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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 >> Reilly v Teaching Regulation Agency & Anor [2020] EWHC 1188 (Admin) (13 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/1188.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1188 (Admin), [2020] ELR 714 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
SITTING AT BIRMINGHAM CIVIL JUSTICE
CENTRE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CAROLINE ANN REILLY |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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(1) TEACHING REGULATION AGENCY (2) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR EDUCATION |
Respondents |
____________________
Iain Steele (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Second Respondent
Hearing date: 4 February 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, released to BAILII and publication on the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00am on the 13 May 2020.
MR JUSTICE SWIFT
A. Introduction
"The Panel will hear an allegation that you are guilty of unacceptable professional conduct and/or conduct that may bring the profession into disrepute in that you:
1. Failed to disclose your relationship with a convicted sex offender A to your employer despite the advice you received from the Director of Operations and Performance at the National Probation Service dated 17 February 2010;
2. Mislead (sic) the investigation by stating you were advised that there was no reason for you to disclose that you had a relationship with a convicted sex offender to your employer;
3. Failed to demonstrate insight into how your relationship with a convicted sex offender may have impacted on your role as Head Teacher;
4. Your conduct at paragraphs 1 and 2 was dishonest."
"This means that Ms Caroline Reilly is prohibited from teaching indefinitely and cannot teach in any school, sixth form college, relevant youth accommodation or children's home in England. She may apply for the prohibition order to be set aside, but not until 18 January 2021, two years from the date of this order at the earliest. This is not an automatic right to have the prohibition order removed. If she does apply, a panel will consider whether the prohibition order should be set aside. Without a successful application, Ms Caroline Reilly remains prohibited from teaching indefinitely.
This order takes effect on the date it is served on the teacher."
B. Decision
(1) The decision of the Professional Conduct Panel to proceed even though Ms Reilly was absent.
"I am currently feeling unfit to attend.
I cannot provide any confidential medical information as I have been advised otherwise.
I do not know what documentation you would require."
On Monday 7 January 2019 Clare Hastie, a solicitor at Kingsley Knapley, a firm retained by the Panel, sent an email to Ms Reilly. She explained that the request to adjourn needed to be considered by the Panel. She suggested the matter be considered at a hearing by telephone sometime that week. She asked Ms Reilly to provide copies of any documents relied on in support of the application to adjourn the hearing. Ms Reilly replied on 8 January 2019. She stated that because she was unemployed she could not obtain a Fit to Work Note; she said she had no money to pay for a doctor's letter or medical certificate. She said she would not be fit enough either for the Panel hearing or to participate in the proposed phone hearing. She said she was not refusing to attend. She went on to state "I would really appreciate being left alone for at least six weeks to aid my current situation". On Thursday 10 January Ms Hastie sent a further email. That email made it clear that the decision on Ms Reilly's application to adjourn the panel hearing remained outstanding. As to provision of information to explain why Ms Reilly was unable to attend the Panel hearing, Ms Hastie wrote this:
"It would assist the Panel in their decision making if you could provide medical evidence from your GP or another medical practitioner confirming your current health condition and the impact of this condition on your ability to participate in the hearing. We are not requesting that you obtain a Fit to Work Note. Your GP will be able to provide a letter for the purposes of the hearing. We note the comments you make about the fee that the GP may charge for this. We would be willing to contact your GP and obtain the requested information on your behalf. We would seek your written consent to do so beforehand and would only pursue this course of action if it would assist you in obtaining the relevant documentary evidence."
Ms Reilly sent an email in reply on Friday 11 January 2019 (the working day before the first day set for the hearing). She repeated that she was not unwilling to attend the hearing, but was unfit to attend. In response to the offer Ms Hastie had made in her email, Ms Reilly replied,
"I have also considered your request for my signed and written consent to access medical evidence.
I am not giving any signed or written consent to my personal and confidential medical records or medical evidence.
I have looked at the TRA Disciplinary Regulations and cannot see any reference to support your request for my consent to my personal and private medical data.
The ICO have informed me that under the GDPR you would need a Lawful Basis under Article 6 and a Special Category under Article 9."
"… The Panel will need to be informed that there is a waiting time of at least 2 weeks for a GP appointment. There would be a further wait of up to a week to receive a private medical report which would also incur a charge.
At this stage I am feeling harassed and intimidated by you and the content of your emails. You are pressurising me to attend the GP surgery and obtain a private medical report at a cost that I cannot afford. Your alternative solution of giving you signed written consent to access a medical report, feels like coercion; in fact it feels as if I am being bullied into doing as you want, following a specific course of action."
"The Panel had regard to the seriousness of this case, and the potential consequences for the teacher. It accepted that fairness to the teacher is of prime importance. However, by taking such measures referred to above, the Panel considered that it could address that unfairness in so far as is possible. The Panel took account of the inconvenience and adjournment would cause to the witnesses, the seriousness of the allegation and the public interest, and considered on balance that the hearing should proceed today."
(2) The decision to make a Prohibition Order
"I accept that I do not know the full facts of the matter at this stage and I can understand your sense of anger that my "private, home and work life were going to be intruded upon" however you will understand that A is convicted sex offender now under our supervision for three years. I do not know the nature of your relationship with this man and whether or not it extends to more than friendship I do believe however that if you have not already done so, it would be wise for you to disclose this relationship to the education authorities whether by way of discussion with your Chair of Governors or some other route."
This final sentence was relied on as the "advice" for the purposes of the first allegation. Yet this led only to a sterile debate over whether Mr Bates' comment could be construed as formal or material advice. That served only to draw attention away from the true issue: whether as head teacher, Ms Reilly realised or ought to have realised that she should have told the School about her relationship with A. The point made by Mr Bates at the end of his letter was significant only because it was an indication that Ms Reilly either did realise, or ought to have realised she needed to tell her governors about that relationship.