S.117 of the Mental Health Act 1983 stipulates the important duty for local authorities and the NHS to provide aftercare for patients who are ordinarily resident in their area and have been detained for treatment under s.3 (as well as some Part 3 sections relating to patients convicted of criminal offences).
Over the years, local authorities have often sought to shift this responsibility. This is usually because the cost of providing residential aftercare can be extremely expensive. I have covered some of the case law arising from these disputes on the Masked AMHP blog.
Often these disputes have arisen due to the interpretation
to the term “ordinarily resident”.
In order to reduce the need for local authorities to go to
the High Court to challenge decisions relating to aftercare, the Care Act 2014
amended s.117 MHA with the intention of clarifying the definition of
“ordinarily resident”.
S.117(3)(a) laid this responsibility on the services where:
“if, immediately
before being detained, the person concerned was ordinarily resident in England,
for the area in England in which he was ordinarily resident”.
This duty then continued until it was agreed that there was
no further need for aftercare services to be provided.
This was generally interpreted as meaning that the local
authority where the patient was living at the point of their first detention
under s.3 retained the responsibility for s.117 aftercare regardless of where
the patient might be living at the time of any subsequent detention under s.3.
This brings me to the case of JG, who was the patient for
whom a dispute arose between Worcestershire and Swindon over who was
responsible for providing aftercare in her case.
JG had a diagnosis of schizoaffective disorder and was
ordinarily resident in Worcestershire. In March 2014 she was detained under s.3
in that area.
As it was deemed that she lacked the capacity to make
decisions about where she should live following discharge, it was arranged for
her to be placed in a care home in Swindon, near to where her daughter lived.
In May 2015 she was admitted to a hospital in Swindon under
s.2 MHA, and this was subsequently detained under s.3.
A dispute arose between Worcestershire and Swindon over
where she was “ordinarily resident” at the time of her second detention under
s.3, and therefore who was then responsible for aftercare.
The dispute was first considered by the Secretary of State,
who concluded that JG was ordinarily resident in Swindon and therefore they
were the responsible local authority. This was in accordance with guidance on
interpretation of ordinary residence.
Swindon then requested a review of this decision, at which
point the Secretary of State reversed the decision, concluding that
Worcestershire was in fact still responsible.
Guess what? Worcestershire went to the High Court to
challenge this decision, and in 2021 the judge overturned this decision,
reasoning that:
“JG was ordinarily resident in Swindon immediately before
the second detention so that the second discharge triggered a duty on Swindon
to provide after-care services for her; that it could not have been intended
that Worcestershire’s duty to provide after-care services consequent on the
first discharge should continue in parallel once Swindon’s duty had been
triggered; and that section 117 should therefore be construed as imposing the
duty to provide after-care services on Swindon alone from that point.”
But that wasn’t the end of it. This time the Secretary of
State appealed against this decision to the Court of Appeal. They found that Worcestershire’s
duty to provide aftercare was still continuing, despite the subsequent s.3
detention, since no decision had been taken that aftercare was no longer
required.
So of course Worcestershire then appealed to the Supreme
Court, who heard the appeal in April 2023 and published its decision on 10th
August 2023.
Worcestershire’s reasoning was that its duty to provide
after-care services for JG under section 117 ended upon the second discharge,
or alternatively that the duty ended at the start of the second detention.
The Secretary of State’s reasoning was that
Worcestershire’s placement of JG in a care home in Swindon did not change where
she was ordinarily resident, which as a matter of law continued to be in
Worcestershire.
The Supreme Court concluded that:
"the duty under section 117(2) to provide after-care
services automatically ceases if and when the person concerned is detained
under section 3 … In this case, therefore, Worcestershire’s duty to provide
after-care services for JG ended upon her second detention. Upon the second
discharge a new duty to provide such services arose. Which local authority owed
that duty is determined by section 117(3) and depends on where JG was
ordinarily resident immediately before the second detention."
So in the end, it was concluded that Swindon was, after
all, responsible for providing aftercare for JG.
Perhaps what this case highlights is the importance of
legislators to ensure that the wording of legislation and statutory guidance
should be as clear and as free of ambiguity as possible.
Will this decision finally put an end to such disputes,
which in themselves can cost local authorities a lot in legal expenses and
possibly places the subjects of the appeals in a limbo lasting several years?
I wouldn’t hold my breath.
I think on the face of it this case law does not appear to be grounded in much common sense/practicality as far as I can see, albeit I have almost immediately 'benefitted' from it (for want of a better word) in terms of another LA taking over 117 responsibility for someone moved from a Section 2 to a 3 from an out of area care home.
ReplyDeleteWe have one particular residential home within our LA that we do not commission due to it's very poor reputation, and their habit of accepting people who they are simply not geared up to appropriately care for. As the local AMHP's we routinely carry out assessments at this home for individuals from all over England. Moving forward, we will undoubtedly end up with Section 117 responsibilities in a number of these cases, often for individuals who it has been extremely difficult to find appropriate care packages for.