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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Skidmore v Dartford & Gravesham NHS Trust [2003] UKHL 27 (22 May 2003)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/2003/27.html
Cite as: (2003) 73 BMLR 209, [2003] 3 All ER 292, [2003] Lloyds Rep Med 369, [2003] ICR 721, [2003] IRLR 445, [2003] UKHL 27, [2003] Lloyd's Rep Med 369

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Skidmore v Dartford & Gravesham NHS Trust [2003] UKHL 27 (22 May 2003)
Judgments - Skidmore (Respondent) v. Dartford & Gravesham NHS Trust (Appellants)

HOUSE OF LORDS

SESSION 2002-03
[2003] UKHL 27
on appeal from: [2002] EWCA Civ 18

OPINIONS

OF THE LORDS OF APPEAL

FOR JUDGMENT IN THE CAUSE

Skidmore (Respondent)

v.

Dartford & Gravesham NHS Trust (Appellants)

ON

THURSDAY 22 MAY 2003

The Appellate Committee comprised:

  Lord Bingham of Cornhill

  Lord Steyn

  Lord Clyde

  Lord Hutton

  Lord Scott of Foscote


HOUSE OF LORDS

OPINIONS OF THE LORDS OF APPEAL FOR JUDGMENT

IN THE CAUSE

Skidmore (Respondent) v. Dartford and Gravesham NHS Trust (Appellants)

[2003] UKHL 27

LORD BINGHAM OF CORNHILL

My Lords,

  1. I have had the advantage of reading in draft the opinion of my noble and learned friend Lord Steyn. I am in full agreement with it and I would accordingly dismiss the appeal and make the order which he proposes.
  2. LORD STEYN

    My Lords,

    I. THE QUESTIONS.

  3. This appeal raises important issues in respect of hospital disciplinary proceedings. The context is a contractual disciplinary code. Specifically, the issues arise because of the incorporation of Department of Health Circular HC (90)9 dated March 1990 in most hospital doctors' contracts. This Circular governed the hospital sector of the National Health Service before the creation of autonomous Trusts under the National Health Service and Community Care Act 1990. It is still in use by autonomous NHS Trusts. The disciplinary code provides for a difference in procedure depending on whether the case involves allegations of "professional conduct" or "personal conduct." The former is governed by a judicialised procedure under Circular HC 90(9). The latter is governed by less formal disciplinary procedures without, amongst other things, the right of legal representation. Inevitably this relatively complex structure gives rise to issues of demarcation concerning the category in which a particular case falls. Not surprisingly, this has given rise to legal problems and criticism: compare Raymond, "The Employment Rights of the NHS Hospital Doctor" in "Doctors, Patients and the Law", Dyer, ed (1992), at p 194; the Department of Health Consultation Paper dated November 1999 entitled "Supporting doctors, protecting patients"; and the NHS Executive's Summary of the responses to the Consultation Paper, at section 4. There has been a difference of judicial view reflected in a number of decisions to which it will be necessary to turn. Two questions dominate the debate. They are:
  4. (1)

      Who decides on the categorisation of a case?

    (2)

      How is the line between professional and personal conduct to be drawn?

    Both these questions arise in the present appeal.

        II. THE OPERATION AND THE AFTERMATH.

  5. In April 1997 Mr Skidmore was a consultant surgeon at the Joyce Green Hospital. On 3 April 1997 Mr Skidmore operated on Mrs A for the removal of a gall bladder. The method was keyhole surgery. During the surgical procedure the patient's left iliac artery was punctured by a sharp three pronged instrument. There was a large loss of blood. The operation had to be converted to open surgery. A surgeon, who had been operating in an adjacent theatre, was called to assist. There was a short period of cardio-pulmonary resuscitation. The patient had eight units of blood transfused during the operation and two further units transfused post operatively. On any view it was a serious episode with potential life threatening implications. But the operation was eventually completed successfully and Mrs A made a complete recovery.
  6. Mrs A's husband sought an explanation from the patient relations manager who in turn asked for Mr Skidmore's comments. In two meetings Mr Skidmore gave his explanation first to Mrs A and then to Mrs A and her husband. The thrust of his explanation was to blame the episode on a faulty instrument and to suggest that the blood loss was normal, viz only two units, and that Mrs A had not arrested or required resuscitation. This version of events was in conflict with the contemporaneous notes of the operation made by the anaesthetist. In a written response Mr Skidmore expanded on his oral explanations.
  7.     III. THE DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDINGS.

  8. Following further exchanges and investigations the Authority made a charge of personal misconduct against Mr Skidmore. The outline statement alleged that Mr Skidmore
    • "sought to deliberately mislead:

      -  The patient and her family

      -  Community Health Council

      -  The Chief Executive

      through a series of statements and correspondence which he knew to be untrue . . .

      "(Mr Skidmore) . . . set out to deceive the patient, her husband, the Community Health Council and her GP about the actual events that occurred in theatre and subsequently . . .

      "Mr Skidmore set out to deceive the Chief Executive with information he knew not to be true."

        The Authority had decided that this charge was properly a charge in respect of personal conduct within the meaning of the disciplinary code.

  9. On 27 and 28 October 1997 the hearing took place before the Trust's Chief Executive. Dr Barker of the Medical Protection Society represented Mr Skidmore and Dr Key represented the management. The question whether the proceedings were properly constituted or whether the case should have been dealt with under the Circular HC (90)9 procedure governing professional conduct was argued as a preliminary point. The Chief Executive decided that the allegations were of personal and not professional misconduct and that as a result she had jurisdiction to deal with the complaint. Oral evidence was then heard from witnesses on behalf of both parties. On 20 November 1997 the Chief Executive delivered her reasoned decision. She concluded that Mr Skidmore had falsely told Mr and Mrs A that 2 units had been transfused in the theatre when in truth 8 units had been transfused and that he had stated as a fact that the instrument was faulty and had been returned to the manufacturer for inspection when this was clearly not the case. She concluded that Mr Skidmore had lied and had continued to be untruthful when he appeared before her. She decided that he should be dismissed with immediate effect.
  10. Mr Skidmore appealed to an appeal panel of the Trust Board. On 2 December 1997 an appeal panel consisting of the Trust chairman, the finance director, and three non-executive directors heard the appeal. The question of the correct procedure was again dealt with as a preliminary point. After hearing submissions the panel decided that the allegations were properly dealt with under the internal disciplinary procedures. The hearing continued. The Chief Executive gave evidence before the panel and was cross-examined by Mr Skidmore's representative, Dr Panting. The panel also heard evidence from Mr Skidmore, 2 witnesses who had given evidence below and also a local general practitioner who had not. On 18 December 1997 the panel delivered its decision. It found that Mr Skidmore's conduct constituted gross misconduct and that summary dismissal had been appropriate.
  11. Annex C of HC(90)9 requires the Secretary of State on application to refer to a panel the question whether an applicant's appointment is being terminated on the sole ground of personal misconduct. Mr Skidmore appealed under Annex C. By letter dated 11 June 1998 the Secretary of State rejected the appeal on the basis that he had no jurisdiction in accordance with the decision of the Court of Appeal in R v Secretary of State for Health, Ex p Guirguis [1990] IRLR 30, as Mr Skidmore had been dismissed without notice.
  12.     IV. THE PROCEEDINGS ALLEGING UNFAIR DISMISSAL.

  13. Mr Skidmore than applied to an industrial tribunal (now an employment tribunal) alleging unfair dismissal. The grounds of his application were twofold, viz that the wrong procedures had been adopted and that the complaint was without substance. On 4 August 1999 the tribunal dismissed the application by a majority.
  14. Mr Skidmore appealed to the Employment Appeal Tribunal on a number of grounds. One ground was that the wrong procedure had been adopted. On 22 February 2001 the EAT dismissed the appeal. Relying on decisions of Lightman J in Kramer v South Bedfordshire Community Health Care Trust [1995] ICR 1066 and Chatterjee v City and Hackney Community Services NHS Trust (1998) 49 BMLR 55, the EAT took the view that, absent bad faith or Wednesbury unreasonableness, the employer's decision on categorisation was final. In any event, the EAT concluded that the case against Mr Skidmore was essentially of a personal nature.
  15.     V. THE COURT OF APPEAL DECISION.

  16. In an unreserved judgment, given on 15 January 2002 by Keene LJ with the agreement of Aldous LJ and Sir Christopher Slade, the Court of Appeal unanimously allowed Mr Skidmore's appeal: [2002] ICR 403. Following a recent decision of the Court of Appeal in Saeed v Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust [2001] ICR 903, Keene LJ held that the decision of the employer must comply with the terms of the contract. Keene LJ further held that on the facts the decision of the employer on categorisation was wrong: the case was one involving professional conduct. The appeal before the House challenges the decision of the Court of Appeal on both points. Before directly addressing these issues it is necessary to set out critical features of Circular HC (90)9 and to explain the conflict of judicial decisions.
  17.     VI. CIRCULAR HC 90(9).

  18. The Circular is a lengthy document. For present purposes it is only necessary to set out a few extracts from it. The Circular draws a distinction between "personal conduct", "professional conduct" and "professional competence". Those categories of allegations of misconduct are defined in paragraph 3 of the Circular as follows:
    • "Personal conduct. Performance or behaviour of practitioners due to factors other than those associated with the exercise of medical or dental skills.

      "Professional Conduct. Performance or behaviour of practitioners arising from the exercise of medical or dental skills.

      "Professional Competence. Adequacy of performance of practitioners related to the exercise of their medical or dental skills and professional judgment."

        The Circular then provides, in Annex B:

      "There are broadly three types of case which may involve medical or dental staff:

      (a) cases involving personal conduct

      (b) cases involving professional conduct

      (c) cases involving professional competence.

      It is for the Authority to decide under which category a case falls. Guidance on the definition of each category is given in paragraph 3 of the Circular" (see above).
                (Emphasis added)

        In cases involving personal conduct Annex B provides that "the position of a doctor or dentist is no different from that of other health service staff". With regard to cases involving professional misconduct and professional incompetence, Annex B of the Circular provides in para 8 that the panel (consisting usually of three members) should have a legally qualified chairman. Moreover in such cases Annex B of the Circular provides, inter alia, in para 12 for the following further procedural rights:

      "The practitioner should have the right to appear personally before the investigating panel and to be represented (either by a lawyer . . . or otherwise), and to hear all the evidence presented to the panel. He should have the right to cross-examine all witnesses and to produce his own witnesses, and they and he may also be subjected to cross-examination".

        By contrast the internal procedure applicable to cases of personal conduct contains no such safeguards and is generally more informal.

  19. Since the hearing of the present case in the Court of Appeal, counsel for Mr Skidmore has unearthed the genesis of Circular HC (90)9. While the distinction between professional and personal conduct goes back to 1956, the disciplinary arrangements presently reflected in HC (90)9 were the result of the deliberations of a Joint Working Party which published a Report in August 1988 entitled "Disciplinary Procedures for Hospital and Community Doctors and Dentists". The Joint Working Party was made up of representatives of the Health Departments, the NHS and the professions. It was set up to "review disciplinary procedures for hospital and community doctors and dentists" and specifically to "consider the scope, operation and effectiveness of the disciplinary procedures" in Circular HM(61)112. Paragraph 3 of the Report reads:
    • "The Working Party recognised the professions' concerns that disciplinary procedures for senior doctors and dentists must ensure that the grounds for dismissal have been fully justified, since a specialist who has been dismissed from an NHS post on professional grounds would be unlikely to find alternative employment elsewhere. The professions felt that the procedures used should be sufficiently weighty to reflect both the long periods of training and competitive selection processes which doctors have undergone before appointment to senior posts, and also the potential gravity of the outcome of such procedures".

        The recommendations of the Working Party were accepted and gave rise to HC(90)9 which was published by the Department of Health in March 1990. The terms contained in HC (90)9 were imposed upon doctors by regulation 3 of the National Health Service (Remuneration and Conditions of Service) Regulations 1991 (SI 1991/ 481). It is now part of the employment contract of Mr Skidmore and of the employment contracts of almost all NHS hospital doctors. It will be necessary to return to the significance of the Report for the purpose of HC90(9).

        VII. THE CASE LAW.

  20. Concentrating at this stage on the issue of whose decision determines the categorisation of a case, I now turn to the directly relevant case law as matters stood at the time of the Court of Appeal judgment. In a carefully reasoned judgment in Kramer Lightman J approached the problem as follows ([1995] ICR 1066, 1071D-F):
    • "As an implied term of the contract of employment, the trust in making this decision must act in good faith and, I would also think, reach a decision which the trust could reasonably reach. If the trust can be shown to have acted in breach of this term, its decision may be challenged on that ground, but, subject to this important proviso, its decision stands. There can otherwise be no reason to include in the contract this provision that categorisation is a matter for the trust. Unlike [counsel for the doctor], I cannot regard this provision as otiose or find any significance in the fact that the impact of the provision was not appreciated by the trust's legal advisers until I raised it. The decision of the trust cannot be impugned merely because the employee or the court would have characterised the case differently or considers the trust's characterisation is wrong, or because the trust has given no reasons (in particular in a case like the present where no reasons were sought and no complaint has been made of lack of reasons prior to the hearing). The trust in this case decided that the charges were of personal misconduct and accordingly that the procedure appropriate to proceedings for personal misconduct should be adopted. This decision can only be impugned on grounds of lack of good faith or unreasonableness in reaching this determination on the part of the trust".

        In all material respects this decision was made on the same contractual terms as are to be found in the contract before the House. In the Chatterjee case (1998) 49 BMLR 55 Lightman J followed his earlier decision in Kramer. In Bhanot v South West London & St George's Mental Hospital NHS Trust [2000] Lloyd's Rep Med 324 Bell J disagreed. He observed, at p 328:

      "This is an action for breach of contract and what I am deciding is whether on the information before me the case of breach of contract is sufficiently strong to make the order which the claimant seeks".

        At first instance in Saeed v Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust [2000] Lloyd's Rep Med 331, Gage J preferred the approach of Lightman J. On the facts Gage J found that the allegation of indecent assault during a medical examination against a senior house officer was one of personal conduct. The Court of Appeal agreed with Gage J on the latter point and dismissed the appeal. Hale LJ (with whom Dame Elizabeth Butler- Sloss P and Potter LJ agreed) defined the first issue as follows (907D):

      "Who decided into which category the case fell, and on what basis could the court interfere with that decision?"

        Hale LJ commenced her judgment by saying (907E):

      "12 One might have thought that the answer to the first issue was obvious. The employer who is contemplating disciplinary action against an employee has to decide which procedure should be followed. If the employee thinks that the employer has made the wrong choice, he can try to have it changed in advance or seek damages after the event. The court will have to perform its usual task of construing the contract and applying it to the facts of the case.

      13 Unfortunately the issue has been clouded by the introduction of public law concepts into an ordinary contractual situation . . ."

        She then discussed the conflicting dicta at first instance and expressed her preference for the general approach of Bell J. She concluded, at p 908 D-F, para17:

      "Of course the employer has to decide which procedure to follow. But the employer has to take that decision in accordance with the terms of the contract . . . the trust will be in breach of contract if [the definitions in the Circular] are not properly applied".

        Taking the view that an indecent assault by a doctor during an examination of a patient cannot amount to a charge of professional misconduct she held that the appeal should be dismissed.

    VIII. ISSUE NO. 1: WHO DECIDES?
  21. Counsel for the Authority invited the House to adopt the approach of Lightman J on the first issue. For reasons which can be explained shortly it is not possible to adopt this course. It is common ground, and rightly so, that no public law issues are involved and that the questions before the House must be resolved within the framework of the contract between Mr Skidmore and the Authority. That is so despite the fact that a public body is involved. Prima facie therefore the position is as follows. The Authority is entitled to decide what disciplinary route should be followed. That decision must, however, comply with the terms of the contract. If a non-conforming decision is taken and acted upon, there is a breach of contract resulting in the usual remedies. The only escape from this position would be if it could be shown that the parties agreed upon wording in their contract making it clear that the employer's decision would be final thereby excluding the role of the court except, of course, in cases of bad faith or possibly the absence of reasonable grounds for the decision. There is no such provision in the present contract. It does, of course, provide that "It is for the authority to decide under which category a case falls". This provision merely states the obvious: the Authority must take the initial decision to commence the appropriate disciplinary procedure. It is, however, quite insufficient to exclude the normal consequences of a failure to follow the agreed contractual procedures. If there has been a breach by the Authority in adopting the wrong procedure, Mr Skidmore is entitled to appropriate relief. So far I am in general agreement with the approach of the Court of Appeal in Saeed.
  22. There is, however, one aspect of the analysis of the Court of Appeal which I cannot accept. Hale LJ observed that the issue has been clouded by the introduction of public law concepts into an ordinary contractual situation. That is not how Lightman J approached the matter in Kramer and Chatterjee. On the contrary, he expressly based his reasoning on an implied term of the contract of employment. He said that there "can otherwise be no reason to include in the contract this provision that categorisation is a matter for the trust". The likelihood is that the judge had in mind decided cases where the court interpreted a contractual term dependent on the exercise of the will of one party as by implication restricted to a decision taken in good faith and on reasonable grounds, e.g. a clause entrusting a decision as to the adequacy of performance to the absolute discretion of one party. The foundation of such an implication is to satisfy the reasonable expectations of the parties. Some examples of such cases are to be found in the judgment of McNair J in Niarchos (London) Ltd v Shell Tankers Ltd [1961] 2 Lloyd's Rep 496, at 507-509; see also Lewison, The Interpretation of Contracts, 2nd ed, 1997, para 12.03, at pp 347-350. There are other recent examples of special provisions: West of England Shipowners Mutual Insurance Association (Luxembourg) v Cristal Ltd (The Glacier Bay) [1996] 1 Lloyd's Rep 370 ('the sole judge') and Brown (RE) v GIO Insurance Ltd [1998] Lloyd's Rep IR 201 ('the sole judge'). The mistake of the judge in Kramer and Chatterjee was to place a weight upon a contractual provision which it was incapable of bearing. There was no agreement to entrust the issue to the final decision of the Authority. There was no warrant for the term the judge implied. The contract was entirely workable on the basis that the Authority had to decide on categorisation but it had to do so in accordance with the contract.
  23. I would reject the challenge of the Authority to the decision of the Court of Appeal on the first point.
  24.     IX. ISSUE NO. 2: WHICH CATEGORY?

  25. It is now necessary to consider how the case against Mr Skidmore should be categorised. The starting point must be the proper interpretation of the definitions contained in the disciplinary code. It seems right to treat the definitions of professional conduct ("behaviour of practitioners arising from the exercise of medical or dental skills") and professional competence ("adequacy of performance of practitioners related to the exercise of their medical or dental skills and professional judgment") as the primary categories. Personal conduct is the residual category consisting of "behaviour . . . due to factors other than those associated with the exercise of medical or dental skills"(Emphasis added). If a case is properly to be categorised as involving professional conduct or competence, the judicialised disciplinary route under HC(90)9 is obligatory. That is so even if the case could also be said to amount to personal misconduct.
  26. For present purposes it is unnecessary to examine the distinction between professional conduct and professional competence. It is common ground that professional competence is not a relevant category. The line drawn between professional conduct and personal conduct is conduct "arising from the exercise of medical or dental skills" and "other" conduct. How this distinction should in practice be applied must now be considered. The structure of the disciplinary code set out in HC (90)9 is a classic case requiring a broad and purposive interpretation enabling sensible procedural decisions to be taken. It would, for example, be surprising if a case where a doctor embarked on an intimate medical examination of a woman, which he knew to be wholly unnecessary, necessarily fell outside the scope of what may constitute professional misconduct. After all, in such a case, the doctor is using his position as a hospital doctor to perpetrate an act of serious professional misconduct. I cannot, therefore, agree with the ruling in Saeed (para 24, at p 910D) that an indecent assault committed by a doctor during a medical examination cannot constitute professional misconduct within the code. It is a case of a doctor misusing his ostensible medical skills for improper purposes. In my view it falls within the scope of professional misconduct within the definition. Relying on the text of HC (90)9 I take the view that a purposive construction, and common sense considerations, point towards a broad interpretation of professional conduct.
  27. Since the decision in Saeed and the hearing in the Court of Appeal there has become available the Joint Working Party Report setting out the reasons for the line drawn between professional and personal misconduct. The emphasis is on the serious consequences for a doctor of an adverse decision, making a doctor dismissed on professional grounds virtually unemployable. In my view this background material reinforces a broad interpretation of HC (90)9 notably in respect of what may amount to professional misconduct. It supports the interpretation that when in a doctor/patient relationship a doctor commits deliberate misconduct it may come within the category of professional conduct.
  28. Keene LJ concluded that the allegations against Mr Skidmore fell within the category of professional conduct and that was the appropriate machinery to be used. He explained, at pp 410-411:
    • "32. First, the appellant was lying about the performance by him of an operation. The operation did not merely provide the occasion or opportunity for his misconduct, as happens in some cases where a medical examination of a patient provides an opportunity for an indecent assault, to take a familiar example. The operation here was the subject matter of the lie, and the conduct on the part of the appellant would not have taken place but for the exercise of his medical skills in the course of the operation. It comes into a different category from lies told about a matter not involving his medical skills, such as, for example, whether he had been having an affair with a member of the nursing staff.

      33. Secondly, the history of this matter shows that it was seen as part of the applicant's professional duty to respond to the complaint by Mr A and to communicate with the patient and his general practitioner, and in due course with the Chief Executive. He was patently expected to respond to the letter from the patient relations manager and the enclosed complaint. Indeed, any surgeon would be expected to explain to a patient what had happened during the course of an operation if something untoward or unexpected had taken place, as the GMC booklet 'Good Medical Practice' indicates. Such an explanation surely is to be regarded as conduct arising from the exercise of his medical skills. The doctor in such a situation is acting in the course of fulfilling a professional responsibility. In the same way, it is part of a consultant's normal responsibility to keep a patient's general practitioner informed of the success or failure of an operation which he has conducted. So the letter of 21 April to the general practitioner is to be seen as arising from the exercise of the applicant's medical skills during the operation.


      34. Thirdly, it is to my mind relevant that the allegations against the applicant raised issues which, at least to a degree, needed medical experience or expertise for their determination. I have in mind in particular the applicant's attempted explanation of how he confused the number of units of blood transfused. Despite Mr Douglas's attempts to persuade us to the contrary, it seems to me that some medical experience was required to give proper consideration to that proffered explanation. The internal disciplinary procedure does not necessarily involve anyone with medical experience determining such an issue. The independent procedure under the Circular does. That too points towards the proper categorisation of the allegations here."

    This reasoning is irresistible.

  29. Given the interpretation, which I have adopted, it is in truth self evident that lies told by a doctor to a patient about important details of an operation can amount to professional conduct. After all in such a case the medical practitioner is professing to speak as a doctor about a matter covered by his medical skills. The argument to the contrary on behalf of the Authority must be rejected.
  30. X. THE OUTCOME.

  31. I conclude that in breach of contract the Authority adopted the wrong procedure. I would therefore dismiss the appeal. In the result the decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal is quashed and the matter is remitted to an employment tribunal to reconsider the complaint of unfair dismissal on the basis that the Authority employed the wrong procedure.
  32. LORD CLYDE

    My Lords,

  33. I agree that the appeal should be dismissed for the reasons set out in the speech of my noble and learned friend Lord Steyn. I add a few words of my own merely in the hope of giving assistance in the future application of the scheme of categories of conduct set out in the Department of Health Circular HC (90) 9.
  34. Paragraph 3 of the Circular explains that authorities had sometimes had great difficulty in defining the nature of the conduct in question. The expressions "personal conduct", "professional conduct" and "professional competence" required in particular concentration upon the particular words "personal" and "professional" and the making of some kind of distinction between them. Clearly these terms would be hard to apply precisely and grey areas could easily be identified where the terms could overlap. Those difficulties were sought to be overcome by the Circular. The guidance which it gave had the effect of moving the attention away from the former expressions and onto the agreed definitions of the categories of conduct. One importance of this was that the words "personal" and "professional" are no longer of importance in themselves. The new guidance would work equally well if the three categories were identified as "type A conduct", "type B conduct" and "type C conduct". The expressions "personal conduct" and "professional conduct" and "professional competence" have become simply labels, serving only to identify categories which have now been fully defined.
  35. The categories must be taken to be exhaustive of all kinds of conduct which might attract disciplinary attention. While it is a threefold categorisation there are only two forms of procedure which may follow. The expression "due to factors associated with" is not a very happy one. But to make the scheme coherent and exhaustive of all cases which may be subject to disciplinary procedure the two main cases must be those where the conduct is due to factors associated with the exercise of medical or dental skills and those where the conduct is due to factors other than those associated with the exercise of medical or dental skills. That latter case is labelled "personal conduct" and attracts the procedure appropriate for such cases. If the conduct is due to factors associated with the exercise of medical or dental skills it will fall into one or other of the two groups which bear the respective labels of "professional conduct" and "professional competence". In relation to the task of making a choice between the second and third kinds of conduct, consideration has to be given to the matters of adequacy and professional judgment which characterise the third kind of conduct. But that choice is not of consequence for the basic distinction in procedure. Both the second and the third kinds of conduct call for the more elaborate processing of the case.
  36. While I do not for a moment suggest that there is only one way in which one must go about the task of deciding which category applies in any particular case, I would prefer first to ask the question whether the conduct complained of is due to factors associated with the exercise of medical or dental skills. One must look at the conduct in question and ask whether it has come about through factors associated with the exercise of medical or dental skills. I agree with my noble and learned friend Lord Steyn that a broad approach is appropriate. If there is such an association then the further question may be asked whether it is matter of conduct or of competence within the meaning of the second and third definitions. If it does not fall into the third category as matter of the adequacy of the performance of a practitioner related to the exercise of medical or dental skills and professional judgment then it must fall into the second category. But in either case the more elaborate procedure will have to be followed. If on the other hand there is no such association then the case will be one for the less elaborate procedure designed for cases in the category of "personal conduct".
  37. Approaching the present case in this way it seems to me clear beyond doubt that the conduct in question was due to factors associated with the respondent's exercise of medical skills and so did not qualify under the heading of "personal conduct".
  38. LORD HUTTON

    My Lords,

  39. I have had the advantage of reading in draft the opinion of my noble and learned friend Lord Steyn. For the reasons he has given, with which I am in full agreement, I too would dismiss this appeal and make the order which he proposes.
  40. LORD SCOTT OF FOSCOTE

    My Lords,

  41. I have had the advantage of reading in advance the opinion of my noble and learned friend, Lord Steyn. For the reasons he has given, with which I agree, I too would dismiss this appeal and make the order proposed.


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