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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> RW v Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead [2023] EWHC 1449 (Admin) (07 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/1449.html Cite as: [2023] WLR(D) 259, [2023] EWHC 1449 (Admin), [2023] PTSR 1924 |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
RW |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
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Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Ben Mitchell (instructed by Joint Legal Team, Reading Borough Council)
for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 23 March 2023
Written submissions submitted: 3 April 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Dexter Dias KC:
Section | Contents |
Paras. |
I. | Facts | 5-11 |
II. | Impugned decision | 12-14 |
III. | Issues | 15-16 |
IV. | Legal and regulatory framework | 17-30 |
V. | Issue 1: whether costs disability-related | 31-39 |
VI. | Issue 2: whether costs necessary and reasonably incurred | 40-77 |
VII. | Issue 3: whether costs part of care and support | 78-81 |
VIII. | Disposal | 82-92 |
B123: electronic core bundle pages; SB456: supplementary bundle; CS/DS: claimant/defendant skeleton
§I. FACTS
Date | Event |
Summer 2018 | Claimant begins attending Step Together Group (commissioned directly by the defendant) |
July 2021 | Defendant produces care plan for claimant |
20 July 2021 | Claimant enters into agreement to receive Direct Payments |
11 October 2021 | Defendant provides claimant with Financial Assessment decision: it refused to accept the ST Group activities and associated costs as DRE |
10 December 2021 | Claimant appeals Financial Assessment decision |
11 March 2022 | Defendant refuses appeal and makes final decision ("impugned decision") |
25 April 2022 | Claimant sends pre-action protocol letter |
10 May 2022 | Defendant sends pre-action protocol response |
10 June 2022 | Claimant brings claim for judicial review |
21 September 2022 | Mr Anthony Dunne sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge refuses permission |
24 November 2022 | Ms Clare Padley sitting as Deputy High Court Judge grants permission following oral hearing |
23 March 2023 | Substantive hearing |
§II. IMPUGNED DECISION
"It has been explained on a number of occasions that the Council would fund Care and Support… and that any other activities which a service user [RW] choose would be self-funded" (SB208-10).
"Having considered these matters, the Royal Borough's position remains unchanged, and the decision is therefore confirmed that the costs of the Step Together activities are not to be treated as DRE as they are being paid from council provided funding (the direct payment)." (CB 131)
§III. ISSUES
"Was the Defendant's decision of 11 March 2022 that the costs of the Claimant's Step Together activities are not "disability-related expenditure" unlawful?
The two types of costs claimed are:
- 'ST Activities costs', incurred during the Step Together group sessions; and
- 'ST Associated costs', incurred during evening events with Step Together."
(1) Whether the costs were disability-related;
(2) Whether the costs were necessary and reasonably incurred;
(3) Whether the costs were for care and support.
Parties agreed. They made submissions in conformity with this rubric.
§IV. LEGAL AND REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
"Wellbeing covers an intentionally broad range of the aspects of a person's life and will encompass a wide variety of specific considerations depending on the individual." (§1.7)
1.9 The Act therefore signifies a shift from existing duties on local authorities to provide particular services, to the concept of 'meeting needs'
and
1.10 The concept of meeting needs recognises that everyone's needs are different and personal to them. Local authorities must consider how to meet each person's specific needs rather than simply considering what service they will fit into. The concept of meeting needs also recognises that modern care and support can be provided in any number of ways, with new models emerging all the time rather than the previous legislation which focuses primarily on traditional models of residential and domiciliary care.
"disability-related expenditure" includes payment for any community alarm system, costs of any privately arranged care services required including respite care, and the costs of any specialist items needed to meet the adult's disability.
This annex covers the treatment of income when conducting a financial assessment in all circumstances. This is divided into:
- care homes
- all other settings
The purpose of this annex is to provide local authorities with detailed guidance on how to apply to the Care and Support (Charging and Assessment of Resources) Regulations 2014, in terms of how to treat different types of income when calculating what a person can afford to contribute to the cost of their eligible care needs.
Disability-related expenditure
39) Where disability-related benefits are taken into account, the local authority should make an assessment and allow the person to keep enough benefit to pay for necessary disability-related expenditure to meet any needs which are not being met by the local authority.
40) In assessing disability-related expenditure, local authorities should include the following. However, it should also be noted that this list is not intended to be exhaustive and any reasonable additional costs directly related to a person's disability should be included:
(a) payment for any community alarm system
(b) costs of any privately arranged care services required, including respite care
(c) costs of any specialist items needed to meet the person's disability needs, for example:
(i) Day or night care which is not being arranged by the local authority
(ii) specialist washing powders or laundry
(iii) additional costs of special dietary needs due to illness or disability (the person may be asked for permission to approach their GP in cases of doubt)
(iv) special clothing or footwear, for example, where this needs to be specially made; or additional wear and tear to clothing and footwear caused by disability
(v) additional costs of bedding, for example, because of incontinence
(vi) any heating costs, or metered costs of water, above the average levels for the area and housing type
(vii) occasioned by age, medical condition or disability
(viii) reasonable costs of basic garden maintenance, cleaning, or domestic help, if necessitated by the individual's disability and not met by social services
(ix) purchase, maintenance, and repair of disability-related equipment, including equipment or transport needed to enter or remain in work; this may include IT costs, where necessitated by the disability; reasonable hire costs of equipment may be included, if due to waiting for supply of equipment from the local council
(x) personal assistance costs, including any household or other necessary costs arising for the person
(xi) internet access for example for blind and partially sighted people
(xii) other transport costs necessitated by illness or disability, including costs of transport to day centres, over and above the mobility component of DLA or PIP, if in payment and available for these costs. In some cases, it may be reasonable for a council not to take account of claimed transport costs – if, for example, a suitable, cheaper form of transport, for example, council-provided transport to day centres is available, but has not been used
(xiii) in other cases, it may be reasonable for a council not to allow for items where a reasonable alternative is available at lesser cost. For example, a council might adopt a policy not to allow for the private purchase cost of continence pads, where these are available from the NHS
41) The care plan may be a good starting point for considering what is necessary disability-related expenditure. However, flexibility is needed. What is disability-related expenditure should not be limited to what is necessary for care and support. For example, above average heating costs should be considered.
"36. I return at last to the appellant's twin challenges to the lawfulness of Cambridgeshire's determination to offer him £85k. I agree with Langstaff J in R(L) v Leeds City Council, [2010] EWHC 3324 (Admin), at para 59, that in community care cases the intensity of review will depend on the profundity of the impact of the determination. By reference to that yardstick, the necessary intensity of review in a case of this sort is high. Mr Wise also validly suggests that a local authority's failure to meet eligible needs may prove to be far less visible in circumstances in which it has provided the service-user with a global sum of money than in those in which it has provided him with services in kind. That point fortifies the need for close scrutiny of the lawfulness of a monetary offer. On the other hand respect must be afforded to the distance between the functions of the decision-maker and of the reviewing court; and some regard must be had to the court's ignorance of the effect upon the ability of an authority to perform its other functions of any exacting demands made in relation to the manner of its presentation of its determination in a particular type of case. So the court has to strike a difficult, judicious, balance."
"The principles of severability in public law are well settled: see de Smith, Woolf and Jowell, Judicial Review of Administrative Action, pp. 355-357, paras. 6-101-6-102; Wade, Administrative Law, pp. 329-331. Sometimes severance is not possible, e.g. a licence granted subject to an important but unlawful condition. Sometimes severance is possible, e.g. where a byelaw contains several distinct and independent powers one of which is unlawful. Always the context will be determinative. … It is an obvious case for severance of the good from the bad. To describe this result as a rewriting of the policy statement is to raise an objection to the concept of severance. That is an argument for the blunt remedy of total unlawfulness or total lawfulness. The domain of public law is practical affairs. Sometimes severance is the only sensible course."
"… the correct analysis is simpler than some of the submissions made would suggest. The scheme which the council operated was only defective in so far as it required payment up front at the time of the application. Its invalidity was limited. Contrary to the respondents' case, European law permits a fee to cover the costs of running and enforcing the licensing scheme becoming due upon the grant of a licence. There is no imperative under European law, as incorporated domestically by the 2009 Regulations, to treat the whole scheme as invalid, rather than to invalidate it to the extent of the inconsistency: see Edward and Lane on European Union Law (2013), para 6.16. Even under purely domestic law principles, a test of substantial severability is appropriate, rather than a rigid insistence on textual severability: see eg Director of Public Prosecutions v Hutchinson [1990] 2 AC 783, 811D-G and 813E-G. Any remaining element of the scheme which can stand by itself is able to do so."
§V. Issue 1: whether costs disability-related
Analysis
"[he] needs support to develop and maintain personal relationships." (§4.1, 4.2, 4.3)
"Due to my ASD, I can have difficulties communicating. I have expressive and receptive language problems and it takes me longer to process information. I therefore often struggle to make myself understood. I can also struggle to understand what is required of me by other people. I become easily overwhelmed if people talk too much and if I am required to attend meetings and formal events (though as I get older, I am gradually getting better at this). My difficulties with language, communication and understanding cause me to have quite significant anxiety, particularly when I don't understand what is required of me." (B136/§12)
"3.23. The overall aim is to allow for reasonable expenditure needed for independent living by the disabled resident. Items where the resident has little or no choice other than to incur the expenditure in order to maintain independence of life, will normally be allowed." (B31-32)
b. Would RW be able to attend and do no activities at all? No - The whole point of coming out with the group is to join in and learn how to work together as a team and enjoy the activities.
c. Could RW just attend and socialise without activities? The socialising during the day is done through the activity and learning to support each other.
"the activities at Step Together are designed and structured in such a way that would not be necessary for non-disabled people. There would not be such an emphasis on non-disabled people building upon their social skills and on their confidence whilst undertaking these activities. For non-disabled people these activities would mainly be done for enjoyment purposes (if at all). In addition, non-disabled people are unlikely to need to attend activities with their peer groups on a daily basis" (B206/§16)
Ms Chesney continues:
"apart from the obvious benefit of developing the particular skill that is associated with the particular activity, such as cooking skills, at Step Together we encourage socialisation between peers during the course of the activities and we find that the activities provide a really valuable framework for building on the participants' social skills. Going out as a group is very beneficial for participants to learn how to work and interact with each other and encourage each other to achieve their full potential. These are the kind of social skills that non-disabled people take for granted." (B204/§11)
Travel Training
Gaining experience of how to deal with
different public transport options.
Budgeting
Learning to be budget aware and
developing independence, great for
taking steps towards supported living.
Socialising
Meeting new people and dealing with
new situations together. The world is
less daunting when you've got
someone to give a helping hand. (SB75)
Conclusion Issue 1
§VI. Issue 2: whether costs necessary and reasonably incurred
Analysis
a. Meaning of necessary
b. Cost
c. Overall proportionality
(a) Meaning of necessary
(1) that the expenditure is related to the disability;
(2) that the additional cost is reasonable.
"They constitute guidance issued as a matter of discretion by a public authority to assist in the performance of public duties. They are issued to promote practical objectives thought appropriate by the public authority." (A v SSHD at [39])
"The starting-point in statutory interpretation is to consider the ordinary meaning of a word or phrase." (§22.1(1))
"A phrase or passage must be read in the context of the section as a whole and in the wider context of a relevant group of sections. Other provisions in a statute and the statute as a whole may provide the relevant context."
"Example of disability related expenditure
Zach is visually impaired and describes the internet as a portal into the seeing world – in enabling him to access information that sighted people take for granted. For example he explains that if a sighted person wants to access information they can go to a library, pick up a book or buy an appropriate magazine that provides them with the information they need.
The internet is also a portal into shopping. For example without the internet if Zach wanted to shop for clothes, food or a gift he would have to wait until a friend or family member could accompany him on a trip out, he would be held by their schedule and they would then have to explain what goods were on offer, what an item looked like, the colour and would inevitably be based on the opinion and advice of said friend. A sighted person would be able to go into a shop when their schedule suits and consider what purchase to make on their own. The internet provides Zach with the freedom and independence to do these things on his own."
(1) identify the needs arising out of the disability; and
(2) examine whether the expenditure is needed to meet that need in the sense that it allows the need to be met.
(b) Cost
"might adopt a policy not to allow for the private purchase cost of continence pads, where these are available from the NHS" ((c)(xiii))
"Decisions should therefore be based on outcomes and value for money, rather than purely financially motivated."
"since starting Step Together RW's whole personality and confidence has changed and developed" … [he] "has developed strong bonds with some of the other participants" and "socialising with them has become hugely important to his life." (B202/§7)
"I think it would cause huge difficulties for RW if he had to attend a group or organisation with people that he didn't know. It is really important for RW to be familiar with the group of peers he attends Step Together with. I feel if RW attended another organisation or group it would take a very long time, if ever, for him to get to the stage of comfortability he has finally reached with Step Together. He has finally become confident enough to talk about his feelings and the things that worry him and cause him stress. He knows that we understand him and understand how his autism can affect him and his behaviours. I believe if RW started another group or organisation he would struggle to build up relationships" (B202/§8)
"if he doesn't have daily stimulation in the form of the group, his condition regresses. He spends his days stuck in his room with his blinds down and becomes depressed." (SB/323)
(c) Overall proportionality
Conclusion Issue 2
"Mostly importantly, the other attendees of the ST Group are my go-to friends circle and support system. I otherwise have difficulty making and maintaining friendships and without social contact I can get very low." (B143/§38)
"It is accepted that some activities do not provide such a level of support, however it is not envisaged that RW would only have to choose one activity from the list provided. RW could partake in a combination of the activities offered which combined could be arranged to provide him a stable schedule of activities." (Moles 2/§14)
Promoting individual well-being
(1) The general duty of a local authority, in exercising a function under this Part in the case of an individual, is to promote that individual's well-being.
(2)"Well-being", in relation to an individual, means that individual's well-being so far as relating to any of the following—
(a) …
(b) physical and mental health and emotional well-being;
(c) …
(d) control by the individual over day-to-day life (including over care and support, or support, provided to the individual and the way in which it is provided)
§VII. Issue 3: whether costs for care and support
Analysis
Conclusion Issue 3
§VIII. DISPOSAL
"Preamble
Reaffirming the universality, indivisibility, interdependence and interrelatedness of all human rights and fundamental freedoms and the need for persons with disabilities to be guaranteed their full enjoyment without discrimination.
Article 3 – General principles
The principles of the present Convention shall be:
a. Respect for inherent dignity, individual autonomy including the freedom to make one's own choices, and independence of persons;
b. Non-discrimination;
c. Full and effective participation and inclusion in society"
Article 19 - Living independently and being included in the community
States Parties to this Convention recognize the equal right of all persons with disabilities to live in the community, with choices equal to others, and shall take effective and appropriate measures to facilitate full enjoyment by persons with disabilities of this right and their full inclusion and participation in the community, including by ensuring that:
b. Persons with disabilities have access to a range of in-home, residential and other community support services, including personal assistance necessary to support living and inclusion in the community, and to prevent isolation or segregation from the community"
"Recognizing an individual right of autonomy makes self-creation possible. It allows each of us to be responsible for shaping our lives according to our own coherent or incoherent – but, in any case, distinctive – personality. It allows us to lead our lives rather than be led along them, so that each of us can be, to the extent a scheme of rights can make this possible, what we have made of ourselves." (p.224)
"a relevant error of law, i.e. an error in the actual making of the decision which affected the decision itself."
"…the importance for persons with disabilities of their individual autonomy and independence, including the freedom to make their own choices" (Preamble, (n))