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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 >> Guys And St Thomas NHS Foundation Trust (GSTT) & Anor v R [2020] EWCOP 4 (29 January 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2020/4.html Cite as: [2020] COPLR 471, (2020) 173 BMLR 80, [2020] WLR(D) 397, [2020] EWCOP 4, [2020] 4 All ER 312, [2020] 4 WLR 96, [2020] Med LR 135 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
VICE PRESIDENT OF THE COURT OF PROTECTION
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(1) Guys and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust (GSTT) (2) South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (SLAM) |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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R |
Respondent |
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Mr Parishil Patel QC (instructed by Official Solicitor) as Advocate to the Court. The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 25th October 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hayden :
"IT IS DECLARED PURSUANT TO S.15 MCA AND PURSUANT TO THE INHERENT JURISDICTION OF THE HIGH COURT THAT:
(1) The Respondent has, at the present time, mental capacity to make decisions regarding her obstetric care and the delivery of her baby;
and it is declared pursuant to S.15 MCA in the event that the respondent should come to lack the capacity to make decisions about her obstetric care, and, in any event pursuant to the inherent jurisdiction of the High Court that:
(2) It is lawful for the Applicants to deliver care and treatment to her in accordance with the obstetric care plan annexed to this Order;
(3) To the extent that the arrangements set out in the care plan amount to a deprivation of the Respondent's liberty, this is authorised, providing always that any measures used to facilitate or provide the arrangements shall be the minimum necessary to protect the safety of the Respondent and those involved in her transfer and treatment; and that all reasonable and proportionate steps are taken to minimise distress to the Respondent and to maintain her dignity."
"I acknowledge that I am not currently empowered to make an order pursuant to section 16(2) because the principle enunciated in section 16(1), namely incapacity, is not yet made out. However, as I have already said, there is a substantial risk that if I fail to address the matter now I could put the welfare, and even the life, of CD at risk and would also put the life of her as yet undelivered baby at risk. As I have said, I am not prepared to take that risk. I am prepared to find that, in exceptional circumstances, the court has power to make an anticipatory declaration of lawfulness, contingent on CD losing capacity, pursuant to section 15(1)(c)"
"I have already explained above, as I suggest is obvious, that I must work within the [MCA] if at all possible. However, were it necessary for me to say that the unusual circumstances of this case are not covered by the Act, I would have no hesitation in making an order pursuant to the inherent jurisdiction if faced with a situation where the choice is to make such an order or to risk life itself"
"19. Save in a case of genuine medical emergency, any application should be made no later than 4 weeks before the expected date of delivery. This time frame is required for the following reasons:
i. where P is assessed as lacking capacity to litigate, it will enable the Official Solicitor to undertake any necessary investigations;
ii. to ensure the final hearing is listed and heard at least a few days before the proposed interventions; and
iii. to enable a directions hearing to be held around 2 weeks before the final hearing. The court and the parties will then have the opportunity to ensure the court has all the relevant and necessary evidence at the final hearing."
"20. In compliance with the timetable set out above, the Trusts should in a timely manner, take the following steps:
i. issue the application
ii. notify the Official Solicitor of the application;
iii. disclose any evidence to the Official Solicitor which they consider appropriate;
iv. seek an urgent directions hearing, preferably around two weeks before the final hearing, at which disclosure and the scope of the evidence can be determined;
v. liaise with the Clerk of the Rules to list the substantive hearing at an early stage.
21. It is important that the Trusts should seek early advice and input from their legal advisers.
22. Late applications are to be avoided save in a case of genuine medical emergency. They have four very undesirable consequences:
i. the application is more likely to be dealt with by the out of hours judge and without a full hearing in public;
ii. the available written evidence is more likely to be incomplete and necessitate substantial oral evidence;
iii. it seriously undermines the role that the Official Solicitor can and should properly play in the proceedings; and
iv. it deprives the court of the opportunity to direct that further evidence, including independent expert evidence, if necessary, is obtained in relation to the issue of capacity or best interests.
This approach is dictated by P's Article 5, 6 and 8 rights and best interests."
The Statutory Framework.
The MCA.
"For the purposes of this Act, a person lacks capacity in relation to a matter if at the material time he is unable to make a decision for himself in relation to the matter because of an impairment of, or disturbance in the functioning of, the mind or brain. [my emphasis]"
"(1) This Act does not authorise any person ("D") to deprive any other person ("P") of his liberty [my emphasis].
(2) But that is subject to:
…
(3) D may deprive P of his liberty if, by doing so, D is giving effect to a relevant decision of the court.
(4) A relevant decision of the court is a decision made by an order under section 16(2)(a) in relation to a matter concerning P's personal welfare."
"This will usually suffice, unless the decision is so serious that the court itself has said it must be taken to court. But if there is a dispute (or if what is to be done amounts to a deprivation of liberty for which there is no authorisation under the "deprivation of liberty safeguards" in Schedule A1 to the 2005 Act) then it may be necessary to bring the case to court, as the authorities did in this case".
"Power to make declarations
(1)The court may make declarations as to—
(a)whether a person has or lacks capacity to make a decision specified in the declaration;
(b)whether a person has or lacks capacity to make decisions on such matters as are described in the declaration;
(c)the lawfulness or otherwise of any act done, or yet to be done, in relation to that person.
(2)"Act" includes an omission and a course of conduct."
"Powers to make decisions and appoint deputies: general
(1)This section applies if a person ("P") lacks capacity in relation to a matter or matters concerning—
(a)P's personal welfare, or
(b)P's property and affairs.
(2)The court may—
(a)by making an order, make the decision or decisions on P's behalf in relation to the matter or matters, or
(b)appoint a person (a "deputy") to make decisions on P's behalf in relation to the matter or matters.
(3)The powers of the court under this section are subject to the provisions of this Act and, in particular, to sections 1 (the principles) and 4 (best interests).
(4)When deciding whether it is in P's best interests to appoint a deputy, the court must have regard (in addition to the matters mentioned in section 4) to the principles that—
(a)a decision by the court is to be preferred to the appointment of a deputy to make a decision, and
(b)the powers conferred on a deputy should be as limited in scope and duration as is reasonably practicable in the circumstances.
(5)The court may make such further orders or give such directions, and confer on a deputy such powers or impose on him such duties, as it thinks necessary or expedient for giving effect to, or otherwise in connection with, an order or appointment made by it under subsection (2).
(6)Without prejudice to section 4, the court may make the order, give the directions or make the appointment on such terms as it considers are in P's best interests, even though no application is before the court for an order, directions or an appointment on those terms.
(7)An order of the court may be varied or discharged by a subsequent order.
(8)The court may, in particular, revoke the appointment of a deputy or vary the powers conferred on him if it is satisfied that the deputy—
(a)has behaved, or is behaving, in a way that contravenes the authority conferred on him by the court or is not in P's best interests, or
(b)proposes to behave in a way that would contravene that authority or would not be in P's"
"…if at the material time (my emphasis) he is unable to make a decision for himself (section 2 (1) MCA 2005)"
Ms Dolan makes the additional and attractive point, that for a court to identify jurisdiction, pursuant to Section 16, in respect of a person who does not lack capacity but, who may lose on some future contingency, it would be infringing the cardinal principle of Section 1 MCA i.e. that a person is not to be treated as unable to make a decision, unless all practical steps have been taken to help him to do so without success. Logically, such steps could not have been taken with an individual who remained capacitous at the time of the application.
"The absence of any pre-condition of incapacity similar to that within s16 and s48 might be taken as an indication that Parliament eschewed limiting the s15(1)(c) declaratory powers to the currently incapacitous. The wording permits the court to make declarations as to the lawfulness or unlawfulness of current and future acts in respect of both the capacitous and incapacitous alike."
"Section 15(1)(c) therefore empowers a range of different types declarations, for example:
i) that X lacks capacity and that the doing of an act in relation to X is or will be lawful, (being predicated on the court finding the act to be in X's best interests); or
ii) that X lacks capacity and that the doing of an act in relation to X is or would be unlawful (being predicated on the court finding the act not to be in X's best interests); or
iii) that X has capacity, and that the doing of the act would be lawful, (e.g. because X has consent to it);
iv) that X has capacity, and that the doing of the act is or would be unlawful, (e.g. because X does not consent to it, or X has made a valid and applicable advanced decision refusing treatment (s24-s26))."
"My Lords, at a time where more and more cases involve the application of legislation which gives effect to policies that are the subject of bitter public and Parliamentary controversy it cannot be too strongly emphasised that the British constitution, though largely unwritten, is firmly based upon the separation of powers; Parliament makes the laws, the judiciary interpret them. When Parliament legislates to remedy what the majority of its members, at the time, perceive to be a defect or a lacuna in the existing law (whether it be the written law enacted by existing statutes or the unwritten common law as it has been expounded by the Judge's in decided cases), the role of the judiciary is confined to ascertaining from the words that Parliament has approved as expressing its intention what that intention was and to giving effect to it. Where the meaning of the statutory words is plain and unambiguous it is not for the judges to invent fancy ambiguities as an excuse for failing to give effect to its plain meaning because they themselves consider that the consequences of doing so would be in expedient, or even unjust or immoral…"
"4 A Restriction on deprivation of liberty
(1) This Act does not authorise any person ("D") to deprive any other person ("P") of his liberty.
(2) But that is subject to—
(a)the following provisions of this section, and
(b)section 4B.
(3) D may deprive P of his liberty if, by doing so, D is giving effect to a relevant decision of the court.
(4) A relevant decision of the court is a decision made by an order under section 16(2)(a) in relation to a matter concerning P's personal welfare.
(5) D may deprive P of his liberty if the deprivation is authorised by Schedule A1 (hospital and care home residents: deprivation of liberty). D may deprive P of liberty if, by doing so, D is carrying out arrangements authorised under Schedule AA1 (arrangements enabling the care and treatment of persons who lack capacity)."
4B Deprivation of liberty necessary for life-sustaining treatment etc][F1Deprivation of liberty necessary for life-sustaining treatment or vital act]
(1) If the following conditions are met, D is authorised to deprive P of his liberty while a decision as respects any relevant issue is sought from the court.
(2) The first condition is that there is a question about whether D is authorised to deprive P of his liberty under section 4A.
(3) The second condition is that the deprivation of liberty—
(a)is wholly or partly for the purpose of—(i)giving P life-sustaining treatment, or (ii)doing any vital act, or
(b)consists wholly or partly of—
(i)giving P life-sustaining treatment, or
(ii)doing any vital act.
(4) The third condition is that the deprivation of liberty is necessary in order to—
(a)give the life-sustaining treatment, or (b)do the vital act.
(5) A vital act is any act which the person doing it reasonably believes to be necessary to prevent a serious deterioration in P's condition.
(1) If Conditions 1 to 4 are met, D is authorised to take steps which deprive P of liberty.
(2) Condition 1 is that the steps—(a)are wholly or partly for the purpose of giving P life-sustaining treatment or doing any vital act, or (b)consist wholly or partly of giving P life-sustaining treatment or doing any vital act.
(3 ) A vital act is any act which the person doing it reasonably believes to be necessary to prevent a serious deterioration in P's condition.
(4) Condition 2 is that the steps are necessary in order to give the life-sustaining treatment or do the vital act.
(5) Condition 3 is that D reasonably believes that P lacks capacity to consent to D taking the steps.
(6) Condition 4 is that—(a)subsection (7) applies, or (b)there is an emergency.
(7) This subsection applies if—(a)a decision relevant to whether D is authorised to deprive P of liberty is being sought from the court, or (b)a responsible body is carrying out functions under Schedule AA1 with a view to determining whether to authorise arrangements that give rise to a deprivation of P's liberty.
(8) In subsection (7) it does not matter—(a)whether the decision mentioned in paragraph (a) relates to the steps mentioned in subsection (1); (b)whether the arrangements mentioned in paragraph (b) include those steps.
(9) There is an emergency if D reasonably believes that—
(a)there is an urgent need to take the steps mentioned in subsection (1) in order to give the life-sustaining treatment or do the vital act, and
(b)it is not reasonably practicable before taking those steps—
(i)to make an application for P to be detained under Part 2 of the Mental Health Act,
(ii)to make an application within subsection (7)(a), or(iii)to secure that action within subsection (7)(b) is taken."
"(1) The inherent jurisdiction of the High Court for the protection of vulnerable and incapacity adults remains available notwithstanding the implementation of the Mental Capacity Act 2005: Re DL per McFarlane LJ (as he then was) at [52] et seq and Davis LJ at [70] et seq. In the memorable phrase first deployed by Lord Donaldson in Re F (Mental Patient: Sterilisation) [1990] 2 AC 1, it is "the great safety net".(2) The jurisdiction extends to protecting vulnerable persons who do not fall within the categories of those covered by the Mental Capacity Act 2005: see, for example, Re DL itself and London Borough of Wandsworth v M & Ors [2018] 1 FLR 919; [2017] EWHC 2435 Fam, and further to providing additional protection to adults lacking capacity within the meaning of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 when the remedy sought does not fall within those provided in the Act: see, for example, City of Westminster v IC [2008] EWCA Civ 198 and NHS Trust v Dr A [2013] EWHC 2442 COP(3) As to the definition of vulnerability in these cases, the picture is comprehensively outlined in the judgment of Munby J in Re SA [Citing paragraphs 77, 78 and 80].(4) Insofar as such actions infringe with rights under Article 8 of the Human Rights Convention, the interference may be justified to protect the health of the individual but only if they are necessary and proportionate: see Re DL, McFarlane LJ at [86] and Davis LJ at [76].(5) In an appropriate case, orders can be made depriving someone of their liberty under the inherent jurisdiction provided the exercise of the jurisdiction is compatible with Article 5 of ECHR: see Re PS (Incapacitated or vulnerable adult) [2007] EWHC 623 Fam per Munby J.(6) In cases involving incapacitated or vulnerable adults, Article 5(1) of the Convention provides, so far as relevant to this case:"Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save in the following cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law:...(e) the lawful detention of persons for the prevention of the spreading of infectious diseases, of persons of unsound mind, alcoholics or drug addicts or vagrants..."Article 5(4) provides:"Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which the lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court and his release ordered if the detention is not lawful."(7) "...[E]xcept in emergency cases, the individual concerned should not be deprived of his liberty unless he has been reliably shown to be of 'unsound mind'. The very nature of what has to be established before the component national authority - that is, a true mental disorder - calls for objective medical expertise. Further, the mental disorder must be of a kind or degree warranting compulsory confinement. What is more, the validity of continued confinement depends on the persistence of such a disorder..." Winterwerp v Netherlands [1979] 2 EHRR 387 at [39].(8) Under Article 5(4), the lawfulness of the detention has to be reviewed under the principles set out in the Convention. It must therefore be wide enough to bear on those conditions that are essential for the lawful detention. In particular, with a view to ascertaining whether there still persists unsoundness of mind of a kind or degree warranting compulsory confinement: see Winterwerp at [55] and Re PS at [20]. (9) As explained by Munby J in Re SA, the inherent jurisdiction in this context is exercisable not merely where a vulnerable adult is but also where he is reasonably believed to be incapacitated. [Citing paragraph 80 above]. See also Re SK [2004] EWHC 3202 Fam; [2005] 2 FLR 230 and London Borough of Wandsworth (Supra) at [84]-[86]. But, as McFarlane LJ pointed out in Re DL at [68]:"Whilst such interim provision may be of benefit in any given case, it does not represent the totality of the High Court's inherent powers."(10) In exercising its powers as set out above, the court must attach due weight to the individual's personal autonomy. The court must, furthermore, be careful to avoid the so-called protective imperative to which I first referred in the case of CC v KK [2012] EWHC 2136 (COP) at [25]."
Whilst that judgment concerns an application for permission to appeal and thus not ordinarily citable, the above passages are a characteristically helpful distillation of the central principles emerging from the case law.
"94. Under its inherent jurisdiction, the High Court can make an order authorising a deprivation of liberty but such an order must comply with the provisions of Article 5: per Munby J in Re PS (Incapacitated or Vulnerable Adult) [2007] EWHC 623 (Fam)). In particular, any order authorising detention must contain provision for an adequate review at reasonable intervals (see paragraph 23). The reason for this requirement was explained by Munby J in Re BJ (Incapacitated Adult) [2009] EWHC 3310 (Fam) at paragraph 10:
"…regular reviews by the court are not merely desirable, not merely a matter of good practice; they go, as both the Strasbourg jurisprudence and the domestic case-law make clear, to the very legality of what is being done."
95. Finally, as stated above, the court, as a public authority, cannot lawfully act in a way that is incompatible with a right under ECHR. I accept the submission that I am under an operational duty under Article 2 to protect Dr. A., a man who, as I have found, lacks capacity to decide whether to accept nutrition and hydration against the risk of death from starvation. By making the orders sought by the Trust under the inherent jurisdiction, I will be complying with that operational duty.
96. In all the circumstances, I hold that this court has the power under its inherent jurisdiction to make a declaration and order authorising the treatment of an incapacitated adult that includes the provision for the deprivation of his liberty provided that the order complies with Article 5. Unless and until this court or another court clarifies the interpretation of section 16A of the MCA, it will therefore be necessary, in any case in which a hospital wishes to give treatment to a patient who is ineligible under section 16A, for the hospital to apply for an order under the inherent jurisdiction where the treatment (a) is outside the meaning of medical treatment of the MHA 1983 and (b) involves the deprivation of a patient's liberty."
"97. Under that jurisdiction, I am satisfied, for the reasons set out above, that an order for forcible feeding of Dr. A. is in his best interests. I therefore make the orders sought by the applicant Trust, that is to say declaring that it shall be lawful for the Trust clinicians to provide Dr. A. with artificial nutrition and hydration and to use reasonable force and restraint for that purpose, and further declaring that, insofar as those measures amount to a deprivation of liberty, they shall be lawful."
"Although this application only came to the notice of the court officials at 1.30pm, it has come on for hearing just before 2.0pm and now at 2.18pm I propose to make the declaration which is sought. I do so in the knowledge that the fundamental question appears to have been left open by the Master of the Rolls in the case of Re T (supra) heard earlier this year in the Court of Appeal, and in the knowledge that there is no English authority which is directly in point. There is, however, some American authority which suggests that if this case were being heard in the American courts the answer would be likely to be in favour of granting a declaration in these circumstances: see Re AC (1990) 573 A 2d 1235 at pp 1240,1246-1248, 1252.
I do not propose to say any more at this stage, except that I wholly accept the evidence of Mr P as to the desperate nature of this situation, and that I grant the declaration as sought."
"(1). Subject to (3) below, in general it is a criminal and tortious assault to perform physically invasive medical treatment, however minimal the invasion might be, without the patient`s consent, see Collins v Wilcox [1984] 1 WLR 1172 per Goff LJ at page 1177, cited with approval in Re F (Mental Patient: Sterilisation) [1990] 2 AC 1.
(2). A mentally competent patient has an absolute right to refuse to consent to medical treatment for any reason, rational or irrational, or for no reason at all, even where that decision may lead to his or her own death, see Sidaway v Board of Governors of the Bethlem Royal Hospital [1985] AC 871 per Lord Templeman at pages 904-905; see also Re T (An Adult)(Consent to Medical Treatment) [1993] Fam 95 per Lord Donaldson MR at page 102.
(3). Medical treatment can be undertaken in an emergency even if, through a lack of capacity, no consent had been competently given, provided the treatment was a necessity and did no more than was reasonably required in the best interests of the patient: Re F (supra)."
"21. We turn now to consider some of the caesarian section decisions. In Tameside and Glossop Acute Services Trust v CH [1996] 1 FLR 762 the patient was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia and was admitted under section 3 of the Mental Health Act 1983. She was found to be pregnant and that the foetus was in danger if the pregnancy continued. There was overwhelming evidence that she lacked the capacity to consent to or refuse the treatment proposed. Wall J, in making the declaration sought under section 63 of the Mental Health Act, set out the general principles which govern non-consensual treatment and applied the three part test, (the C Test), set out by Thorpe J in Re C, (supra).
22. In Norfolk and Norwich HealthCare (NHS) Trust v W [1996] 2 FLR 613 the patient arrived at the hospital in labour denying that she was pregnant. She had a history of psychiatric treatment. She was in a state of arrested labour. The obstetrician considered a forceps delivery or a caesarian section had to be performed. A psychiatrist examined her and found she was not suffering from a mental disorder. He was not certain whether she was capable of comprehending and retaining information about the proposed treatment but she continued to deny she was pregnant. He was not sure if she was capable of believing the information about the treatment. He was however of the opinion that she was not able to balance the information given to her. Johnson J at page 616 held that:-
"although she was not suffering from a mental disorder within the meaning of the statute, she lacked the mental competence to make a decision about the treatment that was proposed because she was incapable of weighing up the considerations that were involved. She was called upon to make that decision at a time of acute emotional stress and physical pain in the ordinary course of labour made even more difficult for her because of her own particular mental history."
23. The judge was satisfied that the operation was in her best interests and that in the circumstances the court had power at common law to authorise the use of reasonable force.
24. During the hearing of the Norfolk and Norwich case Johnson J was asked to make declarations in Rochdale Healthcare (NHS) Trust v C [3 July 1996] (unreported). It was extremely urgent in that the consultant obstetrician considered that the caesarian section had to be carried out within the hour if the foetus was to survive and risk of damage to the patient`s health was to be avoided. The mother had previously had a caesarian section and said she would rather die than have it again. It was not possible to obtain psychiatric evidence in the time available. The obstetrician considered that the patient was fully competent. The judge had very little time and only `the scantiest information` upon which to assess the patient and make a decision. He applied the C Test and found that the patient was not capable of weighing up the information that she was given, the third element of the C test. He held:-
"The patient was in the throes of labour with all that is involved in terms of pain and emotional stress. I concluded that a patient who could, in those circumstances speak in terms which seemed to accept the inevitability of her own death, was not a patient who was able properly to weigh-up the considerations that arose so as to make any valid decision, about anything of even the most trivial kind, still one which involved her own life."
25. One may question whether there was evidence before the court which enabled the judge to come to a conclusion contrary to the opinion of the obstetrician that she was competent. Nonetheless he made the declarations sought. In fact the patient changed her mind and consented to the operation.
26. In Re L [5th December 1996] (unreported) Kirkwood J was faced with an application on facts similar to the present appeal. This was the decision relied upon by Hollis J. It was an urgent application in respect of a patient `L`in her twenties who had been in labour for some hours and the labour had become obstructed. In the absence of intervention the foetus was at risk and deterioration was inevitable and death would follow. The carrying of a dead foetus would be injurious to the patient`s health and the removal of the foetus by surgical procedure would become necessary. An emergency caesarian section was strongly indicated. `L` wanted her baby to be born alive but she suffered from a needle phobia and was unable to consent to the use of a needle and therefore to the proposed course of treatment. The judge applied the C test and said:-
"that her extreme needle phobia amounted to an involuntary compulsion that disabled `L` from weighing treatment information in the balance to make a choice. Indeed it was an affliction of a psychological nature that compelled `L` against medical advice with such force that her own life would be in serious peril."
27. He held that she was incapable of weighing the relevant treatment information in the balance and thus lacked the relevant mental competence to make the treatment decision. He further held that it was in her best interest to have the operation and he granted the declaration sought by the hospital.
28. In each of the decisions to which we have referred the question of the competence of the woman concerned was in issue and in each case she was found to lack the capacity to consent to or refuse treatment. The only reported decision, to our knowledge, in which the capacity of the patient to decide does not appear to have been specifically raised was Re S (Adult: Surgical Treatment) [1993] 1 FLR 26. It was the first occasion upon which this problem was considered by the High Court. It was a life and death situation both for the mother and for the unborn child and a decision was required in minutes rather than hours. It was heard by Sir Stephen Brown, P. as a matter of the utmost urgency…"
"A competent woman who has the capacity to decide may, for religious reasons, other reasons, for rational or irrational reasons or for no reason at all, choose not to have medical intervention, even though the consequence may be the death or serious handicap of the child she bears, or her own death. In that event the courts do not have the jurisdiction to declare medical intervention lawful and the question of her own best interests objectively considered, does not arise.
3. Irrationality is here used to connote a decision which is so outrageous in its defiance of logic or of accepted moral standards that no sensible person who had applied his mind to the question to be decided it could have arrived at it."
"60. The law is, in our judgment, clear that a competent woman who has the capacity to decide may, for religious reasons, other reasons, or for no reasons at all, chose not to have medical intervention, even though, as we have already stated, the consequence may be the death or serious handicap of the child she bears or her own death. She may refuse to consent to the anaesthesia injection in the full knowledge that her decision may significantly reduce the chance of her unborn child being born alive. The foetus up to the moment of birth does not have any separate interests capable of being taken into account when a court has to consider an application for a declaration in respect of a caesarian section operation. The court does not have the jurisdiction to declare that such medical intervention is lawful to protect the interests of the unborn child even at the point of birth."
"The common law does not clothe the Courts with power to order the detention of a pregnant woman for the purpose of preventing her from harming her unborn child. Nor, given the magnitude of the changes and their potential ramifications, would it be appropriate for the Courts to extend their power to make such an order."
"That said however, how can a forced invasion of a competent adult's body against her will even for the most laudable of motives (the preservation of life) be ordered without irremediably damaging the principle of self-determination? When human life is at stake the pressure to provide an affirmative answer authorising unwanted medical intervention is very powerful. Nevertheless the autonomy of each individual requires continuing protection even, perhaps particularly, when the motive for interfering with it is readily understandable, and indeed to many would appear commendable: hence the importance of remembering Lord Reid's warning against making 'even minor concessions'. If it has not already done so medical science will no doubt one day advance to the stage when a very minor procedure undergone by an adult would save the life of his or her child, or perhaps the life of a child of a complete stranger. The refusal would rightly be described as unreasonable, the benefit to another human life would be beyond value, and the motives of the doctors admirable. If however the adult were compelled to agree, or rendered helpless to resist, the principle of autonomy would be extinguished." [page 742]
It needs to be emphasised that Judge LJ was there considering a "competent adult" who remained capacitous throughout.
"The foetus cannot, in English law, in my view, have a right of its own at least until it is born and has a separate existence from its mother. That permeates the whole of the civil law of this country"
"50. Although it might seem illogical that a child capable of being born alive is protected by the criminal law from intentional destruction, and by the Abortion Act from termination otherwise than as permitted by the Act, but is not protected from the (irrational) decision of a competent mother not to allow medical intervention to avert the risk of death, this appears to be the present state of the law. Moreover, if the competent mother by refusing medical intervention is delivered of a handicapped child, she cannot be sued by that child for her decision not to take steps to protect it at the moment of birth. The Law Commission rejected the proposal that a child should be able to have a claim against his mother for injury sustained before birth, (Law Commission Report No 60)."
"Best interests
(1) In determining for the purposes of this Act what is in a person's best interests, the person making the determination must not make it merely on the basis of—
(a)the person's age or appearance, or
(b)a condition of his, or an aspect of his behaviour, which might lead others to make unjustified assumptions about what might be in his best interests.
(2) The person making the determination must consider all the relevant circumstances and, in particular, take the following steps.
(3) He must consider—
(a)whether it is likely that the person will at some time have capacity in relation to the matter in question, and
(b)if it appears likely that he will, when that is likely to be.
(4) He must, so far as reasonably practicable, permit and encourage the person to participate, or to improve his ability to participate, as fully as possible in any act done for him and any decision affecting him.
(5) Where the determination relates to life-sustaining treatment he must not, in considering whether the treatment is in the best interests of the person concerned, be motivated by a desire to bring about his death.
(6) He must consider, so far as is reasonably ascertainable—
(a)the person's past and present wishes and feelings (and, in particular, any relevant written statement made by him when he had capacity),
(b)the beliefs and values that would be likely to influence his decision if he had capacity, and
(c)the other factors that he would be likely to consider if he were able to do so.
(7) He must take into account, if it is practicable and appropriate to consult them, the views of—
(a)anyone named by the person as someone to be consulted on the matter in question or on matters of that kind,
(b)anyone engaged in caring for the person or interested in his welfare,
(c)any donee of a lasting power of attorney granted by the person, and
(d)any deputy appointed for the person by the court, as to what would be in the person's best interests and, in particular, as to the matters mentioned in subsection (6).
(8) The duties imposed by subsections (1) to (7) also apply in relation to the exercise of any powers which—
(a)are exercisable under a lasting power of attorney, or
(b)are exercisable by a person under this Act where he reasonably believes that another person lacks capacity.
(9) In the case of an act done, or a decision made, by a person other than the court, there is sufficient compliance with this section if (having complied with the requirements of subsections (1) to (7)) he reasonably believes that what he does or decides is in the best interests of the person concerned.
(10) "Life-sustaining treatment" means treatment which in the view of a person providing health care for the person concerned is necessary to sustain life.
(11) "Relevant circumstances" are those—
(a)of which the person making the determination is aware, and
(b)which it would be reasonable to regard as relevant."
"24 Advance decisions to refuse treatment: general
(1) "Advance decision" means a decision made by a person ("P"), after he has reached 18 and when he has capacity to do so, that if—
(a)at a later time and in such circumstances as he may specify, a specified treatment is proposed to be carried out or continued by a person providing health care for him, and
(b)at that time he lacks capacity to consent to the carrying out or continuation of the treatment,
the specified treatment is not to be carried out or continued.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1)(a), a decision may be regarded as specifying a treatment or circumstances even though expressed in layman's terms.
(3) P may withdraw or alter an advance decision at any time when he has capacity to do so.
(4) A withdrawal (including a partial withdrawal) need not be in writing.
(5) An alteration of an advance decision need not be in writing (unless section 25(5) applies in relation to the decision resulting from the alteration).
25 Validity and applicability of advance decisions
(1) An advance decision does not affect the liability which a person may incur for carrying out or continuing a treatment in relation to P unless the decision is at the material time—
(a)valid, and
(b)applicable to the treatment.
(2) An advance decision is not valid if P—
(a)has withdrawn the decision at a time when he had capacity to do so,
(b)has, under a lasting power of attorney created after the advance decision was made, conferred authority on the donee (or, if more than one, any of them) to give or refuse consent to the treatment to which the advance decision relates, or
(c)has done anything else clearly inconsistent with the advance decision remaining his fixed decision.
(3) An advance decision is not applicable to the treatment in question if at the material time P has capacity to give or refuse consent to it.
(4) An advance decision is not applicable to the treatment in question if—
(a)that treatment is not the treatment specified in the advance decision,
(b)any circumstances specified in the advance decision are absent, or
(c)there are reasonable grounds for believing that circumstances exist which P did not anticipate at the time of the advance decision and which would have affected his decision had he anticipated them.
(5) An advance decision is not applicable to life-sustaining treatment unless—
(a)the decision is verified by a statement by P to the effect that it is to apply to that treatment even if life is at risk, and
(b)the decision and statement comply with subsection (6).
(6) A decision or statement complies with this subsection only if—
(a)it is in writing,
(b)it is signed by P or by another person in P's presence and by P's direction,
(c)the signature is made or acknowledged by P in the presence of a witness, and
(d)the witness signs it, or acknowledges his signature, in P's presence.
(7) The existence of any lasting power of attorney other than one of a description mentioned in subsection (2)(b) does not prevent the advance decision from being regarded as valid and applicable."