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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Dad v The General Dental Council [2021] EWHC 1376 (QB) (25 May 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2021/1376.html Cite as: [2021] ICR 1383, [2021] WLR(D) 310, [2021] EWHC 1376 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MR ARFAN ZIA DAD |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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THE GENERAL DENTAL COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Ms Eloise Power (instructed by GDC Legal Dept) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 6th May 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Collins Rice:
Introduction
Historical Background
The Application for Restoration Form
1. Have you been convicted of a criminal offence and/or cautioned (other than a protected conviction or caution) and/or are you currently the subject of any police investigations which might lead to a conviction or a caution in the UK or any other country?
□Yes □No
If yes, please give details on a separate sheet, including the approximate date, offence, authority which dealt with the offence and any circumstances that the Council should be aware of in consideration of your application.
2. To the best of your knowledge, have you been or are you currently subject to any proceedings or investigations by a regulatory or licensing body in the UK or any other country, including student fitness to practise?
□Yes □No
If yes, please give details on a separate sheet of the proceedings undertaken or contemplated, including the approximate date of the proceedings, country where proceedings were undertaken and the name and address of the licensing or regulatory body concerned.
Declaration by all applicants.
I understand that the GDC may contact my character referee and any of the health practitioners whose names have been provided.
I acknowledge that my professional registration will be at risk if I knowingly make a false statement in this declaration and undertaking, or if I act in any way which is incompatible with it. I further acknowledge and accept that should a question as to whether or not I have acted in accordance with this declaration and undertaking arise, it may be used by the GDC in fitness to practise proceedings against me.
I will advise the GDC of any future criminal proceedings/police investigations, convictions or cautions and any future health conditions which arise which affect the safety of patients I treat and/or those they work with, and/or my ability to do my job safely.
I have read and understand the General Dental Council's standards and health self-certification guidance and I will adhere to this guidance.
Mr Dad ticked a box at the end of this declaration and signed and dated it.
The health and self-declaration
This declaration should be completed and signed by the applicant. Because dentists are exempt from the UK Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974, you must tell us about any previous or pending prosecutions or convictions, including those considered "spent" under this Act (other than a protected conviction or caution). Protected convictions and cautions are defined in the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 (Exceptions) Order 1975 (Amendment) (England and Wales) Order 2013. We also need to know if you have been the subject of any professional proceedings in the past, or any are being contemplated, by a regulatory or licensing body in the UK or any other country. You will also need to advise the GDC of any future criminal proceedings/police investigations, convictions or cautions. We will treat the information you provide in confidence. We will only use it to assess your fitness for registration now and in the future and will only refuse registration on the basis of this information if we are satisfied about your fitness to practise and/or good character. If you make a false statement, we may refuse your application for registration and/or prosecute you and/or charge you with professional misconduct.
The PCC Proceedings
That being registered as a dentist:
1. On 24th June 2019, the General Dental Council received an application for your restoration to the Dentists' Register, dated 19th June and signed by you.
2. As part of the application at allegation 1 above, you did not declare that you were currently subject to an investigation by NHS National Services Scotland Counter Fraud Services.
3. Your conduct in relation to allegation 2 above was:
(a) misleading;
(b) dishonest.
And that by reason of the facts alleged, your fitness to practise is impaired by reason of your misconduct.
The Committee next considered whether you were under a duty to disclose that investigation. As part of their considerations, the Committee noted that there was no dispute as to the meaning of question one on the form and that you answered this correctly. It then considered the meaning of the words 'regulatory body' and what that would encompass. It also noted that it was important to consider what information the GDC were trying to capture on this form as cited in the case of Pinner v Everett. When considering the meaning of the words 'regulatory body' the Committee considered the role of the Counter Fraud Service and noted that it undertook investigations on behalf of the NHS, and had an input into the regulatory functions of the NHS. The Committee was, therefore, satisfied that the Counter Fraud Service should be considered as a regulatory body for the purposes of question 2 on the declaration form. Even if it was wrong about this, the Committee was satisfied that the Counter Fraud Service is part of the NHS in Scotland and that the NHS certainly carries out regulatory functions. Accordingly, the Counter Fraud Service, as part of the NHS in Scotland, does come within the parameters of question 2 on the restoration form. When considering the intentions of the GDC, the Committee noted that although question 2 was not worded as clearly as it might be, it was apparent by the broad way in which it was drafted, that the GDC's intentions had been for question 2 to capture any investigations that might not come within question 1. The Committee considered that it would be perverse that the GDC would not want to be made aware of a criminal investigation carried out by NHS Counter Fraud Services involving someone applying to be restored to the register. Accordingly, the Committee does not accede to the No Case to Answer application made by Ms Beckett.
…the Committee considered that it had already determined in its decision on Ms. Beckett's application of no case to answer, that NHS National Services Scotland Counter Fraud Services was part of the NHS and therefore performed some form of regulatory function. It could therefore be classed as a regulatory body, as mentioned in question 2 of that form. The Committee also has sight of documents contained within your defence bundle. Specifically, it noted the organisational chart titled 'Current Organisation of the NHS in Scotland' contained within the document 'FPICE Briefing, the National Health Service in Scotland (9th December 2016)'. On that chart, the Counter Fraud Service is included under the heading of 'National Services Scotland'. The Committee also had sight of the document titled 'NHS Improvement. Licensing Application Guidance for Independent Providers (January 2019)', from which it seems clear by the title itself that the NHS is also a licensing body."
Mr Dad's Appeal
Analysis
(i) General Interpretative Approach
(ii) Interpreting the Duty to Declare
(iii) Mr Dad's Duty
Conclusions
Decision