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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Stuewe v Health and Care Professions Council [2022] EWCA Civ 1605 (08 December 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1605.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 1605, [2023] 4 WLR 7, [2022] WLR(D) 499 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Mathew Gullick KC (Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
and
LADY JUSTICE CARR
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LARS STUEWE |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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HEALTH AND CARE PROFESSIONS COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Guy Micklewright (instructed by Blake Morgan LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 29 November 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Carr :
Introduction
The proceedings before and decision of the CCC on 7 January 2021
Summary of procedural history following the Order
"I refer to your enquiry below and confirm that you may make an application to appeal out of jurisdiction.
You will need to either provide a consent order (if you can agree this with your professional body) or even a draft order. Either way you are asking either by consent or through an application to be allowed to apply out of jurisdiction. This application/consent will need to be incorporated into your appeal, but will have to be considered first…"
"Therefore it has always been open to you to make an application to the Court to file out of the jurisdiction – you would not need the consent of the HCPC to make this application – and therefore there is no requirement on the HCPC to provide a consent order and, as such, we will not be issuing one. However, if you still wish to proceed with the appeal and you do make an application to the Court to file out of the jurisdiction, we would not oppose any such application.
Secondly, you point out that you are now out of time to bring the appeal as the 28 day time limit has been exceeded. I appreciate that you have not been able to proceed as quickly as you might have wished in this regard and, if you do intend to proceed with the appeal, we would not seek to make any point about it being out of time."
"I am a litigant in person with no address in the United Kingdom (mainland) or the EEA. I am a resident of Gibraltar (UK) since August 2015. I don't have access to legal aid in the UK or in Gibraltar with this case and appeal and I therefore wish to apply for permission of the court that my postal and residence address is used for correspondence with the Court…"
"41. The HCPC seeks an order from the Court to strike out the whole of the appeal notice, notwithstanding the contrary indication I gave the Appellant in the [5 March email].
42. The indication that the HCPC would not oppose any application for leave to appeal out of time was based on legal advice. Since then, the HCPC has received further legal advice and now appreciates the very limited discretion that the Court has to extend the time for filing a statutory appeal where the legislation in question does not provide for a time limit to be extended.
43. In any event, the indication given in [the 5 March email] was provided on the expectation that the Appellant would file his appeal as soon as practicable following my email, expected to be within the next working week. It was not intended to provide the Appellant with an unlimited extension to file his appeal.
44. It is submitted that the filing of the appeal on 7 April 2021, two months after the statutory deadline and one month after my email to the [Appellant] was unreasonable, even if made on the basis of my indication [in the 5 March email]."
The judgment below
"The Appellant's error was, in my judgment, to let the 28 day deadline expire without filing an appellant's notice in this court, as he in due course did, with an application to be permitted to rely on an address in Gibraltar – either because he was waiting for a consent order or because (see his email of 27 January) he believed that he could not file an appellant's notice in this court in the absence of a consent order. I appreciate that the Appellant may have wished to agree a consent order on the point, or that he may have been under the mistaken belief that he needed a consent order (which is not what the court office's email of 26 January said) but that does not, in my judgment, result in there being exceptional circumstances for the purposes of extending time for the appellant's notice which he in due course filed after the 28 day time limit."
Grounds of appeal
Statutory appeals under the HPO
"(3) if, having considered an allegation…the [CCC] …concludes that it is well founded…
(5) …the [CCC] shall-
…(c) make an order imposing conditions with which the person concerned must comply for a specified period which shall not exceed three years (a "conditions of practice" order);…
(9) The person concerned may appeal to the appropriate court against an order made under paragraph (5) and article 38 shall apply to the appeal.
(10) Any such appeal must be brought before the end of the period of 28 days beginning with the date on which the notice of the order or decision appealed against is served on the person concerned."
"59. The Court reiterates that the right of access to the courts secured by Article 6(1) may be subject to limitations in the form of regulation by the State. In this respect the State enjoys a certain margin of appreciation. However, the Court must be satisfied, firstly, that the limitations applied do not restrict or reduce the access left to the individual in such a way or to such an extent that the very essence of the right is impaired. Secondly, a restriction must pursue a legitimate aim and there must be a reasonable relationship between the means employed and the aim sought to be achieved…" (emphasis added)
"33…In so far as the proceedings involve under the statute a right of appeal against any extradition decision, article 6.1 also requires that it be free from limitations impairing "the very essence" of the right, pursue a legitimate aim and involve a "reasonable relationship of proportionality between the means employed and the aim sought to be achieved" in accordance with the standard identified in Tolstoy…
39. …there is no reason to believe that Parliament either foresaw or intended the potential injustice which can result from absolute and inflexible time limits for appeals. It intended short and firm time limits, but can only have done so on the basis that this would in practice suffice to enable anyone wishing to appeal to do so without difficulty in time. In these circumstances, I consider that, in the case of a citizen of the United Kingdom like Mr Halligen, the statutory provisions concerning appeals can and should all be read subject to the qualification that the court must have a discretion in exceptional circumstances to extend time for both filing and service, where such statutory provisions would otherwise operate to prevent an appeal in a manner conflicting with the right of access to an appeal process held to exist under Article 6(1) in Tolstoy Miloslavsky. The High Court must have power in any individual case to determine whether the operation of the time limits would have this effect. If and to the extent it would do so, it must have power to permit and hear an out of time appeal which a litigant personally has done all he can to bring and notify timeously." (emphasis added)
"14…The context, exclusion from a profession, is still one of great importance to an appellant. There is good reason for there to be time limits with a high degree of strictness. However, one only has to consider hypothetical cases to appreciate that, without some margin for discretion, circumstances may cause absolute time limits to impair "the very essence" of the right of appeal conferred by statute. Take, for example, a case in which a person, having received a decision removing him or her from the Register, immediately succumbs to serious illness and remains in intensive care; or a case in which notice of the disciplinary decision has been sent by post but never arrives and time begins to run by reason of deemed service on the day after it was sent (Nursing and Midwifery Council (Fitness to Practise) Rules 2004, rule 34(4)). In such cases, the nurse or midwife in question might remain in blameless ignorance of the fact that time was running for the whole of the 28 day period. It seems to me that to take the absolute approach in such circumstances would be to allow the time limit to impair the very essence of the statutory right of appeal.
15. The real difficulty is where to draw the line…If Article 6 and section 3 of the Human Rights Act require Article 29(10) of the Order to be read down, it must be to the minimum extent necessary to secure ECHR compliance. In my judgment, this requires adoption of the same approach as that of Lord Mance in Pomiechowski. A discretion must only arise "in exceptional circumstances" and where the appellant "personally has done all he can to bring [the appeal] timeously" (paragraph 39). I do not believe that the discretion would arise save in a very small number of cases." (emphasis added)
Requirement for an address for service in the UK
"(1) A party to proceedings must give an address at which that party may be served with documents relating to those proceedings. The address must include a full postcode unless the court orders otherwise….
(2) Except where any other rule or practice direction makes different provision, a party's address for service must be –
(a) the business address within the United Kingdom of a solicitor acting for the party to be served;…
(c) where there is no solicitor acting for the party –
(i) an address within the United Kingdom at which the party resides or carries on business;…
(3) Where none of sub-paragraphs 2(a) or (c) applies, the party must give an address for service within the United Kingdom…
(8) This rule does not apply where an order made by the court under rule 6.27 (service by an alternative method or at an alternative place) specifies where a document may be served…"
Discussion and analysis
Ground 1: the status of Gibraltar
Ground 2: discretion to extend time
Conclusion
Lord Justice Baker :
Lord Justice Moylan :