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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Driver, R (On the Application Of) v Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council [2020] EWCA Civ 1759 (21 December 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1759.html Cite as: [2021] ELR 193, [2020] EWCA Civ 1759 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT IN WALES
The Honourable Mr Justice Fraser
2 Park Street, Cardiff, CF10 1ET |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES
and
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS
____________________
The Queen on the application of ANNE-MARIE DRIVER |
Claimant/Respondent |
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-and- |
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RHONDDA CYNON TAF COUNTY BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendant/Appellant |
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-and- |
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(1) THE WELSH LANGUAGE COMMISSIONER (2) THE WELSH MINISTERS |
Interveners |
____________________
Mr Rhodri Williams QC and Ms Nia Gowman (instructed by Watkins & Gunn) appeared for the Respondent
Mr Owain Rhys James (instructed by Capital Law) appeared for the Welsh Language Commissioner
Mr Gwion Lewis (instructed by Director of Legal Services, Welsh Government) made written submissions for the Welsh Ministers
Hearing dates: 8-9 December 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Geoffrey Vos, Chancellor of the High Court, giving the judgment of the court:
Introduction
The legislative background as to language
The process of interpreting legislation enacted by the Senedd
Factual background
(1) The alteration of the age range of pupils at the Cardinal Newman Roman Catholic Comprehensive School, from the ages 11 – 19 years currently educated there, to an age range of 11 – 16 years, resulting in the removal of the sixth form provision by September 2022 ("proposal 1"). This was referred to the Welsh Ministers for approval and was not the subject of a decision to implement the proposal on 18 July 2019;
(2) The closure of Pontypridd High School (which currently provides education for children aged from 11 to 19) and Cilfynydd Primary School, and the creation of a new school on the site of the existing Pontypridd High School. The proposed new school would educate children aged 3 – 16, but would have no sixth form provision ("proposal 2").
(3) The closure of Hawthorn High School (which provides education for ages 11 -19) and Hawthorn Primary School and the creation of a new school on the site of the existing Hawthorn High and Hawthorn Primary Schools. There would be no sixth form provision at the proposed new school ("proposal 3").
(4) The closure of Ysgol Gynradd Gymraeg Pont Sion Norton ("Pont Sion Norton") which provides primary education through the medium of Welsh, and Heol y Celyn Primary School (which is a dual medium school, providing education for some pupils through the medium of Welsh and for others through the medium of English) and the opening of a new Welsh medium Primary School on the site of the current Heol y Celyn Primary School ("proposal 4").
The judgment below
(1) proposals 2 and 3 affected sixth form education within the meaning of section 50(2)(a) of the 2013 Act/Deddf as they involved schools (Pontypridd High School and Hawthorn High School) at which sixth form education was provided;
(2) section 50(2) did not "specify the only ways in which proposals could "affect sixth form education"" (see paragraph 77); and
(3) in any event, the word "only" in section 50(2) qualified "education" and not "school", and proposals affected sixth form education if they affected a school which provided sixth form education (whether or not it also provided education for those in other age groups); section 50(2) was not limited to proposals affecting schools providing solely sixth form education. That was made apparent by the Welsh language text which placed "yn unig" at the end of the sub-section (see paragraphs 74 to 80 of the judgment).
(1) In relation to proposal 4, the closure of Pont Sion Norton and Heol y Celyn Primary School, Rhondda Cynon Taf failed to comply with paragraph 1.9 of the Code as it failed to take into account a specific factor, namely how those proposals might affect the sustainability of Welsh medium provision in the regional 14-19 network and promote access to the provision of Welsh medium courses in post-16 education (paragraph 118 of the judgment). In addition, proposal 4 failed to take account of the impact of proposal 4 on Welsh medium secondary education generally and the Welsh language (see paragraphs 123 and 125 of the judgment).
The present appeal
The 2013 Act/Deddf
"Approval by Welsh Ministers
(1) Proposals published under section 48 require approval under this section if—
(a) the proposals affect sixth form education, or
(b) the proposals have been made by a proposer other than the relevant local authority and an objection has been made by that authority in accordance with section 49(2) and has not been withdrawn in writing before the end of 28 days beginning with the end of the objection period.
(2) Proposals affect sixth form education if—
(a) they are proposals to establish or discontinue a school providing education suitable only to the requirements of persons above compulsory school age, or
(b) they are proposals to make a regulated alteration to a school, the effect of which would be that provision of education suitable to the requirements of persons above compulsory school age at the school increases or decreases."
"Eu cymeradwyo gan Weinidogion Cymru
(1) Mae'n ofynnol i gynigion a gyhoeddir o dan adran 48 gael eu cymeradwyo o dan yr adran hon –
(a) os yw'r cynigion yn effeithio ar addysg chweched dosbarth, neu
(b) os yw'r cynigion wedi eu gwneud gan gynigydd ac eithrio'r awdurdod lleol perthnasol ac os yw gwrthwynebiad wedi ei wneud gan yr awdurdod hwnnw yn unol ag adran 49(2) ac os nad yw wedi ei dynnu yn ôl yn ysgrifenedig cyn diwedd 28 o ddiwrnodau gan ddechrau ar ddiwedd y cyfnod gwrthwynebu.
(2) Mae cynigion yn effeithio ar addysg chweched dosbarth -
(a) os ydynt yn gynigion i sefydlu neu derfynu ysgol sy'n darparu addysg sy'n addas at anghenion personau sydd dros oedran ysgol gorfodol yn unig, neu
(b) os ydynt yn gynigion i wneud newid rheoleiddiedig i ysgol, y byddai ei effaith yn golygu bod darparu addysg sy'n addas i anghenion personau sydd dros oedran ysgol gorfodol yn yr ysgol yn cynyddu neu'n lleihau."
The Code
"Where a school closure, reduction in capacity or age range contraction is proposed: …
- with reference to the nature of the schools subject to proposals, whether the alternative school-based provision is sufficient to meet existing and projected demand for schools of the same:
a. language category …
Proposals should ensure that the balance of school provision reflects the balance of demand. This means that where school provision is being reduced or removed, alternative school provision of the same nature (language category or, if relevant, religious character), wherever possible, should remain available and accessible to pupils in the local area.
However in some areas it may not be compatible with the cost effective provision of education to continue to maintain access to schools of the same nature.
In all cases, existing pupils at a school where provision is being reduced or removed must be able to continue receiving an education that provides at least equivalent standards and opportunities for progression in their current language medium. Specific transition arrangements may be necessary in order to achieve this.
Where proposals affect schools where Welsh is a medium of instruction (for subjects other than Welsh) for some or all of the time, local authorities should carry out a Welsh Language Impact Assessment."
The Grounds of Appeal
(1) The judge was wrong to hold that section 50(2) of the 2013 Act/Deddf did not specify the only ways in which proposals could affect sixth form education (ground 1);
(2) The judge was wrong to hold that the word "only" and the phrase "yn unig" in the English and Welsh texts of section 50(2)(a) did not qualify what a school provides (that is, sixth form education only) (ground 2);
(3) The judge was wrong to find that Rhondda Cynon Taf breached paragraph 1.9 of the Code in relation to proposal 4, as that paragraph applies to the reorganisation of secondary education, not primary education (ground 3);
(4) To the extent that the judge found a breach of paragraph 1.4 of the Code, that finding was (a) vitiated by a serious error, as there was no allegation of a breach of paragraph 1.4 and Rhondda Cynon Taf had no opportunity to address the issue in its pleadings, evidence, or submissions and (b) wrong (ground 4); and
(5) The judge was wrong to find that Rhondda Cynon Taf had failed to consider how its proposals for Welsh medium education would impact upon Welsh medium secondary education (ground 5).
The first issue: Grounds 1 and 2: the proper construction of section 50 of the 2013 Act/Deddf
Submissions
Discussion
"that the Welsh Ministers will determine all proposals concerning the removal of 6th forms, or the addition of 6th forms, including the closure of sixth form only schools."
"only those proposals which receive an objection from a local authority (or in the case of a school with a religious character, the relevant religious body) or which are connected solely with the removal or establishment of sixth form provision (in the light of the Welsh Ministers' statutory responsibilities in relation to post-16 educational provision and funding) will be referred to the Welsh Ministers."
The second issue: ground 3: Paragraph 1.9 of the Code
Submissions
Discussion
The third issue: grounds 4 and 5: the wider issue of the impact of proposal 4 on Welsh medium education
Submissions
Discussion
Conclusions
Note 1 See paragraph 12.40 of the Law Commission report, [2016] EWLC 366. [Back] Note 2 See paragraphs 12.5-12.8 and 12.17-12.20. Paragraph 12.20 expresses the view that “it is only in circumstances where there is a concern that there is a difference in meaning between the English and Welsh texts that detailed analysis of the two texts will need to take place”. See the observations of the Law Commission on article 33 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties in paragraphs 12.5 to 12.8 of the Law Commission’s Report.
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