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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> L & Anor v Reading Borough Council & Ors Rev 1 [2006] EWHC 2449 (QB) (12 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/2449.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 2449 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) L (2) B |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) Reading Borough Council (2) Wokingham District Council (3) The Chief Constable of Thames Valley Police |
Defendants |
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Mr Andrew Miller (instructed by Watmores) for the First and Second Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Keith:
Introduction
The assumed facts
L's attitude to these proceedings
The causes of action
(i) Breach of the duty of care. Four social workers Sandra Sullivan and three others are alleged to have been in breach of the duty of care they owed to B to discharge their professional functions with the care which could reasonably be expected of a reasonably competent social worker. Ms Sullivan is alleged to have failed to question L properly at both interviews or to record her responses and demeanour during the first interview or to represent what L had said at both interviews accurately or to provide the appropriate information about L. In addition, she and the three other social workers are alleged to have failed to support contact between L and B if that had been possible, or to follow and apply the Council's policies and guidelines relating to the assessment of allegations of sexual abuse and the making of recommendations to the Child Protection Committee. Berkshire is alleged to have been vicariously liable for all these breaches of duty.
(ii) Misfeasance in a public office. Two aspects of the conduct of Ms Sullivan are alleged to have amounted to the deliberate, malicious and dishonest abuse of power on her part. They are her failure to correct WPC Grey's statement to B at the second interview that the police had medical evidence that L had been sexually abused, and her misrepresentation at the child protection case conference of what L had said at both of the interviews by her and WPC Grey. Since Ms Sullivan has not been joined as a defendant, the allegation presumably is that Berkshire was vicariously liable for Ms Sullivan's misfeasance in a public office, although that vicarious liability has not been pleaded.
(iii) Conspiracy to injure. The allegation is that Ms Sullivan and WPC Grey conspired together to injure B by fabricating evidence of what L had said when she had been interviewed by them. The predominant purpose of that conspiracy was to harm B by getting him convicted in a criminal court or by obtaining a finding against him in a civil court that he had sexually abused L. Again, Berkshire's vicarious liability for that conspiracy has not been pleaded, but that is presumably what is alleged.
The position of the Chief Constable
Should the application be determined now?
The merits of the application to strike out
"In considering whether it would be fair, just and reasonable to impose such a duty, a court has to have regard, however, to all the circumstances and, in particular, to the doctors' admitted duty to the children. The duty to the children is simply to exercise reasonable care and skill in diagnosing and treating any condition from which they may be suffering. In carrying out that duty the doctors have regard only to the interests of the children. Suppose, however, that they were also under a duty to the parents not to cause them psychiatric harm by concluding that they might have abused their child. Then, in deciding how to proceed, the doctors would always have to take account of the risk that they might harm the parents in this way. There would be not one but two sets of interests to be considered. Acting on, or persisting in, a suspicion of abuse might well be reasonable when only the child's interests were engaged, but unreasonable if the interests of the parents had also to be taken into account. Of its very nature, therefore, this kind of duty to the parents would cut across the duty of care to the children."
Lord Rodger concluded at [111] that the appropriate response of the law should be to minimise the danger which arose when the professionals were confronted with this conflict of interest. Since the conventional wisdom was that the interests of the child must be put first in any case of suspected abuse, the conflict of interest would be minimised if the professionals did not owe a duty of care to the parents. Liability would arise, of course, if the professionals acted otherwise than in good faith, but not if they acted in good faith but carelessly. Similar reasoning informed the speeches of Lord Nicholls at [70-78] and Lord Brown at [132 and 137-138].
" it would, in my judgment, be both highly artificial and unprincipled if the protection afforded to social services and the doctors in the investigation of child abuse ceased (perhaps temporarily, or in relation to only part of the investigation) when an interim care order was made, or otherwise where it might temporarily be argued that there was no actual conflict of interest between the parent and the local authority. In the context of a child abuse investigation, a duty of care cannot exist at one moment and then cease to exist in the next because of a shift in the factual matrix. It either exists throughout the investigation or it does not."
By parity of reasoning, a duty of care cannot exist for some purposes in the course of an investigation into child abuse and cease to exist for other purposes because of a shift in the factual matrix. It either exists for all purposes in the investigation or for none. To hold otherwise would put social workers in an impossible position. They would have to assess in every case whether the particular function on which they were engaged at any one time was one which attracted the duty of care in which case they would have to take the parents' interests into account as well as the child's or whether the function was one which did not attract the duty of care. Assuming that they understood the test to be applied in deciding which functions fell on which side of the line, they may well be tempted to adopt an overly cautious stance in order to protect themselves against possible legal action. Indeed, it is noteworthy that the distinction between decisions which call for evaluation and judgement and the performance of purely operational functions was expressly disavowed by counsel for the parents in Lawrence at [26].
Conclusion