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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> O'Callaghan v. Disciplinary Tribunal [2001] IESC 11; [2002] 1 I.R. 1; [2002] 1 ILRM 89 (02 February 2001) URL: https://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2001/11.html Cite as: [2002] 1 ILRM 89, [2002] 1 IR 1, [2001] IESC 11 |
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1. The
appellant is a solicitor against whom a complaint was made to the respondent
tribunal in relation to the handling of a personal injury claim. A
disciplinary inquiry was held and the Tribunal, presided over by Mr. Walter
Beatty, made a decision against the appellant. The transcript of the oral
decision delivered by Mr. Beatty reads as follows:
2. The
appellant obtained leave in the High Court to apply by way of judicial review
for orders of certiorari quashing that decision. Leave was granted and an
application was brought pursuant to the leave. The High Court (McCracken J.)
refused the application and this is an appeal from that refusal.
3. In
the Supreme Court two grounds of attack have been put forward. The first
relates to the statutory procedures under which the Disciplinary Tribunal acts.
Before there can be an inquiry the Tribunal has to make a determination as to
whether there is a
prima
facie
case for holding such an inquiry. Mr. Walter Beatty sat on the division of
the Tribunal which initially decided that there was a
prima
facie
case for an inquiry and then sat on the division of the Tribunal which
conducted the inquiry itself. It is argued on behalf of the appellant that
that is an unfair and unlawful procedure in that not only will all the
documentation have been before Mr. Beatty at the preliminary stage but he will
have formed a preliminary view of the matter or at least might have, and that
in these circumstances there was apparent or objective bias on the part of Mr.
Beatty while he participated in the inquiry itself.
4. The
second ground of attack is that the appellant ought to have received formal
notification and particulars of the original complaint from the Tribunal and
ought to have been given a proper opportunity to rebut it before any decision
was made to hold an inquiry. It is conceded that the appellant had been sent
the letter of complaint by the Law Society and had had an opportunity which he
availed of to write a reply and that this correspondence was before the
Tribunal before it decided to hold the inquiry. But the appellant argues
that that is not enough, that there ought to have been formal notification
coming from the Tribunal itself and that the absence of such procedure rendered
the inquiry unlawful, particularly having regard to the decision of this Court
in
O’Ceallaigh
v. An Bórd Altranais
(unreported judgments delivered the 17th May, 2000).
6. The
learned High Court judge goes on to point out that there is no rule in the High
Court that a judge who gives leave for judicial review cannot hear the judicial
review application itself or that a judge who grants an interim injunction may
not hear the later interlocutory injunction application. The nature of the
decision to be made the second time round is quite different from the nature of
the decision made on the first occasion. In so far as
7. McCracken
J. is holding that a person who is involved in a decision as to whether there
is a
prima
facie
case for an inquiry cannot be precluded from participating in the inquiry given
that the exercise of conducting the inquiry and making a final decision is
totally different, I am in complete agreement with him. I cannot see that
there was anything unfair or unlawful about Mr. Beatty sitting on both
divisions of the Tribunal. One of the cases relied on by the appellant in
this connection is
Radio
Limerick One Limited v. Independent Radio and Television Commission
[1997] 2 ILRM 1. But the bias alleged in that case was of quite a different
nature and had nothing to do with the question of whether a person deciding
whether there was a preliminary issue to be investigated can himself partake in
the investigation. Likewise
Corrigan
v. Irish Land Commission
[1977 IR] 317 would appear to be off point. In that case the two lay
commissioners of the Land Commission who had signed the certificate required to
be published by section 25(1) of the Land Act, 1936 had sat to hear the
objections. As the objector knew that they were the same commissioners the
Supreme Court held that he could not question their decision when he did not
dispute at the time their competence to sit. It can be argued that by
implication the Supreme Court was of the view that if such an objection had
been raised it would have been well-founded. But even if that is so, the
first exercise by the lay commissioners was of a totally different nature from
the first exercise by the Disciplinary Tribunal. The first decision was an
administrative decision that land was to be acquired. It is fairly obvious
that the persons who make such a decision are hardly competent to engage in a
legal process involving an objection to that decision. But that bears no
resemblance to the two pronged procedure which has to be carried out by the
Disciplinary Tribunal. I would, therefore, uphold the view of the learned
High Court judge on this aspect of the case.
8. There
are slightly more difficult questions involved in the second ground of attack.
As I have already mentioned, it is essentially based on the decision of this
Court in
O’Ceallaigh
v. An Bórd Altranais
cited above. But that decision which was itself an appeal from McCracken J.
was decided long after the decision of the High Court in this case. Just as
he did in the
O’Ceallaigh
case, McCracken J., in this case, took the view that the preliminary exercise
of considering whether there is a
prima
facie
case for an inquiry is akin to the decision of a court as to whether to grant
or refuse leave for judicial review and that there is no natural justice
requirement that there be any notification of the complaint to the solicitor.
I do not think that that ground of decision can survive the
O’Ceallaigh
case. Nevertheless for the reasons which I will be explaining I am of the
view that the second ground of appeal should also be dismissed. But first of
all it is necessary to consider what was decided by the
O’Ceallaigh
case. There were a number of different judgments in that case including a
trenchant minority judgment by Murphy J. In the book of authorities
submitted to this Court somebody has written on the copy judgment of Hardiman
J. the following:
“Denham
and Barron JJ. agreed with Hardiman J.
”
This is not entirely accurate. Barron J. arrived at the same decision as
Hardiman J. but his grounds and argumentation, although overlapping to some
extent, were somewhat different. Denham J. undoubtedly agreed with Hardiman
J. As is clear from my written judgment, I also expressly agreed with
Hardiman J., though I added in some observations of my own. For the purposes
of establishing what exactly was decided in that case it would seem to me that
the leading judgment is that of Hardiman J. The
O’Ceallaigh
case concerned an inquiry by the Fitness to Practise Committee of An
Bórd Altranais into three complaints against the applicant who was a
registered nurse and domiciliary midwife in private practice. Under the
Nurses Act, 1985 there are somewhat analogous procedures for deciding in the
first place whether a complaint warrants an inquiry or not and then the inquiry
itself. The Fitness to Practise Committee is involved in both exercises
though in certain circumstances which need not concern us here, the Committee
is obliged to conduct an inquiry notwithstanding its own view that there is not
a case for inquiry. Under the same Act of 1985 there are also provisions for
applying to the Court for temporary suspensions of the right to practise.
The question of whether the court procedure can be adopted without there being
an inquiry by the Fitness to Practise Committee remains undecided. There is
no doubt that McCracken J. is correct that in general no special natural
justice procedures are required for a decision to set up a body or tribunal to
carry out a function which itself would involve requirements of natural
justice. Nurse O’Ceallaigh did not receive notice of any of the
complaints in advance of the holding of the inquiry though she had received
notice of an earlier complaint not the subject of the judicial review. On
this account she claimed that the inquiry was invalid. If the general rule
applied as McCracken J. in the High Court considered it did in that case her
judicial review application would have had to be refused. But it was
successfully argued on behalf of Nurse O’Ceallaigh that there were
exceptions to the general rule, particularly having regard to the decision of
the English Privy Council in
Rees
v. Crane
[1994] 2 AC 173 and that her situation came within one of the exceptions.
One might arguably differentiate the
O’Ceallaigh
case
from this case upon the basis that a nurse, under investigation by the Fitness
to Practise Committee, was also subject to the hazard of an application to the
High Court to suspend her practice. But both on the basis of a close
re-reading of the judgment of Hardiman J. and my own memory of the case having
been on the court and having agreed with his judgment, I am satisfied that Mr.
Cush is correct in his submission that that distinction is merely a factual
distinction and that the hazard of High Court proceedings did not form an
essential part of the actual reasoning in
O’Ceallaigh
to the effect that it fell within the exceptional category of cases identified
by Lord Slynn of Hadley giving the advice of the English Privy Council in
Rees
v. Crane
cited above. In arriving at his decision Hardiman J. relied, not merely on
Rees
v. Crane
though that was the principal persuasive authority but also on a case dealing
with a solicitor i.e.,
Murray
v. Legal Service Commissioner
(1999) 46 NSWLR 224. In so far as Hardiman J. was referring to particular
facts which were peculiar to the
O’Ceallaigh
case it was, as Mr. Cush points out, in the context of consequences of
non-notification in her situation. It was not with a view to differentiating
her case from most other cases of professionals being inquired into by
tribunals connected with their professional bodies and in circumstances where
they were in jeopardy of losing the right to practise their profession. I
think that this becomes perfectly clear from a reading of the section of
Hardiman J.’s judgment headed “
Section
38: Legal Submissions and Discussion”
at pp. 18 ff of his judgment. In my own judgment in
O’Ceallaigh
I made it clear that I was in agreement with the judgment of Hardiman J. In
adding a few comments of my own I stated the following:
9. When
writing that section of the judgment it would never have occurred to me that I
was in any way deviating from the views expressed by Hardiman J. in his
judgment and I believe that I am correct in that view. This does not mean
that there may not be special circumstances such as extreme urgency where
notification to the person complained about and consideration of their response
is not an essential requirement and undoubtedly to a certain extent each case
must be considered on its own facts. But in my view this particular case
falls clearly within the four corners of
O’Ceallaigh.
10. Barron
J. arrived at the same conclusion by a slightly different route but he
considered that the
O’Ceallaigh
case was stronger in the nurse’s favour than
Rees
v. Crane
. He expressed the view that the question in any particular case as to when
the person affected has a right to be heard depends upon the existence of the
relevant procedure. There can be no right to be consulted until some step
has been taken to set the procedures in motion. He then continued as follows
at p. 34:
12. I
have no doubt that the position is similar in relation to a solicitor. No
matter how confidential the proceedings may be the word will get round the
profession very fast that a particular solicitor is being investigated into
with a view possibly to his being struck off the rolls. Unfortunately, it
only requires then the occasional indiscretion for word to pass to outsiders
which may include, in some instances, the circles from which the particular
solicitor’s clients are mostly drawn. But all that is required, in my
view, is that the solicitor be notified of the complaint and be given an
opportunity of responding to it and that that notification and any response
that may have been given to it should be before the Tribunal before it makes
its decision as to whether there is a
prima
facie
case for an inquiry. It is entirely irrelevant how the Tribunal comes into
possession of this correspondence. As Barron J. points out there cannot be
hard and fast rules as to procedures. There is therefore no technical
requirement upon the Tribunal itself to serve notice and await a reply. If
that has already been done and an opportunity has been given for a reply, and
better still if there has been some response then provided that the Tribunal
knows all this and has the documentation before it the requirements of natural
justice have been complied with in accordance with the principles laid down by
this Court in
O’Ceallaigh.
As that is precisely what happened in this case in that the Law Society
notified Mr. O’Callaghan of the complaint and gave him the opportunity to
respond to it and the correspondence passing between the Law Society and Mr.
O’Callaghan was before the Disciplinary Tribunal when they were making
their decision as to whether there was a
prima
facie
case, all the requirements of natural justice were complied with. This
ground for judicial review must, therefore, also fail.