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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Williams, R (on the application of) v Police Appeals Tribunal & Anor [2016] EWHC 2708 (Admin) (02 November 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/2708.html Cite as: [2017] ICR 235, [2016] ACD 138, [2016] WLR(D) 591, [2016] EWHC 2708 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN on the application of DARREN WILLIAMS |
Claimant |
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and |
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POLICE APPEALS TRIBUNAL COMMISSIONER OF POLICE OF THE METROPOLIS |
Defendant Interested Party |
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(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
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Anne Studd QC (instructed by Mayor's Office of Policing & Crime) for the Defendant
Stephen Morley (instructed by Directorate of Legal Services Metropolitan Police)
for the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 14th October 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Holroyde:
The statutory framework and the Standards
"Honesty and Integrity
Police officers are honest, act with integrity and do not compromise or abuse their position.
Authority, Respect and Courtesy
Police officers act with self-control and tolerance, treating members of the public and colleagues with respect and courtesy. Police officers do not abuse their powers or authority and respect the rights of all individuals.
Equality and Diversity
Police officers act with fairness and impartiality. They do not discriminate unlawfully or unfairly.
Use of Force
Police officers only use force to the extent that it is necessary, proportionate and reasonable in all the circumstances.
Orders and Instructions
Police officers only give and carry out lawful orders and instructions. Police officers abide by police regulations, force policies and lawful orders.
Duties and Responsibilities
Police officers are diligent in the exercise of their duties and responsibilities.
Confidentiality
Police officers treat information with respect and access or disclose it only in the proper course of police duties.
Fitness for Duty
Police officers when on duty or presenting themselves for duty are fit to carry out their responsibilities.
Discreditable Conduct
Police officers behave in a manner which does not discredit the police service or undermine public confidence in it, whether on or off duty. Police officers report any action taken against them for a criminal offence, any conditions imposed upon them by a court or the receipt of any penalty notice.
Challenging and Reporting Improper Conduct
Police officers report, challenge or take action against the conduct of colleagues which has fallen below the Standards of Professional Behaviour."
"(13) The person or persons conducting the misconduct proceedings shall review the facts of the case and decide whether the conduct of the officer concerned amounts
(b) to misconduct, gross misconduct or neither.
(14) The person or persons conducting the misconduct proceedings shall not find that the conduct of the officer concerned amounts to misconduct or gross misconduct unless (a) he is or they are satisfied on the balance of probabilities that this is the case; or
(b) the officer concerned admits it is the case."
"(i) management advice;
(ii) written warning;
(iii) final written warning;
(iv) dismissal with notice; or
(v) dismissal without notice."
It is relevant to note that that list of possible sanctions does not include suspension from duty.
The facts
The misconduct
i) In September 2012, in the staff office at Wimbledon Police Station and in the presence of another officer, he put his arms around Mrs J, a civilian employee with whom he worked closely, and put his tongue in her ear.ii) In early 2012 Mrs J was absent through ill health, and another civilian employee, Ms S, took her place for a time. It was alleged that Mr Williams
a) On a number of occasions, approached Ms S whilst she was sitting at a computer and stroked her neck;b) In early summer 2012 called Ms S into his office, told her she looked nice, pulled her closer and put his tongue in her ear;c) In about October or November 2012 he sat with Ms S at a police social function. He asked her a number of inappropriate personal questions, which embarrassed and upset her. About 5 days later he called her into his office to discuss this matter and said: "we could not work together as we'd end up either killing each other or shagging each other on the desk".iii) In the summer of 2012 Mr Williams was in the staff office with Ms E, who was not a police officer but was the head of an important public body in Merton which worked closely with the police. They were to be interviewed over the telephone by a local radio station. It was alleged that whilst waiting for the interviews to begin, Mr Williams said that women eating bananas only reminded him of one thing. Shortly thereafter, whilst Ms E was being interviewed, he used a banana to simulate oral sex in front of her. When the interview was concluded, he said to her "I bet that put you off". On a later date, in 2013, Mr Williams was speaking to Ms E at Merton Civic Centre about a plan to compile a video for a senior officer's retirement. He told her that it would be funny if he could video her standing at a kitchen sink in her underwear.
iv) Around mid-December 2013 he was in the staff office. A Chief Inspector, a Sergeant and a female Police Constable, PC W, were present. Mr Williams stood in a doorway, took a scarf belonging to PC W, and rubbed it around his groin area in a sexually suggestive manner.
v) In 2013 Mr Williams received a donation towards a police open day, in the form of a £50 voucher for use at a stationers. Just over £30 was spent purchasing items for use at the open day. In November 2013 Mr Williams used the balance (£19.09) when purchasing printer cartridges for his own use. He had failed to make any record of this expenditure for his personal benefit in the "gifts and hospitality register" before he was suspended from duty some weeks later, on 7th January 2014.
The disciplinary proceedings
"The ladies concerned fairly recognise that this was not sexual conduct inasmuch as sexual harassment or anything like that, but they do describe how they felt embarrassed and violated by this behaviour."
" can often produce feelings of disassociation, where the sufferer can sometimes experience mild and sudden feelings of detachment from their immediate surroundings. Any accompanying behaviour whilst experiencing dissociation can often be perceived as inexplicable and/or out of character. Psychologically, such behaviour serves the function of managing the pressure experienced internally by the sufferer, albeit temporarily. Quite often such behaviour is an attempt to "lighten the mood", even when said behaviour can at the same time be perceived by some onlookers as inappropriate."
The panel's decision
"We retired and we considered the evidence but in particular we gave very careful consideration to the submissions. Although we are aware of all the available outcomes, we were particularly directed to a final written warning, and dismissal was obviously within our minds. So most of our deliberations I can say were on those two outcomes. Having reconsidered many of the references that we were referred to in the submissions, and considered all matters, the decision of the panel is that DCS Williams will be dismissed from the MPS without notice."
"Allegations One to Four all concern highly inappropriate behaviour towards women, three of whom were junior staff members on DCS Williams' borough and the fourth was employed by London Borough of Merton, a key partner for the borough. Several of his inappropriate acts took place in the presence of others, including junior staff. In addition to the feelings of the women concerned, some junior officers have described in their statements how they also felt shocked and uncomfortable. "
"However, although this case is not concerned with operational dishonesty, the panel do think that the observations of the Court of Appeal in Salter v Ch Constable of Dorset [2012] are relevant. In that case Maurice Kay LJ at paragraph 23 pointed out that because the purpose of misconduct proceedings was the maintenance of public confidence in the police service, the potential of 'personal mitigation' is 'necessarily limited'. The panel is required to balance DCS William's exemplary and long service against the need to maintain public confidence in and the reputation of the MPS."
"However, any such impact is the result of his own conduct. That it is potentially so significant is due to the high rank he has achieved, but that is a rank, as the panel have already stated, which demands that he conduct himself to the highest standards. Were the panel to regard the loss of pension as a reason for imposing a Final Written Warning rather than dismissal in this case, it would justifiably be regarded as treating a senior, long-serving officer more leniently than a junior officer who had acted in the same way, and this would clearly be wrong."
i) that the outcome of dismissal was unreasonable;ii) that the impact of the behaviour was limited, and no offence had been intended;
iii) that insufficient weight had been given to the medical history; and
iv) that there was no finding of dishonesty or lack of integrity, and therefore Mr William's personal mitigation was highly relevant, but it had been accorded little or no weight; and the panel had wrongly interpreted Salter.
The PAT reminded themselves of the approach they must take in deciding whether the decision of the panel was unreasonable. They referred in this regard to the judgment of Moses LJ in R (on the application of the Chief Constable of Durham) v Police Appeals Tribunal and Cooper [2012] EWHC 2733 (Admin). At paragraph 7, Moses LJ said that when a specialist appeal tribunal is considering whether a decision of a misconduct panel was unreasonable " the test imposed by the rules is not the Wednesbury test but is something less. That does not mean that the appeal tribunal is entitled to substitute its own view for that of the misconduct hearing panel, unless and until it has already reached the view, for example, that the finding was unreasonable. Nor, I should emphasise, is the Police Appeals Tribunal entitled, unless it has already found that the previous decision was unreasonable, to substitute its own approach. It is commonplace to observe that different and opposing conclusions can each be reasonable. The different views as to approach and as to the weight to be given to facts may all of them be reasonable, and different views may be taken as to the relevance of different sets of facts, all of which may be reasonable. The Police Appeals Tribunal is only allowed and permitted to substitute its own views once it has concluded either that the approach was unreasonable, or that the conclusions of fact were unreasonable."
"6.17 From all the material put before us, we draw the following conclusions. The wording and language of the judgments need to be seen in context. The words cited above are mainly concerned with dishonesty and lack of integrity. But the principles which underlie the judgments cannot have been intended to apply solely to cases involving dishonesty and integrity.
6.18 The language of the judgments [ie, in the cases referred to by Mr Beggs] is concerned with the maintenance of the reputation of and public confidence in the standing and integrity of 'the profession', be it of solicitors or the police service. These can be severely damaged by the improper conduct of an officer which may not be dishonest but may involve unlawful violence, misuse of confidential information, neglect of duty and undeclared business interests, to name some examples.
6.19 It follows that, in all cases, the maintenance of the reputation of the police force concerned and the police service generally will be uppermost in the minds of those tasked with disciplinary considerations .
6.20 The language, indeed the very words, used by Burnett J are, in our view, clearly intended to be of general application across the full range of police misconduct."
" we consider the panel's decision to dismiss DCS Williams entirely appropriate. From its measured and detailed findings, it is clear that the panel gave anxious and careful consideration to its task. Its decision cannot be impugned."
The claim for judicial review
i) Whether the PAT misapplied Bolton and Salter, in particular by regarding mitigation as carrying little weight even in the context of misconduct which did not involve dishonesty;ii) Whether the PAT erred in its approach to and treatment of Mr Williams' personal mitigation and its assessment of the public interest;
iii) Whether the sanction of dismissal was grossly disproportionate, and therefore one which no reasonable appeal tribunal could have regarded as reasonable.
The first issue: case law and submissions
"It is required of lawyers practising in this country that they should discharge their professional duties with integrity, probity and complete trustworthiness. That requirement applies as much to barristers as it does to solicitors. If I make no further reference to barristers it is because this appeal concerns a solicitor, and where a client's moneys have been misappropriated the complaint is inevitably made against a solicitor, since solicitors receive and handle clients' moneys and barristers do not.
Any solicitor who is shown to have discharged his professional duties with anything less than complete integrity, probity and trustworthiness must expect severe sanctions to be imposed upon him by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. Lapses from the required high standard may, of course, take different forms and be of varying degrees. The most serious involves proven dishonesty, whether or not leading to criminal proceedings and criminal penalties. In such cases the tribunal has almost invariably, no matter how strong the mitigation advanced for the solicitor, ordered that he be struck off the Roll of Solicitors. Only infrequently, particularly in recent years, has it been willing to order the restoration to the Roll of a solicitor against whom serious dishonesty had been established, even after a passage of years, and even where the solicitor had made every effort to re-establish himself and redeem his reputation. If a solicitor is not shown to have acted dishonestly, but is shown to have fallen below the required standards of integrity, probity and trustworthiness, his lapse is less serious but it remains very serious indeed in a member of a profession whose reputation depends upon trust. A striking off order will not necessarily follow in such a case, but it may well. The decision whether to strike off or to suspend will often involve a fine and difficult exercise of judgment, to be made by the tribunal as an informed and expert body on all the facts of the case. Only in a very unusual and venial case of this kind would the tribunal be likely to regard as appropriate any order less severe than one of suspension.
It is important that there should be full understanding of the reasons why the tribunal makes orders which might otherwise seem harsh. There is, in some of these orders, a punitive element: a penalty may be visited on a solicitor who has fallen below the standards required of his profession in order to punish him for what he has done and to deter any other solicitor tempted to behave in the same way. Those are traditional objects of punishment. But often the order is not punitive in intention. Particularly is this so where a criminal penalty has been imposed and satisfied. The solicitor has paid his debt to society. There is no need, and it would be unjust, to punish him again. In most cases the order of the tribunal will be primarily directed to one or other or both of two other purposes. One is to be sure that the offender does not have the opportunity to repeat the offence. This purpose is achieved for a limited period by an order of suspension; plainly it is hoped that experience of suspension will make the offender meticulous in his future compliance with the required standards. The purpose is achieved for a longer period, and quite possibly indefinitely, by an order of striking off. The second purpose is the most fundamental of all: to maintain the reputation of the solicitors' profession as one in which every member, of whatever standing, may be trusted to the ends of the earth. To maintain this reputation and sustain public confidence in the integrity of the profession it is often necessary that those guilty of serious lapses are not only expelled but denied re-admission. If a member of the public sells his house, very often his largest asset, and entrusts the proceeds to his solicitor, pending re-investment in another house, he is ordinarily entitled to expect that the solicitor will be a person whose trustworthiness is not, and never has been, seriously in question. Otherwise, the whole profession, and the public as a whole, is injured. A profession's most valuable asset is its collective reputation and the confidence which that inspires.
Because orders made by the tribunal are not primarily punitive, it follows that considerations which would ordinarily weigh in mitigation of punishment have less effect on the exercise of this jurisdiction than on the ordinary run of sentences imposed in criminal cases. It often happens that a solicitor appearing before the tribunal can adduce a wealth of glowing tributes from his professional brethren. He can often show that for him and his family the consequences of striking off or suspension would be little short of tragic. Often he will say, convincingly, that he has learned his lesson and will not offend again. On applying for restoration after striking off, all these points may be made, and the former solicitor may also be able to point to real efforts made to re-establish himself and redeem his reputation. All these matters are relevant and should be considered. But none of them touches the essential issue, which is the need to maintain among members of the public a well-founded confidence that any solicitor whom they instruct will be a person of unquestionable integrity, probity and trustworthiness. Thus it can never be an objection to an order of suspension in an appropriate case that the solicitor may be unable to re-establish his practice when the period of suspension is past. If that proves, or appears likely, to be so the consequence for the individual and his family may be deeply unfortunate and unintended. But it does not make suspension the wrong order if it is otherwise right. The reputation of the profession is more important than the fortunes of any individual member. Membership of a profession brings many benefits, but that is a part of the price."
"From this review of authority I conclude that the statements of principle set out by Sir Thomas Bingham MR in Bolton v Law Society [1994] 1 WLR 512 remain good law, subject to this qualification. In applying the Bolton principles the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal must also take into account the rights of the solicitor under articles 6 and 8 of the Convention. It is now an overstatement to say that "a very strong case" is required before the court will interfere with the sentence imposed by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. The correct analysis is that the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal comprises an expert and informed tribunal, which is particularly well placed in any case to assess what measures are required to deal with defaulting solicitors and to protect the public interest. Absent any error of law, the High Court must pay considerable respect to the sentencing decisions of the tribunal. Nevertheless if the High Court, despite paying such respect, is satisfied that the sentencing decision was clearly inappropriate, then the court will interfere."
"The classic statement of the approach of this court to an appeal against a penalty imposed by the solicitors' professional disciplinary body is contained in the judgment of Sir Thomas Bingham MR in Bolton v Law Society [1994] 1 WLR 512 at pp. 518A 519E. That approach was modified to a limited extent by the Court of Appeal in Salsbury v Law Society [2008] EWCA Civ 1285; [2009] 1 WLR 1286 at paragraphs 30 and 37. For the purposes of this appeal, the following matters to be derived from these authorities are particularly significant.
(1) The purposes of the imposition of sanctions on defaulting solicitors are three-fold:
(a) In some cases there may be a punitive element in order to punish the solicitor, if he has not been dealt with by the courts, and to deter others. However, such orders are not primarily punitive and often the order is not punitive in intention.
(b) The order may be intended to ensure that the solicitor does not have the opportunity to repeat the offence. An order of suspension or striking off may achieve that in varying degrees.
(c) Most fundamentally, the order is intended to maintain public confidence in the solicitors' profession and its reputation.
(2) Because such orders are not primarily punitive, personal mitigation is likely to be of less effect.
(3) Nevertheless, the Tribunal must also take into account the rights of the solicitor under Articles 6 and 8 ECHR .
(4) Cases of proven dishonesty are the most serious breaches of professional standards. In Bolton, Sir Thomas Bingham observed that in such cases the Tribunal has "almost invariably" ordered that the solicitor be struck off. In Salsbury the Court of Appeal accepted that there exists a "very small residual category where striking off is not appropriate".
(5) In cases where there has been proved a breach of the required standards of integrity, probity and trustworthiness, but falling short of dishonesty, the lapse remains very serious indeed. While a striking off order will not necessarily follow in such cases, it may well. Only in a very unusual and venial case would the Tribunal be likely to regard as appropriate any order less severe than one of suspension.
(6) The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal is a specialist tribunal which is particularly well equipped to determine what sanctions are necessary in any given case in order to deal with defaulting solicitors, to protect the public and to protect the reputation of the profession. As a result a high degree of respect should normally be paid to its decisions.
(7) However, the power of the High Court to interfere with a decision of the Tribunal on sanctions is not limited to cases where "a very strong case is shown". The court will intervene where there has been an error of law or where the sentencing decision was clearly inappropriate."
" the correct approach to the question of sanction on a finding of serious impropriety by a police officer in the course of his duty is reflected in the principles articulated in Bolton and Salsbury. The reasons which underpin the strict approach applied to solicitors and barristers apply with equal force to police officers. Honesty and integrity in the conduct of police officers in any investigation are fundamental to the proper workings of the criminal justice system. "
"It follows that when considering questions of sanction, the Panel, the Chief Constable on review and the Tribunal should have regard to the following factors:
i) The imposition of sanctions following a finding of misconduct by a police officer may have three elements:
a) There may be a punitive element designed to punish the police officer concerned and to deter others, particularly if he has not been prosecuted and convicted. But the imposition of sanctions is not primarily punitive, and may not be punitive at all.
b) The sanctions imposed may be designed to ensure that the police officer does not have the opportunity to repeat his misconduct.
c) However, the most important purpose of these sanctions, particularly in cases involving dishonesty or impropriety in connection with an investigation, is to maintain public confidence in the police service and to maintain its collective reputation.
ii) One consequence of the fact that sanctions imposed in the disciplinary process are not primarily punitive is that personal mitigation is likely to have a limited impact on the outcome.
iii) Cases of proven dishonesty and lack of integrity in an operational environment, of which the destruction, suppression or fabrication of evidence, or attempts to do so, would be clear examples, are the most serious breaches of the Code of Conduct. In such cases, the sanction of dismissal or requirement to resign would, to use the language of Sir Thomas Bingham in Bolton "almost invariably" be appropriate but there exists "a very small residual category" where a lesser sanction may be available, as Jackson LJ put it in Salsbury ."
"32 The language of the Tribunal suggests that it did not approach its decision making on the basis that a finding of operational dishonesty normally called for dismissal or a requirement to resign from the force. Furthermore, it is clear from the way in which it discussed the question of mitigation that it gave very great weight to personal mitigation in circumstances where it was not appropriate to do so, for the reasons given by Sir Thomas Bingham in Bolton. The strength of the personal mitigation available to Mr Salter was regarded by the Tribunal as of great significance. That is clear from paragraph 6.4 of its written decision, where it described his unblemished career and the character evidence as 'exceptional'; and also from paragraph 6.9 where it indicated that he 'should be entitled to feel that he can meaningfully call upon his record in times of trouble'. It follows that in my judgment the Tribunal misdirected itself in law in both these respects."
"On the other hand, I consider that the judge was on firmer ground when concluding that the PAT did not proceed on the basis that personal mitigation carries less weight in this context than in some others. Such mitigation is of course relevant and it is clear that the PAT found "the character evidence, taken together with the unblemished career in the Force" to be "exceptional". Perhaps there is contained within that finding an implicit acknowledgement that personal mitigation generally counts for less in cases such as this but the PAT considered that, so exceptional was the mitigation, that, uniquely, it tipped the balance. My uncertainty about whether this is the correct analysis of the PAT's legal approach to mitigation disposes me to the view that it will be more profitable to revisit the question of mitigation in its factual context when considering the judge's finding of irrationality."
"23 As to personal mitigation, just as an unexpectedly errant solicitor can usually refer to an unblemished past and the esteem of his colleagues, so will a police officer often be able so to do. However, because of the importance of public confidence, the potential of such mitigation is necessarily limited. The PAT found the letter from the Coroner to be "a particularly powerful piece of mitigation". I do not consider that it was justified in treating it as such. On any reasonable view, it misunderstood or misstated the seriousness of the offence, although I do not question the sincerity of the Coroner's opinion. Like Burnett J, I cannot see this as "a finely balanced case" or one of the "very small residual category" in which operational dishonesty or impropriety need not result in dismissal or a requirement to resign. Burnett J derived assistance from the judgment of Underhill J in R (Bolt) v Chief Constable of Merseyside Police [2007] EWHC 2607 (QB) . There, Underhill J said (at paragraph 28):
"While I would certainly accept that not every untruth or half truth told by a police officer, however trivial and whatever the circumstances, would necessarily constitute misconduct justifying dismissal, the misconduct found by the Panel constituted deliberate dishonesty in an operational context. As para 1 of the Code rightly emphasises, integrity is a fundamental requirement for a police officer. I should, frankly, be dismayed to think that such conduct was not of a kind which was normally thought to merit dismissal."
Whilst I acknowledge that the misconduct of Mr Salter was in some ways less serious than that in Bolt, the comments are apt. It may not be profitable to speculate about a case which might fall within the "very small residual category" "
"Although police officers do not have a fiduciary client relationship with individual members of the public or the public at large, they do carry out vital public functions in which it is imperative that the public have confidence in them. It is also obvious that the operational dishonesty or impropriety of a single officer tarnishes the reputation of his Force and undermines public confidence in it. In these respects, the similarities between solicitors and police officers justify the analogy provided that, ultimately, the decision-maker, be it the PAT or a judge of the Administrative Court, appreciates at all times that the index case falls to be assessed in the context of policing."
It follows that, provided the context of the particular proceedings is always kept well in mind, the principles relating to police disciplinary proceedings are the same as those relating to disciplinary proceedings before other professional bodies.
Issues 2 and 3: case law and submissions
" a very serious concern that by defects in, or omissions from, their reasoning process they came to an outcome which is more severe than it should have been."
He therefore remitted the matter for rehearing before a differently-constituted Committee. Although that was a decision of the High Court made in a statutory appeal, rather than in an application for judicial review, Mr Beggs relies on it as supporting his submission that in this case I should regard the panel's and the PAT's reasons for dismissal as inadequate.
"29. I do not doubt that the maintenance of public confidence in the profession must outweigh the interests of the individual doctor. But that confidence will surely be maintained by imposing such sanction as is in all the circumstances appropriate. Thus in considering the maintenance of confidence, the existence of a public interest in not ending the career of a competent doctor will play a part. Furthermore, the fact that many patients and colleagues have, in the knowledge of the misconduct found, clearly indicated their views that erasure was not needed is a matter which can carry some weight in deciding how confidence can properly be maintained.
30. [Counsel] submitted that it would be wrong to allow a practitioner who was more skilled and whose loss would accordingly be a greater blow to avoid a sanction which would otherwise be appropriate and would have been imposed on the less skilled. So long as the public interest in retaining the services of a competent practitioner is a relevant consideration, it is inevitable that the weight to be attached to this aspect will to some extent depend on the abilities of the practitioner in question. It must be obvious that misconduct which is so serious that nothing less than erasure would be considered appropriate cannot attract a lesser sanction simply because the practitioner is particularly skilful. But if erasure is not necessarily required, the skills of the practitioner are a relevant factor."
Collins J went on to conclude that, as the Panel had approached the issue of sanction in the wrong way, he was entitled to form his own view. He concluded that suspension for a period of 12 months would be an appropriate sanction. Mr Beggs relies on that decision in support of his submission that the Panel in this case failed to give sufficient weight to the evidence which confirmed Mr Williams' admirable work with the community which he served.
Discussion
"Proceedings in the Administrative Court seeking to challenge the decision of a Police Appeals Tribunal do not arise by way of appeal, but by way of a claim for judicial review. In those circumstances, a claimant in judicial review proceedings must establish a public law error before the decision of that Tribunal could be quashed."
Conclusion
Addendum
"(1) Where the court is considering whether to exercise its power under section 51 of the Senior Courts Act 1981 to make a costs order against a person who is not a party to the proceedings, that person must
(a) Be added as a party to the proceedings for the purposes of costs only; and
(b) Be given a reasonable opportunity to attend a hearing at which the court will consider the matter further."