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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 >> Bradbury & Ors v Paterson & Ors [2014] EWHC 3992 (QB) (28 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/3992.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3992 (QB) |
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IHQ/14/0710-0718 IHQ/14/0722 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
IHQ/14/0722 Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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LOUISE BRADBURY MAUREEN DALTON EMMA MEASEY JULIE NICHOLSON JENNIFER O'DONNELL |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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(1) IAN PATERSON (formerly by the OFFICIAL SOLICITOR as his litigation friend, but now without assistance) (2) SPIRE HEALTHCARE LIMITED (3) HEART OF ENGLAND NHS TRUST |
Defendants |
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Catherine Ewins (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP, Newcastle upon Tyne) for the 2nd Defendant
Michael de Navarro QC and William Wraight (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP, Bristol) for the 3rd Defendant
Fenella Morris QC and Alexander Ruck Keene (instructed by the Official Solicitor) for the Official Solicitor
Hearing date: 17 November 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Foskett:
Introduction
"… Although each civil claim is of course based upon different facts there are common themes. The central allegations in many of the cases involve:
a. Diagnosing patients with breast cancer who did not have cancer.
b. Performing unnecessary breast surgery (wide local excisions or mastectomies) upon women (and some men) who had no clinical need for such surgery. In many cases, it is alleged that Mr. Paterson repeatedly performed unnecessary procedures on the same patient.
c. Performing incomplete ("cleavage sparing") mastectomies on patients who required full mastectomies leading, in many cases, to the recurrence of cancer and/or the need for substantial corrective surgery.
d. Failing to obtain patients' informed consent for invasive surgery."
Mr Paterson's status in the litigation
The effect of McGowan J's orders
"If during proceedings a party lacks capacity to continue to conduct proceedings, no party may take any further step in the proceedings without the permission of the court until the protected party has a litigation friend." (Emphasis added.)
Should the orders made by McGowan J stand?
"The court may –
(a) direct that a person may not act as a litigation friend;
(b) terminate a litigation friend's appointment; or
(c) appoint a new litigation friend in substitution for an existing one …."
"An application for an order under rule 21.7 must also be served on –
(a) the person who is the litigation friend, or who is purporting to act as the litigation friend, when the application is made; and
(b) the person who it is proposed should be the litigation friend, if he is not the applicant …."
The Official Solicitor's funding constraints generally and in this case
"… The father has a learning disability. He is a "protected party" within the meaning of Rule 2.3 of the Family Procedure Rules 2010. As a matter of law he is not able, as a protected party, to act without a litigation friend. Quite apart from that, the father's learning disability in any event requires him to have considerable support and assistance to be able to participate effectively in the proceedings. The Official Solicitor has agreed to act as his litigation friend. The Official Solicitor cannot be compelled to act as anyone's litigation friend. His practice is to agree to act only if there is funding for the protected party's litigation costs, because his own budget – the monies voted to him by Parliament – is not sufficient to enable him to fund the costs of litigation of the type the father is involved in. The Official Solicitor was willing to act here only because the father's solicitor and counsel have agreed to act, thus far, pro bono. But without the protection against an adverse costs order which the father (and derivatively the Official Solicitor) would enjoy if the father had legal aid, the Official Solicitor has a possible exposure to an adverse costs order – for instance, if the local authority was to obtain an order for costs against him – which, understandably, he is unwilling to assume. The consequence is that the Official Solicitor was not willing to act as the father's litigation friend unless [indemnified]."
"Where it is sought to appoint the Official Solicitor as the litigation friend, provision must be made for payment of his charges."
"The Official Solicitor does not charge for acting as litigation friend, but does require funding for the costs of instructing solicitors to act in the litigation, or for his own charges where he also acts as solicitor.
The Official Solicitor is not funded to subsidise private litigation and will only consent to act in a particular case if his costs are guaranteed from the outset.
If legal aid or a CFA is not available but a protected party has assets, the Official Solicitor will require an order from the Court of Protection authorising him to act and to take his costs from the protected party's assets.
Where the litigation involves an estate or trust fund he may agree to act if there is agreement that his costs will be met from that estate or trust.
Where the Official Solicitor is asked to act for a defendant and there is no other method of funding his costs of obtaining legal representation, he will require an undertaking from the claimant to meet his costs …."
McGowan J's orders
The way forward
(a) If Mr Paterson has capacity to manage his property and affairs (but not the litigation) then, if he wishes, he can ask the Official Solicitor to act for him if he puts the Official Solicitor in funds.
(b) If Mr Paterson lacks capacity to manage his property and affairs, the Court of Protection would have jurisdiction to intervene if invited to do so and, possibly with the co-operation of Mr Paterson's attorneys or on the basis of the appointment of a Deputy, power to ensure that the Official Solicitor is properly funded.
(c) If these avenues are not fruitful, the High Court would, in my view, have the power under its general case management provisions and/or the inherent jurisdiction of the court to direct that one or more of the parties to the litigation should fund the Official Solicitor's costs of instructing lawyers for Mr Paterson, the initial outlay to be recoverable as part of the costs of the litigation in due course.
The stay
That the claims of the five Claimants in these proceedings be stayed for 8 weeks save for the purpose of carrying into effect the following:
(i) the payment by the Claimants and the 2nd and 3rd Defendants of the sum of £2,500 each to the Official Solicitor within 14 days;
(ii) the instruction by the Official Solicitor within 14 days of receipt of the total sum of £7,500 of a suitable expert or experts to examine and report on Mr Paterson in accordance with paragraph 49 of the judgment;
(iii) the examination of Mr Paterson within 42 days either by the expert or experts instructed by the Official Solicitor solely or, if the Claimants and Defendants have chosen to have Mr Paterson examined, jointly by the experts instructed by the Official Solicitor and by those instructed by the other parties;
(iv) the submission to Charles J in writing within 14 days of receipt of the report of the examination of Mr Paterson by the expert(s) instructed by the Official Solicitor (and each of the other parties if they have chosen to have Mr Paterson examined) of the results of the examination and his (the Official Solicitor's) current assessment of the position.