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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 >> Rotherham Borough Council & Ors, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for Business, Innovation And Skills [2014] EWCA Civ 1080 (28 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1080.html Cite as: [2014] PTSR 1387, [2014] EWCA Civ 1080, [2014] WLR(D) 338 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT, QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MR JUSTICE STEWART
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF ROTHERHAM BOROUGH COUNCIL & ORS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR BUSINESS, INNOVATION AND SKILLS |
Respondent |
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Jonathan Swift QC and James Cornwell (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 30 June and 1 July 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Master of the Rolls: this is the judgment of the court to which each member has contributed.
The background
The 2006 regulation
The 2013 regulation
"The ESF and other EU funds should be mobilised where appropriate by Member States to support these objectives: Policies stimulating labour demand could complement investments in human capital".
The challenged decisions
The grounds of challenge
The First Decision in more detail
"
As a result of the new EU formula for allocating Structural Funds, agreed by the European Council in February, there would not have been a fair distribution across the UK, with each of the Devolved Administrations set to lose significant funding vital for economic growth.
In view of this the UK government has decided to reallocate EU Structural Funds to minimise the impact of sudden and significant cut backs in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.
. ..
The Government is providing:
Northern Ireland with a total allocation of around 457 million, an uplift of 181 million compared to the amount that Northern Ireland would receive under the EU formula for allocation of the Funds to the UK.
Scotland with total funding of around 795 million. This represents an uplift of 228 million compared to the amount that Scotland would receive under the EU formula for allocation of the Funds to the UK.
Wales with total allocation of around 2.145 billion. This represents an uplift of 375 million compared to the amount that Wales would receive under the EU formula for allocation of the Funds to the UK.
England with a total allocation of around 6.174 billion.
This decision means that each administration is only subject to an equal percentage cut of around 5% in funding compared to 2007 13 levels. The government believes that this delivers the fairest deal for England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales."
- Transparency;
- Simplicity;
- Consistency; and
- Balance ("it took account of the status of the Devolved Administrations under the UK's constitutional settlement").
The Second Decision in more detail
"
The Government has set allocations that deliver the fairest split of funding across England, as far as EU rules allow. Allocations by LEP area for ERDF and ESF are set out in the Annex .
The government has today also confirmed the detailed allocations for the Highlands and Islands region in Scotland as 172 million and the allocation for West Wales as 1.783 million and for East Wales as 361 million.
All allocations are subject to final agreement on the EU Regulations and the EU 2014 2020 budget in the European Parliament. The European Commission will also need to agree the UK Government's specific proposals."
"The 2007 2013 allocations took account of the greater development needs in the North and the Midlands compared to most of the South. The disparities have not lessened so the government decided that the UK's spending commitments scheduled against the EU budget for 2013 set the base line for the allocation of ESF ERDF for 2014 20. With regard to the area designations described at EU level this meant that:
All "Transition" regions received an equal c.20% uplift based on those regions' 2013 spending commitments "
"9. From 2014 2020 both South Yorkshire and Merseyside will be classified as Transition regions, reflecting their current economic position, along with nine other UK regions. As such they will receive a proportionate share of the UK's budget for Transition regions but they will not enjoy special status over and above other UK Transition regions.
10. As Phasing-in regions, South Yorkshire and Merseyside have been subject to a downward taper of Structural Funds spending commitments across 2007 13 in order to give time to adjust to lower levels of receipts.
11. The spending commitments are not all spent in the year in which they are allocated as under the "n+3" rule, programmes have three years in which to spend these commitments. In terms of actual spending, the profile in 2007 13 is partly a function of the n+3 rule, and partly a function of the speed and profile of implementation by the responsible authorities. The same will also be true in 2014 20. However we must compare like with like. The announcement on allocations concerns spending commitments and the comparator must therefore be spending commitments in 2007 13. So it is true to say that these areas will see a 20% increase in their annual allocations in 2014 20 compared to a 2013 base line (or 15% once the 4.3% reserve of Funds by government is taken into account).
12. Taking into account the 4.3% reserve of funds by government, this will mean that in 2013 South Yorkshire was allocated 20 million and in 2014 it will be allocated 23 million. Merseyside was allocated 23 million in 2013 and in 2014 it was allocated 26 million."
- Option A which was based on the EU Commission's methodology, which overall would have brought a significant uplift in funding to the South of England as compared with the North.
- Option B based the allocations on 2007-13 levels, using the allocation in 2013 as the baseline for purposes of the calculations.
- Option C relied on 2007-13 figures, but basing South Yorkshire and Merseyside's allocations on their average allocation under the previous settlement. This would have resulted in a substantial cut to all Transition regions (including Merseyside and South Yorkshire) of 25% in real terms compared with 2007-13, but significantly higher funding for Merseyside and South Yorkshire compared to 2013.
- Option D was a hybrid option using the EU formula for Transition regions with a UK-specific formula for More Developed regions. For the Transition regions, this option was the same as Option A.
Legal principles
PROPORTIONALITY
" .the question depends on an exacting analysis of the factual case advanced in defence of the measure, in order to determine (i) whether its objective is sufficiently important to justify the limitation of a fundamental right; (ii) whether it is rationally connected to the objective; (iii) whether a less intrusive measure could have been used; and (iv) whether, having regard to these matters and to the severity of the consequences, a fair balance has been struck between the rights of the individual and the interests of the community. These four requirements are logically separate, but in practice they inevitably overlap because the same facts are likely to be relevant to more than one of them. Before us, the only issue about them concerned (iii), since it was suggested that a measure would be disproportionate if any more limited measure was capable of achieving the objective. For my part, I agree with the view expressed in this case by Maurice Kay LJ that this debate is sterile in the normal case where the effectiveness of the measure and the degree of interference are not absolute values but questions of degree, inversely related to each other. The question is whether a less intrusive measure could have been used without unacceptably compromising the objective."
Inconsistent with authority
"The judge's task was (so far as Article 36 was concerned) to see whether the exercise of the secretary of state's power under section 13 of the 1990 Act had been objectively justified and had been shown not to be disproportionate. The test is more demanding than that of "manifest error" and is also more demanding than that of Wednesbury unreasonableness (although in ex parte ITF, Lord Slynn, at page 1277, thought that the same result is often produced under both tests). The difference between the two tests has been lucidly described by Laws J in R v MAFF ex parte First City Trading [1997] 1 CMLR 250, 278 - 9; the whole passage repays close study; its conclusion is that:
'Wednesbury and European review are different models - one looser, one tighter - of the same juridical concept, which is the imposition of compulsory standards on decision-makers so as to secure the repudiation of arbitrary power.'"
"40 ..Mr Paines submits (as I have shown) that a "manifestly inappropriate" test for the margin of appreciation should proceed on the footing that in this area the courts will not enquire whether the benefits to human health to be obtained from the measure in question outweigh any detriments. As advanced by Mr Paines the test would also, I think, disapply proportionality's ordinary rule that the least intrusive measure be chosen, or so dilute it that the rule's value as a legal standard for public decision-making would be critically undermined. If it were otherwise, any substantive distinction between Mr Paines' test and proportionality's paradigm case is effectively lost. Though he was at pains to disavow it, in my judgment Mr Paines in truth contends for an approach effectively tantamount, at least very close, to the Wednesbury standard of judicial review ([1948] 1 KB 223).
That position is not vouchsafed on the authorities. I do not consider that the Court of Justice has evolved such a test for the margin of appreciation in public health cases, or comparable cases of public policy, at least where a national measure is challenged on proportionality grounds. In Eastside Cheese this court was as we have seen faced with an argument that "the Court of Justice [had] approved the application of a special test [for proportionality] in special circumstances" (paragraph 48). Lord Bingham held (ibid.) that "there seems to be no good reason in principle or authority for two sharply different tests". He proceeded to discuss the considerations which broaden or narrow the margin of appreciation, but was clear (paragraph 49) that at no point did the test approximate to one of Wednesbury unreasonableness."
Does the proportionality principle only apply where there is a derogation from a specific legal standard?
Has there been a derogation from a specific legal standard in this case?
"A difference in treatment is justified if it is based on an objective and reasonable criterion, that is, if the difference relates to a legally permitted aim pursued by the legislation in question, and it is proportionate to the aim pursued by the treatment."
Margin of discretion in relation to the proportionality issue
"203. However, [the existence of a less restrictive alternative] should not be applied by a court in such a way as to usurp the role of the primary decision-maker. So, where there is an alternative possible measure, there may be a difference of view as to which measure would be less onerous, and, unless the view of the Member State's government that its measure is the more appropriate is manifestly wrong, the court should not substitute its own view for that of the government .
204. So, too, when there is said to be a less onerous measure than that proposed, it seems to me that, before rejecting the proposed measure, the court would have to bear in mind, in the context of the overall margin of appreciation afforded to the Government, that there may reasonably be different opinions on questions such as the relative disadvantages of the allegedly less onerous alternative, and the degree of difference in onerousness.
205. Accordingly, when considering a challenge to any measure which engages article 34 and which a Member State government seeks to justify on the basis of policy and evidence, the court should avoid being too exacting when it comes to an attack on the evidence on which the measure is based. On the other hand, it would be wrong not to address and evaluate the supporting evidence "
Were the first and second decisions disproportionate and/or irrational?
"Unsurprisingly, given the actual basis of allocation, there are fluctuations. Nevertheless, the Lincolnshire and Merseyside allocations are extremely similar whereas Devon's per capita allocation is low, even taking into account the fact that they are the second highest in terms of average GDP per capita""
EQUAL TREATMENT
The margin of discretion in relation to the equal treatment issue
Failure to treat like cases alike
Application of the same rule to different situations
"Had allocations been calculated based on a 2007-2013 average or overall quantum, then Ministers felt that Merseyside and South Yorkshire would have been unduly advantaged in relation to other English Transition areas, in so far as their boosted allocations in the period 2007-2010 were expressly intended to be "transitional and specific", rather than to be enshrined into future allocations."
Overall conclusion on the equal treatment issues
Failure to take into account mandatory relevant consideration: the domestic law dimension.
Overall conclusion