IMPORTANT
NOTICE
This judgment was delivered in
private. The judge has given leave for this version of the judgment to be
published on condition that (irrespective of what is contained in the judgment)
in any published version of the judgment the anonymity of the incapacitated
person and members of their family must be strictly preserved. All persons,
including representatives of the media must ensure that this condition is
strictly complied with. Failure to do so will be a contempt of court.
Neutral Citation Number: [2014] EWCOP 34
Case No: 12238692
COURT OF PROTECTION
MENTAL CAPACITY ACT 2005
IN THE MATTER OF RR
First
Avenue House
42-49
High Holborn,
London,
WC1V 6NP
Date: 8 July 2014
Before:
District
Judge Mort
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Between:
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Milton
Keynes Council
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Applicant
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- and
-
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|
|
RR
(1)
SS
(2)
TT
(3)
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Respondents
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Mr Patel (instructed by Milton
Keynes Council) for the Applicant
Mr Campbell, solicitor
for the 2nd Respondent
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APPROVED COSTS JUDGMENT
- I
have already handed down judgment on the substantive issues in this case (BAILII: [2014] EWCOP B19).
The only issue remaining is that of costs as between the applicant and the
second respondent which the parties have agreed should be dealt with on
paper. I have received submissions from counsel on behalf of the applicant
and the solicitor representing the second respondent.
- The
circumstances of the case are recited in my judgment and I do not intend
to repeat them here.
The Law in relation to costs:
- Costs
in the Court of Protection are at its discretion subject to the Court of
Protection rules: section 55(1) of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (‘MCA
2005’).
- The
court has ‘full power to determine by whom and to what extent the costs
are to be paid’: MCA 2005, s. 55(3).
- The
general rule in welfare proceedings is that there is no order for costs:
r.157 Court of Protection Rules 2007 (‘COP Rules 2007’).
- The
court has a wide discretion to depart from the general rule ‘if the
circumstances so justify, and in deciding whether the departure is so
justified, the court will have regard to all the circumstances’: COP Rules
2007, r.159(1).
- ‘All
the circumstances’ includes ‘(a) the conduct of the parties (b) whether a
party has succeeded on part of his case, even if he has not been wholly
successful; and (c) the role of any public body involved in the proceedings’:
COP Rules 2007, r.159(1).
- The
‘conduct of the parties’ includes -
(a) … conduct before, as well as during, the proceedings; (b) whether it
was reasonable for a party to raise, pursue or contest a particular
issue…’: COP Rules 2007, r.159(2).
- There
is now a large body of case-law concerning the court’s discretion but the
case-law does not purport to give guidance over and above the words of the
Rules themselves.
- It
adds nothing to say that a case must be exceptional or atypical for costs
to be ordered.
- Each
application for costs must be considered on its own merit or lack of merit
with the clear appreciation that there must be a good reason before the
court will contemplate departure from the general rule. Beyond that, as
MCA s. 55(3) makes plain, the court
has ‘full power’ to make the appropriate order.
- The
questions that must be addressed are:
Is departure from the general
rule justified in all the circumstances, including the conduct of the parties,
the outcome of the case and the role of the local authority as a public body?
If so, what order should be made?
- Departure
from the general rule can include cases where there has been a substandard
practice by a public body and a failure to recognise the weakness of its
own case and the strength of the case against it.
- Public
bodies are not excluded from liability to pay costs where it is
appropriate for them to do so.
Submissions
The Applicant:
- Counsel
for the applicant concedes that some costs order is warranted as:
- P’s
removal was unlawful and her Art. 5 & 8 rights were infringed
- There
was no justification for the delay in bringing the proceedings to the
Court of Protection
- There
was no justification for the failure to notify P’s son of her whereabouts
for 19 days
- There
was no authorisation in place for P’s removal from her home to a care home
or her deprivation of liberty until 8/11/12
- In
considering what order to make counsel submits that there must be some
causative link between the conduct concerned and the costs incurred. He
argues that:
- There
should be no costs order between 12/2/14 and 24/2/14 as the applicant had
accepted on 12/2/14 that P’s removal had been unlawful and did not seek to
rely on the schedule of allegations
- There
should be no order for costs after 27/11/12 being the date the court
authorised P’s residence at the care home and the deprivation of her
liberty
- The
safeguarding concerns were not concluded until 12/9/13 but it is not
accepted that the applicant was responsible for the delay in that
investigation and its conclusion. This delay was due to the applicant
awaiting the outcome of the police investigation and the lack of
cooperation from the 2nd and 3rd respondents. In any event P’s
residence, her deprivation of liberty and the restrictions on contact were
authorised by the court in various orders.
- It
is not accepted that the applicant’s decision not to fund a care package
at P’s home was unreasoned or unprincipled or that it presented a ‘fait
accompli’.
- The
applicant does not accept that their failure to pursue the allegations
against the 2nd Respondent should give rise to a costs order as
their allegations were found to be proved by them in their investigation.
If the 2nd respondent had sought P’s return home they would
have pursued the allegations.
The 2nd Respondent:
- The
2nd respondent seeks his costs of the proceedings on the basis
that all of the costs incurred are a direct consequence of the actions and
omissions of the applicant. The costs are in the region of Ł86,000.00
exclusive of VAT.
- It
is submitted by the solicitor on behalf of the 2nd Respondent
- Notwithstanding
the applicant’s decision not to proceed with the allegations and acceptance that P’s removal had been
unlawful restrictions on contact persisted until the hearing on 24/4/14
(reference is made to para 39 of my judgment)
- The
court orders authorising residence and deprivation of liberty were made on
an interim basis while awaiting further information and cannot be relied
upon and do not provide a defence to a costs order.
- The
investigation should have been concluded before a decision was made to
remove P from her home and it should not have taken the length of time it
did.
- The police discontinued their
investigation in October and they did not become involved again until
later in 2013 after an additional complaint by the applicant. Upon receipt
of the 2nd respondent’s statement in answer to the allegations
the police discontinued their enquiries. The applicant cannot attribute
delay to the police investigation.
- The
applicant’s decision not to fund a care package at home presented the 2nd
respondent with a ‘fait accompli’
- None
of the allegations made against the 2nd respondent have been
proved and have always be denied by him.
Considerations
- Prior
to P’s removal from her home a number of concerns and safeguarding alerts
had been raised on 13/8/12, 3/10/12 and 19/10/12. None of those concerns
was investigated by MKC. I have already described that failure as
deplorable.
- A
further safeguarding alert was raised on 25/10/12. According to the
evidence of the student social worker involved in the case that alert, and
the failure to investigate the previous safeguarding alerts, led to the response from MKC’s Senior
Practitioner for Safeguarding Adults, ‘that the police should be notified
as soon as possible and a place of safety identified’.
- The
student social worker further states ‘At this time it was considered due
to the escalating injuries and the delayed investigation that it was in
P’s best interest that she was removed to a place of safety whilst an
investigation took place’.
- Thus
MKC’s failure to investigate the safeguarding alerts was a factor in MKC’s
decision to remove P from her home on the 25/10/12.
- Prior
to removing P from her home MKC had failed to seek an urgent authorisation
for P’s removal and residence at the care home. Thereafter the request for
a standard authorisation was not made until 29/10/12 and was not given
until 8/11/12. The application to the court followed on 9/11/12.
- It
is hard to imagine a more lamentable and inexcusable set of circumstances.
- The
decision to remove P from her home was one which engaged her Article 5 and
8 rights. MKC were aware that they were dealing with a vulnerable elderly
lady who lacked capacity. MKC should have been aware of the need to obtain
authorisation before removing P from her home (and the care of her son).
It is astonishing and very worrying that they failed to grasp the
importance of such a fundamental requirement.
- What
of the position after the commencement of the proceedings?
- Having
removed P from her home without authorisation MKC then failed to advise
P’s son, who was also her carer, of her whereabouts until 13/11/12 and
then only in response to a solicitor’s letter.
- Given
their failures, and bearing in mind P’s age and vulnerability, one would
have expected MKC to deal with the matter expeditiously thereafter.
Unfortunately for P this did not prove to be the case.
- The
allegations which MKC made against the 2nd and 3rd
Respondents were denied by them. Those allegations dictated the progress
of the case as they were central to its resolution. MKC do not accept they
were responsible for the delay in completing their investigation. They
point out that the police investigation did not conclude until May 2013
and they were awaiting the conclusion of the police involvement. I do not
accept that the police investigation dictated the pace of MKC’s
investigation. It was incumbent on MKC to pursue and conclude their
investigation as quickly as possible. Even if the police involvement did
not conclude until May 2013, which is not accepted by the 2nd
respondent, one questions why it took them until September 2013 to
conclude their investigation, and then decide in February 2014 not to
pursue the allegations any further.
- The
importance of the allegations to the resolution of the case is illustrated
in the report of the Independent Social Worker dated 5/7/13 who concluded
that if the Respondents were not responsible for the injuries to P then in
his opinion P ‘should in the short term remain at the care home until a
care plan was in place to support P at home, at which point she should
return home’. However if the Respondents were responsible for P’s injuries
he took the view that ‘on balance she should not return home but remain in
residential care’.
- In
their report into the allegations dated 12/9/13 MKC concluded ‘that P has
suffered neglect and acts of omission by (the 2nd and 3rd
Respondents)’ and that ‘this would continue should (P) return to their
care as they do not accept any of the concerns or acknowledge any of the
responsibility’. Those conclusions informed the applicant’s views
concerning contact between P and her son and the restrictions placed upon
that contact.
- On
the 13/9/13, the day after their investigation had concluded, MKC sent a
letter to the 2nd Respondent’s solicitor stating ‘It is felt
that [the care home] is the appropriate placement for P’s needs’ and that
‘MKC has determined that it will not fund a package of care for P in the
community’.
- MKC
persisted with its allegations against the 2nd and 3rd
respondents but those allegations were never brought before the court for
determination as they were surprisingly abandoned by the applicant in
February 2014. That impediment to P’s return home was thereby removed.
- However
by then P’s failing health, and the decision by MKC not to fund her care
in the community, meant that she had lost the opportunity to return to the
home in which she had lived for 32 years.
- The
proceedings were not finally concluded until the hearing in April. It was
only then that the head of the
applicant’s Older People’s and Physical Disability Service conceded that
there were no risks associated with P going out more than once a week with
her son.
Conclusion
- MKC
had set a juggernaut in motion by their initial failure to investigate the
safeguarding alerts and their decision to remove P from her home in
circumstances which were unlawful. This case concerned the very sad and
tragic consequences for P which flowed from that decision.
- I
have no difficulty in concluding that MKC’s practice in this case was
substandard. It is P’s misfortune to have been the victim of that
substandard practice. MKC’s acts and omissions have detrimentally affected
both P and her family and changed the course of their lives.
- In
my judgment an award of costs is manifestly justified. I have considered
whether a partial costs order is appropriate but have come to the
conclusion that this is an exceptional case in which a full costs order is
justified.
- Accordingly
the Applicant shall pay the 2nd respondent’s costs of the
proceedings to date to be subject to detailed assessment unless agreed
between the parties. The costs order shall include a detailed assessment
of any publicly funded costs of the 2nd Respondent.