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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 >> Anandh, Estate of & Anor v Barnet Primary Health Care Trust & Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 5 (27 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/5.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 5 |
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A3/2003/1063 FC3 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE,
CHANCERY DIVISION
(The Honourable Mr Justice Lloyd)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
and
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
____________________
The Estate of Dr Anandh & Anr |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Barnet Primary Health Care Trust & Ors |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr James Ramsden (instructed by Capsticks) for the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden :
Background
The Trusts' claim against Dr Anandh's estate
The statutory framework
"2(1) In these regulations, unless the context otherwise requires:
"contractor" means a person who has undertaken to provide general ophthalmic services and whose name is included in the ophthalmic list;
"doctor" means a registered medical practitioner; …
"ophthalmic medical practitioner" means a doctor whose qualifications have in accordance with regulation 4 or regulation 5 been approved as being prescribed qualifications;"
…
[The expression "the ophthalmic list" is defined in regulation 6 below. The expression "registered medical practitioner" is defined in the Interpretation Act 1978.]
[Regulation 3 sets out qualifications which a doctor must possess in order to be an ophthalmic medical practitioner.]
"…
4(1) A doctor who wishes to establish his status as an ophthalmic medical practitioner shall apply to the Ophthalmic Qualifications Committee for approval of his qualifications and shall give to it such particulars of his qualifications as it shall require.
(2) The Ophthalmic Qualifications Committee shall consider and determine the doctor's application and within two months after the date of the application shall inform him of the Committee's determination.
(3) If the Ophthalmic Qualifications Committee is satisfied that the doctor possesses the qualifications prescribed by regulation 3 , he shall be an ophthalmic medical practitioner.
…
6. (1) The Committee shall keep a list called "the ophthalmic list" of those persons who, pursuant to the provisions of regulation 7, have undertaken to provide general ophthalmic services.
…
7. (1) An ophthalmic medical practitioner or optician who wishes to be included in the ophthalmic list of a Committee shall send to that Committee an application to that effect which shall indicate whether the applicant is an ophthalmic medical practitioner, a registered ophthalmic optician or a body corporate carrying on business as ophthalmic opticians and shall include:
(a) an undertaking to provide general ophthalmic services and to comply with the terms of service; and
(b) the information, as respects the matters mentioned in regulation 6(3), which it is proposed shall be contained in the ophthalmic list. …"
"24. Testing of Sight
(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section, a person who is not a registered medical practitioner or registered ophthalmic optician shall not test the sight of another person.
(2) Subsection (1) above shall not apply to the testing of sight by a person recognised by a medical authority as a medical student, if carried out as part of a course of instruction approved by that authority for medical students or as part of an examination so approved.
(3) The Council may by rules exempt from subsection (1) above the testing of sight by persons training as ophthalmic opticians, or any prescribed class of such persons, in such cases and subject to compliance with such conditions as may be prescribed by the rules.
(4) Any person who contravenes subsection (1) above shall be liable on summary conviction to a fine of an amount not exceeding level 4 on the standard scale."
Judgment of Lloyd J
(a) The repayments claim
"17. Mr Power, for the defendant, submits that [section 24 of the Opticians Act 1989] is not an offence of strict liability; but it seems to me that it is. The prohibition is absolute, subject only to irrelevant exceptions in subsections (2) and (3), which relate to the training of medical students and the testing of sight by persons training as ophthalmic opticians under circumstances prescribed separately. The offence is committed if the prohibition is contravened. If there were a genuine misunderstanding or mistake, there might be a reason not to prosecute, or there might be a reason to mitigate the penalty. But that does not seem to me to render lawful the doing of something which is prohibited by section 24(1). It is clear that Dr Rabindra-Anandh did contravene the subsection on very many occasions.
18. The claimants say that, for these various reasons (a) he was not entitled to perform sight tests or to be paid for them, and (b) the payments received were made under a mistake of fact, that is to say, supposing contrary to the fact that he was indeed a registered ophthalmic medical practitioner. Accordingly, it is said the sums paid are recoverable as payments under a mistake. As variants of the same point, the payments are said alternatively to have been ultra vires the relevant authorities which would entitle the claimants in principle to repayment; and it is also said that it was unlawful for the first defendant to receive them.
19. On any of these bases, in principle, it seems to me that the first defendant's liability to repay the sums in question is clear and indisputable."
(b) The overpayments claim
Permission to appeal
Submissions
(a) The repayments claim
"From these authorities the following propositions emerge: (1) property and chattels and land can pass under a contract which is illegal and therefore would have been unenforceable as a contract; (2) a plaintiff can at law enforce property rights so acquired provided that he does not need to rely on the illegal contract for any purpose other than providing the basis of his claim to a property right; …"
"Parliament has chosen to provide a defence against claims for breach of contract in favour of the very people who have ignored its licensing requirements" (per Saville LJ at 674 and see also per Hirst LJ at 675).
"Where a statute prohibits both parties from concluding or performing a contract when both or either of them have no authority to do so, the contract is impliedly prohibited … But where a statute merely prohibits one party from entering into a contract without authority, and/or imposes a penalty upon him if he does so (i.e. a unilateral prohibition) it does not follow that the contract itself is impliedly prohibited so as to render it illegal and void. Whether or not the statute has this effect depends upon considerations of public policy in the light of the mischief which the statute is designed to prevent, its language, scope and purpose, the consequences for the innocent party, and any other relevant considerations. The statutes considered in Cope v Rowlands, 2 M & W 149 and Cornelius Phillips [1918] AC 199 fell on one side of the line; the Food Acts 1984 would clearly fall on the other."
(b) The overpayments claim
Conclusions
(a) The repayments claim
(1) the Trusts made them under a mistake of fact as to Dr Anandh's entitlement to registration;
(2) the payments were ultra vires the Trusts; and
(3) it was unlawful for Dr Anandh to receive them.
The first basis raises an issue of fact which must be tried as to whether the Trusts were concerned with the issue of entitlement to registration. The second basis starts from the proposition that the first basis is correct, alternatively, it is predicated on the basis that Dr Anandh was not a "contractor" for the purposes of the 1986 Regulations, and for the reasons already given the defence to this claim raises a real prospect of success. Alternatively, the second basis, and also the third basis, involve a consideration of the effect of the breach of section 24 of the Opticians Act 1989 on the Trusts' claims for damages or repayment. The payments were for unlawful services. Clearly Dr Anandh could not sue for any payments that had not been paid to him for his services. However, for the reasons given above, section 24 does not render the contracts unlawful or void. In my judgment, there is a real prospect of success on the defence that the Trusts would have to avoid the contracts with Dr Anandh to raise a claim for the fees paid for the services required by those contracts, either in restitution or on the basis of constructive trust. They have not done this. If avoidance is necessary and it is too late for them to do this, their only claim will be for damages for breach of contract.
The overpayments claim
Disposition
Lord Justice Latham:
Lord Justice Potter: