- Latest available (Revised)
- Original (As enacted)
This is the original version (as it was originally enacted).
(1)The court may make a declaration—
(a)that action taken by a guardian, when purporting to exercise functions as a guardian, was within or outside the scope of the guardian’s authority under the guardianship order and this Act, or
(b)that a guardian performed or failed to perform a duty under the guardianship order, this Act or regulations under section 58 of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 or a duty owed to the missing person under a rule of law.
(2)It may do so on an application or without an application being made (and see sections 19 and 20).
(3)If the court makes a declaration under subsection (1) that a guardian acted outside the scope of the guardian’s authority or failed to perform a duty as described in that subsection, it may—
(a)make an order disallowing expenses incurred by the guardian or remuneration to which the guardian would otherwise be entitled;
(b)make an order requiring the guardian to make a payment of an amount determined by the court to the missing person or the missing person’s estate;
(c)make such other order as the court considers appropriate for the purpose of compensating the missing person or the missing person’s estate for any loss resulting from the action or failure.
(4)Subsection (3) does not prevent the court from exercising powers available to it otherwise than by virtue of that subsection.
(5)If the court makes a declaration under subsection (1), or otherwise determines, that a guardian acted outside the scope of the guardian’s authority or failed to perform a duty as described in that subsection but—
(a)the guardian shows that the guardian behaved honestly and reasonably in doing so, and
(b)the court considers that, having regard to all the circumstances, the guardian ought to be relieved of personal liability,
the court may relieve the guardian, either entirely or partly, of personal liability in respect of the action or failure.
(6)In considering whether to relieve a guardian of personal liability, the court must have regard to—
(a)the care and skill that it is reasonable to expect the guardian to have exercised in the circumstances, and
(b)in the case of a person acting as a guardian in the course of a business or profession, any special knowledge or experience that it is reasonable to expect of a person acting in the course of that kind of business or profession.
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