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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Stevenson v General Optical Council [2015] EWHC 3099 (Admin) (30 September 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/3099.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3099 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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STEVENSON | Appellant | |
v | ||
GENERAL OPTICAL COUNCIL | Respondent |
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trading as DTI
8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr A Dos Santos (instructed by DWF Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"A person in respect of whom an appealable decision falling within sub-section 1 has been taken may within the period of 28 days beginning with the day on which the decision was served on him appeal against the decision to the relevant court."
"The appellant's Notice 161 was posted on 14 October 2014 by Guaranteed Next Day Delivery, delivery code AD 795 301 489 GB.
The Royal Mail tracker traced that course, stated that the item applicable to that code could not be delivered on 15 October 2014, and no safe place option was specified by the addressee."
"I contacted the Royal Courts of Justice by telephone [and gives the telephone number] and spoke to a lady, I did not ask her name, who asked me for the postage reference number.
I gave the lady the postage reference number and she informed me that she had no such record and there had been nothing scanned from the registry. She informed me that she would transfer me, to ask at the post room. My call was transferred back to the call menu by pressing '9' as directed.
I was answered by an operator who transferred me to the post room. A gentlemen answered the call. He said he could not give me much help as he was only helping out as there was a strike on, he did not specify where, and there was a shortage of staff.
"I gave him my name and reference number of the postage as I wanted it back but I queried the Royal Court of Justice's records. He took the details of my name and reference number. I then asked him for his name and he replied that his name was David. I asked him for his surname and realised that it was (inaudible) I then asked him if his Christian name was David, and learned his name was David."
"Within the period of 28 days beginning on the day on which the decision was served on you."
"When a step has to be taken within a period described at the beginning with a specified date then that day is included in the period but if the period is described as running from or after the specified day then that day is not included in the hearing."
"23) Where, under some legislative provision, an act is required to be done within a fixed period of time "beginning with" or "from" a specified day it is a question of construction whether the specified day itself is to be included in, or excluded from, that period. Where the period within which the act is to be done is expressed to be a number of days, months or years from or after a specified day, the courts have held, consistently since Young v Higgon (1840) 6 M&W 49, that the specified day is excluded from the period; that is to say, that the period commences on the day after the specified day. Examples of such an "exclusive" construction are found in The Goldsmith's Company v The West Metropolitan Railway Company [1904] 1 KB 1 ("the powers of the company for the compulsory purchase of lands for the purposes of this Act shall cease after the expiration of three years from the passing of this Act") and in re Lympe Investments Ltd [1972] 1 WLR 523 ("the company has for three weeks thereafter neglected to pay"). In Stewart v Chapman [1951] 2 KB 792 ("a person ... shall not be convicted unless ... within fourteen days of the commission of the offence a summons for the offence was served on him") Lord Goddard, Chief Justice, observed, at pages 78-9, that it was well established that "whatever the expression used" the day from which the period of time was to be reckoned was to be excluded.
24) Where, however, the period within which the act is to be done is expressed to be a period beginning with a specified day, then it has been held, with equal consistency over the past forty years or thereabouts, that the legislature (or the relevant rule making body, as the case may be) has shown a clear intention that the specified day must be included in the period. Examples of an "inclusive" construction are to be found in Hare v Gocher [1962] 2 QB 642 ("if within [the period of two months beginning with the commencement of this Act] the occupier of an existing site duly makes an application ... for a site licence") and in Trow v Ind Coope (West Midlands) Ltd [1967] 2 QB 899 ("a writ [...] is valid [...] for 12 months beginning with the date of its issue"). As Lord Justice Salmon pointed out in Trow v Ind Coope, at page 923, the approach adopted in the Goldsmith's Company case and Stewart v Chapman can have no application in a case where the period is expressed to begin on the specified date. He observed, at page 924, that "I cannot ... accept that, if words are to have any meaning, 'beginning with the date of its issue' can be construed to mean the same as 'beginning with the day after the date of its issue'".
"[...] 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 Practice) 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. Mr Pascall, on behalf of the appellants, does not contend for a general discretion to extend time. Parliament is used to providing such discretions, often circumscribed by conditions (see, for example Employment Rights Act 1996, section 111(2), in relation to unfair dismissal). The omission to do so on this occasion was no doubt deliberate. 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. Courts are experienced in exercising discretion on a basis of exceptionality. See, for example, the strictness with which the discretion is approached in relation to the 42 day time limit and the discretion to extend in connection with appeals from Employment Tribunals to the Employment Appeal Tribunal: United Arab Emirates v Abdelghafar [1995] ICR 65; Jurkowska v HLMAD Ltd [2008] EWCA Civ 231."
"The case of Ms Baines is more of a paradigm case. She was present when the adverse decision was announced on 14 February 2012. The decision letter was posted by first-class post on 17 February, a Friday. Time therefore began to run on 18 February. She actually received the letter on 20 February. Her notice of appeal was lodged on 19 March, two days out of time. Although that may be described as marginal, it is unexceptional and there was no good reason why it could not have been lodged in time. There is no evidence of any exceptional difficulties encountered by her or her advisers. We were simply told by Mr Pascall that it had taken some time for her to find a specialist solicitor and to obtain legal aid. In these circumstances, I am not disposed to remit her case to the Administrative Court for further consideration as Mr Pascall requests. She gains no assistance from the Pomiechowski approach. The strict time limit defeats her."
"I) DD did not contact the lawyers who had been acting for her until the last day before time for appealing expired.
II) Upon being contacted counsel immediately drafted grounds of appeal, without any assurance that funds would be available to pay her.
III) Within four days of being contacted (two of which were a weekend) the solicitors filed the appellant's notice.
IV) DD has served no evidence. She has therefore provided no explanation as to how and from whom she raised £235 to pay the court fee. Nor does she reveal when she first took steps to raise that money.
V) During February and March 2014 no-one gave any consideration to the question whether DD was entitled to remission of the court fee. On the material before us it appears that DD was so entitled.
35. On the basis of counsel's submissions and without the assistance of any evidence the judge made a finding that DD was unable to raise the court fee of £235 before 8th March 2014. I have read the transcript of the hearing below. There was no material before the court on which the judge was entitled to make that finding. The obvious inference from the known facts is that DD did not take any steps towards appealing until the very end of the 28 day period."
"Permission to apply from the Court of Appeal. Any appeal to that court, the decision of the High Court which was itself made on appeal."
"Where the appellant seeks permission from the Appeal Court requesting the appellant's notice, the appellant's file the appellant's notice at the Appeal Court within. The court makes a direction ...[Reading to the Words]... 21 days after the date of the decision of the Lower Court about how it wishes to appeal."