Parties (MHT): Difference between revisions
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... | ‘Party’ is defined in rule 1 as anyone appearing in the first column below. Further notes appear in the second column where appropriate. | ||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
!The patient. | |||
| In all cases. | |||
|- | |||
! The responsible authority | |||
| ‘Responsible authority’ is defined in rule 1 as: | |||
* (a) in relation to a patient detained under the Mental Health Act 1983 in a hospital within the meaning of Part 2 of that Act, the managers (as defined in section 145 of that Act); | |||
* (b) in relation to a patient subject to guardianship, the responsible local social services authority (as defined in section 34(3) of the Mental Health Act 1983); | |||
* (c) in relation to a community patient, the managers of the responsible hospital (as defined in section 145 of the Mental Health Act 1983) | |||
|- | |||
! The Secretary of State | |||
| If the patient is a restricted patient or in a reference under rule 32(8) (seeking approval under section 86 of the Mental Health Act 1983) | |||
|- | |||
! Any other person who starts a mental health case by making an application | |||
| Note that neither the nearest relative (unless he is the applicant) nor the victim is a party. | |||
|} | |||
Under rule 9(2) the Tribunal ‘may give a direction adding a person to the proceedings as a respondent’. Such a respondent is not a party as defined in the rules. | |||
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Latest revision as of 21:42, 1 July 2021
‘Party’ is defined in rule 1 as anyone appearing in the first column below. Further notes appear in the second column where appropriate.
The patient. | In all cases. |
---|---|
The responsible authority | ‘Responsible authority’ is defined in rule 1 as:
|
The Secretary of State | If the patient is a restricted patient or in a reference under rule 32(8) (seeking approval under section 86 of the Mental Health Act 1983) |
Any other person who starts a mental health case by making an application | Note that neither the nearest relative (unless he is the applicant) nor the victim is a party. |
Under rule 9(2) the Tribunal ‘may give a direction adding a person to the proceedings as a respondent’. Such a respondent is not a party as defined in the rules.
INFORMATION
- Representation
- Civil sections and CTOs
- Criminal sections
- Aftercare
- Tribunal Rules
- Overriding objective (MHT)
- Applications (MHT)
- Parties (MHT)
- Victims (MHT)
- Representatives (MHT)
- Notice of proceedings, and listing (MHT)
- Medical examination (MHT)
- Remote hearings (MHT)
- Recording of hearings (MHT)
- Disposal without hearing (MHT)
- Hearing in a party’s absence (MHT)
- Decisions by a single judge (MHT)
- Reports (MHT)
- Evidence (MHT)
- Non-disclosure of documents and information (MHT)
- Directions (MHT)
- Adjournment and postponement (MHT)
- Withdrawal (MHT)
- Reinstatement (MHT)
- Decisions (MHT)
- Public hearing (MHT)
- Wasted costs (MHT)
- Appealing against a tribunal decision (MHT)
- Mandatory and discretionary references
- Nearest relative
- Legal Aid
- International law
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