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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 >> Nottinghamshire County Council v SF And GD (Rev 1) [2020] EWCA Civ 226 (03 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/226.html Cite as: (2020) 23 CCL Rep 241, [2020] EWCA Civ 226, [2020] ELR 361 |
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ON APPEAL FROM The Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber)
Upper Tribunal Judge Wright
HS5202019
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
and
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
____________________
Nottinghamshire County Council |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SF and GD |
Respondents |
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Miss Charlotte Hadfield and Mr. Mathew Wyard (instructed by Sinclairslaw Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 21 January 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
The Senior President:
Introduction:
Background:
The context and the legal framework:
"20 (1) A child or young person has special educational needs if he or she has a learning difficulty or disability which calls for special educational provision to be made for him or her.
(2) A child of compulsory school age or a young person has a learning difficulty or disability if he or she-
(a) has a significantly greater difficulty in learning than the majority of others of the same age, or
(b) has a disability which prevents or hinders him or her from making use of facilities of a kind generally provided for others of the same age in mainstream schools or mainstream post-16 institutions.
[…]
21(1) "Special educational provision", for a child aged two or more or a young person, means educational or training provision that is additional to, or different from, that made generally for others of the same age in –
(a) mainstream schools in England
[…]"
"(1) A request for a local authority in England to secure an EHC needs assessment for a child or young person may be made to the authority by the child's parent, the young person or a person acting on behalf of a school or post-16 institution.
(2) An "EHC needs assessment" is an assessment of the educational, health care and social care needs of a child or young person.
(3) When a request is made to a local authority under subsection (1), or a local authority otherwise becomes responsible for a child or young person, the authority must determine whether it may be necessary for special educational provision to be made for the child or young person in accordance with an EHC plan.
[…]
(8) The local authority must secure an EHC needs assessment for the child or young person if, after having regard to any views expressed and evidence submitted under subsection (7), the authority is of the opinion that—
(a) the child or young person has or may have special educational needs, and
(b) it may be necessary for special educational provision to be made for the child or young person in accordance with an EHC plan.
[…]"
"(1) Where, in the light of an EHC needs assessment, it is necessary for special educational provision to be made for a child or young person in accordance with an EHC plan-
(a) the local authority must secure that an EHC plan is prepared for the child or young person, and
(b) once an EHC plan has been prepared, it must maintain the plan.
(2) For the purposes of this Part, an EHC plan is a plan specifying –
(a) the child's or young person's special educational needs;
(b) the outcomes sought for him or her;
(c) the special educational provision required by him or her;
(d) any health care provision reasonably required by the learning difficulties and disabilities which result in him or her having special educational needs;
(e) in the case of a child or a young person aged under 18, any social care provision which must be made for him or her by the local authority as a result of section 2 of the Chronically Sick and Disabled Persons Act 1970 (as it applies by virtue of section 28A of that Act);
(f) any social care provision reasonably required by the learning difficulties and disabilities which result in the child or young person having special educational needs, to the extent that the provision is not already specified in the plan under paragraph (e).
[…]"
"(1) A local authority must review an EHC plan that it maintains –
(a) in the period of 12 months starting with the date on which the plan is first made, and
(b) in each subsequent period of 12 months starting with the date on which the plan was last reviewed under this section.
(2) A local authority must secure a re-assessment of the educational, health care and social care needs of a child or young person for whom it maintains an EHC plan if a request is made to it by –
(a) the child's parent or the young person, or
(b) the governing body, proprietor or principal of the school, post-16 institution or other institution which the child or young person attends.
(3) A local authority may also secure a re-assessment of those needs at any other time if it thinks it necessary.
[…]"
"(1) This section imposes duties on the appropriate authorities for the following schools and other institutions in England—
(a) mainstream schools;
(b) maintained nursery schools;
(c) 16 to 19 Academies;
(d) alternative provision Academies;
(e) institutions within the further education sector;
(f) pupil referral units.
(2) If a registered pupil or a student at a school or other institution has special educational needs, the appropriate authority must, in exercising its functions in relation to the school or other institution, use its best endeavours to secure that the special educational provision called for by the pupil's or student's special educational needs is made.
(3) The "appropriate authority" for a school or other institution is—
(a) in the case of a maintained school, maintained nursery school or institution within the further education sector, the governing body;
[…]"
"9.53: Where, in the light of an EHC needs assessment, it is necessary for special educational provision to be made in accordance with an EHC plan, the local authority must prepare a plan. Where a local authority decides it is necessary to issue an EHC plan, it must notify the child's parent or the young person and give the reasons for its decision. The local authority should ensure it allows enough time to prepare the draft plan and complete the remaining steps in the process within the 20-week overall time limit within which it must issue the finalised EHC plan.
9.54: In deciding whether to make special educational provision in accordance with an EHC plan, the local authority should consider all the information gathered during the EHC needs assessment and set it alongside that available to the local authority prior to the assessment. Local authorities should consider both the child or young
person's SEN and the special educational provision made for the child or young person and whether:
• the information from the EHC needs assessment confirms the information available on the nature and extent of the child or young person's SEN prior to the EHC needs assessment, and whether
• the special educational provision made prior to the EHC needs assessment was well matched to the SEN of the child or young person.
9.55: Where, despite appropriate assessment and provision, the child or young person is not progressing, or not progressing sufficiently well, the local authority should consider what further provision may be needed. The local authority should take into account:
• whether the special educational provision required to meet the child or young person's needs can reasonably be provided from within the resources normally available to mainstream early years providers, schools and post-16 institutions, or
• whether it may be necessary for the local authority to make special educational provision in accordance with an EHC plan."
"(a) What did we know before? [the assessment]
(b) What do we know now? [after the assessment]
(c) If (a) and (b) are well matched, an EHC Plan is probably not necessary; but
(d) If the child is not making progress/sufficient progress despite (a) and (b) being well matched, can appropriate provision be made from normal mainstream resources? Or may the Local Authority have to go further and issue a plan? In other words, which side of the line does the case fall on."
And then finally:
"Point (d) is no more than a restatement of the question 'is an EHC Plan necessary'."
"I bear in mind that the Code of Practice is precisely what it is said to be – guidance to which the local authority and tribunal must have regard. It does not affect the generality of section 324 [under the Education Act 1996] so as to exclude any possibility that a statement may be necessary for some other reason than those indicated in the guidance"
"The Code is not, however, binding law. Where there is a difference between the law as set out in statutes, regulations and case law, and the Code, the Tribunal must follow the law".
Decisions appealed:
"The statutory position is now that the relevant comparator is not whether this provision could be made from within the resources of mainstream schools in the area but nationally in England. Those present at the hearing acknowledged that they were not in a position to make that comparison, and perhaps the tribunal as a national jurisdiction is better placed to use its specialism to do so. We have concluded that the level and quality of provision currently made by [the school] for [HD] is unlikely to be replicated in other local authority area mainstream schools, and would require an EHC plan to ensure its delivery and monitoring. We put on record that on the evidence presented to the tribunal, [HD] is unlikely to require any additional provision immediately, over and above what is in place, but his provision will require constant monitoring and adapting to manage his anxieties and to develop his skills and for these reasons we have concluded that it is necessary for the LA to make and maintain an EHC plan for him."
"the Tribunal in my judgment was entitled to conclude, using its specialist expertise, that, notwithstanding the extensive educational provision Nottinghamshire was providing to HD and his 'progress', this was not educational provision that would be made generally for children of HD's age in mainstream schools in England, and for this reason it was 'necessary' for an EHC Plan to be made for him."
"The fact that this analysis may appear contrary to the guidance in the Code of Practice is neither here nor there (it is only guidance, and the tribunal had regards to it) if, as I have found it was entitled to do, the tribunal applied the test(s) in the statute to the evidence before it. Nor does this approach contradict or otherwise subvert the longstanding view (see paragraph 27 of Hertfordshire cc v MC and KC) that the majority of children with special educational needs will not require EHC Plans. An evaluative judgment still has to be made as to the extent to which [original emphasis] the educational (or training) provision the child needs is additional to, or different from, the educational (or training) provision made generally for others of the same age, and thus needs to be made in accordance with an EHC Plan."
The appeal to this court:
"Consequently, where a trial judge has reached a conclusion on the primary facts, it is only in a rare case, such as where that conclusion was one (i) which there was no evidence to support, (ii) which was based on a misunderstanding of the evidence, or (iii) which no reasonable judge could have reached, that an appellate tribunal will interfere with it."
Lord Justice Coulson:
Lord Justice Newey: