Re A (Adult) and Re C (Child); A Local Authority v A [2010] EWHC 978 (Fam)

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The circumstances of the domestic care of A and C by their families in the family home did not involve a deprivation of liberty engaging the protection of Article 5.

Thanks

Thanks to Ben Troke (Hill Dickinson LLP) for for providing the summary and commentary.

Summary and commentary

Behind closed doors…

A recent judgment addresses profound issues about the extent to which the state should reach into the family home, even to protect vulnerable adults and children who may be deprived of their liberty, and could also affect the way we use the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards in the public arena.

The facts are fairly simple, though the judgment is not. There were two separate linked cases heard together, by Munby J (now Lord Justice Munby) in July 2009, though it took nearly a year to hand down the judgment.

A is an 8-year-old girl, and C is a 20-year-old young woman. They are not related. They are both at particular risk at night, due to a genetic condition (Smith Magenis syndrome) associated with learning disability, disturbed sleep patterns and serious self harming behaviour. They both live at the family home, and to keep A and C (and other members of their families) safe, each family has, as a last resort, taken to locking their daughter in her bedroom overnight. It was agreed by all involved that there was no other real alternative.

The Court had to consider whether this is a deprivation of liberty (DoL), to engage Article 5 of the European Convention, despite being only an act of private individuals rather than the state, and what role the state, through the local authority, has in such cases.

The definition of DoL and the role of the state

Munby J relies on the familiar three-part definition of a DoL to engage Article 5:

  1. Whether A or C is being confined in a particular restrictive space for a not negligible period of time, sufficient to amount to an objective deprivation of liberty (see below)
  2. Whether A or C has not validly consented to the DoL (the subjective element - it was agreed that neither A nor C had capacity to validly consent to the bedroom door being locked overnight)
  3. Whether the state is responsible for the DoL

The local authority’s mere knowledge of what was going on in the family home was not enough to make the state responsible for this regime. Munby J spoke in powerfully critical terms of the local authority “mindset” he had seen in other cases (not, he took pains to emphasise, in this case) of seeking to exercise “control” over vulnerable adults and children, behaving “high-handedly” - sometimes without legal authority - notwithstanding their good intentions. The local authority’s role is to assess needs and to provide support, and to enlist the help of the courts if more intervention is required.

Positive obligations under Article 5

However, Article 5 is not limited to protecting the individual from interference with liberty by the state. There is also a positive obligation on the state, through the local authority, to take positive steps to protect people from such interference by other private individuals.

This means that where the local authority thinks that a deprivation of liberty might be occurring in a private household, it has obligations to:

  • Investigate (and continue to monitor) whether there is a deprivation of liberty
  • Take steps to intervene to bring any deprivation to an end – perhaps by providing additional support and resources
  • If not resolved, to bring the case to Court

It was submitted that the local authority would be in breach of its positive obligations under Article 5 if it was aware of a possible deprivation of liberty in a family home and failed either to prevent it, or to seek the court’s sanction to render it lawful. The judge seems to reject this submission, which some authors think contradicts the points made above. But it is also possible to read his comments as holding that the local authority here cannot be criticised for any failure, because it did investigate and bring the matter before the Court. The least that can be said is that this part of the judgment is not straightforward.

Objective deprivation

Everyone who works with issues surrounding deprivation of liberty will be used to wrestling with the uncertainty as to whether a deprivation is occurring. There is no definition in statute, and the Code of Practice to the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards says, helpfully, that “there is no simple definition of a deprivation of liberty”.

Through case law, we have come to understand that it is a question of degree, including issues of the nature, extent, duration, and intensity of the restrictions imposed, and that there is a massive grey area between running freely across a field at one end of the spectrum, and being imprisoned at the other end.

Surprisingly, Munby J holds that, despite being locked in a room for 10-12 hours at a stretch, neither A nor C was deprived of her liberty. The context is everything. The judge quotes at length from a recent judgment of Parker J in Re MIG and MEG [2010] EWHC 785 (Fam) (the transcript for which is not yet available). He also refers to the House of Lords Judgment in Austin v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis [2009] UKHL 5, in which a person was kept “kettled” in a confined area with the May Day protestors in 2001 for up to seven hours, but the Lords held that she was not deprived of her liberty, at least partly because the police had acted reasonably and proportionately to manage public order, and deprivation of liberty was not their intention.

In Austin, Lord Hope made a powerful comment warning that “if confinement amounting to a deprivation of liberty… is established, good intentions cannot make up for any deficiencies in justification for the confinement…”. Munby J accepts “that the question of intention in the sense of mental attitude is irrelevant to the question of whether someone is deprived of their liberty”. Nonetheless, both Munby J and Parker J talk about A and C, and MIG and MEG, not being deprived of liberty in the family home due to the “purpose” or “context” of the confinement, because, for example, they didn’t object, and the restrictions were in their best interests, not to punish them, and were imposed in good faith.

For the purposes of the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards, these factors may be relevant to whether a deprivation is justifiable and lawful, but none of them would show that a deprivation of liberty is not occurring in a care home or hospital. Essentially, the judges say that where a family caring regime is in good faith, it is not likely to be held to be a deprivation of liberty, and the common law doctrine of necessity will be enough to make this lawful.

The reliance on the common law doctrine of necessity, and the good faith of clinicians, was precisely the problem in the key case of Bournewood, where the European Court of Human Rights held that this allowed no procedural safeguards or due process by which a deprivation of liberty could be challenged. For exactly this reason, the issues of good faith and good intentions are not to be taken into account when DOLS assessors consider whether there is an objective deprivation of liberty for the purposes of the Safeguards, which were introduced in response to Bournewood.

It might be appropriate to have different standards as to what is a deprivation of liberty according to whether it occurs in a family home, or the public arena - it seems likely that being locked in a room in a care home or hospital for 12 hours would be a deprivation of liberty for the purposes of the Safeguards – but such differing standards can cause confusion. As more case law arrives on deprivation of liberty, the task of the DOLS assessors, and the role of the local authorities, is not getting any easier.

And, since it is not unusual that it took nearly a year for the judgment in this case to be handed down, is it realistic to expect the courts to cope with many more applications by local authorities to meet their positive obligations under Article 5 to investigate and intervene in what goes on in family homes, behind closed doors?

Official summary

The following is an extract from Judiciary of England and Wales, 'Court of Protection Report 2010' (July 2011).

8. A Local Authority v A (A Child) & Anor [2010] EWHC 978 (Fam)B (Lord Justice Munby, 4 May 2010). www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2010/978.html A and C are both female. A was born in 2001, and C was born in 1987. Both suffer from a rare genetic disorder called Smith Magenis Syndrome, characterised by “self injurious behaviour, physical and verbal aggression, temper tantrums, destructive behaviour, hyperactivity, restlessness, excitability, distractibility and severe sleep disturbances, which include frequent and prolonged night waking and early morning waking.” Both live at home “in the exemplary and devoted care of their parents” in the area of the same local authority. The only way that their parents can keep them safe at night is by locking their bedroom doors. The question arose whether this involves a deprivation of liberty, engaging Article 5 of the ECHR and, if so, what (if any) role does the local authority have in such cases. At paragraph 96 the judge held:

“What emerges from this is that, whatever the extent of a local authority’s positive obligations under Article 5, its duties, and more important its powers, are limited. In essence, its duties are threefold: a duty in appropriate circumstances to investigate; a duty in appropriate circumstances to provide supporting services; and a duty in appropriate circumstances to refer the matter to the court. But, and this is a key message, whatever the positive obligations of a local authority under Article 5 may be, they do not clothe it with any power to regulate, control, compel, restrain, confine or coerce. A local authority which seeks to do so must either point to specific statutory authority for what it is doing – and, as I have pointed out, such statutory powers are, by and large, lacking in cases such as this – or obtain the appropriate sanction of the court. Of course if there is immediate threat to life or limb a local authority will be justified in taking protective (including compulsory) steps ... but it must follow up any such intervention with an immediate application to the court.”

At paragraph 163 he held: “In the outcome, all that is required is appropriate declaratory relief, essentially to the effect that neither A nor C is being deprived of her liberty.”

Dept of Health summary

In the A and C cases, both lived at home, one with the mother alone, one with both parents. Both were extremely well looked after. Smith Magenis sufferers have behaviour problems, are aggressive, and self-injure. They also have severe sleep disturbance. The result in both cases was that the parents felt they must lock their bedroom doors at night; as otherwise, they will leave the bedroom and cause damage to themselves and their surroundings. In both cases, the parents checked regularly, A and C were not distressed by being locked in, and both knew their parents would come if they shouted during the night. The Court held that the actions of locking them up were necessary and unavoidable because the parents rightly believed that A and C would otherwise hurt themselves.

Mr Justice (now Lord Justice) Munby (LJM) first considered the role of the local authority (L/A) in both cases.

He criticised their view that they had control over A or C. Although the L/A had important monitoring and safeguarding roles, its major function was to assess needs and provide services. LJM accepted that there were positive obligations on L/As to take reasonable steps to provide protection for vulnerable people and prevent a deprivation of liberty of which they knew or should have known. However, he held that where an L/A is in this position, they should investigate, provide support services where appropriate, and if necessary refer the matter to court. They could do no more unless they could cite specific statutory authority or obtain court sanction from the Court of Protection or the High Court.

LJM therefore concluded that the State was not directly involved in either of these cases. The L/A was providing support services only. It was not directly involved in what happened in the home of either person. It was not the decision-maker. Mere knowledge was not enough, although this might trigger a duty to investigate and seek judicial assistance. He therefore, held that the L/A could not be in breach of art 5 in these cases even if a deprivation of liberty had occurred.

LJM then reviewed whether there was a deprivation of liberty in respect of A or C in their homes. He considered the 2 elements – an objective element and a subjective one. As both lacked capacity, he held the subjective one was satisfied. However, he found the objective element was not. He held that a loving, caring, proportionate and appropriate regime by devoted parents in a loving family relationship whose objective was solely “the welfare, happiness and best interests of A and C respectively – falls significantly short of anything that would engage Art 5.” He adopted the reasoning of Mrs J Parker in the case of MIG and MEG. He decided living in a family context was very different from being a prisoner. Locking their rooms at night did not change this. He agreed that the restrictions imposed were not to restrict their liberty but to maximise their opportunities and help them to lead their lives to the full. This amounted to an appropriate and proportionate restriction upon liberty not a deprivation of liberty.

As there was no deprivation of liberty, there was no need to decide whether it could be justified as an Art 5 compliant exercise of parental responsibility.

This briefing needs to be read alongside an earlier case law briefing from the Department, and an earlier practice briefing(see links below).

There are implications not just for those attempting to understand and comply with the Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards but also for safeguarding more generally.

LJM in paragraph 96 of the above judgment says,

“What emerges from this is that, whatever the extent of a local authority’s positive obligations under Article 5, its duties, and more important its powers, are limited. In essence, its duties are threefold: a duty in appropriate circumstances to investigate; a duty in appropriate circumstances to provide supporting services; and a duty in appropriate circumstances to refer the matter to the court. But, and this is a key message, whatever the positive obligations of a local authority under Article 5 may be, they do not clothe it with any power to regulate, control, compel, restrain, confine or coerce. A local authority which seeks to do so must either point to specific statutory authority for what it is doing – and, as I have pointed out, such statutory powers are, by and large, lacking in cases such as this – or obtain the appropriate sanction of the court. Of course if there is immediate threat to life or limb a local authority will be justified in taking protective (including compulsory) steps: R (G) v Nottingham City Council [2008] EWHC 152 (Admin)B, [2008] 1 FLR 1660B, at para [21]. But it must follow up any such intervention with an immediate application to the court.”

Citations

(2010) 13 CCL Rep 404, [2010] Fam Law 929, [2010] EWHC 978 (Fam)B

Re A and C (Equality and Human Rights Commission Intervening) [2010] 2 FLR 1363B

Duplicate Bailii citation number: [2010] EWHC 978 (COP)B

External links

BAILII

Mondaq: 'The Court Of Protection – Recent Cases And Comments On Procedure (Part 1)', Alexis Hearnden, Victoria Butler-Cole and Alex Ruck Keene, 1/7/10 - Summary at paras 27-29

Department of Health, 'Summary of two cases on the meaning of deprivation of liberty: the "MIG and MEG" case and the "A and C" case' (gateway ref 15723, 7/3/11)