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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 >> A Council v X [2011] EWCOP B10 (09 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2010/B10.html Cite as: [2011] EWCOP B10 |
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This judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report, no person may be identified by name or location (Other than a person identified by name in the judgment itself) and that in particular the anonymity parties must be strictly preserved
B e f o r e :
B E T W E E N:
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The Council |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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X (by her litigation friend the Official Solicitor) |
1st Respondent |
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- and - |
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Y |
2nd Respondent |
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- and - |
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Z |
3rd Respondent |
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Cater Walsh Transcription Ltd., 1st Floor,
Paddington House, New Road, Kidderminster DY10 1AL.
Tel: 01562 60921/510118; fax: 01562 743235;
[email protected]
Ms. AMY STREET (instructed by Langleys Solicitors, acting for the Official Solicitor) for the First Respondent.
Y appeared in person.
Z did not attend court
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Crown Copyright ©
MRS. JUSTICE KING:
(1) X lacks the capacity to litigate.
(2) X lacks the capacity to make decisions as to her residence.
(3) X lacks the capacity to make decisions as to the contact she should have with others.
(4) X lacks the capacity to make decisions as to the care package that she should receive.
(5) It is in X's best interests that she resides at QM ("the care home") and no other person shall seek to remove X from QM save for the Applicant or health authority in an emergency.
(6) It is in X's best interests that she has contact with the Third Respondent in accordance with the contact schedule attached to this order.
(7) It is in X's best interests that she receive the care package in accordance with her assessed needs.
"(1) Contact shall take place between X and Y once per week at the care home or some other facility as is deemed necessary by the local authority to meet X's best interests.
(2) The contact between X and Y shall be for up to one hour.
(3) The contact shall be supervised by staff from the local authority who may halt the contact at their discretion if deemed necessary to meet X's best interests.
(4) The contact arrangements shall be kept under regular review by the Applicant and shall also be reviewed at the periodic review meetings of X's placement held at least six monthly.
(5) The Applicant will notify Y in writing of any change to the current contact arrangements."
"were both of the opinion that the attitude of Y during contact often causes X distress. X becomes very upset when certain topics are raised, for example, when X thinks her father is alive and speaks of him Y tells her abruptly that her father is dead. Y cannot or will not see that this is unkind and wholly unproductive. Y says she believes in telling the truth, but at X's stage of dementia there is no truth but only what beliefs where ravaged memory have left her. In her mind she is a young girl who lives at home with her mother and beloved father. Each time she is told he is dead she is distressed. I have been referred to numerous contact records, these regularly record inappropriate behaviour on Y's part. Dr. S has read all the contact sheets, she regards them as very balanced. She noted that it had been reported when contact had gone well and both had enjoyed it. Since the hearing on 30th November 2009 X has had contact with Y once a week, supervised by two local authority home care staff. Happily, the quality and contact has shown some recent improvement, with Y showing more tolerance of X's disorientation. Unfortunately, she persists in telling X that she is being kept in QM against her will and that she has been put there by Social Services and Z. Miss S. recommends that contact continues on the same basis. Despite the improvement in quality she is of the view that Y needs clear and consistent boundaries regarding her visits, I agree. Having said that, however, I hope very much that if the quality of contact continues to improve, that the length and frequency of contact can be increased and the level of supervision can be reviewed. In any event, it is most important that contact is kept under review. In making that decision I have in mind the observations of Sedley L.J. in Re: F (Adults Courts: jurisdiction) and those of Mumby L.J. (as he then was) in R: S (Adult Patients)."
"With Y I recently attended a hearing before the Court of Protection but had no right of audience and could not act as an advocate. Y who has only limited financial resources has been denied legal aid and had to represent herself. The contest was a highly competent character assassin, totally without scruple, was an unequal one. I was shocked when Y was required to remove her glasses in court to display her speech disability and have it portrayed as evidence of mental disorder."
(i) very unusually, I allowed W to address the court and, indeed, to give evidence; and,
(ii) my recollection of the evidence was that, whilst initially reluctant to remove her glasses, when that was not pressed by Mr. O'Brien on behalf of the local authority, Y then offered to, and did remove her glasses of her own volition.
That is as may be. It is most regrettable that W is still writing letters in such intemperate terms, and in terms which come perilously close to, if not in fact disclosing information from these private proceedings to third parties without the leave of the court.
I have heard evidence from JH, social worker and principal practitioner of the Council, and JA, the manager of QM
"The ambulance crew arrived and at that moment Y tried to run into me to get past me to the ambulance crew. I was in the door well and Y was in the side. She ran her mobility scooter into me. I said to her: 'You just hit me', and she said: 'Well, get out of my way then', and she hit me again, and she hit another member of staff, RS."
JA described how she had bruising to the bottom of her right foot and to the shin of her right leg. She was asked whether or not J had offered an apology and she said she had not. The parties then spoke to the ambulance crew, the police arrived and escorted J off the premises.
"Y said she was not interested in what anyone else says about her mother. Y told me that she had written a letter of complaint to the Council about SH, Y's social worker, for a single point of contact, whom she claimed was very flippant in her manner and not acting correctly. Y said that SH was on holiday this week but another social worker would telephone this afternoon during our visit, and if he didn't telephone before a certain time she would ring him. In fact, the social worker did telephone and Y very quickly became confrontational, telling him not to refer to his colleague, SH, by her first name. After this Y seemed to challenge anything the social worker was trying to tell her. It was impossible to see how the telephone call could have achieved its purpose in terms of keeping Y up to date with her mother's situation and well-being. At one point Y held the phone into the centre of the table for some few minutes while the social worker was talking to her, and shortly after this she terminated the call with him. Y consistently and persistently returned to the time when her mother lived with her, and her version of events which led to X being admitted to QM. When I reminded Y about the Court of Protection final order regarding her mother, Y said she did not accept what had happened in court. I again reminded Y that the issue to be addressed today was solely that of contact, Y's response was to say that it was disgraceful the way the court had treated her and W, who are both disabled people."