THE COURT ORDERED that no one shall publish or reveal the name or address of the Respondents or publish or reveal any information which would be likely to lead to the identification of the Respondents or of any member of their families in connection with these proceedings.
[2023] UKSC 52
On appeal from: [2022] EWCA Civ 1196
JUDGMENT
HXA (Respondent) v Surrey County Council (Appellant);
YXA (a protected party by his litigation friend the Official Solicitor) (Respondent) v Wolverhampton City Council (Appellant)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Briggs
Lord Sales
Lord Burrows
Lord Stephens
20 December 2023
Heard on 24 and 25 October 2023
Appellants
Lord Faulks KC
Paul Stagg
Thomas Jones
(Instructed by DWF Law LLP and Browne Jacobson LLP)
Respondents
Elizabeth-Anne Gumbel KC
Justin Levinson
(Instructed by Scott-Moncrieff and Associates Ltd and Bolt Burdon Kemp LLP)
LORD BURROWS AND LORD STEPHENS (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Briggs and Lord Sales agree):
Introduction
These two cases are concerned with claims in the tort of negligence brought against local authorities by HXA and YXA, who were children when they suffered sexual or physical abuse by a parent or parent’s partner. It is alleged that the local authorities owed a common law duty of care to the claimants, when children, to protect them from that harm. The liability of local authorities in the tort of negligence for a failure to protect against harm by a third party has been explored and clarified by this court, in the context of alleged failures by a local authority’s social services department, in N v Poole Borough Council [2019] UKSC 25, [2020] AC 780 (“N v Poole”). The decisions in these cases turn on the application of the decision and reasoning in that leading case.
The defendant local authorities have applied to have the statements of case struck out (under CPR r 3.4(2)(a)) as disclosing no arguable cause of action. Their applications succeeded at first instance and on appeal to a High Court judge, but the Court of Appeal overturned those decisions and held that the claims should not be struck out because it was arguable that there was a duty of care owed as alleged. The defendants now appeal to the Supreme Court.
It is common ground that, applying N v Poole, the claimants need to establish that there was a relevant assumption of responsibility by the local authorities. Accordingly, this appeal is concerned with whether the particulars of claim provide some basis for the leading of evidence at trial from which a relevant assumption of responsibility can be made out, in accordance with the principles in N v Poole, so that the local authorities arguably owed HXA or YXA a duty of care at common law to protect them from harm.
The claims are brought against the defendants in respect of both direct (ie personal) and vicarious liability. That is, it is alleged that each local authority was in breach of a duty of care that the authority itself owed to each claimant; and it is also alleged that social workers, employed by the local authorities, were themselves in breach of a duty of care such that the local authority, as employer, was vicariously liable for the tort of its employees committed within the scope of their employment. But in terms of the correct analysis of the law, it is common ground that nothing in this case turns on whether one is looking at the defendants’ direct, or vicarious, liability. Not least for ease of exposition, it is therefore appropriate for us to focus throughout on the direct liability of the defendants.
Factual background
The court is required to determine the defendants’ applications to strike out by reference to assumed facts as pleaded in the claimants’ amended particulars of claim. In setting out a summary of assumed facts in each case it must always be borne in mind that there have been no factual findings in these proceedings and that not all the facts alleged in the two cases are admitted by the defendants in their defences. However, it is appropriate to highlight that it is clear that, as children, both HXA and YXA were subjected to severe abuse by, in the case of HXA, HXA’s mother and her partner, and, in the case of YXA, by YXA’s parents. As Baker LJ recorded, at para 2 of his leading judgment in the Court of Appeal, [2022] EWCA Civ 1196, [2023] 1 WLR 116, the background to both cases is “shocking and disturbing.”
HXA summary of alleged facts
We gratefully adopt the summary of the facts alleged in HXA’s case as set out by Baker LJ in the Court of Appeal at paras 5 to 8.
“5 HXA was born in 1988 and is now aged 33. She has three younger siblings, two of whom have learning disabilities. Their childhood was characterised by sustained abuse and neglect, perpetrated by their mother and at a later date by her partner Mr A, whom she met in 1996 and married a year later.
6 From at least September 1993, there were a series of referrals to the local authority, Surrey County Council, about the mother’s inappropriate physical chastisement, verbal abuse and lack of supervision of her children. Between September 1993 and July 1994, five investigations were conducted under section 47 of the Children Act 1989. During this time, the names of HXA and her siblings were placed on the child protection register. In November 1994, after seeking legal advice, the local authority resolved to undertake a full assessment with a view to initiating care proceedings. In the event, however, no such assessment was carried out. The local authority continued to monitor the family but on at least some occasions no decisions or actions were taken despite ongoing concerns being reported.
7 In July 1996, HXA’s mother formed a relationship with Mr A. Four years earlier, he had been convicted of assault on his own infant son. Thereafter concerns about Mr A’s behaviour towards HXA and her siblings were raised with the local authority by several sources. In 1999, there were allegations of sexual abuse of HXA and her younger sister SXA by both Mr A and Mr A’s father. It is alleged by HXA that she reported abuse to staff at her school which was run by the local authority’s education department. In January 2000, it was recorded at a case conference that HXA had alleged that Mr A had touched her breast. The local authority decided not to investigate the matter due to fear of how Mr A would react and because it was wrongly thought that there had been no previous similar concerns. It resolved not to take any action beyond carrying out ‘keeping safe’ work with HXA and SXA. In the event, however, no such work was undertaken. In 2004, aged 16, HXA moved out of the family home.
8 In 2007, after SXA had made further allegations as a result of which she was removed from her mother’s care under an emergency protection order, the police carried out an investigation during the course of which HXA was interviewed. As a result of this investigation, both Mr A and the children’s mother were prosecuted. In January 2009, Mr A was convicted of seven counts of rape of HXA between the ages of nine and 16 and sent to prison for 14 years. Her mother was convicted of indecently assaulting her and sentenced to nine months’ imprisonment.”
YXA summary of alleged facts
We also gratefully adopt the summary of the facts alleged in YXA’s case as set out by Baker LJ at paras 13 to 14.
“13 YXA, who is now aged 19, suffers from epilepsy, learning disabilities and autism spectrum disorder. Initially he lived with his parents in London where the family came to the attention of the local authority social services department. In 2007, when he was six years old, he moved with his family to the West Midlands. A few weeks after their arrival, an assessment by the local authority for that area, Wolverhampton City Council, identified concerns about his parents’ ability to care for him. In March 2008, a paediatrician advised the local authority that YXA was being inappropriately and excessively medicated and recommended that he should be taken into care. Thereafter, under an agreement reached between the local authority and the parents under section 20 of the Children Act 1989, a pattern of respite care was established whereby YXA spent roughly one night a fortnight and one weekend every two months in foster care.
14 In the course of the next 18 months, further concerns arose about YXA’s treatment in his parents’ care. There were allegations that the parents drank and took cannabis to excess, that they physically assaulted YXA, and that they were continuing to administer medication excessively. Eventually in December 2009, the parents admitted smacking him and giving him excessive medication to keep him quiet. With their consent, YXA was accommodated full time under section 20. Care proceedings were then started and a final care order made in March 2011 on the basis of a care plan under which YXA remained in long-term foster care.”
Procedural history and the particulars of claim as to an assumption of responsibility
We here set out a summary of the procedural history in respect of each case. Furthermore, as “the particulars of claim must provide some basis for the leading of evidence at trial from which an assumption of responsibility could be inferred” (see N v Poole at para 82) it is appropriate at this stage to set out each claimant’s (amended) particulars of claim which assert that there was an assumption of responsibility on the part of the defendants.
The claim form which instituted the proceedings on behalf of both HXA and SXA (HXA’s younger sister) was issued in September 2014. Surrey County Council is the sole defendant. Lengthy extensions of time were agreed and endorsed by the court, in part to await the outcome of the proceedings which ultimately resulted in the judgment of this court in N v Poole. In the event, it was not until 23 October 2019 that particulars of claim were served in relation to both HXA and SXA. By a consent order in October 2019, SXA’s claim was stayed pending the outcome of HXA’s claim. In relation to HXA, the particulars of claim advanced allegations relating to both the defendant’s social services department and the defendant’s education department. The allegation relating to the defendant’s education department concerned an occasion on which it is alleged that HXA had reported abuse to staff at her school which was run by the defendant’s education department.
On 31 January 2020, the local authority applied to strike out the part of HXA’s claim relating to the defendant’s social services department. No application to strike out was made in respect of that part of the claim concerning HXA’s disclosures to the school and hence in respect of the claim relating to the defendant’s education department.
On 15 February 2021, Deputy Master Bagot QC delivered judgment striking out those paragraphs of HXA’s claim directed at the defendant’s social services department but leaving in the paragraphs directed at the education department ([2021] EWHC 250 (QB)). An appeal notice was filed, and the appeal duly listed, along with the appeal in YXA’s case, before Stacey J. On 8 November 2021, Stacey J handed down judgment dismissing the appeal ([2021] EWHC 2974 (QB)).
Turning to YXA, the claim form, which instituted the proceedings on behalf of YXA, was issued in July 2018. Southwark London Borough Council and Wolverhampton City Council were the defendants. In August 2019 particulars of claim were served against both defendants. YXA claimed damages in negligence or, alternatively, damages pursuant to the Human Rights Act 1998 on the basis of alleged breaches of YXA’s rights under Article 3 (prohibition on inhuman and degrading treatment) and Article 8 (right to respect for private and family life) of the European Convention on Human Rights. Southwark London Borough Council and Wolverhampton City Council made applications to strike out the negligence claims on 14 January 2020 and 30 July 2020 respectively. But there has been no application to strike out YXA’s claim under the Human Rights Act 1998. In July 2020 YXA served a Notice of Discontinuance in respect of his claim against Southwark London Borough Council, leaving Wolverhampton City Council as the sole remaining defendant.
Wolverhampton City Council’s strike-out application was heard by Master Dagnall who handed down judgment on 26 May 2021 striking out YXA’s negligence claim ([2021] EWHC 1444 (QB), [2021] PIQR P9). An Appellant’s Notice was filed, and the appeal duly listed, along with the appeal in HXA’s case, before Stacey J. As stated above, Stacey J dismissed both appeals in a judgment handed down on 8 November 2021.
Both HXA and YXA appealed to the Court of Appeal. The Court of Appeal delivered judgment on 31 August 2022 allowing the appeals in both cases. Baker LJ gave the leading judgment, with which Lewis and Elisabeth Laing LJJ agreed.
In his judgment Baker LJ criticised the claimants’ pleadings in both claims as being “at times excessively discursive”: see paras 9 and 15 of his judgment. Excessively discursive elements included the pleadings in relation to an assumption of responsibility by the defendants. The technique adopted in both claims was to set out a long chronology described as a “sequence of events” which, in HXA’s claim, stretched to 59 paragraphs summarising the involvement of the local authority with her and her family over the entire period between 1993 and 2007. We agree with those criticisms of the claimants’ pleadings made by Baker LJ.
In the event, in HXA’s claim, out of those 59 paragraphs, the only pleaded matters relied on by her in the Court of Appeal were two paragraphs, namely paras 14(l) and 14(vv): see para 108 of Baker LJ’s judgment. Similarly, only one of the paragraphs was relied on in YXA’s claim, namely para 5.2: see paras 15 and 108 of Baker LJ’s judgment. Those three paragraphs are the only particulars of claim relied on before this court as providing some basis for the leading of evidence at trial from which an assumption of responsibility could be inferred.
It will be helpful to set out now those three paragraphs (and the paragraphs linking the alleging facts to an assumption of responsibility). Paras 14(l) and 14(vv) relate to HXA’s claim that there was an assumption of responsibility by the defendant. Para 14(l) alleges:
“In November 1994 there was a child protection investigation after the Defendant received a referral alleging that [HXA’s] mother had assaulted [HXA]. The Defendant’s social worker decided to seek legal advice with a view to initiating care proceedings. The Defendant resolved to undertake a full assessment, but did not do so.”
“On 27 January 2000, a child protection conference was held. It was noted that [HXA] had reported that [Mr A] had touched her breast. The Defendant resolved not to investigate this due to fear of how [Mr A] would react and because it was wrongly thought that there had been no previous similar concerns. It was resolved to do keeping safe work with [HXA], although this was never done.”
“… the Defendant assumed responsibility for the welfare of [HXA] … [and] for investigating the plight of [HXA] …”
Para 14(vv) alleges:
On the basis of those paragraphs (and it should be noted for completeness that neither paragraph referred to Mr A’s father), it is alleged on behalf of HXA at para 15 of the particulars of claim that:
Turning to para 5.2, in relation to YXA’s claim that the defendant assumed responsibility, para 5.2(a) alleges:
“On 28 April 2008, a pattern began of [Wolverhampton City Council] receiving the Claimant into its care for approximately [one] night every [two] weeks and [one] weekend every [two] months with the Claimant’s parents’ agreement pursuant to section 20 of the Children Act 1989.”
“… the Defendant … assumed a responsibility for his welfare, protection and safety.”
This pattern continued until YXA was taken into care, with his parents’ consent, in December 2009. Under the heading of “Assumption of Responsibility”, YXA, at para 6.10, identified the matters for which the defendant assumed responsibility as being:
The legislative context
A general overview of the relevant legislative provisions
The legislative context involves consideration of various sections in Part III, Part IV and Part V of the Children Act 1989 (“the 1989 Act”). The provisions in those parts have been amended on several occasions since the commencement in October 1991 of most of the provisions in the Act. For the purposes of this appeal, we are concerned with the provisions which were in force between 1996 and 2004 in the case of HXA and between 2007 and 2009 in the case of YXA.
Several duties are imposed on local authorities in Parts III, IV and V of the 1989 Act. In considering the legislative context we will set out several of those duties. In addition to the duties imposed by the 1989 Act, section 11(2) of the Children Act 2004 imposes a duty on local authorities to make arrangements for ensuring that their functions are discharged having regard to the need to safeguard and promote the welfare of children.
Before we turn to those duties, it is important to make clear that it is common ground that, in the light of the decision of the House of Lords in X (Minors) v Bedfordshire County Council [1995] 2 AC 633, the provisions of the 1989 Act (and the Children Act 2004) which impose duties on local authorities do not create a statutory cause of action actionable in tort. That is, it is not suggested that breach of any of those duties by either of the defendant local authorities gives rise to a claim for the tort of breach of statutory duty. We are also not concerned with the possible enforcement of those statutory duties through judicial review proceedings or by a claim for damages under the Human Rights Act 1998 (or conceivably for the tort of misfeasance in public office). Rather, the claims on behalf of HXA and YXA are advanced on the basis that the defendants owed them a common law duty of care based on an assumption of responsibility by the defendants. But we consider that, in analysing the common law duty of care, it is important as background context to understand the statutory duties (and powers) applicable to the operations of the social services departments of the local authorities in these cases.
Part III of the 1989 Act is concerned with support for children and families by local authorities. By way of contrast Part IV, which is headed “Care and Supervision”, and Part V, which is headed “Protection of Children”, are concerned with compulsory powers of intervention in the lives of children and their families.
Section 17, which appears in Part III, is concerned with the provision of services for children in need, their families and others. Section 17(10) defines a child in need:
“a child shall be taken to be in need if—(a) he is unlikely to achieve or maintain, or to have the opportunity of achieving or maintaining, a reasonable standard of health or development without the provision for him of services by a local authority under this Part; (b) his health or development is likely to be significantly impaired, or further impaired, without the provision for him of such services; or (c) he is disabled ....”
Section 17(1) imposes a general duty on the local authority to provide a range and level of services appropriate to meet the various needs of children in its area. It does not impose a duty to meet the needs of any particular child. Section 17(1) provides:
It shall be the general duty of every local authority (in addition to the other duties imposed on them by this Part)—
to safeguard and promote the welfare of children within their area who are in need; and
so far as is consistent with that duty, to promote the upbringing of such children by their families, by providing a range and level of services appropriate to those children’s needs.”
Section 17(2) provides that, for the purpose principally of facilitating the discharge of that general duty, every local authority has the specific duties and powers set out in Schedule 2. These include a duty to take reasonable steps to identify the extent to which there are children in need within their area, a duty to assess the needs of any child who appears to be in need, and a duty to take reasonable steps, through the provision of services under Part III of the Act, to prevent children suffering ill-treatment or neglect, and to reduce the need to bring proceedings for care or supervision orders: paragraphs 1, 3, 4 and 7 respectively. As originally enacted, the services provided under section 17(6) “may include giving assistance in kind or, in exceptional circumstances, in cash”. However, by an amendment effective from 7 November 2002 and therefore relevant, in point of time, to YXA’s claim, the services provided under that section may include providing accommodation.