THE COURT ORDERED that no one shall publish or reveal the names or addresses of RM or SM or publish or reveal any information which would be likely to lead to the identification of RM or SM or of any member of their family in connection with these proceedings.
[2024] UKSC 7
On appeal from: [2022] NICA 35
JUDGMENT
In the matter of an application by RM (a person under disability) by SM, his father and next friend (Respondent) for Judicial Review (Northern Ireland);
In the matter of an application by RM (a person under disability) by SM, his father and next friend (Respondent) for Judicial Review (Northern Ireland) No 2
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Sales
Lord Stephens
Lady Rose
Lady Simler
21 February 2024
Heard on 15 and 16 November 2023
Appellants and Interveners
Tony McGleenan KC
Aidan Sands BL
Matthew Corkey BL
Laura Curran BL
(Instructed by Departmental Solicitor’s Office and Crown Solicitor’s Office (Belfast))
Respondent
David McMillen KC
David Heraghty
(Instructed by Higgins Hollywood Deazley)
LADY SIMLER (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Sales, Lord Stephens and Lady Rose agree):
IIntroduction
These appeals concern the proper meaning and operation of provisions governing the discharge from hospital of a mentally disordered patient who is compulsorily detained in a hospital for medical treatment, and their inter-relationship with provisions governing the use of leave of absence from hospital as a means of transitioning from secure conditions to discharge, contained in the Mental Health (Northern Ireland) Order 1986 (SI 1986/595 (NI 4)) (“the 1986 Order”). The statutory scheme in England and Wales (extended in some respects to Scotland: see section 146) is contained in the Mental Health Act 1983 (“the 1983 Act”) and, as might be expected, there are strong similarities between the two legislative schemes.
A distinction is drawn in both legislative schemes, between “civil patients” whose compulsory admission to hospital for assessment or treatment of mental disorder is dealt with under Part II, and patients who are concerned in criminal proceedings or under sentence, including “restricted patients”, who are dealt with under Part III. Restricted patients under Part III include those patients who commit an imprisonable offence and are either sentenced to custody and subsequently become mentally disordered and are transferred to hospital, or those who are made the subject of a hospital order with restrictions on their management and discharge from hospital. Whereas an offender made subject to a hospital order under Part III is put in almost the same position as a civil patient whose interests are paramount, in effect passing out of the penal system into the hospital regime, the position is different for restricted patients. A restricted patient’s discharge from hospital requires the consent of the Department of Justice for Northern Ireland (“the Department of Justice”) or the Secretary of State for Justice for England and Wales, in the interests of protecting public safety, and is dealt with by a relevant tribunal in both jurisdictions. The same distinction applies to the grant of leave of absence available to civil patients under Part II and restricted patients under Part III in both legislative schemes.
Authorised leave of absence from hospital for patients who are subject to a detention order can be an important part of the therapeutic management and rehabilitation of a detained patient. Such leave is governed by article 15 of the 1986 Order (and section 17 of the 1983 Act), which provides for the grant of leave to be absent from the hospital, subject to any necessary conditions, “to any patient who is for the time being liable to be detained in a hospital”. Article 15 leave can be authorised for an indefinite period in an appropriate case but can (where necessary) be revoked and the patient recalled to hospital.
Articles 78(1) and 77(1) of the 1986 Order govern applications for the discharge of a restricted patient who is subject to a restriction order. The review tribunal considering such an application must order the patient’s absolute discharge if “(a) the tribunal is not satisfied as mentioned in paragraphs 1(a) or (b) of Article 77; and (b) … is satisfied that it is not appropriate for the patient to remain liable to be recalled to hospital for further treatment” (see article 78(1)). The article 77(1) reference means that for this purpose the tribunal must be “(a) … not satisfied that [the patient] is then suffering from … mental disorder of a nature or degree which warrants his detention in hospital for medical treatment” or “(b) … not satisfied that [the patient’s] discharge would create a substantial likelihood of serious physical harm to himself or to other persons ...”. Where a patient is absolutely discharged under article 78(1), the relevant order authorising detention ceases to have effect and the patient ceases to be liable to be detained. Where the tribunal is not satisfied of one or other of the article 77(1)(a) or (b) conditions in article 78(1)(a), but sub-paragraph 78(1)(b) does not apply (in other words, it is satisfied that the patient should remain liable to be recalled to hospital for further treatment) then the tribunal must order a conditional discharge (see article 78(2)). A conditional discharge means that the relevant order authorising detention remains in effect; the patient leaves hospital and moves back into the community while remaining liable to be recalled to hospital at any time (on notice being given); and requires the patient to comply with such conditions (if any) as may be imposed at the time of discharge by the tribunal.
The inter-relationship between the discharge provisions in articles 78(1) and 77(1) and article 15 leave is at the heart of this appeal. The critical question is whether a review tribunal can remain satisfied that a patient’s mental disorder warrants his or her detention in hospital even though the tribunal knows that she or he is due to be released into the community on article 15 leave without any further stay in, still less visits to, hospital.
In Secretary of State for Justice v MM [2018] UKSC 60; [2019] AC 712, (referred to below as “MM”), this court held that the 1983 Act does not permit the conditional discharge of a restricted patient to be made subject to any condition amounting to detention or deprivation of liberty. The court reached that conclusion notwithstanding its recognition that the purpose of conditional discharge from hospital is to enable the patient to make a safe transition from the institutional setting of a hospital to the community, and that there is nothing in the 1983 Act which expressly prohibits a condition which amounts to a detention or deprivation of liberty in another setting (see paragraph 38, per Lady Hale). Lord Hughes, dissenting, would have held that there is power, if considered right in all the circumstances, to impose conditions on the discharge of a restricted patient so long as the loss of liberty involved was not greater than that already authorised by the hospital and restriction orders. In his judgment, if the treatment of the patient had progressed to the point where the nature of the detention could be relaxed, it was plainly in the public interest that it should be, and he did not consider that the 1983 Act prohibited such arrangements. Neither side has sought to challenge the correctness of MM on this appeal. (I note that in response to the judgment in MM, in June 2022, a draft Mental Health Bill was published. It includes the introduction of a new power of "Supervised Discharge", a subset of conditional discharge, through which a deprivation of liberty in the community would be permitted. The purpose of the power would be to enable restricted patients who are no longer therapeutically benefitting from treatment in hospital but continue to pose a risk that could not be safely managed in the community through a conditional discharge, to move into a community care setting with the necessary levels of supervision and restriction. The Bill has been subject to pre-legislative scrutiny and the Joint Committee on the Draft Mental Health Bill published its report on 19 January 2023. The Bill has, however, not yet been brought forward.)
Since MM, the use of authorised leave of absence as a tool for enabling detained patients to continue their rehabilitation in a community setting where appropriate has assumed greater clinical importance. In RM’s case, the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal (“the NICA”) acknowledged that the option of article 15 leave of absence for a detained patient is an important and valuable therapeutic tool, but held nonetheless, at para 40, that:
“… Article 15 cannot and should not be used as a mechanism for providing legitimacy for what amounts to detention in the community when the grounds for detention in hospital for medical treatment no longer exist and it cannot and should not be seen as a means of avoiding the difficulties presented by the MM decision in respect of the conditions which can be imposed upon a patient who is subject to a conditional discharge.”
The respondent to the appeal, RM, is a restricted patient detained for medical treatment under Part III of the 1986 Order (pursuant to orders made by the Crown Court under article 50A(2)(a) with a restriction order direction, without limit of time). His application (under article 78(1) of the 1986 Order) for discharge from detention in hospital was refused by a review tribunal, which concluded that his detention in hospital for medical treatment remained necessary. The tribunal accepted the recommendation of the responsible medical officer in the case that RM’s long term leave of absence under article 15 (subject to conditions) would shortly be authorised, and he would move to a community-based setting as a means of transition from secure conditions to ultimate discharge. The tribunal considered that as a patient subject to leave of absence, he would nonetheless remain a patient detained in hospital for treatment for the purposes of article 77(1)(a) of the 1986 Order. The High Court upheld that decision.
The NICA allowed RM’s appeal. It held that the words “warrants detention in hospital for medical treatment” in article 12 (which sets the test in the 1986 Order for compulsory detention for treatment to be lawful, is mirrored by the provisions of articles 77 and 78 and requires the person to be suffering from a mental disorder which warrants his or her detention in hospital for medical treatment) should be interpreted differently to the corresponding provision of the 1983 Act (section 3, which sets the test for compulsory detention for treatment under the 1983 Act and requires the person to be suffering from a mental disorder “which makes it appropriate for him to receive treatment in hospital”). The NICA held it was significant that the test of necessity in article 12 did not mirror the “appropriateness test” in section 3, and that courts in England and Wales had introduced a degree of flexibility into the meaning of medical treatment in hospital reflecting the latter (more relaxed) threshold. The NICA held accordingly, that when applying the test for discharge of a restricted patient under articles 78(1) and 77(1) of the 1986 Order, the words “warrants detention in hospital for medical treatment” should not be interpreted in the same (flexible) way. The review tribunal erred in this regard, applying the wrong legal test in RM’s case. The need for a present and persisting liability to be detained in a hospital before a grant of leave of absence was held by the NICA to mean that the possibility of a grant of article 15 leave of absence should not have any bearing on the decision of the tribunal as to whether detention for medical treatment is warranted. The NICA held that it was inappropriate for the review tribunal to conclude that the statutory test for detention for treatment was met when the patient’s authorised leave of absence from hospital under article 15 was intended. Since RM remained a detained restricted patient, the NICA’s order remitted the application for discharge to the review tribunal to be reconsidered in light of its guidance.
Two main questions arise on the appeal. The first is whether the NICA was correct to conclude that the difference in wording just identified (and other differences between the 1986 Order and the 1983 Act) support a conclusion that a lower threshold test for compulsory detention applies under the 1983 Act and accordingly, authorities from courts in England and Wales could not be relied on to construe the requirement of detention in hospital for medical treatment. The second is whether the grant of leave of absence under article 15 of the 1986 Order is inconsistent with a conclusion that a patient still satisfies the test for detention in hospital for medical treatment and should have no bearing on the decision whether detention for medical treatment is warranted. If so, such leave which may form an important and valuable part of a detained patient’s treatment plan, that can and frequently does support a safe transition from the institutional setting of a hospital to a less secure, less institutionalised setting in the community, as part of the continuum from detention to discharge, is considerably restricted in its availability.
IIThe factual and procedural background
This is set out in detail in the judgments below. In outline, RM was born in 1988. He has a significant intellectual disability and severe impairment of social functioning associated with abnormally aggressive behaviour. He has been assessed as not having the requisite capacity to conduct legal proceedings on his own behalf, but is otherwise assessed as having mental capacity.
He was charged with a series of offences including indecent assaults, gross indecencies with or towards a child, sexual assault of a child under 13 and threats to kill that were alleged to have been committed between 1998 and 2014. He was committed for trial in the Belfast Crown Court and found to be unfit to be tried. Consequently, a trial limited to a trial of the facts took place without investigating RM’s mens rea in relation to the offences alleged, and accordingly, no criminal convictions could result. On 6 September 2017, however, RM was found by a jury to have committed the unlawful acts alleged.
On 2 March 2018 there was a sentencing hearing at Belfast Crown Court. Because RM was unfit to be tried and was found to have committed the unlawful acts alleged the provisions of article 50A of the 1986 Order applied in his case. The court made an order admitting him to hospital for medical treatment under article 50A(2)(a) and directed that RM should be treated as if a restriction order had been made without limit of time (see article 50A(3)(b)). The effect of the court’s order and direction was that RM is treated for the purposes of the 1986 Order as if admitted to hospital in pursuance of a hospital order and an unlimited restriction order (see article 50A(3)).
RM was admitted to and detained at Muckamore Abbey Hospital on 13 March 2018. He has remained a restricted patient pursuant to the order and direction made by the Crown Court, and liable to detention ever since.
RM applied for discharge from detention on 16 January 2019. There was a hearing on 12 June 2020, by a review tribunal (formerly known as a mental health tribunal), comprising a legally qualified chair, a medical member (a Consultant Psychiatrist) and a lay member. Dr Milliken, a Consultant Psychiatrist, who was then the assigned “responsible medical officer” for RM, gave evidence that RM still had severe mental impairment. However, based on Dr Milliken’s evidence, the tribunal was satisfied that RM had:
“completed all medical and psychotherapeutic work which can be provided in hospital and that the development of specialised, effective community provision for [RM]’s supervision, care and treatment in [a residential care setting] means that currently his severe mental impairment is not of a nature or degree requiring his detention in hospital for medical treatment. Such detention would not be proportionate, necessary, or warranted. The Tribunal is also satisfied that the continued detention of RM would be in breach of Article 5 of the European Convention [on] Human Rights. It is not the least restrictive option for his care and cannot be justified under Article 5. Accordingly, the Tribunal is satisfied that the grounds for detention are not satisfied.” (para 20)
Although not satisfied that the statutory conditions for detention in hospital for treatment were met, the tribunal held that RM should remain liable to be recalled to hospital for further treatment in accordance with article 78(1)(b) of the 1986 Order, so that a conditional (rather than an absolute) discharge appeared, in principle, appropriate pursuant to article 78(2). The conditions set out in a detailed proposed community care plan to which RM would be subject in his community placement included RM being in locked accommodation, unable to leave (the residential care setting) without being escorted, with continuous staff supervision when he did leave. However, applying MM, the tribunal concluded that the proposed conditions would amount to a deprivation of liberty and conditional discharge on this basis was not available. The Department of Justice had strongly opposed RM’s discharge into a residential care setting on public protection grounds in any event and maintained that RM still required detention for treatment. The tribunal adjourned the case to await further developments without any final order being made.
Both the Belfast Health and Care Trust and RM commenced proceedings in the High Court to determine the powers of the review tribunal in this situation and RM challenged the lawfulness of his continued detention and sought his release. The Trust ultimately withdrew its application. Keegan J refused RM’s applications (see SM, Re Application for writ of habeas corpus [2020] NIQB 73, where RM is referred to as “RO”) and made clear that the matter should proceed before the review tribunal.
When the application was relisted for a final hearing on 16 February 2021, the review tribunal heard from Dr Paul Devine, Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist, who had replaced Dr Milliken as the responsible medical officer for RM, and Dr Adrian East, also a Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist, who endorsed Dr Devine’s conclusions. The tribunal summarised their evidence as follows (at para 37):
“Dr Devine is of the opinion that [RM] is at a stage in his treatment where he should be allowed to leave the hospital with the approval of the department on Art 15 leave. It is his view that Art 15 leave is an important part of the treatment plan and allows for medical support and rehabilitation of a patient. He told the Tribunal that this represented ‘a significant amount of medical supervision and treatment.’ Dr Devine in his evidence outlined that treatment under Art 15 would allow testing of the care plan and allow [RM] to put into practice the skills that he had learnt in a setting outside hospital and to build upon those skills. He said that a lot of personnel would be involved in assessing [RM’s] care needs and ongoing risk assessment and in providing regular refresher psychological support. His role as [responsible medical officer] would be to have oversight of all of that. Dr Devine submitted that the Art 15 leave would allow rigorous testing out of a care plan and allow a support plan and risk management plan to be fully developed and adapted to meet [RM’s] needs. He said that he hoped that [RM] could quickly move to less supervised conditions under Art 15 and by the end of six months be in a position where his case could be referred to [the Review Tribunal] with the recommendation for a conditional discharge.” (Emphasis as original)
The review tribunal concluded that RM had a severe mental impairment, that the impairment warranted his detention in hospital for treatment and that discharge would create a substantial likelihood of serious physical harm to others (see article 78(1)(a) and (b)). It acknowledged that RM’s care plan would involve him moving to live in a community-based setting soon by way of leave of absence from hospital under article 15. It considered that as a patient subject to leave of absence, he would nonetheless remain a patient detained in hospital for the purposes of article 77(1)(a) of the 1986 Order.