BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> A London Borough v BB & Ors [2011] EWHC 2853 (Fam) (31 August 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2011/2853.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 2853 (Fam) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
This judgment is being handed down in private on 31 August 2011. It consists of 65 paragraphs and has been signed and dated by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved.
FAMILY DIVISION
AND IN THE COURT OF PROTECTION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
A London Borough |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
||
[1] BB (by her litigation friend, the Official Solicitor) -and- [2] AM -and- [3] SB -and- [4] EL Trust |
Respondents |
____________________
Ms Helen Knott (instructed by John Street Solicitors) for AM and SB
Ms Fenella Morris (instructed by Steel and Shamash on behalf of the Official Solicitor) for BB
Hearing dates: 13, 14, 15, 16, and 17 June 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Ryder :
The Issues
i) Whether it is in BB's best interests to be married
ii) Whether BB's liberty is deprived at Polestar
iii) Where BB should live
iv) Whether and if so when she should have contact with her extended family if she is not living with them.
Capacity
The Marriage
The alleged assault
The evidence on other issues
Deprivation of liberty
i) BB is not able to consent to her accommodation at Polestar which has been for more than a negligible period of time (approximately 12 months);
ii) BB has stated a determination to leave and the attendance of the police was threatened as a consequence; in any event, she does not consistently express the wish to remain there and her wishes and feelings are differently expressed to family and professionals;
iii) Dr Appleford's advice, if followed, is that restraint would be appropriate to ensure that BB receives treatment, care and rehabilitation;
iv) A request by the family that BB be discharged to their care would be refused;
v) A request by the family for contact with BB if not agreed by staff can be refused i.e. her contact with her family is intensively controlled and supervised;
vi) BB is supervised at all times and is accompanied outside her accommodation at all times;
vii) BB has a 2:1 staffing ratio when taking medication and when outside of her accommodation and 1:1 when in the common areas of the building;
viii) There is day to day regular supervision and control of BB's anti-psychotic medication, diet and behaviours;
ix) BB's medication is likely to have the effect of reducing her attempts to leave Polestar;
x) The plan put forward by the local authority is for the continuation of the placement for a further indeterminate period of 'rehabilitation' outside of her family home, at least within a defined maximum period of 3 years
xi) The decision that she stay at Polestar is one made by the state.
i) BB is happy at Polestar and for most of the time wishes to live there;
ii) BB may achieve greater autonomy in the longer term as a consequence of her residence at Polestar i.e. the arrangements for her care are benign;
iii) The control and supervision to which she is subject are an indissoluble part of her daily care needs (albeit not assessed in the family home context);
iv) BB is not subject to restraint despite the opinion of experts who would support that;
v) BB has her own flat which is a supported living arrangement;
vi) There is no less restrictive option which will permit BB to make the therapeutic gains including in her communication abilities that are predicted based upon the gains made so far.
Welfare
i) A return to the family home
ii) A move to another placement
iii) Remaining at Polestar.
"[115] I am not saying that there is in law any presumption that mentally incapacitated adults are better off with their families: often they will be; sometimes they will not be. But respect for our human condition, regard for the realities of our society and the common sense … surely indicate that the starting point should be the normal assumption that mentally incapacitated adults will be better off if they live with a family rather than in an institution – however benign and enlightened the institution may be, and however well integrated into the community – and that mentally incapacitated adults who have been looked after within their family will be better off if they continue to be looked after within the family rather than by the State.
[116] We have to be conscious of the limited ability of public authorities to improve on nature. We need to be careful not to embark upon 'social engineering'. And we should not lightly interfere with family life. If the State – typically, as here, in the guise of a local authority – is to say that it is the more appropriate person to look after a mentally incapacitated adult than her own partner or family, it assumes, as it seems to me, the burden – not the legal burden but the practical and evidential burden – of establishing that this is indeed so. And common sense surely indicates that the longer a vulnerable adult's partner, family or carer have looked after her without the State having perceived the need for its intervention, the more carefully must any proposals for intervention be scrutinised and the more cautious the court should be before accepting too readily the assertion that the State can do better than the partner, family or carer."
"[30] The fact that the assessment of the option of a family placement was not given top priority is a matter of concern. Placement in the family should be at the top of any priority list before non-family placements are considered."
And very recently in LB Hillingdon v Neary & Anor [2011] EWHC 1377 (CoP) Peter Jackson J held:
"[24] Decisions about incapacitated people must always be determined by their best interests, but the starting point is their right to respect for their family life where it exists. The burden is always on the State to show that that an incapacitated person's welfare cannot be sustained by living with and being looked after by his or her family, with or without outside support."
i) her very significant gains in relation to communication, functioning and behaviour;
ii) her potential to make further gains in these areas, particularly in the next 2 years;
iii) the availability of an intensely supported environment which is providing a very effective package of care;
iv) her personal happiness and self esteem;
v) the substantial infrastructure available to those with impaired hearing in Birmingham e.g. the deaf mosque, the deaf cinema and multi-disciplinary family therapy.
i) That for the time being the circumstances of that placement are a deprivation of her liberty;
ii) There will be a continuing disruption to BB's family life;
iii) Save for the deaf mosque and any multi-disciplinary family work that is yet to be organised, there are fewer opportunities in Birmingham for the family to be involved in the care and support of BB;
iv) The obstacle created by distance will tend to militate against regaining normality in family life by way of more flexible contact;
v) There is a real risk that the pressure placed on the family to maintain reasonable contact with BB cannot be sustained.
i) The close association, love and care of her parents, sisters and extended family with whom she has lived from the time she returned from her educational placement in 1999 at the age of 19 until 19 April 2010;
ii) Were BSL communication to be taught to BB and her family together that would have the benefit of enhancing their existing idiosyncratic communication that is nevertheless very effective as between themselves and whether enhanced or not by BSL needs to be maintained;
iii) Were holistic support arrangements including BSL signing, community mental health provision and sensory integration of the type deliverable at Polestar to be provided in the home environment, that would have the inestimable benefit of doing so in such a manner where respect for BB's family life is maximised and interference with her article 8 ECHR rights minimised;
iv) The detrimental impacts of separation from family i.e. relative estrangement are avoided;
v) It is unlikely that BB will ever achieve sufficient independent living and will always require support. In the absence of an assessed long term care plan, the local authority's proposal is no more than short term education not a substitute for rehabilitation;
vi) The benefits of participation in an Islamic and Bangladeshi culture and community with her family would be provided for.
i) Loss of the gains she has made in communication, functioning and behaviour;
ii) Failure to achieve the anticipated further gains in these areas, particularly in the next 2 years;
iii) The lack of the intense and consistent expert support available at the moment only at Polestar;
iv) The lack of insight of BB parents into BB's need to have the benefits of participating in deaf culture and community;
v) The use of idiosyncratic communication rather than BSL;
vi) A theoretical proposition given in evidence by the cultural expert commissioned by the parties who had not analysed or assessed BB or her family that it was likely that the local community and their religious practices would be antithetic to her objective best interests. That was not established in evidence as being relevant to BB's family and accordingly I reject it as no more than an hypothesis at this stage.
i) Proximity to family. It was acknowledged by all the professionals that BB's relationship with her family is a very important to her. Ms Diffey in her oral evidence spelt out the significance of BB being able to participate in family life not just with her parents but her nephews, sisters and aunt. If BB were living closer to her family she may be able to obtain the asserted benefits of 24 hour professional support and normal family relationships;
ii) It would reduce isolation: AM and SB were clear in their evidence that they could not keep up the present level of contact travelling each week in the long term, and as a consequence BB's family life is likely to be further compromised;
iii) There would be increased opportunities for other significant family members to visit BB, for example Mrs MC. The importance of them being able to spend more time together has been identified by Polestar staff, Ms Wong and Ms Walshe. It is unrealistic to expect MC to stay at Polestar given that she is shortly to have another baby and has 2 other small children to care for;
iv) There would be the possibility of BB resuming her attendance at college which all reports confirm she enjoyed and to be reunited with her friends from college;
v) The placement at Polestar is time limited and a move is inevitable.;
vi) Paula Williams agreed in her oral evidence that it would be better for BB to move now so there could be arrangements which include the family rather than being geographically divorced from them;
vii) A placement in London would enable her parents and other family members to be involved in BB's treatment and rehabilitation;
viii) Ms Diffey raised in her oral evidence the difficulties that may ensue if BB were to become more integrated into the community in Birmingham and the possibility that BB would remain in Birmingham long term "by default."
ix) The Local Authority is presently committed to making resources available to support a placement in London, for example additional staffing. That may not still be the case in future years. If those additional resources are to be secured by way of recruiting additional staff the process should commence without delay.
x) BB has not had the opportunity to express any wishes and feelings about a possible placement in London as she has not been presented with any information about it. Her wishes are therefore unknown.
xi) BB has unfortunately had several moves since 19.4.10 but has been able to form relationships with staff. It is predictable she will be able to do so again and that the process will be easier with the support of her family.
xii) Ms Walshe's view was that the possibility should be explored without delay as if the potential Polestar placement at Longley Road in London is lost one may not be available for some time.
xiii) Such a placement would assist with the objective of shared care .
Judgment ends.