ARGYLL AND BUTE COUNCIL - PETITIONERS
Judicial Review of a
Decision of the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman
SUMMARY of OPINION
Lord Macphail
This is the first time an
application has been presented to the Court of Session for judicial review of a
decision by the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman.
17TH October 2007
Argyll and Bute Council
asked the court to review a decision by the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman
that they had a duty to provide funding for the personal care of a resident over
65 in a private care home. The Council argued that their duty as a local authority to provide funding for the personal
care of people over 65 arose only where the personal care was provided by them,
and not where it was provided through an entirely private arrangement between
the resident or his or her relatives and the care home. Lord Macphail decided that it was not
possible to interpret the legislation about free personal care as obliging a
local authority to make payments for personal care that was not provided by
them. He accordingly held that the Ombudsman's decision that the legislation
placed a statutory duty on Argyll and Bute Council to
provide funding for the personal care of the resident concerned was
incorrect.
Before reaching his decision Lord
Macphail gave the Scottish Ministers an opportunity to instruct counsel to
appear before the court and make submissions in the public interest about the
correct interpretation of the legislation about free personal care. They
declined to do so. Lord Macphail expressed his disappointment that he had not
been afforded such assistance and indicated that he had reached his decision
with reluctance.
Background
Free
personal care for people over 65 is the subject of the Community Care and
Health (Scotland) Act 2002 and regulations made
under the Act.
Section
1(1) of the Act provides that a local authority are not to charge for social
care provided by them (or the provision of which is secured by them) if that
social care is personal care [Para 60 of the Opinion].
Before the
Act came into force, where a local authority acting under the Social Work
(Scotland) Act 1968 provided a person with accommodation which included
personal care, it was obliged to charge, subject to means-testing, for the
element of personal care as well as for the housing element of the
accommodation.
In 1999 the
Royal Commission on Long Term Care (the Sutherland Commission) recommended that
personal care should be exempted from means-testing and should be available for
those who needed it. Their recommendation was endorsed by the Health and
Community Care Committee of the Scottish Parliament. When the bill which became
the Act was introduced in the Parliament, the Minister for Health and Community
Care, Mr Malcolm Chisholm, said, "We will
ensure that personal care is free for all Scotland's oldest people: the
dementia sufferer and the stroke victim; those at home as well as those in care
homes." [Paras 36-39.]
The Act
provides that local authorities are not to charge for personal care provided by
them. The regulations made under the Act state that accommodation provided by a
local authority under the 1968 Act does not include the first г145 per week of
personal care.
The complaint
Mr William
McLachlan complained to the Ombudsman that Argyll and Bute
Council had
failed to provide a service to his father between February and June 2006 in
that they had not provided funding for his personal care.
The
Council, acting under the 1968 Act, assessed that Mr McLachlan's father was
entitled to free personal care. In February 2006 Mr McLachlan placed his father
in a private care home and claimed that his father was entitled to free
personal care. The Council told him that all their free personal care budget
was committed, but his father would be placed on a priority list. Eventually
they contributed г145 per week towards his personal care costs with effect from
28 June 2006. He died on 4 April 2007.
Mr
McLachlan complained to the Ombudsman. The Ombudsman conducted an investigation
and issued a report on 28 November 2006. She decided that the Council had
been obliged by the terms of the 2002 Act to provide Mr McLachlan's
father with
free personal care, and she recommended that the Council should calculate and
pay a sum equivalent to the payments which in her view should have been paid to
him from the date when he became eligible for them until the date when the
Council began to make the payments.
The
application for judicial review
The Council
applied to the Court for judicial review of the Ombudsman's decision. They
argued that it should be set aside for two principal reasons. The first was
that the obligation to pay for personal care arose only where it was provided
by the local
authority.
The second was that the Act forbade a local authority to charge for personal
care, but did not impose an obligation to make any payment.
Lord
Macphail upheld the Council's first argument and decided that it was not
possible to interpret the legislation as obliging a local authority to make
payments for personal care which was not provided by them. It was concerned
only with not charging for personal care provided by a local authority. The
personal care provided to Mr McLachlan's father had been provided to him by his
family, who had made an entirely private arrangement with the care home, with
which the Council had not been concerned.
Lord Macphail therefore held that the Ombudsman's decision that the Act
placed a statutory duty on the Council to provide funding to him was incorrect
[paras 66-67].
Lord Macphail
said that he reached that conclusion with reluctance. However, while a court in
interpreting legislation must always seek the true intention of the
legislature, it could not ignore the natural meaning of the clear and
unambiguous words Parliament had chosen to use, even where it suspected that
Parliament might have provided differently if a particular question or issue
had been exposed to them. Lord Macphail also said that he was acutely aware
that his decision meant that there had been a widespread misunderstanding of
the meaning and effect of the legislation on the part of local authorities, the
Scottish Executive and persons over 65 in private care homes and their families
[paras 69-70].
In July
2007 Lord Macphail gave the Scottish Ministers an opportunity to instruct
counsel to appear before the Court and submit that the Council's first argument
was wrong. He said, when inviting the Scottish Ministers to do so, that the
matter was of great importance and that the Court would derive invaluable assistance
from submissions made on their behalf. However, the Scottish Ministers decided
not to appear. In his judgment Lord Macphail recorded his disappointment that
the Court had not been afforded the assistance of submissions made by the
Scottish Ministers [paras 73 -76]
Lord
Macphail rejected the Council's second argument that the Act did not impose on
a local authority an obligation to make any payment, but only disentitled them
from charging for personal care. Lord Macphail observed that while the legislation
about free personal care was unusually complex, it implied that a local
authority were entitled to make payments in respect of personal care in
accommodation provided by them [para 87].
In his
judgment Lord Macphail examined the constitutional position of the Ombudsman
[paras 4-21]. In the present case the Ombudsman did not maintain that she was
immune from judicial review. A question arose, however, as to whether it would
be appropriate for her decision in the present case to be set aside by the Court.
Lord Macphail held that in the circumstances of this case the petitioners,
Argyll and Bute Council, had a substantial interest in having the decision set
aside, and accordingly that it should be reduced by way of judicial review if
it was found to be unsound [para 104].
In view of
his conclusion on the Council's first argument Lord Macphail set aside the
Ombudsman's decision that they had been obliged to provide Mr McLachlan's
father with free personal care.
Lord
Macphail pointed out that the first argument had not been presented to the
Ombudsman [paras 71, 97]. He rejected other criticisms which the Council had
made of the Ombudsman's report. He observed that it had been within the
discretion of the Ombudsman to determine the scope of her investigation and the
appropriate level of response to the complaint, and that the purpose of her
report had been to deal with the complaint in an effective and intelligible
manner [paras 88, 89, 95-97].
NOTE
This summary is provided to
assist in understanding the Court's decision. It does not form part of the
reasons for that decision. The full report of the Court is the only
authoritative document.
The full Opinion will
be available today at this location on the Scottish Courts website:
http://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/opinions/2007CSOH168.html
Media Contact Elizabeth
Cutting,
Public
Information Officer
Parliament House,
Parliament Square
Edinburgh
0131 240
6854
07917 068173
[email protected]
The Scottish Public Services
Ombudsman
The Office
of the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman deals with complaints about
organisations which provide public services in Scotland. It was established by the Scottish
Public Services Ombudsman Act 2002. The Ombudsman is Professor Alice Brown. For
further information about the Ombudsman's Office go to www.spso.org.uk
OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2007] CSOH 168
|
P78/07
|
OPINION OF LORD MACPHAIL
in Petition of
ARGYLL AND BUTE
COUNCIL
Petitioner;
against
Judicial Review of
a Decision of the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman
Defender:
ннннннннннннннннн
|
Petitioners: D. E. L. Johnston, Q.C., M.
V. Ross; Brodies LLP
Respondent: Cullen, Q.C., Munro; Anderson Strathern
Interested Party: Party
17 October 2007
Introduction
[1] This
is the first application for judicial review of a decision by the Scottish
Public Services Ombudsman ("the Ombudsman").
On 24 March 2006 a member of the public, Mr William
McLachlan, made two complaints to the Ombudsman. His first complaint was that a local
authority, Argyll and Bute Council ("the Council"), had failed to provide
funding in respect of the personal care of his father, also named William
McLachlan. Secondly, he complained that
the Scottish Executive Health Department had failed to ensure that the Council
provided a service. The Council began to
provide the desired funding with effect from 28 June 2006, but did not backdate it. The Ombudsman conducted an investigation and
on 28 November 2006 issued
a report in which she upheld the complaint against the Council but did not
uphold the complaint against the Scottish Executive. In her report she stated that the Council had
been obliged by the terms of the Community Care and Health (Scotland)
Act 2002 ("CCHSA") to provide funding to Mr McLachlan Senior for his personal
care. She recommended that the Council
should calculate and pay to him a sum equivalent to the payments which in her
view should have been paid to him from the date when he became eligible for
such payments until the date when the Council began to make such payments to
him.
[2] The
Council have now brought the present petition in which they seek "reduction of
[the Ombudsman's] decision" on two grounds.
The first ground is that the decision is wrong in law et separatim irrational. The second is that the decision was ultra vires, but that ground has not
been insisted in. The Ombudsman is the
respondent. The petition was served on
Mr McLachlan Junior as an interested party, and was also intimated informally
to the Scottish Ministers. The Ombudsman
and Mr McLachlan lodged answers. The
Scottish Ministers did not do so and have not appeared although invited by the
Court to do so, as I shall explain. I
heard the compearing parties at the first hearing of the petition on 1 and 2
March and 30 May 2007. The Council and the Ombudsman were
represented by senior and junior counsel. Mr McLachlan Junior appeared on his own behalf. Mr McLachlan Senior died on 4 April 2007.
[3] I
shall begin by examining in Part I of this Opinion the constitutional position
of the Ombudsman. I shall then set out
in Part II the relevant terms of CCHSA and other legislation and the cases and
materials discussed in argument. Thereafter
I shall discuss in Part III the facts which have given rise to the present
petition. In Part IV I shall reproduce
the Ombudsman's conclusion and recommendation with respect to Mr McLachlan's
complaint about the Council. I shall
consider in Part V the criticisms which the Council have made of the
Ombudsman's report, and in Part VI I shall notice the submissions made by Mr
McLachlan. Finally, in Part VII I shall
state my decision as to the nature of the interlocutor to be pronounced.
I The Ombudsman
[4] The
concept of the office of ombudsman is helpfully discussed in general terms in
Wade and Forsyth, Administrative Law (9th
edn) at pages 83-85. In their discussion
of complaints against administration the authors say (footnotes omitted):
"The primary necessity is the
impartial investigation of complaints. It
has always been possible for the government to commission a special inquiry,
but this is far too ponderous and expensive a process for the ordinary run of
grievances. What every form of
government needs is some regular and smooth-running mechanism for feeding back
the reactions of its disgruntled customers, after impartial assessment, and for
correcting whatever may have gone wrong.
Nothing of this kind existed in our system before the establishment of
the Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration (or ombudsman) in 1967,
except in very limited spheres. Yet it
is a fundamental need in every system. This
was why the device of the ombudsman suddenly attained immense popularity,
sweeping round the democratic world and taking root in Britain
and in many other countries, as well as inspiring a vast literature. [ .
. . ]
"Ombudsman is a Scandinavian word
meaning officer or commissioner. In its
special sense it means a commissioner who has the duty of investigating and
reporting to Parliament on citizens' complaints against the government. An ombudsman requires no legal powers except
powers of inquiry. In particular, he is
in no sense a court of appeal and he cannot alter or reverse any government
decision. His effectiveness derives
entirely from his power to focus public and parliamentary attention upon
citizens' grievances. But publicity based on impartial inquiry is a
powerful lever. Where a complaint is
found to be justified, an ombudsman can often persuade a government department
to modify a decision or pay compensation in cases where the complainant unaided
would get no satisfaction. For the
department knows that a public report will be made and that it will be unable
to conceal the facts from Parliament and the press.
"The essence of the ombudsman's
technique is to receive the complaint informally, to enter the government
department, to speak to the officials and read the files, and to find out
exactly who did what and why. No formal
procedure is involved at any stage, nor is any legal sanction in question."
[5] The
distinctive nature of "any modern Ombudsman system" is described in this way by
the present Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration (now usually known as
"the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman" or simply "the Parliamentary
Ombudsman"), Ms Ann Abraham, in her foreword to The Parliamentary Ombudsman: withstanding the test of time (4th
Report, Session 2006-2007, HC 421):
"The
investigation and resolution of individual complaints remains the staple diet
of the office's work, the evidential base against which patterns of good and
bad practice can be mapped. To that task
I increasingly bring the sort of 'strategic' approach expected of any modern
Ombudsman system: early diagnosis, appropriate levels of response (not the
'Rolls Royce approach' for its own sake), the ability to use the intelligence
yielded to aid future prevention as well as immediate cure. The Ombudsman is not a court or tribunal,
certainly not a court or tribunal familiar to lawyers of a common law
jurisdiction. Ombudsmen and courts are
like chalk and cheese: superficially similar, but of very different texture and
ingredients. Liberated from the burden
of imposing enforceable remedies, with wide discretion, the Ombudsman is free
to establish a very different relationship between the disputing parties, based
upon trust and shared understandings, not formal compliance."
[6] These
passages from Wade and Forsyth and from the recent report on the Parliamentary
Ombudsman provide useful general indications of the character of the
Ombudsman's office. I shall now refer to
the statutory provisions relative to the respondent.
[7] In
Scotland,
section 91(1) of the Scotland Act 1998 requires the Scottish Parliament to make
provision for the investigation of relevant complaints made to its members in
respect of any action taken by or on behalf of a member of the Scottish Executive
or any other office-holder in the Scottish Administration. In addition, section 91(3) empowers the
Parliament to make provision for the investigation of complaints in respect of,
among other things, any action taken, or any failure to act, by or on behalf of
a Scottish public authority with mixed functions or no reserved functions
(section 91(3)(c), (6)). A Scottish
local authority are such an authority (Schedule 5, Part III, paragraph 1). Temporary provision for such investigations
was made by the Scotland Act 1998 (Transitory and Transitional Provisions)
(Complaints of Maladministration) Order 1999 (SI 1999, No 1351) until the
Scottish Public Services Ombudsman Act 2002 ("SPSOA") came into force.
[8] I
now notice the provisions of SPSOA which are relevant to the present case. Section 1 establishes the office of Scottish
Public Services Ombudsman. Section 2
confers on the Ombudsman powers of investigation. Among other things, the Ombudsman may
investigate any matter, whenever arising, if the matter consists of action
taken by or on behalf of a person liable to investigation under the Act, if it
is a matter which the Ombudsman is entitled to investigate, and if a complaint
in respect of the matter has been made to him or her (section 2(1)). "Action" includes failure to act (section
23(1)); and a local authority are "a person liable to investigation" (section 3(1) and Schedule 2, Part I,
paragraph 7). It is for the Ombudsman to
decide whether to initiate, continue or discontinue an investigation (section
2(3)); and he or she may take such action in connection with the complaint as
he or she thinks may be of assistance in reaching any such decision (section
2(4)).
[9] Sections
5 to 8 make provision as to the range of matters which the Ombudsman is entitled
to investigate. They include "any
service failure" by a local authority (section 5(1)(c)). "Service failure" includes "any failure of
the authority to provide a service which it was the function of the authority
to provide" (section 5(2)(b)). In the
present case Mr McLachlan complained of a service failure by the Council. Section 12 is concerned with the
investigation procedure. Where the
investigation is pursuant to a complaint, as in the present case, the Ombudsman
must give the authority complained of an opportunity to comment on any
allegations contained in the complaint (section 12(2)(a)). The Ombudsman gave the Council such an
opportunity. Section 13 confers on the
Ombudsman extensive powers to obtain evidence.
[10] Sections 15 and 16 deal with reports on investigations. Section 15(1)(a) provides that after
conducting an investigation pursuant to a complaint the Ombudsman must send a
report of the investigation to the person aggrieved, to the authority
complained of, and to the Scottish Ministers; and must also lay a copy of the
report before the Scottish Parliament. Section
15(4) requires the authority to make, and to publicise, arrangements for
allowing any person to inspect the report at any reasonable time and to obtain
a copy of it. To obstruct anyone seeking
to inspect or obtain a copy of a report is a criminal offence (section
15(7)).The authority are not required to respond to the report, and there is no
legal sanction for any failure by the authority to implement any recommendation
made by the Ombudsman as to any action which they should take. If, however, the report finds that the person
aggrieved has sustained injustice or hardship and, following the making of the
report, it appears to the Ombudsman that the injustice or hardship has not
been, or will not be, remedied, the Ombudsman may make and publicise a special
report on the case which, like the original report, must be issued and laid
before the Parliament (section 16).
[11] Junior counsel for the petitioners and for the Ombudsman made
extensive submissions as to the Ombudsman's functions. The petitioners' submissions were designed to
rebut any suggestion that the Ombudsman was not subject to the supervisory
jurisdiction of the court. The
Ombudsman's junior counsel, however, disclaimed any such suggestion. She undertook a lucid and comprehensive
exposition of the Ombudsman's function and role. I need not recount the respective submissions
of junior counsel in detail because at the end of the day there was little
dispute between the parties on these matters.
It is sufficient to note that junior counsel for the petitioners
referred to R v Local Commissioner for
Administration for the South, the West Midlands, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire
and Cambridgeshire, ex parte Eastleigh Borough Council [1988] 1 QB 855 and
to R v Parliamentary Commissioner for
Administration, ex parte Dyer [1994] 1 WLR 621. Senior counsel for the petitioners referred
to R v Parliamentary Commissioner for
Administration, ex parte Balchin [1997] JPL 917, R v Parliamentary
Commissioner for Administration, ex parte Balchin (No 2) [2000] JPL 267 and
R v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, ex parte Bradley [2007] EWHC 242. The effect of these
authorities was not disputed by the Ombudsman's counsel. I shall therefore notice them briefly.
[12] R v Local Commissioner
for Administration for the South, the West Midlands, Leicestershire,
Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire, Ex parte Eastleigh Borough Council [1988]
1 QB 855 was an application for judicial review of a report by a Local
Commissioner acting in terms of the Local Government Act 1974. Holding that the Local Commissioner was
subject to judicial review, Lord Donaldson of Lymington MR said (at pages
866H-867D):
"Let me start
with the fact that Parliament has not created a right of appeal against the
findings in a Local Commissioner's report.
It is this very fact, coupled with the public law character of the
ombudsman's office and powers, which is the foundation of the right to relief
by way of judicial review.
Next there is the suggestion that
the council should issue a statement disputing the right of the ombudsman to
make his findings and that this would provide the council with an adequate
remedy. Such an action would wholly
undermine the system of ombudsman's reports and would, in effect, provide for
an appeal to the media against his findings.
The Parliamentary intention was
that reports by ombudsmen should be loyally accepted by the local authorities
concerned. This is clear from section
30(4) and (5) [of the 1974 Act], which require the local authority to make the
report available for inspection by the public and to advertise this fact, from
section 31(1), which requires the local authority to notify the ombudsman of
the action which it has taken and proposes to take in the light of his report
and from section 31(2), which entitles the ombudsman to make a further report
if the local authority's response is not satisfactory.
Whilst I am very far from
encouraging councils to seek judicial review of an ombudsman's report, which,
bearing in mind the nature of his office and duties and the qualifications of
those who hold that office, is inherently unlikely to succeed, in the absence
of a successful application for judicial review and the giving of relief by the
court, local authorities should not dispute an ombudsman's report and should
carry out their statutory duties in relation to it."
I note that SPSOA does not have any
provisions equivalent to section 31(1) and (2) of the 1974 Act. As I have mentioned, SPSOA only makes
provision for a "special report" where a report under section 15 finds that the
person aggrieved has sustained injustice or hardship and it appears to the
Ombudsman that the injustice or hardship has not been, or will not be, remedied
(section 16).
[13] R v Parliamentary Commissioner for
Administration, Ex parte Dyer [1994] 1 WLR 621 was an application for
judicial review of a decision of the Parliamentary Commissioner for
Administration appointed under the Parliamentary Commissioner Act 1967. Simon Brown LJ (as he then was) said at page
625F:
"I see nothing
about the Commissioner's role or the statutory framework within which he
operates so singular as to take him wholly outside the purview of judicial
review."
His Lordship also cited (at page
627B-C and G-H) passages from the above dicta of Lord Donaldson of Lymington MR
in Ex parte Eastleigh. Ex
parte Eastleigh was also followed in R v
Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, ex parte Bradley [2007] EWHC 242,
where Ex parte Eastleigh was held to be
authority for the proposition that in the absence of a successful application
for judicial review the findings of a Local Government Ombudsman are binding on
the relevant local authority.
[14] The petitioners' counsel distinguished between an application
for judicial review which challenged the Ombudsman's exercise of discretion,
and one which challenged the Ombudsman's reasoning. In Ex
parte Dyer, which concerned a challenge to the Ombudsman's discretion in
the exercise of his investigatory functions, the challenge had failed. On the other hand challenges had succeeded in
R v Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration, ex parte Balchin [1997] JPL 917, where the Ombudsman had omitted a factor decisive in reaching his
decision; in R v Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration, ex parte Balchin (No 2)
[2000] JPL 267; and in Ex parte
Eastleigh. In each of the two latter cases there had been
a serious flaw in the reasoning which went to the heart of the decision. As I shall explain later, the petitioners in
the present case challenge, not an exercise of discretion, but the legal
reasoning which led the Ombudsman to her decision.
[15] Senior counsel for the petitioners submitted that these cases
showed that the courts were prepared, albeit reluctantly, to review the
decisions of ombudsmen. He also observed
that SPSOA had brought together in one office the functions of a number of
officials who had handled complaints against administration, including the
Scottish Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration and the Commissioner for
Local Administration in Scotland:
accordingly, the English cases concerning such ombudsmen were directly
analogous. Counsel further commented
that on the authority of Ex parte Eastleigh and Ex
parte Bradley the findings of the respondent were binding.
[16] As I have mentioned, none of these authorities was challenged,
and none of these submissions was disputed, by counsel for the Ombudsman. They made it clear that she did not suggest
that she was immune from judicial review.
They submitted, however, that the Court's supervisory jurisdiction
should be exercised with sensitivity to the special nature of the Ombudsman's
constitutional role and function.
[17] I have no difficulty in accepting the latter submission. I accept that the Court must be careful to
understand and respect the powers and duties of the Ombudsman, in the same way
as it is bound to attend carefully to the position of any other person or body
whose actings are submitted to its supervisory jurisdiction. In the present case the Ombudsman did not
maintain that she was immune from judicial review, but a question arose as to
whether it would be appropriate for her decision in this case to be set aside. I shall discuss that matter in Part VII of
this Opinion.
[18] I also have no difficulty in accepting the submissions for the
petitioners, subject to the following reservations. First, I do not consider that it would be
appropriate for me to adopt in their entirety the observations of Lord Donaldson
of Lymington MR in Ex parte Eastleigh. As I have already noted, SPSOA does not have
any provisions equivalent to section 31(1) and (2) of the Local Government Act
1974. In addition, at this very early
stage in the history of the office of the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman it
would be premature, in my view, to tender any general advice in the Outer House. I therefore refrain from making any
observations about the prospects of success of applications for judicial review
of a report by the Ombudsman. Nothing in
this Opinion should be understood either as encouraging interested parties to
seek judicial review of an Ombudsman's report, or as discouraging them from
doing so.
[19] Secondly, senior counsel for the petitioners criticised a
comment by junior counsel for the Ombudsman that the issue about free personal
care for the elderly had been ventilated by the Ombudsman's inquiry and focused
by her report. The petitioners' counsel
observed that the notion that the Ombudsman existed to ventilate matters of
public concern was an alarming one. That
was a purpose served by the media: it was not a duty imposed on the Ombudsman
by SPSOA. By virtue of section 5 her task was to
investigate and report on allegations of maladministration or service failure. I consider, however, that the Ombudsman's
counsel was saying no more than was consistent with the passage from Administrative Law quoted above: "[The
Ombudsman's] effectiveness derives entirely from his power to focus public and
parliamentary attention upon citizens' grievances."
[20] Thirdly, senior counsel for the petitioners discussed the
question whether the Ombudsman's recommendations and findings were binding. He submitted that while her recommendations
did not bind the petitioners as a matter of law, on the authority of Eastleigh and Bradley
her findings were binding. The
Ombudsman, on the other hand, avers in Answer 8(i) that her findings and
recommendations are not legally binding.
I consider that the question whether the Ombudsman's recommendations and
findings are binding is not a live issue in this case. The petitioners themselves challenged a
finding in the Ombudsman's report that Mr McLachlan Senior had been assessed as
having unmet care needs at home, and the Ombudsman's counsel did not argue that
they were not entitled to do so. I note
that in England
it has been said that in any event findings of the Parliamentary Ombudsman are
not binding where they are "objectively shown to be flawed or irrational, or
peripheral, or there is genuine fresh evidence to be considered." (Ex
parte Bradley, paragraph 58.) Whether
findings made by the respondent are binding appears to me to be a question for
another day.
[21] On the other hand I have no difficulty in accepting a
submission by the petitioners' counsel that there is a strong expectation that
public authorities will follow the Ombudsman's recommendations. While they are not obliged by law to do so,
they are nevertheless subject to very real pressure to comply. As Sir William Wade and Mr Forsyth point out
in the same passage from Administrative
Law, "publicity based on impartial inquiry is a powerful lever." And there is the prospect of a special report
under section 16 if it appears to the Ombudsman that the public authority has
not, or will not, remedy an injustice or hardship which she has identified.
II Free personal care: the
statutory framework
[22] The central question in this case is whether the Ombudsman was
correct in her interpretation of section 1 of the Community Care and Health (Scotland)
Act 2002 ("CCHSA"). She understood that
it imposed on the Council a positive obligation to provide funding in respect
of the personal care of Mr McLachlan Senior.
The Council maintain that it did not impose any such obligation. Before discussing that issue in Part V I
shall set out in this Part the statutory provisions, cases and materials which
were discussed in argument; in Part III
I shall state the material facts; and in
Part IV I shall reproduce the Ombudsman's conclusion and recommendation with
respect to Mr McLachlan's complaint about the Council.
[23] The statutory provisions of primary importance appear in the
Social Work (Scotland) Act 1968, as amended ("SWSA"), the Community Care and
Health (Scotland) Act 2002 ("CCHSA") and the Community Care (Personal Care and
Nursing Care) (Scotland) Regulations 2002 (SSI 2002, No 303) ("the
Regulations"). Before setting them out
it may be convenient to foreshadow matters that will be discussed in more
detail later. In 1999 the Royal Commission
on Long Term Care stated that people in long-term care incurred three kinds of
cost: living costs, housing costs and personal care costs. Section 87 of SWSA prevented a local
authority from providing free personal care to those for whom they had provided
accommodation which included personal care: the authority were obliged to
charge, subject to means-testing, for the element of personal care as well as
for the "housing" element of the accommodation.
The Commission recommended that personal care should be exempted from
means-testing and should be available for those who needed it. The issue between the Council and the
Ombudsman is whether the effect of CCHSA and the Regulations is to distinguish
the element of personal care and to provide that where a person aged 65 or over
is in accommodation which includes an element of personal care, a local
authority are obliged to provide funding for the personal care element of his
or her accommodation. It is the view of
the Ombudsman that such an obligation is imposed, while the Council maintain
the contrary. They argue (1) that the
legislation only provides that a local authority are not entitled to charge for
personal care, and (2) that the legislation applies only where the local
authority are providing the accommodation.
[24] I now set out the statutory provisions, cases and materials.
The
Social Work (Scotland) Act 1968
[25] The subject of Part II of
SWSA, as amended, is the promotion of social welfare by local authorities. Section 12 is concerned with the general
social welfare services of local authorities.
Subsection (1) provides:
"(1) It shall be the duty of every local
authority to promote social welfare by making available advice, guidance and
assistance on such a scale as may be appropriate for their area, and in that
behalf to make arrangements and to provide or secure the provision of such
facilities (including the provision or arranging for the provision of
residential and other establishments) as they may consider suitable and
adequate, and such assistance may [ .
. . ] be given in kind or in cash to, or in
respect of, any relevant person."
[26] Section 12A makes provision as to the duty of a local
authority, first, to assess a person's needs and then, secondly, to decide
whether his or her needs call for the provision of any community care services. These include services which the authority
are under a duty or have a power to provide, or to secure the provision of,
under Part II of SWSA (sections 12A(8), 5A(4)).
Section 12A(1) sets out in subsections (1)(a) and (1)(b) the two limbs
of the duty.
"(1) Subject to the provisions of this section,
where it appears to a local authority that any person for whom they are under a
duty or have a power to provide, or to secure the provision of, community care
services may be in need of any such services, the authority -
(a) shall make an assessment of the needs of
that person for those services; and
(b) shall then decide, having regard to the
results of that assessment, and taking account -
(i) where it appears to them that a person
('the carer') provides a substantial amount of care on a regular basis for that
person, of such care as is being so provided; and
(ii) in so far as it is reasonable and
practicable to do so, both of the views of the person whose needs are being
assessed and of the views of the carer (provided that, in either case, there is
a wish, or as the case may be, a capacity, to express a view),
whether the
needs of the person being assessed call for the provision of any such
services."
Subsection (1)(b) was substituted
by section 8 of CCHSA. As originally
inserted by the National Health Service and Community Care Act 1990, section
55, it read:
"(b) having regard to the result of that
assessment, shall then decide whether the needs of that person call for the
provision of any such services."
[27] Residential accommodation with nursing is the subject of
section 13A. Subsection (1) provides:
"(1) Without prejudice to section 12 of this
Act, a local authority shall
(a) provide and maintain; or
(b) make such arrangements as they consider
appropriate and adequate for the provision of
suitable
residential accommodation where nursing is provided for persons who appear to
them to be in need of such accommodation by reason of infirmity, age, illness
or mental disorder, dependency on drugs or alcohol or being substantially
handicapped by any deformity or disability."
[28] Section 87 deals with the charges that may be made for services
and accommodation. Subsections (1) and
(1A) provide, so far as material:
"(1) [ .
. . ] a local authority providing a service under
this Act [ . . . ]
may recover such charge (if any) for it as they consider reasonable.
(1A) If a person -
(a) avails himself of a service provided
under this Act [ . . . ];
and
(b) satisfies the authority providing the
service that his means are insufficient for it to be reasonably practicable for
him to pay for the service the amount which he would otherwise be obliged to
pay for it,
the authority
shall not require him to pay more for it than it appears to them that it is
practicable for him to pay."
Subsection (1B), however, was
inserted by section 1(6) of CCHSA. It
provides:
"(1B) Subsections (1) and (1A) above do not apply
as respects any amount required not to be charged by subsection (1) of section
1 of the Community Care and Health (Scotland) Act 2002 (asp 5) (charging and
not charging for social care) or required to be charged or not to be charged by
virtue of subsection (4) of that section."
Subsections (2) and (3) then
continue:
"(2) Persons [ .
. . ] for whom accommodation is provided under
this Act [ . . .] shall be required to pay for that
accommodation in accordance with the subsequent provisions of this section.
(3) [ .
. . ] accommodation provided under this Act [ . .
. ] shall be regarded as
accommodation provided under Part III of the National Assistance Act 1948
[ . .
. ]"
In Part III of the National
Assistance Act 1948 ("the 1948 Act"), section 22 requires a local authority to
fix a standard rate of charges for accommodation and to assess a person's
ability to pay. Thus, the effect of
section 87(3) is that a local authority must charge for accommodation which is
a facility provided or secured by them in terms of section 12(1). Section 87(1B), however, is now inserted.
The
Community Care and Health (Scotland) Act 2002
[29] Part 1 of CCHSA is headed
"Community Care". Section 1
empowers the Scottish Ministers to make regulations as respects charging and
not charging for "social care". "Social
care" includes a service provided under SWSA other than the provision of
accommodation (section 22(1) and (2)). Section
1(1) provides, so far as material:
"(1) [ .
. . ] a local authority are not to charge for
social care provided by them (or the provision of which is secured by them) if
that social care is -
(a) personal care as defined in section 2(28)
of the Regulation of Care (Scotland)
Act 2001 (asp 8);
(b) personal support as so defined;
(c) whether or not such personal care or
personal support, care of a kind for the time being mentioned in schedule 1 to this Act; or
(d) whether or not from a registered nurse,
nursing care."
The definition of "personal care"
in section 2(28) of the 2001 Act is in these terms:
"'personal care'
means care which relates to the day to day physical tasks and needs of the
person cared for (as for example, but without prejudice to that generality, to
eating and washing) and to mental processes related to those tasks and needs
(as for example, but without prejudice to that generality, to remembering to
eat and wash)."
[30] "Social care" is defined in section 22 of CCHSA. Subsection (1) provides in part:
"'social care'
means, subject to subsection (2) below, a service provided -
(a) under the 1968 Act [SWSA]; or
(b) [ .
. . ]
to an individual
by a local authority or a service the provision of which to an individual,
under the 1968 Act [ . . . ],
is secured by a local authority."
Subsection (2) provides:
"(2) In this Act, 'social care' does not include
a service which (or so much of a service as) consists of the provision of
accommodation; but in the definition of the expression in subsection (1) above,
the references to a service being provided are to the provision of any other
form of assistance (including, without prejudice to that generality, the
provision of advice, guidance or a material thing)."
[31] Section 2 of CCHSA provides that for the purposes of, among
other things, the definition of "social care" in section 22(1) and (2) of CCHSA,
and for the purposes of section 22 of the 1948 Act (charges to be made for
accommodation) and of section 87(2) and (3) of SWSA (charges that may be made
for accommodation), the Scottish Ministers may by regulations determine what is
and what is not to be regarded as accommodation provided under SWSA. The relevant regulations are the Community
Care (Personal Care and Nursing Care) (Scotland)
Regulations 2002 (SSI 2002, No 303), as amended ("the Regulations").
The
Community Care (Personal Care and Nursing Care) (Scotland) Regulations 2002
[32] Regulation 2 provides:
"For the
purposes of section 2 of the Act [CCHSA], accommodation provided to or
provision of which is secured for an individual by a local authority under the
1968 Act [SWSA] or section 25 (care and support services etc) of the 2003 Act
[the Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003] does not include -
(a) the first г145 per week of care of a kind
mentioned in paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of section 1(1) of the Act."
Personal care is mentioned in
paragraph (a). Regulation 3 provides
that the requirement in section 1(1) not to charge for personal care applies
only where the person for whom the local authority has a duty or power in terms
of SWSA is a person aged 65 or over.
Identifying
the intention of Parliament
[33] The Ombudsman's counsel referred in some detail to the
background to the enactment of section 1 of CCHSA. As to the use of background material,
reference was made to the speech of Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead in Wilson v First County Trust Ltd (No 2) [2003] UKHL 40, [2004] 1 AC 816, at
paragraphs 56-59, where his Lordship discussed the decision of the House of
Lords in Pepper v Hart [1993] AC 593. At
paragraph 56 his Lordship said:
"56 The
decision in Pepper v Hart [1993] AC 593 removed from the law
an irrational exception. When a court is
carrying out its constitutional task of interpreting legislation it is seeking
to identify the intention of Parliament expressed in the language used. This is an objective concept. In this context the intention of Parliament
is the intention the court reasonably imputes to Parliament in respect of the
language used. In seeking this intention
the courts have recourse to recognised principles of interpretation and also a
variety of aids, some internal, found within the statute itself, some external,
found outside the statute. External aids
include the background to the legislation, because no legislation is enacted in
a vacuum. It has long been established
that the courts may look outside a statute in order to identify the 'mischief'
Parliament was seeking to remedy. Lord
Simon of Glaisdale noted it is 'rare indeed' that a statute can be properly
interpreted without knowing the legislative object: Black-Clawson International Ltd v Papierwerke Waldhof-Aschagffenburg AG [1975] AC 591, 647. Reports of the Law Commission or advisory
committees, and government white papers, are everyday examples of background
material which may assist in understanding the purpose and scope of legislation."
[34] At paragraph 57 his Lordship observed that before the decision
in Pepper v Hart a self-imposed judicial rule had excluded use of
parliamentary materials as an external aid.
At paragraphs 58 and 59 his Lordship said:
"58 In
relaxing this self-imposed rule the House enunciated some practical safeguards
in Pepper v Hart. These were intended
to keep references to Hansard within reasonable bounds. One of these safeguards is that the
parliamentary statement must be made by the minister or other promoter of the
Bill. In imposing this cautionary
limitation the House was not, I believe, intending to attribute to ministerial
statements some special status, thereby encroaching upon the court's
constitutional task of determining objectively what was the intention of
Parliament in using the language in question.
A clear and unambiguous ministerial statement is part of the background
to the legislation. In the words of Lord
Browne-Wilkinson in Pepper v Hart [1993] AC 593, 635, such
statements 'are as much background to the enactment of legislation as white
papers and Parliamentary reports'. But
they are no more than part of the background.
As I emphasised in R v Secretary of State for the Environment,
Transport and the Regions, Ex parte Spath Holme Ltd [2001] 2 AC 349, 399,
however such statements are made and however explicit they may be, they cannot
control the meaning of an Act of Parliament."
[35] Lord Nicholls went on to discuss the duty of the courts to
evaluate the effect of primary legislation in terms of Convention rights and to
note that the legislation must satisfy a "proportionality" test. That is not relevant in the present case, but
at paragraph 63 his Lordship said this:
"Moreover, as
when interpreting a statute, so when identifying the policy objective of a
statutory provisions or assessing the 'proportionality' of a statutory
provision, the court may need enlightenment on the nature and extent of the
social problem (the 'mischief') at which the legislation is aimed. This may throw light on the rationale
underlying the legislation."
[36] The first item of background material to which the Ombudsman's
counsel referred was the report of the Royal Commission on Long Term Care, With Respect to Old Age: Long Term Care -
Rights and Responsibilities (1999, Cm 4192-I) ("the Sutherland Report"). Chapter 6 of the report considered the scope
for and desirability of increases in the scale of public sector provision
towards the costs of long-term care, and expressed the view that the only fair
and practicable way forward was to make entitlement to state financial support
more universal than it then was. "The
aim must be to bring significant help particularly to people with relatively
modest means whom the present system does not serve well" (paragraph 6.27). The report continued:
"6.28 Against this background we have therefore
sought to consider, from first principles, where the balance between collective
public provision and personal responsibility should lie in relation to paying
for long-term care. What follows
represents our analysis and our conclusions, in respect first of residential
care and secondly of domiciliary care.
6.29 In principle, people in long-term care
incur three kinds of cost (excluding the kind of therapeutic care which is
provided by the NHS and is free in any event):
1. living costs, (food, clothing, heating
amenities and so on);
2. housing costs (the equivalent of rent,
mortgage payments and
council tax) and;
3. personal care costs (the
additional cost of being looked after arising from frailty or disability).
6.30 It is admittedly a fine point in some cases
as to the category into what particular costs should fall. [ .
. . ] The key point is that no distinction is
currently drawn in principle between these costs in applying the means test. Where the operation of means-testing results
in people having to meet some or all of residential or nursing home fees, they
are regarded in principle as contributing equally to all three cost elements of
the fees. This system is indiscriminate
and illogical.
6.31 We judge instead that a proper distinction
should now be drawn for funding purposes between the three cost elements in
long-term care. A case has been put to
us that the state should meet all three elements, as it does for people in
hospital. We do not think however, that
this is desirable or necessary. Nor
would it be a proper use of limited public funds. People who receive care at home have to meet
their living and housing costs themselves.
In our judgement therefore people should be fully responsible for
elements (1) and (2), that is, their living and housing costs while in
residential care, subject to the normal mechanisms for supporting income,
subject to a means test if help is required.
These are legitimate items for which people may want to save in their
old age.
6.32 The costs of personal care as such are
however quite different. These are the
costs which, unpredictably and through no fault of their own, old people have
to incur when unfortunately they can no longer be looked after at home or
cannot be sent home after hospital treatment.
They reflect the true risk and 'catastrophic' nature of needing
long-term care.
In our judgement
it is right for the state to exempt personal care from means-testing altogether. This is our key recommendation."
[37] The Royal Commission expressed their recommendation in these
terms:
"6.37 The Commission's main recommendation is that
personal care should be available for those individuals who need it, after an
assessment. (Recommendation 6.4)"
[38] Counsel for the Ombudsman also referred to the following
parliamentary materials. In the Scottish
Parliament, the Health and Community Care Committee in its 16th
Report, Inquiry into the Delivery of
Community Care in Scotland (2000) said at paragraph 27:
"The
overwhelming message from stakeholders in community care supports the principle
of making available personal care services free at the point of use as
recommended in the Sutherland Report."
[39] At Stage 1 of the Community Care and Health (Scotland) Bill
(which after amendment was later enacted as CCHSA), the Minister for Health and
Community Care, Mr Malcolm Chisholm, said in the Scottish Parliament on 28
November 2001 (Official Report, cols 4220-4222):
"There have been
many significant developments in community care in this Parliament's lifetime,
and the Community Care and Health (Scotland) Bill marks a further milestone in
the Executive's commitment to better community care services in every part of
Scotland. Just over a year ago, Susan
Deacon set out to the Parliament the agenda of joint management, joint
resourcing, joint working, better home care, more flexible services, free
nursing for our older people and help for all Scotland's carers. As members know, free personal care was added
to that agenda in January.
The Community Care and Health (Scotland)
Bill is the legislative framework for delivering that agenda. [ .
. . ]
Equity and fairness are the final two principles on which the bill is
built. Because of those principles, the
bill gives ministers powers to introduce free nursing care. No longer will someone in a nursing home have
to pay for the same nursing care that would be received free in hospital or at
home. For the same reasons, the bill
also gives ministers powers to introduce free personal care to bring to an end
the current situation in which an elderly person with cancer receives free
personal care, whereas someone with Alzheimer's has to pay for the same care. [ .
. . ]
Let us consider the important changes
and tangible benefits that the bill will bring.
It will mean that the Executive will be able to tackle existing
inequities surrounding care for older people by introducing free nursing care
and free personal care. We will ensure
that nursing care is finally free for all who need it, regardless of the
context - free at home, free in hospital and, for the first time, free in
nursing homes. In the same way, we will
ensure that personal care is free for all Scotland's
oldest people: the dementia sufferer and the stroke victim; those at home as
well as those in care homes."
[40] Reference was also made to a Ministerial statement by the
Deputy Minister for Health and Community Care, Mr Hugh Henry, at a meeting of
the Health and Community Care Committee which considered the Community Care and
Health (Scotland)
Bill on 16 January 2002. The Minister said (Official Report of the
Committee, col 2334):
"The system will
be implemented in full. There might well
be people who qualify but who do not claim until a later date, and they will
not get free personal care until such time as they make their claim. For example, those who are self-funders and
are in homes will have the payments made in full whether or not they are
assessed. An assessment will need to be
done for anyone new coming into the system.
Such people will receive the appropriate payments from the date of the
assessment decision."
The term "self-funder" was not
defined in the course of the argument, but it appears that a self-funder is a
resident in a care home whose accommodation there has been provided under a
private arrangement between the care home and the resident or someone, usually
a relative, acting on his or her behalf who has arranged the placement and
meets the fees himself or herself. In
other words, a self-funder is a privately placed resident who is either a party
to a contract with the care home or is resident there as a result of a contract
covering his or her residence which has been made by a representative or
relative.
[41] In addition to discussing these parliamentary materials,
counsel for the petitioners and for the Ombudsman examined MacGregor v South Lanarkshire
Council 2001 SC 502, a decision of Lord Hardie in the Outer House which was
referred to in the Ombudsman's report. A
man of 90 years of age who had been admitted to hospital sought judicial review
of a decision by the respondents to delay providing him with a place in a
nursing home. The respondents had
assessed his needs for community care services in terms of the provisions of
section 12A(1) of SWSA which were then in force and had identified nursing care
as best meeting his needs. They had not,
however, provide him with nursing care, but had placed his name on a waiting
list of persons needing nursing home care and had stated that it would be some
months before public funding would become available to him. Lord Hardie pronounced a declarator that the
respondents had acted ultra vires and
remitted the case to them to make the necessary provision of residential nursing
home care.
[42] Lord Hardie said:
"[7] The first issue which I must determine is
whether the Act confers any right to community care services upon an individual
in any circumstances.
[ . .
. ] The terms of sec 12A(1) are
such that in appropriate individual cases, where the local authority considers
someone may be in need of community care services, the local authority is
required to undertake an assessment of the needs of that individual for such
services. Depending upon the results of
that assessment the local authority requires to decide whether the needs of the
individual call for the provision of such services. [ .
. . ] I am of the opinion that once a local
authority has determined that the needs of an individual in their area require
the provision of particular community care services, such as residential
nursing home care, and that his or her needs cannot be met in any other way,
even in the short to medium term, the effect of sec 12 is to impose a duty on
the local authority to provide the necessary assistance to satisfy the
individual's needs. In short the local
authority must find a place in a residential nursing home for the individual in
such circumstances. It seems to me that
the clear intention of Parliament was that where a local authority had
undertaken an assessment of needs and had decided that the needs of an
individual called for the provision of certain community care services, the
local authority had an obligation to provide such services. [ .
. . ]
[8] The second issue for consideration is
whether in exercising their functions under section 12A(1) local authorities
are entitled to take into account the resources available to them in
undertaking an assessment of needs of an individual for community care services
or whether they are entitled to take into account available resources in
determining what provision to make for an individual following upon an
assessment of needs. Moreover, is a
local authority entitled to purport to discharge its obligations towards an
individual under section 12A(1) by placing him or her on a waiting list. [ .
. . ] When it is undertaking [an assessment of
the needs of an individual], I have concluded that the resources available to a
local authority are irrelevant to that exercise.
[His Lordship
referred to the speech of Lord Lloyd of Berwick in R v Gloucestershire County Council and Another ex parte Barry [1997] AC 584 at page 599.]
[10] Once a local authority has completed an
assessment of the needs of an individual for community care services the next
stage of the process is for the local authority to decide whether the needs of
that individual call for the provision of any such services in terms of sec
12A(1)(b). In undertaking this exercise
the local authority could of course take into account the resources available
to the individual including any additional support available to the individual
from neighbours and friends. This would
be particularly relevant in the context of an individual who was able to live
independently but who required some support within the home, such as assistance
with shopping or household chores. At
the other end of the spectrum where the assessment of needs discloses that the
individual is not capable of living independently, even with support, and
requires to be provided with assistance by way of residential accommodation,
the resources available to the local authority are relevant in considering how
to meet the need for residential accommodation.
[ . . . ]
While I consider that the availability of resources to the local authority is a
relevant consideration in that sense and at that stage of the process, I do not
consider that it is an option for the local authority to determine to take no
action meantime on the basis that the local authority does not have the
available resources to fund a place in a residential nursing home.[ . .
. ] [I]n my opinion, doing
nothing is not an option available to a local authority. Placing the petitioner on a waiting list for
what may be several months pending the availability of a place in a nursing
home appears to me to be an abdication of the local authority's responsibility
towards the petitioner. Having decided
that he was unable to care for himself and that he had insufficient funds to
pay for residential care, the local authority was under a duty to make some
provision for his care. The nature of
that care is a matter for the local authority but the decision to do nothing
and place him on a waiting list is in my opinion ultra vires. I would also
observe that even if the use of waiting lists has a legitimacy to assist local
authorities in utilising their resources to the optimum advantage, the way in
which the respondents operate the waiting list for places in residential
nursing homes does not appear to me to fulfil that objective. I was advised that the respondents simply
placed the petitioner on the waiting list and that he would require to wait his
turn in the sense that all of those who appeared on the waiting list ahead of
him would be given priority over him. In
other words, within the category of persons waiting for places in residential
nursing homes there was no attempt by the authority to prioritise the persons
waiting for such a place according to their needs. Such a failure by the respondents did not appear
to me to be consistent with a desire to obtain optimum advantage from the
resources available to the respondents in the sense that the waiting list
system failed to provide places in residential nursing homes for those who had
greatest need for such places. [ . .
. ] If the respondents wish to
maintain waiting lists to enable them to assess the needs of the community for
whom they are responsible, it is essential that the respondents undertake
regular assessments of the relative needs of the persons on the waiting lists
to ensure that they utilise their resources to the best advantage."
[43] I note that Lord Lloyd of Berwick was in the minority in R v Gloucestershire County Council and Another ex parte Barry. That case was not discussed before me.
III The facts
Mr McLachlan's complaint
[44] The facts are set out in statement 5 of the petition and in
paragraph 19 of the Ombudsman's report (no. 6/1 of process). The process by which the Council dealt with
the case of Mr McLachlan Senior is also set out in a letter from the Chief
Executive of the Council to the Ombudsman's office dated 27 July 2006 (no. 7/16 of process). Mr McLachlan Senior came to the attention of
the Council in November 2005. He was
then 90 years of age. His wife advised
the Council's local community care office that she considered that he would
require residential care after they returned from a holiday. A care manager interviewed Mrs McLachlan on 2 December 2005. In the words of the letter, "The assessment
was completed during this interview. Mr
McLachlan was assessed as requiring residential care." In the words of the
petition, "He had a care needs assessment.
He was assessed as having unmet care needs."
[45] At the first hearing of the petition, the petitioners' counsel
maintained that that assessment had been no more than an initial assessment
which was only the first stage of a three-stage process normally undertaken by
the Council. That "initial" stage was
said to involve the completion of a "Carenap" (care needs assessment package)
form: the form in Mr McLachlan's case is attached to the Chief Executive's
letter no. 7/16 of process. The normal
second stage, said counsel, was the presentation of a completed assessment to
the Local Resource Review Group for approval, and the passing by them of the
assessment to the Head of Service for funding approval. Thirdly, the Head of Service had regard to
the resources available; a priority list was drawn up; and monitoring and
updating of client information was undertaken on a regular basis.
[46] The petitioners' counsel argued that the Ombudsman had failed
to understand that the petitioners had not carried out both stages of the
process prescribed by section 12A(1) of SWSA: they had assessed Mr McLachlan's
needs, but they had not decided whether his needs called for the provision of
any community care services. I am unable
to accept this submission. I accept that
the assessment made on 2 December 2005
may be regarded as the first stage of the section 12A(1) process. Exactly when the second stage was carried out
has been left obscure, but clearly it was completed by the beginning of
February 2006. Whether or not the
Council went through any three-stage process, it is plain that they had
concluded by that time that Mr McLachlan was entitled to free personal care. The Chief Executive's letter (no. 7/16 of
process) gives the following narrative. On
2 December 2005 a care
manager conducted an interview with Mrs McLachlan. "The assessment was completed during this
interview. Mr McLachlan was
assessed as requiring residential care." On 7 January 2006 the Carenap report and a financial
assessment form were sent to headquarters with a request for free personal care
funding.
[47] The letter goes on to say that on 3 February 2006 Mr McLachlan Junior telephoned the care
manager who had carried out the Carenap assessment. He told her that his mother was no longer
coping with his father and the family had decided to place him in a specified
care home, after considering other care homes in the area. (The name of the home is not stated in the
pleadings and has been blanked out in most of the productions.) Mr McLachlan
indicated that his father would be "self-funding". (A "self-funder" is a resident in a care home
whose placement has been arranged and whose fees are met by the resident
himself or by his or her relatives.) Mr McLachlan Junior said that his father
was entitled to free personal care. The
care manager, far from telling him that the assessment process had not been
completed, or that his father was not entitled to free personal care for any
other reason, told him that at present all the FPC (free personal care) budget
was committed but he would be informed as soon as any FPC funding became
available and that in the meantime his father would be placed on a priority
list. She added that if the family
self-funded the placement, the Council would be unable to backdate any funding. It is implicit in her response that the
Council had decided that Mr McLachlan Senior's needs called for the provision
of free personal care.
[48] The position was more cautiously stated in a letter from the
Council to Mr McLachlan Junior dated 6 February 2006 (no. 7/2 of process)
which told him that his application for funding of free personal care had not been
approved but was on a priority list. The
letter did not suggest, however, that approval might be withheld because a
decision might be made that Mr McLachlan Senior's needs did not call for the
provision of free personal care. The
letter said, "Due to overcommitment of this budget, no finite date can be given
for approval of your application, nor will any monies be backdated." It is clear, therefore, that any delay in the
approval of the application was a technicality: the only obstacle to payment
was lack of funds. Eventually, as I have
already noted, the Council began to make free personal care payments with
effect from 28 June 2006. Rightly, the Council apparently did not
consider that they were prevented from doing so by any technical niceties in
the completion of the formal assessment process because, I was informed, Mrs McLachlan
did not sign a financial assessment form until 21 July 2006. I am
accordingly satisfied, from the information provided by the Council themselves
and from their making of these payments, that by 3 February 2006, at the
latest, for all practical purposes they had completed the assessment process
and determined that the needs of Mr McLachlan Senior called for the provision
of free personal care. No doubt the
statement in paragraph 19 of the Ombudsman's report (no. 6/1 of process) that
it was on 9 December 2005
that Mr McLachlan was assessed as having unmet care needs at home is not
strictly correct, but that is not an error of any significance.
[49] Mr McLachlan Junior and his mother had read a leaflet issued by
the Scottish Executive entitled "Free Personal and Nursing Care from 1 July 2002 - what does it mean for
you?" It stated:
"On 1 July 2002 free personal care is
being introduced for people aged 65 and over [ . . . ]
If you fully
fund your own care you will be entitled to a contribution of г145 a week
towards the cost of personal care."
Having placed Mr McLachlan Senior
in the care home on or about 5 February
2006 and having failed to obtain from the Council any contribution
towards the cost of his father's personal care, Mr McLachlan Junior made
several complaints to the Scottish Executive Health Department (SEHD). He received a number of responses, the
essence of which appears from a letter dated 3 April 2006 (no. 7/8 of process):
"I understand
that your father has been assessed as requiring free personal and nursing care
payments but has been advised by Argyll & Bute council that it is not in a
position to make them. Local authorities
have a duty under the Social Work (Scotland)
Act 1968 to assess the community care needs of people who appear to need them
and decide, in the light of the assessment, whether they should arrange any
services and, if so, which services. As
my colleague advised in his earlier response local authorities have been
provided with the funds that were asked for, but ultimately it is the
responsibility of local authorities to manage their resources to provide the
services which they have a statutory duty to deliver. Lewis Macdonald, the Deputy Minister for
Health and Community Care, has previously expressed concerns about those local
authorities that appear to be operating waiting lists and he has asked
officials to pursue this matter with them.
I realise that
in the short term this is not a satisfactory answer for you and so I suggest
that if you haven't already done so you should write to Douglas Hendry, the
Director of Social Work at Argyll & Bute council to make an official
complaint. [ . .
. ] If you are not satisfied by
the response you receive you can then follow this up by complaining to the
Scottish Public Services Ombudsman [ .
. . ]"
[50] Mrs McLachlan then complained to the Council. Their reply, by a letter dated 25 April 2006 (no. 7/9 of process),
included the following:
"The leaflet
outlining arrangements for free personal care gives the impression that funding
for free personal care is readily available for everyone. In reality the Council are awarded a fixed
amount of money from the Scottish Executive to Social Work to meet all of their
commitments.
At the time your
husband placed himself in [the care home] all of the funding allocated for free
personal care was committed. I am sorry
to tell you that this is still the case today.
Your husband is
on a priority list along with a number of other people awaiting free personal
care. All of the people on the priority
list are reviewed weekly and as funding becomes available it is awarded on a
priority needs basis."
[51] Mr McLachlan Junior had already made his complaints to the
Ombudsman about both the Council and the Scottish Executive. Eventually, on 24 July 2006 the Community Services Department of the
Council wrote to Mrs McLachlan as follows (no.
7/15 of process):
"I refer to [Mr
McLachlan Senior] and advise that, with effect from 28 June 2006, this Department will contribute
г145.00 per week towards Mr McLachlan's
personal care costs, on behalf of the Scottish Executive.
The above
contribution will be paid directly to [the care home], who should reduce Mr
McLachlan's charges accordingly."
Mr McLachlan Junior's
complaint about the Council therefore came to be that they had failed to
provide a service to his father "between 6 February 2006 and June 2006, in that
they did not provide Council funding for his personal care in line with
Government Policy." That is the complaint which the Ombudsman upheld. His complaint about the Scottish Executive
was that they had failed to ensure that the Council provided a service. The Ombudsman did not uphold that complaint.
Availability
of funding
[52] In her report (no. 6/1 of
process) the Ombudsman refers to the availability of funding for free personal
care in the following passages. She
observes in paragraph 8:
"Funding for the
policy [of free personal care] is made available to the Council through
Scottish Executive Grant Aided Expenditure (GAE) funding. GAE represents the level of resources which
the Scottish Executive considers the local authorities require to cover
expenditure incurred in delivering services.
The overall amount is sub-divided into a GAE for each local authority
service and calculated individually for each local authority. This does not necessarily reflect the actual
sums required."
[53] In paragraph 10 the Ombudsman quotes the following extracts
from a Scottish Executive Health Department (SEHD) Circular, No. CCD5/2003 dated 29 July 2003 entitled "Free Personal and Nursing Care in Scotland"
(no. 6/8 of process). In Section 2, headed "Eligibility", paragraph
18 states in part:
"Local eligibility criteria and priorities
18. Local authorities will need to have in
place agreed eligibility criteria for assessments of need and priorities for
the provision of and access to services based on need. [ .
. . ] Following a needs assessment, payment
towards personal care should commence when the authority is in a position to
arrange or provide the required services.
[ . . . ]"
In Section 5, headed "Payment
mechanisms", paragraph 1(k) states in part:
"k) Start
date of payments and retrospective payments
From 1 July 2002, payments will commence
once the [ . . . ]
personal care service is being provided [underlining in original]. It does not start before and will not be
backdated, eg to the date of referral or assessment."
[54] In a section of her report headed "Evidence of the Council" the
Ombudsman refers in paragraph 13 to the Council's letter to Mr McLachlan dated
25 April 2006 (no. 7/9 of process) which has been quoted above. She continues:
"14. The Council told me that in 2004/5 it
spent г1.968m more on Free Personal Care than the GAE allocation and г2.022m
more in 2005/6 - it plans to spend г1.491m more in 2006/7. The Council informed me that the impact of
this and consequent pressure on other parts of the social work services had led
to a moratorium on spend across all social services within the Council. From December 2005 this impacted on a number
of clients waiting for FPC funding who were placed on a priority waiting list
to be dealt with as funds became available.
An allocation of funds was made available in May 2006 and priority was
given to those clients where there was a delay in discharge from hospital
because of the lack of funds. In June
2006 further funds were allocated and this sum was in part allocated to [Mr
McLachlan Senior]. The Council told me
that throughout the operation of the priority waiting list, staff reviewed the
status of all those on the list on a weekly basis to ensure that any emergency
situations caused by a change in circumstances were identified and addressed
immediately.
15. The Council referred to their agreement
with a letter written by the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (COSLA)
to the Scottish Parliament Health Committee in February 2006 [no. 6/6 of process] which stated, with respect to
section 18 of the Guidance, that:
'Local
Authorities are clear on their interpretation of this point. Services can only be provided when the
resources are available to meet the assessed needs - in other words when the
local authority is in a position to arrange or provide these services. The cash limited nature of this budget sets
the boundaries.'
The letter
further noted that, just as there were waiting lists for health services
because in part of cash-limited budgets, so there would be for social services.
16. The Council stated that it had concluded
that as it had no funds to cover the costs of FPC it considered that it was not
in a position to arrange or provide the service (as stated within Part 1,
section 18 of the Guidance) and, therefore, was not obliged to make such a
payment or to backdate such a payment in terms of Part 5, section 1(k) of the
Guidance."
[55] Much of the material in paragraphs 14 to 16 may be found set
out at length in the Chief Executive's letter of 27 July 2006 to the Ombudsman's Office (no. 7/16 of
process).
[56] In the next section of her report, headed "Evidence of the
SEHD", the Ombudsman reproduced in paragraph 17 an extract from the
Department's letter to Mr McLachlan dated 3 April 2006 (no. 7/8 of process) which has been quoted
above. In paragraph 18 she quoted from
an e-mail from the Department to Mr McLachlan dated 11 May 2006 (no. 7/12 of process) which said:
"Free personal
and nursing care is available to people aged 65 years and over who have been
assessed as requiring these services.
The funding for
the policy is given to the local authorities as part of their Grant Aided
Expenditure (GAE) settlement. It should
be noted that GAEs are not budgets or spending targets. [ .
. . ] It is then up to each Council to decide how
best to allocate these resources based on their local needs and priorities.
I would like to
assure you that the policy is sufficiently funded with increases each year."
[57] Having set out in these terms the "evidence" of the Council and
the Department, the Ombudsman did not make any findings as to the availability
to the Council of funding for the free personal care of Mr McLachlan Senior.
IV The Ombudsman's
conclusion and recommendation
[58] The Ombudsman's conclusion
and recommendation relative to Mr McLachlan Junior's complaint against the
Council were in these terms:
"(a)
Conclusion
22. I note that Council staff
took reasonable steps to ensure that no excessive hardship occurred for those
clients affected by the restriction on payments and regularly considered the
needs of each such affected person. The
Council operated its waiting list in accordance with the standards established
by Lord Hardie [in MacGregor v South Lanarkshire Council 2001 SC 502]
and as expected by the SEHD. The Council
also endeavoured to respond promptly and appropriately to [Mr McLachlan
Junior's] complaint. The Council policy
operated in a consistent and clear manner and I do not consider there was
maladministration in this complaint. However,
there remains the question of whether the Council failed to provide to [Mr McLachlan
Senior] a service which they were obliged to provide.
23. The SEHD told [Mr McLachlan Junior] that
the FPC policy was sufficiently funded. There
is a clear indication in the SEHD response [of 3 April 2006, no. 7/8 of process] that the Minister
for Health and Community Care had previously expressed concern about those
local authorities that appear to be operating waiting lists. There is no evidence in the legislation,
regulation or public information that it was the intention of the Scottish
Parliament that FPC funding would be rationed or only automatically be made
available to those who qualified and fortuitously applied before monies were
otherwise committed.
24. I, therefore, conclude that there was a
statutory duty placed on the Council by the Community Care and Health (Scotland)
Act 2002 to provide funding to [Mr McLachlan Senior]. I do not accept that the Council could not
'arrange the provision of the service' simply because it could not pay for it
as the provision and funding of services are two distinct issues. The suggestion is made both from the Council
and the SEHD that Lord Hardie's judgement allowed for waiting lists for FPC and
that Ministers expected Councils to follow guidance with respect to such
waiting lists. This is indeed correct
with respect to the provision of services but cannot be extended to apply to
the separate issue of the funding of a policy particularly a policy not in
existence at the time of Lord Hardie's judgement.
25. Part 5, section 1(k) of the Guidance
refers to payments commencing from the time the personal care service is being
provided and not before (emphasis in the Guidance). I consider that the personal care service in
question was being provided by the Care Home from 5 February 2006 when [Mr
McLachlan Senior] became a resident there and that there was, therefore, an
obligation on the Council to pay funds from that point.
(a) Recommendation
26. The Ombudsman recommends
that the Council calculate and pay to [Mr McLachlan Senior] the equivalent sum
to the missed payments for Free Personal Care from the date of the original
notification of eligibility on 6
February 2006 to the date when payments actually began."
V Criticisms of the
Ombudsman's report
[59] The Council submitted that
the Ombudsman's report was founded on errors of law that went to its heart. The fundamental error lay in her
interpretation of section 1 of CCHSA. In
addition, she had failed to appreciate the significance of SWSA, MacGregor and the guidance in the
Scottish Executive Circular; and she had failed to notice that CCHSA applied
only where the local authority were providing or securing the provision of
services. The Ombudsman's counsel, on
the other hand, submitted that her interpretation of the law had been correct. The ground of review, accordingly, is error
of law. This is not a case where the
Court is called upon to review a decision taken in the exercise of a
discretion.
The
interpretation of the legislation
[60] It will be convenient to
repeat the material terms of section 1(1) of CCHSA which have been set out more
fully above:
"(1) [ .
. . ] a local authority are not to charge for
social care provided by them (or the provision of which is secured by them) if
that social care is -
(a) personal care [ . .
. ]"
The Ombudsman interpreted section 1
of CCHSA as imposing on the Council a positive obligation to make payments in
respect of personal care. She said at
paragraph 24 of her report, "I, therefore, conclude that there was a statutory
duty placed on the Council by the Community Care and Health (Scotland)
Act 2002 to provide funding to [Mr McLachlan Senior]."
[61] The Council submitted that that construction of section 1 was
wholly unsustainable. On a plain reading
of its terms, section 1 did not impose on the local authority an obligation of
payment: it disabled the local authority from charging for personal care. Further, CCHSA applied only where the local
authority was providing, or securing the provision of, services, which here the
Council was not.
[62] I shall consider first the submission that the legislation
applies only where the local authority are providing, or securing the provision
of, services. If that is correct, the
Council were not obliged to make any payments in respect of Mr McLachlan
Senior's personal care. Secondly I shall
discuss the submission that section 1 of CCHSA does not impose on a local
authority any obligation to make payment, but only requires them not to charge
for certain kinds of social care provided by them. Finally I shall deal with other arguments
advanced by the Council.
Applicability
of the legislation
[63] As to the first submission,
senior counsel for the petitioners argued that both section 1 of CCHSA and the
Regulations related only to services provided, or whose provision was secured,
by the local authority. Here, the local
authority had not provided, or secured the provision of, services to Mr
McLachlan Senior. Thus they were not
obliged to make any payments in respect of his personal care.
[64] Senior counsel for the Ombudsman argued that if a person was
assessed as requiring personal care, the fact that it was provided pursuant to
a private arrangement was nothing to the point.
Once a person's needs had been assessed, and once it had been determined
that those needs called for the provision of personal care services, the
obligation upon the local authority to meet the costs of personal care was
engaged as soon as those services began to be provided or from the point at
which their provision was secured. The
fact that some individuals arranged their own placements in residential care at
their own expense while others were entirely dependent upon being placed by the
local authority and at public expense made no difference. Free personal care was a universal,
non-means-tested benefit available to all assessed as requiring personal care
services, regardless of their individual means.
The submission for the Council was entirely misconceived. It prompted the question why the Council had
begun to make payments to cover Mr McLachlan Senior's care costs at all. There was nothing in section 12A of SWSA to
suggest that, merely because the duty to assess was engaged in relation to
persons for whom the local authority had a duty or power to provide or secure
appropriate services, those services must then be provided by the local
authority and no other. Were the
legislation to be construed so as to mean that those who arranged their own
residential care (or whose families did so on their behalf) fell outside its
scope, the result would be to deprive the policy of free personal care of the
universal quality it was plainly intended to have.
[65] Counsel referred to the annotations to the 2002 Act in Current Law Statutes. In the Introduction and General Note the
annotator, Professor Alastair Bissett-Johnson, states, "Part I makes provision
for the delivery of free nursing care and free personal care to those over 65
years of age in all settings." He refers
to the Act's "provision for the introduction of free nursing care and personal
care for all who need it, regardless of the context." Counsel also pointed out
that the Guidance issued by SEHD (Circular No. CCD5/2003, no. 6/8 of process)
envisaged the making of personal care payments to self-funders (page 21,
paragraph 5(d)).
[66] I accept that section 1(1) of CCHSA must be read in the context
of other legislative provisions. I have
concluded, however, that even when the section is so read, it is not possible
to interpret it as obliging a local authority to make payments for social care
which is not provided by them. The
section is concerned only with charging and not charging for social care
provided by a local authority. It
provides, "[A] local authority are not to charge for social care provided by them (or the provision of which
is secured by them) if that social care is - (a) personal care [ . .
. ]" In section 22(1) "social care", of which
personal care is an example, is defined as meaning a service provided under
SWSA or other legislation "to an individual by
a local authority". Similarly, the
Community Care (Personal Care and Nursing Care) (Scotland) Regulations 2002
provide that people aged 65 or over who are in receipt of a care home service
are not charged for the first г145 per week of personal care which is provided
to them or secured for them by a local authority. Regulation 2 provides that "accommodation provided to or provision of which is secured
for an individual by a local authority under the 1968 Act [SWSA] or section
25 (care and support services etc) of the 2003 Act [the Mental Health (Care and
Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003] does not include - (a) the first г145 per week
of care of a kind mentioned in paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of section 1(1) of
[CCHSA]."
[67] It is not possible to say that the personal care or the
accommodation provided to Mr McLachlan Senior was provided by the Council, or
that the provision of them was secured by the Council. They were provided by his family, or were
secured for him by them. The family
considered the care homes in the area, selected one of them and decided to
place him in that care home without seeking or obtaining the approval of the
Council. The family met the care home
fees themselves. That was an entirely
private arrangement between the care home and the family with which the Council
were not at all concerned. The Council
did not arrange Mr McLachlan Senior's placement; there was no contract between
the care home and the Council; and the Council had not delegated their functions
to the care home. Accordingly, in my
opinion, section 1 of the Act and regulation 2 of the Regulations cannot apply
to Mr McLachlan Senior. On that
short ground alone I consider that the Ombudsman's decision that the Act placed
on the Council a statutory duty to provide funding to him is incorrect.
[68] In section 12A, to which counsel for the Ombudsman referred,
subsection (1) imposes on a local authority the duty of making an assessment of
needs where it appears to them "that any person for whom they are under a duty
or have a power to provide, or to secure the provision of, community care
services may be in need of any such services."
Mr McLachlan Senior was such a person.
It is true that if the local authority make an assessment and decide
that a person's needs call for the provision of any such services, those
services may be provided (or their provision may be secured) by the local
authority or by other means. If the
latter is the case, however, section 1 and the Regulations cannot apply. Here, it was the family who secured the
provision of the services needed by Mr McLachlan Senior. Section 1(1) of CCHSA makes it clear that the
local authority are not to charge for certain kinds of social care "provided by
them"; and the Regulations are concerned only with care in accommodation
provided by a local authority. If,
therefore, the person assessed is provided with care and accommodation, not by
the local authority but by some other person or persons such as his or her
family, section 1 and the Regulations cannot apply. The statements by Professor Bisset-Johnston
and the passage in the Guidance are not, in my opinion, warranted by the terms
of the legislation.
[69] I have reached this conclusion with reluctance. I make the following observations. First, whether or not, if the issue had been
drawn to its attention, the legislature would have wished to secure that where
a person over 65 for whom a local authority had a duty or power in terms of
SWSA was in residential care, he or she would receive personal care free of
charge whether that care was provided by a local authority or otherwise, the
question whether that object has been secured must be determined by the
language that Parliament has employed, always bearing in mind that the duty of
a court of construction is to determine Parliament's intention from the
legislation. As Lord Nicholls observed
in Wilson,
even a ministerial statement, however explicit it may be, cannot control the
meaning of an Act of Parliament. While a
court in construing legislation must always seek the true intention of the
legislature, it cannot ignore the natural meaning of clear words the
legislature has chosen to use. The
language used in section 1 and the Regulations is in this respect unambiguous. Although it may be thought to lead to an
unwelcome outcome, it is not susceptible of modification by the Court in order
to obviate that result (Craies on
Legislation (8th edn, 2004), paragraph 18.1.2(3); Stock v Frank Jones (Tipton) Ltd [1978] 1 WLR 231, Lord Simon of Glaisdale
at page 237E-F). The fundamental
principle of the sovereignty and supremacy of Parliament requires "clear and
unambiguous words to be given their clear and unambiguous meaning, even in
cases where one suspects that the legislature might have provided differently
had a particular question or issue been exposed to them" (Craies, paragraph 18.1.1).
[70] Secondly, I am acutely aware that my decision means that since
the coming into effect of the new regime on 1 July 2002 there has been a
widespread misapprehension as to the meaning and effect of the legislation on
the part not only of local authorities but also of the Scottish Executive and
of persons over 65 in private care homes and their families.
[71] Thirdly, I note the way in which the argument which I have
sustained emerged in the present case. The
Council appear to have changed their position on this issue. If they had always believed that they had no
obligation to provide Mr McLachlan Senior with free personal care after
completing their assessment, it is scarcely possible to understand why they
made free personal care payments to his care home. They did not suggest to the Ombudsman that
they had no such obligation, and no such argument was mentioned in their
petition for judicial review. The argument
was presented in the third speech, on the third day of the hearing. It was not consistent with an observation by
the petitioners' junior counsel on the first day that even a "self-funder" such
as Mr McLachlan Senior was entitled to free personal care. It might have been preferable for an issue of
such significance to have been foreshadowed in the petition and made the
subject of a full debate. The point
having been taken, however, the Court is bound to reach a decision upon it.
[72] Fourthly, no argument was addressed to me that the Council, by
reason of the fact that they had paid г145 per week for Mr McLachlan Senior's
personal care with effect from 28 June
2006, were barred from contending, in effect, that such payments
were ultra vires the Council. I have
not, therefore, considered that issue.
[73] Finally, I must record that when considering at avizandum the
Council's argument that the legislation applied only where a local authority
are providing, or securing the provision of, services, I observed that the
Scottish Ministers had had no notice that that argument would be presented. It occurred to me that if they had been given
notice in the petition that such an argument would be deployed, they might have
decided to enter the process. I therefore
considered that they should be afforded an opportunity to do so. On 10
July 2007, accordingly, I pronounced an interlocutor appointing the
Scottish Ministers, if so advised, to enrol by the close of business on 7 September 2007 a motion for
leave to enter the process and to lodge answers to the petition and a note of
argument. I attached to the interlocutor
a note in which I explained that the purpose of the interlocutor was to enable
the Scottish Ministers to make submissions in response to the Council's
argument that the legislation applied only where a local authority were
providing, or securing the provision of, services. I stated that if they wished to be heard, the
case would be put out by order for a further hearing on that point at which all
parties would be entitled to make submissions.
I expressed the view that the Court would derive invaluable assistance
in arriving at a decision on that very important issue from hearing submissions
on behalf of the Scottish Ministers.
[74] On 7 September 2007
a letter from the Office of the Solicitor to the Scottish Executive was
delivered to the Deputy Principal Clerk of Session. It stated:
"The Scottish
Ministers have considered carefully Lord Macphail's suggestion that they might
wish to make submissions in response to the petitioners' arguments. Having taken advice, the Scottish Ministers
have decided that they do not wish to enrol a motion for leave to enter the
process.
The Scottish
Ministers' reasons are essentially the same as those which militated against
their participating in the proceedings when the petition was first intimated to
them. The dispute in this case is
essentially a matter between the Council and the Ombudsman as to the scope of
the Ombudsman's powers. The Scottish
Ministers could give the court their own view of the legislation, but they do
not consider that it would be appropriate in the circumstances. The interpretation of legislation is
ultimately a matter for the courts."
[75] That response appears to be based on a curious misunderstanding. The dispute was not as to the scope of the
Ombudsman's powers. I stated the nature
of the dispute in my note. I said:
"[3] The principal argument presented for the
Council was that the Ombudsman had erred in law in her interpretation of the
Community Care and Health (Scotland)
Act 2002 (2002 asp 5) ("CCHSA") and the Community Care (Personal Care and
Nursing Care) (Scotland)
Regulations 2002 (SSI 2002, No. 303) ("the Regulations"). The issue between the Council and the
Ombudsman is whether the effect of CCHSA and the Regulations is to provide that
where a person aged 65 or over is in accommodation which includes an element of
personal care, a local authority is obliged to provide funding for the personal
care element of his or her accommodation.
It is the view of the Ombudsman that such an obligation is imposed,
while the Council maintain the contrary.
At the first hearing of the petition they argued (1) that the
legislation only provides that a local authority is not entitled to charge for
personal care, and (2) that the legislation applies only where the local
authority is providing the accommodation: here, the accommodation had been
provided by Mr McLachlan Senior's family.
[4] The first argument is foreshadowed in
the petition, but the second is not. The
Scottish Ministers therefore have had no notice that it would be presented to
the Court. The argument is that a local
authority are not obliged to make any payments in respect of the personal care
of a person whose care is being provided in a care home through a private
arrangement between the care home and the person or someone acting on his or
her behalf, usually a member of his or her family. Shortly stated, the argument is that a
"self-funder" is not entitled to personal care payments. In effect, personal care payments in respect
of a self-funder are ultra vires the local authority.
[5] If that argument is correct, it would be
a matter of great importance to the many residents in private care homes who
have received such payments since the legislation came into force on 1 July 2002, to their families, to the
local authorities who have made the payments, and to the Scottish Ministers. It may be that if the Scottish Ministers had
been given notice that such an argument would be deployed, they would have
sought an opportunity to convey their views to the Court."
[76] It is difficult to envisage how the nature and importance of
the dispute could have been more clearly stated. It is a matter of great public interest which
affects very many people. It is trite
that statutory interpretation is a matter for the courts: the vital
consideration, which has been overlooked, is that when determining an issue of
such general importance as this the Court would have derived much assistance from
submissions made in the public interest which in the circumstances of this case
the Scottish Ministers were well qualified and entitled to present. I can only record my disappointment that such
assistance has not been afforded to the Court.
[77] I would not have sustained any of the other arguments submitted
by the Council. I shall notice them in
the following paragraphs.
Whether
section 1 of CCHSA imposes an obligation to make payment
[78] I now consider the other
radical submission for the Council, which was that section 1 of CCHSA did not
impose on a local authority any obligation to make payment. The argument ran as follows. Section 1 removed personal care from the
category of services for which a local authority were entitled to charge by
section 87 of SWSA. Nothing in the long
title of the Act, where the policy and purposes of an Act might be found,
indicated that personal care was to be free or on what other terms it was to be
provided. The long title is, "An Act of
the Scottish Parliament to make further provision as respects social care; to
make provision in relation to arrangements and payments between National Health
Service bodies and local authorities as respects certain of their functions; to
amend the law relating to the National Health Service; and for connected
purposes." The words of the section were plain, and to give them a meaning
entirely different from that which they naturally bore was to play havoc with
statutory construction. Since the
meaning of the words was completely unambiguous, it was not legitimate to
resort to Parliamentary materials to qualify their plain meaning: Wilson v
First County Trust (No. 2) [2003] UKHL 40, [2004] 1 AC 816, Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead at paragraphs 56-59, Lord
Hobhouse of Woodborough at paragraphs 139-140.
The Ombudsman's construction of section 1 depended not on reading its
words, but on identifying a legislative vehicle and seeing what policy
aspirations were on board and what destination it was bound for. That was a novel approach to statutory
construction for which there was no warrant.
[79] Counsel for the Ombudsman submitted that even if section 1 did
not express a positive duty to make payment, having regard to the policy and
purposes of the Act it could not be intelligibly understood other than as
obliging local authorities to meet personal care free. There was no ambiguity about its language
when set in its proper legislative context.
It was the language of obligation, albeit expressed negatively. It excised from the means-tested regime
founded on the National Assistance Act 1948 the social care (including personal
care) element of community care services (including residential care). Where previously local authorities had been
entitled to charge, accommodation provided under SWSA now did not include the
first г145 per week of personal care. That
weekly amount now fell to be funded by the responsible local authority.
[80] In my opinion the legislative provisions relative to personal
care are unusually complex. It is clear
that section 1(1) does not expressly impose on a local authority an obligation
to pay for certain kinds of social care but says only, "a local authority are
not to charge for social care provided by them." It is impossible to tell, however, from a mere
reading of the subsection, how it is to have effect: that is a matter about
which the reader is left in doubt. It is
therefore helpful to identify the mischief at which section 1 is aimed and to
view the section in its legislative context.
[81] To identify the mischief, it is helpful to consider the state
of the law as to the assessment of need and provision of care by local
authorities immediately before the enactment of section 1. The legislation and other materials to which
I am about to refer are set out in Part II of this Opinion.
[82] Section 12A(1) of SWSA imposed (and continues to impose) duties
on a local authority where it appears to them that any person for whom they are
under a duty or have a power to provide, or to secure the provision of,
community care services may be in need of any such services. Section 87 of SWSA provided (and continues to
provide) by subsection (1) that a local authority providing a service under
SWSA may recover such charge for it as they consider reasonable; and by
subsection (1A) that they shall not require a person to pay more than it is
practicable for him to pay. Subsection
(3) provided (and continues to provide) that accommodation provided under SWSA
is to be regarded as accommodation provided under Part III of the National
Assistance Act 1948. The effect of
section 87(3) is that in terms of section 22 of the 1948 Act, as amended, the
local authority are required to charge for accommodation and assess a person's
ability to pay.
[83] Thus, immediately before the enactment of CCHSA there was a
means-tested regime for the provision of community care services, including
accommodation provided or secured by the local authority. That meant that where a person was in
hospital, the State met all their living costs, housing costs and personal care
costs; but where a person was receiving community care services provided or
secured by a local authority in a care home, he or she was subject to
means-testing and might have to meet some or all of these costs. The Sutherland Royal Commission regarded this
system as "indiscriminate and illogical" (paragraph 6.30). They considered that people in residential
care should be fully responsible for their living and housing costs, subject to
a means test if help was required, but that the costs of personal care were
quite different. Their "key
recommendation" was that personal care should be exempted from means-testing
altogether (paragraphs 6.31, 6.32, 6.37).
[84] It is clear that the mischief at which section 1 of CCHSA, and
the statutory provisions related to it, were aimed was the "indiscriminate and
illogical" system identified by the Commission.
The 16th Report of the Health and Community Care Committee of
the Scottish Parliament supported "the principle of making available personal
care services free at the point of use as recommended in the Sutherland
Report." (Inquiry into the Delivery of
Community Care in Scotland (2000), paragraph 27.) The reports of the Royal Commission and of
the Health and Community Care Committee provide, in the words of Lord Nicholls
of Birkenhead in Wilson at paragraph
63, "enlightenment on the nature and extent of the social problem (the
'mischief') at which the legislation is aimed", and "throw light on the
rationale underlying the legislation."
[85] I consider that it is also permissible to refer, as part of the
background to the legislation, to the "clear and unambiguous ministerial
statement" (Wilson at paragraph 58) by the Minister at
Stage 1 of the bill in the Scottish Parliament on 28 November 2001 (Official Report, cols 4220-4222). I do not accept the submission for the
Council that it is not legitimate to resort to Parliamentary material because
there is no ambiguity in the legislation: as I have already noted, section 1
read in isolation is on this issue quite uninformative. The Minister said:
"[The bill] will
mean that the Executive will be able to tackle existing inequities surrounding
care for older people by introducing free nursing care and free personal care."
[86] It is helpful to examine section 1 and the provisions relative
to it against that background. At risk
of repetition, it is possible to see that section 1(1) excises from the
means-tested regime various elements of social care provided by a local
authority including personal care: the local authority are no longer to charge
for it. Section 1(6) inserts into
section 87 of SWSA a new subsection (1B).
It provides that subsections (1) and (1A) of section 87, which are
concerned with the recovery by the local authority of charges for services
provided under SWSA, do not apply as respects any amount required not to be
charged by section 1(1) of CCHSA. Then
section 2 of CCHSA deals with the provisions of the earlier legislation about
charges for accommodation. It enacts
that for the purposes of, among other provisions, section 22 of the National
Assistance Act 1948 and section 87(2) and (3) of SWSA the Scottish Ministers
may by regulations determine what is and what is not to be regarded as
accommodation provided under SWSA. The
Regulations are the Community Care (Personal Care and Nursing Care) (Scotland)
Regulations 2002. Regulation 2 provides
that for the purposes of section 2 of CCHSA, accommodation provided to or
provision of which is secured for an individual by a local authority under SWSA
does not include the first г145 per week of personal care. Regulation 3 provides that the requirement in
section 1(1) not to charge for personal care applies only where the person for
whom the local authority have a duty or power in terms of SWSA is a person aged
65 or over.
[87] Once this somewhat labyrinthine study of the relevant
provisions and the background materials has been undertaken, there is little
difficulty in interpreting the provisions as meaning that a local authority are
not to charge for the first г145 per week of the personal care element in
accommodation provided, or provision of which is secured, by them. The direction not to charge, which is stated
in section 1(1), is entirely consistent with the various statements in the
background materials. The amount that is
not to be charged is stated in the Regulations.
On the other hand, there is nothing in the statutory provisions or the
background materials which explicitly provides that the local authority are
entitled make payments in respect of personal care. I have concluded, however, that that is to be
implied. Let it be assumed that a local
authority require to make arrangements for the residential accommodation of a
person. If they accommodate the person
in a residential establishment of their own, they may, subject to
means-testing, charge the person, but not for personal care (and the other
kinds of social care specified in section 1(1)). The local authority must bear the cost of
personal care (up to г145 per week) themselves.
If, instead of so accommodating the person, they secure for him or her
the provision of accommodation in a residential establishment operated by a
third party, they may pay the third party for the person's accommodation and
charge the person as before. The element
of personal care will be provided to the person, and charged to the local
authority, by the third party, but the local authority may not recover the cost
of it from the person since they are forbidden by section 1 to charge him or
her for it. The sum they pay to the
third party includes an element representing the person's personal care which,
again, they must bear themselves. That
necessarily means that they must pay the third party for it. That appears to me to be an inevitable and
logical consequence of the direction in section 1(1) that the authority are not
to charge for personal care. I am
therefore unable to sustain the Council's argument.
SWSA,
MacGregor and the SEHD Guidance
[88] The Council argued that the
Ombudsman had construed section 1 as if it stood in isolation. She appeared to have regarded SWSA as having
been superseded, and had failed to understand that SWSA continued to set out
the entire statutory framework for the performance of the Council's statutory
duties in relation to the assessment of needs and the provision of services to
satisfy them. That was an error which
went to the heart of the report. Had the
Ombudsman understood the significance of SWSA, she could not at the same time
have found (a) that the Council had operated entirely in conformity with the
guidance provided by MacGregor and
the Scottish Executive, and (b) that they were nonetheless guilty of a service
failure. SWSA and CCHSA provided a
single system, SWSA being concerned with identifying what was required and
matching need to provision, while CCHSA was concerned with the implementation
of free personal care.
[89] I do not consider this to be a sound criticism. It appears to misunderstand the purpose of
the Ombudsman's report, which was to deal with the complaints that had been
made to her in an effective and intelligible manner. It was within her discretion to determine the
appropriate level of response. Here,
like the Parliamentary Ombudsman, she did not adopt "the 'Rolls Royce approach'
for its own sake". When she dealt in her
report with the legislation and legal background, she made it clear that the
information given "does not cover all the relevant legislation, guidance or
case law but summarises the legislative background to this complaint"
(paragraph 7). She did not discuss SWSA
in detail, but it does not follow that she regarded it as having been
superseded. She refers to it in her
discussion in paragraph 12 of MacGregor v South Lanarkshire
Council 2001 SC 502 where the duties
imposed on local authorities by section 12A as it then stood were fully
considered. It is necessary to
appreciate that the Ombudsman was not writing the judgment of a court: as the
Parliamentary Ombudsman has observed in the report quoted above, "Ombudsmen and
courts are like chalk and cheese."
[90] The fact that the Council operated their waiting list in
accordance with MacGregor and the
SEHD Guidance is, in my view, nothing to the purpose. MacGregor
is concerned with the two stages of assessment and decision-making
prescribed by section 12A(1)(a) and (b), and with the legitimacy of the
operation by a local authority of a waiting list for persons whose needs called
for the provision of residential accommodation.
In the present case, however, as I have already explained, the
assessment process in Mr McLachlan Senior's case was completed by 3 February
2006, and his family provided him with residential care from about 5 February
2006. There was therefore no need to
place him on a waiting list. In any
event MacGregor was not concerned
with the terms of section 1 of CCHSA. I
note that Lord Hardie was less than enthusiastic about a local authority's
resorting to the use of waiting lists. In
the absence of full argument I refrain from comment on that subject, other than
to say that, on the assumption that there is an obligation to pay for personal
care in respect of a person who is not receiving services provided by the local
authority, Lord Hardie's decision cannot be understood as permitting a
local authority to withhold the personal care element of a person's
accommodation costs once his or her accommodation has been provided.
[91] The Council also relied on paragraph 18 of section 2 of the
Scottish Executive Health Department (SEHD) Circular, No. CCD5/2003 dated 29 July 2003 entitled "Free Personal
and Nursing Care in Scotland"
(no. 6/8 of process). Paragraph 18
states, "Following a needs assessment, payment towards personal care should
commence when the authority is in a position to arrange or provide the required
services." The Council's position was
that they complied with that statement: their obligation to make payment
towards personal care did not arise until they were in a position to do so by
receiving funding. But, on the same
assumption as before, the statement must mean that payment must commence when
the services are being provided. That is
made clear in paragraph 1(k) of section 5 of the guidance, which states that
payments are to commence "once the personal care service is being provided"
(underlining in original).
Other
arguments
[92] I shall begin my review of the
Council's other arguments by noticing briefly a submission by their junior
counsel which was, as I understood it, that it was illogical to interpret
section 1 of CCSHA as imposing a positive duty which the Council could not
afford to perform as they had insufficient funds. In my view this argument is unsound. A statutory duty cannot be binding only to
the extent that the person on whom the duty is imposed accepts that he is
capable of fulfilling it. If a local
authority, in fulfilment of its duties under section 12A(1) of SWSA, assesses a
person's needs and decides that his or her needs call for the provision of any
community care service, the person's entitlement to the service cannot depend
on whether the local authority can afford to provide it. The argument was not pursued and I do not
consider it further.
[93] Junior counsel for the petitioners deployed a further argument
based on the status of Mr McLachlan Senior as a "self-funder", that is, a
person whose accommodation in a care home was provided under a private
arrangement between the care home and his family. Counsel stated that even a self-funder was
entitled to free personal care (that was not the view expressed in her senior's
speech, as I have noted); but, she said, that had to be provided against the
background of resources, which were taken into account at the second stage of
the assessment process. The Council did
not have enough money and had to operate a waiting list and a prioritisation
system. If, however, the making of an
assessment immediately triggered a duty to make free personal care payments,
self-funders would "jump the queue" and go to the top of the list every time.
[94] In my opinion this consideration is irrelevant. It depends on the argument just discussed and
rejected above. Once the Council have
assessed a person's needs and have decided that his needs call for the
provision of free personal care by the Council, the Council's obligation to
provide it is engaged. There is no
additional condition that the Council should be able to afford to provide it.
[95] A further criticism by the Council was that the Ombudsman had
mistakenly assumed that it was the Council who had provided Mr McLachlan Senior
with residential care from February 2006.
The true position was that his care had been arranged by his family,
without the Council having first carried out the second stage of the assessment
process which was to ascertain what his needs called for. I do not consider that the Ombudsman
misunderstood the position. She observes
at the end of paragraph 12 of her report that Mr McLachlan Senior's need "was
already being met within a care home, although this was not funded by the
Council." In her statement of the facts
in paragraph 19 she makes it clear that his family had directly arranged his
placement in the care home and that he would be self-funding apart from the
desired funding for free personal care.
[96] The Council also found fault with the Ombudsman for making no
findings in relation to the availability of funding. It was said that she had narrated the
evidence of the Council and the statements by the SEHD in their correspondence
with Mr McLachlan Junior. She had
apparently accepted what had been said by both sides, but they could not both
be right. Rather than comment on the
availability of funding, she had attempted to solve the problem by creating an
artificial distinction between funding and the provision of free personal care.
[97] In my opinion it was within the discretion of the Ombudsman to
determine the scale of her investigation and, in the case of the complaint
against the Council, to confine herself to the question whether they had failed
to provide a service to Mr McLachlan Senior by not providing funding for
his personal care. She concluded that
CCHSA placed on the Council a statutory duty to provide him with such funding. As I have explained, I have been reluctantly
driven to the conclusion that in so finding she was in error, for a reason
which was not presented to her. I
consider, however, that the distinction which she drew between the provision of
services and the funding of services was a sound one. The question whether a person's needs call
for the provision of services is determined in accordance with section 12A of
SWSA. Once the services are provided by
the local authority, section 1 of CCHSA and the Regulations immediately impose
on the authority an inescapable duty to fund the personal care element. It is no answer to a charge of failure in
that duty to say that the authority had insufficient funds: that may explain
the failure, but it cannot alter the fact that the failure has occurred.
[98] I have accordingly rejected all the Council's arguments except
their argument that CCHSA and the related Regulations only apply where the
services in question are provided by the local authority.
VI The interested party
[99] Before stating the result, I
shall notice the representations made by Mr McLachlan Junior. His answers were lucidly drafted, and while
much of their contents and much of what he said in court did not bear directly
on the legal issues discussed by counsel, he spoke eloquently and with
moderation about the problems faced by elderly people and their families when
there is difficulty in obtaining free personal care. I have already noted in this Opinion the
responses he received when he complained to the Council and to SEHD. The Ombudsman sympathetically and justly
acknowledged in her report that he "found himself in a very frustrating
position, being told by the SEHD that there were sufficient funds for delivery
of the [free personal care] policy and being told by the Council that, in
reality, there were not." (Paragraph 29.) He "was caught at the centre of a well publicised
difference of views between the SEHD who are responsible for the implementation
of the Act and the Council who are responsible for delivering the Act."
(Paragraph 31.) It is not for this
Court, however, to comment on most of the matters raised by Mr McLachlan.
[100] There is, nevertheless, one series of issues mentioned by Mr McLachlan
on which comment is appropriate. He
criticised the Council on several grounds for bringing this petition. First, he said that the Ombudsman had not
made an enforceable decision and thus there were no grounds for judicial review. Counsel for the Ombudsman made a similar
submission, and I shall consider that matter in the next Part of this Opinion. Secondly, he said that the Council should
have delayed taking issue with the Ombudsman's report until she had made a
second, special report in terms of section 16 of SPSOA. In my opinion, however, the Council were
entitled to apply for judicial review without awaiting a special report (cf Ex parte Eastleigh at page 867A-C). Thirdly, he criticised the Council for
devoting a portion of their resources to the financing of this litigation. I consider, however, that they had a
substantial interest in bringing this petition.
That is also a matter which I shall discuss later.
[101] Mr McLachlan made a further point which requires to be noticed. He said that the Council, by making this
application, had exposed him and his family to publicity, although they had
been protected from publicity when he made his complaints to the Ombudsman. The matter arises in this way. Section 12(1) of SPOSA provides that an
investigation by the Ombudsman must be conducted in private. Section 15 makes provision as to reports on
investigations. Subsection (3) provides:
"(3) Apart from identifying the listed authority
in question, the report must not
(a) mention the name of any person, or
(b) contain any particulars which, in the
Ombudsman's opinion, are likely to identify any person and can be omitted
without impairing the effectiveness of the report,
unless the
Ombudsman determines that it is necessary to do so."
In her report, accordingly, the
Ombudsman referred to Mr McLachlan Junior as "Mr C", and to Mr McLachlan
Senior as "Mr A". In the petition,
however, Mr McLachlan Junior was named and designed as an interested
party, and these particulars were likely to identify his father as "Mr A". Mr McLachlan Junior accepted that to
name and design him as an interested party was in accordance with practice, but
he maintained that to do so breached his right to anonymity under sections
12(1) and 15(3)(a) of the Act and his right to privacy under article 8 of the
European Convention on Human Rights. He
said that the main attractions of the service provided by the Ombudsman were
that it was provided free of charge to those who considered themselves
aggrieved by an administrative decision, it respected their rights to privacy
and it was an extra-judicial process. He
considered that many individuals would prefer to suffer an injustice or
hardship rather than resort to the Ombudsman if they considered that they might
find themselves in a public court. He
maintained that the bringing of the petition was oppressive to him and his
family. Mr McLachlan's point was
well made, but he did not suggest that publication of his identity could have
been forbidden by the Court.
VII Result
[102] I have held that the
Ombudsman's decision that CCHSA placed on the Council a duty to provide funding
to Mr McLachlan Senior was incorrect. There
remains, however, a question as to what order the Court should now pronounce. In statement 3 of the petition the Council
seek "(i) reduction of the respondent's decision; (ii) such further order,
decrees or orders (including an order for expenses) as may seem to the Court to
be just and reasonable in the circumstances of the case." The "decision" is
identified in statement 2 as the decision above. The petitioners do not seek reduction of the
report, or of the recommendation that they should make the payments to which I
have referred.
[103] The Ombudsman's counsel questioned whether reduction of the
decision would be appropriate. Their
argument was that the remedy of reduction deprived an administrative decision
of its legal effects, but the Ombudsman's decision had no legal effects. Thus, reduction would serve no useful
purpose; and the Court did not act in vain when asked to grant decree of
reduction: King v East Ayrshire Council 1998 SC 182, Lord President Rodger at page
194G-H. If the Ombudsman's decision was
correct, an issue remained about the adequacy and the method of funding of the
policy of free personal care. If her
decision was wrong, a wider issue still remained: that CCHSA had failed to
capture the policy objective of providing personal care services to all those
assessed as needing them, regardless of their means and free of any charge. In either case, difficulties had plainly
arisen in the implementation and delivery of that policy. The Ombudsman's role in that connection was
not to pronounce definitively on what the law was, or on what the solution
should be. Her role, once her
investigative jurisdiction was engaged by a complaint, was to inquire into the
matter and to report in such a way that the nature of those difficulties - the
systemic problems exposed by the complaint - were properly identified and
canvassed, so that resolution of those difficulties might be pursued through
ordinary political processes. Reduction
of her interpretation of section 1 of CCHSA would not short-circuit those
processes to the least extent.
[104] In my opinion the answer to those submissions is this. The dictum that "the Court does not act in
vain" is a quotation from the speech of Lord Wilberforce in Malloch v Aberdeen Corporation 1971 SC (HL) 85 at page 118. In King
Lord President Rodger commented:
"In effect Lord
Wilberforce is saying that when asked to grant decree of reduction of an
administrative decision it is relevant for the court to consider whether the
person seeking reduction has a substantial interest in having it set aside."
I consider that there is no doubt
that the petitioners have a substantial interest in having the Ombudsman's
decision set aside. They are a public
body which make decisions on spending and the provision of services on the
basis of what they understand to be their statutory powers and duties. The extent of their duties in relation to the
provision of free personal care has significant financial consequences for them. The Ombudsman has now found that they have
failed to provide a service and has recommended that they make certain payments. In
these circumstances I am satisfied that the Council have a substantial interest
in the reduction of the Ombudsman's decision.
[105] I shall accordingly sustain the petitioners' first plea-in-law
and reduce the respondent's decision of 28 November 2006 that the petitioners
were in breach of a statutory duty incumbent upon them under section 1 of the
Community Care and Health (Scotland) Act 2002 to provide funding for personal
care to the father of the interested party.
The recommendation is consequential on the decision and will fall with
it. I shall reserve all questions of
expenses.
[106] At the conclusion of the speeches of junior counsel on the second
day of the hearing, I invited senior counsel to hand up skeleton arguments at
the continued hearing on the third day. Both
counsel greatly assisted me by responding most generously to that invitation.