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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Mullins v McFarlane & Anor [2006] EWHC 986 (QB) (05 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/986.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 986 (QB), [2006] LLR 437 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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WILLIAM P MULLINS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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NIGEL MCFARLANE (sued pursuant to CPR 19.6(1) in his capacity as secretary to the Appeal Board of the Jockey Club, representing the members of the Appeal Board which determined the Claimant's appeal on 20 August 2004) THE JOCKEY CLUB |
Defendants |
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The First Defendant represented by Charles Russell LLP, made written submissions but did not appear.
Mark Warby QC and Iain Christie (instructed by Charles Russell LLP) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 30, 31 March 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Stanley Burnton:
Introduction
The facts
(1) The Stewards shall publish or cause to be published on behalf of the Club such rules (hereinafter called "the Rules of Racing") regulations, orders and directions as they may think necessary for the proper conduct of horseracing, race meetings and racehorse training. (2) The Stewards shall have power on behalf of the club to issue licences and permits in relation to horseracing, race meetings or racehorse training . . .
Without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing Rule 1A (xiv) and save where any Rule expressly provides otherwise, (the Stewards have power at their discretion) to make such arrangements as they think fit for any one or more of their powers or other functions under these Rules or Instructions to be exercised on their behalf and in their name by any employee of the Jockey club where they are satisfied that it is in the interest of the efficient administration of horseracing and the operation of these Rules and the Regulations to do so. Further, the Stewards of the Jockey Club have the power at any time to ratify the exercise or purported exercise of any power or function on their behalf by any employee of the Jockey Club where they think fit notwithstanding that the individual may not have been duly authorised by the Stewards of the Jockey Club at the relevant time.
Where a horse has been the subject of an examination under Rule 14(vi) and the result of an analysis of any sample of its tissue, body, fluid or excreta is positive the horse shall be disqualified for the race in question and may at the discretion of the Stewards of the Jockey club, be disqualified for such time and for such races subsequent to the race in question as they shall determine. For the purpose of this Sub-Rule a positive analysis is as defined in Rule 53 (ii).
A result of an Analysis of any Sample is positive if:-
a Certificate of Analysis reports the presence in the Sample of a substance which is, in the opinion of a Veterinary Officer, unless the contrary is proved to the satisfaction of the Stewards of the Jockey Club, included in the List of Prohibited Substances published from time to time by the Stewards of the Jockey Club and the concentration of such substance is at or above the threshold level for that substance established from time to time by the Stewards of the Jockey Club …
LIST OF BANNED SUBSTANCES AND NOTIFIABLE MEDICATIONS
The Stewards of the Jockey Club give notice that the following are Banned Substances and Notifiable Medications under the Rules of Racing …
Part 1 – Banned Substances
Alcohol – at a threshold in the A sample at or above 54 mg per 100 ml in urine.
…
Part 2 – Banned Substances
Diuretics
Opiates and Opioids …
(Substances in this group include, but are not exclusively restricted to, heroin, methadone, morphine and pethidine).
Note:
1. In accordance with Paragraph 1.6 of the Protocol, the chosen body fluid for sampling for Banned Substances listed in Part 1 and 2 above will be urine.
2. Substances without thresholds will be declared positive at the limit of detection using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry.
The Stewards of the Jockey Club give notice that in accordance with Rule 53(ii) of the Rules of Racing they have established the following threshold levels for the substances shown.
There follows a list of substances and applicable quantities. For example, for hydrocortisone it is 1 microgram per millilitre in urine. Morphine is not one of the substances shown in the list.
"14. Save as provided in this paragraph, appeals shall only be made by a person who has been made subject to a penalty. In the case of a decision to disqualify a horse or demote its placing, an appeal may be made by one or more of the trainer, the rider or the owner of the horse. In such a case, and unless the Chairman of the Appeal Board shall decide otherwise, where more than one person wishes to appeal the appeal shall be treated as a joint appeal and the appellants shall choose one representative from amongst their number and shall only be permitted joint legal representation."
Having discussed the morphine "cut off" with Christopher, and on the assumption that the batch of contaminated feed that caused our recent problems has now all been consumed or recalled, we think that we should revise, at least temporarily, our GB morphine cut off. Once the apparent anomalies of quantification have been resolved between laboratories, and we are clearer about the appropriate inter-horse component in safety factors, we may wish to revise the cut off. Until then, please regard this e-mail as a formal instruction not to confirm morphine in samples which, in your opinion are likely to contain more that 50ng/ml of morphine.
As you have no doubt noticed, the last sentence in my instruction should read:
"Until then, please regard this email as a formal instruction not to confirm morphine in post race urine samples which, in your opinion are likely to contain less than 50ng/ml of morphine."
Those threshold questions and issues were agreed and Mr Fitzgerald was content that they gave him a proper opportunity to run his case in its various aspects. Depending on the answers to the questions and issues, it would be open to Mr Fitzgerald to advance his case on fairness fully. However, if the answers were adverse to his case, no such need would arise.
29. By way of background to the instruction there had been a meeting of the Regulatory Committee of the Jockey Club on 10 June 2002 in which Mr Foster reported to that committee on recommendations that were being discussed by the European Horserace Scientific Liaison Committee ("EHSLC") in relation to the desirability of establishing agreed "reporting levels" in connection with certain drugs. The minutes of the meetings set out the position.
30. One issue of fact which we do have to resolve is whether or not there is any difference in substance between a "threshold level" on the one hand and a "reporting level" or "limit of detection" on the other hand.
31. We find that there is a real difference between the two concepts and agree with the explanations given by Dr Webbon and by Mr Maynard both as to why this is so and as to why the specific instruction was given to HFL in the emails of 28 March 2003. Dr Webbon's evidence was that there are some drugs which are either produced naturally by the horse or, as practical experience has shown, are virtually impossible to exclude from a horse's feed. International (and equivalent national) threshold levels are set for substances which are perceived by the regulatory authorities to fall into one or other of these categories. For all other drugs, no threshold levels are set. Morphine is a drug for which no threshold level has been set. In order to detect the presence of a substance such as morphine, a laboratory will use what is called a limit of detection. Dr Webbon was asked what this meant. He said this,-
"In simple terms, …, if we submit to the laboratory a sample of urine, and they say that a given drug either is or is not present in that sample, …, what they really mean is that the drug is either detectable or not detectable in that sample, and whether or not it is detectable depends upon the concentration which can be detected. So every analytical method will have, inevitably, a limit of detection."
32. However there have been advances in analytical (testing methods), the consequence of which is to make ever more sensitive findings in relation to samples. As doping becomes more sophisticated, this is desirable for some drugs but not necessary and even undesirable in relation to others. In relation to drugs of the latter type, it is desirable to have an agreed reporting level for screening purposes in order to identify whether or not the substance is present in a horse. Morphine is one such drug. There have been discussions at both the international and European level on the harmonisation of limits of detection, involving the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities and the EHSLC. At the time of the test carried out by HFL for Be My Royal (IRE), the limit of detection which it was using (about 10 ng per ml) was consistent with proposals that had been advanced in the context of the discussion referred to above.
Dr Webbon then told us that there was a perceived lack of uniformity in analytical procedures between different laboratories and these differences lay behind the specific instruction given to HFL to use 50ng per ml rather than 10 ng per ml. He then said:
"So, in an attempt to try to keep the system within the various laboratories as harmonised as possible until we have an opportunity to go through a formal harmonisation procedure, we decided that it would be more appropriate for the HFL, once [this] cluster of cases [of which the present is one] were finished."
It is right to record as a fact that there has indeed been a cluster of cases where contaminated horsefeed appears to be the likely source of the positive samples in those cases. Earlier in his evidence, Dr Webbon had also referred to a meeting of the EHSLC where this had been discussed, with particular reference to the different testing procedures followed in France and Ireland.
33. Furthermore, as Dr Webbon told us, the setting of the limit of detection had nothing to do with any assessment of the capabilities of the morphine in the performance of a horse. He described the setting of a limit of detection as being in effect an instruction to a laboratory no to confirm samples below the limit but, as he put it, "if a sample was confirmed at less than that, it would still be a positive sample".
34. On 6 May 2003 Dr Webbon reported to the Regulatory Board of the Jockey Club. The minutes of that meeting are before us. Dr Webbon reported that he was now satisfied that the contaminated feed which produced 39 positives for morphine was no longer in existence and it was unlikely that there would be any more such positive samples. He reported as follows,-
"This matter had been discussed at length with representatives from France, Ireland Germany and Italy. There was some concern as to how to deal with morphine as it was inappropriate as a Class I drug for it to have a threshold level. It was therefore important that the five laboratories used the same method to detect the drug.."
35. The instruction given on 28 March 2003 was, as we find, a reporting level or limit of detection.
Is there in fact a de facto threshold of 50 nanograms per millilitre now in operation for morphine such that a sample should not now be found to be positive unless it is reliably shown that the concentration is in excess of 50 nanograms per millilitre?
43. Mr Mullins' case is that the amount of morphine in fact present in the horse was less than 50ng per ml and that a de facto threshold was set after the race. The argument that a threshold now exists is based on the two emails of 28 March 2003 referred to above and the instruction which they contain.
44. However, we do not consider that this instruction amounted to the creation of a "threshold level". As indicated, we find that the instruction was a "limit of detection" or "reporting level".
45. There is another difficulty in the way of Mr Fitzgerald's submission. It relies on construing the words in Rule 53(ii) "…established from time to time.." as including a reference to any time before the relevant enquiry takes place. We do not agree. We consider that the time contemplated by Rule 53(ii) is the time at which the breach of the regulation is alleged to have occurred, and not the date of the enquiry.
46. We therefore answer question 3 in the negative. Given our conclusions, we did not consider it necessary to reach any view as to whether or not the limit of detection had been "established…by the Stewards of the Jockey Club" within Rule 53(ii).
(i) The panel wrongly found that the instruction now in force to disregard quantities of fifty nanograms or less merely established a "limit of detection" whereas it plainly does far more than that. The limit referred to in the instruction operates as a threshold level because it means that even through quantities between 10 and fifty nanograms are still detected, they are not now acted upon by the Jockey Club. Moreover, it was confirmed in evidence by Dr Webbon that this was partly because he was confident that quantities below fifty nanograms would have no effect on the performance of the horse.
(ii) As to the operative time at which to determine whether there is a threshold, it is submitted that the operative time is the time of the hearing at which the Panel is being invited to find out that there has been a positive analysis within the meaning if Rule 53 (ii).
Terminology in Regard to Presence of Prohibited Substance
17. It is helpful, we believe, to clarify at the outset the meaning of the terms used in regard to the different levels of a particular Prohibited Substance which might be present in a sample.
Limits of Detection and Threshold Levels
18. In screening samples of Prohibited Substances laboratories have Limits of Detection (LODs). There are two types of LOD. First is the 'Method LOD', that is a concentration below which the analyst will not be able to detect the presence of a given substance. Accordingly this level is determined by the scientific method employment (see Reasons para 31). However, as scientific technology has improved, lower and lower concentrations of a particular Prohibited Substance have been detected in samples until a point may be reached below which the Regulator will not wish to go. In such circumstances the LOD may be changed through an executive, unpublished instruction given on behalf of the Stewards of the Jockey Club to HFL to the effect that HFL's Report concerning a sample should not disclose the presence of a particular drug below a certain level. This fixed LOD, which may be subject to change at some later date, is also called a Reporting (or Cut-Off) Level. However because the system of establishing the presence of a minute quantity of a Prohibited Substance can be a complex, comparative process, different laboratories in different countries may, through their individual scientific tests for the same Prohibited Substance, arrive at somewhat differing LODs/Reporting Levels in respect of the same sample. For this reason the Jockey Club will, in certain circumstances, endeavour to harmonise or seek to harmonise, though international discussions levels of LODs/Reporting Levels (see evidence of Dr Webbon …). This may lead to the introduction or change of an LOD/Reporting Level.
19. Dr Webbon gave evidence that although it can be said with reasonable confidence, on scientific data, that a particular LOD has no measurable effect on the performance of a horse, he nevertheless went on to add "but, to prove that anything at any concentration is ineffective is absolutely impossible" (see his evidence (at 2/435B-D). However, it is a recognised procedure that, in establishing a Reporting (or Cut-Off) Level, the Jockey Club will be confident that the level identified could not have had any measurable effect on the horse's performance. This is usually achieved by taking a level at which the particular drug will be known to impact on a horse's performance and then, through a consensus of international experts in the field (see in particular extracts from the article in the Equine Journal 1/156), dividing such figure by a factor of 500 (the safety factor process). Thus Dr Webbon said in evidence that this is a factor:-
"which would allow racing administrators, the racing public, the betting public to be confident that the horse was running free of any possible conceivable effect of the drug." ...
In the course of the evidence different phraseology was used in regard to the possible "effect on performance" of a particular substance on a horse. Unless otherwise qualified we take the meaning of "no effect on performance" to indicate that scientific evidence can be expected to demonstrate with confidence that the substance, at the level in question, would not have any measurable effect on the horse's performance.
20. There is, however, one essential qualification which has had to be made in regard to LODs. This concerns a particular group of Prohibited Substances which can, from time to time, be unavoidably present in horses at detectable LODs in normal circumstances. These may be unavoidably present because they are (a) endogenous, that is produced naturally by the horse, and/or (b) exogenously that is originating externally in circumstances in which it is virtually impossible in practice to exclude the substance from the horse's feed. These particular substances, when present in a horse's system, are liable to be detected at existing LODs. In order to redress the situation, discussion and research at international level have taken place and a number of named Prohibited Substances in this group have, through the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities, been agreed upon and, consequent on such agreement, have been given what are known as Threshold Levels and then incorporated into National Rule Books. Those which have been agreed to date are nine in number and are incorporated as named specific substances, listed under Instruction C1 para 3 of the Rules. Morphine is not among them. In this group the Threshold Level has been set by reference to research and scientific data such that the International and National Threshold Level assigned to the Prohibited Substance will have been raised to a limited extent in order to avoid positive levels being reported in normal circumstances. This methodology does not, of itself, involve an assessment of the level at which the substance will have a measurable effect on the performance of a horse. Furthermore the particular Threshold Level set will be applied uniformly by all laboratories carrying out analyses under the Rules. It is also essential to appreciate that, where a particular Prohibited Substance is not endogenous to the horse and is not expected in normal circumstances to enter a horse exogenously, as applies, for example, to those in the amphetamine class, no Reporting Level will normally be set for such a substance, unless it is thought that the particular method of analysis has become so developed and the quantity of the substance so minute that the cost of further reducing the Method LOD is not justified. Indeed the current testing for almost any drug has reached such acute sensitivity that amounts can now be measured, in layman's terms, in the most miniscule quantities.
21. We consider the Panel correctly summarised the position in regard to these matters in paragraphs 30-33 inclusive of its Reasons.
Morphine
22. Turning to morphine, it is also important to appreciate, as was unchallenged in evidence, that national and international experience shows that, in regard to the horse, morphine might be endogenous – there is debate as to whether morphine can in fact be so produced – and/or exogenous through the "innocent" feeding of morphine in contaminated feedstuff. However any concentration thereby generated is so low that, as was confirmed in discussions at international level, an LOD established with HFL for morphine at a level of 10ng/ml has not been expected in normal circumstances to disclose the low amounts of morphine which may be in a horse's system with either endogenously or exogenously by "innocent" feeding (see Dr Webbon 2/530G-531D). By way of support for these propositions, Mr Maynard's evidence (1/104 para 19) was that during the 12 months preceding December 2002 over 8000 samples were analysed for the Jockey Club in like manner to that applied to the Be My Royal sample. During that period not a single sample containing morphine was reported to the Jockey Club. Furthermore, prior to December 2002, the last sample which had been reported to the Jockey Club as containing morphine had been in 1994. Indeed it was Dr Webbon's evidence that he was satisfied, in particular in the light of the absence of the finding of morphine in the many tests above referred to, that it was appropriate to leave the figure at 10ng per ml for morphine as the appropriate LOD. There was also further evidence that the safety factor process (see above) had been applied to morphine and that this had produced a figure also around 10ng per ml. However, following the "cluster" of positives at about the end of 2002, Dr Webbon, after consultation with the National Racing Authorities, reassessed the position after it had become apparent that the contaminated feedstuff was no longer in circulation. He then gave an instruction to HFL on 28 March 2003 not to report as positive an LOD of morphine at less than 50ng per ml in an attempt to harmonise the level with other countries. We indicate later, in more detail (see paragraph 88 below), as to why he took this course. Dr Webbon made clear that the only laboratory to which this change of Cut-Off Level to 50ng per ml was given was HFL. No international agreement on overall harmonisation has as yet been finalised. Indeed as the Panel stated in it Reasons at paragraph 34:-
The Board quoted paragraph 34 of the Disciplinary Panel's reasons, including the citation of the passage from the minutes of the meeting of the Regulatory Board of the Jockey Club of 6 May 2003, and continued:
23. As has been pointed out morphine is not listed as a substance for which a Threshold Level has been set. At the time of the race in question the LOD for morphine was at 10 ng per ml and above (see our confirmation of the Panel's finding as to this at paragraphs 86 to 90 below), and it was to this level that the sample in question was tested. Under the Rules there is no duty on the Jockey Club to set Reporting Levels and no reference to Reporting or Cut-Off Levels (excluding the Threshold Levels expressly referred to in Instruction C1 para 3) is made within the Rules. The fixing of such Levels arises through policy decisions made on behalf of the Jockey Club. Furthermore it was only subsequent to the race in question that the Reporting Level for morphine was increased from 10ng per ml to 50 ng per ml.
88. It is important, we consider, to bear in mind why the new LOD of 50ng per ml was introduced. By way of background to the instruction there had been a meeting of the Regulatory Committee of the Jockey Club in 10 June 2002 at which it was reported … that there were discussions within the EHSLC in relation to the desirability of establishing agreed "Reporting Levels" in connection with certain drugs. It was, however, consequent on the abnormal figures thrown up by the batch of morphine cases in late 2002 that Dr Webbon was prompted to reassess the situation as to the LODs for morphine in Europe. Following such reassessment … stating that data from the outbreak of morphine positives suggested that there were "anomalies of Quantification with other laboratories" (see Dr Webbon 2/243Fm 2/439B-440D, 2/531 F-G and Minutes of May 2003 Meeting of the Regulatory Board of the Jockey Club (1/141)). He thought that the HFL test procedure was probably more effective and sensitive than its international counterparts. Accordingly the instruction was, as Dr Webbon put it (see 2/531G-532/B), "to try to keep the system within the various laboratories as harmonised as possible until we have the opportunity to get through a formal harmonisation procedure". As Dr Webbon pointed out in his witness statement this course also allowed a further safety margin to be reflected in the Reporting Level of morphine (see 1/122 para 5). He went on to say that this Cut-Off point may still need to be revised after further research in order to meet the aim of establishing an international harmonisation level. He also made clear in evidence his view that if HFL was to detect morphine at a concentration of less than 50ng per ml such concentration would not have a measurable effect on performance. However, he was clearly not saying, as Mr Fitzgerald was at one stage seeking to imply, that the figure of 50ng per ml was some possible dividing line between morphine having no effect on performance. Dr Webbon, by his instruction of the 28 March 2003, was seeking to achieve harmonisation between HFL and other international laboratories by giving the instruction that levels at 50 ng per ml and over were only to be reported as positive. In so doing Dr Webbon, notwithstanding that the Rules on their face do not permit any Prohibited Substance to be present in a horse, was following the policy of the Jockey Club to make a concession, in certain circumstances, in the LOD or Reporting Level in regard to certain Prohibited Substances. In our view the Panel correctly dealt with these matters in their Reasons at paragraphs 25 and 33 (1/262-263).
The present proceedings
The issues before me
"… the Appeal Board reached a conclusion that was arbitrary and capricious:
(1) it was arbitrary in that the Appeal Board disapplied a threshold set at a level intended to preserve the prevention of performance enhancement and consequently penalised an innocent man whose horse's sample concentration had not been proved to exceed that level;
(2) it was capricious in that the interpretation adopted means that the Jockey Club can make and unmake thresholds in secret and have them applied and disapplied on a whim."
Conclusion