PS HM 487 2011

JurisdictionUK Non-devolved
JudgeJudge E. Jacobs
Judgment Date30 March 2011
Neutral Citation2011 UKUT 143 AAC
Subject MatterMental health
RespondentCamden & Islington NHS Foundation Trust
CourtUpper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber)
Docket NumberHM 487 2011
AppellantPS
DECISION OF THE UPPER TRIBUNAL

[2011] AACR 42

(PS v Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust

[2011] UKUT 143 (AAC))

Judge Jacobs HM/487/2011

30 March 2011

Tribunal procedure and practice – tribunal jurisdiction in mental health cases – whether application on revocation of community treatment order lapses when new community treatment order made

Tribunal procedure – whether tribunal may treat letter as application

The patient was detained under section 3 of the Mental Health Act 1983 for about two months. A community treatment order was then made, but she was subsequently recalled to hospital and the order was revoked. The hospital managers then referred her case to the First-tier Tribunal as required by section 68(7) of the Act. While the case was pending, a new community treatment order was made and the patient returned to live in the community. Following correspondence with the patient’s solicitors, the First-tier Tribunal decided that a section 68(7) reference should generally be treated as lapsed if, before the hearing, the patient is again discharged from hospital back on to a community treatment order. However, it agreed to treat a letter from the solicitors as an application to the tribunal, under section 66(1)(ca), to consider whether or not to discharge the new community treatment order under section 72(1)(c). In correspondence the First-tier Tribunal had sought to distinguish section 68(7) references from other references and applications, which were the subject of AA v Cheshire and Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust [2009] UKUT 195 (AAC); [2011] AACR 37 and KF v Birmingham and Solihull NHS Mental Health Foundation Trust [2010] UKUT 185 (AAC); [2011] AACR 3, where the Upper Tribunal had decided that such proceedings did not lapse when a community treatment order was made. The patient’s solicitors appealed to the Upper Tribunal.

Held, allowing the appeal, that:

  1. whether or not the reference has lapsed depends on the nature of the reference, which is a matter of statutory interpretation and neither the overriding objective in rule 2 of the Tribunal Procedure (First-tier Tribunal) (Health, Education and Social Care Chamber) Rules 2008 (the HESC rules) nor the policy adopted by the First-tier Tribunal is relevant to the issue. Given that the legislation places a patient whose community treatment order has been revoked in the same position as any other patient detained under section 3, the reasoning in KF and AA governed the present case (paragraph 15)
  2. the subject matter of a reference under section 68(7) is not related to the circumstances that trigger it. The statutory conditions of detention under section 72 must be satisfied whether the patient is detained in hospital or released under a new order. Accordingly, the subject matter of the reference survives and in line with AA and KF it requires the tribunal to consider the position as at the date of the hearing (paragraph 16)
  3. the tribunal’s approach to lapsing was inconsistent with section 68(1) of the Act, which envisages that a section 68(7) reference might be ongoing in the case of a community patient (paragraph 17);
  4. there was therefore no scope in the present case for the solicitors’ correspondence to be treated as an application under section 66. The judge commented that the power to treat a document as having a particular status is in general a beneficial one and in accordance with the overriding objective, but it is subject to limits and it is not permissible to take that approach to override an unequivocal indication by a solicitor to the opposite effect, especially when its effect is to deprive a patient of the chance to time her section 66 application for later, should she not obtain her discharge on the reference. The power was appropriately exercised for the applicant’s advantage, not potential detriment (paragraphs 18 to 20);
  5. where a patient does not wish to co-operate or even participate in the proceedings, the tribunal must exercise its powers in a way that ensures that the patient’s best interests are protected, bearing in mind that there is a limit to what can be achieved without co-operation. The judge made suggestions as to the responsible exercise of case management in such cases, taking account of the overriding objective and, in particular, of the need to act proportionately under rule 2(2)(a) of the HESC Rules (paragraphs 21 to 26).

    The Upper Tribunal Judge remitted the case to the tribunal with directions.

DECISION OF THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS CHAMBER)

Save for the cover sheet, this decision may be made public (rule 14(7) of the Tribunal Procedure (Upper Tribunal) Rules 2008 (SI 2008/2698)). That sheet is not formally part of the decision and identifies the patient by name.

As the decision of the First-tier Tribunal (made on 22 December 2010 under reference MH/2010/18490) involved the making of an error in point of law, it is SET ASIDE under section 12(2)(a) and (b)(i) of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 and the case is REMITTED to the tribunal.

DIRECTIONS:

  1. The reference in respect of the patient under section 68(7) of the Mental Health Act 1983 has not lapsed.
  2. The correspondence from Blavo & Co is not to be treated as an application under section 66(1)(ca).
  3. A judge of the First-tier Tribunal will give case management directions in respect of the reference.

REASONS FOR DECISION

  1. The issues that I have to decide
  1. This case raises two issues. First, does a reference made when a patient’s community treatment order is revoked lapse when a new community treatment order is made? Second, when is it permissible for the tribunal to treat a letter as an application for a patient’s case to be considered by the First-tier Tribunal?
  1. How the issue arises
  1. The patient in this case was detained under section 3 of the Mental Health Act 1983 on 23 March 2010. A community treatment order was made on 20...

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