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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Squier, R (on the application of) v General Medical Council [2015] EWHC 299 (Admin) (13 February 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/299.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 299 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN (on the application of SQUIER) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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GENERAL MEDICAL COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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Tom Kark QC and Alexandra Felix (instructed by GMC Legal) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 22nd and 23rd January 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Ouseley :
Background
"2 a) You provided expert opinion evidence outside your field of expertise by:
i) presenting opinion evidence, based upon biochemical research, as to the likelihood that a low level fall could have caused the brain injury which baby 'A' suffered;
ii) presenting opinion evidence based in the fields of ophthalmic pathology and/or ophthalmology;
iii) giving an opinion in relation to the likelihood of baby A having had a lucid interval between injury and death.
b) You made assertions in support of your opinion which you knew or believed were insufficiently founded upon the evidence available, in that you:
i) asserted that baby A had vomited four or five times between an alleged fall at approximately 16:30 and 23:30 and that 'baby A vomited repeatedly over the next five hours';
ii) asserted that there was a left sided unilateral subdural haemorrhage.
c) You provided expert opinion evidence in which you purported to rely upon research papers including those set out below, whereas in fact the research did not support your opinion in the way in which you suggested, namely that in the circumstances of this case an accidental low level fall as opposed to an inflicted injury could have caused the brain injury:
[6 research papers are identified]
d) You provided expert opinion evidence in which you purported to rely upon research papers including that set out below, whereas in fact the research did not support your opinion in the way in which you suggested, namely that the child may have had a lucid interval:
Arbogast KB et al (2005)
3. You failed to present your report and the research material you relied upon in a way which was as complete and accurate as possible.
4. You failed to discharge your duties as an expert in that you:
i) Failed to work within the limits of your competence;
ii) Failed to be objective and unbiased;
iii) Failed to pay due regard to the views of other experts;
5. Your actions and omissions as described above in paragraphs 2 and 3:
i) Were misleading;
ii) Were irresponsible;
iii) Were deliberately misleading;
iv) Were dishonest;
v) Were likely to bring the reputation of the medical profession into disrepute."
The FTPP decision on the admissibility of the redacted judgments
"The committee or a panel may admit any evidence which they consider fair and relevant to the case before them, whether or not such evidence would be admissible in a court of law." S.I. 2004 No. 2608.
The FTPP accepted the submissions of its legal assessor that the issue was whether admitting the judgments in evidence would be relevant and fair at the finding of fact stage. It dealt first with relevance.
"23. The panel noted Mr Francis' submission that a judge's view set out in a judgment was no more valid than a member of the public sitting at the back of the court making notes on the case. The panel wholly rejected that proposition.
24. The panel accepts your submission that the factual elements of the judgments will assist the Panel's understanding of the background facts relating to the circumstances of each child's injury or death as found. The panel notes that the admission of the judgment is not conclusive evidence of any of the background facts. The GMC must still prove what Dr Squier did or did not do in the context of those background facts. Dr Squier and her representatives will have the opportunity to challenge the background facts of the judgements where necessary.
25. The relevance is two fold: in order to give context to each of the child protection cases; and to understand the evidence and the context in which that evidence was given by Dr Squier.
26. The panel considered that the judgments in so far as they deal with factual matters are relevant as prima facie evidence of those facts."
"31. The panel was concerned that there was likely to be a significant amount of material to establish matters which were not directly relevant to the allegations that Dr Squier faces. It potentially included a GMC file of 14,000 pages and it noted expert evidence in one of the child protection cases alone took four weeks. In essence, the panel was being invited to rehear the entirety for the child protection cases. The panel relied on the authorities that it is not required to conduct itself as a court of law rehearing all the evidence underlying the court's findings. The panel bore in mind that it has a duty to hear challenges to the evidence and attaché [sic] appropriate weight; and that the findings of the courts were not irrefutable when it comes to making due inquiry into the case.
32. The panel was satisfied that admitting the judgments was a proportionate means of settling the background to the child protection cases and that alternative means were likely to be disproportionate and unfair to the GMC in prosecuting the case.
33. The panel took account of submissions made on Dr Squier's behalf that it should rely on the primary evidence rather than judgments. The panel decided GMC v Meadow 2006 EWCA Civ 1390 was supportive of the propositions that: a) the facts of the case can only be understood in context to the judgments; and b) a proper assessment as to a doctor's misconduct could only be undertaken by having regard to the judgments that led to the allegations of misconduct. The panel also noted that it would be necessary to give appropriate weight and to have an understanding of the context in which a doctor gives evidence as a witness in court. This is a necessary part of dealing with that evidence fairly."
The particulars decision of 23 September 2004
"The panel is not persuaded by Mr Francis's submissions that Dr Squier does not know the way in which her conduct is being impugned by the GMC, such that she cannot mount a defence. The panel is satisfied that by cross referencing the schedule and the allegation, it is possible for a defence in regard to the "wrap up" allegations to be sufficiently mounted on her behalf. Further reference can be found in the GMC's opening statement where detail is given in relation to the nature of the "wrap up" charges."
Principles
"There can be no inflexible rule. However I agree with Mr Englehart [for the GMC] that in general it is preferable for proceedings to be allowed to take their course and a challenge to their validity to be taken by way of appeal. Consideration must also be given to the difficulty of organising such proceedings in a complex case and the potential inconvenience to witness who may have had to make special arrangements to attend the hearing, and may be reluctant to repeat the experience."
"19. In my view, however, the only question for the court is the first. Where it is alleged that a lower tribunal has acted in breach of the rules of fairness or natural justice, the court is not confined to reviewing the reasoning of the tribunal on Wednesbury principles. It must make its own independent judgement:
"… the question whether we are entitled to intervene at all is not to be answered … by reference to Wednesbury principles … Rather the question has to be decided in accordance with the principles of fair procedure which have been developed over the years, and of which the courts are the author and sole judge…" (R v Panel on Takeovers and Mergers ex p Guinness plc [1991] QB 146, 184 per Lloyd LJ).
Furthermore the question whether there has been a breach of those principles is one of law, not fact (see e.g. Rose v Humbles [1972] 1 WLR 33).
20. Accordingly although I will comment below on the discussion before the Committee, the decision of this court does not principally depend on how the matter was presented to the Tribunal or how they responded. What matters is whether they reached the right result."
"Of course the court will give great weight to the tribunal's own view of what is fair and will not lightly decide that a tribunal has adopted a procedure which is unfair, especially so distinguished and experienced a tribunal as the panel. But in the last resort the court is the arbiter of what is fair."
I add only that what is true for a distinguished and experienced tribunal is equally true for a specialist tribunal advised by a legal assessor.
Admissibility of the judgments
"(1) There could be no reasonable objection to the tribunal reading the judgment provided that it was clear and rigorous in its approach to that judgment. The judgment was admissible to prove background facts in the context of which C's misconduct had to be considered. That however was the limit of its functions in the particular circumstances of the instant case. The judge's views in the High Court action as to C's dishonesty and lack of integrity were not admissible to prove the Law Society's case against C in the disciplinary proceedings. In the instant case, the judge's conclusions were far more wide ranging than the allegations made in the disciplinary proceedings. They were not relied upon by the Law Society as proof of dishonest and the tribunal direction itself that it was an expert and experienced tribunal that was bound to apply a different standard of proof to that of the judge. Further, it was plain that the tribunal disregarded the judgment when reaching its own conclusions, uninfluenced by the conclusions of another."
"205. Where the conduct of an expert alleged to amount to a professional offence under scrutiny by his professional disciplinary body arises out of evidence he has given to a court or other tribunal, it is, therefore, important that that body should fully understand, and assess his conduct in the forensic context in which it arose. Of great importance are the circumstances in which he came to give the evidence, the way in which he gave it, and the potential effect, if any, it had on the proceedings and their outcome. If the disciplinary body lacks information to enable it properly to assess the expert's conduct in that forensic context, or fails properly to take it into account, a court reviewing its determination, is likely to bring important insights of its own to the matter. Not least among those should be an appreciation of the isolation of an expert witness, however seasoned in that role, in the alien confines of the witness box in an adversarial contest over which the judge and the lawyers hold sway.
208. It is in those respects that I believe the respective insights of the two Court of Appeal judgments would have been of help to the FPP. Unfortunately, as I have mentioned, it did not take or have the opportunity to consider them. In consequence, it appears, in my view, to have misunderstood or mistaken certain aspects of Professor Meadow's evidence and the circumstances in which he came to give it, and to have wrongly exaggerated the heinous effect, as it saw it, of what he said and its possible effect on the integrity and outcome of the trial."
"As the judge rightly recognised the foundation on which the rule must now rest is that findings of fact made by another decision maker are not to be admitted in a subsequent trial because the decision at that trial is to be made by the judge appointed to hear it ("the trial judge"), and not another. The trial judge must decide the case for himself on the evidence that he receives, and in the light of the submissions on that evidence made to him. To admit evidence of the findings of fact of another person, however distinguished, and however thorough and competent his examination of the issues may have been, risks the decision being made, at least in part, on evidence other than that which the trial judge has heard and in reliance on the opinion of someone who is neither the relevant decision maker nor an expert in any relevant discipline, of which decision making is not one. The opinion of someone who is not the trial judge is, therefore, as a matter of law, irrelevant and not one to which he ought to have regard."
Particulars
Conclusion