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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 >> Hill, R (On the Application Of) v Institute of Chartered Accountants In England And Wales (Rev 1) [2013] EWCA Civ 555 (22 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/555.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 555, [2014] WLR 86, [2014] 1 WLR 86, [2013] WLR(D) 194 |
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ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE LANG DBE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF HILL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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INSTITUTE OF CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS IN ENGLAND AND WALES |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
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Ms Catherine Callaghan (instructed by Bates Wells & Braithwaite London LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 15th & 16th April 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Longmore:
"THE CHAIRMAN: I am sorry Mr Cope, could I just mention something; it is possible under the rules if everyone agrees that we could continue in Mr Mander's absence with just two members of the tribunal after he left at five.
MR COPE: Yes. I do not think you would need agreement to do that, you have a discretion to do that.
THE CHAIRMAN: Well I would like your agreement because if he got the transcript he would get the flavour of what has gone on.
MR COPE: Do I take it you will be ordering the transcript of the last two days?
THE CHAIRMAN: Yes, I can do.
MR COPE: I think on that basis if there is to be a transcript I would certainly have no objection to Mr Mander leaving at five.
THE CHAIRMAN: Yes, we will have a transcript. Do you have any objection Mr O'Fathaigh.
MR O'FATHAIGH: No. I think what you are suggesting is that you continue after five and Mr Mander has the benefit of a transcript and you will then meet again and confer and then give your decision?
THE CHAIRMAN: Well we will try and see how far we get.
MR O'FATHAIGH: Are we going to try and finish Mr Hill today so when we meet next time it will just be legal submissions and decision time?
THE CHAIRMAN: If that is possible."
"MR O'FATHAIGH: If the transcript could be marked that Mr Mander is leaving and the Committee Administrator is leaving and I will wait and then begin again.
THE CHAIRMAN: Shall we just take a short adjournment.
MR COPE: Do I take it that Mr Mander does not have any further questions of Mr Hill.
MR MANDER: Not at this stage, no.
MR COPE: It may be on the next occasion his evidence will have been completed and there might not be a further opportunity. If Mr Mander does have other questions then we could recall Mr Hill
THE CHAIRMAN: Indeed. We will just have a brief adjournment.
(Adjournment for a short time)
(The hearing continued without Mr Mander)"
At about 6.30 p.m. the cross-examination concluded and the legal assessor asked a few questions after which the Chairman said:-
"THE CHAIRMAN: Well we are going to have to adjourn now. We have got some questions. On the next occasion there will be re-examination and then we will put our questions and I think Mr Mander may have some other questions and then we will hear closing arguments."
The hearing was then adjourned to a date which was later fixed to be 27th January 2010.
Powers of the Tribunal
"(1) On receipt by the Disciplinary Committee of a formal complaint, the Chairman of that Committee or, failing him, any Vice-Chairman of that Committee
(a) shall appoint three of its members, two of them being members of the Institute and the third not being an accountant, as a tribunal to hear that complaint;
(b) and shall appoint one of the three as chairman of the tribunal.
(2) If, in the case of a tribunal so appointed, any member of the tribunal –
(a) is for any reason unable to attend the hearing or any adjourned hearing of the formal complaint; or
(b) is in the course of the hearing unable to continue so to attend.
the remaining members, if not less than two in number, may at their discretion proceed or continue with the hearing; but if the defendant is present or represented at the hearing, they shall do so only if he or his representative consents.
(3) If in a case falling within paragraph 2, the remaining members of the tribunal
(a) do not proceed or continue with the hearing; or
(b) complete the hearing but are unable to agree on a finding,
the complaint shall be heard or re-heard by a new tribunal under paragraph 1."
"The hearing shall be informal and the strict rules of evidence shall not apply. Subject to these regulations the tribunal may adopt any method of procedure which it may consider fair and which gives each party an opportunity to have his case presented. The tribunal may at its discretion consider evidence which has not been provided in accordance with regulations 14 and 17 above. Subject to regulation 7, the hearing will be in public. Evidence will not be taken on oath."
Regulation 46 provides:-
"No objection shall be upheld to any technical fault in the complaint or in the procedure adopted by a tribunal provided that the proceedings are fair and the relevant Bye-laws and Regulations have been complied with."
Breach of the rules of natural justice?
"To put the matter at its very lowest, it is a very grave disadvantage to anybody who has to give a decision in such a case not to have been able to judge the demeanour of the complainant's wife while she was giving her own story."
Lord Merriman thought however, that it would be a "grave wrong" to require the case to be re-heard and he therefore dismissed the appeal. He could not therefore have thought that the undoubted irregularity affected the jurisdiction of the magistrates' court.
"In a criminal trial, whether before a jury or before magistrates, it is a fundamental requirement of justice that those called upon to deliver the verdict must have heard all the evidence. The evaluation of oral evidence depends not only upon what is said but how it is said. Evidence that may ultimately read well in a transcript may have carried no conviction at all when it was being given. Those charged with returning a verdict in a criminal case have the duty cast upon them to assess and determine the reliability and veracity of the witnesses who give oral evidence, and it is upon this assessment that their verdict will ultimately depend. If they have not had the opportunity to carry out this vital part of their function as judges of the facts, they are disqualified from returning a verdict and any verdict they purport to return must be quashed."
Lord Griffiths added, at 1360B:-
"Whether or not justice was done in the present case it was certainly not seen to be done."
"Subject to the provisions of the Act and of any regulations thereunder, the board can regulate its procedure in such manner as it thinks fit. … Whether the board heard the interested parties orally or by receiving written statements from them is, as Hamilton LJ said in Rex v Local Government Board, ex parte Arlidge [1914] 1 KB 160, a matter of procedure. Equally it would have been a matter of procedure if the board had appointed a person or persons to hear and receive evidence and submissions from interested parties for the purpose of informing the board of the evidence and submissions (see Osgood v Nelson and Rex v Local Government Board, ex parte Arlidge). This procedure [i.e. the delegation to another person of the task of hearing evidence] may be convenient when the credibility of witnesses is not involved, and if it had been followed in this case and as a result the board, before it reached a decision, was fully informed of the evidence given and the submissions made and had considered them, then it could not have been said that the board had not heard the interested parties and had acted contrary to the principles of natural justice. In some circumstances it may suffice for the board to have before it and to consider an accurate summary of the relevant evidence and submissions if the summary adequately discloses the evidence and submissions to the board."
This shows not merely that the way evidence is received is essentially a procedural matter but also that reading witness statements or receiving their evidence in some other accurate manner may be a permissible procedure.
"A situation arose where a member was to be substituted who would not have the same information and background as the other two members. That is a situation that occurs in practice with some regularity and the way in which it is solved is often to allow that particular new substituted member to have access and to read into the transcripts carefully so as to have the same kind of information as the originally constituted members. It is generally acknowledged that that is not a perfect solution because in some cases the way in which the evidence was given can be significant and therefore a person who has not heard the witness may be at a disadvantage to those who have. …
However, in some cases it is concluded that, having regard to the nature of the case and the evidence that has been given, the potential for injustice is relatively slight and that the advantages for the administration of justice in general countervail such slight disadvantage that has been perceived. The general advantages of course lie in the fact that it is then unnecessary for the hearing to be duplicated with all the additional cost, use of resources and anxiety to one or both parties of having to go through yet again a full hearing, when that is not strictly necessary because other measures can be taken."
Consent
Jurisdiction
"By constitutive jurisdiction I mean the power given to a judicial body to decide certain classes of issue. By adjudicative jurisdiction I mean the entitlement of such a body to reach a decision within its constitutive jurisdiction."
The importance of the distinction for present purposes is that an act outside the constitutive jurisdiction of a tribunal is an act which cannot be agreed to by the parties and cannot, therefore, be waived by them. If Mr Hamer's first argument in relation to the Bye-laws were correct and there was no power for the tribunal to permit a temporary absence by a tribunal member on the basis that he would read the transcript of evidence given in his absence and then return, the procedure adopted would no doubt be outside the constitutive jurisdiction of the tribunal and could not be agreed to or waived.
"I do not think it is necessary for the purpose of deciding this case to determine whether the rule that two members of the Commission constitute a quorum was complied with. The important issue is whether the maxim "he who decides must hear" invoked by the applicant should be applied here.
This maxim expresses a well-known rule according to which, where a tribunal is responsible for hearing and deciding a case, only those members of the tribunal who heard the case may take part in the decision. It has sometimes been said that this rule is a corollary of the audi alteram partem rule. This is true to the extent a litigant is not truly "heard" unless he is heard by the person who will be deciding his case. In my view, however, the rule expresses more than that; it is a rule which actually affects the judge's jurisdiction. For that reason its violation may be invoked even by a litigant who waived his right to be heard by the court which passed judgment on him. Thus, a defendant who voluntarily declines to attend the hearing thereby waives the right to be heard; he does not, however, waive the right to be judged by a judge who has heard the evidence. This having been said, it must be realized that the rule "he who decides must hear", important though it may be, is based on the legislator's supposed intentions. It therefore does not apply where this is expressly stated to be the case; nor does it apply where a review of all provisions governing the activities of a tribunal leads to the conclusion that the legislator could not have intended them to apply. Where the rule does apply to a tribunal, finally, it requires that all members of the tribunal who take part in a decision must have heard the evidence and the representations of the parties in the manner which the law requires that they be heard. It can therefore not be argued that the requirements of the law have been met merely because the members of the tribunal who rendered a decision heard the evidence and arguments; the rule requires that they hear them in the manner prescribed by law."
Agreement/Waiver
Respondent's Notice
"This case was not dependent upon a judgment as to disputed evidence or the veracity or demeanour of witnesses. The common theme in Mr Hill's defence put forward in his witness statement, defence, skeleton argument and final submissions was reflected in his answers in cross-examination as is clear from our reading of the transcript. In no way in this case do we feel disadvantaged in forming our judgment by not having heard Mr Hill give evidence. Mr Mander was in fact present for Mr Hill's fairly lengthy examination in chief and part of the cross-examination. There was no actual prejudice to Mr Hill by reason of Mr Mander's absence during the major part of the cross-examination."
Lord Justice Beatson:
Lord Justice Underhill: