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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Bestway National Chemists Ltd (t/a Well Pharmacy), R (On the Application Of) v The Welsh Ministers [2017] EWHC 1983 (Admin) (31 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/1983.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 1983 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT IN WALES
B e f o r e :
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R on the application of Bestway National Chemists Limited (trading as Well Pharmacy) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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The Welsh Ministers |
Defendant |
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(1) Boots UK Limited (2) Dowlais Pharmacy Limited |
Interested Parties |
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Tom Cross (instructed by the Legal Services Department of the Welsh Government ) for the Defendant
Joanne Clement (instructed by Gabb & Co Solicitors) for the Second Interested Party
The first interested party did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing dates: 15 June 2017.
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Lewis:
INTRODUCTION
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
"An application … shall be granted by the Local Health Board only if it is satisfied that it is necessary or desirable to grant the application in order to secure, in the neighbourhood in which the premises from which the applicant intends to provide services are located, the adequate provision, by persons included in the list, of services specified in the application."
THE FACTS
The Applications
(1) On 28 May 2012 Dowlais applied for inclusion in the pharmaceutical list to provide pharmaceutical services at the Health Park. This would involve permitting an additional pharmacy in addition to those already on the pharmaceutical list;
(2) On 13 June 2012, the Co-operative applied to the Board for permission to change its premises from 18 Newmarket Walk to the Health Park;
(3) On 27 July 2012, Boots applied to the Board for permission to change its premises from a location on the Cyfartha Retail Park to the Health Park
The Decision and the Appeals.
The Report of the Panel
"an overprovision in pharmaceutical services due to the relocation of the general medical services from the Hollies Health Centre, Swan Street to the Health Park. They submitted that granting their change of premises would redistribute pharmaceutical services in line with the medical services and meet the established need for a pharmacy in the neighbourhood under consideration."
"There will be a cost to granting the application by Dowlais Pharmacy and this was a matter that was considered by the panel However, as previously noted, Mr Morgan had given evidence about the significant increase in the demand for pharmaceutical services in Merthyr and the Health Board's locality, and the average figure of 2,300 items per week was said to be 10% more than the average pharmacy in Wales dispenses. There was no evidence before the panel that contradicted Mr Morgan's submissions upon the affordability of the new contract"."
"152. Taking into account the Welsh Health Circular's Guidance about adaptation to change in circumstances and local provisions and the effect upon services to patients rather than on the effect upon other contractors, the panel concludes that patients within the neighbourhood and the LHB area are best served by maintaining the existing pharmaceutical provision in the town centre by the Co-Op and Boots and maintaining the LHB contracted pharmacy with Boots within the Cyfarthfa Retail Park. In the panel's judgement the best way to meet the increasing need for pharmaceutical services is by recommending the Dowlais Pharmacy should be awarded the contract to run the pharmacy within the Keir Hardie Health Park.
"153. This is the only one of three appeals before the panel which would not alter or reduce the existing pharmaceutical provisions within the existing and adjoining neighbourhood and would therefore clearly enable the Local Health Board to adapt to the growing need for pharmaceutical services within the Local Health Board area as well as within the specific neighbourhood.
"154. In making this recommendation, the panel do not do so because they consider the Dowlais Pharmacy would be able to equip and run the pharmacy in the Health Park in a more efficient or modern fashion than Boots or Co-Op. We have already made it clear that we consider that all of the applicants would be able to provide such a service.
"155. The panel note that recommending the allowance of the Dowlais Pharmacy appeal would be the only one of the three applications that would not result in a reduction in service provision. If the Co-Op's relocation for its smaller pharmacy was granted, then the additional hours that that pharmacy is open at the weekends within the town centre, would be lost as the pharmacy in the Health Park would not be open at the weekend. We do consider that the admission by Mr Reissner that the smaller Co-Op pharmacy was being kept on in the hope of relocating it and being used to argue against the inclusion of Dowlais Pharmacy upon the list, would in practice, if accepted, have the same effect as allowing a "closed shop" to operate.
"156. Therefore after very careful consideration of all of the oral and written material before us, the panel recommends to the Welsh Ministers that the appeal by Dowlais Pharmacy against the decision of the Cwm Taf Health Board to refuse their application for inclusion in the pharmaceutical list at Keir Hardie Health Park be allowed."
The Decision of the Welsh Ministers
"1. The Welsh Ministers concluded that the provision of a pharmacy at the Health Park was not necessary but was desirable in order to secure the adequate provision, by persons included in the pharmaceutical list, of pharmaceutical services in the neighbourhood. The Welsh Ministers considered the Appeals together as provided for under regulation 8(5) of the Regulations. The Welsh Ministers, having determined that it was desirable to grant an application, decided that if the Boots UK Ltd ("Boots") application were granted it would diminish the pharmaceutical services currently provided to those persons resident in Winchfawr, Heolgerrig, Gellideg and Twyncarmel and to the transient population who visit the Retail Park and the loss of the extended hours provision would amount to a diminution of the pharmaceutical services provided across the wider Local Health Board area; they considered these to be relevant factors with regard to this application. They also decided if the application by the Co-operative Pharmacy Ltd ("Co-op") was granted it would diminish the level of services available to the population in the town centre to a level that would have an adverse effect on the population in that neighbourhood and in the wider LHB area. The Welsh Ministers determined that of the applications made by Boots, Co-op and Dowlais Pharmacy Ltd ("Dowlais"), Dowlais was the only application which would not reduce the existing pharmaceutical services provision across the wider LHB area and, in particular, in the Newmarket Walk neighbourhood and in adjoining neighbourhood."
"there is no national or [Board] target for the number of pharmacy premises within a neighbourhood or wider area. Furthermore that local needs and circumstances may change over time and that the pattern of pharmacy provision must adapt to fill these changing patterns. They were aware that between 14,500 and 15,000 patients were registered with doctors at the Health Park, and it was likely that a large proportion of those would be resident outside the neighbourhood of the Health Park in other neighbourhoods within Merthyr Tydfil. This was considered to amount to a significant transient population which would now be visiting the neighbourhood to access general medical services. Whilst it was likely that some of these patients may be able to access pharmaceutical services on their journeys into and out of the application neighbourhood, it was considered that a proportion of these patients were likely to require access to pharmaceutical services from within the application neighbourhood itself. The Welsh Ministers therefore decided that there had been an increase in demand for pharmaceutical services in the neighbourhood occasioned by the provision of general medical services at the Health Park."
"66. With regard to the appeals by Boots and Dowlais against the decision of the [Board] to grant the application by the Co-Op for a change of premises to Keir Hardie Health Park: the Welsh Ministers are aware that the central argument put forward by the Co-Op in support of their application is that the effect of the relocation of the Hollies Surgery into the Health Park meant there was an overprovision of pharmaceutical services in the adjoining neighbourhood (including the No 18 Newmarket Walk the pharmacy which it was seeking to relocate). The Co-Op argue that granting their application would secure the better distribution of pharmacies and would address the overprovision in the adjoining neighbourhood. As well as the three pharmacies located on Newmarket Walk, Co-Op have drawn attention to the fact that there is a fourth pharmacy located in the town centre (Beacon Pharmacy) which provides pharmaceutical services to the population in the Merthyr area."
"considered the effect of the loss of the Co-op pharmacy at 18 Newmarket Walk in the adjoining neighbourhood if Co-Op's application to re-locate those premises to the Health Park were approved. In considering this matter they were, once again, mindful of the evidence that had been presented to the Oral Hearing Panel by Mr Morgan on behalf of Dowlais Pharmacy and the fact that none of the parties at the oral hearing (nor the [Board]) challenged that evidence. That evidence demonstrates an increasing need for pharmaceutical services across the [Board's] area. The Welsh Ministers believe it is reasonable to conclude that a proportion of this increase in need for pharmaceutical services will be for the Merthyr Tydfil area including the neighbourhood served by the Co-op at 18 Newmarket Walk."
"74. The Welsh Ministers therefore concluded that, based on the evidence submitted at the Oral Hearing, which shows an increasing need for pharmaceutical services across the [Board's] area, there is not an overprovision of pharmaceutical services in the neighbourhood served by 18 Newmarket Walk and adjoining neighbourhoods. The Welsh Ministers acknowledge that there is a cluster of pharmacies on Newmarket Walk but that this is not unusual as, as submitted at the Oral Hearing by Mr Loughrey on behalf of Boots, pharmacies are often located in town centres because "this is where the population go to". Therefore, to grant the Co-op's application for change of premises to Keir Hardie Health Park would have an adverse effect upon access to pharmaceutical services at Newmarket Walk. In addition granting the application would result in a reduction in the pharmacy opening hours across the [Board's] area as a pharmacy at Keir Hardie Health Park would not be open on the weekends. Welsh Ministers are also mindful that the WHC Guidance requires decision makers to have regard to "the effect on services to patients" when making decisions under the Regulations. Therefore, on the balance of the evidence before them, the Welsh Ministers considered that that the provision of pharmaceutical services to patients in the Newmarket Walk Neighbourhood would be diminished if the Co-op were to relocate its premises at 18 Newmarket Walk to the Health Park. For these reasons the Welsh Ministers uphold the appeals by Boots and Dowlais Pharmacy against the decision of Cwm Taf [Board] to grant the application by the Co-Op pharmacy for a change of premises to the Keir Hardie Health Park.
"… taking into consideration the increasing need for pharmaceutical services across the [Board's] area and number and distribution of pharmacies across the area of Cwm Taf University Health Board, the Welsh Ministers conclude that patients within the neighbourhood of Keir Hardie Health Park, patients within the neighbourhood served by the pharmacies in Newmarket Walk and patients within the wider [Board] area would best be served by maintaining the existing pharmaceutical services provision (by Co-op and Boots and Beacons) in Merthyr town Centre and by Boots within the Cyfartha Retail Park and by granting the application by Dowlais for inclusion in the list at Keir Hardie Health Park.
"79. The Welsh Ministers therefore uphold the appeal by Dowlais against the decision of Cwm Taf University Health Board to refuse the application by Dowlais pharmacy for inclusion in the list at Keir Hardie Health Park."
(1) allowed the appeal by Boots and Dowlais against the decision of the Board to grant the Co-operative's application to transfer its pharmacy from premises at 18 Newmarket Walk, in the town centre of Merthyr, to the Health Park, with the result that it could not transfer its pharmacy;
(2) dismissed the appeal by Boots against the decision of the Board refusing to grant the application by Boots to transfer its premises from the Cyfartha Retail Park to the Health Park; and
(3) allowed the appeal by Dowlais against the decision of the Board refusing its application for inclusion in the pharmaceutical list to provide pharmaceutical services from a location in the Health Park.
THE PLEADINGS AND THE ISSUES
(1) The Welsh Ministers misdirected themselves in law regarding the evidence as to the increased need for pharmaceutical services across the Board's area as a whole when considering whether there was an overprovision of pharmaceutical services in the neighbourhood served by the Claimant's existing premises at 18 Newmarket Walk;
(2) The Welsh Ministers took into account an immaterial consideration or reached a finding based on no evidence in respect of its conclusion as to whether there was overprovision of pharmaceutical services in the neighbourhood served by 18 Newmarket Walk; and
(3) The Welsh Ministers failed to provide any, or any lawful reasons for their conclusion that there was no overprovision of pharmaceutical services in the neighbourhood served by 18 Newmarket Walk.
(1) Did the Welsh Ministers err in their approach to the question of whether there was an overprovision of pharmaceutical services in the neighbourhood including the town centre of Merthyr Tydfil, or act irrationally or on the basis of no evidence and did they fail to give adequate reasons for their conclusion ?
(2) Is it arguable that the Welsh Ministers failed to have regard to the fact that granting the application by Dowlais would incur additional cost and, if so, did the Welsh Ministers act unlawfully and should any remedy be granted?
THE FIRST ISSUE: THE QUESTION OF OVERPROVISION
THE SECOND ISSUE – FAILURE TO TAKE ACCOUNT OF FINANCIAL CONSIDERATIONS
"36 The reasons for a decision must be intelligible and they must be adequate. They must enable the reader to understand why the matter was decided as it was and what conclusions were reached on the "principal important controversial issues", disclosing how any issue of law or fact was resolved. Reasons can be briefly stated, the degree of particularity required depending entirely on the nature of the issues falling for decision. The reasoning must not give rise to a substantial doubt as to whether the decision-maker erred in law, for example by misunderstanding some relevant policy or some other important matter or by failing to reach a rational decision on relevant grounds. But such adverse inference will not readily be drawn. The reasons need refer only to the main issues in the dispute, not to every material consideration. They should enable disappointed developers to assess their prospects of obtaining some alternative development permission, or, as the case may be, their unsuccessful opponents to understand how the policy or approach underlying the grant of permission may impact upon future such applications. Decision letters must be read in a straightforward manner, recognising that they are addressed to parties well aware of the issues involved and the arguments advanced. A reasons challenge will only succeed if the party aggrieved can satisfy the court that he has genuinely been substantially prejudiced by the failure to provide an adequately reasoned decision."
CONCLUSION