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England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> ZZ (Capacity), Re [2024] EWCOP 21 (12 April 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2024/21.html Cite as: [2024] EWCOP 21 |
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ON AN APPEAL FROM HHJ BURROWS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Protection
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Local Authority A |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ZZ (By His Litigation Friend the Official Solicitor) |
Respondent |
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Ms Sophia Roper KC and Dr Oliver Lewis (instructed by Peter Edwards Law) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 19th March 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Theis DBE :
Introduction
Relevant background
(1) ZZ lacks insight into his ability to control his behaviour and stop himself from engaging in behaviour that he knows is wrong;
(2) This prevents ZZ from using and weighing information with regards to engaging in sexual activity and he therefore lacks capacity in this area;
(3) ZZ does not have any insight into his own vulnerabilities and may potentially behave in public in a way which places him at significant risk of both sexual exploitation by others but also aggressive behaviour and potential reprisals;
(4) Based on his lack of capacity in relation to engaging in sexual relations, he lacks capacity to marry.
Legal framework
"(1) what the two options are, including information about what they are, what sort of property they are and what sort of facilities they have;(2) in broad terms, what sort of area the properties are in (and any specific known risks beyond the usual risks faced by people living in an area if any such specific risks exist);
(3) the difference between living somewhere and visiting it;
(4) what activities L would be able to do if he lived in each place;
(5) whether and how he would be able to see his family and friends if he lived in each place;
(6) in relation to the proposed placement, that he would need to pay money to live there, which would be dealt with by his appointee, that he would need to pay bills, which would be dealt with by his appointee, and that there is an agreement that he has to comply with the relevant lists of "do"s and "don't"s, otherwise he will not be able to remain living at the placement;
(7) who he would be living with at each placement;
(8) what sort of care he would receive in each placement in broad terms, in other words, that he would receive similar support in the proposed placement to the support he currently receives, and any differences if he were to live at home; and
(9) the risk that his father might not want to see him if L chooses to live in the new placement."
(1) the sexual nature and character of the act of sexual intercourse, including the mechanics of the act;
(2) the fact that the other person must have the capacity to consent to the sexual activity and must in fact consent before and throughout the sexual activity;
(3) the fact that P can say yes or no to having sexual relations and is able to decide whether to give or withhold consent;
(4) that a reasonably foreseeable consequence of sexual intercourse between a man and woman is that the woman will become pregnant;
(5) that there are health risks involved, particularly the acquisition of sexually transmitted and transmissible infections, and that the risk of sexually transmitted infection can be reduced by the taking of precautions such as the use of a condom.
"[76] The test for capacity to marry is also a simple one:
(a) Marriage is status specific not person specific.
(b) The wisdom of the marriage is irrelevant.
(c) P must understand the broad nature of the marriage contract.
(d) P must understand the duties and responsibilities that normally attach to marriage, including that there may be financial consequences and that spouses have a particular status and connection with regard to each other.
(e) The essence of marriage is for two people to live together and to love one another.
(f) P must not lack capacity to enter into sexual relations.
[77] The decision is about capacity and not welfare. Thus I do not take into account aspects of his decision making which affect the consequence of his decision making, so long as they do not affect the decision making process in itself."
The grounds of appeal
The judgment
'All that being said, I agree with the Official Solicitor's submissions on this. I do not accept that a sixth factor or limb ought to be introduced into the JB test, namely, to have insight into and the ability to control one's urges. I also agree the conclusion I have reached, namely that Peter has capacity in this area, fits in with Cobb J's statement in Re Z [2016] EWCOP 4, namely that ordinary risk taking, which may be unwise does not render the decision incapacitous. I would go further. A person can have the capacity to engage in sexual relations, understanding that his partner may withdraw her consent at any moment, and that with that he must stop the sexual act. If, however, when that withdrawal of consent happens the person is unable to overcome his urges, that is nothing to do with capacity to consent to sexual relations.'
Submissions
(1) The degree to which there was an unusual degree of difficulty or inability of ZZ to prevent himself from carrying on if consent was withdrawn was not in the evidence, and,
(2) ZZ''s inability to understand, retain, use and weigh that degree of difficulty when embarking on a sexual encounter.
In any event, she submits Dr Rippon accepted she did not discuss with ZZ his degree of insight in this context.
Discussion and decision
(1) He did not properly analyse the evidence regarding whether ZZ's wish to live with TD and her mother was a pipedream or not, as had been asserted by the Official Solicitor on ZZ's behalf. In her oral evidence Dr Rippon considered it was more than that and gave her reasons for saying that. In addition, this was the view ZZ had expressed over a period of time to a number of people.
(2) On the particular facts of this case, the Judge fell into error by not properly considering that the requisite care needed was relevant information to the issue of residence. In my judgment arguably it was. Ms Roper accepted that the declaration made by the Judge would have been more accurate if it stated that the declaration about residence was in the context of the care being provided. To do that would have required the Judge to analyse ZZ's ability to understand relevant information about the need for the care and support and use or weigh it in reaching a decision. That would include considering, in the context of residence, the evidence that ZZ did not consider he required the care and support that was being provided.
(3) The risk in the Judge's approach to this issue is that it has been considered in a silo, with implications for the local authority in being able to coherently manage a care plan for ZZ in the light of the declarations made which, although referred to at [48], was not properly addressed by the Judge.
(1) The Judge did not properly deal with various aspects of Dr Rippon's evidence in particular (a) whether ZZ was able to use or weigh information about consent in the context of ZZ's sexual impulsivity and the complexity of the causes of that, including his mental impairment; (b) that ZZ's disinhibited sexual behaviour was due to a combination of his mental impairment, which included his cognitive functioning and executive functioning and gave disproportionate weight to the significance of ZZ's ordinary sexual urges/desire.
(2) The Judge wrongly equated ZZ's sexual disinhibition with the usual risk-taking of a person of commensurate maturity (as Cobb J did in Re Z). The Judge failed to properly weigh in the balance the evidence that ZZ has a record of sex offending and has been assessed as manipulative and presenting a very high risk. His sexually disinhibited behaviour falls into a different category than that envisaged by Cobb J in Re Z, with the result that the ability to use or weigh the question of consent needs to be considered in that context.
(3) The Judge erred in not following the approach set out in JB by asking himself first is the person unable to decide the matter for himself by reference to the matter and the relevant information, second is there a clear nexus between his inability to make a decision in relation to the matter and an impairment of, or disturbance in the mind or brain. If he had taken that structure it would have directed him to the relevant parts of Dr Rippon's evidence.