IN -v- St Andrews Healthcare and others: [2024] UKUT 411 (AAC)

Upper Tribunal Administrative Appeals Chamber decision by Judge Church on 10 December 2024

Read the full decision in UA-2023-000468-HM.

Judicial Summary

The right of a detained psychiatric patient to have their detention reviewed timeously is a very important right, as is the right to a fair hearing. The Mental Health Act 1983 and the Tribunal Procedure (First-tier Tribunal) (Health, Education and Social Care Chamber) Rules 2008 contain important safeguards to protect those rights. This case demonstrates how tensions can arise between them.

This decision concerns a tribunal’s decision making around whether to adjourn or to proceed with a hearing from which both the patient and the patient’s appointed representative are absent, as well as what the tribunal must say in its reasons to clear the required hurdle of ‘adequacy’.

I give guidance to the First-tier Tribunal, and to parties and representatives in the First-tier Tribunal, about what to do when a patient with a representative appointed under Rule 11(7)(a) of the first-tier tribunal rules makes a capacious decision not to engage with their representative to provide instructions. I say that the patient should not be left unrepresented and the representative should conduct the hearing on the basis that their implicit instructions are to test the legal test for the patient’s continued detention.

I decide that where a patient’s liberty is at stake, and where the patient will be neither present nor represented at the hearing, there is a significant risk that the disposal of the proceedings will involve an unlawful interference with the patient’s Article 5(4) rights. In such circumstances, if a tribunal is to proceed to dispose of the appeal, it must explain specifically how and why it concluded that doing so was in the interests of justice. It is not enough to simply state that it decided that it was so.

Updates to this page

Published 4 February 2025