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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sanusi v The General Medical Council [2019] EWCA Civ 1172 (16 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1172.html Cite as: [2019] 1 WLR 6273, [2019] WLR 6273, [2019] Med LR 469, [2019] EWCA Civ 1172, [2019] WLR(D) 414, [2020] ICR 311 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2020] ICR 311] [Buy ICLR report: [2019] 1 WLR 6273] [View ICLR summary: [2019] WLR(D) 414] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT SITTING AT LEEDS
MR JUSTICE KERR
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SIMLER
and
MRS JUSTICE THEIS
____________________
DR ABAYOMI LUKMAN SANUSI |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE GENERAL MEDICAL COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Jenni Richards QC and Alexis Hearnden (instructed by The General Medical Council) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 25 June 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Simler:
Introduction
i) whether the Tribunal should have notified the Appellant of its findings of misconduct and given him an opportunity to make submissions before proceeding to sanction;ii) whether the Judge was right to find that the process by which the sanction decision was reached was not rendered unfair by the failure of the Respondent to provide the Tribunal with evidence which the Appellant had asked to have taken into account in mitigation?
Factual background
The Respondent's investigation
The rule 7 response concluded by explaining the stark difference between the unhappy working environment he experienced at South Tees Trust as compared with the hospitals he worked at thereafter, where he said he felt valued and had delivered quality care in collaborative and well-functioning teams.
"If you do not attend, and are not represented, the Tribunal can hear and make a decision about your case in your absence, under rule 31 of the GMC (Fitness to Practise) Rules. If your fitness to practise is found to be impaired a sanction could be imposed on your registration in your absence…"
"If the Tribunal finds that your fitness to practise is impaired, it can direct that
- your name be erased from the medical register…;
- your registration be suspended for up to 12 months…;
- your registration be made subject to conditions for up to 3 years…"
The letter explained that the Tribunal would refer to a document containing 'Sanctions Guidance' if the sanction stage was reached and referred to a link on the website containing the Sanctions Guidance.
"I am not legally represented as I could not afford the cost of a legal service. As much as I would have liked to read this statement to the panel myself I am unable to attend. I commenced my General Practice training programme in February 2017, and have a limited number of permitted days of absence".
The Tribunal hearing and determinations
"29…to date, Dr Sanusi has demonstrated a concerning lack of insight and an inability to accept responsibility for his actions. He has sought to justify his behaviour and continue to place blame on others for his actions and to minimise his role in the events. Dr Sanusi seems to see himself as a victim in the situation where others are 'out to get him'. There has been no evidence of any remediation provided to the Tribunal. He has shown limited remorse for his conduct and no insight into the impact that his conduct could have had on patients, or on the profession.
30. It was the view of the tribunal that given the above, it cannot be satisfied that there is no future risk of repetition at this point in time and the tribunal are concerned that, without developing insight or remediation, Dr Sanusi may place patients at risk of harm in the future"
"The Tribunal bore in mind the mitigating factors in Dr Sanusi's case. The incidents all took place whilst Dr Sanusi was working in the same role at one place of employment and there is no evidence of issues with Dr Sanusi's character or performance either prior to October 2012 or since July 2015. There is also no evidence that Dr Sanusi's misconduct caused actual harm to patients, although it did pose a potential risk of serious harm. The Tribunal also had regard to two testimonials from Consultant Surgeons at Doncaster and Bassetlaw Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, which speak of his abilities in positive terms during his employment there from 1 October 2015 to 4 October 2016. However, the Tribunal noted that, in relation to the testimonials, the authors appeared to be unaware of the nature of the allegations against Dr Sanusi or of the fact of these proceedings. This fact impacted upon the weight which the Tribunal felt able to attach to them. The Tribunal understood that Dr Sanusi had been undergoing GP training since February 2017, however, no evidence has been submitted in relation to this." (emphasis added by the Judge).
"which not only confirmed that the GP training was taking place, but also that it was going quite well. The Respondent was in possession of that letter…but the Tribunal was not".
The Tribunal rejected suspension on the basis that there was:
"no evidence of any meaningful insight, acknowledgement of fault, or steps taken towards remediation and, to date, the Tribunal has not received any evidence upon which could properly conclude that there is any real prospect of remediation in the future." [33]
"26. Further, Dr Sanusi's misconduct was not limited to clinical failings, but extended to dishonest conduct which, although not persistent or covered up, was serious because it involved lying in an attempt to obtain employment as a surgical registrar performing the same duties for which he had been dismissed by his previous employer only four weeks earlier. A doctor who engages in dishonest conduct will invariably be at risk of erasure, and all the more so where the doctor does not engage with the hearing and acknowledge his dishonesty, show the potential for remediation or show any development of insight. The Tribunal was of the view that, in the circumstances, Dr Sanusi's proven misconduct is fundamentally incompatible with continued registration.
27. The Tribunal took into account the impact that erasure will inevitably have upon Dr Sanusi. In particular, it is noted from Dr Sanusi's statement dated 15 September 2017, that he had embarked upon a GP training programme in February 2017. However, it concluded that the need to protect patients and the public interest outweighed Dr Sanusi's personal interests. It determined that erasure was the only sufficient sanction which would protect patients, maintain public confidence in the profession and send out a clear message to Dr Sanusi, the profession and the public that his misconduct constituted behaviour unbefitting of a registered doctor. The Tribunal therefore directs that Dr Sanusi's name be erased from the Medical Register".
The appeal heard by Kerr J
(a) It was accepted before Kerr J, on the Appellant's behalf, that the Tribunal was justified in proceeding with the hearing on 2 October 2017 in the Appellant's absence but submitted that the Tribunal should have considered adjourning at the sanction stage and/or 'pausing' to allow the doctor to either produce further documentary evidence as to remediation, insight or remorse, and/or to attend to give evidence of this at the sanction stage;(b) the failure to take either step meant that the hearing proceeded without any further material (by way of evidence or submissions) directed to remediation, insight or remorse; and
(c) the sanction imposed was therefore unfair and disproportionate in these circumstances.
(a) the Appellant "did not understand that attending the Tribunal hearing should take priority over his training" and although he appreciated the nature and extent of the hearing, he did not appreciate the peril of erasure. He did not seek legal advice, citing financial constraints.(b) The Appellant provided the Respondent with a "substantial number of documents over a considerable period". Although some documents he provided were sent to the Tribunal, many were not sent by the Respondent to the Tribunal. Kerr J found the following material (referred to as "the Missing Material"), was available to the Respondent, having been provided by the Appellant, but not sent to the Tribunal:
(i) appraisal documents going back to 2014;
(ii) a tool for assessment and peer review dating back from October 2015;
(iii) an appraisal for February 2016;(iv) certificates of courses completed over the years;(v) expressions of appreciation from former patients;(vi) the results of clinical evaluation exercises undertaken by supervising doctors while working at Friarage Hospital;(vii) the results of a patient feedback exercise involving an interpersonal skills questionnaire;(viii) the letter from Dr Roberts dated 1 August 2017.(c) Those Missing Materials "did not go before the Tribunal and were therefore not available to the Tribunal when it later evaluated the available sanctions and considered the question of mitigating circumstances."
The statutory provisions and approach to appeals
"(1) The following decisions are appealable decisions for the purposes of this section, that is to say –
(a) a decision of a Medical Practitioners Tribunal under section 35D above giving a direction for erasure, for suspension or for conditional registration or varying the conditions imposed by a direction for conditional registration; …
(7) On an appeal under this section from a Medical Practitioners Tribunal, the court may –
(a) dismiss the appeal;
(b) allow the appeal and quash the direction or variation appealed against;
(c) substitute for the direction or variation appealed against any other direction or variation which could have been given or made by a Medical Practitioners Tribunal; or
(d) remit the case to the MPTS for them to arrange for a Medical Practitioners Tribunal to dispose of the case in accordance with the directions of the court,
and may make such order as to costs (or, in Scotland, expenses) as it thinks fit."
The appeal
The first issue: adjournment before dealing with sanction
"It cannot be said, to take the matter shortly, that this was necessarily at the top range of offences covered by the table under "Common circumstances" item C [a reference to the sentencing guidance for breaches of the Bar Code of Conduct]. I make it clear that I would not hold that disbarment was necessarily the wrong sentence here but it seems to me that there is plainly an argument as to whether or not it was. In the circumstances for my part I think it right that the tribunal should have afforded an opportunity for this appellant to make representations as to sanction once they had found him guilty of the professional charges before them. Such an opportunity should properly have been provided, notwithstanding all the negative features of this appellant's previous communications with the BSB or the Tribunal".
"…I have no doubt that the panel ought to have considered before imposing any sanction, particularly as they clearly had erasure in mind, whether attempts should have been made to contact the appellant to enable her to put forward any mitigation" (paragraph 39).
"19. …First, the GMC represent the public interest in relation to standards of healthcare. It would run entirely counter to the protection, promotion and maintenance of the health and safety of the public if a practitioner could effectively frustrate the process and challenge a refusal to adjourn when that practitioner had deliberately failed to engage in the process. The consequential cost and delay to other cases is real. Where there is good reason not to proceed, the case should be adjourned; where there is not, however, it is only right that it should proceed.
20 Second, there is a burden on medical practitioners, as there is with all professionals subject to a regulatory regime, to engage with the regulator, both in relation to the investigation and ultimate resolution of allegations made against them. That is part of the responsibility to which they sign up when being admitted to the profession…"
"discretion whether or not to proceed must then be exercised having regard to all the circumstances of which the Panel is aware with fairness to the practitioner being a prime consideration but fairness to the GMC and the interests of the public also taken into account; the criteria for criminal cases must be considered in the context of the different circumstances and different responsibilities of both the GMC and the practitioner."
"61 … the judge appears to have put emphasis on the fact that this was the first hearing and that an adjournment was unlikely to be highly disruptive or inconvenient to attending witnesses. To suggest that the practitioner must be allowed one (or perhaps more than one) adjournment is to fly in the face of the efficient despatch of the regulatory regime. In addition, an adjournment was highly disruptive: the members of the Panel, the legal assessor, the staff and the accommodation had been set up… Organising another hearing would have been both disruptive and inconvenient. No regulatory system can operate on the basis that a failure to attend should lead to an adjournment on the basis that the practitioner might not know of the date of the hearing (rather than having disengaged from the process or even adopted an 'ostrich like attitude'): any culture of adjournment is to be deprecated…
63. The system simply could not operate efficiently or effectively and although attendance by the practitioner is of prime importance, it cannot be determinative."
"those who fail to attend lose the right to participate and explain, and they do so at their peril. As [was] conceded, if, without more, a solicitor deliberately absented himself it would not be feasible to argue that he was entitled to a rehearing".
"I have had to learn tough lessons, suffer remarkably, and continue to do so. I can only hope that the impact already caused are not underestimated or overlooked. Further sanctions can only amount to a repeat infliction of further punishment for events I have already been severely punished and crushed to the limit. It is hard to disembowel a man and demand he feel no pain."
"If your client does not attend the hearing, the Tribunal may proceed in their absence and without their involvement. You should be aware that the Tribunal could impose a sanction, without seeking further representations, which could severely restrict your client's ability to practise. Your client will not have the opportunity to advance a defence or demonstrate insight and remediation, which could influence the Tribunal's decisions."
Secondly, registrants are now provided in advance of the hearing with a written indication of the General Medical Council's proposed submissions on the appropriate sanction outcome in the particular case (albeit noting that it may be subject to change) and directed to the Sanctions Guidance. Although these changes were not in place in time for the Appellant, that does not affect the outcome in his case. He was clearly notified of the hearing and what would be addressed. He was made aware of the Sanctions Guidance. Significantly, he took a deliberate decision not to attend the hearing, thereby depriving himself of the right to participate and explain, at his peril. There was no justification for any adjournment or for a rehearing on the question of sanction. This ground accordingly fails.
The second issue: was the Judge right to find that the process by which the sanction decision was reached was not rendered unfair by the failure of the GMC to provide the Tribunal with evidence which the Appellant had asked to have taken into account in mitigation
"…The Tribunal's decision on sanction would still have had to reflect the gravamen of the main findings. The absence of insight and appreciation of the seriousness of his misconduct, the difficulty in showing the required "remediation" in the case of dishonesty and the overriding need to preserve public confidence in the profession, lead me to conclude that no harm was done by what went wrong in the present case and that the decision to erase Dr Sanusi's name from the medical register must therefore stand…"
"Probability is not enough. The defendant would have to show that the decision would inevitably have been the same…"
Conclusion
Mrs Justice Theis DBE:
Lord Justice David Richards:
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION) Case No: C1/2018/1677
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT SITTING AT LEEDS
MR JUSTICE KERR
BETWEEN:-
Appellant
Respondent
ON 25 June 2019
UPON hearing the appellant in person and leading counsel for the respondent
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. The appeal is dismissed.
2. The appellant do pay the respondent's cost of the appeal to be summarily assessed on the papers, on the standard basis, by a single judge.
3. Any party seeking to rely upon written costs submissions shall file and serve brief written submissions (limited to the question of costs) by no later than 4pm on 19 July 2019.