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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Pierce v Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council [2007] EWHC 2968 (QB) (13 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2007/2968.html Cite as: [2008] 1 FLR 922, [2008] 1 FCR 122, (2008) 100 BMLR 76, [2008] Fam Law 315, [2007] EWHC 2968 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Jake Pierce |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council |
Defendant |
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Catherine Foster (instructed by Halliwells) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 26 to 29 November 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Eady:
Introduction
A summary of the Claimant's case on liability
"51. From when the Claimant was removed into care in July 1976 at the age of 4 months his plight ought to have been known to the Defendant and steps ought to have been taken to prevent the Claimant suffering abuse, neglect and physical and emotional harm from his parents. The Defendant failed to provide an adequate level of monitoring and supervision from when they returned the Claimant home in July 1977.
52. Within a few weeks of his return home the Claimant's weight dropped so significantly that he was required to be an in-patient in hospital for 3 weeks; with competent care it ought to have been apparent that his mother was not capable of providing an adequate level of care for the Claimant.
53. When the Claimant was returned to his family again in November 1977 the Defendant failed to carry out a proper or adequate assessment of the family home and his parents' ability to care for him.
54. After the Claimant had returned home the Defendant failed to monitor him adequately or at all; with proper monitoring it would have been apparent that the Claimant was likely to suffer significant harm if placed at home. Proper investigation would have revealed that the Claimant was
a. not properly fed;
b. not provided with an adequate level of hygiene;
c. was being beaten, assaulted and physically injured;
d. was being bullied and tormented by his family;
e. was not attending school regularly.
55. The Defendant ought to have known that:
f. the Claimant was a vulnerable child whose parents were unable to care for him;
g. the Claimant's mother had been unable to adequately protect the Claimant from abuse by the Claimant's father;
h. the Claimant frequently suffered from bruising;
i. the Claimant suffered severe scalding in 1979.
56. The Defendant ought to have known that when the Claimant was missing from home in 1990 he was at immediate risk of danger and ought to have taken steps to discover his whereabouts or to take him into care.
57. In failing to protect the Claimant from abuse by his family the Defendant, its servants or agents, were negligent and the Defendant is vicariously liable for the negligence of its social workers and social work managers in that they:
(a) failed to give proper consideration to the overall management of the Claimant's welfare as a child when he had been identified as living in a household with a family who were clearly unable to look after him. In particular it was known or ought to have been known that the Claimant had suffered severe injuries and abuse from his family.
(b) failed to carry out any comprehensive review of the family when the Claimant moved back to his parents' home in November 1977 or to make any proper plan for the family.
(c) despite noting concerns about the Claimant's mother and her ability to parent the Claimant and his siblings the Defendant failed to make any proper assessment of the Claimant's mother's ability to care for the Claimant.
(d) having been made aware in 1979 of the risks set out above that the family posed to the Claimant when he suffered severe burns, the Defendant failed to investigate adequately or at all whether the Claimant was at risk. Proper investigation would have led to the conclusion that he was and remained at a significant risk when living in a household with his mother and father. Such competent investigation would have shown that his family was persistently physically abusing, emotionally abusing and neglecting the Claimant as set out in the complaints of abuse referred to above. The only competent conclusion from proper investigation would have been that the Claimant was at risk and required removal from home.
(e) the Defendant failed to interview the Claimant sufficiently or at all away from his family so as to ascertain whether he was subjected to actual abuse or the threat of abuse by his family.
(f) the Defendant failed to remove the Claimant from the home in which his family lived when it was known or ought to have been known to the Defendant that his family posed a foreseeable risk of harm to the Claimant. Even after the Claimant ran away from home in 1990 the Defendant took no steps to ascertain his whereabouts or his welfare.
(g) having left the Claimant in the home with his family the Defendant failed to visit sufficiently often to ascertain that the Claimant was being abused by his family.
(h) the Defendant failed to allocate to the Claimant a social worker in whom he could build sufficient trust to confide the abuse and failed to provide a social worker who could have spoken to the Claimant away from home and in particular away from his family.
(i) failed to carry out sufficient investigations or sufficiently competent investigations to be able to provide information to the Court from 1977 that the Claimant was not safe if placed with his family.
(j) after the Claimant had left the family home in 1990 to live on the streets, failed to ascertain this or the reasons for this and to provide help and support for the Claimant.
(k) when the Claimant was taken into care in 1991 the Defendant failed to obtain adequate counselling, help and support for the Claimant to mitigate the damage that had been done to him by the abuse of his family, the period the Claimant had lived on the streets, and the sexual, physical and emotional abuse he suffered.
(k) failed to provide a reasonable standard of care and support to the Claimant in circumstances where with competent investigation they ought to have discovered the extensive abuse suffered by the Claimant whilst living in the Defendant's area.
(l) once it was apparent to the Defendant the extent to which the Claimant had suffered abuse, failed to take any steps to protect him and placed him in unsuitable institutions including a Barnados Home in Tadcaster where he was detained beyond the point at which it could be reasonably said to be in his best interests to detain him there."
The importance of the Claimant's own evidence
The modern law on duty of care
"83. In so far as the position of a child is concerned, we have reached the firm conclusion that the decision in Bedfordshire cannot survive the Human Rights Act. Where child abuse is suspected the interests of the child are paramount – see section 1 of the Children Act 1989. Given the obligation of the local authority to respect a child's Convention rights, the recognition of a duty of care to the child on the part of those involved should not have a significantly adverse effect on the manner in which they perform their duties. In the context of suspected child abuse, breach of a duty of care in negligence will frequently also amount to a violation of article 3 or article 8. The difference, of course, is that those asserting that wrongful acts or omissions occurred before October 2000 will have no claim under the Human Rights Act. This cannot, however, constitute a valid reason of policy for preserving a limitation of the common law duty of care which is not otherwise justified. On the contrary, the absence of an alternative remedy for children who were victims of abuse before October 2000 militates in favour of the recognition of a common law duty of care once the public policy reasons against this have lost their force.
84. It follows that it will no longer be legitimate to rule that, as a matter of law, no common law duty of care is owed to a child in relation to the investigation of suspected child abuse and the initiation and pursuit of care proceedings. It is possible that there will be factual situations where it is not fair, just or reasonable to impose a duty of care, but each case will fall to be determined on its individual facts.
85. In reaching this decision we do not suggest that the common law duty of care will replicate the duty not to violate articles 3 and 8. Liability for breach of the latter duty and entitlement to compensation can arise in circumstances where the tort of negligence is not made out. The areas of factual enquiry where breaches of the two duties are alleged are, however, likely to be the same".
Was there a duty owed by the Defendant?
The standard of care
Was there a breach of duty in 1977?
"Neither parent is able to display the physical and emotional care Lee and his twin sister require. Sustained efforts by family social worker and health visitor to assist this family have not proved productive mainly due to parents' inadequacies which are directly linked to their own early life experiences. Natural mother is one of [the number is illegible but is clearly at least 10] children of whom at least five have been 'in care' themselves. In my opinion the twins would be subjected to such poor quality parenting that their health could be at serious risk. Mother has some insight and concurs with our observations".
"I spent quite a long time talking to [the mother] about this and about the twins. She admitted that Lee's visits to her home in July had not been successful but was adamant that she wanted the twins to return to her as soon as possible and is frightened that she will never be allowed to have them home. We talked about her spasmodic visits to the twins in the past and her seeming lack of interest in their well-being and I suggested that she should show more interest in her children by making a more positive effort to see them on a regular basis. [The mother] promised to do this and although she may make the effort and visit for a week or so, she may well then slip back into her pattern of excuses and reasons why she has been unable to visit the twins".
"Whilst at the Rehabilitation Unit [the mother] has shown that she can make progress in many aspects but is, and always will be, hampered by Tony Wilson who manipulates and uses her to his own selfish ends. Her own need for affection and emotional and sexual nourishment is great and she is, therefore, unable at this time to produce the kind of strength that could sever the relationship between her and Tony and the only way that this will end will be if Tony finds another girl.
[The mother] is going to require support, in my opinion, for many years to come until her family is grown up and I think that as a Department we must be prepared to give this in order to prevent the remaining three children being received into care."
Considerable reliance was placed by the Defendant on this document as showing positive satisfaction with developments at the time. Unfortunately, Ms Shore did not appear to have the experience or familiarity acquired by Ms Callaghan and the ominous phrase "as well as one could have hoped" is bland and uninformative. What is of greater significance is her warning for the future. There is no evidence that it was heeded. Indeed, if it had been followed up, the injuries recorded in May 1979 might have been avoided or spotted earlier.
"… I can ascertain no satisfactory interpretation of the evidence which would have favoured a definite decision to return the children to their parents and I regard the Defendant's action in failing to make a proper assessment, and in making a decision to return the children to the care of their family in the circumstances outlined as falling short of the standard of practice to be expected of a reasonably competent local authority. I regard it as unlikely that any other similarly qualified expert would form a different judgment in this instance."
I am bound to say that I agree with this conclusion and accordingly hold that there was indeed a breach in allowing the Claimant back into parental care in November 1977.
Was there a breach in May 1979?
The alleged breach in 1990 or 1991
Findings on causation
Limitation
The quantification of damage