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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Nursing & Midwifery Council & Anor v Harrold [2015] EWHC 2254 (QB) (31 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/2254.html Cite as: [2016] IRLR 30, [2015] EWHC 2254 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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NURSING & MIDWIFERY COUNCIL & anr |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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HARROLD |
Defendant |
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Claire Darwin (instructed by Slater & Gordon) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 23 July 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
Background
The CRO regime
"Rule 3.11 Power of the court to make civil restraint orders
3.11
A practice direction may set out—
(a) the circumstances in which the court has the power to make a civil restraint order against a party to proceedings;
(b) the procedure where a party applies for a civil restraint order against another party; and
(c) the consequences of the court making a civil restraint order."
(i) a limited CRO restrains the party against whom the order is made from making any further applications in the proceedings in which the order is made without first obtaining the permission of the judge identified in the CRO (para 2.2(1) of the PD). It is a pre-condition for making a limited CRO that the party in question should have made two or more applications which are "totally without merit" (para 2.1 of the PD );
(ii) an extended CRO restrains the party in question from issuing claims or making applications in the High Court or any County Court (if the order has been made by a judge of the High Court) where those claims or applications concern any matter involving or relating to or touching upon or leading to the proceedings in which the order is made without first obtaining the permission of the judge identified in the CRO (para 3.2(1) of the PD). The pre-condition for the making of an extended CRO is that the party in question has "persistently issued claims or made applications which are totally without merit" (para 3.1 of the PD);
(iii) a general CRO restrains the party in question from issuing any claim or making any application in the High Court or any County Court (if the order has been made by a judge of the High Court) without first obtaining the permission of the judge identified in the CRO (para 4.2(1) of the PD). The pre-condition for the making of a general CRO is that the party restrained should have persisted in issuing claims, or making applications, which were "totally without merit" in circumstances where an extended CRO would not be sufficient or appropriate (para 4.1 of the PD ).
The jurisdictional issue
(1) "As a matter of principle the general jurisdiction of the High Court is unlimited save insofar as it has been taken away by statute".
(2) "The inherent jurisdiction derives historically from coercion, that is to say punishment for contempt of court and of its process, and regulation, that is to say regulating the practice of the court and preventing abuse of its process".
(3) "Under its inherent jurisdiction the High Court has the power, not to review the decisions of inferior courts, but (1) to prevent interference with the due course of justice in those courts and (2) to assist them so that they may administer justice fully and effectively".
(4) "The powers of the court under the inherent jurisdiction are complementary to its powers under the Rules and are not replaced by them".
"The control and superintendence of the High Court over inferior courts stems, at any rate in part, from the jurisdiction of the Court of King's Bench in matters of contempt of court. Under its inherent jurisdiction, the High Court has power by summary process to prevent any person from interfering with the due courts of justice in any inferior court and to punish any such misconduct as a contempt of court, i.e., of the High Court . The basis for the exercise of this jurisdiction is that the inferior courts have not the power to protect themselves.
But the High court also has power under its inherent jurisdiction to render assistance to inferior courts to enable them to administer justice fully and effectively, e.g., by the issue of a sub-poena to attend and give evidence, and to exercise general superintendence over the proceedings of inferior courts, e.g., to admit to bail..."
"The High Court has traditionally exercised a supervisory jurisdiction in relation to the county court and although that jurisdiction is normally exercised over the county court by means of judicial review this does not mean that it is the only way the jurisdiction can be exercised. It could for example properly be exercised by the granting of an injunction or by the sort of orders made by Neuberger J. If authority was needed for this it is provided by In re Connolly Brothers Ltd. [1911] 1 Ch 731 . In that case the proceedings which were restrained were in the Lancaster Palatine Court and not a county court. In addition the proceedings had already been commenced when they were restrained. Furthermore the injunction would be enforceable against the individual and not the court. None the less these distinctions do not alter the principle involved. The county court will give effect to the High Court order in the same way as it would give effect to an order made by a county court judge. We still have a High Court and county courts with separate but overlapping jurisdictions. However both courts are part of the same civil justice system."
(1) The High Court's supervisory jurisdiction over inferior courts and tribunals is statutory and there is no statutory power to make a CRO relating to proceedings in the ET.
(2) There are limits to the High Court's inherent jurisdiction and the modern approach is to the exercise of such jurisdiction is a circumspect one.
(3) The High Court's inherent jurisdiction cannot be used in a way which is contrary to or inconsistent with the CPR.
'The supervisory jurisdiction that the High Court exercises over the way in which inferior courts and tribunals conduct their proceedings….is not inherent in its character as a court of justice; it is statutory."
"It is accepted that the existence of the statutory power has not supplanted the power of the court to make a limited Grepe v. Loam order. They serve to emphasise the importance of the Grepe v. Loam orders only being made when a clear case for making the orders has been established. This is one of the situations where it is accepted that notwithstanding the intervention of Parliament an inherent jurisdiction remains alongside the statutory jurisdiction. This does not mean that intervention of Parliament may not have cut down the inherent jurisdiction of the court. If there was an application for an order of the same width as the statutory jurisdiction, the court could only appropriately deal with such an application under the statutory jurisdiction."
Conclusion