[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Folks v Faizey [2006] EWCA Civ 381 (06 April 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/381.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 381 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WOOD, QC
BM209162
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
and
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
____________________
ROBERT ANTHONY JOHN FOLKS |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
GARY FAIZEY |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR D MATTHEWS (instructed by Buller Jefferies, Birmingham 1) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill :
"Evidence from neuropsychology testing, witness statements of family members and my own assessment confirm that he is not capable of managing his own financial affairs. He agrees with this and has told me that he does not object to this process … [involving the Court of Protection]. He admits himself that he cannot cope with his own affairs. He has good insight into this. He is not against having a trustee appointed…"
"2.1 The Experts agree that the nature of the head injury sustained by the Claimant was Very Severe.
2.2 The Experts agree that the Claimant developed changes in his personality as a consequence of his brain injury. They agree that Mr Folks' persisting behavioural abnormalities include impulsivity, periodic disorganisation, reduced insight and empathy, rigidity, eccentricity, sensitivity to criticism, mild phobic anxiety, emotional lability, periodic suspicion, tendency to be rude and tactless, and marked mood swings. The experts agree that Mr Folks developed organic personality changes but differ in their views on its severity."
"6.1 Dr Scheepers considers that the Claimant currently does not have the insight and understanding to realise when he has a problem in respect of which he may need advice in relation to the litigation or in relation to the management of any damages that may be awarded.
6.2 The Experts agree that the Claimant is incapable of managing and administering his own affairs by reason of mental disorder and should be regarded as a patient within the meaning of the Mental Health Act 1983.
6.3 In Dr Jacobson's opinion the issue of capacity is more complex, because concerns were not raised by Dr Priestley in 2001 and 2002, there is no information which might shed light on his fiscal capacity while he was working at DHL, and there is no reference to impulsive spending in the 2000 – mid 2003 medical records. He considers that Mr Folks has probably lacked the capacity to manage his property and affairs since leaving DHL, by reason of mental disorder (Organic Bipolar Disorder) and alcohol abuse, but that he will probably regain capacity in about two years, when his Bipolar Disorder improves on mood stabilisers. Capacity should then be re-assessed. Dr Jacobson considers that Mr Folks probably has the capacity to litigate.
6.4 Dr Scheepers has no difficulty with reassessment in the future, but is less optimistic regarding prognosis since in his opinion the Claimant's impulsivity is part of his organic personality disorder rather than a bipolar affective disorder."
"190. I put to him two scenarios. In the first, I suggested that he is a gardener at a school near his house. He earns £5 per hour, works from 9am to 1pm, Monday – Friday, was supposed to go to work today but does not feel like going because it is raining. He now has to make a choice. In the second, I suggested that he has a car which is making strange noises. He does not know much about how cars work, but takes it to a garage. A mechanic at the garage tells him that the car is quite old, has several big problems, will cost £350 to repair, but the car will probably only last for another year anyway. The mechanic offers to buy the car for £500, even though he says it is only worth £450. Last week, his sister told him that she thought the car was worth at least £800. He now has to make a choice. With regard to these two vignettes, I asked him to identify what the choice must be. I sought his understanding of the choices by asking what he could choose to do, is there anything else he could choose to do, what are the advantages and problems of making a choice in one or the other direction. I asked him what he would do and why. I asked him who the choice would affect. He gave good answers, showing ability to identify choices, understand the nature of the choice, give the reasoning behind the choice and appreciation of how the choice would affect him."
"5. Frankly, I have to say that I am persuaded by the defendants that I should follow the judgment of Kennedy LJ. I should conclude that the final conclusion as to capacity rests with the court, and that I need medical evidence to guide me. The good medical evidence of Dr Jacobson really does support his view that the claimant has capacity to litigate, and I am unable to find against that, that the claimant does not have such capacity without hearing from Dr Scheepers who may hold a different, and as I would put it more pessimistic view about his capacity.
6. Therefore my conclusion is that it is not appropriate for me to order that a litigation friend should be appointed, even on the provisional or without prejudice basis which I discussed at the beginning of this judgment. I should say that I have taken into account the disadvantage of the need for there to be a further hearing which would take probably about a day and in which these experts would attend. That does add to the overall costs and it could possibly delay the conduct of the case, but I am persuaded by counsel for the defendant that that is a proportionate as it were disadvantage to set against the need to comply with the requirement, as I see it, that I should work on the basis of medical evidence before I say that a litigation friend should be appointed.
7. That is the conclusion of the judgment."
(While it did not emerge clearly from the joint statement, there is no doubt that Dr Scheepers was of the opinion that the appellant required a litigation friend.)
"In the context of litigation, rules as to capacity are designed to ensure that plaintiffs and defendants who would otherwise be at a disadvantage are properly protected, and in some cases that parties to litigation are not pestered by other parties who should be to some extent restrained. However, finality in litigation is also important, and the rules as to capacity are not designed to provide a vehicle for reopening litigation which, having apparently been properly conducted (whatever the wisdom of the individual decisions in relation to it), has for long been understood to be at an end."
"The rule making body plainly contemplated, and intended, that the question whether a party was required to act through a next friend or guardian ad litem (as the case might be) should, in the ordinary case, be determined by the party himself or by those caring for him; perhaps with the advice of a solicitor but without the need for enquiry by the court."
Lord Justice Keene:
Lord Justice Wilson :
(a) the decision under appeal to adjourn the appellant's application for its further consideration upon oral evidence rather than to accede to it there and then was a case management decision in relation to which the learned circuit judge had a discretion;
(b) if a wrong turn had been taken in allowing the respondent to participate in the enquiry as to whether the appellant had litigation capacity, it had been taken at a hearing on 16 September 2005 when, ultimately by consent, a district judge had granted each party permission to file a report on the issue by a separate consultant neuropsychiatrist; the circuit judge's order might seem to be only a logical extension of that direction;
(c) in that, by whatever route, the judge had before him an opinion by Dr Jacobson that the appellant probably had the capacity to litigate, it was hard to castigate as plainly wrong his conclusion that the opinion had to be probed before a litigation friend was appointed; and
(d) the appellant had put forward both to the judge and to this court a seemingly unattractive argument that the appointment of a litigation friend could be expressed to be without prejudice to the respondent's contention that it was inappropriate.
(a) it was open to the judge to act on the opinion of Dr Scheepers notwithstanding the contrary opinion of Dr Jacobson;
(b) the course taken by the judge condemned the parties to the unnecessary expense attendant upon a trial of the issue and to a regrettable continuation of the limbo in which, by virtue of the uncertainty as to the appellant's capacity, no step, whether proactive or reactive, could be taken by his solicitors in the proceedings; and
(c) the course was therefore one which, in that he was obliged to seek to give effect to the overriding objective, including saving expense and ensuring expedition, the judge should, with respect to him, not have taken.