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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> JK v A Local Health Board [2019] EWHC 67 (Fam) (13 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2019/67.html |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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JK |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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A LOCAL HEALTH BOARD |
Respondent |
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Mr John McKendrick QC (instructed by Bindmanns LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 4th November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was delivered in private. The judge has given leave for this version of the judgment to be published on condition that (irrespective of what is contained in the judgment) in any published version of the judgment the anonymity of the children and members of their family must be strictly preserved. All persons, including representatives of the media, must ensure that this condition is strictly complied with. Failure to do so will be a contempt of court.
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
JK's background history
The Evidence
The Law
a) Does JK have capacity to make a decision to refuse food?
b) Where the court is invited to make a declaration that a proposed course by the Health Board is medical treatment under s.63 MHA, what legal test should the Court apply?
c) Is the proposed treatment, i.e. force feeding, treatment that falls within s.63?
d) If the proposed treatment does not fall within s.63 can the court authorise the force feeding pursuant to its inherent jurisdiction? this raises two sub-issues;
i. Is there a lacuna in the statutory scheme which the inherent jurisdiction can appropriately fill?
ii. Is JK a vulnerable person within the meaning of SA (Vulnerable Adult with Capacity: Marriage) [2006] 1 FLR 867?
e) Is it appropriate on the facts to order that JK can be force fed?
' … the principle of self-determination requires that respect must be given to the wishes of the patient, so that if an adult patient of sound mind refuses, however unreasonably, to consent to treatment or care by which his life would or might be prolonged, the doctors responsible for his care must give effect to his wishes, even though they do not consider it to be in his best interests to do so'.
'… every person's body is inviolate and proof against any form of physical molestation …. The right of the defendant to determine his future is plain. That right is not diminished by his status as a detained prisoner'.
Mental Capacity Act 2005
Mental Health Act 1983
"The consent of a patient shall not be required for any medical treatment given to him for the mental disorder from which he is suffering, not being a form of treatment to which section 57, 58 or 58A above applies, if the treatment is given by or under the direction of the approved clinician in charge of the treatment".
"Any reference in this Act to medical treatment, in relation to mental disorder, shall be construed as a reference to medical treatment the purpose of which is to alleviate, or prevent a worsening of, the disorder or one or more of its symptoms or manifestations."
'On any view, and to a high degree of probability, section 63 was triggered because what arose was the need for medical treatment for the mental disorder from which the Applicant was and is suffering. The hunger strike is a manifestation or symptom of the personality disorder. The fact (if such it be) that a person without mental disorder could reach the same decision on a rational basis in similar circumstances does not avail the Applicant because he reached and persists in his decision because of his personality disorder'.
'found the views articulated by the treating clinicians, and in particular Dr. WJ, persuasive. She does not consider that the administration of artificial nutrition and hydration to Dr. A. in the circumstances of this case to be a medical treatment for his mental disorder, but rather for a physical disorder that arises from his decision to refuse food. That decision is, of course, flawed in part because his mental disorder deprives him of the capacity to use and weigh information relevant to the decision. The physical disorder is thus in part a consequence of his mental disorder, but, in my judgement, it is not obviously either a manifestation or a symptom of the mental disorder. This case is thus distinguishable from both the Croydon case and Brady'.
The cases have drawn a distinction between a condition which is, on the one hand, a consequence of the disorder, and, on other hand, a condition which is a symptom or manifestation of it. The former is not within section 63 , the latter is. I confess to finding the distinction intellectually challenging. At all events a wide (but not always consistent) interpretation has been given to section 145(4). Thus the decision to force-feed Ian Brady was held to be within section 63. His hunger strike, ostensibly in protest at the decision to move him to another ward, was held to be a manifestation or symptom of his very profound personality disorder (he was additionally found to be incapacitated): see Ex parte Brady [2000] Lloyd's Rep Med 355. In B v Croydon Health Authority [1995] Fam 133 the court declared that it was lawful to force-feed a patient who would otherwise die from self-starvation which was the result of her borderline personality disorder. By contrast in A NHS Trust v Dr A [2014] 2 WLR 607 a hunger strike by a detained Iranian doctor protesting about the impoundment of his passport was held to be not a manifestation or symptom of his mental disorder. In Tameside and Glossop Acute Services v CH [1996] 1 FLR 762 it was held that section 63 could be used to restrain a patient to enforce a Caesarean section upon her; while in St George's Healthcare NHS Trust v S the opposite conclusion was reached.
The Inherent Jurisdiction
'it would be unwise, and indeed inappropriate, for me even to attempt to define who might fall into this group in relation to whom the court can properly exercise its inherent jurisdiction. I disavow any such intention'.
1) Under constraint;
2) Subject to coercion or undue influence;
3) For some other reason deprived of the capacity to make the relevant decisions, or disabled from making a free choice, or incapacitated or disabled from giving or expressing a real and genuine consent.
'the many other circumstances that may so reduce a vulnerable adult's understanding and reasoning powers as to prevent him forming or expressing a real and genuine consent, for example, the effects of deception, misinformation, physical disability, illness, weakness (physical, mental or moral), tiredness, shock, fatigue, depression, pain or drugs. No doubt there are others'.
"24. The arguments presented to me on these facts have caused me to consider with care the circumstances in which the inherent jurisdiction can indeed be deployed for someone who is 'vulnerable'. The evolving caselaw was neatly and helpfully summarised neatly by Baker LJ when refusing permission to appeal in the case of Southend-on-Sea v Meyers [2018], and reproduced by Hayden J in his later judgment at [2019] EWHC 399 (Fam) at [28]. I do not propose to reproduce that summary once again here, but it plainly a most useful reference point in cases of this kind. For the purposes of deciding this case, on these facts, I have focused on some of the key messages from the Court of Appeal's decision in Re DL ,and the predecessor authorities, thus:
(i) "[T]he inherent jurisdiction can be exercised in relation to a vulnerable adult who, even if not incapacitated by mental disorder or mental illness, is, or is reasonably believed to be, either (i) under constraint or (ii) subject to coercion or undue influence or (iii) for some other reason deprived of the capacity to make the relevant decision, or disabled from making a free choice, or Particularly citing Singer J in Re SK [2004] EWHC 3202 (Fam)
(emphasis by underlining added) (Munby J in Re SA at [77]: this description was expressly endorsed by McFarlane in Re DL at [53]);
ii)The inherent jurisdiction should be "targeted solely at those adults whose ability to make decisions for themselves has been compromised by matters other than those covered by the 2005 Act" (McFarlane LJ in Re DL at [53])
iii)The inherent jurisdiction can be used to "supplement the protection afforded by the Mental Capacity Act 2005 for those who, whilst 'capacious' for the purposes of the Act, are 'incapacitated' by external forces—whatever they may be—outside their control from reaching a decision" (Macur J as she then was in LBL v RYJ [2010] EWCOP2665 [2011] 1 FLR 1279 at [62]). Macur J added (op cit.), materially: "...the relevant case law establishes the ability of the Court, via its inherent jurisdiction, to facilitate the process of unencumbered decision-making by those who they have determined have capacity free of external pressure or physical restraint in making those decisions" (also at [62]: emphasis added).
The Submissions
Conclusion
Capacity
Legal test under s.63
This Court, in R (Wilkinson) v Broadmoor, held in judicial review of an RMO's decision to treat a detained mentally ill hospital patient without his consent pursuant to section 58(3)(b), that the court should conduct a "full merits review" as to whether the proposed treatment infringed his human rights, and that, to that end, he is entitled to require the attendance of witnesses to give evidence and to be cross-examined. As appears later in this judgment, the rigour of that ruling may be qualified to the extent that resolution of challenges to section 58(3)b) decisions may not always or even mostly require oral evidence. However, it is authority for the proposition that a court, albeit exercising a judicial review function, does so, not on a Wednesbury basis, but by deciding the matter for itself on the merits after a full consideration of the evidence whether oral or in writing. The importance of this is the further safeguard it provides to vulnerable, detained mental patients in addition to that of the independently appointed SOAD for scrutiny of medical decisions with a potential to violate their human rights.
Is the refusal to eat a manifestation of JK's mental disorder?