Dr Esegbona (on behalf of the estate of Christina Esegbona, deceased) v King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust [2019] EWHC 77 (QB)
Introduction
- When Mrs Esegbona fell ill in October 2010, requiring a tracheostomy, there was no question she needed hospital care. However, when she was ready for discharge, the Trust’s staff repeatedly ignored her express wish to have the tracheostomy removed and go home to her family. For over three months, the Trust failed to comply with its duties under the Mental Capacity Act 2005, and instead took a ‘high-handed’ and “oppressive” approach. The Trust deliberately excluded her family from any decisions concerning her future care, moving Mrs Esegbona to a nursing home many miles away from her home and family.
- Had the Trust complied with its duties under the MCA, Mrs Esegbona’s wishes and feelings would have been considered: she would have had “a voice”… her frustration and distress would have been significantly reduced”. Instead, just nine days after being moved, Mrs Esegbona died, “frightened, distressed and alone (when she should not have been)…”
- In January 2019, HHJ Coe QC delivered judgment. The court found clinical negligence, and awarded significant damages and aggravated damages for Mrs Esegbona’s false imprisonment. Importantly, this case demonstrates that a person can recover substantial awards if they are falsely imprisoned, their wishes ignored, and kept, not just away from home, but from any environment that would be more suitable, in circumstances which cause them considerable distress [234 – 236]. It also serves to strengthen the approach to damages taken in the deprivation of liberty HRA case of Essex County Council v RF & Ors (more commonly known as the “Fluffy” case) [2015] EWCOP 1.