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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Cornwall Council, R (on the application of) v Wiltshire Council & Ors (Rev 1) [2012] EWHC 3739 (Admin) (21 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/3739.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3739 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT IN WALES
(BRISTOL HEARING CENTRE)
2 Redcliff Street, Bristol, BS1 3ST |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
The Queen on the application of Cornwall Council |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Health |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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(1) Wiltshire Council (2) South Gloucestershire Council (3) Somerset County Council |
Interested Parties |
____________________
Deok-Joo Rhee (instructed by Department of Health Litigation and Employment Division) for the Defendant
Hilton Harrop-Griffiths (instructed by Wiltshire Council Legal Department) for the First Interested Party
Sarah Hannett (instructed by South Gloucestershire Council Legal Department) for the Second Interested Party
David Fletcher (instructed by Somerset County Council Legal Department) for the Third Interested Party
Hearing date: 9 November 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Beatson:
II. The legal and regulatory context
(i) The National Assistance Act 1948:
"a local authority may, with the approval of the Secretary of State, and to such extent as he may direct, shall make arrangements for providing:
(a) residential accommodation for persons who by reason of age, illness, disability or any other circumstances are in need of care and attention which is not otherwise available to them."
"(1) The local authority empowered under this part of the Act to provide residential accommodation for any person shall, subject to the following provisions of this part of this Act, be the authority in whose area the person is ordinarily resident
…
(3) Where a person in the area of a local authority –
…
(b) not being ordinarily resident in the area of the local authority, is in urgent need of residential accommodation under this part of the Act,
the authority shall have the like power to provide residential accommodation for him as if he were ordinarily resident in their area.
(4) Subject to and in accordance with the arrangements under section 21 of this Act, a local authority shall have power, as respects a person ordinarily resident in the area of another local authority, with the consent of that other authority, to provide residential accommodation for him in any case where the authority would have a duty to provide such accommodation if he were ordinarily resident in their area.
(5) Where a person is provided with residential accommodation under this Part of this Act, he shall be deemed for the purposes of this Act to continue to be ordinarily resident in the area in which he was ordinarily resident immediately before the residential accommodation was provided for him.
…"
"(1) Any expenditure which apart from this section would fall to be borne by a local authority –
(a) in the provision under this Part of this Act of accommodation for a person ordinarily resident in the area of another local authority;
…
shall be recoverable from the said other local authority.
…
(3) Any question arising under this Part as to a person's ordinary residence shall be determined by the Secretary of State…"
(ii) The Children Act 1989:
22.- General duty of local authority in relation to children looked after by them.
(1) In this Act any reference to a child who is looked after by a local authority is a reference to a child who is –
…
(b) provided with accommodation by the authority in the exercise of any functions (in particular those under this Act) which are social services functions within the meaning of the Local Authority Social Services Act 1970…
…
(3) It shall be the duty of a local authority looking after any child -
(a) to safeguard and promote his welfare…
…
(4) Before making any decision with respect to a child whom they are looking after, or proposing to look after, a local authority shall, so far as is reasonably practicable, ascertain the wishes and feelings of –
(a) the child;
(b) his parents;
(c) any person who is not a parent of his but who has parental responsibility for him; and
(d) any other person whose wishes and feelings the authority consider to be relevant regarding the matter to be decided.
(5) In making any such decision, a local authority shall give due consideration –
(a) having regard to his age and understanding, to such wishes and feelings of the child as they have been able to ascertain;
(b) to such wishes and feelings as any person mentioned in subsection (4)(b) to (d) as they have been able to ascertain…"
"(1) Each local authority shall have the duties provided for in this section towards –
(a) a person who has been a relevant child for the purposes of section 23A (and would be one if he were under 18), and in relation to which they were the last responsible authority; and
(b) a person who was being looked after by them when he attained the age of 18, and immediately before ceasing to be looked after was an eligible child,
and in this section such a person is referred to as a 'former relevant child'.
…
(4) It is the duty of the local authority to give a former relevant child –
…
(c) other assistance, to the extent that his welfare requires it;
…
(6) Subject to subsection (7) [which is not relevant in these proceedings] the duties set out in subsections (2), (3) and (4) subsist until the former relevant reaches the age of 21;
…"
By section 30(1) of the 1989 Act "nothing in this Part shall affect any duty imposed on a local authority by or under any other enactment".
(iii) The Mental Capacity Act 2005:
(iv) Departmental Guidance and Directions:
(1) As there is no definition of "ordinary residence" in the 1948 Act, the term should be given its ordinary and natural meaning subject to any interpretation by the courts: paragraph 18.
(2) The concept of "ordinary residence" "involves questions of fact and degree" and that "factors such as time, intention and continuity (each of which may be given different weight according to the context) have to be taken into account": paragraph 19.
(3) For the purposes of the 1948 Act it is not possible for a person to have more than one ordinary residence. This is because, if (as is possible in other contexts) a person could have more than one ordinary residence, the purpose of the ordinary residence test in the 1948 Act to determine which single local authority has responsibility for meeting a person's eligible social care needs would be defeated: paragraph 26.
(4) "Ordinary residence can be acquired as soon as a person moves to an area if their move is voluntary and for settled purposes, irrespective of whether they own, or have an interest in, a property in another local authority area. There is no minimum period for which a person has to be living in a particular place for them to be considered ordinarily resident there, because it depends on the nature and quality of the connection with a new place.": paragraph 22, emphasis in original.
(5) In the case of a young person who reaches the age of 18 years, if the young person is eligible for services, local authorities could reasonably have regard to the definition of "ordinary residence" in the 1989 Act in determining where responsibility for the future delivery of services might most appropriately lie: see paragraph 147 and [25(1)] below.
(6) Issues relating to mental capacity should be decided with reference to the 2005 Act; and the test for capacity is specific to each decision at the time it needs to be made and that a person may be capable of making some decisions but not others: paragraphs 27 – 30, which also refer to the checklist of factors in section 4 of the 2005 Act for working out the best interests of a person who lacks capacity.
(7) In the case of a person who has been placed in accommodation and who does not have capacity to decide where to live and cannot be regarded as having adopted a place of residence voluntarily, uncertainty about that person's place of "ordinary residence" should be resolved by applying one of the alternative tests in the Vale case: paragraph 30.
(8) Taylor J's statement that, where a person's learning difficulties were so severe as to render them totally dependent on a parent or guardian "the concept of her having an independent ordinary residence of her own which she has adopted voluntarily and for which she has a settled purpose does not arise" is set out in paragraph 31. It is stated that Taylor J "rejected the possibility of the young person having an ordinary residence in a place that she had left or in a place where she may go in the future". It is also stated that he held "that a young person with severe learning disabilities was ordinarily resident at her parents' house where she was temporarily living at the time" and that "she was in the same position as a small child who was unable to choose where to live".
(9) As to the first of the Vale tests, that a young person with severe learning disabilities will be treated as having the ordinary residence of his or her parents, the guidance states (paragraph 33) that the test:-
(a) "may not always be appropriate and should be used with caution" because "its relevance will vary according to the ability of the person to make their own choices and the extent to which they rely on their parents or carers"; and
(b) should "only be applied when making decisions about ordinary residence cases with similar material facts to those in Vale" (ibid).
(10) The guidance states that "the alternative approach [the second of the Vale tests] involves considering a person's ordinary residence as if they had capacity. All the facts of the person's case should be considered, including physical presence in a particular place and the nature and purpose of that presence as outlined in Shah, but without requiring the person themselves to have adopted the residence voluntarily": paragraph 34.
(1) Although the provisions of the 1989 Act no longer apply once a young person reaches the age of 18, local authorities could reasonably have regard to the 1989 Act and start from a "presumption that the young person remains ordinarily resident in the local authority that had responsibility under the 1989 Act": paragraph 147.
(2) Where a local authority has placed a child in accommodation on out of its area under the 1989 Act, as a result of section 105(6) of the Act, that local authority remains the child's place of ordinary residence for the purpose of the 1989 Act: paragraph 148.
(3) In such a case, "there would be a starting presumption that the young person's place of ordinary residence remains the same for the purposes of the 1948 Act when they turn 18": paragraph 148.
(4) "[The] starting presumption may be rebutted by the circumstances of the individual's case, and the application of the Shah or Vale tests": paragraph 149. "[T]he young person may be found to be ordinarily resident in the local authority that had responsibility for them under the 1989 Act, or they may be found to have acquired a new residence in the area in which they are living, depending on the facts of their case": paragraph 150.
(5) The factors that should be taken into account when considering ordinary residence for the purposes of the 1948 Act include:-
(a) "the remaining ties the young person has with the authority that was responsible for their care as a child,
(b) ties with the authority in which the young person is currently living,
(c) the length and nature of residence in the area in which the young person is currently living, and
(d) If he/she has the mental capacity to make this decision, the young person's views in respect of where he/she wants to live. The position of those with physical and learning disabilities and who may lack capacity is dealt with in the discussion of a number of scenarios in paragraph 158. These show the intention of the Departmental Guidance that the questions are ones of fact and degree. The scenarios are summarised in the Appendix to this judgment.
III The facts
(1) The preferred persons to contact were recorded as his parents at their address in Cornwall.
(2) At the time PH lived with his foster-parents. It was recorded that on reaching 18 he would need either to move elsewhere, or the foster placement would need re-registering as an adult placement.
(3) PH had lived with his foster parents for over 12 years and was included in their family activities. His parents were recorded as visiting four or five times a year, with occasional visits to their home by PH, usually over the Christmas period (which included his birthday) and in the summer.
(4) It was recorded that, if PH was to be moved away, his parents would wish to maintain at least the current level of contact. His foster parents also expressed a wish to be involved in helping him settle into a new placement and intended to visit as regularly as possible.
(5) Continuing contact with PH's natural and foster families was noted to be vitally important. For that reason it was considered desirable for him to live within the M4/M5 corridor for ease of travelling.
"27.1 [Wiltshire] considers that it accepted responsibility for [PH] until he reached the age of 18 but has not at any time accepted responsibility for him as an adult. Nonetheless it has provided services for him as an adult on a provisional basis pending this determination, formerly in keeping with LAC(93)7 and now with paragraph 2(2) of the Ordinary Residence Disputes (National Assistance Act 1948) Directions 2010.
27.2 [Cornwall] considers that [Wiltshire] has accepted responsibility for [PH] and demonstrated this by their actions. It has continued to provide services for him as an adult and has at no time stated that this was on a provisional or without prejudice basis.
27.3 [South Gloucestershire] considers that [Wiltshire] accepted responsibility for [PH] until he reached the age of 18 but has not at any time accepted that it ought to be responsible for providing him with adult services when he became an adult. Nonetheless, after the he left [his foster parents'] home on 24th January 2005 it has provided services for him as an adult on a provisional basis pending this determination, formerly in keeping with LAC(93) and now with the paragraph 2(2) of the Ordinary Residence Disputes (National Assistance Act 1948) Directions 2010."
It is clear that the word "it" in the fourth line of 27.3 refers to Wiltshire.
IV The decision
"17. The legal basis for the provision of [PH's] placement between his 18th birthday and his move to Blackberry Hill is unclear. Given [PH's] personal care needs this period cannot have been in accommodation provided pursuant to section 21 of the 1948 Act, as it would not have met the requirements of section 26(1A). It may have been provided pursuant to continuing duties under the 1989 Act, but the Secretary of State's jurisdiction under section 32(3) of the 1948 Act does not extend to determining this. …
18. On [PH's] 18th birthday, his need for accommodation under section 21 of the 1948 Act arose. I will determine [PH's] place of original residence as of his 18th birthday, despite the fact that the section 21 accommodation was not in fact provided on his date, on the basis of the approach taken in the case of Greenwich. In Greenwich, the court looked at what the position would have been had arrangements been made under section 26 of the 1948 Act, and noted that the deeming provisions should be applied and interpreted on the basis that they had actually been put in place by the appropriate authority (paragraph 55 of the judgment).
19. As stated in paragraph 147 of the guidance issued by the Department, local authorities, in determining ordinary residence, can reasonably have regard to the 1989 Act and start from a presumption that the young person remains ordinarily resident in the local authority that had responsibility for them under the 1989 Act. …
[Section 105(6) of the 1989 Act was set out and the decision in Northampton County Council v Islington Borough Council [1999] All ER (D) 832 was cited.]
20. …I consider that, for the purposes of the 1989 Act, [PH] was ordinarily resident in Wiltshire. Residence while accommodation was being provided by or on behalf of a local authority, in this case with foster carers, would be disregarded in accordance with section 105(6)(c) of the 1989 Act.
21. The starting presumption is that [PH] remained ordinarily resident in the area of the local authority which had responsibility for him under the 1989 Act, namely Wiltshire. However, as paragraph 149 of the guidance points out, this starting point may be rebutted by the circumstances of the case and the application of the Shah and Vale tests. That paragraph refers to various factors that should be taken into account in applying those tests.
22. First, I do not consider that [PH] was ordinarily resident in Wiltshire. He had no links to the area. [PH's] parents and siblings left Wiltshire in November 1991, and [by December 2004] there were no…remaining ties with Wiltshire. …The mere fact that Wiltshire was the responsible authority for [PH] under the 1989 Act is not enough to affirm the presumption that he is ordinarily resident in Wiltshire from 27 December 2004.
…
24. [PH] has severe learning difficulties and lacks mental capacity to decide where to live…The family home in Cornwall is a place to which [he] returns for holidays and his parents are in regular contact by telephone. In 2004 it was the case that [his] parents visited him four or five times a year. [His] parents have also been closely involved in decisions made in relation to his care. [His] father's letter dated 6 January 2001 provides an example of this. From that letter…it is apparent that the family view the quantity of contact with [PH] in terms of what is in [his] best interests. It is clear from the social services papers that proximity to the family home and ease of travel to and from Cornwall has been a consideration in planning the care and support needs of [PH]. I consider that [PH's] base is with [h]is parents.
25. I note that Cornwall question whether the family home in Cornwall can properly be described as a "base" for [PH] given the infrequency of his visits there. It is not merely the number or frequency of visits that are determinative. The entirety of the relationship between [PH] and his parents is to be taken into account, and when regard is had to that, it is clear that [PH's] base remained with his parents.
26. Nor do I consider that [PH's foster parents] can, despite the years spent caring for [PH], be treated, by analogy, as a parent, such that, in accordance with test 1 in Vale, [PH] could be considered to have been ordinarily resident in South Gloucestershire on 26 December 2004. [PH's] natural parents remained his base throughout [PH's] placement with [his foster parents]. His parents visited him, he stayed with them, and they were involved with decisions regarding his care and well-being. I do not consider [his foster parents] to have so far replaced the role of [PH's] parents to be treated by analogy as [his] parents.
27. …[I]t was clear that [PH's] remaining in South Gloucestershire was at 26 December a temporary matter. [PH] was to remain with [his foster parents] in South Gloucestershire only until his section 21 accommodation became available. It is clear from the papers that continuing with his foster carers was considered to be important and [they] have kept in regular contact, but this is now mainly by letters and cards. His school, respite care and church life were associated with this foster care placement, and ceased once he removed to the accommodation provided under section 21 of the 1948 Act.
28. For the reasons given above, I determine that [PH] was ordinarily resident in the area of Cornwall as of 26 December 2004."
V The grounds of Cornwall's challenge
VI Analysis and conclusions
(i) Introduction
(ii) Grounds 1 and 2
(iii) Ground 3:
(iv) Ground 4:
"That therefore is the question to be asked, and it is not appropriate to consider whether, in a general or abstract sense, such a place would be considered an ordinary or normal residence. So long as that place where he eats and sleeps is voluntarily accepted by him, the reason why he is there rather than somewhere else must not prevent that place from being his normal residence. He may not like it, he may prefer some other place, but that place is, for the relevant time, the place where he normally resides."
"Habitual or ordinary residence is in each case a question of fact. The temptation to turn it into an abstract proposition should be resisted. Habitual or ordinary residence is not equivalent to physical presence. There can be ordinary or habitual residence without continuous presence, while physical presence is not necessarily equivalent to residence. Residence means living somewhere. The significance of ordinary or habitually is that it connotes residence adopted voluntarily and for settled purposes. That was the point emphasised before me and appears clearly from Shah. Although ordinary in one place can be lost immediately, acquisition of a new ordinary residence requires an appreciable period of time. The length of the appreciable period of time is not fixed, since it depends on the nature and quality of the connection with the new place. However, it may only be a few weeks, perhaps, in some circumstances, even days. In order to establish ordinary residence over a period of time a person must spend more than a token part of that period in the place in question. Ordinary residence is not broken by temporary or occasional absences of long or short duration. …"
"[the mother] is treated as though she has two hats; she is a mother whose ordinary residence must be determined by common law principles when that concept is relevant for the purpose of determining her child's ordinary residence for any purpose under the 1989 Act; but she is a child whose ordinary residence is modified by section 105(6) when it comes to determining her own place of ordinary residence for any purpose under that Act". (at [45]).
The reasoning summarised in paragraph 22 of the Secretary of State's determination represents the application of those common law principles.
Appendix:
Scenario 1: A disabled person is accommodated by local authority A under section 20 of the 1989 Act in a specialist residential school in the area of local authority B. The individual has capacity to make some decisions for himself, and has expressed a desire to remain living in local authority B near his friends. The guidance states that the starting presumption is that the individual is ordinarily resident in local authority A. However, since he or she has expressed a wish to remain in local authority B, and since the family home in local authority A is not a base to which he or she returns other than for short spells over Christmas and other occasional events, it is stated that, in line with the settled purpose test in the Shah case, "it seems that [the person] has adopted local authority B voluntarily and for settled purposes". The presumption that he remains ordinarily resident in local authority A is stated to be rebutted so that, for the purposes of the 1948 Act, he is ordinarily resident in local authority B.
Scenario 2: A person with severe learning disabilities has been accommodated under the 1989 Act by local authority A in a residential facility in the area of local authority B, but spends weekends and holidays with his parents at their home in the area of local authority A. The assumption is that the individual does not have capacity to decide where to live, and that a "best interests" assessment concluded that it would be in his best interests to remain in the residential facility in which he is currently living during the week, because it caters for young people up to the age of 21. It is stated that, while the presumption is that the individual remains ordinarily resident in the local authority that had responsibility for him under the 1989 Act, because he maintained a close relationship with his parents and returned to their home each weekend and for holidays, and was dependent on them for much of his support, their home could be considered his "base". The guidance states that his circumstances are similar to those in the Vale case, where it was decided that a 28 year old woman who lived in residential care remained ordinarily resident with her parents. The guidance contrasts this scenario with the first scenario because of the close relationship between the individual, his parents, and their home, and the absence of established links "within his host local authority".
Scenario 3: A person with Downs Syndrome has been looked after by local authority A and placed with foster carers in the area of local authority B. The scenario assumed that she has expressed the wish to live independently, that her support workers and foster carers helped her to find a flat share, and that she signed her own tenancy agreement. The guidance states that, although the starting presumption is that her place of ordinary residence is local authority A which had responsibility for her under the 1989 Act, since she has lived within the area of local authority B for five years, has no contact with her birth parents, and has no links with anyone in local authority A other than her social workers, whereas she has a well-established support network in the local authority B, she has acquired an ordinary residence in local authority B.