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 £5, 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!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> F v West Berkshire HA [1991] UKHL 1 (17 July 1990)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1991/1.html
Cite as: [1990] 2 AC 1, [1991] UKHL 1

[New search] [Buy ICLR report: [1990] 2 AC 1] [Help]


JISCBAILII_CASE_TORT

    Parliamentary Archives,
    HL/PO/JU/18/249

    In re F (Respondent)

    JUDGMENT

    Die Jovis 4° Maii 1989

    Upon Report from the Appellate Committee to whom was
    referred the Cause In re F, That the Committee had heard
    Counsel as well on Monday the 27th and Tuesday the 28th days
    of February as on Wednesday the 18th, Thursday the 2nd, Monday
    the 6th, Tuesday the 7th, Wednesday the 8th and Thursday the
    9th days of March last, upon the Petition and Appeal of the
    Official Solicitor to the Supreme Court, of Penderel House,
    287 High Holborn, London WC1V 7HP praying that the matter of
    the Order set forth in the Schedule thereto, namely an Order
    of Her Majesty's Court of Appeal of the 3rd day of February
    1989, might be reviewed before Her Majesty the Queen in Her
    Court of Parliament and that the said Order might be reversed,
    varied or altered or that the Petitioners might have such
    other relief in the premises as to Her Majesty the Queen in
    Her Court of Parliament might seem meet; as upon the cases of
    Fiona Kinloch (by her mother and next friend Lesley Perkins)
    and the West Berkshire Health Authority, lodged in answer to
    the said Appeal; and Counsel having been heard as amicus
    curiae
    and also on behalf of the Mental Health Act Commission,
    the Intervenors in the said Appeal; and due consideration had
    this day of what was offered on either side in this Cause:

    It is Ordered and Adjudged, by the Lords Spiritual and
    Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her Majesty the Queen
    assembled, That the said Order of Her Majesty's Court of
    Appeal (Civil Division) of the 3rd day of February 1989
    complained of in the said Appeal be, and the same is hereby,
    Set Aside, save as to legal aid taxation, and that the said
    Petition and Appeal be, and the same is hereby, dismissed this
    House: And it is further Ordered, That the following Order
    and Declaration be substituted for that of Mr. Justice Scott
    Baker of the 2nd day of December 1988, as amended on the 16th
    day of December 1988:

    "(1) it is declared that the operation of
    sterilisation proposed to be performed on the
    plaintiff being in the existing circumstances in
    her best interests can lawfully be performed on
    her despite her inability to consent to it;

    (2) It is ordered that in the event of a material
    change in the existing circumstances occurring
    before the said operation has been performed any
    party shall have liberty to apply for such further
    or other declaration or order as may be just";

    And it is also further Ordered, That the costs of the said
    Respondent Fiona Kinloch be taxed in accordance with Schedule
    2 to the Legal Aid Act 1974, as amended, such costs to include
    provision for three Counsel.

    Cler: Parliamentor:

    Oral Judgment: 4.5.89
    Reasons: 24 5.89

    HOUSE OF LORDS

    IN RE F.
    (RESPONDENT)

    Lord Bridge of Harwich
    Lord Brandon of Oakbrook
    Lord Griffiths
    Lord Goff of Chieveley
    Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle


    LORD BRIDGE OF HARWICH

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading the speeches of my
    noble and learned friends Lord Brandon of Oakbrook and Lord Goff
    of Chieveley. I concurred in the dismissal of the appeal, subject
    to a variation of the terms of the order made by Scott Baker J.,
    for the reasons given by them.

    The appeal raised a number of difficult questions regarding
    both the jurisdiction and the procedure of the court in relation to
    the lawfulness of the sterilisation of an adult woman disabled by
    mental incapacity from giving her consent to the operation. These
    issues are fully examined by Lord Brandon and Lord Goff and I
    further agree, for the reasons they give in the following
    conclusions:-

    1. that no court now has jurisdiction either by statute or
      derived from the Crown as parens patriae to give or
      withhold consent to such an operation in the case of an
      adult as it would in wardship proceedings in the case of a
      minor;

    2. that the court has jurisdiction to declare the lawfulness of
      such an operation proposed to be performed on the ground
      that it is in the circumstances in the best interests of the
      woman and that, although such a declaration is not
      necessary to establish the lawfulness of the operation, in
      practice the court's jurisdiction should be invoked whenever
      such an operation is proposed to be performed.

    3. that for the future the procedure to be used when applying
      for a declaration of the kind in question should be regulated
      as proposed in the speech of my noble and learned friend
      Lord Brandon of Oakbrook.

    The issues canvassed in argument before your Lordships
    revealed the paucity of clearly defined principles in the common
    law which may be applied to determine the lawfulness of medical
    or surgical treatment given to a patient who for any reason,
    temporary or permanent, lacks the capacity to give or to
    communicate consent to that treatment. It seems to me to be
    axiomatic that treatment which is necessary to preserve the life,
    health or well being of the patient may lawfully be given without
    consent. But if a rigid criterion of necessity were to be applied
    to determine what is and what is not lawful in the treatment of
    the unconscious and the incompetent, many of those unfortunate
    enough to be deprived of the capacity to make or communicate
    rational decisions by accident, illness or unsoundness of mind might
    be deprived of treatment which it would be entirely beneficial for
    them to receive.

    Moreoever, it seems to me of first importance that the
    common law should be readily intelligible to and applicable by all
    those who undertake the care of persons lacking the capacity to
    consent to treatment. It would be intolerable for members of the
    medical, nursing and other professions devoted to the care of the
    sick that, in caring for those lacking the capacity to consent to
    treatment they should be put in the dilemma that, if they
    administer the treatment which they believe to be in the patient's
    best interests, acting with due skill and care, they run the risk of
    being held guilty of trespass to the person, but if they withhold
    that treatment, they may be in breach of a duty of care owed to
    the patient. If those who undertake responsibility for the care of
    incompetent or unconscious patients administer curative or
    prophylactic treatment which they believe to be appropriate to the
    patient's existing condition of disease, injury or bodily malfunction
    or susceptibility to such a condition in the future, the lawfulness
    of that treatment should be judged by one standard, not two. It
    follows that if the professionals in question have acted with due
    skill and care, judged by the well-known test laid down in Bolam
    v. Friern Hospital Management Committee
    [1957] 1 W.L.R. 582,
    they should be immune from liability in trespass, just as they are
    immune from liability in negligence. The special considerations
    which apply in the case of the sterilisation of a woman who is
    physically perfectly healthy or of an operation upon an organ
    transplant donor arise only because such treatment cannot be
    considered either curative or prophylactic.

    LORD BRANDON OF OAKBROOK

    My Lords,

    This appeal concerns the proposed sterilisation of an adult
    woman, F., who is disabled by mental incapacity from consenting
    to the operation. By an originating summons issued in the High
    Court, Family Division, on 20 June 1988, in which F. by her
    mother and next friend was named as plaintiff and the West
    Berkshire Health Authority ("the health authority") as defendant,
    F. applied for (1) a declaration, under R.S.C., Ord. 15, r. 16, that

    - 2 -

    to effect her sterlisation would not amount to an unlawful act by
    reason only of the absence of her consent or (2) the consent of
    the court under either its parens patriae or its inherent jurisdiction
    to her sterilisation. The application was heard by Scott Baker J.
    in chambers with the assistance of counsel instructed by the
    Official Solicitor as amicus curiae. On 2 December 1988 the
    judge gave judgment in open court and by order of that date made
    the declaration sought under (1) above. Pursuant to a direction
    given by the Lord Chancellor under section 90(3)(b) of the Supreme
    Court Act 1981 the Official Solicitor, being of opinion that it was
    in F.'s interests that the case should be considered by the Court
    of Appeal, obtained the leave of that court to appeal against the
    decision of Scott Baker J. By order dated 3 February 1989 the
    Court of Appeal (Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R., Neill and
    Butler-Sloss L.JJ.) dismissed the Official Solicitor's appeal and
    gave him leave to appeal to your Lordships' House. Subsequently
    the House allowed an application by the Mental Health Act
    Commission for England and Wales for leave to intervene in the
    appeal and your Lordships had the benefit of additional argument
    by counsel for them at the hearing.

    The material facts relating to F., which are not in dispute,
    are these. She was born on 13 January 1953, so that she is now
    36. She suffers from serious mental disability, probably as a
    consequence of an acute infection of the respiratory tract which
    she had when she was about nine months old. She has been a
    voluntary in-patient at Borocourt Hospital (a mental hospital under
    the control of the health authority) since 1967 when she was 14.
    Her mental disability takes the form of an arrested or incomplete
    development of the mind. She has the verbal capacity of a child
    of two and the general mental capacity of a child of four to five.
    She is unable to express her views in words but can indicate what
    she likes or dislikes, for example, people, food, clothes and
    matters of routine. She experiences emotions such as enjoyment,
    sadness and fear, but is prone to express them differently from
    others. She is liable to become aggressive. Her mother is her
    only relative and visits her regularly. There is a strong bond of
    affection between them. As a result of the treatment which F.
    has received during her time in hospital she has made significant
    progress. She has become less aggressive and is allowed
    considerable freedom of movement about the hospital grounds
    which are large. There is, however, no prospect of any
    development in her mental capacity.

    The question of F. being sterilised has arisen because of a
    relationship which she has formed with a male patient at the same
    hospital, P. This relationship is of a sexual nature and probably
    involves sexual intercourse, or something close to it, about twice a
    month. The relationship is entirely voluntary on F.'s part and it is
    likely that she obtains pleasure from it. There is no reason to
    believe that F. has other than the ordinary fertility of a woman of
    her age. Because of her mental disability, however, she could not
    cope at all with pregnancy, labour or delivery, the meaning of
    which she would not understand. Nor could she care for a baby if
    she ever had one. In these circumstances it would, from a
    psychiatric point of view, be disastrous for her to conceive a
    child. There is a serious objection to each of the ordinary
    methods of contraception. So far as varieties of the pill are
    concerned she would not be able to use them effectively and there

    - 3 -

    is a risk of their causing damage to her physical health. So far
    as an inter-uterine device is concerned, there would be danger of
    infection arising, the symptoms of which she would not be able to
    describe so that remedial measures could not be taken in time.

    In the light of the facts set out above Scott Baker J.
    concluded that it would be in the best interests of F. to have an
    operation for sterilisation by ligation of her Fallopian tubes. The
    Court of Appeal unanimously affirmed that conclusion, and no
    challenge to its correctness was made on behalf of any party at
    the hearing of the appeal before your Lordships.

    It might have been supposed that, with such complete
    agreement that it was in F.'s best interests that she should be
    sterilised, no difficulty about giving effect to that agreement
    would have arisen. Difficulty, however, has arisen because of
    doubts about three questions of law and legal procedure. The first
    question is whether it is necessary or desirable for the court to
    become involved in the matter at all. The second question is, if
    so, what jurisdiction does the court have to deal with the matter,
    and according to what principles should that jurisdiction be
    exercised. The third question is, assuming that the court has
    jurisdiction and is bound to exercise it in a particular manner,
    what procedure should be used for the invocation and subsequent
    exercise of that jurisdiction.

    If F. were a minor of say 17, instead of an adult of 36, and
    the same problem arose in relation to her, there would be no
    difficulty in answering these three questions. This is because your
    Lordships' House dealt authoritatively with a case involving the
    sterilisation of a girl just under 18, who suffered from mental
    disability closely comparable to F.'s, in In Re B. (A Minor)
    (Wardship: Sterilisation)
    [1988] A.C. 199. The answer to the first
    question would have been that, because of the seriousness of
    deciding whether the girl should be sterilised or not, the court, in
    the form of the High Court, Family Division, should be involved in
    the matter. The answer to the second question would be that the
    court could exercise its wardship jurisdiction, and, in doing so,
    would be bound to treat the welfare, or to use an expression with
    substantially the same meaning, the best interests of the minor, as
    the paramount consideration. The answer to the third question
    would be that the wardship jurisdiction of a court would be
    invoked by the issue by an interested party of an originating
    summons under R.S.C., Ord. 90, r. 3, and the procedure then
    followed would be the ordinary procedure designed to bring all
    relevant expert and other evidence before the court so as to
    enable it to decide whether sterilisation was or was not in the
    best interests of the girl.

    For reasons which will become apparent later, no court or
    judge has now any jurisdiction with respect to the person of an
    adult under mental disability comparable with the wardship
    jurisdiction of the High Court with respect to the person of a
    minor in a similar condition. Because of this, no ready answers
    are available to the three questions referred to above in the case
    of such an adult, and a separate examination of each of them has
    to be made.

    (1) The necessity or desirability of the court being involved

    - 4 -

    Part IV of the Mental Health Act 1983 contains provisions,
    which it is not necessary to detail, imposing restrictions or
    conditions on the giving to mentally disorded persons of certain
    kinds of treatment for their mental disorder. The Act, however,
    does not contain any provisions relating to the giving of treatment
    to patients for any conditions other than their mental disorder.
    The result is that the lawfulness of giving any treatment of the
    latter kind depends not on statute but the common law.

    At common law a doctor cannot lawfully operate on adult
    patients of sound mind, or give them any other treatment involving
    the application of physical force however small ("other treatment"),
    without their consent. If a doctor were to operate on such
    patients, or give them other treatment, without their consent, he
    would commit the actionable tort of trespass to the person. There
    are, however, cases where adult patients cannot give or refuse
    their consent to an operation or other treatment. One case is
    where, as a result of an accident or otherwise, an adult patient is
    unconscious and an operation or other treatment cannot be safely
    delayed until he or she recovers consciousness. Another case is
    where a patient, though adult, cannot by reason of mental
    disability understand the nature or purpose of an operation or
    other treatment. The common law would be seriously defective if
    it failed to provide a solution to the problem created by such
    inability to consent. In my opinion, however, the common law
    does not so fail. In my opinion, the solution to the problem which
    the common law provides is that a doctor can lawfully operate on,
    or give other treatment to, adult patients who are incapable, for
    one reason or another, of consenting to his doing so, provided that
    the operation or other treatment concerned is in the best interests
    of such patients. The operation or other treatment will be in
    their best interests if, but only if, it is carried out in order either
    to save their lives, or to ensure improvement or prevent
    deterioration in their physical or mental health.

    Different views have been put forward with regard to the
    principle which makes it lawful for a doctor to operate on or give
    other treatment to adult patients without their consent in the two
    cases to which I have referred above. The Court of Appeal in the
    present case regarded the matter as depending on the public
    interest. I would not disagree with that as a broad proposition,
    but I think that it is helpful to consider the principle in
    accordance with which the public interest leads to this result. In
    my opinion, the principle is that, when persons lack the capacity,
    for whatever reason, to take decisions about the performance of
    operations on them, or the giving of other medical treatment to
    them, it is necessary that some other person or persons, with the
    appropriate qualifications, should take such decisions for them.
    Otherwise they would be deprived of medical care which they need
    and to which they are entitled.

    In many cases, however, it will not only be lawful for
    doctors, on the ground of necessity, to operate on or give other
    medical treatment to adult patients disabled from giving their
    consent; it will also be their common law duty to do so.

    In the case of adult patients made unconscious by an
    accident or otherwise, they will normally be received into the
    casualty department of a hospital, which thereby undertakes the

    - 5 -

    care of them. It will then be the duty of the doctors at that
    hospital to use their best endeavours to do, by way of either an
    operation or other treatment, that which is in the best interests of
    such patients.

    In the case of adult patients suffering from mental
    disability, they will normally, in accordance with the scheme of
    the Mental Health Act 1983, be either in the care of guardians,
    who will refer them to doctors for medical treatment, or of
    doctors at mental hospitals in which the patients either reside
    voluntarily or are detained compulsorily. It will then again be the
    duty of the doctors concerned to use their best endeavours to do,
    by way of either an operation or other treatment, that which is in
    the best interests of such patients.

    The application of the principle which I have described
    means that the lawfulness of a doctor operating on, or giving
    other treatment to, an adult patient disabled from giving consent,
    will depend not on any approval or sanction of a court, but on the
    question whether the operation or other treatment is in the best
    interests of the patient concerned. That is, from a practical point
    of view, just as well, for, if every operation to be performed, or
    other treatment to be given, required the approval or sanction of
    the court, the whole process of medical care for such patients
    would grind to a halt.

    That is not the end of the matter, however, for there
    remains a further question to be considered. That question is
    whether, in the case of an operation for the sterilisation of an
    adult woman of child-bearing age, who is mentally disabled from
    giving or refusing her consent to it, although involvement of the
    court is not strictly necessary as a matter of law, it is
    nevertheless highly desirable as a matter of good practice. In
    considering that question, it is necessary to have regard to the
    special features of such an operation. These features are: first,
    the operation will in most cases be irreversible; secondly, by
    reason of the general irreversibility of the operation, the almost
    certain result of it will be to deprive the woman concerned of
    what is widely, and as I think rightly, regarded as one of the
    fundamental rights of a woman, namely, the right to bear children;
    thirdly, the deprivation of that right gives rise to moral and
    emotional considerations to which many people attach great
    importance; fourthly, if the question whether the operation is in
    the best interests of the woman is left to be decided without the
    involvement of the court, there may be a greater risk of it being
    decided wrongly, or at least of it being thought to have been
    decided wrongly; fifthly, if there is no involvement of the court,
    there is a risk of the operation being carried out for improper
    reasons or with improper motives; and, sixthly, involvement of the
    court in the decision to operate, if that is the decision reached,
    should serve to protect the doctor or doctors who perform the
    operation, and any others who may be concerned in it, from
    subsequent adverse criticisms or claims.

    Having regard to all these matters, I am clearly of the
    opinion that, although in the case of an operation of the kind
    under discussion involvement of the court is not strictly necessary
    as a matter of law, it is nevertheless highly desirable as a matter
    of good practice.

    - 6 -

    There may be cases of other special operations to which
    similar considerations would apply. I think it best, however, to
    leave such other cases to be examined as and when they arise.

    (2) The judisdiction of the court and the principles on which it
    should be exercised

    In the course of the argument in this appeal your Lordships
    were invited to consider four kinds of jurisdiction by the exercise
    of which the court might become involved in the decision whether
    F. should be sterilised or not. These were: first, the parens
    patriae jurisdiction; secondly, jurisdiction under Part VII of the
    Mental Health Act 1983; thirdly, a jurisdiction which the Court of
    Appeal considered could be exercised under appropriate
    amendments to R.S.C., Ord. 80; and, fourthly, the jurisdiction to
    make declarations. I shall examine each of these in turn.

    I consider first the parens patriae jurisdiction. This is an
    ancient prerogative jurisdiction of the Crown going back as far
    perhaps as the thirteenth century. Under it the Crown as parens
    patriae had both the power and the duty to protect the persons
    and property of those unable to do so for themselves, a category
    which included both minors (formerly described as infants) and
    persons of unsound mind (formerly described as lunatics or idiots).
    While the history of that jurisdiction and the manner of its
    exercise from its inception until the present day is of the greatest
    interest, I do not consider that it would serve any useful purpose
    to recount it here. I say that because it was accepted by the
    Court of Appeal and not challenged by any of the parties to the
    appeal before your Lordships, that the present situation with
    regard to the parens patriae jurisdiction was as follows. First, so
    much of the parens patriae jurisdiction as related to minors
    survives now in the form of the wardship jurisdiction of the High
    Court, Family Division. Secondly, so much of the parens patriae
    jurisdiction as related to persons of unsound mind no longer exists.
    It ceased to exist as a result of two events both of which took
    place on 1 November 1960. The first event was the coming into
    force of the Mental Health Act 1959, section 1 of which provided:

    "1. Subject to the transitional provisions contained in this
    Act, the Lunacy and Mental Treatment Acts, 1890 to 1930,
    and the Mental Deficiency Acts, 1913 to 1938, shall cease
    to have effect, and the following provisions of this Act shall
    have effect in lieu of those enactments with respect to the
    reception, care and treatment of mentally disordered
    patients, the management of their property, and other
    matters related thereto."

    The second event was the revocation by Warrant under the Sign
    Manual of the last Warrant dated 10 April 1956, by which the
    jurisdiction of the Crown over the persons and property of those
    found to be of unsound mind by inquisition had been assigned to
    the Lord Chancellor and the judges of the High Court, Chancery
    Division.

    The effect of section 1 of the Act of 1959, together with
    the Warrant of revocation referred to above, was to sweep away
    the previous statutory and prerogative jurisdiction in lunacy,
    leaving the law relating to persons of unsound mind to be governed

    - 7 -

    solely, so far as statutory enactments are concerned, by the
    provisions of that Act. So far as matters not governed by those
    provisions are concerned, the common law relating to persons of
    unsound mind continued to apply. It follows that the parens
    patriae jurisdiction with respect to persons of unsound mind is not
    now available to be invoked in order to involve the court or a
    judge in the decision about the sterilisation of F.

    I consider, secondly, jurisdiction under Part VII of the
    Mental Health Act 1983. That part of the Act has the heading
    "Management of Property and Affairs of Patients" and comprises
    sections 93 to 113. The question which has to be considered is
    whether the expression "the affairs of patients," as used in the
    heading and various sections of Part VII, includes medical
    treatment such as an operation for sterilisation. In order to
    answer that question, it is necessary to examine the following
    sections in Part VII which are mainly relevant to it:

    "93. (1) The Lord Chancellor shall from time to time
    nominate one or more judges of the Supreme Court ... to
    act for the purposes of this Part of this Act.

    "(2) There shall continue to be an office of the Supreme
    Court, called the Court of Protection, for the protection
    and management, as provided by this Part of this Act, of
    the property and affairs of persons under disability . . .

    "95. (1) The judge may, with respect to the property and
    affairs of a patient, do or secure the doing of all such
    things as appear necessary or expedient -

    (a) for the maintenance or other benefit of the
    patient,

    (b) for the maintenance or other benefit of members
    of the patient's family,

    (c) for making provision for other persons or purposes
    for whom or which the patient might be expected to
    provide if he were not mentally disordered, or

    (d) otherwise for administering the patient's affairs.

    "(2) In the exercise of the powers conferred by this
    section regard shall be had first of all to the requirements
    of the patient, and the rules of law which restricted the
    enforcement by a creditor of rights against property under
    the control of the judge in lunacy shall apply to property
    under the control of the judge; but, subject to the foregoing
    provisions of this subsection, the judge shall, in
    administering a patient's affairs, have regard to the
    interests of creditors and also to the desirability of making
    provision for obligations of the patient notwithstanding that
    they may not be legally enforceable.

    "96. (1) Without prejudice to the generality of section 95
    above, the judge shall have power to make such orders and
    give such directions and authorities as he thinks fit for the
    purposes of that section and in particular may for those
    purposes make orders or give directions or authorities for -

    - 8 -

    1. the control . . . and management of any property of
      the patient;

    2. the sale, exchange, charging or other disposition of or
      dealing with any property of the patient;

    (c) the acquisition of any property in the name or on
    behalf of the patient;

    1. the settlement of any property of the patient, or the
      gift of any property of the patient to any such
      persons or for any such purposes as are mentioned in
      paragraphs (b) and (c) of section 95(1) above;

    2. the execution for the patient of a will making any
      provision . . . which could be made by a will
      executed by the patient if he were not mentally
      disordered;

    3. the carrying on by a suitable person of any
      profession, trade or business of the patient;

    4. the dissolution of a partnership of which the patient
      is a member;

    (h) the carrying out of any contract entered into by the
    patient;

    (i) the conduct of legal proceedings in the name of the
    patient or on his behalf;

    (j) the reimbursement out of the property of the patient
    . . . of money applied by any person either in
    payment of the patient's debts (whether legally
    enforceable or not) or for the maintenance or other
    benefit of the patient or members of his family . . .;

    (k) the exercise of any power (including a power to
    consent) vested in the patient, whether beneficially,
    or as guardian or trustee, or otherwise."

    The expression "the affairs of patients," taken by itself and
    without regard to the context in which it appears, is, in my view,
    capable of extending to medical treatment of patients other than
    treatment for their mental disorder. There is further an obvious
    attraction in construing that expression, as used in Part VII of the
    Act of 1983, as having that extended meaning ("the wider
    meaning"), since there would then be a judicial authority, namely,
    a judge nominated under section 93(1), who would have statutory
    power to authorise, or refuse to authorise, the sterilisation of an
    adult woman of unsound mind such as F. There are two passages
    in the sections of the Act set out above which, if they do not
    expressly support the wider meaning, are at least consistent wih it.
    The first is the passage in section 95(1)(a) "for the maintenance or
    other benefit of the patient" (my emphasis). The second is the
    passage in section 96(1)(k) "the exercise of any power (including a
    power to consent)
    vested in the patient, whether beneficially, or as
    guardian or trustee, or otherwise" (again my emphasis). It seems

    - 9 -

    to me, however, that, when one examines the general tenor of
    Part VII of the Act, and more particularly the context in which
    the two passages referred to above are to be found, the expression
    "the affairs of patients" cannot properly be construed as having
    the wider meaning. It must rather be construed as including only
    business matters, legal transactions and other dealings of a similar
    kind.

    I would, therefore, hold that Part VII of the Act of 1983
    does not confer on a judge nominated under section 93(1) any
    jurisdiction to decide questions relating to the medical treatment
    of a patient, such as the question of F.'s sterilisation in the
    present case.

    I consider, thirdly, the jurisdiction relied on by the Court of
    Appeal. Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R., reached the
    conclusion that operations for the sterilisation of adult women,
    disabled by mental disorder from giving their consent, as of
    minors, were in a special category, and should not be performed
    without the approval of the court (transcript pp. 19-21). He then
    turned to the question of the procedure to be used for seeking
    that approval and said, at pp. 21-23:

    "This at once raised the question of how the court should be
    consulted and what form its concurrence in the treatment of
    the patient should take. Thus far, apart from the instant
    case, there have been three occasions upon which proposed
    abortion or sterilisation operations upon adults who were
    incompetent to consent have been brought before the court
    (In re T. The Times, 26 May 1987, per Latey J.; In re X.
    The Times, 4 June 1987, per Reeve J.; and T. v. T. [1988]
    Fam. 62, per Wood J.). In each case those who proposed
    that the operation be carried out sought and obtained a
    declaration that to do so would be lawful.

    "For my part, I do not think that this is an appropriate
    procedure. A declaration changes nothing. All that the
    court is being asked to do is to declare that, had a course
    of action been taken without resort to the court, it would
    have been lawful anyway. In the context of the most
    sensitive and potentially controversial forms of treatment
    the public interest requires that the courts should give
    express approval before the treatment is carried out and
    thereby provide an independent and broad based 'third
    opinion.' In the case of wards of court, the performance of
    any such operation without first obtaining the approval of
    the court would in any event constitute a very grave
    contempt of court. In the case of other minors, the law
    will impose a very heavy burden of justification upon those
    who carry out the treatment without first ensuring that the
    minors are made wards of court and the court's consent
    obtained. In the case of adults who are themselves
    incompetent to consent, the law will impose an equally
    heavy burden of justification if those who carry out the
    treatment do not first seek a determination of the
    lawfulness of the proposed treatment by enabling the court
    to approve or to disapprove.

    - 10 -

    "As this problem has only recently arisen, there is no
    specific procedure laid down for obtaining the court's
    approval. R.S.C., Ord. 80 is that which is concerned with
    persons under a disability and there should be little
    difficulty in framing a new rule under that Order prescribing
    such a procedure. We trust that this will receive urgent
    attention from the Lord Chancellor and the Supreme Court
    Rule Committee.

    "In the course of argument we were told that the Official
    Solicitor knows of a small number of other cases in which it
    is considered necessary that such an operation be performed
    upon an adult patient, but in which the outcome of this
    appeal has been awaited. Clearly it would not be right that
    those patients should have to await the formulation and
    enactment of a new procedural rule. Fortunately the court
    has inherent jurisdiction to regulate its own proceedings
    where the rules make no provision and, pending the
    appearance of a new rule or a Practice Direction by the
    President of the Family Division of the High Court, we will
    direct as follows:

    1. Applications for the court's approval of medical or
      surgical treatment where such approval is required
      should be by way of originating summons issuing out
      of the Family Division of the High Court.

    2. The applicant should normally be those responsible for
      the care of the patient or those intending to carry
      out the treatment, if it is approved.

    3. The patient must always be a party and should
      normally be a respondent. In cases in which the
      patient is a respondent the patient's guardian ad litem
      should normally be the Official Solicitor. In any
      cases in which the Official Solicitor is not either the
      next friend or the guardian ad litem of the patient or
      an applicant he shall be a respondent.

    4. With a view to protecting the patient's privacy, but
      subject always to the judge's discretion, the hearing
      will be in chambers, but the decision and the reasons
      for that decision will be given in open court.

    "As the procedure adopted in this case accorded with what
    at the time was thought to be appropriate and as the judge
    investigated the matter fully and reached a decision, the
    wisdom of which no one seeks to challenge, I would dismiss
    the appeal."

    Neill L.J. said, at pp. 42-43:

    "There are, however, some operations where the intervention
    of a court is most desirable if not essential. In this
    category I would place operations for sterilisation and organ
    transplant operations where the incapacitated patient is to
    be the donor. The performance of these operations should
    be subject to outside scrutiny. The lawfulness of the
    operation will depend of course on the question whether it

    - 11 -

    is necessary or not, but in my view it should become
    standard practice for the approval of the court to be
    obtained before an operation of this exceptional kind is
    carried out. Thus it is of the greatest importance to
    guard against any tendency for operations for sterilsation to
    be performed as a matter of convenience or merely to ease
    the burden of those who are responsible for looking after
    the patient. Each case needs to be looked at with especial
    care to ensure that the operation is indeed in the best
    interests of the patient.

    "I consider that a special form of procedure should be
    provided so that the matter can be brought before the court
    in the simplest way possible. A claim for a declaration
    under R.S.C., Ord. 15, r. 16 is not a satisfactory form of
    procedure because, if the claim were unopposed, as it often
    would be, the proceedings would be open to the technical
    objections that declarations are not in the ordinary way
    made by consent nor where the defendant or respondent has
    asserted no contrary claim. Nevertheless, the purpose of
    the application to the court will be to satisfy the court that
    the operation which is to be performed will be necessary
    and lawful and the court's approval will be sought on this
    basis. If the court is so satisfied its decision will provide a
    safeguard for those who carry out the operation and an
    assurance to the public that the facts have been fully
    investigated in a court of law. If the court is not so
    satisfied, its approval will not be given and the operation
    will not go ahead. Of course, if there was any possibility
    that the operation was going to be proceeded with after
    approval had been withheld - which would be extremely
    unlikely - the court could grant an injunction. It may be
    that the most convenient method of prescribing the
    appropriate form of procedure will be by way of a new rule
    under R.S.C,, Ord. 80 which is concerned with proceedings
    relating to those under a disability.

    "I have had the advantage of reading in draft the judgment
    of Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. I agree with his
    proposals as to how the proceedings should be constituted
    and heard."

    Butler-Sloss L.J. said, at pp. 55-56:

    "In my judgment, a decision as to sterilisation of a person
    under a disability ought not to be left entirely to the
    decision of the family and the medical profession alone.
    Public policy requires that there should be imposed the
    supervision of the courts in so important and delicate a
    decision.

    "In the previous cases . . . and in the present appeal the
    mechanism has been by declaration under R.S.C., Ord. 15, r.
    16. I agree that this is not an appropriate procedure. A
    declaration cannot alter the existing position and the
    granting of it at first instance may have limited efficacy in
    any subsequent litigation. The court by a declaration alone
    cannot give approval. The reverse application, an injunction,
    is also limited in its usefulness and, other than the Official

    - 12 -

    Solicitor if notified, there may be no one with an interest
    available to apply for it.

    "There is at present no mechanism providing for the
    approval of the court in the present case. It does, however,
    exist in the sphere of property by R.S.C., Ord. 80 for
    persons under a disbility and by analogy I see no reason in
    principle why a rule should not be framed to prescribe such
    a procedure. I respectfully agree with Lord Donaldson of
    Lymington M.R. as to the procedure that he has set out in
    his judgment and the participation of the Official Solicitor.

    "Such a procedure is needed in those operations coming
    within the special category which includes sterilisation, in
    the public interest, in order to demonstrate that the
    operation will or will not be lawful and to give or withhold
    the approval of the court."

    My Lords, as I understand the judgments of all three
    members of the Court of Appeal, they took the same view with
    regard to the involvement of the court in a case such as F. as I
    expressed earlier: namely, that, although such involvement is not
    strictly necessary as a matter of law, it is highly desirable as a
    matter of good practice. They went on, however, to say that the
    court's involvement should take the form of giving or refusing its
    approval to the sterilisation operation proposed. They further
    considered that the procedure to be used for the making and
    determination of an application for approval could conveniently be
    prescribed by a new rule under R.S.C., Ord. 80.

    I recognise that such a form of proceeding, if it were open
    to be adopted, would provide an admirable solution to the
    procedural problem which arises. With respect to the Court of
    Appeal, however, I cannot see how or on what basis the High
    Court, or any court or judge, can have jurisdiction to approve or
    disapprove a proposed operation. If the old parens patriae
    jurisdiction were still available with respect to persons of unsound
    mind, as it is with respect to minors who are wards, and if its
    exercise could be conferred on the judges of the High Court,
    Family Division, in the same way as the wardship jurisdiction has
    been conferred on them, there would be no difficulty. For the
    reasons which I gave earlier, however, the parens patriae
    jurisdiction with respect to adults of unsound mind no longer
    exists, and if that jurisdiction, or something comparable with it, is
    to be re-created, then it must be for the legislature and not for
    the courts to do the re-creating. Rules of Court can only, as a
    matter of law, prescribe the practice and procedure to be followed
    by the court when it is exercising a jurisdiction which already
    exists. They cannot confer jurisdiction, and, if they purported to
    do so, they would be ultra vires.

    In my opinion, therefore, a jurisdiction to approve or
    disapprove an operation, which the Court of Appeal considered to
    be available to the High Court, and appropriate to be exercised in
    the present case, does not exist.

    I turn, fourthly and lastly, to the jurisdiction to make
    declarations. I do not think that it is right to describe this
    jurisdiction as being "under R.S.C., Ord. 15, r. 16." The

    - 13 -

    jurisdiction is part of the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court,
    and the rule does no more than say that there is no procedural
    objection to an action being brought for a declaration whether any
    other kind of relief is asked for or available or not.

    There can, in my view, be no doubt that the High Court has
    jurisdiction, in a case like the present one, to make a declaration
    with regard to the lawfulness of an operation for sterilisation
    proposed to be carried out. As appears, however, from the
    passages in the judgments of the three members of the Court of
    Appeal which I set out earlier, they all concluded that procedure
    by way of declaration, though used in the present case and three
    previous cases similar to it, was not a satisfactory procedure to be
    adopted. Their grounds of objection were these. First, that a
    declaration changes nothing (Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. at
    pp. 21-22 and Butler-Sloss L.J. at p. 56). Secondly, that an
    application for a declaration might be unopposed and it was not
    the ordinary practice to grant declarations by consent or where
    there is no contrary claim (Neill L.J. at p. 42). Thirdly, that the
    public interest requires that the court should give express approval
    to a proposed operation and a declaration does not have that
    effect (Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. at p. 22, Neill L.J. at
    p. 43 and Butler-Sloss L.J. at p. 56). Fourthly, that a declaration
    granted at first instance may have limited efficacy in any
    subsequent litigation (Butler-Sloss L.J. at p. 56).

    With respect to all three members of the Court of Appeal, I
    do not consider that these objections are well founded. The first
    objection, that a declaration changes nothing would be valid if the
    substantive law were that a proposed operation could not lawfully
    be performed without the prior approval of the court. As I
    indicated earlier, however, that is not, in my view the substantive
    law, nor did the Court of Appeal, as I understand their judgments,
    hold that it was. The substantive law is that a proposed operation
    is lawful if it is in the best interests of the patient, and unlawful
    if it is not. What is required from the court, therefore, is not an
    order giving approval to the operation, so as to make lawful that
    which would otherwise be unlawful. What is required from the
    court is rather an order which establishes by judicial process (the
    "third opinion" so aptly referred to by Lord Donaldson of
    Lymington M.R.) whether the proposed operation is in the best
    interests of the patient and therefore lawful, or not in the
    patient's best interests and therefore unlawful.

    The second objection, that the application for a declaration
    might be unopposed and it is not the ordinary practice to grant
    declarations by consent or where there is no contrary claim, would
    only be valid in the absence of appropriate rules of procedure
    governing an application of the kind under discussion. The same
    objection could be raised against the procedure by way of
    application for approval of the proposed operation favoured by the
    Court of Appeal, in the absence of rules of procedure such as
    those propounded by Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. and agreed
    to by Neill and Butler-Sloss L.JJ. I accept, of course, that no
    such rules of procedure have so far been made. But even without
    them, there would have to be a summons for directions, preferably
    before a judge, and he could be relied on to ensure that the
    application was not unopposed, and that all necessary evidence,
    both for and against the proposed operation, were adduced before
    the court at the hearing.


    - 14 -The third objection, that the public interest requires that
    the court should give express approval to a proposed operation and
    that a declaration does not have that effect appears to be largely
    semantic. By that I mean that, whichever of the two forms of
    procedure, if both were available, were to be used, the nature of
    the inquiry which would have to be made by the court, and of the
    reasoned decision which it would be obliged to give after carrying
    out that inquiry, would be substantially the same.

    The fourth objection, that a declaration granted at first
    instance may have limited efficacy in any subsequent litigation was
    not the subject matter of any argument before your Lordships.
    My provisional view is that, whatever procedure were to be used,
    only the parties to the proceedings and their privies would be
    bound by, or could rely on, the decision made. In practice,
    however, I think that that would be enough.

    For the reasons which I have given, I am of opinion that,
    having regard to the present limitations on the jurisdiction of the
    court, by which I mean its inability to exercise the parens patriae
    jurisdiction with respect to adults of unsound mind, the procedure
    by way of declaration is, in principle, an appropriate and
    satisfactory procedure to be used in a case of this kind.

    (3) Procedure to be used when applying for a declaration

    The Court of Appeal, as I indicated earlier, considered that
    the correct form of proceeding in a case of this kind was an
    application to the court for approval of the proposed operation.
    On that basis, as appears from a part of the judgment of Lord
    Donaldson of Lymington M.R. which I quoted earlier, he formulated
    certain directions numbered (1) to (4) (with which both Neill and
    Butler-Sloss L.JJ. agreed) to govern such applications pending the
    making of appropriate amendments to R.S.C., Ord. 80, by the
    Supreme Court Rule Committee. On the basis of my conclusion
    that the correct form of proceeding is an application for a
    declaration, it seems to me that, subject to certain alterations in
    the wording of directions (1) and (2), those directions would be
    equally appropriate to the latter kind of proceeding. I would alter
    directions (1) and (2) so as to read:-

    "(1) Applications for a declaration that a proposed
    operation on or medical treatment for a patient can lawfully
    be carried out despite the inability of such patient to
    consent thereto should be by way of originating summons
    issuing out of the Family Division of the High Court.

    (2) The applicant should normally be those responsible for
    the care of the patient or those intending to carry out the
    proposed operation or other treatment, if it is declared to
    be lawful."

    I would leave directions (3) and (4) as they are.

    Counsel for the intervener, the Mental Health Act
    Commission for England and Wales, invited your Lordships to say
    that further and more detailed directions with regard to evidence
    and other matters should be added to directions (1) to (4) above.

    - 15 -

    In my opinion there will, in cases of this kind, have to be a
    summons for directions heard by a judge, and it should be left to
    him to decide on the hearing of such summons, whether any, and,
    if so what, further and more detailed directions should be given in
    the particular case before him.

    I consider also that further consideration needs to be given,
    first, to the precise terms in which a declaration should be
    granted, and, secondly, to the question whether any order
    supplementary to the declaration should be made.

    The form of order and declaration made by Scott Baker J.
    in the present case was this: "It is ordered and declared that
    under the Rules of the Supreme Court Ord., 15, r. 16 the
    sterilisation of the plaintiff would not amount to an unlawful act
    by reason only of the absence of the plaintiff's consent." In my
    view, three changes in the form of the order should be made.
    First, for the reasons which I gave earlier, I think that the
    reference to R.S.C., Ord. 15, r. 16 is unnecessary and should be
    omitted. Secondly, I think that the declaration should be amplified
    in two ways: (a) to show the finding of fact on the foundation of
    which it is made; and (b) to make it clear that it is made on the
    basis of existing circumstances only. Thirdly, I think that
    provision should be made for the possibility of a change in the
    existing circumstances occurring before the declaration is acted
    upon. Taking account of these three matters I consider that the
    order should be in the following form, or something broadly similar
    to it:

    "(a) It is declared that the operation of sterilisation
    proposed to be performed on the plaintiff being in the
    existing circumstances in her best interests can
    lawfully be performed on her despite her inability to
    consent to it.

    "(b) It is ordered that in the event of a material change
    in the existing circumstances occurring before the
    said operation has been performed any party shall
    have liberty to apply for such further or other
    declaration or order as may be just."

    Your Lordships were referred by counsel in the course of
    the hearing of the appeal to the way in which the problem raised
    in this case has been dealt with in other countries, whose legal
    systems were originally derived, to a large exent at any rate, from
    the common law of England. These countries were the United
    States of America, Canada and Australia, and a large file of
    reported cases decided in them was made available, to some of
    which specific reference was made. My Lords, the material so
    supplied was of compelling interest, and it is right to express
    gratitude to those concerned for the industry displayed in making
    it available. In my view, however, the way in which the problem
    has been dealt with in those other countries does not in the end
    assist your Lordships to any great extent in the determination of
    this appeal. This is because it is clear that, under their legal
    systems, the parens patriae jurisdiction with respect to persons of
    unsound mind is still alive and available for exercise by their
    courts. It follows that those courts have powers to deal with the
    problem concerned which are, unfortunately as I think, denied to

    - 16 -

    the courts here. In these circumstances I do not consider that it
    would serve any useful purpose to examine and analyse this
    extensive body of American, Canadian and Australian law, and I
    trust that my omission to do so will not be regarded as indicating
    disrespect of any kind toward the legal systems of those countries.

    There is one further matter with which I think that it is
    necessary to deal. That is the standard which the court should
    apply in deciding whether a proposed operation is or is not in the
    best interests of the patient. With regard to this Scott Baker J.
    said, at p. 10 of the transcript:

    "I do not think they [the doctors] are liable in battery
    where they are acting in good faith and reasonably in the
    best interests of their patients. I doubt whether the test is
    very different from that for negligence."

    This was a reference to the test laid down in Bolam v. Friern
    Hospital Management Committee
    [1957] 1 W.L.R. 582, namely, that
    a doctor will not be negligent if he establishes that he acted in
    accordance with a practice accepted at the time by a responsible
    body of medical opinion skilled in the particular form of treatment
    in question.

    All three members of the Court of Appeal considered that
    the Bolam test was unsufficiently stringent for deciding whether an
    operation or other medical treatment was in a patient's best
    interests. Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. said, at pp. 18-19 of
    the transcript:

    "Just as the law and the courts rightly pay great, but not
    decisive, regard to accepted professional wisdom in relation
    to the duty of care in the law of medical negligence (the
    Bolam test), so they equally would have regard to such
    wisdom in relation to decisions whether or not and how to
    treat incompetent patients in the context of the law of
    trespass to the person. However, both the medical
    profession and the courts have to keep the special status of
    such a patient in the forefront of their minds. The ability
    of the ordinary adult patient to exercise a free choice in
    deciding whether to accept or to refuse medical treatment
    and to choose between treatments is not to be dismissed as
    desirable but inessential. It is a crucial factor in relation
    to all medical treatment. If it is necessarily absent,
    whether temporarily in an emergency situation or
    permanently in a case of mental disability, other things
    being equal there must be greater caution in deciding
    whether to treat and, if so, how to treat, although I do not
    agree that this extends to limiting doctors to treatment
    upon the necessity for which there are 'no two views' (per
    Wood J. in T. v. T. [1988] Fam. 52, 62). There will always
    or usually be a minority view and this approach, if strictly
    applied, would often rule out all treatment. On the other
    hand, the existence of a significant minority view would
    constitute a serious contra-indication."

    Neill L.J. said, at pp. 40-41:

    - 17 -

    "I have therefore come to the conclusion that, if the
    operation is necessary and the proper safeguards are
    observed, the performance of a serious operation, including
    an operation for sterilisation, on a person who by reason of
    a lack of mental capacity is unable to give his or her
    consent is not a trespass to the person or otherwise
    unlawful.

    "It therefore becomes necessary to consider what is meant
    by 'a necessary operation.' In seeking to define the
    circumstances in which an operation can properly be carried
    out Scott Baker J. said this:

    'I do not think they are liable in battery where they
    are acting in good faith and reasonably in the best
    interests of their patients. I doubt whether the test
    is very different from that for negligence.'

    "With respect, I do not consider that this test is sufficiently
    stringent. A doctor may defeat a claim in negligence if he
    establishes that he acted in accordance with a practice
    accepted at the time as proper by a responsible body of
    medical opinion skilled in the particular form of treatment
    in question. This is the test laid down in Bolam v. Friern
    Hospital Management Committee
    [1957] 1 W.L.R. 582. But
    to say that it is not negligent to carry out a particular
    form of treatment does not mean that that treatment is
    necessary. I would define necessary in this context as that
    which the general body of medical opinion in the particular
    specialty would consider to be in the best interests of the
    patient in order to maintain the health and to secure the
    well-being of the patient. One cannot expect unanimity but
    it should be possible to say of an operation which is
    necessary in the relevant sense that it would be
    unreasonable in the opinion of most experts in the field not
    to make the operation available to the patient. One must
    consider the alternatives to an operation and the dangers or
    disadvantages to which the patient may be exposed if no
    action is taken. The question becomes: What action does
    the patient's health and welfare require?"

    Butler-Sloss L.J., at p. 57, agreed with Neill L.J.

    With respect to the Court of Appeal, I do not agree that
    the Bolam test is inapplicable to cases of performing operations
    on, or giving other treatment to, adults incompetent to give
    consent. In order that the performance of such operations on, and
    the giving of such other treatment to, such adults should be
    lawful, they must be in their best interests. If doctors were to be
    required, in deciding whether an operation or other treatment was
    in the best interests of adults incompetent to give consent, to
    apply some test more stringent than the Bolam test, the result
    would be that that such adults would, in some circumstances at
    least, be deprived of the benefit of medical treatment which
    adults competent to give consent would enjoy. In my opinion it
    would be wrong for the law, in its concern to protect such adults,
    to produce such a result.

    - 18 -

    For the reasons which I have given I would dismiss the
    appeal, subject to varying the order of Scott Baker J. by
    substituting for the declaration made by him the amplified
    declaration and further order which I formulated earlier.

    LORD GRIFFITHS

    My Lords,

    The argument in this appeal has ranged far and wide in
    search of a measure to protect those who cannot protect
    themselves from the insult of an unnecessary sterilisation. Every
    judge who has considered the problem has recognised that there
    should be some control mechanism imposed upon those who have
    the care of infants or mentally incompetent women of child
    bearing age to prevent or at least inhibit them from sterilising the
    women without approval of the High Court. I am, I should make
    it clear, speaking now and hereafter of an operation for
    sterilisation which is proposed not for the treatment of diseased
    organs but an operation on a woman with healthy reproductive
    organs in order to avoid the risk of pregancy. The reasons for the
    anxiety about a sterilisation which it is proposed should be carried
    out for other than purely medical reasons, such as the removal of
    the ovaries to prevent the spread of cancer, are readily
    understandable and are shared throughout the common law world.

    We have been taken through many authorities in the United
    States, Australia and Canada which stress the danger that
    sterilisation may be proposed in circumstances which are not truly
    in the best interests of the woman but for the convenience of
    those who are charged with her care. In the United States and
    Australia the solution has been to declare, that in the case of a
    woman who either because of infancy or mental incompetence
    cannot give her consent, the operation may not be performed
    without the consent of the court. In Canada the Supreme Court
    has taken an even more extreme stance and declared that
    sterilisation is unlawful unless performed for therapeutic reasons,
    which I understand to be as a life saving measure or for the
    prevention of the spread of disease: see In re Eve (1986) 31 D.L.R.
    (4th) 1. This extreme position was rejected by this House In re B.
    (A Minor) (Wardship: Sterilisation)
    [1988] A.C. 199 which recognised
    that an operation might be in the best interests of a woman even
    though carried out in order to protect her from the trauma of a
    pregnancy which she could not understand and with which she
    could not cope. Nevertheless Lord Templeman stressed that such
    an operation should not be undertaken without the approval of a
    High Court judge of the Family Division. In this country the case
    of In re D. (A Minor) (Wardship: Sterilisation) [1976] Fam. 185
    stands as a stark warning of the danger of leaving the decision to
    sterilise in the hands of those having the the immediate care of
    the woman, even when they genuinely believe that they are acting
    in her best interests.

    I have had the advantage of reading the speeches of Lord
    Brandon of Oakbrook and Lord Goff of Chieveley and there is

    - 19 -

    much therein with which I agree. I agree that those charged with
    the care of the mentally incompetent are protected from any
    criminal or tortious action based on lack of consent. Whether one
    arrives at this conclusion by applying a principle of "necessity" as
    do Lord Goff of Chieveley and Lord Brandon of Oakbrook or by
    saying that it is in the public interest as did Neill L.J. in the
    Court of Appeal, appear to me to be inextricably interrelated
    conceptual justifications for the humane development of the
    common law. Why is it necessary that the mentally incompetent
    should be given treatment to which they lack the capacity to
    consent? The answer must surely be because it is in the public
    interest that it should be so.


    In a civilised society the mentally incompetent must be
    provided with medical and nursing care and those who look after
    them must do their best for them. Stated in legal terms the
    doctor who undertakes responsibility for the treatment of a mental
    patient who is incapable of giving consent to treatment must give
    the treatment that he considers to be in the best interests of his
    patient, and the standard of care required of the doctor will be
    that laid down in Bolam v. Friern Hospital Management Committee
    [1957] 1 W.L.R. 582. The doctor will however be subject to the
    specific statutory constraints on treatment for mental disorder
    provided by Part IV of the Mental Health Act 1983. Certain
    radical treatments such as surgical destruction of brain tissue
    cannot be performed without the consent of the patient and if the
    patient is incapable of giving consent the operation cannot be
    performed, however necessary it may be considered by the doctors.
    Other less radical treatment can only be given with the consent of
    the patient, or if the patient will not or cannot consent, on the
    authority of a second medical opinion. There are however no
    statutory provisions that deal with sterilisation.

    I agree with Lord Brandon's analysis of the provisions of the
    Mental Health Act 1983 and in particular that in its context the
    expression "the affairs of patients" in Part VII cannot be construed
    as including medical treatment and thus providing a substitute for
    the parens patriae jurisdiction previously vested in the Lord
    Chancellor and the judges of the High Court, Chancery Division,
    which was removed by warrant under Sign Manual dated 1
    November 1960, contemporaneously with the passing of the Mental
    Health Act 1959.

    Finally I agree that an action for a declaration is available
    as a mechanism by which a proposed sterilisation may be
    investigated to ensure that it is in the woman's best interests.

    But I cannot agree that it is satisfactory to leave this grave
    decision with all its social implications in the hands of those
    having the care of the patient with only the expectation that they
    will have the wisdom to obtain a declaration of lawfulness before
    the operation is performed. In my view the law ought to be that
    they must obtain the approval of the court before they sterilise a
    woman incapable of giving consent and that it is unlawful to
    sterilise without that consent. I believe that it is open to your
    Lordships to develop a common law rule to this effect. Although
    the general rule is that the individual is the master of his own
    fate the judges through the common law have, in the public
    interest, imposed certain contraints on the harm that people may

    - 20 -

    consent to being inflicted on their own bodies. Thus although
    boxing is a legal sport a bare knuckle prize fight in which more
    grievous injury may be inflicted is unlawful (Reg. v. Coney (1882)
    8 Q.B.D. 534), and so is fighting which may result in actual bodily
    harm: see Attorney General's Reference (No. 6 of 1980) [1981]
    Q.B. 715. So also is it unlawful to consent to the infliction of
    serious injury on the body in the course of the practice of sexual
    perversion Rex v. Donovan [1934] 2 K.B. 498. Suicide was
    unlawful at common law until Parliament intervened by the Suicide
    Act 1961.

    The common law has, in the public interest, been developed
    to forbid the infliction of injury on those who are fully capable of
    consenting to it. The time has now come for a further
    development to forbid, again in the public interest, the sterilisation
    of a woman with healthy reproductive organs who, either through
    mental incompetence or youth, is incapable of giving her fully
    informed consent unless such an operation has been enquired into
    and sanctioned by the High Court. Such a common law rule would
    provide a more effective protection than the exercise of parens
    patriae jurisdiction which is dependent upon some interested party
    coming forward to invoke the jurisdiction of the court. The
    parens patriae jurisdiction is in any event now only available in
    the case of minors through their being made wards of court. I
    would myself declare that on grounds of public interest an
    operation to sterilise a woman incapable of giving consent either
    on grounds of age or mental incapacity is unlawful if performed
    without the consent of the High Court. I fully recognise that in
    so doing I would be making new law. However the need for such
    a development has been identified in a number of recent cases and
    in the absence of any parliamentary response to the problem it is
    my view that the judges can and should accept responsibility to
    recognise the need and to adapt the common law to meet it. If
    such a development did not meet with public approval it would
    always be open to Parliament to reverse it or to alter it by
    perhaps substituting for the opinion of the High Court judge the
    second opinion of another doctor as urged by counsel for the
    Mental Health Tribunal.

    As I know that your Lordships consider that it is not open
    to you to follow the course I would take I must content myself by
    accepting, but as second best, the procedure by way of declaration
    proposed by Lord Brandon of Oakbrook and agree to the dismissal
    of this appeal.

    LORD GOFF OF CHIEVELEY

    My Lords,

    The question in this case is concerned with the lawfulness
    of a proposed operation of sterilisation upon the plaintiff F., a
    woman of 36 years of age, who by reason of her mental incapacity
    is disabled from giving her consent to the operation. It is well
    established that, as a general rule, the performance of a medical
    operation upon a person without his or her consent is unlawful, as
    constituting both the crime of battery and the tort of trespass to

    - 21 -

    the person. Furthermore, before Scott Baker J. and the Court of
    Appeal, it was common ground between the parties that there was
    no power in the court to give consent on behalf of F. to the
    proposed operation of sterilisation, or to dispense with the need
    for such consent. This was because it was common ground that
    the parens patriae jurisdiction in respect of persons suffering from
    mental incapacity, formerly vested in the courts by Royal Warrant
    under the Sign Manual, had ceased to be so vested by revocation
    of the last warrant on 1 November 1960; and further that there
    there was no statutory provision which could be invoked in its
    place. Before your Lordships, having regard to the importance of
    the matter, both those propositions were nevertheless subjected to
    close scrutiny, and Mr. Munby (for the Official Solicitor) deployed,
    with great ability, such arguments as can be advanced that the
    parens patriae jurisdiction is still vested in the courts as a matter
    of common law, and that the necessary statutory jurisdiction is to
    be found in Part VII of the Mental Health Act 1983, and in
    particular in sections 93, 95 and 96 of the Act. However, with
    the assistance of counsel, I for my part have become satisfied that
    the concessions made below on these points were rightly made.
    On both points I find myself to be respectfully in agreement with
    the opinion expressed by my noble and learned friend, Lord
    Brandon of Oakbrook, and I do not think it necessary for me to
    add anything.

    It follows that, as was recognised in the courts below, if
    the operation upon F. is to be justified, it can only be justified on
    the applicable principles of common law. The argument of counsel
    revealed the startling fact that there is no English authority on
    the question whether as a matter of common law (and if so in
    what circumstances) medical treatment can lawfully be given to a
    person who is disabled by mental incapacity from consenting to it.
    Indeed, the matter goes further; for a comparable problem can
    arise in relation to persons of sound mind who are, for example,
    rendered unconscious in an accident or rendered speechless by a
    catastrophic stroke. All such persons may require medical
    treatment and, in some cases, surgical operations. All may require
    nursing care. In the case of mentally disordered persons, they
    may require care of a more basic kind - dressing, feeding, and so
    on - to assist them in their daily life, as well as routine
    treatment by doctors and dentists. It follows that, in my opinion,
    it is not possible to consider in isolation the lawfulness of the
    proposed operation of sterilisation in the present case. It is
    necessary first to ascertain the applicable common law principles
    and then to consider the question of sterilisation against the
    background of those principles.

    Mr. Munby, for the Official Solicitor, advanced the extreme
    argument that, in the absence of a parens patriae or statutory
    jurisdiction, no such treatment or care of the kind I have
    described can lawfully be given to a mentally disordered person
    who is unable to consent to it. This is indeed a startling
    proposition, which must also exclude treatment or care to persons
    rendered unconscious or unable to speak by accident or illness.
    For centuries, treatment and care must have been given to such
    persons, without any suggestion that it was unlawful to do so. I
    find it very difficult to believe that the common law is so
    deficient as to be incapable of providing for so obvious a need.
    Even so, it is necessary to examine the point as a matter of
    principle.

    - 22 -

    I start with the fundamental principle, now long established,
    that every person's body is inviolate. As to this, I do not wish to
    depart from what I myself said in the judgment of the Divisional
    Court in Collins v. Wilcock [1984] 1 W.L.R. 1172, and in particular
    from the statement, at p. 1177, that the effect of this principle is
    that everybody is protected not only against physical injury but
    against any form of physical molestation.

    Of course, as a general rule physical interference with
    another person's body is lawful if he consents to it; though in
    certain limited circumstances the public interest may require that
    his consent is not capable of rendering the act lawful. There are
    also specific cases where physical interference without consent
    may not be unlawful - chastisement of children, lawful arrest,
    self-defence, the prevention of crime, and so on. As I pointed out
    in Collins v. Wilcock [1984] 1 W.L.R. 1172, 1177, a broader
    exception has been created to allow for the exigencies of everyday
    life - jostling in a street or some other crowded place, social
    contact at parties, and such like. This exception has been said to
    be founded on implied consent, since those who go about in public
    places, or go to parties, may be taken to have impliedly consented
    to bodily contact of this kind. Today this rationalisation can be
    regarded as artificial; and in particular, it is difficult to impute
    consent to those who, by reason of their youth or mental disorder,
    are unable to give their consent. For this reason, I consider it
    more appropriate to regard such cases as falling within a general
    exception embracing all physical contact which is generally
    acceptable in the ordinary conduct of everyday life.

    In the old days it used to be said that, for a touching of
    another's person to amount to a battery, it had to be a touching
    "in anger" (see Cole v. Turner (1704) 6 Mod. 149 per Holt C.J.);
    and it has recently been said that the touching must be "hostile"
    to have that effect (see Wilson v. Pringle [1987] QB 237, 253). I
    respectfully doubt whether that is correct. A prank that gets out
    of hand; an over-friendly slap on the back; surgical treatment by a
    surgeon who mistakenly thinks that the patient has consented to it
    - all these things may transcend the bounds of lawfulness, without
    being characterised as hostile. Indeed the suggested qualification
    is difficult to reconcile with the principle that any touching of
    another's body is, in the absence of lawful excuse, capable of
    amounting to a battery and a trespass. Furthermore, in the case
    of medical treatment, we have to bear well in mind the libertarian
    principle of self-determination which, to adopt the words of
    Cardozo J. (in Schloendorff v. Society of New York Hospital (1913)
    105 N.E. 92, 93) recognises that:

    "Every human being of adult years and sound mind has a
    right to determine what shall be done with his own body,
    and a surgeon who performs an operation without the
    patient's consent commits an assault."

    This principle has been reiterated in more recent years by Lord
    Reid in S. v. McC. (orse. S.) and M. (D.S. intervened; W. v. W.
    [1972] A.C. 24, 43.

    It is against this background that I turn to consider the
    question whether, and if so when, medical treatment or care of a

    - 23 -

    mentally disordered person who is, by reason of his incapacity,
    incapable of giving his consent, can be regarded as lawful. As is
    recognised in Cardozo J.'s statement of principle, and elsewhere
    (see e.g. Sidaway v. Board of Governors of the Bethlem Royal
    Hospital and the Maudsley Hospital
    [1985] AC 871, 882 per Lord
    Scarman), some relaxation of the law is required to accommodate
    persons of unsound mind. In Wilson v. Pringle, the Court of
    Appeal considered that treatment or care of such persons may be
    regarded as lawful, as falling within the exception relating to
    physical contact which is generally acceptable in the ordinary
    conduct of everyday life. Again, I am with respect unable to
    agree. That exception is concerned with the ordinary events of
    everyday life - jostling in public places and such like - and affects
    all persons, whether or not they are capable of giving their
    consent. Medical treatment - even treatment for minor ailments -
    does not fall within that category of events. The general rule is
    that consent is necessary to render such treatment lawful. If such
    treatment administered without consent is not to be unlawful, it
    has to be justified on some other principle.

    Upon what principle can medical treatment be justified when
    given without consent? We are searching for a principle upon
    which, in limited circumstances, recognition may be given to a
    need, in the interests of the patient, that treatment should be
    given to him in circumstances where he is (temporarily or
    permanently) disabled from consenting to it. It is this criterion of
    a need which points to the principle of necessity as providing
    justification.

    That there exists in the common law a principle of
    necessity which may justify action which would otherwise be
    unlawful is not in doubt. But historically the principle has been
    seen to be restricted to two groups of cases, which have been
    called cases of public necessity and cases of private necessity.
    The former occurred when a man interfered with another man's
    property in the public interest - for example (in the days before
    we could dial 999 for the fire brigade) the destruction of another
    man's house to prevent the spread of a catastrophic fire, as indeed
    occurred in the Great Fire of London in 1666. The latter cases
    occurred when a man interfered with another's property to save
    his own person or property from imminent danger - for example,
    when he entered upon his neighbour's land without his consent, in
    order to prevent the spread of fire onto his own land.

    There is, however, a third group of cases, which is also
    properly described as founded upon the principle of necessity and
    which is more pertinent to the resolution of the problem in the
    present case. These cases are concerned with action taken as a
    matter of necessity to assist another person without his consent.
    To give a simple example, a man who seizes another and forcibly
    drags him from the path of an oncoming vehicle, thereby saving
    him from injury or even death, commits no wrong. But there are
    many emanations of this principle, to be found scattered through
    the books. These are concerned not only with the preservation of
    the life or health of the assisted person, but also with the
    preservation of his property (sometimes an animal, sometimes an
    ordinary chattel) and even to certain conduct on his behalf in the
    administration of his affairs. Where there is a pre-existing
    relationship between the parties, the intervenor is usually said to

    - 24 -

    act as an agent of necessity on behalf of the principal in whose
    interests he acts, and his action can often, with not too much
    artificiality, be referred to the pre-existing relationship between
    them. Whether the intervenor may be entitled either to
    reimbursement or to remuneration raises separate questions which
    are not relevant in the present case.

    We are concerned here with action taken to preserve the
    life, health or well-being of another who is unable to consent to
    it. Such action is sometimes said to be justified as arising from
    an emergency; in Prosser and Keeton on Torts, 5th edition, p. 117,
    the action is said to be privileged by the emergency. Doubtless,
    in the case of a person of sound mind, there will ordinarily have
    to be an emergency before such action taken without consent can
    be lawful; for otherwise there would be an opportunity to
    communicate with the assisted person and to seek his consent.
    But this is not always so; and indeed the historical origins of the
    principle of necessity do not point to emergency as such as
    providing the criterion of lawful intervention without consent. The
    old Roman doctrine of negotiorum gestio presupposed not so much
    an emergency as a prolonged absence of the dominus from home
    as justifying intervention by the gestor to administer his affairs.
    The most ancient group of cases in the common law, concerned
    with action taken by the master of a ship in distant parts in the
    interests of the shipowner, likewise found its origin in the
    difficulty of communication with the owner over a prolonged
    period of time - a difficulty overcome today by modern means of
    communication. In those cases, it was said that there had to be
    an emergency before the master could act as agent of necessity;
    though the emergency could well be of some duration. But when
    a person is rendered incapable of communication either
    permanently or over a considerable period of time (through illness
    or accident or mental disorder), it would be an unusual use of
    language to describe the case as one of "permanent emergency" -
    if indeed such a state of affairs can properly be said to exist. In
    truth, the relevance of an emergency is that it may give rise to a
    necessity to act in the interests of the assisted person, without
    first obtaining his consent. Emergency is however not the
    criterion or even a pre-requisite; it is simply a frequent origin of
    the necessity which impels intervention. The principle is one of
    necessity, not of emergency.

    We can derive some guidance as to the nature of the
    principle of necessity from the cases on agency of necessity in
    mercantile law. When reading those cases, however, we have to
    bear in mind that it was there considered that (since there was a
    pre-existing relationship between the parties) there was a duty on
    the part of the agent to act on his principal's behalf in an
    emergency. From these cases it appears that the principle of
    necessity connotes that circumstances have arisen in which there is
    a necessity for the agent to act on his principal's behalf at a time
    when it is in practice not possible for him to obtain his principal's
    instructions so to do. In such cases, it has been said that the
    agent must act bona fide in the interests of his principal (see
    Prager v. Blatspiel Stamp & Heacock Ltd. [1924] 1 K.B. 566, 572
    per McCardie J.). A broader statement of the principle is to be
    found in the advice of the Privy Council delivered by Sir Montague
    Smith in Australasian Steam Navigation Co. v. Morse (1872) L.R. 4
    P.C 222, 230, in which he said:

    - 25 -

    "... when by the force of circumstances a man has the
    duty cast upon him of taking some action for another, and
    under that obligation, adopts the course which, to the
    judgment of a wise and prudent man, is apparently the best
    for the interest of the persons for whom he acts in a given
    emergency, it may properly be said of the course so taken,
    that it was, in a mercantile sense, necessary to take it."

    In a sense, these statements overlap. But from them can be
    derived the basic requirements, applicable in these cases of
    necessity, that, to fall within the principle, not only (1) must there
    be a necessity to act when it is not practicable to communicate
    with the assisted person, but also (2) the action taken must be
    such as a reasonable person would in all the circumstances take,
    acting in the best interests of the assisted person.

    On this statement of principle, I wish to observe that
    officious intervention cannot be justified by the principle of
    necessity. So intervention cannot be justified when another more
    appropriate person is available and willing to act; nor can it be
    justified when it is contrary to the known wishes of the assisted
    person, to the extent that he is capable of rationally forming such
    a wish. On the second limb of the principle, the introduction of
    the standard of a reasonable man should not in the present context
    be regarded as materially different from that of Sir Montague
    Smith's "wise and prudent man," because a reasonable man would,
    in the time available to him, proceed with wisdom and prudence
    before taking action in relation to another man's person or
    property without his consent. I shall have more to say on this
    point later. Subject to that, I hesitate at present to indulge in
    any greater refinement of the principle, being well aware of many
    problems which may arise in its application - problems which it is
    not necessary, for present purposes, to examine. But as a general
    rule, if the above criteria are fulfilled, interference with the
    assisted person's person or property (as the case may be) will not
    be unlawful. Take the example of a railway accident, in which
    injured passengers are trapped in the wreckage. It is this principle
    which may render lawful the actions of other citizens - railway
    staff, passengers or outsiders - who rush to give aid and comfort
    to the victims: the surgeon who amputates the limb of an
    unconscious passenger to free him from the wreckage; the
    ambulance man who conveys him to hospital; the doctors and
    nurses who treat him and care for him while he is still
    unconscious. Take the example of an elderly person who suffers a
    stroke which renders him incapable of speech or movement. It is
    by virtue of this principle that the doctor who treats him, the
    nurse who cares for him, even the relative or friend or neighbour
    who comes in to look after him, will commit no wrong when he or
    she touches his body.

    The two examples I have given illustrate, in the one case,
    an emergency, and in the other, a permanent or semi-permanent
    state of affairs. Another example of the latter kind is that of a
    mentally disordered person who is disabled from giving consent. I
    can see no good reason why the principle of necessity should not
    be applicable in his case as it is in the case of the victim of a
    stroke. Furthermore, in the case of a mentally disordered person,
    as in the case of a stroke victim, the permanent state of affairs
    calls for a wider range of care than may be requisite in an

    - 26 -

    emergency which arises from accidental injury. When the state of
    affairs is permanent, or semi-permanent, action properly taken to
    preserve the life, health or well-being of the assisted person may
    well transcend such measures as surgical operation or substantial
    medical treatment and may extend to include such humdrum
    matters as routine medical or dental treatment, even simple care
    such as dressing and undressing and putting to bed.

    The distinction I have drawn between cases of emergency,
    and cases where the state of affairs is (more or less) permanent,
    is relevant in another respect. We are here concerned with
    medical treatment, and I limit myself to cases of that kind.
    Where, for example, a surgeon performs an operation without his
    consent on a patient temporarily rendered unconscious in an
    accident, he should do no more than is reasonably required, in the
    best interests of the patient, before he recovers consciousness. I
    can see no practical difficulty arising from this requirement, which
    derives from the fact that the patient is expected before long to
    regain consciousness and can then be consulted about longer term
    measures. The point has however arisen in a more acute form
    where a surgeon, in the course of an operation, discovers some
    other condition which, in his opinion, requires operative treatment
    for which he has not received the patient's consent. In what
    circumstances he should operate forthwith, and in what
    circumstances he should postpone the further treatment until he
    has received the patient's consent, is a difficult matter which has
    troubled the Canadian Courts (see Marshall v. Curry [1933] 3
    D.L.R. 260, and Murray v. McMurchy [1949] 2 D.L.R. 442), but
    which it is not necessary for your Lordships to consider in the
    present case.

    But where the state of affairs is permanent or semi-
    permanent, as may be so in the case of a mentally disordered
    person, there is no point in waiting to obtain the patient's consent.
    The need to care for him is obvious; and the doctor must then act
    in the best interests of his patient, just as if he had received his
    patient's consent so to do. Were this not so, much useful
    treatment and care could, in theory at least, be denied to the
    unfortunate. It follows that, on this point, I am unable to accept
    the view expressed by Neill L.J. in the Court of Appeal, that the
    treatment must be shown to have been necessary. Moreover, in
    such a case, as my noble and learned friend Lord Brandon of
    Oakbrook has pointed out, a doctor who has assumed responsibility
    for the care of a patient may not only be treated as having the
    patient's consent to act, but may also be under a duty so to act.
    I find myself to be respectfully in agreement with Lord Donaldson
    of Lymington M.R., when he said:

    "I see nothing incongruous in doctors and others who have a
    caring responsibility being required, when acting in relation
    to an adult who is incompetent, to exercise a right of
    choice in exactly the same way as would the court or
    reasonable parents in relation to a child, making due
    allowance, of course, for the fact that the patient is not a
    child, and I am satisfied that that is what the law does in
    fact require."

    In these circumstances, it is natural to treat the deemed authority
    and the duty as interrelated. But I feel bound to express my

    - 27 -

    opinion that, in principle, the lawfulness of the doctor's action is,
    at least in its origin, to be found in the principle of necessity.
    This can perhaps be seen most clearly in cases where there is no
    continuing relationship between doctor and patient. The "doctor in
    the house" who volunteers to assist a lady in the audience who,
    overcome by the drama or by the heat in the theatre, has fainted
    away, is impelled to act by no greater duty than that imposed by
    his own Hippocratic oath. Furthermore, intervention can be
    justified in the case of a non-professional, as well as a
    professional, man or woman who has no pre-existing relationship
    with the assisted person - as in the case of a stranger who rushes
    to assist an injured man after an accident. In my opinion, it is
    the necessity itself which provides the justification for the
    intervention.

    I have said that the doctor has to act in the best interests
    of the assisted person. In the case of routine treatment of
    mentally disordered persons, there should be little difficulty in
    applying this principle. In the case of more serious treatment, I
    recognise that its application may create problems for the medical
    profession; however, in making decisions about treatment, the
    doctor must act in accordance with a responsible and competent
    body of relevant professional opinion, on the principles set down in
    Bolam v. Friern Hospital Management Committee [1957] 1 W.L.R.
    582. No doubt, in practice, a decision may involve others besides
    the doctor. It must surely be good practice to consult relatives
    and others who are concerned with the care of the patient,
    Sometimes, of course, consultation with a specialist or specialists
    will be required; and in others, especially where the decision
    involves more than a purely medical opinion, an inter-disciplinary
    team will in practice participate in the decision. It is very
    difficult, and would be unwise, for a court to do more than to
    stress that, for those who are involved in these important and
    sometimes difficult decisions, the over-riding consideration is that
    they should act in the best interests of the person who suffers
    from the misfortune of being prevented by incapacity from
    deciding for himself what should be done to his own body, in his
    own best interests.

    In the present case, your Lordships have to consider whether
    the foregoing principles apply in the case of a proposed operation
    of sterilisation upon an adult woman of unsound mind, or whether
    sterilisation is (perhaps with one or two other cases) to be placed
    in a separate category to which special principles apply. Again,
    Mr. Munby assisted your Lordships by deploying the argument that,
    in the absence of any parens patriae jurisdiction, sterilisation of an
    adult woman of unsound mind, who by reason of her mental
    incapacity is unable to consent, can never be lawful. He founded
    his submission upon a right of reproductive autonomy or right to
    control one's own reproduction, which necessarily involves the right
    not to be sterilised involuntarily; upon the fact that sterilisation
    involves irreversible interference with the patient's most important
    organs; upon the fact that it involves interference with organs
    which are functioning normally; upon the fact that sterilisation is
    a topic upon which medical views are often not unanimous; and
    upon the undesirability, in the case of a mentally disordered
    patient, of imposing a "rational" solution upon an incompetent
    patient. Having considered these submissions with care, I am of
    the opinion that neither singly nor as a whole do they justify the

    - 28 -

    conclusion for which Mr. Munby contended. Even so, while
    accepting that the principles which I have stated are applicable in
    the case of sterilisation, the matters relied upon by Mr. Munby
    provide powerful support for the conclusion that the application of
    those principles in such a case calls for special care. There are
    other reasons which support that conclusion. It appears, for
    example, from reported cases in the United States that there is a
    fear that those responsible for mental patients might (perhaps
    unwittingly) seek to have them sterilised as a matter of
    administrative convenience. Furthermore, the English case of In re
    D. (A Minor) (Wardship): Sterilisation)
    [1976] Fam. 185 provides a
    vivid illustration of the fact that a highly qualified medical
    practitioner, supported by a caring mother, may consider it right
    to sterilise a mentally retarded girl in circumstances which prove,
    on examination, not to require such an operation in the best
    interests of the girl. Matters such as these, coupled with the
    fundamental nature of the patient's organs with which it is
    proposed irreversibly to interfere, have prompted courts in the
    United States and in Australia to pronounce that, in the case of a
    person lacking the capacity to consent, such an operation should
    only be permitted with the consent of the court. Such decisions
    have of course been made by courts which have vested in them
    the parens patriae jurisdiction, and so have power, in the exercise
    of such jurisdiction, to impose such a condition. They are not
    directly applicable in this country, where that jurisdiction has been
    revoked; for that reason alone I do not propose to cite passages
    from the American and Australian cases although, like my noble
    and learned friend, Lord Brandon of Oakbrook, I have read the
    judgments with great respect and found them to be of compelling
    interest. I refer in particular to In re Grady (1981) 426 A. 2d.
    467 in the United States; and, in Australia, to the very full and
    impressive consideration of the matter by Nicholson C.J. in In re
    Jane,
    22 December 1988 (as yet unreported), who in particular
    stressed the importance of independent representation by some
    disinterested third party on behalf of the patient (there a minor).

    Although the parens patriae jurisdiction in the case of adults
    of unsound mind is no longer vested in courts in this country, the
    approach adopted by the courts in the United States and in
    Australia provides, in my opinion, strong support for the view that,
    as a matter of practice, the operation of sterilisation should not
    be performed on an adult person who lacks the capacity to consent
    to it without first obtaining the opinion of the court that the
    operation is, in the circumstances, in the best interests of the
    person concerned, by seeking a declaration that the operation is
    lawful. (I shall return later in this speech to the appropriateness
    of the declaratory remedy in cases such as these). In my opinion,
    that guidance should be sought in order to obtain an independent,
    objective and authoritative view on the lawfulness of the procedure
    in the particular circumstances of the relevant case, after a
    hearing at which it can be ensured that there is independent
    representation on behalf of the person upon whom it is proposed to
    perform the operation. This approach is consistent with the
    opinion expressed by Lord Templeman in In re B (A Minor)
    (Wardship: Sterilisation)
    [1988] A.C. 199, 205-206, that, in the
    case of a girl who is still a minor, sterilisation should not be
    performed upon her unless she has first been made a ward of
    court and the court has, in the exercise of its wardship
    jurisdiction, given its authority to such a step. He said:

    - 29 -

    "No one has suggested a more satisfactory tribunal or a
    more satisfactory method of reaching a decision which
    vitally concerns an individual but also involves principles of
    law, ethics and medical practice."

    I recognise that the requirement of a hearing before a court is
    regarded by some as capable of deterring certain medical
    practitioners from advocating the procedure of sterilisation; but I
    trust and hope that it may come to be understood that court
    procedures of this kind, conducted sensitively and humanely by
    judges of the Family Division, so far as possible and where
    appropriate in the privacy of chambers, are not to be feared by
    responsible practitioners.

    It was urged before your Lordships by Mr. Ouseley, on
    behalf of the Mental Health Act Commission (the Commission
    having been given leave to intervene in the proceedings), that a
    court vested with the responsibility of making a decision in such a
    case, having first ensured that an independent second opinion has
    been obtained from an appropriate consultant of the appropriate
    speciality, should not, if that second opinion supports the proposal
    that sterilisation should take place, exercise any independent
    judgment but should simply follow the opinion so expressed. For
    my part, I do not think that it is possible or desirable for a court
    so to exercise its jurisdiction. In all proceedings where expert
    opinions are expressed, those opinions are listened to with great
    respect; but, in the end, the validity of the opinion has to be
    weighed and judged by the court. This applies as much in cases
    where the opinion involves a question of judgment as it does in
    those where it is expressed on a purely scientific matter. For a
    court automatically to accept an expert opinion, simply because it
    is concurred in by another appropriate expert, would be a denial of
    the function of the court. Furthermore, the proposal of the
    Commission is impossible to reconcile with the American and
    Australian authorities which stress the need for a court decision
    after a hearing which involves separate representation on behalf of
    the person upon whom it is proposed to perform the operation.
    Having said this, I do not feel that the Commission need fear that
    the opinions of the experts will in any way be discounted. On the
    contrary, they will be heard with the greatest respect; and, as the
    present case shows, there is a high degree of likelihood that they
    will be accepted.

    I turn finally to the question of the procedure adopted in
    the present case, in which a declaration is sought. The relief
    claimed by the plaintiff in these proceedings is a declaration that
    to effect a sterilisation will not amount to an unlawful act by
    reason only of the absence of the plaintiff's consent. Scott Baker
    J. granted the declaration as asked. The Court of Appeal
    dismissed the appeal and affirmed the order of Scott Baker J.
    Even so, all members of the Court of Appeal expressed the opinion
    that procedure by way of declaration was not appropriate in a
    case such as this. Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. said:

    "For my part, I do not think that this is an appropriate
    procedure. A declaration changes nothing. All that the
    court is being asked to do is to declare that, had a course
    of action been taken without resort to the court, it would
    have been lawful anyway. In the context of the most

    - 30 -

    sensitive and potentially controversial forms of treatment
    the public interest requires that the courts should give
    express approval before the treatment is carried out and
    thereby provide an independent and broad based 'third
    opinion'."

    He then proceeded, with the concurrence of the other members of
    the court, to make directions in respect of applications for the
    court's approval of medical or surgical treatment, pending the
    appearance of a new Rule of the Supreme Court (to be added to
    R.S.C., Ord. 80) or a Practice Direction of the President of the
    Family Division.

    With all respect to the Master of the Rolls, in the absence
    of any parens patriae jurisdication vested in the High Court I know
    of no jurisdictional basis upon which any such Rule of the Supreme
    Court or Practice Direction, still less directions such as he
    proposed, could be founded. The course of action proposed by the
    Master of the Rolls presupposes the existence of a jurisdiction
    under which approval by the High Court is required before the
    relevant medical or surgical treatment is performed. There is at
    present no such jurisdiction; and the jurisdiction of the High Court
    cannot be expanded by a Rule of the Supreme Court or Practice
    Direction or other direction. The present position is that the
    lawfulness of medical or surgical treatment cannot, in the case of
    adults, depend upon the approval of the High Court. In my
    opinion, the course of action proposed by the Master of the Rolls
    would be ultra vires.

    However, I do not altogether share the misgivings expressed
    by him (and shared by his other colleagues in the Court of Appeal)
    about the procedure for declaratory relief. First of all, I can see
    no procedural objection to the declaration granted by the judge,
    either as a matter of jurisdiction, or as a matter of exercise of
    the discretion conferred by the relevant Rule of the Supreme
    Court, Ord. 15, r. 16. Rule 16 provides:

    "No action or other proceeding shall be open to objection on
    the ground that a merely declaratory judgment or order is
    sought thereby, and the Court may make binding
    declarations of right whether or not any consequential relief
    is or could be claimed."

    In Guaranty Trust Co. of New York v. Hannay & Co. [1915] 2 K.B.
    536, a leading case in which an unsuccessful attack was mounted
    on the vires of the then Ord. 25, r. 5 (the predecessor of the
    present rule), forthright statements were made by both Pickford
    and Bankes L.JJ. as to the breadth of the jurisdiction conferred by
    the rule. Pickford L.J. said, at p. 562:

    "I think therefore that the effect of the rule is to give a
    general power to make a declaration whether there be a
    cause of action or not, and at the instance of any party
    who is interested in the subject matter of the declaration."

    And Bankes L.J. said, at p. 572:

    "It is essential, however, that a person who seeks to take
    advantage of the rule must be claiming relief. What is

    - 31 -

    meant by this word relief? When once it is established, as
    I think it is established, that relief is not confined to relief
    in respect of a cause of action it seems to follow that the
    word itself must be given its fullest meaning. There is,
    however, one limitation which must always be attached to
    it, that is to say, the relief claimed must be something
    which it would not be unlawful or unconstitutional or
    inequitable for the court to grant or contrary to the
    accepted principles upon which the court exercises its
    jurisdiction. Subject to this limitation I see nothing to
    fetter the discretion of the court in exercising a jurisdiction
    under the rule to grant relief, and having regard to general
    business convenience and the importance of adapting the
    machinery of the courts to the needs of suitors I think the
    rule should receive as liberal a construction as possible."

    There are of course some limits which have been established
    to the exercise of the discretion under the Rules. In Russian
    Commercial and Industrial Bank v. British Bank for Foreign Trade
    Ltd.
    [1921] 2 A.C. 438, 448, Lord Dunedin said with reference to
    the ancient Scottish action of declarator:

    "The rules that have been elucidated by a long course of
    decisions in the Scottish courts may be summarized thus:
    The question must be a real and not a theoretical question;
    the person raising it must have a real interest to raise it;
    he must be able to secure a proper contradictor, that is to
    say, someone presently existing who has a true interest to
    oppose the declaration sought."

    Subsequently, in Vine v. National Dock Labour Board [1957] A.C.
    488, 500, Viscount Kilmuir L.C. found this Scottish approach to be
    helpful; and indeed there is authority in the English cases that a
    declaration will not be granted where the question under
    consideration is not a real question, nor where the person seeking
    the declaration has no real interest in it, nor where the
    declaration is sought without proper argument, e.g. in default of
    defence or on admissions or by consent. In the present case,
    however, none of these objections exists. Here the declaration
    sought does indeed raise a real question; it is far from being
    hypothetical or academic. The plaintiff has a proper interest in
    the outcome, so that it can properly be said that she is seeking
    relief in the broad sense described by Bankes L.J. The matter has
    been fully argued in court, through the intervention of the Official
    Solicitor, and indeed with the benefit of assistance from an amicus
    curiae. I wish to add that no question arises in the present case
    regarding future rights: the declaration asked relates to the
    plaintiff's position as matters stand at present. In all the
    circumstances, I can see no procedural difficulty in the way of
    granting a declaration in the present case. In truth, the objection
    of the members of the Court of Appeal to the declaratory remedy
    was that it was not so appropriate as the exercise by the court of
    the parens patriae jurisdiction, had that still been available, by
    which the court would have considered whether or not to grant
    approval to the proposed treatment. This is a justifiable comment,
    in that (statute apart) only the exercise of the parens patriae
    jurisdiction can ensure, as a matter of law, that the approval of
    the court is sought before the proposed treatment is given. If,
    however, it became the invariable practice of the medical

    - 32 -

    profession not to sterilise an adult woman who is incapacitated
    from giving her consent unless a declaration that the proposed
    course of action is lawful is first sought from the court, I can see
    little, if any, practical difference between seeking the court's
    approval under the parens patriae jurisdiction and seeking a
    declaration as to the lawfulness of the operation.

    I am satisfied that, for the reasons so clearly expressed by
    the judge, he was right to grant the declaration sought by the
    plaintiff in the present case. I would therefore dismiss the appeal.
    My noble and learned friend, Lord Brandon of Oakbrook, has
    proposed that certain alterations should be made to the declaration
    made by the judge. I for my part understood that the declaration
    was made on the basis of existing circumstances; but I am very
    content that this should be made clear in the order, and that
    express provision should be made for a liberty to apply, as
    proposed by my noble and learned friend.

    LORD JAUNCEY OF TULLICHETTLE

    My Lords,

    The difficult questions raised in this appeal have been fully
    examined in the speeches of my noble and learned friends Lord
    Brandon of Oakbrook and Lord Goff of Chieveley and I entirely
    agree with their conclusions as to the manner in which this appeal
    should be disposed of and with their reasons for such disposal.

    My Lords, I should like only to reiterate the importance of
    not erecting such legal barriers against the provision of medical
    treatment for incompetents that they are deprived of treatment
    which competent persons could reasonably expect to receive in
    similar circumstances. The law must not convert incompetents
    into second class citizens for the purposes of health care.

    There are four stages in the treatment of a patient,
    whether competent or incompetent. The first is to diagnose the
    relevant condition. The second is to determine whether the
    condition merits treatment. The third is to determine what the
    merited treatment should be. The fourth is to carry out the
    chosen form of merited treatment. In the case of a long term
    incompetent, convenience to those charged with his care should
    never be a justification for the decision to treat. However, if
    such persons take the decision in relation to the second and third
    stages (supra) solely in his best interests and if their approach to
    and execution of all four stages is such as would be adopted by a
    responsible body of medical opinion skilled in the particular field
    of diagnosis and treatment concerned, they will have done all that
    is required of them and their actings will not be subject to
    challenge as being unlawful.

    - 33 -

    4.5.89

    HOUSE OF LORDS

    IN RE F.
    (RESPONDENT)

    Lord Bridge
    of Harwich
    Lord Brandon
    of Oakbrook
    Lord Griffiths
    Lord Goff
    of Chieveley
    Lord Jauncey
    of Tullichettle

    LORD BRIDGE OF HARWICH

    My Lords,

    I understand that your Lordships all agree on the appropriate
    disposal of this appeal although not yet ready to state your
    reasons. In the circumstances it is obviously desirable that the
    appeal should now be determined for reasons to be given later. I
    accordingly propose that the appeal be dismissed but that there be
    substituted for the order and declaration made by Scott-Baker J.
    an Order in the following terms:

    1. It is declared that the operation of sterilisation
      proposed to be performed on the plaintiff being in the
      existing circumstances in her best interests can
      lawfully be performed on her despite her inability to
      consent to it;

    2. It is ordered that in the event of a material change
      in the existing circumstances occurring before the
      said operation has been performed any party shall
      have liberty to apply for such further or other
      declaration or order as may be just.

    - 1 -


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1991/1.html