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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Good Law Project Ltd v Secretary of State for Health And Social Care [2021] EWHC 1237 (TCC) (29 April 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2021/1237.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 1237 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
Fetter Lane London |
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B e f o r e :
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GOOD LAW PROJECT LIMITED AND EVERYDOCTOR LIMITED |
(Claimants) |
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- v - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE |
(Defendant) |
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MR BOWSHER QC and MR WEST appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
DISCLAIMER: The quality of audio for this hearing is the responsibility of the Court. Poor audio can adversely affect the accuracy, and we have used our best endeavours herein to produce a high quality transcript.
MRS JUSTICE O'FARRELL:
a. Firstly, it is alleged that the contracts violated the treaty principles of equal treatment and transparency. It is said by the claimants that the defendant has failed to provide evidence that it conducted any, or any fair and transparent, form of negotiated process which applied equally as between prospective suppliers.
b. Secondly, it is alleged by the claimants that the defendant failed to provide proper reasons for the contract awards.
c. Thirdly, it is submitted by the claimants that the awards of the contracts was irrational. That allegation falls into two parts: firstly, it is alleged that no, or insufficient, financial or technical verification was undertaken in respect of the potential suppliers; and secondly, it is alleged that the use of a high priority lane for certain suppliers in the absence of any stated criteria for referrals to that high priority lane gave rise to an unfair advantage.
a. messages to or from Andrew Mills concerning Prosper Mills or Ayanda's offers to supply PPE;
b. messages to or from members of the PPE cell concerning Prosper Mills or Ayanda's offers to supply PPE;
c. messages concerning PPE procurement sent to a Whatsapp group consisting of approximately 200 CEOs, or a Whatsapp group consisting of CPOs;
d. messages sent to or from members of the PPE cell which concerned the handling of offers to supply made by PestFix and Prosper Mill, Ayanda or Andrew Mills; and
e. messages sent to or from members of the PPE cell which evidence any advantages obtained by suppliers in the VIP lane as a result of VIP status.
The third category that is sought is any communications a) by and with Steve Oldfield, concerning the offers to supply made by PestFix; and/or b) by and with any minister or official of the Department for International Trade concerning the offers to supply made by Prosper Mills, Ayanda or Andrew Mills. The defendant's position is that some searches have been carried out; anything produced by Mr Oldfield has been disclosed.
Items 6 and 7 concern the requirements by the defendant for the FFP2 respirators and the contracts that were placed for those respirators. The claimants seek a number of items of information concerning the enquiries that the defendant had made of the NHS prior to placing the orders for these items and also explanations for the placing of those orders. The starting point is that Mr Young and Mr Marron in their witness statements have explained the basis on which they decided to place orders for FFP2 respirators. That is something that the claimants can challenge. The court is going to have to consider whether those explanations justify the placing of those orders if in fact the equipment did not meet the NHS requirements. However, the matter does not rest there because the defendant expressly pleads in its detailed grounds that it relied on advice from Emily Lawson in deciding to go ahead with the orders for FFP2 respirators. In those circumstances, it is appropriate for the claimants to ask for details of that advice. In 6(ii) the request is for the defendant to provide a detailed explanation of the advice from Emily Lawson referred to at paragraph 85 of the detailed grounds, in paragraph 54.2.5 of the statement of Chris Young and in paragraph 18.1 of the statement of Jon Fundrey, and to supply documentary evidence of that advice. I consider that it would be reasonable, necessarily and proportionate for that information to be provided – clearly it will be the best information that is available – so that the claimants can understand the advice that was given which formed the basis of the decision taken by the defendant to proceed with those orders. That is sufficient to deal with the requests in both 6 and 7.