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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 [2020] EWHC 1108 (QB) (06 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/1108.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1108 (QB) |
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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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(1) Nursing & Midwifery Council (2) North Bristol NHS Trust |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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Alvida Harrold |
Respondent |
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Mrs Alvida Harrold in person
Hearing dates: 30 April 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Chamberlain:
Introduction
Background
"…it seems to me that on the further hearing, the court is going to need to be addressed in more detail in relation to these hearings [sc. the proceedings brought by Mrs Harrold which were said to be TWM] than it has in the past… I mean whether it is an evidential matter or a submission matter. It is up to you… I think you are going to need to go into more detail than you are currently listing, as I see it."
"[Hamblen J] said that since there has been no TWM finding, the court may need more evidence about the detail of the cases below. In particular, that the court would need a good understanding of what was before the courts below, and that the court would be helped by a more detailed analysis of the reason why each case was dismissed.
He said that AH's witness statement went through each claim, and that this was much fuller. Whereas C's evidence merely recorded the results of each hearing, and this may not be enough."
"The thrust of the Respondent's submission is that the original GCRO of 2016 was obtained fraudulently. The arguments and evidence in support of that submission have all the flavour of the kind of vexatious conduct that must have been the foundation of the GCROs against this Respondent. But I do not need to determine whether those arguments have any merit. They are backward-looking arguments. As such they are not reasons why a GCRO should not be imposed or 'is not required' for the future."
"Whilst I cannot say that the inherent jurisdiction might not be extended to embrace the kind of order he suggests should be made, I would want to hear full argument on it, preferably with both sides of the argument being deployed, before reaching a conclusion. It would be apparent that I have not received such argument in the present case. The difficulty I see is that what is really being sought is some kind of court-imposed filter on the access that someone has to the complaints system for the relevant professionals. I do not consider that the inherent jurisdiction goes as far as to permit that. It is essentially there to protect the court's processes from being abused. I would add that most professional disciplinary systems have a sifting arrangement which ought to be capable of weeding out obviously unsustainable allegations."
"It is clear that since the avenues of litigation have been closed off to Mrs Harrold, she has sought to pursue grievances against the NMC and the Trust by way of complaints against their chosen legal representatives. This is entirely improper. It is a means of attempting to gain a litigation advantage and harass the NMC and the Trust through their legal representatives (and causing cost to the Trust and NMC, and upset the individual lawyers who are harassed) while not ostensibly acting in breach of Orders made by Mr Justice Foskett and Mr Justice Warby. It is also a waste of time and resources for the legal regulators. That is why the application also seeks an order preventing Mrs Harrold from making complaints to the relevant regulators against the legal teams instructed from time to time by the NMC or the Trust."
"The NMC does not seek to prevent Mrs Harrold from exercising her statutory rights under the Data Protection Act 2018 or the Protection from Harassment Act 1997, however, it believes that Mrs Harrold's use of data subject access requests, alongside her continued efforts to use internal reviews and complaint procedures to pursue well-trodden arguments (in addition to the complaints she makes about lawyers instructed on the case for the NMC to the relevant legal regulators), are a clear indication that she intends to litigate against the NMC following the end of the GCRO, and to do so by making the same stale complaints that were considered by the courts when the previous CROs were made."
The law
"The court may extend the duration of a general civil restraint order, if it considers it appropriate to do so, but it must not be extended for a period greater than two years on any given occasion."
"(1) First, it is not a precondition for granting a GCRO that the person against whom it is made has brought claims which are TWM. A GCRO may be made against a person who persists in issuing claims which are TWM, or someone who persists in making applications which are TWM.
(2) Secondly, the threshold requirements in PD3C 4.1 need to be satisfied before a GCRO is made. But the test for the grant of an extension is different: it is whether the court "considers it appropriate". This plainly makes sense, as a person who has already been subject to a GCRO will in principle have had no opportunity to issue any TWM claim or application, other than an application for permission to proceed, or to vary or discharge the GCRO.
(3) Thirdly, when a Judge has determined that a claim or application is TWM, the circumstances in which it will be legitimate to contest that determination in subsequent proceedings before a Court at the same level of jurisdiction are limited. The CPR provide that those against whom orders are made on the court's own initiative, or in their absence, may apply to vary or set aside the order: see, eg, CPR rr 3.3(5) and (6); 23.8-23.11 & PD23 11.2. Otherwise, if the proceedings are between the same parties, there will be issue estoppel; and in any case, the correct means of challenge will normally be by way of appeal.
(4) Fourthly, as Mr Gray has emphasised, a CRO interferes with the right of access to a court. That is a fundamental civil right. The court must be alive to that, and wary of too readily imposing restrictions upon the right of access. Restrictions should be imposed only if and to the extent that they are necessary in the pursuit of a legitimate aim. In the case of a CRO the legitimate aims in view include the protection of the rights of others, to be free from the waste of time and precious resources that flow from the bringing of unfounded claims and applications. The scarce publicly funded resources of the court also require protection against such waste. These are considerations which justify the existence of the CRO regime.
(5) In that context, the fifth point is important. A GCRO is not, as some of Mr Gray's submissions would suggest, a bar on the bringing of any proceedings. It imposes a permission filter. Permission filters are a well-established feature of civil and criminal procedure. They are most common as a way of controlling the use of appeal mechanisms. But permission is required to initiate a claim for judicial review. The court would not refuse permission to bring a claim of substance with arguable merit. What it might do, if presented with such a case, is to give directions to ensure that any untenable aspects of the claim were removed and to ensure that all remaining claims were conducted fairly and efficiently, did not consume disproportionate resources, and were otherwise dealt with in accordance with the overriding objective."
"To this list I would add the observation that where an application to extend a GCRO is made the court would normally expect to see some evidence relating to matters relevant to the period which has elapsed since the GCRO was made or most recently extended as the case may be. Otherwise, the important safeguard of limiting the duration of the period of the making or extension of a GCRO to two years would be liable to be circumvented."
"14. The test for imposing a GCRO is stated by [4.1] of PD 3C to be that 'the party against whom the order is made persists in issuing claims or making applications which are totally without merit, in circumstances where an extended civil restraint order would not be sufficient or appropriate.' In R (Kumar) v Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs [2007] 1 WLR 536 at [60] the Court of Appeal said that this language:
'… is apt to cover a situation in which one of these litigants adopts a scattergun approach to litigation on a number of different grievances without necessarily exhibiting such an obsessive approach to a single topic that an extended civil restraint order can appropriately be made against him/her.'
15. The test when the Court is asked to extend a GCRO pursuant to [4.10] of PD 3C is different and is that the Court 'considers it appropriate' to do so. That test must be read in the light of the criteria for imposing a GCRO in the first place, since the restriction upon the party's right to bring litigation is the same during the original term of a GCRO or during its extension. In briefest outline, the question either on an original application for a GCRO or on an application for an extension is whether an order (or its extension) is necessary in order (a) to protect litigants from vexatious proceedings against them and/or (b) to protect the finite resources of the Court from vexatious waste. This question is to be answered having full regard to the impact of any proposed order upon the party to be restrained. The main difference between an original application for a GCRO and an application for an extension is that, on an application for an extension, the respondent will have been restrained from bringing vexatious proceedings during the period of the existing GCRO."
Submissions for the Trust and the NMC
"A professional man's integrity is the lifeblood of his vocation. If it is deliberately and wrongly attacked, whether out of personal self-interest or malice, a potential claim lies under the [Protection from Harassment Act 1997]."
Mrs Harrold's submissions
"The full payment of the injury to feelings compensation including interest of 8% per year is sought. All legal costs to date in defending the GCRO and the full amount of the charging order obtained by [the Trust] and loss of income will also be sought. These figures will be provided to the court at a later date."
Discussion
Should the GRCO be extended or discharged?
Should the GCRO be extended to restrain Mrs Harrold from complaining to legal regulators without the permission of the court?
Conclusion