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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 >> GE, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department & Anor [2013] EWHC 2186 (Admin) (26 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/2186.html Cite as: [2014] PTSR 124, [2013] EWHC 2186 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE)
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The Queen on the application of GE |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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1. The Secretary of State for the Home Department 2. Bedford Borough Council |
Defendant |
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Paul Greatorex (instructed by Bedford Borough Council) for the Second Defendant
Hearing date: 23 May 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr C M G Ockelton :
(a) Statutory Provisions
"(a) a person who has been a relevant child for the purposes of s.23A (and would be one if he were under 18), and in relation to whom [the local authority was] the last responsible authority; and
(b) a person who was being looked after by [the local authority] when he attained the age of 18, and immediately before ceasing to be looked after was an eligible child".
(b) The Authorities
"[42] It is not necessary, for the purpose of deciding this appeal, to express a view on whether any or all of these cases were rightly decided. For my part, I am entirely sympathetic to the proposition that where a local children's services authority provide or arrange accommodation for a child, and the circumstances are such that they should have taken action under section 20 of the 1989 Act, they cannot side-step the further obligations which result from that duty by recording or arguing that they were in fact acting under section 17 or some other legislation. The label which they choose to put on what they have done cannot be the end of the matter. But in most of these cases that proposition was not controversial. The controversy was about whether the section 20 duty had arisen at all.
…
[44] … It is one thing to hold that the actions of a local children's services authority should be categorised according to what they should have done rather than what they may have thought, whether at the time or in retrospect, that they were doing. It is another thing entirely to hold that the actions of a local housing authority should be categorised according to what the children's services authority should have done had the case been drawn to their attention at the time. In all of the above cases, the children's services authority did something as a result of which the child was provided with accommodation. The question was what they had done. In this case, there is no evidence that the children's services authority did anything at all. It is impossible to read the words
… a child who is… provided with accommodation by the authority in the exercise of any functions… which are social services functions within the meaning of the Local Authority Social Services Act 1970…"
to include a child who has not been drawn to the attention of the local services authority or provided with any accommodation or other services by that authority".
"The question is: what is the true ratio of the decision in the Hammersmith case? It is plain, in my judgement, that what Baroness Hale, in that passage was contrasting was the facts of the case before the Appellate Committee in which the Children's Services Authority had done nothing at all and there was nothing as a result of which the child was provided with accommodation in that case which had been done by that authority from the other cases cited to the House of Lords. That, as it seems to me, requires there to be not only some action by the Children's Services Authority, but also a causal nexus between that action and the result that a child is in fact provided with accommodation. In such circumstances a child will be regarded in law as having been provided with accommodation under section 20 of the 1989 Act, even though, as a matter of fact, the accommodation is provided by the Housing Authority under the 1996 Act. "
i) a local authority is shown to have had an obligation to provide accommodation under s.20, andii) there has been some action by, or imputable to, the Social Services Division of that authority, and
iii) the local authority in fact provided or provides accommodation; and
iv) there is a causal link between the action attributable to the Social Services Department and the provision of the accommodation,
Then the accommodation actually provided may be regarded as having been provided under s.20.
"The claimant was being provided with accommodation at a refuge which was nothing to do with its [sic] local authority. In that case, Sir George Newman held (see paragraph 36) that the claimant was entitled to a declaration that she should have been accommodated for at least thirteen weeks before she became eighteen and is now a former relevant child ".
"In the course of submissions on this issue I expressed my reservation that the claimant's submission seemed to be contrary to the reality but I am satisfied, having reviewed the authorities carefully as invited to do, that the Court may deem accommodation to have been provided pursuant to section 20 where the local authority has acted unlawfully. Were it necessary for me to do so, I would have done so here".
"The Court may deem accommodation provided by the Local Authority to have been provided pursuant to section 20 where the local authority has acted unlawfully".
"[44]… The London Borough of Croydon has known since June of last year that it had made a grave error. The error may have been made in good faith, but it was a serious error with grave consequences for this young man. I had assumed that between the decision of Parker J and the hearing before me, a period of some seven months, the Council would have given some consideration to his plight and to whether or not the Council could or indeed should do something about him. I asked whether that had been done and I found it necessary to repeat the question more than once before I received the response from Miss Rowlands [for the Council] that her instructions were that the Council would abide by the order of this Court. I inferred, and it was not suggested I was in error, that the answer to my question was no. The approach of Croydon effectively has been that it has done no wrong so there was nothing to put right. That line of thinking has, in my judgement, prevented the Council from considering how to remedy the position for this young man and to have prevented it from taking what might have been thought to be the only proper option open to it, namely to treat him as if he were a former relevant child within the meaning of section 23 of the Act and provide him with the services to which he would be entitled.
[45] I am quite satisfied that the court ought to intervene in this case. Accordingly, I direct that the Council must now treat this young man as a former relevant child and provide him with the services to which he would have been entitled had he been treated as a child from May 2008 and onwards. I am not going to give the precise wording unless there is dispute between the parties and I would invite them to discuss the appropriate form of words for any order".
(c) the Scheme of the Children Act 1989
Conclusion