10 September 2024 Anonym 1088 Case Updates The MCA’s belief requirement is wrong in law byAnonym Commentary This is an important case because it corrects a misunderstanding about the test for capacity. There has been an established view that the Mental Capacity Act contains a ‘belief’ requirement. That is wrong. It is an interesting case for a number of other reasons. To continue reading you must be an EWI member, become a member and access exclusive content. Already a member? Login More links Link to the Judgment Share Print Tags Mental Capacity Act Switch article When is a summary not a summary? Previous Article Known unknowns and the non-accidental injury hypothesis Next Article Comments are only visible to subscribers.