BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> The NHS Business Services Authority v Williams [2016] EWHC 1952 (Ch) (28 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/1952.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1952 (Ch), [2016] WLR(D) 461, [2017] ICR 327 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2017] ICR 327] [View ICLR summary: [2016] WLR(D) 461] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF REGULATION R2 OF THE NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE PENSION SCHEME REGULATIONS 1995
AND IN THE MATTER OF A DETERMINATION OF THE PENSIONS OMBUDSMAN AND AN APPEAL UNDER SECTION 151 OF THE PENSION SCHEMES ACT 1993
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE NHS BUSINESS SERVICES AUTHORITY |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
CHRISTINE WILLIAMS |
Respondent |
____________________
David E Grant (instructed by Blake Morgan LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 23, 24 February 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warren :
Introduction
The Scheme
"R2 Nurses, physiotherapists, midwives and health visitors
(1) Subject to paragraph (2), this regulation applies to a member –
(a) who, at the coming into force of these Regulations –
(i) is in pensionable employment as a nurse, physiotherapist, midwife or health visitor, or
(ii) has accrued rights to benefits under this Section of the scheme arising out of a previous period in which she was engaged in such employment and at no time since the last occasion on which she was so engaged has she had a break in pensionable employment for any one period of 5 years or more,
and
(b) who spends the whole of the last 5 years of her pensionable employment as a nurse, physiotherapist, midwife or health visitor.
(2) This regulation shall cease to apply if the member has a break in pensionable employment for any one period of 5 years or more ending after the coming into force of these Regulations.
(3) Where this regulation applies –
(a) regulation E1 (normal retirement pension) will apply to the member as if the reference, in paragraph (1) of that regulation, to age 60, were a reference to age 55... "
"Following several enquiries made to the Branch, it is confirmed that Nursery Nurses, including those working in special care baby units are not members of the special classes as defined by the regulations.
Consequently the minimum retiring age for this group of employees is age 60, and to ensure that in retirement they are treated correctly in accordance with the regulations, all Nursery Nurses should be shown as capacity code "4" on forms…
Employing Authorities are asked to bring to the attention of this group of employees that they are not members of the special classes and their normal retiring age is 60.
The EA Guide will be amended in due course."
"In relation to nursery nurses in neonatal intensive care units [the Department of Health] sought views on their position and were advised that the role remained mainly concerned with routine caring duties and normally for healthy rather than sick patients. While some Nursery Nurses were beginning to undertake more duties of a clinical nature this was, and remains, under the direction of a professionally qualified senior nurse. Following this review the Department maintained its earlier determination that SCS could not apply to nursery nurses. Their roles, even in the neonatal units, were not considered physically arduous and did not require a professional qualification. They were mindful that while whilst [sic] many nursing roles had evolved and continued to do so the SCS provisions were about protecting the rights of staff who had met the criteria prior to certain transfers of functions to the NHS." [That is a reference to the transfers which included the transfer of certain functions from local authorities in 1974.]
"EAs are reminded that it is SOLELY the duties performed that determine special class status and classification is not influenced by either the pay scales or the possession of a nursing qualification.
Whilst nursing duties are many and varied the following, if they form a major proportion of the duties performed, will comply with the definition of arduous for the purposes of granting special class status
- Lifting, carrying, controlling and restraining
- Feeding, bathing, dressing and attending to personal needs
- Constant attendance and monitoring of patients
- Responsibility for administering treatment and drugs."
"Definition of a Nurse
2. A member is accepted as a nurse if she holds a nursing qualification recognised by the UK Central Council for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Visiting and is employed in a job which requires such a qualification as part of the job specification. In addition, those in occupations traditionally accepted as analogous to nursing can be classified as nurses. These include Nursing Auxiliaries, Physiotherapists, Midwives and Health Visitors. Nursery Nurses do not qualify for Special Class Status."
"Occupational Health Nurses have not, in the past, been accepted as qualifying for Special Class Status. It has now been agreed that they should do so. EAs should therefore amend their records to redesignate all Occupational Health Nurses as members of the Special Classes and advise the members concerned." [Emphasis in original]
Ms Williams' employment by the NHS
"Staff employed as nursery nurses at the time Ms Williams was first employed were required to have gained the National Nursery Examination Board (NNEB) qualification. Whilst this was not a United Kingdom Central Council for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Visiting qualification, it was widely viewed as an essential qualification for staff working as nursery nurses within the special care baby unit neonatal area. The NNEB qualification appears as an essential criterion on the person specification for this post and is broadly comparable to NVQ level 3. In addition nursery nurses are required to undertake the NHS course "Nursing care of well and sick babies"."
"In relation to what Ms Williams' role was in 1995 (when the Regulations came into force) they say that the role of Nursery Nurses has evolved over time. They are now trained in giving medication and the need to complete a drug training and assessment which was approved by the Trust Board – and this was new since 1995. The cohort of babies that they would be expected to look after now has changed as neonatal care has developed and more extreme premature babies are surviving. More nursing care was needed which is provided by the Nursery Nurses under the supervision of a trained nurse."
"Perform skills where there is a specific requirement for speed or accuracy. Make judgments involving facts or situations some of which will require analysis e.g. drug administration (following Trust drug administration policy for Nursery Nurses). Care of oxygen dependant babies. Care of babies following surgical procedures. Resuscitation. Performing Gurthrie tests. Tube feeding babies. Assisting with hearing and eye tests."
"a Nurse Auxiliary who may perform the same arduous duties as a qualified nurse grade but who does not hold a nursing qualification would qualify for SC status. The essential factor is that they are working in a nursing capacity. Conversely a person, who holds a nursing qualification but works as for example, a secretary, would not qualify for SC status."
The Determination
"As it stands, her entitlement has been determined on a basis that is not in line with anything set out within the Scheme's regulations. She was ruled out primarily because of her job title and qualifications. The correct test would have been whether a person with some knowledge of the field would describe her as a nurse."
Mr Sanders contends that that is wrong; the absence of a nursing qualification answers the question against Ms Williams.
Qualifications and names
"(l) A person commits an offence if, with intent to deceive (whether by words or in writing or by the assumption of any name or description, or by the wearing of any uniform or badge or by any other kind of conduct)—
(a) he falsely represents himself to possess qualifications in nursing, midwifery or health visiting; or
(b) he falsely represents himself to be registered in the register, or in a particular part of it.
(2) A person commits an offence if—
(a) with intent that any person shall be deceived, he causes or permits another person to make any representation about himself which, if made by himself with intent to deceive, would be an offence by him under subsection (1); or
(b) with intent to deceive, he makes with regard to another person any representation which—
(i) is false to his own knowledge, and
(ii) if made by the other with that intent would be an offence by the other under that subsection.
(3) A person guilty of an offence under this section shall be liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 4 on the standard scale."
The qualifications referred to were the "appropriate professional qualifications" defined in section 11(2), that is to say, qualifications entitling individuals to apply for admission to the "register of qualified nurses, midwives and health visitors".
Grounds of Appeal
i) Ground 1: erroneous interpretation of "nurse" in Regulation R2.
ii) Ground 2: erroneous application of Regulation R2 to Ms Williams.
iii) Ground 3: erroneous comparison with nursing auxiliaries.
iv) Ground 4: erroneous award of compensation.
It is convenient to record the parties' arguments on Grounds 1, 2 and 3 before embarking on my discussion of those arguments.
Ground 1: erroneous interpretation of "nurse" in Regulation R2 Ground 1: NHSBSA's position
i) The Ombudsman failed to identify what "nurse" means. He did not ask himself whether Ms Williams was a nurse (or more appropriately I think whether she was employed as a nurse) but asked himself a different question. This can be seen from [70] of the Determination where he asks why in principle a nursery nurse cannot be a nurse given that occupational health nurses, midwifes and nursing auxiliaries are species of nurse.
ii) Given their literal meanings, "nurse" and "nursery nurse" are different professions or occupations and the terms are mutually exclusive.
iii) Even on a purposive approach, Regulation R2 was, contrary to the Ombudsman's approach, intended to apply to a "clearly closed set of people" (see [70] of the Determination and [32] above). Reliance is placed on the absence in Regulation R2 of any reference to nursery nurses in contrast with the inclusion of nurses, physiotherapists, midwives and health visitors. It is submitted that the principle of construction expressed as expressio unius est exclusio alterius applies. The absence of reference to nursery nurses is said to be stark given that Regulation R2 was drafted at a point of time when there had already been consultation on whether they should be included within SCS. Regulation R2 includes four separate occupations and implicitly excludes what is essentially a fifth occupation, that is to say that of a nursery nurse. A nursery nurse is not simply a species of nurse.
iv) The Ombudsman erred in concluding that the term "nurse" extends to individuals who are not themselves "nurses" but who are or have been fulfilling a role analogous to that of a "nurse". Regulation R2 was included to meet what is now, as Mr Sanders describes it, a discredited anomaly, that is to say the incapacity of women over 55 to undertake the perceived arduous work; there is no reason to construe it expansively.
v) The Ombudsman also erred in finding that the test for whether someone was a nurse had "shifted over time" (see [70] of the Determination) and in finding that "occupational health nurses, midwives and nursing auxiliaries are for the purposes of the legislation species of "nurse"". Further, the Ombudsman appears to have thought that NHSBSA included within SCS "nursing auxiliaries and others whose roles are 'analogous to nursing'" (see [77] of the Determination). These were material misunderstandings and misdirections and errors of law: occupational health nurses are nurses; midwives have SCS not because they are seen as a species of nurse, but because they are named in Regulation R2 and were named in its predecessor provisions; and the only dispensation that has been made is for nursing auxiliaries, but this is a matter of practice, it is not because they are seen as a "species of nurse" and it cannot change the meaning of "nurse" in Regulation R2.
vi) The legislative intention must have been that Regulation R2 should apply to fixed and readily identifiable employees, such that job titles and qualifications should therefore be determinative, subject to confirmation that the individual is also in pensionable employment in the relevant role. The scope and application of Regulation R2 should be clear and certain and the test must be whether the individual is in fact a nurse, physiotherapist, midwife or health visitor who is in pensionable employment as such and not whether their role is analogous to that of a nurse, physiotherapist, midwife or health visitor.
vii) Had it been intended that SCS should depend on a case-by-case investigation and assessment of individual roles and their comparability with those of a nurse, Regulation R2 would have been worded differently and would have set out the relevant criteria. Further, the same approach would apply to persons whose roles were comparable to those of a physiotherapist, midwife or health visitor. Physiotherapy helpers and healthcare assistants might, depending on the precise scope of their individual jobs, qualify for SCS on this approach. This cannot have been intended.
viii) The position today is, and has been for many years and certainly since before the 1995 Regulations were made, that a person will only be employed in the NHS as a nurse if they hold a nursing qualification. That proposition, I consider, needs some deconstruction. It means that a person is only employed in an NHS hospital to carry out the full range of activities which a qualified nurse is able to carry out, and can only be employed in a job with the title "nurse", if they are in fact qualified as a nurse. Whilst Ms Williams is qualified as a nursery nurse, she is not qualified as a nurse. There are some duties of a qualified nurse that she could not carry out.
"What, then, is meant by "nursing" for this purpose? Each of the authorities lays stress on the possession of a professional nursing qualification or training. In the Leamington Spa case, Evershed MR referred to "nursing in the sense that the subject or patient is looked after and attended to by persons professionally trained to look after and attend the sick"; Denning LJ drew a distinction between "the exercise of professional skill" and the simple provision of care and attention; and Romer LJ said that nursing "presumably, refers to nursing of a professional character" ….. In White's case, Ralph Gibson LJ referred to "professionally trained nurses" and to "appropriate nurse staffing, including qualified mental nurses" ….. The position is perhaps less clear in Botchett's case. In the main part of his reasoning, Evans LJ stated that the care and assistance received "from nursing as opposed to domestic staff" must be regarded as "medical or other treatment", drawing no distinction between the trained and untrained nursing staff at the nursing home in question; but he did go on to derive support from the Leamington Spa case and its reference to inmates being cared for by persons who were "professionally trained to care for the sick" …... It seems to me that the various references in these cases to professional qualifications and training were fundamental to the reasoning of the court: in each case the decision turned on the fact that the staff of the institution included qualified and/or trained nurses. I acknowledge that nursing has moved on since the days of the Leamington Spa case and that much of what was done then by professionally qualified nurses is done now by nursing assistants working under the supervision of qualified nurses, but I do not think that this development undermines the basis of the decisions or calls for a different approach."
Ground 1: Ms Williams' position
i) There is no definition of "nurse" in the 1995 Regulations or in predecessor provisions. This is clearly correct.
ii) The advantageous retirement conditions of SCS were historically provided to special classes on account of their "arduous duties": this remained the test as late as 1989 (see SD Letter 89(7) at [8] and [16] above). This is clearly correct on the Ombudsman's findings. It does not, however, really assist the debate. Even assuming that this evidence of the genesis of the provision is admissible (which I very much doubt), it only shows that the classes identified were perceived as having relevantly arduous posts justifying special treatment. That evidence does not, I consider, demonstrate that, because a person has an arduous job, they should be treated as falling within one of the special classes when they would not otherwise do so. If a nursery nurse in a neonatal unit is properly to be seen as a "nurse" then she qualifies for SCS; if she is not properly seen in that way, the fact that her duties may be as arduous as those of a "nurse" does not justify extending SCS to her. Further, if that evidence is admissible, it seems to me that equally admissible is the result of the consultation which resulted in confirmation of the policy decision that nursery nurses, including those working a neonatal unit, should not be entitled to SCS. Indeed, by the time of the 1995 Regulations, that factor was no longer of any great relevance and focus was not so much on the arduous nature of the work at all but had shifted to some extent to professional qualification.
iii) Section 16 of the Local Government Superannuation Act 1937 refers to "female nurses, midwives and health visitors": there is no reference to physiotherapists (or indeed nursery nurses). This is clearly correct.
iv) By 1990, the term "nurse" in the then current regulations was applied having primary regard to whether an individual had a professional qualification: see [13] of the Determination. I comment that it is clearly the case that regard was had to this factor but whether it was primary or not is not apparent from the Ombudsman's findings or the material referred to by him. I have already made some comments on SD Letter 90(13) referred to in that paragraph: see [16] above.
v) Over time
a) it was recognised that certain occupations analogous to nursing (including nursing auxiliaries) can be classified as nurses andb) it was agreed that occupational health nurses should be accepted as qualifying for SCS despite the historic approach to the contrary.
vi) As to v) a), I comment that it is true that SD Letter 90(13) saw physiotherapists, midwives and health visitors as analogous to nurses but, as I have already pointed out, they qualify for SCS not because they are analogous to or treated as nurses but because they are expressly mentioned in Regulation R2 (and its predecessor provisions). Nursing auxiliaries have in fact been treated as qualifying for SCS, a treatment which could only properly have been afforded under Regulation R2 (and it has not been suggested that any other provision of the 1995 Regulations could justify this treatment) if they are "nurses". Mr Sanders' submission is that auxiliary nurses are not nurses so that it may be that such a treatment should not have been afforded. However, the treatment in fact accorded to auxiliary nurses clearly shows that their role was regarded as analogous to nursing in the sense of involving arduous duties and duties some of which might be carried out by a qualified nurse.
vii) As to v) b), I comment that Mr Sanders' submission that Occupational Health Nurses are nurses is inconsistent with their exclusion, before 1990, from SCS unless their roles and qualifications changed in 1990, as to which there is nothing in the Determination or, so far as I am aware, nor was there any before the Ombudsman. Indeed, SD Letter 90(13) explains that Occupational Health Nurses were to be accepted as qualifying for SCS. The reason given by the Department of Health for this change (see [60] of the Determination) was that in the past the roles of such persons were not considered arduous, under the earlier main criterion. But the move to a criterion requiring the holding of a professional nursing qualification moved them squarely within the revised SCS criteria.
i) Her duties are primarily the nursing of sick neonates on the neo-natal intensive care unit.
ii) She had worked for 36 years on this unit during which time her role had evolved into a unique role for Nursery Nurses.
iii) The role of a Nursery Nurse on the neo-natal unit is totally different from that of a Nursery Nurse working in the hospital crèche, where they give basic childcare and supervise play. It was also different from that of a Nursery Nurse on maternity wards where they give support to mothers caring for their own babies.
i) In talking of "pensionable employment as a nurse" and "had a break in pensionable employment for any period of 5 years or more", Regulation R2 clearly has in mind an individual's function.
ii) Job function will have regard to the job description and to the extent to which the duties actually undertaken correspond with the description.
iii) It is the most sensible approach given that Regulation R2 calls for an exercise of judgment and is the best way to address the mischief in question, namely that the default normal retirement age of 60 is too high for people engaged in certain work.
iv) In this sense, whether someone's job title is "nurse" is neither necessary nor sufficient.
v) It would be quite possible to have specified that Regulation R2 applies to someone with the requisite title or qualification and, if such matters were to have been decisive irrespective of the substantive role, the word "nurse" would have been specifically defined and there would have been reference to specific job titles or specific qualifications.
vi) In cases where a definition is contained of a person's occupation, it is by reference to function rather than qualification: see for instance, the definition of "mental health officer" in section 1(3) National Health Service Superannuation Regulations 1947 to which I would add that the same point applies to the definition of "mental health officer" in Regulation R3(14) of the Regulations.
i) It leads to arbitrary outcomes. He refers to the definition of "nursery nurse" in Regulation R2 of the Education (Training Grants) Regulations 1990 where the individual must be "….employed in connection with the education of children under the age of 5". It would be absurd, he says, if someone who nursed sick children on a neo-natal intensive care unit, worked nurse shifts and did the work of a nurse were to be treated as if she worked in a nursery.
ii) It is easy for a job title to be changed for a variety of reasons and there would be no protection against a sudden change of title for whatever reason, let alone protection in the case of clerical error.
iii) An approach based on job title irrespective of job function is at odds with the language of Regulation R2 and the statutory concern for those whose duties are arduous who could not be expected to work beyond age 55.
"Accordingly, both on a literal and purposive interpretation, "nurse" should bear its ordinary meaning (ie of a professionally qualified person who cares for the sick or infirm)."
i) The finding at [66] that nurse is to be given its ordinary meaning.
ii) The finding, at [72] that nurse means what someone with the relevant knowledge of the admissible background would objectively consider to be a nurse.
iii) The reference to the OED definition of "nurse" which the Ombudsman applies at [77] and [79].
i) The starting point is the ordinary meaning of the word "nurse" which has nothing to do with qualifications and everything to do with function.
ii) The correct test is, as the Ombudsman put it, to ask whether a person with knowledge of the field would describe Ms Williams as a nurse.
i) there was no regulation in relation to physiotherapists as at 1948 (when SCS was extended to such professionals);
ii) thereafter, there was no prohibition against the use of "physiotherapist" per se;
iii) there was no prohibition against the use of the title "health visitor" until 1979 (and "health visitor" was defined in the relevant superannuation provisions);
iv) regulation of nurses was initially concerned with the use of the title "registered nurse". Thereafter it was concerned with "nurse" but subject to certain provisos – in particular in the case of a children's nurse;
v) from 1979, the prohibition was against the false representation of qualifications in nursing, midwifery and health visiting.
Ground 2: erroneous application of Regulation R2 to Ms Williams
Ground 2: NHSBSA's position
i) The Ombudsman determined that the correct test for determining whether or not Ms Williams was a "nurse" was "whether a person with some knowledge of the field would describe her as a nurse". He erred in this since he should have asked himself whether she was in fact in pensionable employment as a nurse. This was not a question which he engaged with or provided reasoning upon.
ii) The Ombudsman further erred in that he did not go on to apply that test but rather applied a separate test, which was not properly reasoned, namely whether Ms Williams' role was "analogous to nursing". By doing so, he implicitly accepted that she was not in fact a "nurse" and his subsequent conclusion that she nevertheless was a "nurse" was illogical and perverse.
iii) Even if the Ombudsman's initially formulated test were correct, the answer should still have been that no person with some knowledge of the field would think that nursery nurses are a species of nurse. There is a clear distinction between the two. Thus:
a) The Ombudsman recognised that, "…in the case of the Regulations ['nurse'] should be given the sense that would normally be applied to it in the healthcare services" ([73] of the Determination). However, his determination failed to engage with the respective definitions of "nurse" and "nursery nurse" in the legislation underpinning those services. These definitions emphasise that "nurse" means a qualified/registered nurse and "nursery nurses" do not fall into this category. If "nurse" in Regulation R2 were given the sense normally applied to it in the healthcare services, a nursery nurse would be excluded.
b) The authorities on what is meant by "nursing" lay "stress on the possession of a professional nursing qualification or training" referring to the passage from the judgment of Richards LJ in Slavin set out at [52] above.
c) It would be an offence for Ms Williams to describe herself as an adult nurse, mental health nurse, learning disabilities nurse, children's nurse, general nurse or fever nurse. Mr Sanders places reliance on articles 6 and 44 of the 2001 Order.
d) Further, there was no evidence that the Ombudsman's own test was fulfilled.
Ground 2: Ms Williams' position
i) First, "nurse" and "nursery nurse" are not defined in the 1995 Regulations whether expressly or by reference to other statutory provisions.
ii) Secondly, some of the statutory provisions relied upon post-date the Regulations under consideration.
iii) Thirdly, Slavin does not assist.
i) she was in fact employed nursing sick new-borns in the neonatal intensive care unit, working nursing shift hours, and reporting to the Senior Nurse;
ii) she held the NNEB qualification to which I have referred and a had undertaken the NHS Course "Nursing care of well and sick babies";
iii) she reported to a Senior Nurse, but so did all nurses on the neo-natal unit.
i) Ms Williams "had qualifications in nursing such that she was entitled to describe herself by the title 'nurse'"; and
ii) for the purposes of section 14 of the Nurses, Midwives and Health Visitors Act 1979, Ms Williams did have qualifications in nursing whereby there was no misrepresentation such that she could take the title of 'nurse'.
i) she could not have described herself as a registered nurse;
ii) she could not have worn any uniform or badge worn by registered nurses; and
iii) she could not have represented that she possessed a qualification in nursing.
Ground 3: erroneous comparison with nursing auxiliaries Ground 3: NHSBSA's position
i) He wrongly considered that the dispensation allowing (some) nursing auxiliaries (potentially) to be given SCS reflects an acceptance that a Nursing and Midwifery Council qualification is not a prerequisite to being a nurse: Determination [77]. This was an error. A nursing qualification and registration is a necessary condition to being a nurse. However, the issue under Regulation R2 is not just whether the individual is a "nurse" but whether they are "in pensionable employment as a nurse". For these purposes, a formal nursing qualification is a necessary but not a sufficient condition: a qualified nurse undertaking a management role may not be in pensionable employment as a nurse. This appears to have confused the Ombudsman and led him into error: the fact that not all nurses fall within the class of nurses who are in employment as such, does not mean that the class itself is open to non-nurses.
ii) He also asked himself, first, whether Ms Williams' job description meant she had "as many duties that might be regarded as acting as a nurse" as would a nursing auxiliary and, secondly, whether her role was "more of [a nursing care] role than the nursing auxiliary": Determination [79-80]. In doing so, he had regard to a legally irrelevant consideration. The dispensation allowing nursing auxiliaries to claim or be recognised as SCS did not flow from an acceptance that they are a species of nurse; rather, it was a matter of policy and practice. Furthermore, the fact that Regulation R2 has been applied to them as a matter of policy and practice cannot change the meaning of the provision itself or warrant a departure from the ordinary principles of statutory construction.
"79….. I can also see that the job description of a Nursing Auxiliary that Ms Williams' employer has provided has almost no duties that might be regarded as acting as a nurse.
80. Having taken into account the job descriptions and other evidence, in my view Ms Williams' role was one of nursing care (indeed it was clearly more of such a role than the Nursing Auxiliary). It was such a role in 1995 and, with some increase in duties later, it was still a nursing role at the time that Ms Williams retired."
Ground 3: Ms Williams' position
Discussion of Ground 1, 2 and 3
i) As to the first suggestion concerning arbitrary outcomes, he relies on a definition of nursery nurse in a particular set of regulations of no relevance to the present case. The argument appears to be that, because Ms Williams was employed as a nursery nurse, an approach based on job title would mean that she was employed in connection with the education of children under 5. But that is a non sequitur. Ms Williams was employed to perform a role appropriate to a person with her qualifications as a Nursery Nurse; she was employed because, quite apart from her personal attributes and her experience, she was a qualified nursery nurse. Whether or not she was employed as a nurse within Regulation R2, she was certainly employed as a Nursery Nurse (as a person with that title and with the qualification); and her own description of her post in her job specification was that of Nursery Nurse on the neonatal unit.
ii) I note that the Determination does not actually say what Ms Williams' job title was, simply recording at [15] that she was worked as a Nursery Nurse in a neonatal intensive care unit. This, it seems to me, illustrates the way in which job title, job description and job function inform each other. Ms Williams was able to obtain the job because she had a qualification as a nursery nurse. Although her title was "Nursery Nurse", her functions were clearly not solely the educational ones referred to by Mr Grant. In the context of work in a neonatal unit, the scope of her duties would have to be ascertained from her job description and contract of employment. The role of a nursery nurse in a neo-natal unit is no doubt different from the role of a nursery nurse in a different context. But that does not mean that Ms Williams was not in fact employed as a nursery nurse but was employed as something else. The question in issue is whether, by being employed as a nursery nurse in a neo- natal unit, she was also employed as a nurse within the meaning of Regulation R2. On any view, she was not employed as a registered nurse.
iii) As to the second and third suggestions concerning an approach based on job- title alone, I do not think that Mr Sanders has ever suggested that job-title by itself is an answer to the problem. Mr Grant is obviously correct to say that a job-title might be changed. That does not detract from the potential relevance of the existing job-titles and professional qualifications as factors in determining whether a person is a nurse. If all that occurs is change in the job- title, there is no change in the substance of the job which involves the same roles and qualifications. If there is a change in roles, then the substance of the changes would need to be assessed to determine whether the employment is still as a nurse within the meaning of Regulation R2.
Conclusion on Grounds 1 to 3
Ground 4: erroneous award of compensation
Disposition