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February 2023 chronology

This page is automatically generated: it will only be complete at the end of the month. All monthly updates are available here: Archive of monthly updates.

See February 2023 update for a thematic summary of these changes.

  • 27/02/23
    (2159)
    : Mental capacity law newsletter. 39 Essex Chambers, 'Mental Capacity Report' (issue 129, February 2023) —Highlights this month include: (1) In the Health, Welfare and Deprivation of Liberty Report: is depriving a person of their phone depriving them of their liberty, a reminder that the court is the ultimate arbiter of best interests and an Ombudsman comes belatedly to the rescue; (2) In the Property and Affairs Report: a reminder of the new process for applying for deputyship and how the Powers of Attorney Bill would amend the MCA 2005; (3) In the Practice and Procedure Report: the Vice-President intervenes on s.49 reports and new contempt rules; (4) In the Wider Context Report: Parliamentary consideration of the draft Mental Health Bill, a toolkit for supporting decision-making, and confidentiality and common sense; (5) In the Scotland Report: the Supreme Court dismisses an appeal against assessment for services and an opposed application for guardianship.
  • 27/02/23
    (2142)
    : Case (Parental responsibility and DOL). Re D (A Child) [2019] UKSC 42 — It is not within the scope of parental responsibility to consent to living arrangements for a 16- or 17-year-old child which would otherwise amount to a deprivation of liberty within the meaning of Article 5.
  • 27/02/23
    (2136)
    : Case (DOL of under 16s). Re RN (Deprivation of Liberty and Parental Consent) [2022] EWHC 2576 (Fam) — The local authority sought declarations under the inherent jurisdiction authorising the deprivation of liberty of a 12-year-old girl in her father's home. The Supreme Court in Re D (A Child) [2019] UKSC 42 had decided that parental consent cannot authorise DOL of 16-17 year olds. The High Court in this case concluded: "It follows from all that I have said that the restrictive care arrangements in place for RN are a proper and lawful exercise of parental responsibility. This amounts to a valid consent, with the consequence that the second limb of the established three stage test for what amounts to a deprivation of liberty is not met. In such circumstances, this Court need not make any High Court declaration authorising them. They are rendered lawful by the parental consent."
  • 13/02/23
    (2331)
    : T113 (CMR1). Form T113: Case management request (November 2022) —Use for interlocutory matters: (1) Postponements/date brought forward/time change; (2) HQ1 extension; (3) Listing window extension; (4) Prohibition of Disclosure of information: (5) Pre-hearing examination; (6) Permission to withdraw an application; (7) Reinstatement of application; (8) Extension of reports submission/reports directions; (9) Rule 11 request; (10) Telephone conference request; (11) Observer request; (12) Other. This is a simplified form, compared with the September 2020 version, with more tick boxes but only one other box which is for providing reasons. Newer version: Form T113 (CMR1): Case management and pre-hearing (v05.23).
  • 08/02/23
    (1117)
    : Event. Event:Court of Protection: Webinar for legal professionals (online, 28/2/23) —"An overview of how to submit property and affairs deputyship applications to the Court of Protection online. Applications for property and affairs deputyships should be made online. Join us for a step-by-step demonstration of how to make an application and for guidance on which forms must be completed to support your application. There will be plenty of time for questions on the process and the online submission process. The session will be led by Jessica Newton, Deputy Service Manager. You can submit questions during the event by using the live chat bar, or in advance by emailing: HMCTS.Communications@justice.gov.uk." Time: 1200-1300. Cost: free. See Eventbrite website for further details and booking information.
  • 02/02/23
    (0915)
    : NHS commissioning. NHS England, 'Who Pays? Determining which NHS commissioner is responsible for commissioning healthcare services and making payments to providers' (v2, 30/6/22) —"This version of Who Pays? is being published because of changes introduced by the Health and Care Act 2022 and associated regulations ... Although the legislation which underpins Who Pays? is changing in some respects, the new arrangements effective from 1 July 2022 will in practice provide a very high level of continuity with the rules which have applied under the 2020 version of Who Pays?" The introduction notes changes in three key areas: (1) People for whom an ICB is to have core responsibility; (2) Responsibility for detention and aftercare under the Mental Health Act; (3) Transition to adult continuing care. Updates from the 2020 version are highlighted in yellow.