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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Virdi v The Law Society of England and Wales & Anor [2010] EWCA Civ 100 (16 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/100.html Cite as: [2010] 1 WLR 2840, [2010] EWCA Civ 100, [2010] WLR 2840, [2010] 3 All ER 653, [2010] ACD 38 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
SCOTT BAKER LJ and DAVID CLARKE J
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF THE SOLICITORS ACT 1974 AMRITPAL SINGH VIRDI |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE LAW SOCIETY OF ENGLAND AND WALES |
Respondent |
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-and- THE SOLICITORS DISCIPLINARY TRIBUNAL |
Intervener |
____________________
Michael McLaren QC (instructed by Bevan Brittan LLP) for the Respondent
Andrew Hopper QC and Alexis Hearnden (instructed by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal) for the Intervener
Hearing date : 26 January 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON :
Introduction
(1) It was ultra vires the Tribunal for the clerk to retire with them or to assist in drafting their findings.(2) The clerk's role led to the appearance of bias and an infringement of the Appellant's Convention right to a fair trial under Article 6.
On these grounds, the Appellant seeks an order quashing the decision of the Tribunal.
The statutory and regulatory framework
(5A) The Tribunal may do anything calculated to facilitate, or incidental or conducive to, the carrying out of any of its functions.
23. Upon the conclusion of the hearing or determination of any Application the Tribunal may announce its Order while still sitting in which case the Order may be filed immediately with the Society, and the Findings shall be filed later as if judgment had been reserved, or it may reserve judgment in which case it shall announce its Findings and Order in public at a later date notice whereof shall be given to the parties by the Clerk. The Clerk shall on the day of pronouncement file the Order, or the Findings, or both, with the Society. The Clerk shall supply a copy of the Findings and Order to each party to the proceedings and to any other person present at the pronouncement who requests one.
(a) Subject to the provisions of these Rules the Tribunal may regulate its own procedure.
(6) The Tribunal may also appoint other clerks, including clerks appointed to deal with a particular case or cases.
(7) A clerk appointed by the Tribunal under this rule shall be a solicitor or barrister of not less than 10 years standing
(8) A clerk shall vacate his office if
(a) in the Tribunal's opinion (with which the Master of the Rolls agrees) he is physically or mentally incapable of performing his duties; or
(b) he retires; or
(c) he is removed from office by a resolution of the Tribunal approved by the Master of the Rolls.
(9) The Clerk shall be responsible to the Tribunal for the administration of the Tribunal in an efficient manner and, for so long as he shall be remunerated by the Law Society, shall be regarded as seconded to the Tribunal.
(10) The services of a clerk may be provided to the Tribunal through a body independent of the Law Society and that body may employ him on such terms (including remuneration and pension provision) as the Tribunal shall think fit.
(11) The Tribunal may prescribe the duties to be performed by the clerks or for which they shall be responsible and those duties shall include arrangements for
(a) the submission of applications for certification of a case to answer;
(b) making pre-listing arrangements including directions of an administrative nature;
(c) listing of and attendance at hearings;
(d) securing a record of hearings (by tape recording or other means);
(e) advising the Tribunal on matters of law or procedure as may be necessary or expedient;
(f) preparing summaries of allegations, evidence and submissions for inclusion in the Tribunal's detailed findings;
(g) drawing orders and findings and filing them with the Law Society;
(h) the general supervision of other clerks and the Tribunal's administration and staff; and
(i) maintaining records and collecting statistics required by the Tribunal.
a) a Chair, who shall be a solicitor but not a Council member, appointed by the Council following an open recruitment process taking into account Guidelines issued by the Commissioner for Public Appointments;
b) seven non-Council members who shall not be solicitors, appointed in the manner described in (a); and
c) eight non-Council members, who shall be solicitors, appointed in the manner described in (a).
22(1) Subject to (3), the chairs of the subsidiary boards serve for a single period of three years, and shall not be eligible for re-election at the end of that period.
(2) Subject to (3), the other members of subsidiary boards (including Council members) serve for three years, being eligible for re-election or re-appointment, as the case may be, for one further period of three years only.
(3) As a transitional provision, the members of subsidiary boards elected or appointed to serve for initial periods of four years shall serve for the period for which they were originally elected and shall thereafter be eligible to be re-elected or re-appointed for one further period of three years only.
(4) A member elected or appointed to fill a casual vacancy on a subsidiary board serves until the end of his or her predecessor's term, and shall thereafter be eligible for re-election or re-appointment for one further period of three years only.
(5) The terms of office of the chair and members of the Consumer Complaints Board shall be two years, running from the date of appointment, and they shall be eligible for re-appointment for two further terms of two years only.
(6) The terms of office of the chair and members of the Regulation Board shall be four years, running from the date of appointment, and they shall be eligible for re-appointment for one further term of four years only.
31 The terms of reference of the Regulation Board are
(1) To exercise all monitoring, regulatory, investigative, adjudication, disciplinary, intervention, prosecution, enforcement, civil litigation and cost recovery powers vested in the Society or the Council under
(a) the Act
..
(2) To deal with any actual or forthcoming litigation arising from the exercise of its functions under this Regulation in relation to individual casework matters and other regulatory decisions relating to individuals and particular recognised bodies.
..
(11) To deal with all proceedings before the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal, and all litigation arising from such proceedings.
(6) The Solicitors Regulation Authority Board shall consist of
(a) a Chair, who shall be a solicitor but not a Council member, appointed by the Council following an open recruitment process taking into account Guidelines issued by the Commissioner for Public Appointments;
(b) seven non-Council members, who shall not be solicitors, appointed in the manner described in (a), and
(c) eight non-Council members, who shall be solicitors, appointed in the manner described in (a).
The terms of office of its chair and members were set out in regulation 23(4), which was in the same terms as regulation 22(6) of the 2006 Regulations.
This memorandum of understanding records an interim arrangement between the Law Society and the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal ('the Tribunal'). It is the objective of both parties to work as soon as possible towards a situation where the Tribunal becomes wholly independent of the Law Society in the operation and administration of its function. It is recognised in any event that the Tribunal is wholly independent of the Law Society in the exercise of its judicial functions.
The italics are mine.
The overriding obligation of the [Tribunal] is to do justice as a judicial body.
The [Tribunal's] budget is proposed by the Clerk and submitted to the Society for approval.
The Clerk is appointed by the Tribunal to hold office in accordance with the Solicitors (Disciplinary Proceedings) Rules 1994.
The remuneration (including pension provision) of the Clerk shall be determined by the Society in accordance with scales and other rates of pay considered by the Society to be appropriate for a person holding such office and with responsibilities comparable to those of similar employees of the Society.
The Society cannot withdraw or impede the services provided for the proper performance of the Clerk's office.
The Clerk shall be regarded as seconded to the SDT. The staff of the SDT will continue to be employees of the Society and will report to the Clerk as their line manager.
The facts
It is understood that the judgment of the Tribunal was drafted in whole or in part by the Clerk to the Tribunal and not by the Tribunal members. This is understood to be the current practice of the Tribunal. The Clerk had no statutory authority or other legal power to take part in the decision-making process, still less to draft all or part of the Tribunal's judgment. The Appellant was entitled to be tried by a "Tribunal established by law" (ECHR Art 6(1). If the Clerk drafted any part of the judgment, that was a breach of natural justice: the Appellant thought he was being tried by the Tribunal members and by no-one else. The Appellant asked the Tribunal to confirm what part the Clerk played in the drafting of the Findings. If she played any part, the decision must be regarded as a nullity and should be quashed.
.. the clerk:
- retires with the Tribunal, hears its discussion and decision, and takes a note. The clerk plays no part in the decision-making process but might, for example, seek clarification of the reasons for a particular decision for the purposes of the note. As will be explained, the clerk will have the initial responsibility for producing the written record of the Tribunal's decisions and reasons and, as discussion may have been wide ranging and time consuming, will wish to ensure that he or she has captured and summarised the members' decisions and reasons accurately, and that nothing has been overlooked;
- draws to the attention of the Tribunal similar past cases and, if appropriate, the sanctions imposed. Although the Tribunal is not formally bound by precedent in relation to its own decision information of this kind might be sought in the interests of maintaining consistency;
- draws up the Tribunal's order on a pro forma, which is then typed and signed by the chairman and handed down to the parties on the day of the hearing. The practice is that the chairman gives brief oral reasons before the orders are handed down, and confirms to the parties that the detailed written Findings will be prepared and distributed subsequently. The chairman's brief oral extempore 'judgment' is prepared and written by the chairman, with input from the other two members;
- prepares an initial draft of the Findings.
8. The first draft is then circulated amongst the members who consider it and make any adjustments or amendments they see fit. This is not in any sense a process limited to the parts of the Findings recording the rulings and findings of the members. Whole sections may be rewritten entirely. The initial draft is the clerk's minute of the proceedings, in the courtroom and in the retiring room. It is a record of events committed to paper by an experienced professional, which is then fully reviewed and amended as necessary by the members. The Findings, particularly in a complex case, may go through many draft stages before the members are all agreed on the final record. Unless the members specifically ask for further assistance (such as a reminder of words used, from the digital record) the clerk has no further contribution to make after the first draft is with the members. Successive amendments are handled by the Tribunal staff as matters for the typists.
9. When all the members are agreed the Findings are signed by the chairman, distributed to the parties and filed with the Law Society.
3. Usually the clerk will produce the first draft [of the Findings] as a complete document. In this case the chairman and other members played a part as the draft progressed. This was primarily due to the number and extent of the applications and objections raised in the course of the hearing, as recorded in section 4 of the Findings, and the length and complexity of the proceedings. Having made a note of the full reasons as provided by the members at the time, in retirement, and in the light of the oral reasons given as recorded in the transcript, I took the view that this part of the Findings could be set out in relatively short and summary form. I also provided the summaries of the evidence of witnesses and submissions, but I circulated the draft to the members at a preliminary stage to check that they were happy with the approach I had adopted.
4. There was also a departure from the normal process in that the chairman drafted, in the sense that she dictated, some of the decisions of the Tribunal in section 4 of the Findings.
5. My notes from the 26th October 2007 indicate that the members were in retirement discussing their final decision in relation to liability for approximately six and a half hours. Once a consensus was reached the chairman drafted, with the assistance of the other members, a rather longer set of oral reasons to be read in open court than is normally the case. My contribution was to remind them, from my note, of comments and reasons made and given during the course of the lengthy discussion. It was this set of reasons, as should be apparent from the transcript, which formed the basis of my first draft of section 7 of the Findings. After hearing submissions in mitigation and also costs the members spent a further period of just under two hours considering penalty and costs.
5. The one matter with which it may be appropriate for me to deal is that there may be an implication that the decision was in substance that of the clerk rather than of the members, wholly or in part, or that the clerk contributed inappropriately to the decision-making process. If there is an allegation or implication that the decisions, orders and reasons were not wholly those of the members of the Tribunal as duly constituted, I refute it. The decisions, orders and reasons recorded in the Findings are the findings of the members of the Tribunal. I signed the Findings on 13 October 2008 to record that fact.
The staff of the Tribunal are employees of the Law Society. The Clerk and Deputy Clerks are formally seconded to the Tribunal by the Law Society. The full complement of staff consists of a full time Clerk, two part-time Deputy Clerks, all of whom are solicitors of no less than ten years' standing; a full-time Assistant Clerk (also a solicitor) and two part-time Assistant Clerks.
1. The Tribunal uses a building not used by the Law Society.
2. The Law Society has no control over and does not interfere with the routine management or operation of the Tribunal.
3. None of the clerks has ever been employed by the Law Society for any purpose other than as clerk to the Tribunal. They have never served the Law Society in any other capacity.
4. The clerks have no routine contact with the Law Society other than as a nominal employer.
5. There is no link between results of cases in the Tribunal and career development of clerks.
The grounds of appeal
(b) The retirement of the clerk with the panel members of the STD on 26th October 2007 when they considered their final verdict and sentence was unlawful at common law because, according to the evidence of Mrs Elson, the clerk is an employee of the Law Society (seconded to the SDT). She therefore had, or appears objectively to have had, a common interest with, or partiality towards, her employer, the Law Society, the body prosecuting Mr Virdi before the Tribunal;
(c) The involvement of the clerk in retiring with the panel when they considered their final verdict and sentence and/or in drafting the findings on 26th October 2007, was unlawful at common law, because her employer was party to the proceedings and for her to have played any part in the retirement and/or drafting processes, was, or was tantamount to, the Law Society being a judge in its own cause;
(d) The involvement of the clerk in drafting the detailed findings after 26th October 2007, was unlawful at common law, because her employer was a party to the proceedings and for her to have played any part in the drafting process was, or was tantamount to, the Law Society being a judge in its own cause.
The decision of the Divisional Court
1. The SDT is entirely independent of the Law Society. The historical and financial connections are well documented as are the steps that have been taken to keep the two bodies separate.
2. The independence of the Tribunal is well established on the authorities.
3. The attack in the present case is not directly on the Tribunal but on the clerk, it being alleged that because she was employed by the Law Society that this in some way tainted the Tribunal's decision because the Law Society was the prosecutor and neither party should have any connection with the Tribunal. Examination of the clerk's position however shows that her employment by the Law Society (as with all Tribunal clerks) is not employment in the ordinary sense of the word but very much technical employment for remuneration purposes.
4. The clerk was not the decision maker, either by virtue of her position or on the particular facts of this case. Even taking the broadest view of what the independent and informed observer might think, I can see no basis for concluding that the Tribunal's decision could be considered to be biased against the appellant.
5. Nothing the clerk did was improper. She was not in any way a party to the decision. She followed the ordinary administrative procedures adopted in other cases. She was entitled to assist in drafting the findings document which, in the event, was not in any way inconsistent with the extempore reasons give by the Chair on 26th October 2007.
The contentions of the parties on this appeal
Discussion
(a) Was the retirement of the clerk with the members of the Tribunal ultra vires?
It is clear that the deputy clerk was a member of the firm of solicitors engaged in the conduct of proceedings for damages against the applicant in respect of the same collision as that which gave rise to the charge that the justices were considering.
This decision, relied upon by Mr Beaumont, is inconsistent with any implied general prohibition on a clerk retiring with the justices. Furthermore, there is no suggestion in the judgment that the retirement of a clerk with the justices was the subject of, or required, any express provision of the then Magistrates' Court Rules.
Bias and apparent bias
the spokesman of the fair and reasonable man, who represents after all no more than the anthropomorphic conception of justice, is and must be
the Court itself.
Similarly, in Locabail v Bayfield Properties Ltd [2000] QB 451, 477 the Court of Appeal referred to the court "personifying the reasonable man". The ultimate question is whether the proceedings in question were and were seen to be fair. If on examination of all the relevant facts, there was no unfairness or any appearance of unfairness, there is no good reason for the imaginary observer to be used to reach a different conclusion.
The court must first ascertain all the circumstances which have a bearing on the suggestion that the judge was biased. It must then ask whether those circumstances would lead a fair-minded and informed observer to conclude that there was a real possibility, or a real danger, the two being the same, that the tribunal was biased.
The first sentence is inconsistent with any limitation on the circumstances that should be taken into account. See too R v Gough [1993] AC 646 at 670. Similarly, in Medicaments the Court of Appeal said, at paragraph 83:
The material facts are not limited to those which were apparent to the applicant. They are those which are ascertained upon investigation by the court.
Parenthetically, in the present case the Appellant did not perceive any apparent bias during the Tribunal's proceedings. More recently, in Helow v Home Secretary [2008] UKHL 62 [2008] 1 WLR 2416, Lord Hope, with whom Lords Rodger, Walker and Cullen expressly agreed, said:
1. The fair-minded and informed observer is a relative newcomer among the select group of personalities who inhabit our legal village and are available to be called upon when a problem arises that needs to be solved objectively. Like the reasonable man whose attributes have been explored so often in the context of the law of negligence, the fair-minded observer is a creature of fiction. Gender-neutral (as this is a case where the complainer and the person complained about are both women, I shall avoid using the word "he"), she has attributes which many of us might struggle to attain to.
2. The observer who is fair-minded is the sort of person who always reserves judgment on every point until she has seen and fully understood both sides of the argument. She is not unduly sensitive or suspicious, as Kirby J observed in Johnson v Johnson (2000) 201 CLR 488, 509, para 53. Her approach must not be confused with that of the person who has brought the complaint. The "real possibility" test ensures that there is this measure of detachment. The assumptions that the complainer makes are not to be attributed to the observer unless they can be justified objectively. But she is not complacent either. She knows that fairness requires that a judge must be, and must be seen to be, unbiased. She knows that judges, like anybody else, have their weaknesses. She will not shrink from the conclusion, if it can be justified objectively, that things that they have said or done or associations that they have formed may make it difficult for them to judge the case before them impartially.
3. Then there is the attribute that the observer is "informed". It makes the point that, before she takes a balanced approach to any information she is given, she will take the trouble to inform herself on all matters that are relevant. She is the sort of person who takes the trouble to read the text of an article as well as the headlines. She is able to put whatever she has read or seen into its overall social, political or geographical context. She is fair-minded, so she will appreciate that the context forms an important part of the material which she must consider before passing judgment.
I do not detect any difference of substance between the speech of Lord Hope and that of Lord Mance. Paragraph 3 of Lord Hope's speech is of obvious relevance, and is inconsistent with the Appellant's case.
Provided that the court, personifying the reasonable man, takes an approach which is based on broad common sense, without inappropriate reliance on special knowledge, the minutiae of court procedure or other matters outside the ken of the ordinary, reasonably well informed member of the public, there should be no risk that the courts will not ensure both that justice is done and that it is perceived by the public to be done.
However, in Gough, the Court considered evidence from the juror whose impartiality was in issue. In Locabail itself, the Court considered facts that were not publicly available (see, for example, paragraph 105), and gave guidance as to how evidence from an impugned judge, lay justice or juror should be considered. In Re Medicaments, the relevant facts were not publicly available. In Whitefield v the General Medical Council [2002] UKPC 62, the Privy Council considered a witness statement made subsequent to the hearing in question and on its basis rejected the allegation of bias. We have not been referred to any authority explaining what the Court in Locabail meant by special knowledge, but I have no doubt that the present case does not turn on any such knowledge, or the minutiae of tribunal procedure or other matters outside the ken of the ordinary, reasonably well-informed observer.
23. Standing back, and bearing in mind the statutory scheme for the Disciplinary Tribunal, I see no reason to doubt its independence or impartiality. It is independent of the Law Society. There is no indication that the Law Society can influence its decisions, except in the sense of making submissions to the Tribunal as a party before the Tribunal. No evidence or suggestion has been made that the particular Tribunal demonstrated any partiality in any way. In my judgment, the submission that the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal does not meet the test of being an independent and impartial tribunal is not made out. .
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD:
LORD JUSTICE JACOB: