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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> ER, R (on the application of) v London Borough of Hillingdon [2014] EWCA Civ 1407 (29 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1407.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 1407, [2015] PTSR D3 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Judge Stewart QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE AIKENS
and
LORD JUSTICE BEAN
____________________
R (on the application of ER) |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONER FOR LOCAL ADMINISTRATION (THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT OMBUDSMAN) |
Defendant/Respondent |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF HILLINGDON |
Interested Party |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Brian Ash QC instructed by Bevan Brittan for the Respondent Defendant
The Interested Party did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing date : 16 October 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean:
The background
"The fundamental difference between the parties was, and remains, whether N's needs can be adequately met at Moorcroft School, with the additional packages of support and resources identified within the LEA's case statement, and discussed during the course of the hearing; alternatively, whether he should attend as a 51 week boarding pupil at Penhurst School, the placement identified by his mother as being the only one which in her view could meet his extremely complex and exceptional needs, albeit at a very significant cost indeed to the LEA."
"We are entirely satisfied that there is ample evidence to enable us to conclude that N has an urgent need for a highly specialised, highly flexible, and extended educational curriculum, going well beyond the normal school day. We do not accept that the basis upon which this appeal was submitted by ER prevents us from coming to that conclusion. No reasonable LEA, in the circumstances described to us during this appeal, should have concluded that appropriate and adequate educational provision could be made for N, with whatever additional packages of support may be provided by the LEA, and whatever the real strengths of the day placement proposed, during the course of a normal school day.
. . …As to Part 4 [of N's statement of special education needs], we shall order that N attends Penhurst School. In the light of our conclusion as to the complexity and extent of the whole day curriculum that N now requires a comparison of the relative placement costs does not arise. We recognise that Penhurst is a very expensive proposition for the LEA and that even though the cost covers nursing care – which we accept is not educational provision – it is for the LEA to pay it where Penhurst is named in Part 4. However, we have found that this is an exceptional situation and we have had no hesitation in concluding that Penhurst is an adequate and appropriate placement and that, for the reasons given, Moorcroft is not……………….
ORDER
……..Part 4 shall be amended by the deletion of that currently within the statement and in substitution with the following:
'N shall attend Penhurst School, New Street, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, an independent special school for children with profound multiple and sensory impairments. After a period of introduction and transition, during which N may be a weekly boarding pupil, he will attend on a 51 week full boarding basis.'"
The statutory framework
"make arrangements for the provision of suitable education at school or otherwise than at school for those children of compulsory school age who, by reason of illness, exclusion from school or otherwise, may not for any period receive suitable education unless such arrangements are made for them."
By section 19(6) "suitable education" in relation to a child or young person, is defined as "efficient education suitable to his age, ability and aptitude and to any special educational needs he may have."
"(3) In particular, the statement shall –
(a) give details of the authority's assessment of the child's special educational needs, and
(b) specify the special educational provision to be made for the purpose of meeting those needs, including the particulars required by subsection (4).
(4) The statement shall –
(a) specify the type of school or other institution 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 or institution (whether in the United Kingdom or elsewhere) which they consider would be appropriate for the child and should be specified in the statement……………
(5) Where a local education authority maintain a statement under this section, then –
(a) unless the child's parent has made suitable arrangements, the authority –
(i) shall arrange that the special educational provision specified in the statement is made for the child . . . ."
"(1) The parent of a child for whom a local education authority maintain a statement under section 324 may appeal to the tribunal –
. . .(b) if an amendment is made to 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 a school so specified),
(c) if no school is specified in the statement, that fact."
"[24A Power to investigate]
(1) Under this Part of this Act, a Local Commissioner may investigate a matter –
(a) which relates to action taken by or on behalf of an authority to which this Part of this Act applies,
(b) which is subject to investigation under this Part of this Act by virtue of section 26, and
(c) in relation to which subsection (2) . . . is satisfied.
(2) This subsection is satisfied if, in relation to the matter, a complaint which satisfies sections 26A and 26B has been made to a Local Commissioner………….
(4) Any question whether subsection (2)…..is satisfied in relation to a matter shall be determined by a Local Commissioner………..
(6) In determining whether to initiate, continue or discontinue an investigation, a Local Commissioner shall, subject to the provisions of this section and sections 26 to 26D, act in accordance with his own discretion.
26 Matters subject to investigation
(1) For the purposes of section 24A(1)(b), in relation to an authority to which this Part of this Act applies, the following matters are subject to investigation by a Local Commissioner under this Part of this Act –
(a) alleged or apparent maladministration in connection with the exercise of the authority's administrative functions;
(b) an alleged or apparent failure in a service which it was the authority's function to provide;
(c) an alleged or apparent failure to provide such a service…………
(1A) Subsection (1) is subject to the following provisions of this section…….
(6) A Local Commissioner shall not conduct an investigation under this Part of this Act in respect of any of the following matters, that is to say,
(a) any action in respect of which the person affected has or had a right of appeal, reference or review to or before a tribunal constituted by or under any enactment;
(b) . . .
(c) any action in respect of which the person affected has or had a remedy by way of proceedings in any court of law:
Provided that a Local Commissioner may conduct an investigation notwithstanding the existence of such a right or remedy if satisfied that in the particular circumstances it is not reasonable to expect the person affected to resort or have resorted to it." [Emphasis added.]
"This section applies where a Local Commissioner reports that there has been –
(a) maladministration in connection with the exercise of the authority's administrative functions;
(b) a failure in a service which it was the function of an authority to provide; or
(c) a failure to provide such a service.
(2B) Where the report relates to maladministration, those recommendations are recommendations with respect to action which, in the Local Commissioner's opinion, the authority concerned should take –
(a) to remedy any injustice sustained by the person affected in consequence of the maladministration, and
(b) to prevent injustice being caused in the future in consequence of similar maladministration in connection with the exercise of the authority's administrative functions.
(2BA) Where the report relates to a failure in, or to provide, a service which it was the function of the authority to provide, those recommendations are recommendations with respect to action which, in the Local Commissioner's opinion, the authority concerned should take –
(a) to remedy any injustice sustained by the person affected in consequence of the failure, and
(b) to prevent injustice being caused in the future in consequence of a similar failure in, or to provide, a service which it is the function of the authority to provide."
The parties' submissions
"[Whereas] 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 content of 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."
"… if the complaint was justified, the person concerned might be entitled to obtain some form of remedy in respect of the subject matter of the complaint if he had commenced proceedings within the appropriate time limits. The commissioner is not concerned to consider whether in fact the proceedings would succeed."
Mr Ash relies on the use by Woolf LJ of the phrase "some form of remedy", rather than (for example) "a complete remedy".
"Parliament was at pains to ensure that the commissioners should not conduct an investigation which might trespass in any way on the jurisdiction of the courts of law or of any tribunals".
"… it is plain that the intention underlying the Act of 1974 was to provide redress for those people who were denied the possibility of resort to redress of any kind in respect of maladministration by a local authority in exercise of its administrative powers. It can hardly have been the intention of Parliament to have provided two remedies, one substantive by way of judicial review and one compensatory by way of the local commissioner. The essential feature of the legislation is the creation of a legal right to complain about a grievance, but in respect of which there had been no available form of redress whether through the common law or by means of judicial review. Where a party has ventilated a grievance by means of judicial review it was not contemplated that they should enjoy an alternative, let alone an additional, right by way of complaint to the local government commissioner".
On a renewed application for leave to appeal Simon Brown LJ approved these observations.
"I take the point that the statutory appeal to the Secretary of State against a refusal of planning permission provides no compensation for the delay which inevitably occurs. However, the fact is that wherever there is a right of appeal to a Minister of the Crown (the situation dealt with in Section 26(6) (b)), there will inevitably be some delay if the right is exercised, as it often will be, and where there is such delay, loss may very well result, as it has in the present case. Yet Parliament has chosen expressly to exclude jurisdiction on the part of the Local Government Ombudsman in such cases.
It seems to me that in those circumstances Parliament must have contemplated that there would arise situations where loss had been suffered and where no remedy for that loss would be provided, and yet the Local Government Ombudsman would have no jurisdiction to intervene. I therefore do not find the argument based upon the lack of remedy through the statutory appeal to the Secretary of State persuasive on this particular issue."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Aikens:
Lord Justice Moore-Bick: