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Stokes, In the Matter of [2000] NIQB 29 (12th September, 2000)
KERE3255
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN IRELAND
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (CROWN SIDE)
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IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY MARGARET STOKES
FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
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KERR J
Introduction
1. The applicant is the widow and personal representative of
John Stokes, deceased. By this application she challenges decisions of the
Coroner for Greater Belfast, Mr John Leckey, taken in relation to the conduct of
the inquest into the death of her husband.
Background
2. Mr Stokes was a member of the travelling community. He
lived with the applicant and their children at the Windy Gap site, Monagh
By-Pass, Belfast. On 2 November 1997 the applicant left their caravan at about
6pm. Her husband was then the only person present in the caravan. Mrs Stokes
returned an hour later. All appeared normal. She and her husband watched
television together until about 10pm. Mr Stokes was then suddenly unwell. He
began to shake. When he attempted to stand, he fell backwards on to the floor.
Mrs Stokes summoned help and she and her husband and other relatives travelled
to Royal Victoria Hospital by car. On arrival there Mr Stokes was taken by
stretcher to the resuscitation ward. While he was in the ward Mr Stokes became
violent. Police were tasked to the scene. They attempted to calm Mr Stokes but
did not succeed. Ultimately they had to handcuff Mr Stokes in order to restrain
him.
3. Dr O'Hare was on duty in the hospital that evening and he
came to the ward where Mr Stokes had been restrained. He was told by Mr Stokes
that he had taken eighty Co-proxamol tablets at approximately 8.15 pm. The
doctor checked Mr Stokes' pulse, respiratory rate and pupils. He then informed
him that it might be necessary to pump out his stomach. Mr Stokes objected
vehemently to this. Dr O'Hare then consulted a senior registrar, Dr Paul Curran,
by telephone. He was advised by Dr Curran that if the patient was compos
mentis and had no psychiatric history and refused treatment, there was
nothing he could do. Dr Curran also instructed him that, in the event that the
patient refused treatment, he was to be advised that there could be problems
after a few days if he did not receive the antidote to the paracetemol content
of the Co-proxamol.
4. After this telephone conversation, Dr O'Hare was informed
by Mrs Stokes that her husband had no psychiatric history. The doctor then
returned to speak again to Mr Stokes who was still being restrained by police
officers. He informed Mr Stokes that it would not be necessary to pump his
stomach but that he would have to take a drug with the antidote to paracetemol.
He told Mr Stokes that if he failed to take this he could suffer liver failure
within a couple of days. At first Mr Stokes agreed to have the treatment and
then he changed his mind and refused all treatment. Dr O'Hare then discharged
him.
5. As the deceased left the hospital, his legs appeared to
buckle and he was lowered to the ground by police officers. He again became
violent and aggressive. Mrs Stokes tried to persuade him to have the treatment
but he refused. Because he continued to be aggressive, Mr Stokes was arrested by
one of the police officers at the scene, he was handcuffed once more and taken
to a police landrover and conveyed to Grosvenor Road police station. He was
carried to a cell and while his clothing was being removed it was noticed that
he did not have a pulse. Paramedics and a doctor began resuscitative measures
and the cardiac ambulance was summoned. As a result of the cardiopulmonary
resuscitation he received, Mr Stokes' heartbeat was restored. He was conveyed to
Royal Victoria Hospital but died at approximately 12.30 pm on 3 November 1997.
6. An autopsy on the body of the deceased was carried out
and the cause of death was established as poisoning by dextropropoxyphene and
paracetemol which are the active constituents of Co-proxamol. Analysis of blood
samples from the deceased and his stomach contents revealed high levels of both
constituents. Ante mortem samples disclosed much lower levels. The police
officer who investigated the death of the deceased was unable to account for
this.
7. On 11 October 1999 an inquest began before Mr Leckey. The
applicant's legal representatives had been informed that it was proposed to
admit the statements of Dr O'Hare and a Fusilier Lannigan under rule 17 of the
Coroners (Practice and Procedure) Rules (Northern Ireland) 1963 and that these
witnesses would not be required to attend, therefore. Fusilier Lannigan was a
regimental medical assistant and had attended Mr Stokes in the cell at Grosvenor
Road police station at the request of the police. He had carried out
cardio-pulmonary resuscitation on Mr Stokes. He was on duty in Bosnia at the
time that the inquest was due to take place and, according to the coroner, this
was the reason that he had decided to admit the Fusilier's evidence under rule
17.
8. In the course of the first day of the inquest, counsel
for the next of kin was in discussion with counsel for the Royal Ulster
Constabulary about the production of certain documents. These were produced on
the morning of 12 October, the second day of the inquest. They numbered over one
thousand. Counsel then applied to the coroner for an adjournment. That was
refused at first. An application for leave to apply for judicial review was then
launched in which the applicant sought orders of certiorari to quash the
decision of the coroner to refuse to adjourn the inquest and the decision to
admit the evidence of Fusilier Lannigan and Dr O'Hare under rule 17. After the
application for leave to apply for judicial review was made, the coroner acceded
to the application to adjourn.
9. Following the adjournment of the inquest, the coroner
discovered that Fusilier Lannigan would be back in the United Kingdom and
available to give evidence on the date that he proposed to resume the inquest.
He decided, therefore, that he would call that witness to give oral testimony.
The coroner was also informed by solicitors acting on behalf of the Medicap
Protection Society that Dr O'Hare was unlikely to be in Northern Ireland in the
foreseeable future. The coroner therefore confirmed his decision to admit Dr
O'Hare's evidence under rule 17.
10. The challenge to the coroner's decisions in relation to
the refusal of an adjournment and the admission of Fusilier Lannigan's evidence
under rule 17 are now no longer relevant. The application for judicial review
now relates solely to the coroner's decision not to have Dr O'Hare attend to
give oral evidence and to admit his evidence under rule 17.
The judicial review application
11. As amended, the Order 53 statement seeks an order of
certiorari "quashing the decision of the coroner to admit the statement of Dr
O'Hare ... without inquiring into the availability of [that] witness to give
oral evidence at the inquest". The following declarations were also sought:-
"1. A declaration that the decision of the coroner
that Dr O'Hare [was] not a necessary witness was unlawful
2. A declaration that the decision of the coroner that
the attendance of Dr O'Hare as a witness is unnecessary within rule 17(1) was
unlawful
3. A declaration that the decision of the coroner to
admit in evidence the statement of Dr O'Hare was unlawful"
12. The grounds on which these orders were sought were that
the coroner's conclusion that the attendance of Dr O'Hare was unnecessary within
the meaning of rule 17(1) was Wednesbury unreasonable; that the
conclusion was arrived at without taking into account all relevant matters, in
particular, the possibility that Dr O'Hare might be both willing and able to
give evidence; that the coroner erred in concluding that the circumstance that
Dr O'Hare was overseas justified the admission of the statement per se
and finally, that the coroner had failed to exercise his discretion under rule
17(1).
The evidence
13. In his first affidavit, Mr Eamann McMenamin, a partner
in the firm of solicitors acting on behalf of the applicant, stated that the
coroner had been asked by counsel for the next of kin whether he had checked on
the availability of Dr O'Hare and had replied that he had not done so but that
he was satisfied that his attendance was unnecessary. In his first affidavit, Mr
Leckey dealt with his decision not to call Dr O'Hare in the following paragraphs
:-
"6. I had been informed in advance of 11 October 1999
that Dr O'Hare would not be available to give evidence at the inquest because he
was working in Australia. On being informed of the non-availability of Dr O'Hare
and on reviewing the statements which he had made to the police during the
investigation into the death of John Stokes, I decided it was not necessary for
Dr O'Hare to attend the inquest as a witness. Dr O'Hare was the doctor on duty
when John Stokes was brought to the Accident and Emergency Department of the
Royal Victoria Hospital on 2 November 1997. ... In making the decision that it
was not necessary for Dr O'Hare to attend the inquest to give evidence, I took
account of the fact that other witnesses would be present to give evidence about
the events in the Accident and Emergency Department of the
Royal Victoria Hospital when John Stokes came to the hospital on 2 November
1997. The following members of the nursing staff - Bernadette Toal, Patricia
Spratt, Mary Lavery and Grainne Hamill - were available to give evidence ...
These witnesses have already given evidence to the inquest ... Mr Curran, the
senior registrar, who was consulted by Dr O'Hare as to the course of action to
be taken in the light of the refusal of medical advice by Mr Stokes, was
available to give evidence to the inquest ... A security officer, Stephen
McLaughlin, who was present in the Accident and Emergency Department when Mr
Stokes was offered medical treatment, was available to give evidence to the
inquest ... The policemen who were present in the Accident and Emergency
Department when attempts were being made to persuade Mr Stokes to accept
treatment were also available to give evidence to the inquest ... Another
witness who was available to give evidence to the inquest was Dr John P
Alexander, consultant anaesthetist, whom I had asked to prepare a medical report
on the circumstances surrounding the death of Mr Stokes ...
7. In the light of the evidence of the above-mentioned
witnesses who were available for the inquest and in the light of the
non-availability of Dr O'Hare I decided that Dr O'Hare was not a necessary
witness."
14. Mr McMenamin joined issue with the coroner's decision
in a second affidavit; he also disputed the account that the coroner had given
of the reasons for that decision. He suggested that Dr O'Hare was the only
doctor who had treated the deceased while he was conscious and was the only
doctor, therefore, who could give evidence about his condition during
consciousness. He was the doctor who took the decision to discontinue treatment
and was responsible for the timing of that decision. He also pointed out that
the coroner had indicated in a list of witnesses which had been furnished before
the inquest that Dr O'Hare was included among those witnesses that he intended
to call to give evidence.
15. As to the nursing and other staff who had either given
evidence or were scheduled to give evidence, Mr McMenamin asserted that most of
these did not witness Mr Stokes receive treatment and those who did were not
privy to the decision to withdraw treatment from him. This decision had been
made by Dr O'Hare alone.
16. In relation to the evidence which Dr Curran proposed to
give to the inquest, Mr McMenamin drew attention to the fact that Dr Curran had
recorded that Dr O'Hare had told him that the patient was "fully alert and
without psychotic features". Dr Curran had also been informed by Dr O'Hare that
Mr Stokes had reported ingesting twenty four Co-proxamol tablets whereas Dr
O'Hare had stated that he had been told by Mr Stokes that he had taken eighty.
Dr Curran appeared to accept that the initial signs of poisoning by Co-proxamol
were caused by dextropropoxyphene. Symptoms of dextropropoxyphene poisoning
include nausea, vomiting, generalised and focal fits and cardiovascular
collapse. He was not told by Dr O'Hare that Mr Stokes had suffered any of these
symptoms but it was clear from other evidence that at least some of these
symptoms had been present and must have been observed by Dr O'Hare.
Constable Babb's evidence suggested that Mr Stokes had suffered some form of
seizure and appeared to be unconscious when he was lifted on to the bed at the
request of a doctor (presumably Dr O'Hare). Reserve Constable Porter also noted
that the deceased had suffered "some form of seizure". He said that he was
amazed when Dr O'Hare pronounced that Mr Stokes was of sound mind because he
certainly did not appear to him to be so. Constable Porter was present when Mrs
Stokes told Dr O'Hare that she would sign any necessary consent forms to allow
her husband to be treated.
17. Mr McMenamin suggested that, on the basis of this
evidence, Dr O'Hare was uniquely placed to testify as to the deceased's
condition and refusal of treatment. He alone could give evidence about the
circumstances in which the decision was made that Mr Stokes should not receive
further treatment. He was clearly a necessary witness, therefore.
18. After Mr McMenamin's second affidavit was filed, the
coroner swore and filed a further affidavit. In this affidavit he did not
dispute the contents of either of Mr McMenamin's affidavits. He explained,
however, that he had informed Carson & McDowell, the firm of solicitors whom he
believed were acting on behalf of Dr O'Hare on the instructions of the Medical
Protection Society, about the arrangements for the inquest. On 17 August 1999,
he received a telephone call from a solicitor in that firm informing him that Dr
O'Hare would not be available to give evidence because he was working in
Australia.
19. Subsequently on 22 November 1999, the solicitors wrote
to the coroner in the following terms:-
"I have been contacted today (18 November 1999) by
Dr O'Hare. Dr O'Hare informs me that his mother had a visit by the RUC during
the course of this week requesting details of his whereabouts. Dr O'Hare resides
in Sydney and I have his address and telephone number. He is working as a doctor
in Australia and has no intention of returning to the UK in the immediate
future. His current post terminates in January 2001 following which time he may
be back in the UK, although there is no guarantee that he will not pursue other
opportunities either in Australia or elsewhere. ..."
Rule 17
20. In its current form rule 17 provides :-
"(1) A document may be admitted in evidence at an
inquest if the coroner considers that the attendance as a witness by the maker
of the document is unnecessary and the document is produced from a source
considered reliable by the coroner.
(2) If such a document is admitted in evidence at an
inquest the inquest may, at the discretion of the coroner, be adjourned to
enable the maker of the document to give oral evidence if the coroner or any
properly interested person reasonably so desires.
(3) Such a document shall be marked by the coroner in
accordance with these rules with the additional words: ‘received pursuant to
rule 17’. "
21. It is interesting to compare this wording with that
employed in the original rule which was as follows :-
"(1) The report of a post-mortem examination carried
out at the request of the coroner may be admitted in evidence at an inquest if
the coroner considers that the attendance as a witness of the medical
practitioner who made the report is unnecessary.
(2) Any other documentary evidence as to how the
deceased came by his death shall not be admissible at an inquest unless the
coroner is satisfied that there is good and sufficient reason why the maker of
the document should not attend the inquest.
(3) If such report or document is admitted in evidence
at an inquest, the inquest shall be adjourned to enable the maker of the report
or the document to give oral evidence if the coroner or any properly interested
person so desires."
22. Thus, while a coroner could only admit a statement
(other than the report of a post-mortem examination) under the old rule if he
was satisfied that there was a good and sufficient reason that the maker of the
statement should not attend the inquest, under the new rule he may admit the
statement if he considers that it is not necessary that the maker of the
statement attend the inquest. It should also be noted that what the coroner
requires to be satisfied of under the new rule is that it is not necessary that
the maker of the document attend the inquest . He does not require to be
persuaded that the maker of the statement is not a necessary witness .
23. The difference between these two is perhaps best
illustrated by reference to the old rule. By that rule, a pathologist was not
required to give evidence if the coroner considered that this was not necessary.
But there would be few inquests where the pathologist's evidence would not be
necessary since one of the principal functions of an inquest is to discover how
the deceased came by his death.
The arguments of the parties
24. For the applicant, counsel argued that it had plainly
been the original intention of the coroner to have Dr O'Hare attend to give
evidence. He had included his name in the list of witnesses that he had proposed
to call and had informed solicitors whom, he believed, were acting on behalf of
the doctor, about the arrangements for the inquest. But, according to the
averments in his first affidavit, the coroner clearly allowed extraneous issues
to influence his later judgment whether Dr O'Hare was a necessary witness. He
took into account statements made by other witnesses whose evidence was patently
insufficient to deal with points which only Dr O'Hare could cover. The coroner
had wrongly supposed that Dr Curran could deal with the reasons for withdrawing
treatment from Mr Stokes when, on analysis, it was evident that there was a
critical conflict between Dr Curran and Dr O'Hare both on the question of the
number of tablets ingested and on the condition of the deceased while he was in
the resuscitation room of the Royal Victoria Hospital.
25. It was submitted that the coroner had wrongly allowed
these factors to weigh with him in deciding that it was not necessary that the
doctor give evidence. Particular reference was made by counsel for the applicant
to paragraph 7 of the coroner's first affidavit where he stated that, in light
of the evidence of the other witnesses, he had decided that Dr O'Hare was "not a
necessary witness". The later attempt by the coroner to retrieve the situation
by suggesting (in his second affidavit) that the only reason that he decided
that it was not necessary that Dr O'Hare attend the inquest was that he was not
available should be treated sceptically, counsel suggested.
26. The applicant submitted that the coroner's decision was
deficient on two bases. First, instead of asking himself the question, "Is it
necessary for Dr O'Hare to attend?", he posed the wrong question viz "Is
Dr O'Hare a necessary witness?". Secondly, the coroner wrongly decided that the
other evidence available rendered Dr O'Hare's attendance unnecessary.
27. For the coroner, counsel accepted that the coroner had
to make a preliminary decision as to whether a witness was necessary. He then
had to address the question whether his attendance was necessary. Counsel argued
that the coroner had always believed that Dr O'Hare was a necessary witness but
concluded, correctly, that his attendance was not necessary when he discovered
that he was not available. In making a determination on the latter issue, it was
open to the coroner to have regard to other evidence available to the inquest.
Conclusions
28. It is troubling that Dr O'Hare should not be available
to give evidence at the inquest into the death of the deceased. It appears to me
that there are several issues on which his evidence would be valuable in
ascertaining how the deceased died. It is not necessary for me to embark on a
review of the jurisprudence in this jurisdiction and in England and Wales on the
scope of the inquiry permitted so as to explore the issue of how the deceased
came to die because I accept that the coroner did - at least initially -
consider that Dr O'Hare was a necessary witness.
29. The first issue which calls for resolution is whether
the coroner remained of the view that the doctor was a necessary witness, as
opposed to being a witness whose attendance was necessary. The averments in
paragraph 7 of his first affidavit would certainly appear to suggest that he had
changed his opinion on this issue because he says without qualification that he
had decided that the doctor was not a necessary witness. On reflection, however,
and in light of the coroner's unequivocal statement in his second affidavit, I
have concluded that it has not been established that the coroner changed his
view as to whether Dr O'Hare was a necessary witness.
30. It is perhaps unfortunate that the coroner did not deal
directly with the error of the first affidavit when he came to swear his second
affidavit. This is particularly so because the assertion of Mr McMenamin that
the coroner had told counsel for the next of kin that he had not checked the
availability of Dr O'Hare was not disputed in the coroner's second affidavit.
The failure to challenge this averment does not rest easily with his subsequent
claim that the only factor which influenced his decision was the
non-availability of Dr O'Hare. As against this, the coroner does set out the
correct test in the opening words of paragraph 6 of his first affidavit, when he
said, " ... [o]n being informed of the non-availability of Dr O'Hare and on
reviewing the statements which he had made to the police ... I decided that it
was not necessary for Dr O'Hare to attend the inquest as a witness." On balance,
therefore, I am prepared to accept that the statement in paragraph 7 of the
first affidavit was made inadvertently.
31. The next matters to be considered are whether the
coroner was wrong to have taken into account the evidence from other witnesses,
and whether he reached a conclusion on that evidence which is insupportable.
Three issues should be clarified at the outset. Firstly, despite his averment in
his second affidavit that his only reason for concluding that the attendance of
Dr O'Hare was not necessary was his non-availability, I am satisfied that the
coroner also had regard to the evidence of the other witnesses in relation to
that question. Otherwise, the rehearsal of the coroner's consideration of the
evidence in paragraph 6 of his first affidavit is wholly irrelevant and would
not have been included. Secondly, since it has not been established that the
coroner had decided that Dr O'Hare was not a necessary witness, I must approach
the evidence on this point on the basis that his consideration of the other
evidence available to the inquest was in the context of deciding whether it was
necessary that Dr O'Hare should attend to give evidence. Finally, it appears to
me that it is beyond dispute (and, indeed, counsel for the applicant did not
seek to dispute it) that, in deciding whether it was necessary that Dr O'Hare
should attend to give evidence, it was open to the coroner to have taken into
account that he was unavailable and that he (the coroner) did not have the power
to compel his attendance.
32. Dealing with the first of the matters adumbrated above,
(whether the coroner should have taken the other evidence into account), I am of
the opinion that the coroner was not only entitled to have regard to that
evidence, but that he would have been at fault if he had ignored it. In deciding
whether it is necessary that a particular witness (whose evidence is necessary
for the proper exploration of the various issues that arise on an inquest)
should be required to attend, it is obviously important to ascertain what other
evidence is available. The importance of the issue increases when it is known
that the witness whose attendance is in question is not available at the time
that it is proposed to hold the inquest. I am satisfied that the coroner was
right to have regard to that evidence.
33. On the second matter, (whether the coroner's conclusion
on the significance of the evidence is insupportable), one must first determine
the purpose for which the consideration of the evidence was undertaken. The
applicant's argument that the coroner was wholly wrong in the conclusion that he
reached on that evidence proceeded on the implicit premise that the coroner had
assessed the other evidence on its capacity to substitute for Dr O'Hare's oral
testimony. I am satisfied that this was not the basis on which the coroner
evaluated the evidence of the other witnesses. For the reasons that I have
given, I am satisfied that the coroner believed - at least at the beginning of
his consideration of the need for Dr O'Hare's evidence - that he was a witness
who should attend the inquest. He is unlikely to have reached that view if he
considered that the doctor's evidence was completely replicated in the testimony
that he was due to hear from other witnesses.
34. It appears to me that the coroner must have approached
the evidence of the other witnesses on the basis that Dr O'Hare was unlikely to
be available in the foreseeable future and that it was therefore relevant to
look at the other evidence to see whether it was worthwhile proceeding with the
inquest at all. Knowing that he had the opportunity to introduce the doctor's
evidence under rule 17, the coroner was entitled to conclude that, when one
considered the other evidence, it was both possible and proper that the inquest
should proceed and, to that extent, it was not necessary that Dr O'Hare attend
as a witness. Such a conclusion is unimpeachable, in my opinion. The coroner has
not articulated his reasoning in this way. Indeed, it may have been impossible
for him to do so since he had disavowed having been influenced by any factor
other than the doctor's non-availability. It appears to me, however, that,
confronted by the knowledge that the doctor would not be available, there was
only one possible course open to him. Having looked at the other evidence and
mindful of his powers under rule 17, he was bound to have proceeded with the
inquest. Even if I had been satisfied that the coroner had not approached the
matter in this - what I consider to be the only correct - way, I would
nevertheless have exercised my discretion to refuse the relief sought because I
am entirely content that the decision to proceed with the inquest was the proper
one.
35. Having carefully considered all the issues in the case,
and, notwithstanding my sense of disquiet about the fact that Dr O'Hare will not
be available to deal with matters which I think ought, in ideal circumstances,
to have been explored with him at the inquest, I have concluded that none of the
grounds of challenge to the coroner's decision has been made out and the
application for judicial review must therefore be dismissed.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN NORTHERN IRELAND
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (CROWN SIDE)
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IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY MARGARET STOKES
FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW
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JUDGMENT
OF
KERR J
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