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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> MH, R (on the application of) v Special Educational Needs & Disability Tribunal & Anor [2004] EWCA Civ 770 (23 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/770.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 770 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT – Mr Justice Pitchford
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF MH |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1)THE SPECIAL EDUCATIONAL NEEDS AND DISABILITY TRIBUNAL (2) THE LONDON BOROUGH OF HOUNSLOW |
Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Steven Kovats (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the First Respondent
Mr Peter Oldham (instructed by Legal Services of London Borough of Hounslow) for the Second Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker:
This is the judgment of the court.
INTRODUCTION
THE LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
"(2) The statement shall be in such form and contain such information as may be prescribed.
[(3)]
(4) The statement shall –
(a) specify the type of school …. which the local education authority consider would be appropriate for the child,
(b) if they are not required under Schedule 27 to specify the name of any school in the statement, specify the name of any school …. which they consider would be appropriate for the child and should be specified in the statement, and
[(c)]
[(4A)]
(5) Where a local education authority maintain a statement under this section, then –
[(a)]
(b) if the name of a maintained school …. is specified in the statement, the governing body of the school shall admit the child to the school.
[(5A)]
[(6)]
(7) Schedule 27 has effect in relation to the making and maintenance of statements under this section."
"the type of school which the [local education] authority consider appropriate for the child and if the authority are required to specify the name of a school for which the parent has expressed a preference, the name of that school, or, where the authority are otherwise required to specify the name of a school …., the name of the school … which they consider would be appropriate for the child and should be specified; …."
"3(1) Every local education authority shall make arrangements for enabling a parent –
(a) on whom a copy of a proposed statement has been served under paragraph 2,
(b) on whom a copy of a proposed amended statement has been served under paragraph 2A, or
[(c)]
to express a preference as to the maintained school at which he wishes education to be provided for his child and to give reasons for his preference.
(2) Any such preference must be expressed or made within a period of 15 days beginning –
(a) with the date on which the written notice mentioned in paragraph 2B was served on the parent, or
[(b)]
(3) Where a local education authority make a statement in a case where the parent of the child concerned has expressed a preference in pursuance of such arrangements as to the school at which he wishes education to be provided for his child, they shall specify the name of that school in the statement unless –
(a) the school is unsuitable to the child's age, ability or aptitude or to his special educational needs, or
(b) the attendance of the child at the school would be incompatible with the provision of efficient education for the children with whom he would be educated or the efficient use of resources."
"(1) Any person exercising any functions under this Part in respect of a child with special educational needs who should be educated in a school shall secure that, if the conditions mentioned in subsection (2) are satisfied, the child is educated in a school which is not a special school unless that is incompatible with the wishes of the parent.
(2) The conditions are that educating a child in a school which is not a special school is compatible with –
(a) his receiving the special educational provision which his learning difficulty calls for,
(b) the provision of efficient education for the children with whom he will be educated, and
(c) the efficient use of resources."
"316 Duty to educate children with special educational needs in mainstream schools
(1) This section applies to a child with special educational needs who should be educated in a school.
(2) If no statement is maintained under section 324 for the child, he must be educated in a mainstream school.
(3) If a statement is maintained under section 324 for the child, he must be educated in a mainstream school unless that is incompatible with –
(a) the wishes of his parent, or
(b) the provision of efficient education for other children.
(4) In this section and section 316A 'mainstream school' means any school other than –
(a) a special school, or
(b) ….
316A Education otherwise than in mainstream schools
(1) ….
(2) ….
(3) Section 316 does not affect the operation of –
(a) ….
(b) paragraph 3 of Schedule 27.
(4) If a local education authority decide –
(a) to make a statement for a child under section 324, but
(b) not to name in the statement the school for which a parent has expressed a preference under paragraph 3 of Schedule 27,
they shall, in making the statement, comply with section 316(3).
(5) A local education authority may, in relation to their mainstream schools taken as a whole, rely on the exception in section 316(3)(b) only if they can show that there are no reasonable steps that they could take to prevent the incompatibility.
(6) An authority in relation to a particular mainstream school may rely on the exception in section 316(3)(b) only if it shows that there are no reasonable steps that it or another authority in relation to the school could take to prevent the incompatibility.
(7) The exception in section 316(3)(b) does not permit a governing body to fail to comply with the duty imposed by section 324(5)(b).
(8) An authority must have regard to guidance about section 316 and this section issued –
(a) for England, by the Secretary of State,
[(b)]
[(9)-(11)]"
"(1) The parent of a child for whom a local education authority maintain a statement under section 324 may appeal to the Tribunal –
(a) when the statement is first made,
(b) if an amendment is made to the statement,
(c) if, after conducting an assessment under section 323, the local education authority determine not to amend the statement.
(1A) An appeal under this section may be against any of the following –
(a) the description in the statement of the local education authority's assessment of the child's special educational needs,
(b) the special educational provision specified in the statement (including the name of the school so specified),
(c) if no school is specified in the statement, that fact.
(2) Subsection (1)(b) does not apply where the amendment is made in pursuance of –
(a) paragraph …. 11(3)(b) (amendment ordered by the Tribunal) of Schedule 27, or
[(b)]
….
(3) On an appeal under this section, the Tribunal may –
(a) dismiss the appeal,
(b) order the authority to amend the statement, so far as it described the authority's assessment of the child's special educational needs or specified the special educational provision, and make such other consequential amendments to the statement as the Tribunal think fit, or
(c) order the authority to cease to maintain the statement.
(4) On an appeal under this section the Tribunal shall not order the local education authority to specify the name of any school in the statement (either in substitution for an existing name or in a case where no school is named) unless –
(a) the parent has expressed a preference for the school in pursuance of arrangements under paragraph 3 (choice of school) of Schedule 27, or
(b) in the proceedings the parent, the local education authority, or both have proposed the school."
"In the course of the hearing the parties shall be entitled to give evidence, to call witnesses, to question any witness and to address the tribunal both on the evidence, including the written evidence submitted before the hearing, and generally on the subject matter of the appeal:
Provided that neither party shall be entitled to call more than two witnesses to give evidence orally …. unless the President has given permission [i.e. in advance of a hearing] or the tribunal gives permission at a hearing."
"The starting point is always that children who have statements will receive mainstream education. The new section 316 states that a child who has special educational needs and a statement must be educated in a mainstream school unless this would be incompatible with –
(a) the wishes of the child's parents;
(b) or the provision of efficient education of other children.
These are the only reasons why mainstream education can be refused outright."
"Mainstream education cannot be refused on the grounds that the child's needs cannot be provided for within the mainstream sector. The general duty assumes that with the right strategies and support most children with special educational needs can be included successfully at a mainstream school. The local education authority should be able to provide a mainstream option for all but a small minority of pupils. Local education authorities should look across all of their schools and seek to provide appropriate mainstream provision where possible. …."
"Where the parents do not express a choice or their preferred choice of school is not named in the child's statement section 316 requires that the local education authority must name another mainstream school. It should look across all of its schools. It can only refuse mainstream education where the child's inclusion would be incompatible with the efficient education of other pupils. In addition, the local education authority must demonstrate that there are no reasonable steps it or a maintained school could take to prevent the incompatibility. Parents can appeal against a local educational authority's decision."
"Option 3 – parents do not express a preference for an individual mainstream school: Where parents want mainstream education, but do not indicate what their preferred choice of school is, the local education authority must decide which mainstream school should be named in the child's statement. Again mainstream education can only be refused where the child's inclusion would be incompatible with the efficient education of other pupils and there are no reasonable steps to prevent the incompatibility. …."
"All reasonable steps must be taken to enable pupils to be included without [compromising] the efficient education of other pupils. The decision not to educate a pupil in a mainstream school – against their parent's wishes – should not be taken lightly. It is important that all cases are judged on the individual circumstances. There may be a range of reasons why it may not always be possible to take reasonable steps to prevent a child's inclusion being incompatible with the efficient education of others. For example –
(a) a child's behaviour systematically, persistently and significantly threatens the safety of others; and
(b) a child's behaviour systematically, persistently and significantly impedes the learning of others.
An extreme incident may be sufficient to make the child's inclusion incompatible with the education of others where it is highly likely that it would occur again and there are no reasonable steps that could be taken to prevent this."
THE AUTHORITIES
"…. it seems to me that the words in section 324(4)(b) '…. which they consider would be appropriate for the child and should be specified in the statement' require the authority only to specify the name of a school if it considers the school appropriate and that it should be specified. The authority thus has a discretion whether to name a school or not. Section 324(5) requires the authority to arrange that the specified educational provision specified in the statement is made for the child unless the child's parent has made suitable arrangements and it is implicit in section 324(5)(b) that there may be cases in which the name of a maintained, grant-maintained, or grant-maintained special school is not specified in the statement.
As to the position on appeal to the tribunal, I share the judge's view that it is inconceivable that Parliament would have required the tribunal to order the authority to name a particular school if it had not made it obligatory for the authority to do so. …. I am satisfied that the judge was right to hold that the authority has a power, not a duty, to specify the name of a school which it considers appropriate and that on the hearing of an appeal under section 326 the tribunal is not obliged to order the authority to specify the name of a school."
"In the new regime, the first independent arbiter of this question [viz. a question as to the special educational provision to be specified in Part 3 of the statement] is the tribunal. Unlike the High Court, it is a specialist tribunal with a lawyer chairman and lay members chosen for their knowledge and experience. …. In my view this restructuring has jurisprudential implications. Where previously the parent's only resort from the local education authority was to the court, which had therefore to do its best to construe the statutory language in so far as construction was an appropriate exercise, there is now interposed a specialist tribunal whose remit is not necessarily the same. In particular, where a court has to limit itself to the interpretation of terms of legal art and the setting of outer limits to the meaning of ordinary words in their statutory context, the tribunal is empowered to take a much closer look at the LEA's statement. Indeed, for many purposes it stands in the LEA's shoes, re-evaluating the available information in order if necessary to recast the statement. But in carrying out this function it also has a supervisory role – to interpret and apply the relevant law. Where that law is expressed in words which, while not terms of legal art, have a purpose dictated by – and therefore a meaning coloured by – their context, it is clearly Parliament's intention that particular respect should be paid to the tribunal's conclusions."
THE FACTS
THE JUDGE'S JUDGMENT
"It must follow, I think, if the LEA has established the unsuitability of the parent's preference under paragraph 3(3)(a) or incompatibility with the efficient use of resources under paragraph 3(3)(b), neither it nor the Tribunal need be further concerned with the section 316 criteria in relation to that particular school." (Our emphasis)
"…. the LEA must justify its reliance on paragraph 3(3)(b) incompatibility with the provision of efficient education for the children with whom he would be educated, against the section 316(3)(b) and section 316A(4), (5) and (6) criteria."
"…. the Tribunal perforce must examine the parent's preferred school against those criteria, and if the LEA justifies its decision not to specify the parent's preferred school the Tribunal must go on to consider the same criteria against mainstream schools in general."
"45. Section 316 does not remove the suitability ground from paragraph 3(3). Section 316A(3) provides the contrary. But if the Tribunal accepts the LEA's paragraph 3(3) unsuitability case upon the parent's preference and proceeds to examine mainstream schools in general, it does not seem to me that the suitability criterion remains an issue.
46. Formerly, the duty under section 316(1) was to provide mainstream education, provided that was compatible with the parent's wishes and with (a) the special educational provision the child needed and (b) the efficient education of other children and (c) the efficient use of resources.
47. Parliament's wholesale substitution of section 316, without a re-enactment of the saving for compatibility with special educational provision, must be regarded as deliberate, and deliberate given the statutory guidance, because Parliament wished to create the presumption in favour of mainstream schools for children with special educational needs, save in the more narrowly defined circumstances now provided in section 316(3). "
"48. The process in which the Tribunal is engaged is a judgment: what should be the contents of the statement of special educational needs? If the Tribunal has rejected the parent's preference on suitability grounds and is considering only the issue of mainstream against special schooling generally, then there is no occasion for the application of paragraph 3(3) criteria, since paragraph 3(3) only applies to the selection by the parent of a particular school.
49. I therefore accept Mr Wolfe's illustration establishing that unless the LEA can show that all of its mainstream schools have similar disadvantages which cannot be overcome, the Tribunal should order that mainstream be specified as a type in Part 4."
"54. Notwithstanding the repeal of the original section 316, I consider Miss Richards must be right. There can be no doubt of the legislative intention, in the event that a parent takes the statutory opportunity of expressing a preference for a school. Any later proposal, must, it seems to me, be treated as a substitution for the original preference or a late statement of preference and therefore subject to the same criteria. The LEA is, in other words, being invited to consider, and the Tribunal to judge, a fresh statement of preference which should be judged against the criteria which applied in the first place.
55. Had Parliament intended otherwise I consider a revision of schedule 27, paragraph 3, would have been required together with section 316. I agree with Miss Richards' submission that Mr Wolfe's construction would render paragraph 3(3) in practice otiose.
56. Thus I conclude that when considering an individual school proposed by a parent, the LEA and the Tribunal are entitled to and should apply the paragraph 3(3) criteria to the decision whether the parent's preference should be named in the child's statement of special educational needs. The qualified presumption, however, will in all cases be that a child with special educational needs will receive a mainstream education."
THE ARGUMENTS ON THIS APPEAL
The argument for the appellant
The argument for the Tribunal
The arguments for the LEA
CONCLUSIONS
Order: