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DCC v NLH

[2019] EWCOP 9

Neutral Citation Number: [2019] EWCOP 9 Case No: COP13269986
IN THE COURT OF PROTECTION

IN THE MATTER OF THE MENTAL CAPACITY ACT 2005

AND IN THE MATTER OF NLH

Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL

Date: 19 March 2019

Before :

LORD JUSTICE BAKER

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Between :

DCC Applicant

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NLH (by his litigation friend, the Official Solicitor) Respondent

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Approved Judgment

I direct that pursuant to CPR PD 39A para 6.1 no official shorthand note shall be taken of this Judgment and that copies of this version as handed down may be treated as authentic.

.............................

LORD JUSTICE BAKER

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 incapacitated person 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.

MR JUSTICE BAKER Double-click to enter the short title

Approved Judgment

LORD JUSTICE BAKER:

1.

When making an order by consent in the Court of Protection on 12 July 2018, I agreed to give a short judgment on an issue which arose in the course of the proceedings.

2.

The proceedings concerned a man, referred to as NLH, suffering in the late stages of the degenerative neurological condition known as Prion disease. The applicant local authority applied to the Court for an order permitting the taking of samples from NLH to assist with DNA testing. An order made by another judge sitting in the family court had declared that the outcome of the DNA tests would be of vital importance to the resolution of proceedings in that court. The results would be important not merely to establish paternity of the child in question but also because it was considered important that any child of NLH should be aware that there was a possibility that he or she might have inherited the disease so that, when the child was older, a decision could be taken about genetic testing. NLH himself had at an earlier stage told a social worker and the assistant care manager at his nursing home that he wanted the child to be made aware that he may have inherited the disease so that he would have the opportunity in due course to decide for himself whether to undergo testing.

3.

The application had been listed for a hearing before a circuit judge on a later date but NLH’s condition deteriorated rapidly and it was decided to make the application as a matter of urgency to the out of hours duty judge sitting in the Family Division. The Official Solicitor, appointed to act as a litigation friend for NLH, agreed to the order being made. There were plainly overwhelmingly strong arguments on this occasion in favour of making the order and, on receiving and considering the application, together with supporting statements and other documents, I concluded it would be appropriate to make a declaration (1) that NLH lacked capacity (a) to make decisions as to the provision of buccal swab samples, the testing of such samples and the profiling of his DNA and (b) to conduct these proceedings, and further (2) that it was lawful for the local authority to arrange for the taking of buccal swabs from NLH for the purposes of performing DNA paternity testing in respect of the child. I further concluded it would be appropriate to make an order, by consent, that the court consented on NLH’s behalf for the swab sample to be taken and tested and so that his DNA could be profiled to establish whether he was the father of the child.

4.

Shortly before the order was made, however, it emerged that a member of staff from the DNA testing company, Lextox, had already attended at the nursing home and taken the sample, with the agreement of NLH’s family, but without either the formal consent of NLH (who lack capacity to provide consent) or the approval of the court.

5.

In the circumstances of this case, I am entirely satisfied that, had I considered the application before the sample was taken, I would undoubtedly have given my approval. No injustice or harm was therefore perpetrated in this case, and I agreed to make an order retrospectively authorising the taking of the sample. It will be readily appreciated, however, that in different circumstances the taking of an unauthorised sample could be highly prejudicial to the rights of the individual concerned.

6.

I therefore agreed to prepare this short judgment to remind practitioners, carers and those involved in taking samples in these circumstances that, where the patient lacks capacity and an application has been made to the Court of Protection for an order

MR JUSTICE BAKER Double-click to enter the short title

Approved Judgment

authorising the taking of a sample, it will be unlawful for the sample to be taken without the Court’s permission. All practitioners and professionals working in this field ought to be aware that there is always a judge of the Family Division on duty available to sit in the Court of Protection twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, every day of the year, to deal with urgent applications, usually by telephone. Consequently, there is no excuse for any failure to comply with the obligations to obtain the court’s permission in circumstances such as these. As stated, no harm arose on this occasion, but any infringement in future will run the risk not only of attracting severe criticism from the Court but also potentially incurring liability for damages if a breach of human rights were to be established.

DCC v NLH

[2019] EWCOP 9

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