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England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> SM, Re (revocation of a Lasting Power of Attorney) [2015] EWCOP 27 (21 April 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2015/27.html Cite as: [2015] EWCOP 27 |
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MENTAL CAPACITY ACT 2005
IN THE MATTER OF SM
42-49 High Holborn London WC1V 6NP |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE PUBLIC GUARDIAN |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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MO and SDRM |
Respondents |
____________________
The respondents in person and unrepresented
Hearing date: 17 March 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Senior Judge Lush:
The facts
The application
(a) on 22 November 2013 the OPG received a phone call from Milton Keynes Council saying that SM's care fees were £9,739.85 in arrears.
(b) the caller also said that SM's accounts were overdrawn and her bank statements revealed expenditure on services that she would never have required personally. For example, there were supermarket payments of £1,978 and other retail payments of £9,591.
(c) a Court of Protection General Visitor (Nicholas Dunkley) visited SM on 6 February 2014 and concluded that she has advanced Alzheimer's disease, as a result of which she lacks the capacity to suspend or revoke the LPA.
(d) MO has failed to comply with her duties as attorney and has used her mother's funds for her own benefit.
(e) Milton Keynes Council was not prepared to act as deputy and there was no alternative other than to appoint a panel deputy to manage SM's property and affairs.
"The attorney by her own account has had personal problems health wise in the past 18 months and described a situation to me whereby she had paid some debts for the donor and mixed her own income with the income of the donor. The attorney also said that the donor had been sending her son money and had paid sums into a trust fund for him. The attorney was unable to account for why the donor's bank accounts were overdrawn despite my asking."
"The donor needs clothing and the attorney seems unable or unwilling to furnish the donor with the most basic items necessary for the donor's comfort and dignity. I suggest the OPG intervene to ensure that the donor can begin enjoying her income and assets to the appropriate extent."
"The property is in my mother's name. This property was purchased by my grandfather to be handed down through the family to make sure we always have somewhere to live no matter what our circumstances. Myself and my family moved to this address with my mother after looking after her at our address for a year and 3 months (she wanted to be at home) and gave up our council property as we felt it was in my mother's best interest."
Procedural history
(a) the OPG to serve the application and the witness statement on the attorneys by 1 August;
(b) the attorneys to respond by 29 August; and
(c) the matter to be referred back to a judge on or after 1 September.
(a) the OPG to serve the application and the witness statement on the attorneys by 7 November;
(b) the attorneys to respond by 28 November; and
(c) the matter to be referred back to a judge on or after 1 December.
"My eldest son who is my co-attorney has had no dealings with anything to do with this order against me. Apart from obviously visiting his Nan when he is down here, and speaking between us about how his Nan is. I have not been able to previously give you his address as until recently when he moved to Norwich he has been staying at different friends' houses, so did not have a permanent address."
(a) inviting the OPG to file and serve any further evidence or submissions by 13 February;
(b) inviting the attorneys to file and serve any further evidence or submissions by 6 March; and
(c) listing the matter for an attended hearing on Tuesday 17 March 2015.
Melanie Lewis's second witness statement
1. ...
2. On 29 January 2015 I telephoned an officer of the Milton Keynes Local Authority Finance Team who advised that current care fee invoices for SM are being paid by direct debit but MO has defaulted on the care fee arrears repayment plan.
3. On 29 January 2015 an email was received from the LA Finance Team advising that the total of care fees outstanding for SM is £20,868.98.
4. I have considered MO's application to the court dated 24 November 2014 but MO has still not provided the Public Guardian with an account of her spending from SM's funds.
5. MO has provided copies of utility bills in her name for gas, electric and water at SM's property as evidence of her having taken over payment of utility bills.
6. Bank statements for SM's Barclays account show that before she moved into the care home on 5 January 2013, payments were made for utility bills at her property from her funds instead of the cost of these utilities beings shared with MO and her family. Bank statements for this account are not held beyond 25 January 2013 so the dates direct debits ceased from SM's funds are not known.
7. After considering MO's evidence dated 24 November 2014 the Public Guardian's position remains the same and we would submit that MO has failed to comply with her fiduciary duties as attorney to SM:
(a) MO has not been able to account to the Public Guardian;
(b) MO has failed to pay care fees;
(c) bank statement evidence shows that MO has allowed SM's accounts to become overdrawn; and
(d) spending from SM's funds has not always been for SM's benefit or in her best interests.
8. The Public Guardian seeks an order from the court under paragraph 22(4) of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 revoking and cancelling the registered LPA made by SM.
9. As attorney SDRM has taken no part in the management of SM's funds, and has not made any contact with either the Public Guardian or the court. The OPG would ask the court to consider inviting a member of the panel of deputies to manage SM'S property and financial affairs. The Public Guardian believes this is in the best interests of SM.
MO's statement
"… I told that person our financial situation and said "please send me a repayment plan". Numerous times I have called MK Council re-asking for this but no-one ever gets back to me. I am not refusing to pay this. I am waiting to receive a payment plan. As this has still not been done, on 10th February 2015 at 11.55 am I spoke to a lady called Anita at MK Council. I was in a complete mess (which I'm sure she will recall) and said that I had on numerous occasions asked for a repayment plan in respect of mum's care home fees, and have still not received one. … What more can I do?"
"As I have said all along, I love my mum and my family with all my heart, and I'm heartbroken to think people feel otherwise. I'm doing the best I can to follow my mum's and my grandparents' upbringing and wishes, by doing the best I can for my mum and my family. It's just a shame that bad situations, a lack of good communication, and confusion has thrown everything up in the air, and come down a mess.The last few years have been a nightmare for me, mentally and physically; what with losing my mum to this awful illness, trying my best to get the help she needed, with doors always slamming in my face, then looking after my mum herself, find that as she gets worse I could no longer do it, so a care home was the only answer, then all this Court of Protection mental stress, and my physical pain getting worse, and my husband and youngest son getting worse, my head is about to blow, and I don't know how much more I am expected to take.
Please trust me, I could not be more sincere and honest about this if I tried. This has all been a case of grief, sadness, confusion and mix ups."
The hearing
(a) Fatima Chandoo and Timothy Goundry of the OPG; and
(b) the respondents in person, accompanied by Gaynor Gooch of the Personal Support Unit.
The law relating to the revocation of an LPA
"Subsection (4) applies if the court is satisfied -(a) ….(b) that the donee (or, if more than one, any of them) of a lasting power of attorney –(i) has behaved, or is behaving, in a way that contravenes his authority or is not in P's best interests, or(ii) proposes to behave in a way that would contravene his authority or would not be in P's best interests."
"The court may –(a) direct that an instrument purporting to create the lasting power of attorney is not to be registered, or(b) if P lacks capacity to do so, revoke the instrument or the lasting power of attorney."
Decision
"The donor was diagnosed with Alzheimer's. The attorney informed me that in October 2012 the donor was formally diagnosed at The Lakes Assessment Centre in Bletchley, Milton Keynes, and at the time the donor's diagnosis was described as severe. The care team leader at the donor's current home also describes the donor's Alzheimer's as being severe and advanced.The donor's dementia is so advanced that she does not know who her attorney is and I do not believe that the donor would be able to foresee the consequences or reasons for revocation or suspension. I do not believe the donor would have the ability to understand the nature of an LPA or the reasons for making one. I do not believe the donor would be able to retain or weigh up the information that would have to be given top her to approach the making of a new LPA, as her dementia is so advanced.
The donor does not know her daughter any more, let alone the fact that her daughter is her attorney. The donor does not communicate coherently and rarely in the context of a situation, conversation or set of questions."
(a) he should have acted as a check and balance on MO, rather than allow her to wreak havoc with SM's finances; his failure in this regard makes him partly responsible for the loss to her estate;
(b) the conflict of interests referred to in paragraphs 29 and 30; and
(c) the instability of his living arrangements, which were mentioned in paragraph 17.