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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> X City Council v MB & Ors [2006] EWHC 168 (Fam) (13 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2006/168.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 168 (Fam), [2006] 2 FLR 968 |
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This judgment was handed down in private but the judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the family must be strictly preserved.
FAMILY DIVISION
(In Private)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
In the matter of MAB X CITY COUNCIL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) MB (2) NB (3) MAB (by his litigation friend the Official Solicitor) |
Defendants |
____________________
Ms U R Sood (instructed by Smith Partnership) for the first and second defendants (father and mother)
Ms Alison Ball QC (instructed by Irwin Mitchell) for the Official Solicitor
Hearing dates: 28-30 November 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down in private but the judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the family must be strictly preserved.
Mr Justice Munby :
"In my opinion, [MAB] does not understand the nature of the contract of marriage. This is because of his level of learning disability which precludes him from understanding the mutual responsibilities of marriage It is also my opinion that because of his autistic spectrum disorder he cannot grasp the social implications of marriage and duties and responsibilities normally associated with marriage."
"Given the lack of social support for people with learning disabilities in Pakistan, marriage between a learning disabled person and a person without a learning disability is often considered a means to securing their future care."
The local authority is also concerned that, particularly in Pakistan, there may be cultural and family pressures towards marriage despite the parents' very clear insistence that they would not force an unsuitable or unwanted marriage on their son or niece.
i) In April 1999 an application was made to the Entry Clearance Officer in Islamabad for leave for R to enter this country as MAB's fiancιe under paragraph 290 of the Immigration Rules, HC 395. That application was refused by the ECO on 18 May 1999. R appealed. Her appeal was heard by an Adjudicator, Professor G K Morse, on 20 March 2000 and dismissed in a determination dated 13 April 2000. Applying the test set out in Mohd Meharban v ECO Islamabad [1989] Imm AR 57, Professor Morse held that MAB and R had not "met" within the meaning of paragraph 290(ii), their only meeting having been in 1983 when MAB was aged 3.
ii) In July 2001 an application was made to the Secretary of State for the Home Department for a visa to enable R to settle permanently in this country. The application was made outside the normal Immigration Rules and, as it was put, on compassionate grounds. It was refused by the Secretary of State on 14 December 2001. R appealed and filed additional grounds by letter dated 30 May 2002 raising various issues under the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. Her appeal was heard by an Adjudicator, Mr P J M Hollingworth, on 17 September 2003. The appeal was successful, Mr Hollingworth's reasons being set out in a determination dated 8 December 2003. On 10 February 2004 the Immigration Appeal Tribunal (Mr K Drabu) gave the Secretary of State permission to appeal. The appeal was heard by the IAT (Mr M S W Hoyle, Mr B D Yates and Mr R A McKee) on 15 October 2004 and allowed for reasons set out in a decision dated 13 December 2004. Essentially the IAT allowed the appeal because the parties had never "met". That being so there was no basis for any exercise of discretion, and there could be no breach of Article 8 given the absence of any established family life as between R and MAB.
iii) By letter dated 7 July 2005 an application was made to the ECO at Islamabad seeking leave for R to enter as a family visitor for 6 months, that being something that had, in effect, been suggested by the IAT (see paragraph 10 of its decision dated 13 December 2004). That application was refused by the ECO on 28 July 2005. As I understand it, there has been no appeal.
"He is planning to take [MAB] to Pakistan probably late Jan/Feb for 1-2 weeks. The purpose of this visit is for [R] to meet [MAB] with a view to marriage. If the woman wishes to go ahead plans will be made for the marriage to take place while [MAB] is in Pakistan. Details will then be passed to Home Office with a view to the young woman coming to this country ...
[The father] told me that he has spent a lot of time talking to this woman + has tried to "put her off". He is concerned that if she goes ahead with this she may later change her mind. The woman is insisting on meeting [MAB] before making her decision. [Father] stressed that he hopes she will not want to go ahead with this after she has met [MAB].
He told me that [the mother] is very much in favour of this match + if he did not go along with this it would cause a split in the family
This situation has arisen as all the family's attempts to bring this young woman over have failed (Home Office decision)."
"I do not think it would be in [MAB's] best interests for him to go on a long haul flight. I am worried about the possibility of [MAB] becoming agitated during the flight. I am also worried about the possibility of the risks to the safety of other passengers and cabin crew I am aware that you mentioned the issue of offering sedation to [MAB] during the flight; I think this might go some way towards reducing the risk but I still think that this would not reduce the level of risk to an acceptable level."
"Dr C asked [the father] if he had informed the Airline of [MAB's] special needs. [The father] said he hadn't yet bought the tickets but would ensure this was done when he did so ...
Dr C said to [the father] that he ([father]) was aware of his (Dr C's) views on this matter. Dr C asked that it be minuted that in his opinion the flight to Pakistan was too risky for [MAB] to undertake.
[The social worker] suggested that as [MAB] was only just beginning to settle after a prolonged period of unsettled behaviour that such a journey would be detrimental to [MAB]. [The father] stated that he was under pressure to take [MAB] to Pakistan and that it couldn't be delayed."
I might add that the local authority's records show that the "unsettled behaviour" to which the social worker was referring included incidents in January and February 2005 when MAB had punched the taxi driver who drives him to and from his day centre and had tried "several times" to put on the hand-brake whilst the taxi was moving. (The consequences were MAB to behave in this kind of way on an airplane could obviously be extremely serious.) The minutes record as part of the "agreed action" that the airline was to be "fully informed" by the father of MAB's care needs prior to the proposed flight to Pakistan.
"I firmly and strongly believe that [MAB] understands what being married entails, for example, understanding the marriage ceremony and his vows, his obligation to share a home, domestic and social life together, and to look after his wife to the best of his ability."
How the father could really have believed that, given what he had been told by Dr C, escapes me. I regret to have to say that the father also gave a very partial account of Dr C's views about MAB travelling to Pakistan, contenting himself with the statement that although Dr C "had reservations he did not do anything more than give his opinion." Only in September 2005 did the father acknowledge that MAB "at present does not have the capacity to marry."
i) The court is exercising an essentially protective jurisdiction, to be invoked if but only if there is a need to protect a vulnerable adult: here I am being asked to put in place protective measures to prevent a vulnerable adult being taken abroad to be married.
ii) The court is justified in intervening in this kind of case if there is a real possibility of harm, in the sense in which those words were used in In re H and others (Minor) (Sexual Abuse: Standard of Proof) [1996] AC 563.
iii) Particularly in this kind of case one needs to bear in mind that prevention is better than cure. As Singer J pointed out in In re SK (An Adult) (Forced Marriage: Appropriate Relief) [2004] EWHC 3202 (Fam), [2006] 1 WLR 81, at para [4], although a non-consensual marriage is voidable, that alone is plainly not an adequate remedy because, as he went on to observe, such a "marriage" is "nevertheless one which might engender irreparable and severe physical and emotional consequences for its victim." So the protective jurisdiction is particularly important where the need is to take preventive steps in advance.
iv) In this context the well known words of Lord Eldon LC in Wellesley v Duke of Beaufort (1827) 2 Russ 1 at page 18 are as apposite today as they were almost 180 years ago, and as equally applicable where the court is exercising its inherent jurisdiction in relation to vulnerable adults as when it is exercising its inherent or wardship jurisdictions in relation to a child:
"it has always been the principle of this court, not to risk the incurring of damage to children which it cannot repair, but rather to prevent the damage being done."
Lord Eldon continued at page 20 with the observation that the jurisdiction:
"is founded on the obvious necessity that the law should place somewhere the care of individuals who cannot take care of themselves, particularly in cases where it is clear that some care should be thrown around them."
"We must guard against the risk of stereotyping. We must be careful to ensure that our understandable concern to protect vulnerable children (or, indeed, vulnerable young adults) does not lead us to interfere inappropriately and if inappropriately then unjustly with families merely because they cleave, as this family does, to mores, to cultural beliefs, more or less different from what is familiar to those who view life from a purely Euro-centric perspective. It would be a tragic irony if the full weight of the wardship jurisdiction was to be deployed against those sections of our community who, paying particular regard to the importance of marriage and to the unacceptability of pre-marital sexual relations, tend for that very reason to marry young, whilst leaving untouched those sections of our community who, treating pre-marital sexual relations and co-habitation without the benefit of matrimony as almost the norm, tend for that reason not to marry until they are well into their twenties."
That was said in the context of proceedings in relation to the sixteen year old daughter of Iraqi Kurds. But the same sensitivity is called for in this and other cases involving incapacitated adults.
i) there has never been, and is not likely to be, any question of them trying to coerce MAB or override either his free will or his wishes;
ii) throughout the history of their endeavours to arrange his marriage they have been motivated by, and have endeavoured to act in, what they genuinely believed to be his best interests they have never set out to act in a manner inimical to what they saw as his best interests;
iii) they have never flouted the law or done anything to suggest that they will do so in future.
"Negligible. Whilst his overall level of functioning varies there is no evidence that he has ever functioned at a level where he could grasp the necessary concepts to manage either his legal or financial affairs."
That of course is not conclusive in relation to the different questions I am considering, for capacity is always 'issue specific', but it is certainly indicative of MAB's level of functioning.
"Realistically [MAB] would have to show a very substantial improvement in his understanding of marriage and relationship-related issues if there was to be any possibility of him having the capacity to marry."
That, in essence, remained Dr Land's view, as also Dr C's view, by the time they had concluded their oral evidence. It certainly accords with the view I have formed having regard to all the evidence I have read and heard. But Dr Land continued with this important observation, with which I wholly agree:
"Nevertheless, the overwhelming importance of this issue to his family culturally, and potentially to him individually, would make it reasonable to reassess [MAB's] capacity after an extended period of contact with his prospective wife."
That, of course, assumes that in some way the extended period of contact Dr Land has in mind can actually be organised. And that in turn involves consideration of the possible future feasibility of MAB flying to Pakistan. Both Dr Land and Dr C, as I read their reports and understand their oral evidence, think that such a flight may be possible at some in the future, depending, amongst other things, upon how MAB is seen to react to travel in what Dr Land calls "lower risk environments" lengthy train journeys and shorter internal flights.
"In my judgment the matter can be summarised as follows. Marriage, whether civil or religious, is a contract, formally entered into. It confers on the parties the status of husband and wife, the essence of the contract being an agreement between a man and a woman to live together, and to love one another as husband and wife, to the exclusion of all others. It creates a relationship of mutual and reciprocal obligations, typically involving the sharing of a common home and a common domestic life and the right to enjoy each other's society, comfort and assistance."
The point which I am now addressing did not arise for consideration in that case, which is why I said nothing about it. I took it for granted that, as I have said, a sexual relationship is, generally speaking, implicit in any marriage.
"For although it has been said that the procreation of children is one main object of marriage, yet it cannot be doubted that marriages between persons so advanced in years as effectually and certainly to defeat that object, are perfectly legal and binding. The truth is, consensus non concubitus facit matrimonium."
In Baxter v Baxter [1948] AC 274 Viscount Jowitt LC quoted with approval at page 289 a passage in Lord Stair's Institutions:
"It seems to me that the true view of the matter is expressed in Lord Stair's Institutions, 1681 ed, book I, tit 4, para 6. That learned and distinguished author put the matter thus: "So then, it is not the consent of marriage as it relateth to the procreation of children that is requisite; for it may consist, though the woman be far beyond that date; but it is the consent, whereby ariseth that conjugal society, which may have the conjunction of bodies as well as of minds, as the general end of the institution of marriage, is the solace and satisfaction of man." I am content to adopt these words as my own."
"whether the consent is no consent because it is not directed to the nature and character of the act."
"The general rule of English law, whatever the context, is that the test of capacity is the ability (whether or not one chooses to exercise it) to understand the nature and quality of the transaction."
"Stephen J's rule does something to nail down the doctrine of vitiation of consent. If it be granted, it must necessarily govern spontaneous mistake as well as mistake produced by fraud".
This was recognised by the High Court of Australia in Papadimitropoulos v The Queen (1957) 98 CLR 249 at page 260:
"In considering whether an apparent consent is unreal it is the mistake or misapprehension that makes it so. It is not the fraud producing the mistake which is material so much as the mistake itself."
The Court of Appeal, Criminal Division, made the same point in R v Linekar [1995] QB 250 at page 255:
"it is the non-consent to sexual intercourse rather than the fraud of the doctor or choir master that makes the offence rape."
"it must be proved that she has not sufficient knowledge or understanding to comprehend (a) that what is proposed to be done is the physical fact of penetration of her body by the male organ or, if that is not proved, (b) that the act of penetration proposed is one of sexual connection as distinct from an act of a totally different character."
The court when on to say at page 342:
"That knowledge or understanding need not, of course, be a complete or sophisticated one. It is enough that she has sufficient "rudimentary knowledge" of what the act comprises and of its character to enable her to decide whether to give or withhold consent."
"capacity to consent does not involve, as a matter of law, knowledge or understanding of any of the ingredients referred to as "rudimentary concepts" by the learned trial judge."
All that was required was, as we have seen,
"sufficient "rudimentary knowledge" of what the act comprises and of its character to enable her to decide whether to give or withhold consent."
"there are two reasons for making the requirement low. First, this is necessary to prevent men who have intercourse with willing but sexually innocent girls from being convicted of rape. Secondly, it is necessary in order not to forbid sexual expression to women of low intelligence. Every offence has the effect of diminishing the liberty of the defendant, but when a person is convicted on account of a consensual activity the practical result is to restrict not only his liberty but that of the person with whom he acts."
In the present context I am concerned not so much with the first as with the second of these two considerations. I entirely agree with Glanville Williams's sentiments on this point. They accord, after all, with a very similar observation I made in Sheffield City Council v E [2004] EWHC 2808 (Fam), [2005] Fam 326, at para [144]:
"There are many people in our society who may be of limited or borderline capacity but whose lives are immensely enriched by marriage. We must be careful not to set the test of capacity to marry too high, lest it operate as an unfair, unnecessary and indeed discriminatory bar against the mentally disabled."
"a person consents if he agrees by choice, and has the freedom and capacity to make that choice."
There is no statutory definition of "capacity". It would seem that the common law applies to determine whether someone has capacity for this purpose.
"unable to refuse because of or for a reason related to a mental disorder "
"Mental disorder" is defined for this purpose by section 79(6) as having the same meaning as in section 1 of the Mental Health Act 1983. More importantly for present purposes, the Act provides a definition of what is meant by being "unable to refuse". A person is "unable to refuse" (see section 30(2); essentially the same form of words is to be found in sections 31(2), 32(2) and 33(2)) if:
"(a) he lacks the capacity to choose whether to agree to the touching (whether because he lacks sufficient understanding of the nature or reasonably foreseeable consequences of what is being done, or for any other reason), or
(b) he is unable to communicate such a choice "
"The better view is that, in order to protect those with a mental disorder, a person is to be treated as understanding the "nature" of the touching if they understand its sexual nature, as opposed to the fact that physical touching is taking place. This interpretation focuses on the complainant's knowledge or understanding of the meaning or consequences of sexual relations, and so moves firmly away from the heavily criticised and old-fashioned view that a mentally disordered person can legally consent to sexual activity if their "animal instincts" take over."
The authors then refer to R v Morgan before continuing:
"In Morgan, the court did not go so far as to rule that the complainant could only consent if she understood the potential physical consequences of the intercourse, such as pregnancy. However, in the context of the 2003 Act, we suggest that the phrase "reasonably foreseeable consequences" does refer to the complainant's understanding that the sexual activity could have implications for his or her sexual health and, in the case of women, could lead to pregnancy."
"Such information might include basic knowledge about the risks of pregnancy, sexually transmitted diseases; some understanding of what is involved in sexual activity; and an understanding of the nature of the relationship they have with the other party."
Applying that approach, Dr Land's conclusion, as we have seen, was that MAB lacks the capacity to consent to sexual relations, not having, in his view, even a rudimentary understanding of the practical issues of human reproduction.
"But there is, in my judgment, an important in truth a crucial distinction between, on the one hand, the capacity to litigate or to consent (or refuse consent) to medical treatment and, on the other hand, the capacity to marry. And it is a distinction which makes this analysis much less important in practical terms in the case of capacity to marry than in the two other situations. The distinction, as I have already said, is that marriage is not something on which the average person needs to obtain either expert advice or expert assistance. Litigation and medical treatment, in contrast, are both activities where the average layman needs, and is accustomed to obtaining from an appropriately qualified professional person, expert information, advice and assistance."
I went on at para [136]:
"Where the issues are as complex as typically they will be if the question is whether someone has the capacity to litigate or has the capacity to consent (or refuse consent) to medical treatment, then it is appropriate and helpful to approach the issue by reference to the analyses in In re C (Adult: Refusal of Treatment) [1994] 1 WLR 290 and Re MB (Medical Treatment) [1997] 2 FLR 426. But I doubt whether such a refined analysis is either necessary or indeed particularly helpful where the issue is as simple as the question whether someone has the capacity to marry The question remains as it was in 1881: is E capable of understanding the nature of the contract of marriage? There is no need, as it seems to me, to over-analyse that simple question by bringing to bear on it the analyses in In re C (Adult: Refusal of Treatment) [1994] 1 WLR 290 and Re MB (Medical Treatment) [1997] 2 FLR 426. I do not say that these analyses are irrelevant; they are not. I merely say that in this particular context it is unlikely to be either necessary or even particularly helpful to refer to them."
"Nothing in this Act permits a decision on any of the following matters to be made on behalf of a person
(a) consenting to marriage or a civil partnership,
(b) consenting to have sexual relations".
i) Although, as I have said, Judge Bevington's order was clear that only MAB's passport was to be seized, the separate passport order drawn up by the court the document (in Form 3A) which, together with the direction to the tipstaff signed by the judge (Form 3B), is the authority to the tipstaff and to police officers acting on his behalf to carry out the court's directions erroneously directed the tipstaff to seize not merely MAB's passport but also the parents' passports. That was a clear error. It is an error for which the court bears sole responsibility, for it is the court which draws passport and other tipstaff orders and the practice is not to supply copies of them to the parties. This error by the court was the cause, the causa sine qua non, of everything that followed.
ii) On 24 May 2005 the parent's solicitors issued an application for an order that the local authority be required to return the parents' passports "seized by the authority of" the local authority. That application came before another Circuit Judge on 26 May 2005, who made an order that the Z Constabulary forthwith return the parents' passports to them. Unfortunately both the application and the order were misconceived. The parents' passports, which had been in the constructive custody of the tipstaff ever since they were seized by the police, had in fact been in his actual custody from a very early stage. (An attendance note of a conversation with the tipstaff on 1 April 2005 indicates that he had by then received the passports.) The order should accordingly have been addressed to the tipstaff, directing the tipstaff to return the passports to the parents. This was in fact pointed out by the tipstaff in an e-mail to the local authority on 31 May 2005. The point, if I may explain, is simply this. The original direction made by Judge Bevington on 24 March 2005 in Form 3B required the tipstaff "to keep [the passports] safely, until further direction of the court". The tipstaff was accordingly obliged to keep the passports until such time as he received a direction of the court. The tipstaff was entitled indeed obliged to say that without a direction addressed to him his obligation was to comply with the terms of Judge Bevington's order. As an officer of the court, the tipstaff is entitled to the protection of a direction an order before he parts with any passport which he has seized in accordance with a previous direction he has been given by the court. The order dated 26 May 2005 was useless for this purpose; it merely beat the air.
iii) The e-mail which the tipstaff had sent to the local authority on 31 May 2005 was not brought to the attention of the parents' legal advisers. On 16 August 2005 they telephoned the tipstaff's office and were told quite correctly that the parents' passports could not be released without an order. The same day they sent the tipstaff a copy of the order dated 26 May 2005. On 30 August 2005 the tipstaff informed them again quite correctly that he could not release the passports without an amended order directed to him rather than to the Z Constabulary. It is most unfortunate that the local authority did not see fit to tell the parents' solicitors what they had learnt from the tipstaff on 31 May 2005. As can be seen this omission occasioned a further three months delay.
iv) On 12 September 2005 Coleridge J made an order directing the tipstaff to release the parents' passports to their legal representative or duly appointed agent. Unfortunately, that direction was included in a lengthy order, some of the details of which took a little time to be agreed between the various parties' representatives. It was only on 9 November 2005 that the order was finally sealed and only on 16 November 2005 that a sealed copy sent to them by the court was received by the parents' solicitors.
i) The court should check more carefully than seems to have been done here to ensure that passport and other tipstaff orders are accurately drawn and in a form which accords precisely with the judge's order.
ii) Those involved should ensure that any order for the return of a passport seized by the tipstaff is expressed as being directed to the tipstaff and not to anyone else.
iii) If an order for the return of a passport is made it should be drawn as a separate order which can immediately be sealed without waiting for the finalisation of any other orders or directions the court has made.
"UPON the First and Second Defendants undertaking through Counsel that:
(1) they will not cause or permit the Third Defendant to undergo any civil or religious ceremony of betrothal or marriage whatsoever;
(2) they will not take the Third Defendant out of England Wales and Scotland; and
(3) if they wish to apply to the court to vary or be released from these undertakings they will comply with the procedures set out in the schedule hereto
IT IS DECLARED that:
1 The Third Defendant does not have the capacity to marry.
2 Any purported marriage by the Third Defendant whether celebrated inside or outside England and Wales will not be recognised in English law.
AND IT IS ORDERED that:
3 The First and Second Defendants having given the said undertakings the Tipstaff shall forthwith return the passport of the Third Defendant to the First and Second Defendants and the order of 24 March 2005 providing for the holding of the said passport by the Tipstaff is hereby discharged.
4 Permission is granted to any of the parties to disclose to
(a) the Foreign and Commonwealth Office
(b) the Home Office
(c) the Registrar General
(d) the British High Commission in Pakistan
(e) all treating professionals within the multidisciplinary team caring for the Third Defendant (namely Social Services professionals and [omitted])
(f) health professionals (namely the psychiatrist, general practitioner, occupational therapist, community nurse, psychologist, speech and language therapist)
(g) [the local authority's] Complaints Department
copies of
(i) the originating summons and Part 8 claim form herein;
(ii) the report of Dr Land herein dated 27 July 2005 and the statement of Dr C herein dated 21 October 2005;
(iii) the judgment herein of Mr Justice Munby dated 13 February 2006; and
(iv) this order.
5 The parties are to be at liberty to apply to the court to vary or discharge the undertakings declarations and orders herein upon 28 days written notice to the other parties and to the Official Solicitor.
6 There be a detailed assessment of the costs of the First, Second and Third Defendants.
7 The Claimant do pay two-thirds of the First and Second Defendants' costs of the hearing before Mr Justice Munby on 28-30 November 2005 such costs if not agreed to be the subject of a detailed assessment on the standard basis.
8 Except as aforesaid there be no order as to costs.
SCHEDULE
(Undertaking of the First and Second Defendants)
In the event that either the First and/or the Second Defendants wish to apply to vary or be released from their undertakings they will before applying to the court and at the same time as they give notice in accordance with paragraph 5 above first supply the Claimant and the Official Solicitor with copies of the evidence of a consultant psychiatrist and all the other evidence upon which they intend to rely in support of the application including if they wish to take the Third Defendant out of England Wales and Scotland:
(i) written confirmation from the Third Defendant's treating psychiatrist of his fitness to travel by the means of transport proposed; and
(ii) written agreement from any airline with which it is intended that the Third Defendant will travel that he may travel with that airline."