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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> B & Ors v. Attorney General & Ors (New Zealand) [2003] UKPC 61 (16 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2003/61.html Cite as: [2003] UKPC 61, [2003] Lloyd's Rep Med 527, [2003] 4 All ER 833 |
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ADVANCE COPY
Privy Council Appeal No. 1 of 2003
"B"and Others Appellants
v.
The Attorney General and Others Respondents
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
Delivered the 16th July 2003
------------------
Present at the hearing:-
Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead
Lord Hutton
Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough
Lord Rodger of Earlsferry
Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe
[Delivered by Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead]
------------------
The history
Prince's case
" (1) It shall be the duty of the Director-General to take positive action and such steps under this Act as in his opinion may assist in preventing children or young persons from being exposed to unnecessary suffering or deprivation …
(2) In pursuance of the duty imposed on him by subsection (1) of this section the Director-General shall arrange -
(a) for prompt inquiry where he knows or has reason to suspect that any child or young person is –
(i) Suffering or likely to suffer from ill-treatment or from inadequate care or control …"
"The 1974 Act is directed to the care and protection of children and young persons. The class of persons for whom the statutory protection was enacted is clear. The discharge of the particular function calls for the exercise of special social work skills and responsibilities. There is a professional relationship between social worker and client child or young person. Children and young persons are seen as vulnerable. Because of their youth and immaturity they cannot assert their own rights and needs. Others must do it for them. Just as it is right that the department and its professionals have a generalised duty under the statute to promote the well-being of children and young persons (s 3), so, too, when exercising their statutory duties in respect of a particular child or young person they assume a responsibility to that child or young person (s 4). And the duty to consider a complaint of neglect is specific to the particular child or young person, the subject of the complaint (s 5). While a deprived child or young person may have no particular expectation that the department will seek to assist him or her, given general community expectations reflected in the statute it is not unreasonable to conclude that a child or young person is to be regarded as implicitly relying on the department and its officers to consider complaints that they are in need. Finally, it is readily foreseeable that inadequate consideration of complaints that a young person is neglected might cause harm. … the department is not in a position to say that the imposition of a duty of care would expose the officer and the department to a burden out of proportion to their own moral culpability."
"That statutory scheme does not lead inevitably to a conclusion that there was a common law duty of care to take proper steps to investigate allegations of neglect and thereafter to take such further and successive steps as the circumstances required. The question is whether it is just and reasonable to superimpose a common law duty of care on the department in relation to the performance of its statutory responsibilities for the protection and care of children and young persons. But, given the conclusion that proximity is satisfied, the statutory framework within which the department and its social workers act is consistent with the imposition of a common law duty of care. The narrow argument is that liability may arise where the person charged with the responsibility either unreasonably fails to carry out the duty to consider the matter or reaches a conclusion so unreasonable as to show its failure to do its duty.
… it cannot be said that a common law duty in these terms would cut across the whole statutory scheme. At that early triggering step a specific positive duty rests on the Director-General. At that step it does not require participation with other agencies. The duty suggested does not conflict with any other duty by the department and its officers. On the contrary it enhances it."
The decisions of Gallen J and the Court of Appeal
"[The duty of care] is to be tied to the 'positive duty' stated by Parliament relating to that initial stage of deciding whether to arrange a 'prompt inquiry' and when appropriate arranging it."
"… the statutory scheme cuts across a common law duty of care once the triggering step of the 'prompt inquiry' is completed and the officials are moving beyond that initial obligation and are assembling relevant information before considering whether to exercise their statutory powers."
He then noted, at para 28, that the breaches of duty alleged in the present case "fall outside that initial period of positive statutory obligations during which, in accordance with Prince, a common law duty of care may also arise".
The duty to inquire
The duty of care
Witness privilege
Conclusion