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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Davis & Anor v West Sussex County Council [2012] EWHC 2152 (QB) (22 August 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/2152.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2152 (QB), [2013] PTSR 494 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MARY DAVIS PHILIP DAVIS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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WEST SUSSEX COUNTY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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Mr Bryan McGuire QC (instructed by West Sussex Legal) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 26 to 28 June 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE MACKIE QC:
Background
(a) fifteen allegations of abuse of a number of residents, made against various members of staff at Nyton House and against Nyton House as an 'institution', were 'substantiated';(b) ten further allegations of abuse of residents, made against members of staff, were 'inconclusive' (rather than 'unsubstantiated');
(c) Nyton House and others should take 45 individual 'actions' as a result of those determinations;
(d) three members of staff at Nyton House should be referred to the Independent Safeguarding Authority ('the ISA') and/or the Nursing and Midwifery Council ('the NMC') for possible disciplinary action.
(a) They were not given adequate notice of the allegations made against them so as to allow them a fair opportunity to present their case at the Case Conference. They were only provided with a copy of the very substantial Investigation Report – which set out the allegations for the first time, albeit in unclear form – one working day before the Case Conference.(b) They were not shown the evidence against them.
(c) The Case Conference was not shown relevant evidence generated by the investigation, both for and against them.
(d) They were not permitted, or given an adequate opportunity, to produce relevant evidence to the Case Conference, whether through witnesses or otherwise.
The relevant legal functions of West Sussex
"… where it appears to a local authority that any person for whom they may provide or arrange for the provision of community care services may be in need of such services, the authority –
(a) shall carry out an assessment of his need for those services; and
(b) having regard to the results of that assessment, shall decide whether his needs call for the provision by them of any such services."
"… a local authority may with the approval of the Secretary of State, and to such extent as he may direct shall, make arrangements for providing –
(a) residential accommodation for persons aged eighteen or over who by reason of age, illness, disability or any other circumstances are in need of care and attention which is not otherwise available to them…"
"A local authority may, with the approval of the Secretary of State, and to such extent as he may direct in relation to persons ordinarily resident in the area of the local authority, make arrangements for promoting the welfare of persons to whom this section applies, that is to say persons aged eighteen or over who are blind, deaf or dumb or who suffer from mental disorder of any description, and other persons aged eighteen or over who are substantially and permanently handicapped by illness, injury, or congenital deformity or such other disabilities as may be prescribed by the Minister."
"A local authority may with the approval of the Secretary of State and, to such extent as he may direct, make arrangements for promoting the welfare of old people."
Safeguarding vulnerable adults: Government Guidance
"Local authorities shall, in the exercise of their social services functions, including the exercise of any discretion conferred by any relevant enactment, act under the general guidance of the Secretary of State."
"Parliament in enacting section 7(1) did not intend local authorities to whom ministerial guidance was given to be free, having considered it, to take it or leave it… in my view Parliament by s.7(1) has required local authorities to follow the path charted by the Secretary of State's guidance, with liberty to deviate from it where the local authority judges on admissible grounds that there is good reason to do so, but without freedom to take a substantially different course."
'Objectives of an investigation. The objectives of an adult abuse investigation will be to:
- Establish facts;
- Assess the needs of the vulnerable adult for protection, support and redress; and
- Make decisions with regard to what follow up action should be taken with regard to the perpetrator and the service or its management if they have been culpable, ineffective or negligent.'
"The following stages of investigation of any allegation of abuse will need to be undertaken:
- reporting to a single referral point;
- recording, with sensitivity to the abused person, the precise factual details of the alleged abuse;
- initial co-ordination involving representatives of all agencies which might have a role in a subsequent investigation and could constitute a strategy meeting;
- investigation within a jointly determined framework to determine the facts of the case; and
- decision making which may take place at a shared forum such as a case conference."
Safeguarding vulnerable adults: the Defendant's Policy
(a) The Investigating Manager should decide within 24 hours of receipt of the referral whether or not it is an adult protection referral and on the most appropriate level of investigation based on the information then available.(b) The Investigating Officer should visit the vulnerable adult within 24 hours of the referral if there is a significant risk or, otherwise, within 3 working days.
(c) A strategy meeting must be convened within 5 working days of confirmation of an adult protection referral.
(d) 'All relevant parties should be included [in the strategy meeting] unless delay would put the vulnerable adult at risk… The Provider Manager, owner or representative of a service will normally be involved in discussions at an early stage, except where s/he is implicated in the allegation'.
(e) The investigation should follow, resulting in a 'full investigation report'.
(f) A case conference should take place within four weeks of the strategy meeting.
(g) The investigation report should be discussed with those involved before the case conference.
(h) The purpose of the case conference is to 'complete all investigations and to agree the protection plan'; the chairperson should, among other things, 'ensure that a decision based on a balance of probability is taken, regarding whether abuse occurred, did not occur, or that the evidence is inconclusive' and 'ensur[e] that the conference takes the decision required of it in an informed and objective way…'
(i) 'The Investigating Manager must ensure that any case conference is held at a convenient time and place, especially for those with essential first hand information… Invitations to an adult protection case conference should be confirmed using the standard letter and sent as far as possible in advance of the conference. For reasons of both efficiency and confidentiality, attendance at an adult protection conferences should be restricted to those who have a contribution to make to the deliberations involved or on a need to know basis…' .
(j) The minutes of the case conference should be distributed within 5 working days.
(k) Any amendments to the minutes should be sent to the chairperson within 10 working days.
"Except in particular circumstances you should receive a copy of the Investigation Report at least two days in advance of the Case Conference meeting. At the meeting you will have the opportunity to ask questions and make comments on the information presented."
But:
"The person who is thought to be responsible for the harm or concern the vulnerable adults was alleged to have experienced would not usually be invited to a Case Conference. They will have had an opportunity to input into the investigation."
The contract between the parties
"act in accordance with the protection of vulnerable adults with the Sussex Multi-Agency procedures and guidance, for the protection of vulnerable adults and the Public Disclosure Act 1998 to ensure appropriate action is taken in response to the suspicion or evidence of abuse or neglect (including whistle blowing) to ensure the safety and protection of Service Users."
The facts
"The next stage of the safeguarding process is to progress the investigation through interviews. Your client Felicity Hillary-Warnett will then be given the opportunity to respond to the allegations through the interview process.
"Once this is complete and the Investigation Reports have been written for each allegation, and an overarching report for Institutional abuse, these will be shared with the proprietor prior to the Case Conference, and time given for Mrs Davis to provide a detailed response. It is only at the point of the Case Conference that a decision is taken as to whether the outcomes of the investigation and allegations of abuse are substantiated or not. Mrs Davis will be invited to that Case Conference. Furthermore, Felicity Hilliary-Warnett will be given the opportunity to respond to the allegations being made against her before the Case Conference takes place…"
The Claimants submit that this gave rise to a legitimate expectation.
"A review of the Safeguarding Process ... will be undertaken by an officer of the council who is not involved in the original safeguarding process and procedure. There will also be an independent health representative to review the health matters."
The Claimants were not happy with what was offered which was a paper review of whether the decisions of the Case Conference were reasonable and in accordance with procedures. Nevertheless the review proceeded. The review needs to be considered because of West Sussex's argument that 'the failure to participate in the review process totally undermines the Claimant'. This appears to relate to the fact that on 11 February the Defendant had invited the Claimants to make written submissions within seven days. This was before the scope of the proposed review had been confirmed. Furthermore the Claimants had already made representations running to more than 40 pages to which West Sussex had understandably not yet responded. West Sussex contends that any complaints about the review are 'an exercise in cherry picking' and that the non-participation by the Claimants in the review is fatal.
The claims based on lack of procedural fairness and/or natural justice-law
"The so-called rules of natural justice are not set on tablets of stone. To use the phrase which better expresses the underlying concept, what the requirements of fairness demand when any body, domestic, administrative or judicial, has to make a decision which will affect the rights of individual depends on the character of the decision-making body, the kind of decision which it has to make and the statutory or other framework in which it operates. In particular, it is well-established that when a statute has conferred on any body the power to make decisions affecting individuals, the courts will not only require the procedure prescribed by the statute to be followed, but will readily imply so much and no more to be introduced by way of additional procedural safeguards as will ensure the attainment of fairness."
"The rule against bias is one thing. The right to be heard another. Those two rules are the essential characteristics of what is often called natural justice. They are the twin pillars supporting it…
'If the right to be heard is to be a real right which is worth anything, it must carry with it a right in the accused man to know the case which is made against him. He must know what evidence has been given and what statements have been made affecting him: and then he must be given a fair opportunity to correct or contradict them."
"Of course the opportunity to present a case to the court is not confined to being given an opportunity to stand up and say what you want to say; it necessarily extends to a reasonable opportunity to prepare your case before you are called upon to present it. A mere allocation of court time is of no value if the party in question is deprived of the opportunity of getting his tackle in order and being able to present his case in the fullest sense."
"The right to be heard will include, in appropriate cases, the right to call evidence. It would in our judgment be wrong to attempt an exhaustive definition as to what are appropriate cases, but they must include proceedings whose function is to establish the guilt or innocence of a person charged with serious misconduct."
Legitimate expectations-law
"Where a public authority has issued a promise or adopted a practice which represents how it proposes to act in a given area, the law will require the promise or practice to be honoured unless there is good reason not to do so. What is the principle behind this proposition? It is not far to seek. It is said to be grounded in fairness, and no doubt in general terms that is so. I would prefer to express it rather more broadly as a requirement of good administration, by which public bodies ought to deal straightforwardly and consistently with the public."
Application to the facts of the legal principles
The "vulnerable adult centred investigation defence"
"Both 'No Secrets' and 'in safe hands' were issued under section 7 of the Local Authority Social Services Act 1970. The consultation paper raised concerns that while section 7 guidance must be linked to a local authority's statutory functions 'No Secrets' and 'in safe hands' cover an area of law where there is currently no specific statute therefore, we argue that while the guidance will be effective in guiding local authorities in the exercise of their existing statutory functions, they cannot provide a freestanding justification for any act."
The contractual remedy point
Contractual Remedy – The Law
"If an outside contractor is engaged on ordinary commercial terms to provide cleaning services, or the catering and cooking services, or any other essential services at a Local Authority owned care home, it seems to me absurd to suggest that the private contractor, in earning its fee for its business services, is publicly funded or is carrying on a function of a public nature. It is simply carrying on its private business with a customer who happens to be a public authority. The owner of a private care home taking Local Authority funded residents is in no different position. It is simply providing a service for which it charges a commercial fee."
"42 However, it cannot be right that a claimant suing a public body for breach of contract, who is dissatisfied with the remedy afforded him by private law, should be able to invoke public law simply because of his dissatisfaction, understandable though it may be. If he could do so, it would place a party who contracts with a public body in an unjustifiably more privileged position than a party who contracts with anyone else, and a public body in an unjustifiably less favourable position than any other contracting party.
"43 Equally importantly, it appears to me that it would be wrong in principle for a person who would otherwise be limited to a private law claim should be entitled to base his claim in public law merely because private law does not afford him a sufficiently attractive remedy. It is one thing to say that, because a contracting party is a public body, its actions are, in principle, susceptible to judicial review. It is quite another to say that, because a contracting party is a public body, the types of relief which may be available against it under a contract should include public law remedies, even where the basis of the claim is purely contractual in nature". (Neuberger LJ)
"61 Seventhly, it cannot be right in principle for a party to a contract with a public authority to have recourse to public law remedies simply on the ground the private law remedies, such as specific performance, are not available after the relevant contractual obligations have expired, or because they are too vague and uncertain to be specifically enforceable by the court, or because alternative private law remedies, such as damages for breach of contract, are inadequate. The relevant remedies are those available in private law for breach of contract." (Mummery LJ)
"There are, of course, circumstances where, in a contractual context, a public body is susceptible to public law remedies. However where the claim is fundamentally contractual in nature and involves no allegation of fraud or improper motive or the like against a public body, it would, at least in the absence of very unusual circumstances, be right, as a matter of principle, to limit a Claimant to private law remedies."
Mummery LJ says at paragraph 36
"… In order to attract public law remedies, it would be necessary for the applicant for judicial review to establish, at the very least, a relevant and sufficient nexus between the aspect of the contractual situation of which complaint is made and an alleged unlawful exercise of relevant public law powers."
At paragraph 59 he agrees that the case was not one of public law
"Because there was no sufficient nexus between the conduct of the review and the public law powers of the Council to make this a judicial review case. The required public law element of unlawful use of power was missing from the support services review."
He also observed that in that case the source of the power of the Council's support services review was in the relevant contract but not in legislation or guidance.
"I would draw these tentative propositions from this analysis. First, the source of the power will be a relevant factor in determining whether the act in question is in the nature of a private act or not. Second, that will not be decisive, however, since the nature of the activities in issue in the proceedings is also important. This leads on to the third and related proposition, which is that the character of an act is likely to take its colour from the character of the function of which it forms part."
"39 … to risk confusion as to the identity of the person to whom a duty in public law is owed. The Local Authority owes a statutory duty under Sections 21 and 26 (and Section 47) to the vulnerable adult who is resident in a care home. So may a care home provider, if it contracts to, and does, provide the care for which the Local Authority makes arrangements under s 26. It does not follow that the Local Authority owes a statutory duty to the care home provider, or a duty of a public nature. The fact that the care home provider is the commercial beneficiary of such arrangements being made is a different matter."
The relief
89.1 A declaration that the adverse determinations made at the Case Conferences on 10 December 2010 and 23 July 2011 and/or the adverse recommendations made pursuant to the review were unlawful.89.2 An order that these be quashed.
89.3 An order that the Defendant shall inform the ISA and the NMC of the court's judgment and order and/or shall withdraw its referrals of Felicity Hillary-Warnett, Joy Hillary and Zona Bidwell to those bodies.
"It is well settled that 'the grant or refusal of the remedy sought by way of judicial review is, in the ultimate analysis, discretionary' (Lord Roskill in IRC v National Federation of Self Employed and Small Businesses [1981] 2 All ER 93 at 116, [1982] AC 617 at 656.) But the discretion must be exercised judicially and in most cases in which a decision has been found to be flawed, it would not be a proper exercise of the discretion to refuse to quash it."
Conclusion