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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Douce v Staffordshire County Council [2002] EWCA Civ 506 (19th April, 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/506.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 506 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN’S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
(Mrs Justice Rafferty)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
and
SIR DENIS HENRY
____________________
DOUCE | Respondent | |
- and - | ||
STAFFORDSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL | Appellant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
(instructed by Messrs Weightmans) for the Appellant
Edward Bartley Jones Esq, QC & Digby Jess
(instructed by Messrs Rowe & Cohen) for the Respondents
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Denis Henry:
“Provision of facilities and services
(1) … the person registered shall having regard to the size of the home and the number, age, sex and condition of residents-
(a) employ by day and, where necessary, by night suitably qualified and competent staff in numbers which are adequate for the well-being of residents”
Statute requires there to be at least two inspections a year, and the Inspection Services Division of the county council deals with them, and routinely appraises the level of staffing and its adequacy. Mr Jarrett, whose witness statement was before the judge, was the Assistant Director responsible for that Division.
“The court may give summary judgment against a claimant or a defendant on the whole of the claim or on a particular issue if-
(a) it considers that-
(i) the claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; … [and]
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at trial.”
“(1) A summary hearing can be a fair hearing for the purposes of Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights. A defendant is entitled to a fair summary hearing in a case which once properly investigated has no prospect of success.
(2) Summary judgment may be granted if the defendant can show that four criteria are present:
a) all substantial facts relevant to the allegations of negligence are before the court.
b) Those facts are undisputed, or there is no real prospect of successfully disputing them.
c) There is no real prospect of oral evidence affecting the court’s assessment of the facts.
d) There is no real prospect of the claim succeeding and there is no other reason to dispose of the case at trial.”
By way of commentary on those principles, May LJ made clear that the practical effect of them is intended to be that the court will only give summary judgment on the clearest case (see S -v- Gloucestershire County Council at 936E).
“Here, the claimants argue that the defendant is sufficiently proximate to the claimants, and there is a tri-partite care agreement arising out of the tender process, to make a duty of care at the very least arguable. In my judgment that is right. This is an area of developing jurisprudence. There seem to me to be issues of fact and of interpretation to be resolved in this matter, and I have no doubt that the application for summary judgment should be refused.”
It will be seen that she refused the application on two grounds. First, that it was arguable that the county council owed Mr and Mrs Douce a duty of care, and second that the issues of fact and interpretation necessitated a trial. That decision is now appealed to us.
“Most statutes which impose a statutory duty on local authorities confer on the authority a discretion as to the extent to which and the methods by which, such statutory duty is to be performed. It is clear both in principle and from the decided cases that the local authority cannot be liable in damages for doing that which Parliament has authorised. Therefore if the decisions complained of fall within the ambit of such statutory discretion they cannot be actionable in common law. However, if the decision complained of is so unreasonable that it falls outside the ambit of discretion conferred on the local authority, there is no a priori reason for excluding all common law liability.”
“If the decision complained of falls outside the statutory discretion it can (but not necessarily will) give rise to common law liability. However, if the factors relevant to the exercise of the discretion include matters of policy, the court cannot adjudicate on such policy matters and therefore cannot reach the conclusion that the decision was outside the ambit of the statutory discretion. Therefore a common law duty of care in relation to the taking of decisions involving policy matters cannot exist.” (738G-H)
“alleges carelessness, not in the taking of a discretionary decision to do some act, but in the practical manner in which the act has been performed”, and in those circumstances the question whether or not there is a common law duty of care falls to be considered by applying the usual principles, ie those laid down in Caparo Industries plc -v- Dickman [1990] 2 AC 605, 617-618. Was the damage to the plaintiff reasonable foreseeable? Was the relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant sufficiently proximate? Is it just and reasonable to impose a duty of care? … However, the question whether there is such a common law duty and if so its ambit, must be profoundly influenced by the statutory framework within which the acts complained of were done. … Similarly … a common law duty of care cannot be imposed on a statutory duty if the observance of such a common law duty of care would be inconsistent with, or have a tendency to discourage the due performance by the local authority of its statutory duties.” (739 A-D)
“Here, for the first time, the plaintiffs are seeking to erect a common law duty of care in relation to the administration of a statutory social welfare scheme. Such a scheme is designed to protect weaker members of society (children) from harm done to them by others. The scheme involves the administrators in exercising discretions and powers which would not exist in the private sector and which in many cases bring them into conflict with those who, under the general law, are responsible for the child’s welfare. To my mind, the nearest analogies are the cases where a common law duty of care has been sought to be imposed upon the police (in seeking to protect vulnerable members of society from wrongs done to them by others) or statutory regulators of financial dealings who are seeking to protect investors from dishonesty. In neither of those cases has it been thought appropriate to superimpose on the statutory regime a common law duty of care giving rise to a claim in damages for failure to protect the weak against the wrongdoers. … In my judgment, the court should proceed with great care before holding liable in negligence those who have been charged by Parliament with the task of protecting society from the wrongdoing of others.”
“The conclusion that cases of this kind may often be capable of being formulated as viable causes of action in negligence says little or nothing about whether they are likely to succeed on the facts.”
“The mere fact that the applicants [the county council] had put forward, in the evidence of Mr Jarrett, a case which could justify the conclusion that they have a strong case for defeating the claim, did not of itself impose an obligation upon the respondents [Mr and Mrs Douce] to submit evidence in answer, nor did it mean that in the absence of any evidence from the respondents, the judge was bound to deal with the matter on the basis that Mr Jarrett’s evidence was uncontraverted. If that were the right principle, a party could always require a mini-trial.”
“The correspondence illustrates, I hope, the amount of officer time expended by the defendant in dealing with the claimants over the years, not just in relation to staffing but to a host of issues. I believe that if the court rules that a LSSA [Local Social Services Authority - as the county council is] owes a duty of care to the owner of a care home in the way it conducts its regulatory and inspection functions, the LSSA is likely to be inhibited in carrying out those functions properly so as to ensure that the persons who are supposed to be protected by the LSSA through the exercise of these functions, namely the vulnerable residents, receive the protection to which they are entitled.”
Lord Justice Potter: