[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> One Medicare (t/a One Primary Care LLP) v NHS Northamptonshire Integrated Care Board [2025] EWHC 63 (TCC) (17 January 2025) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2025/63.html Cite as: [2025] EWHC 63 (TCC) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (KBD)
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ONE MEDICARE T/A ONE PRIMARY CARE LLP | Claimant |
|
- and – |
||
NHS NORTHAMPTONSHIRE INTEGRATED CARE BOARD | Defendant |
|
- and – |
||
DHU HEALTH CARE CIC |
Interested Party |
____________________
Jen Coyne (instructed by Mills & Reeve LLP) for the Defendant
Patrick Halliday (instructed by Anthony Collins Solicitors LLP) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 25 June 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE JEFFORD:
(i) For the defendant/applicant, three statements of Sarah Stansfield, Chief Finance Officer and three statements of James Barry of the defendant's solicitors.
(ii) For the claimant/respondent, two statements of Michael Beverley, Vice Chairman and non-executive director; two statements of Rachel Beverley-Stevenson, Executive Chairman; and two statements of James Piper of the claimant's solicitors.
(iii) For the interested party, two statements of Elizabeth Amias, Deputy Director of Service Development.
Background Facts
The test
"(i) Is there a serious issue to be tried
(ii) If so, would damages be an adequate remedy for the claimant(s) if the suspension were lifted and they succeeded at trial; is it just in all the circumstances that the claimant(s) should be confined to a remedy of damages?
(iii) If not, would damages be an adequate remedy for the defendant if the suspension remained in place and it succeeded at trial.
(iv) Where there is doubt as to the adequacy of damages for either of the parties, which course of action is likely to carry the least risk of injustice if it transpires that it was wrong; that is where does the balance of convenience lie?"
The ICB's case
(i) Damages are an adequate remedy for OPC because, if the claim is successful, the loss it will have suffered is a loss of profit which is readily calculable.
(ii) In contrast, the ICB submits that it will suffer unquantifiable loss should the suspension be maintained and the ICB succeed at trial. The service benefits from the new contract will be delayed. The interim contract is failing to reach performance targets in relation to triage times, with an increased risk to patients, and that is likely to continue. The loss is one of quality of service and quality of patient care, with an increased risk to patients and a risk of loss of public confidence.
(iii) Accordingly, the ICB says that, if the court even reaches the point of considering the balance of convenience, the balance of convenience very much falls in favour of lifting the suspension.
OPC's case
(i) The relevant test is whether it is arguable that damages would not be an adequate remedy (Draeger Safety UK Ltd v London Fire Commissioner [2021] EWHC 2221 (TCC) at [41]).
(ii) The court may take account of the difficulty in assessing damages based on the loss of a chance and the speculative nature of the ascertainment.
(iii) If the refusal of an injunction would put a party out of business, it is likely that no damages would adequately compensate for that (Camelot at [87]). It will be relevant to consider the extent to which lifting the automatic suspension would have a real and disruptive effect on the claimant's remaining business and finances which is difficult to quantify – see Central Surrey Health Ltd. v NHS Surrey Downs CCG [2018] EWHC 3499 (TCC) at [56]-[57].
(iv) The loss of a highly skilled workforce with skills not widely available may result in damages not being adequate.
(v) The court may consider the effect on the wider community and healthcare areas served by the claimant if there is a knock on effect to other contracts that it delivers.
(vi) Loss of reputation and market position may be relied on to establish that damages are not an adequate remedy where loss of an uniquely prestigious contract is likely to impact on prospects of success in future tenders but cogent evidence is needed.
Adequacy of damages as a remedy for the claimant
Business disruption
(i) OPC has made profits from the existing UCC contract and large payments have been made to shareholders.
(ii) OPC has structured its business so that the old contract (and now the interim contract) subsidises other loss-making contracts which would otherwise be financially unsustainable.
(iii) OPC was aware that the existing contract would come to an end on 31 March 2024 and that there was no guarantee that it would be re-awarded this (or any other) contract.
(iv) Nonetheless it made 4 significant loans to a shareholder property company, OMPH, to enable that business to expand.
(v) There was no financial "backup plan" in the event that OPC was not awarded the contract.
(vi) As a result there is a risk that OPC will cease to exist by the time of trial.
The evidence as to impact on and destruction of the claimant's business
Cost cutting
"OMPH and OPC would both be reluctant to agree to early repayment of these loans because a loss will be realised which is likely to be avoided if time is available to fully examine each of the alternatives …."
Mr Beverley further identified two developments on sites where bank funding is in place. Shareholder capital together with OMPH funds is required for these developments which might not be able to progress if the loan is called in early.
ICB's fall back position
Loss of opportunity
Reputation and innovation
Conclusion on adequacy of damages for OPC
Adequacy of damages for the ICB
"47. Particular considerations arise when addressing this question in the context of procurement cases where the defendant will be a public body. ….. There will, however, be circumstances where damages will not be an adequate remedy for a public body. This will potentially be the position where the contract is to provide particular services for the public or to provide those services in a particular way and where the maintenance of the suspension means that for a period of time the services will not be provided or will not be provided in the way desired by the authority. Such an impact on the provision of services by the public body in question will not be measurable in financial terms and damages would not normally be an adequate remedy for a defendant authority in those circumstances."
The judge went on to observe at [107] to [110] that the decision of the defendant was one reached after reflection and consideration and that the councils were best placed to know how services were being delivered and whether changes would be improvements. He recognised that there would be room for debate and that improvements may not be as great as the defendants anticipated but:
"110 ….. I come back to the point that the Consortium has decided that it is beneficial for the CES to be delivered in a particular way and on particular terms. If the suspension is maintained the Consortium will not be able to implement that decision for the period of the suspension and for such time thereafter as is necessary to enable the new arrangements to be put into effect. …. the Defendant will not be able to provide the services in the form and on the terms it wishes. That is a loss which cannot adequately be compensated in damages."
"(2) I do not consider a satisfactory answer to this, as advanced by the Claimant, that they (the Claimant) will agree terms to extend the services. It is inevitable that this would in fact require a negotiated extension of services, the outcome of which is uncertain;
(3) Whilst Mr Peachey states that Teleperformance Ltd. would be willing to extend the present agreement on the same terms until judgment was handed down, this ignores the fact that the new procurement was intended to bring benefits which could not be introduced by TCL other than pursuant to a commercial agreement. Mr Peachey accepted in terms that the proposed contracts would deliver benefits. A willingness to "enter into discussions" in relation to providing some of these benefits during any period of extension can plainly not be considered an appropriate basis upon which to concluded that SSHD will be in the same position (but for any losses which could be compensated in damages). It is entirely uncertain whether any such discussion would deliver the benefits."
In short, I take the same view in this case.
(i) Managing patients back into the service
(ii) Electronic triage
(iii) Flexible staffing
(iv) Training
(v) Staff wellbeing
(vi) Integrated service
(vii) Prescribing medicine
(viii) Primary care services
(ix) Preventing A&E admission
(x) Use of technology
(xi) Data integration and reporting
(xii) Continuing and holistic care
(xiii) Local stakeholders
(xiv) Patient feedback
(xv) Environmental
"This document is originally produced by the Defendant to address its alternative submission that even if it were correct that when deciding the AtL, the Court cannot reach findings on the Defendant's view of what it has identified as benefits in DHU's tender if these benefits are also matters which are allegedly in issue in the scoring challenge in the APOC, that even on this test the Defendant relies on some benefits that are not under challenge in the APOC."
"42. On the other hand, damages would be an adequate remedy for the Council. Given the very slim difference in the costs of provision of the Services by (sic) the Council compared to Virgin, the successful bidder, the financial differential would in any ever either be small or non-existent, But even if that were not the case, the actual services would remain uninterrupted up to the date of judgment in the proceedings, and there would be essentially an accountancy type exercise to compare and compute the financial loss after a trial. That is an entirely different matter, and of a different nature, to the damage that would be caused to the Trusts were the suspension to be lifted and the Trusts succeed at trial.
43. I consider the inadequacy of damages to the Trusts to be conclusive on this application. However, in case I am wrong about that, I will also provide my short conclusions on the issue of balance of convenience. …. The only point in the Council's favour is its stated intention and preference to bring Virgin on board as soon as possible, together with the mobilisation period required by that provider. … Given the nature of the services, their subject matter, and the sector of the population for which they are provided (the children and young people of Lancashire) and the importance to the public interest of these Services, a desire by the Council to get on with the new contract (although entirely understandable) does not weigh in the balance. …."
"It would be unfortunate not to say tragic if even one person died or suffered unavoidable serious physical harm or metal deterioration as a result of unavoidable delays in the provision of improvements planned by the new contract …. I do not think that the Court should take risks with people's lives and health; by this I do not infer that Solent, if it continued under the existing regime would put "service users" lives at risk but I do infer that the integrated and improved service to be provided under the new contract has a better chance of better outcomes and it would be wrong to risk "service users" not having the benefit of those improvements as soon as possible."
Taking together the regard to be had to the ICB's wish to provide services in a particular way, the apparent benefits of the DHU provision, the experience that DHU has in this respect, and the time that it would take OPC to mirror this provision (even accepting that it could do so), to maintain the suspension carries with it the risk that patients will be deprived of those benefits for an avoidable reason. That is both a loss to the ICB that cannot be compensated in damages and weighs very much in the ICB's favour in the balance of convenience in any event.
Balance of convenience
Undertaking as to damages
"if following a trial at which OPC is unsuccessful and the Contract Award is not set aside, ICB can demonstrate a direct causal connection between a performance failure by OPC during the period from the order maintaining the automatic suspension to judgment following trial and an increased cost to ICB then it will pay the cost."
That appears to be a cross-undertaking as to damages that seeks to determine in advance any issue as to causation of loss.
Expedition