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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> SARCP, R (On the Application Of) v Stoke-On-Trent City Council [2025] EWHC 18 (Admin) (27 January 2025) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2025/18.html Cite as: [2025] EWHC 18 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Bull Street, Birmingham |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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THE KING (on the application of SARCP) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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STOKE-ON-TRENT CITY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
____________________
Timothy Straker KC and Jasraj Sanghera, instructed by and for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 13th December 2024 and 10th January 2025
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ TINDAL:
Introduction
"The Price shall be subject to annual indexation at a rate to be determined by the Council following consultation with the Provider. The rate shall be no less than 1.4% per annum. The first application of the indexation to the Price shall take effect on 1st April 2022."
(i) Ground 1: Inadequate consultation not properly considered in the Decision;
(ii) Ground 2: Failure to consider material considerations;
(iii) Ground 3: Breach of the Public Sector Equality Duty;
(iv) Ground 4: Failure to follow statutory guidance;
(v) Ground 5: Breach of the Art.8 ECHR rights of residents;
(vi) Ground 6: Wednesbury Unreasonableness.
a. Whether the Claimant had an alternative remedy under the Contract;
b. Whether there is a 'sufficient public law element' in the whole claim;
c. Whether each ground of challenge is within the 'scope of review';
d. Whether each ground succeeds, focussing on Grounds 1, 4 and 3;
e. Whether relief should be refused as a matter of discretion.
I shall consider those issues in that order (although I will take (b) and (c) together), after setting out the factual background and legal framework.
Factual Background
"40 Judicial review is directed to examination of whether a public authority has acted lawfully or not. This means that the general position is that the focus of a judicial review claim is on whether the public authority had proper grounds for acting as it did on the basis of the information available to it. This may include examination of whether the authority should have taken further steps to obtain more information to enable it to know how to proceed: Secretary of State for Education and Science v Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council [1977] AC 1014, 1065 (Lord Diplock). Accordingly, it is for the public authority to determine on the information available to it the facts which are relevant to the existence and exercise of its powers, subject to review by a court according to the usual rationality standard. The court has a supervisory role only….
41 Judicial review is supposed to be a speedy and effective procedure, in respect of which disputes of fact which have a bearing on the legal question to be determined by the court - that is, whether the public authority has acted lawfully - do not generally arise. A public authority is subject to a duty of candour to explain to the court all the facts which it took into account and the information available to it when it decided how to act.
42 Given the nature of the legal question to be determined by the court and the duty of candour, the usual position is that a judicial review claim can and should be determined without the need to resort to procedures, such as cross-examination of witnesses, which are directed to assisting a court to resolve disputed questions of fact which are relevant in the context of other civil actions, where it is the court itself which has to determine those facts. In judicial review proceedings the court is typically not concerned to resolve disputes of fact, but rather to decide the legal consequences in the light of undisputed facts about what information the public authority had and the reasons it had for acting."
In McAleenon itself, the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal had rejected a claim by someone living next door to a waste disposal site for judicial review of a regulator's failure to stop statutory nuisance because the nuisance was disputed in fact by the site which was not a party (and due to alternative remedy, considered later). But the Supreme Court disagreed, as the focus of judicial review was whether the regulator had behaved lawfully on the information it had (or should have had under Tameside), not whether there was actually a nuisance from the waste disposal site.
Care Home Fees
The 2021 Provider Contract
"Any person who is not a party to the Agreement (including without limitation any employee, officer, agent, representative, or sub-contractor of either the Council [i.e. the Defendant] or the Provider), save for Residents and Sponsors, shall not have any right to enforce any term of the Agreement. This clause does not affect any right or remedy of any person which exists or is available otherwise than pursuant to that Act."
Dispute Resolution provisions in Cl.58 require the parties to attempt in good faith to negotiate a settlement to any dispute about the Contract and then to go to mediation unless either party disagrees. Subject to that, litigation is not inhibited.
"18.2..[T]he Price shall be inclusive of all costs expenses and disbursements incurred by the Provider arising out of or in connection with full and proper performance of the Service and the Price shall not be amended to reflect any increase in…such costs expenses or disbursements, save for any amendments made in accordance with this Agreement and approved…
"18.3 The Price shall be subject to annual indexation at a rate to be determined by the Council following consultation with the Provider. The rate shall be no less than 1.4% per annum. The first application of the indexation to the Price shall take effect on 1st April 2022….
20.1 Subject to Clause 18.3 above the Price shall remain fixed for the Term subject to adjustment in accordance with the 'Annual Price Adjustment' as detailed at P14 of the Pricing Schedule."
In the event of a variation the Price may also be varied as appropriate [Cl.40.3]. That Pricing Schedule recognises the Defendant's duty to facilitate a diverse and 'sustainable high quality' market [P1 Schedule]. P5.1 also acknowledges that:
"The weekly price to be paid for an individual's care ['Banded Guide Price'] is based on their care and support needs and the input required from the care home in order to effectively and safely meet these needs. As the input required from the care home increases as does the price to be paid…"
The 'Banded Guide Prices' in P5 are standard weekly prices for four categories: (1) 'Residential', (2) 'Residential Enhanced', (3) 'Nursing' and (4) 'Nursing Enhanced' (many care home residents, without nursing needs, would be in the first two). P14.1 of Schedule 2 sets out the 'Annual Price Adjustment' provisions:
"The weekly price payable by the Council for each Banded Price Guide (as detailed at P5) will be reviewed during the first quarter of each calendar year and the Council will determine the rate it will pay for each band in the subsequent financial year and if applicable will adjust the Price paid for Residents already in the Premises. The Weekly Price is adjusted annually in accordance with clause 18.3 of the main body of this Agreement.
a) The effective date of any proposed change to the Prices will be upon the date when the Department for Work and Pensions annual revision of benefit levels comes into force (…normally the first two weeks of April each year)…
b) Any adjustment to the Total Care Price under this section shall be payable by the Council and there shall be no adjustment made to the Statutory Contribution under this section.
c) Where the Total Care Price is in excess of the Council's Banded Price Guide and there is a Third-Party Top-up payment from a Sponsor, the following price review arrangements shall apply.
i. From the date of this Agreement, where the Sponsor is a body external to the Council, for example a Health body or a voluntary organisation, their contribution will be adjusted in accordance with their nominated annual inflationary increase… In years where the Council adjusts its price review by more than the index used by the Sponsor [they] can be requested to match this price review. If the request is not agreed the adjustment remains at the Sponsor's index.
ii. In the case of any Individual Placement Agreement entered into after the Commencement Date of this Agreement at the time of the annual review any contribution made by an individual Sponsor for example a relative, friend or representative of the Resident will be adjusted in accordance with indexation provisions set out in the Individual Placement Agreement.
iii. In the case of any Individual Placement Agreement entered into after the Commencement Date of this Agreement at the time of the annual review any contribution where the Council is a Sponsor of the Resident will be adjusted in accordance with clause 18.3 in the main body of this Agreement."
There is also an Annexe or Appendix to the Pricing Schedule. This sets out non-exhaustive 'Factors' to be considered in looking at the annual price review, like accommodation, staff and business overheads/running costs, similar to those in the 'toolkit', albeit there is no set percentage weighting as in the 2011 provider contract. Once the resident enters a care home the Defendant issues an Individual Placement Agreement ('IPA'). As noted, this is an (up-to) four-party contract between the Defendant, the provider, the resident (and any sponsor). The standard IPA specifies a start date for the residential placement. Following an initial six-week trial period, the notice period for the termination of the IPA is four weeks. The 'indirect impact' of the Decision on residents is partly due to Clause 8 of the standard IPA:
"If a top-up payment is being paid by the Sponsor this will be adjusted by inflation each year. The revised top-up payment will apply from April each year. This inflation adjustment is calculated based on the actual changes in the cost of providing a resident's care…"
So, even if the Defendant gives providers a below-inflation fee rise under Clause 18.3 of the Contract (as it did in the Decision), providers will pass on the true impact of inflation in actual costs of care to the resident or sponsor if they pay 'top-ups'.
The 2024 Price Increase
"There is currently an oversupply of general residential provision in the City, due to our strategic direction to support people to remain in their own homes and/or be supported in Extra Care Housing rather than residential care, the proposal is to not uplift the residential rate in 2024/25. In addition, there are currently no issues with sourcing residential enhanced at the current contract rate, therefore the proposal is to again hold the rate at the same level for 2024/25.
By comparison, nursing and nursing enhanced is becoming increasingly difficult to source at the current rates, especially when competing with neighbouring Councils and the [NHS Integrated Care Board] who pay more. It is therefore proposed that the rates for both nursing and enhanced nursing are increased for 2024/25. Uplifts will only be applied to placements at or below the proposed fee rate, any placements above the proposed rate will not receive any uplift in fees."
So, Mr Tomlin recommended an increase of 5.47% in the 'Nursing Care' band and 4.87% for the 'Nursing Enhanced' band, but no increase for the 'Residential' and 'Residential Enhanced' bands – i.e. no increase for (many) of the residents of care homes (such as those of the Claimant's members) as opposed to nursing homes. Under Equality issues, Tomlin simply suggested that an Equalities Impact Assessment was not required. His recommendations were adopted by the Cabinet.
"[Mr Tomlin] outlined the City Council's financial position and that one of the key pressures was due to the high number of children in the City who are in care: over 1,000. The City Council had been predicting a £10m overspend for 23/24, increasing to £30m 24/25. The Leader of the City Council and City Director had been in early conversations with Central Government regarding the potential risk of the City Council having to declare a s.114, effectively declaring the City Council bankrupt. The City Council were informed in March 2024 that Central Government had agreed a £42m loan for the City Council. Whilst this is positive, it is a loan and needs to be repaid and with interest. As the biggest pressure facing the City Council is Children's Social Care, very little of the £42m will be available to support pressures in adult social care. [Mr Tomlin] explained that as a result the Adult Social Care department is therefore having to make difficult decisions with the limited funds available, including the fees paid to care providers. Peter stressed that the City Council wants to work together with care providers both in terms of the financial challenges facing both the City Council and care providers but also to jointly redesign social care services locally. [Mr Tomlin] was clear that the way the funding is allocated from central government and the reduction in funding local government over many years has left the council in a very difficult position."
Mr Tomlin's colleague then explained the Adult Social Care department's future commissioning plans. In a question-and-answer session following the presentation, Mr Tomlin and his colleagues confirmed they had offered a 1.4% increase to care home providers but they would be pausing the '0% decision' to enable consultation and would look at the actual cost of care, including past cost of care assessments. One provider even suggested that the Defendant should 'pay the true cost of care even if it means going 'bankrupt' to highlight to central government they did not have enough money': I am afraid hardly a constructive or realistic attitude.
"There will be a period of consultation when reviewing the pricing structures that will be reasonable, proportionate and fair where SARCP will be able to make submissions and within the Gunning principles."
(Mr Rule relies on that as a 'clear and unambiguous promise' that the Claimant would be involved in the Defendant's consultation exercise with providers. I should add that Mr Straker disputes that and argues the only consultation was contractual).
"Whilst the City Council is legally required to consult on any change to residential care fees for 2024/25, the City Council also has a legal duty to ensure a balance budget is achieved. Any uplifts must be sustainable within the context of overall affordability. The City Council's commissioning intentions continue to be focused on keeping people in their own homes for as long as possible and supporting people to maintain their independence. The 2024/25 fee strategy is aimed to target the limited funding available on care services which are considered to be areas of growth. As a result, the proposed fee increase offered for band 1 and band 2 residential placements for 2024/25 will be 1.4% and suggested to be applied to both existing and new placements at the current band rates.
This proposal is being placed before Cabinet for their consideration and comment/ approval within the month. Please can you consider the proposed increase and respond to by 5pm Wednesday 19th June 2024. If you would like to have a one to one with a member of the commissioning team regarding the proposal or the impact this may have on your business please contact the team …" (my italics)
This was not a happily-drafted letter (by the same Council officer who took the Decision in July 2024, whom I shall not name). On one hand, it set out a timetable for consultation responses by mid-June and a decision by early July (as happened). On the other, it created misunderstanding by suggesting the 1.4% rise proposal 'would be placed before Cabinet for their comment/approval within the month', suggesting Cabinet would vote on the 1.4% rise before the consultation deadline.
"[1] That Cabinet agrees to pause the implementation of the residential care component of the 2024-25 Adult Social Care Fee Strategy for residential care provision placements at the 2023-24 band rates and enter into a six- week period of consultation with those residential care providers.
[2] That Cabinet delegates responsibility for finalising and the implementation of the strategy at the end of the consultation period to the Director of Adult Social Care…in consultation with the Cabinet Member for Adult Services."
In other words, what was being 'placed before Cabinet for their consideration and comment/ approval within the month of May' was not the 1.4% increase itself. It was the proposal to pause implementation of the Cabinet's decision of 26th March to make no increase, to enable a 6-week consultation period on 1.4% and delegate the final decision to Mr Tomlin himself in consultation with the Cabinet member for Adult Social Care. This was because Mr Tomlin and his colleagues could not themselves pause the Cabinet's previous decision, only Cabinet itself could do so.
"…could result in a legal challenge from care providers in respect of both breach of contract and Judicial Review proceedings. Pausing the current approach and entering into a period of consultation will mitigate the risk…
"There will be no negative financial implications in delaying the current implementation strategy for a further period of consultation. While the service is confident that it can absorb a 1.4% increase, any fee increase agreed over and above that amount will cause a resulting pressure [and] will need to be reported in the current financial position, as no further funding is available. By entering into a further consultation period, Stoke Council look to maintain a good working relationship with external providers and effectively manage the market, whilst striving for best value for money for the residents of Stoke-on-Trent. Risk still remains that providers will reject proposals requesting higher fee increases. Any such cases will need to be addressed on a case-by-case basis…..
To agree to maintain the conditions in respect of the current Contract with Residential Providers will negate the threat of litigation proceedings in respect of Breach of Contract. This in turn will allow a review and consultation of pricing structures for the relevant services to be implemented and will allow certainty that we are compliant with s.5 of the Care Act in relation to the provision of these services. This will also help to negate the possibility of any Judicial Review proceedings being initiated following the outcome of the proposed review."
As with his earlier Cabinet report, Mr Tomlin suggested that an Equality Impact Assessment was not required. Again, the Cabinet adopted his recommendation.
"Following a review of the responses, the City Council will be going ahead with the proposed 1.4% increase for placements at the band 1 and band 2 rates ['Residential' and 'Residential Enhanced']…- backdated to the 8th April.
During the next 12 months we will be developing a package of support for care home providers, such a moving to payment on gross, removing restrictions on uplifting third party contributions, reviewing of training offer and developing our new care home contract in partnership with yourselves. We will be looking at how we can utilise Care Cubed [an updated economic tool for care costs] to inform and benchmark future fee uplifts.
I want to stress again, that whilst the City Council's commissioning intentions are to support people to remain in their own homes for a long as possible, we do not want to lose any provision from the local market and I am happy to discuss our commissioning intentions with any provider on an individual basis to explore options for future working."
To anticipate some of my legal conclusions below, it may be helpful to 'flag up' some straightforward observations about this Decision. Firstly, it did not refer to any statutory guidance, still less explain how it considered a 1.4% uplift was consistent with that guidance in any material respect. Secondly, it did not mention or consider any actual costs of care, including inflationary pressure or the NLW. Thirdly, it did not refer to the Public Sector Equality Duty, Art.8 ECHR, or indeed even care home residents at all. Fourthly, it did not explain how it had considered any consultation responses and why it disagreed with them. Fifthly, it did not even seek to justify the Decision by reference to the Defendant's difficult financial position, or even its view that there was sufficient capacity in residential care so that an uplift was not required, as Mr Tomlin had done in his March and May Cabinet reports and at the meeting on 1st May. Instead, the Decision simply confirmed the original proposal without any reasoning, other than to reassure providers that whilst the Defendant's main objective was to keep people in their own home, it wanted to keep providers in the market too and over the next year would roll-out a package of support for them aside from the annual uplift. Whilst complaints are made about the consultation process in Ground 1, even part of it and the whole focus of Grounds 2-6 are the suggested failings in the Decision.
Legal Framework
a. s.1 - The general duty of a local authority ('LA'), in exercising a function in the case of an individual, is to promote that individual's well-being. This includes suitability of living accommodation. The LA must have regard to an individual's wishes and need to protect people from abuse and neglect. The 'wellbeing principle' is the adult analogue to the 'welfare principle' for children in s.1 Children Act 1989 (although is not 'paramount' as that is).
b. ss.2-3 – s.2 requires the LA to provide or arrange the provision of services preventing needs for care and support. s.3 requires the LA to integrate them with health services. These duties run together because they are 'target' duties not owed to individual people, but rather to the area generally.
c. s.5 – Another 'target' duty to promote diversity and quality in provision of services (set out more fully below and called the 'market-shaping duty').
d. s.6 - Duty of co-operation. A local authority must co-operate with 'a person who provides services to meet adults' needs for care and support, services to meet carers' needs for support or services, facilities or resources'. This would include care home providers like the Claimant's members.
e. s.18 – Most importantly, the LA has a duty to meet an individual's assessed needs for care and support. It must first determine whether: (i) the individual is eligible under the LA's eligibility criteria set under s.13 CA; and (ii) whether they are liable to charge under s.14 CA under the LA's means criteria under s.17 CA. If eligible, under s.18 CA the LA must meet the individual's needs for care and support falling within its eligibility criteria. This is typically (but not exclusively) if the individual is ordinarily resident in the area and is either exempt from charge; or if liable asks for services or lacks mental capacity to do so. If either under a duty to meet an individual's needs under s.18 LA or exercising its power to meet their needs under s.19 CA, the LA must under s.24 CA prepare a 'Care and Support Plan' (defined by s.25 LA), setting out how those needs will be met. Under s.8 CA, a LA may do so by providing a service itself, arranging for another person (like a care home provider) to provide it, or making a Direct Payment to the individual to 'buy-in' the service themselves. 'Services' include care at home or (under s.8(1)(a) CA) 'accommodation in a care home or in premises of some other type'. The Care and Support Plan includes the individual's 'personal budget' under s.26 CA setting out (i) the cost to the LA of meeting the needs in that Plan; and (ii) any charge to the individual for doing so (their 'contribution'). This is the statutory underpinning to the practical system described above where LAs contract with care home providers for them to 'provide a service' for assessed individuals, whether or not they are liable to make a 'contribution' to the LA. However, this does not prevent providers outside the statutory scheme levying a 'top-up' from residents or third party sponsors like family or charities. Those legal relationships are regulated by the 3 or 4-way individual placement agreement (or 'IPA').
"(1) A local authority must promote the efficient and effective operation of a market in services for meeting care and support needs with a view to ensuring that any person in its area wishing to access services in the market — (a) has a variety of providers to choose from who (taken together) provide a variety of services; (b) has a variety of high quality services to choose from; (c) has sufficient information to make an informed decision about how to meet the needs in question.
(2) In performing that duty, a local authority must have regard to the following matters in particular: (a) the need to ensure the authority has, and makes available, information about the providers of services for meeting care and support needs and the types of services they provide; (b) the need to ensure that it is aware of current and likely future demand for such services and to consider how providers might meet that demand; (c) the importance of enabling adults with needs for care and support, and carers with needs for support, who wish to do so to participate in work, education or training; (d) the importance of ensuring the sustainability of the market (in circumstances where it is operating effectively as well as circumstances where it is not); (e) the importance of fostering continuous improvement in the quality of such services and the efficiency and effectiveness with which such services are provided and of encouraging innovation in their provision; (f) the importance of fostering a workforce whose members are able to ensure the delivery of high quality services (..for example, they have relevant skills and appropriate working conditions).
(3) In having regard to the matters mentioned in subsection (2)(b), a local authority must also have regard to the need to ensure that sufficient services are available for meeting the needs for care and support of adults in its area and the needs for support of carers in its area.
(4) In arranging for the provision by persons other than it of services for meeting care and support needs, a local authority must have regard to the importance of promoting the well-being of adults in its area with needs for care and support and the well-being of carers in its area.
(5) In meeting an adult's needs for care and support or a carer's needs for support, a local authority must have regard to its duty under subsection (1)...
(7) 'Services for meeting care and support needs' means— (a) services for meeting adults' needs for care and support, and (b) services for meeting carers' needs for support.
(8) The references in subsection (7) to services for meeting needs include a reference to services, facilities or resources the purpose of which is to contribute towards preventing or delaying the development of those needs."
The Care Quality Commission ('CQC') has oversight of the entire market under ss.53-57 CA. Under different legislation and guidance that I need not cite, the CQC requires (i) care homes to meet its various care quality standards (assessed in regular inspections); and (ii) to be and remain financially viable.
"Suitability of Accommodation
8) In exercising a choice, a local authority must ensure that the accommodation is suitable to meet a person's assessed needs and identified outcomes established as part of the care and support planning process.
9) People are able to express a preference about the setting in which their needs are met through the care and support planning process….
Cost
11) The personal budget is defined as the cost to the local authority of meeting the person's needs which the local authority chooses or is required to meet. However, the local authority should take into consideration cases or circumstances where this 'cost to the local authority' may need to be adjusted to ensure that needs are met. For example, a person may have specific dietary requirements that can only be met in specific settings. In all cases the local authority must have regard to the actual cost of good quality care in deciding the personal budget to ensure that the amount is one that reflects local market conditions. This should also reflect other factors such as the person's circumstances and the availability of provision. In addition, the local authority should not set arbitrary amounts or ceilings for particular types of accommodation that do not reflect a fair cost of care. Guidance on market shaping and commissioning is set out in Chapter 4. Local authorities must also have regard to the guidance on personal budgets in Chapter 11….
Price increases
34) Arrangements will need to be reviewed from time to time, for example in response to any changes in circumstances of the cared for person, the person making the 'top-up' payments (if this is different from the cared for person), local authority commissioning arrangements or a change in provider costs. However, these changes may not occur together and a local authority must set out in writing how these changes will be dealt with.
35) The local authority must clearly set out in writing to the person or persons concerned its approach to how any increased costs may be shared. This should also include details of how agreement will be reached on the sharing of any price increases. This should also state that there is no guarantee that these increased costs will automatically be shared evenly should the provider's costs rise more quickly than the amount the local authority would have increased the personal budget…and there is an alternative option that would be affordable within that budget.
36) A local authority may wish to negotiate any future prices rises with the provider at the time of entering into a contract. This can help provide clarity for adults and providers and help ensure that the top up remains affordable."
Also relevant within the CA Guidance (indeed referred to at para.11 of Annex A as just quoted) is the guidance in Chapter 4 on the authority's 'market-shaping' duty under s.5 CA, especially paras 4.31 and 4.33-5 (but also later paras. 8.8 and 8.13):
"4.31 When commissioning services, local authorities should assure themselves and have evidence that contract terms, conditions and fee levels for care and support services are appropriate to provide the delivery of the agreed care packages with agreed quality of care. This should support and promote the wellbeing of people who receive care and support and allow for the service provider ability to meet statutory obligations to pay at least the national minimum wage and provide effective training and development of staff. It should also allow retention of staff commensurate with delivering services to the agreed quality and encourage innovation and improvement. Local authorities should have regard to guidance on minimum fee levels necessary to provide this assurance, taking account of the local economic environment. This assurance should understand that reasonable fee levels allow for a reasonable rate of return by independent providers that is sufficient to allow the overall pool of efficient providers to remain sustainable in the long term. [Economic] tools may be helpful as examples of possible approaches…
4.33 Local authorities must work to develop markets for care and support that - whilst recognising that individual providers may exit the market from time to time - ensure the overall provision of services remains healthy in … sufficiency of adequate provision of high-quality care and support…..
4.34 Local authorities should understand the business environment of the providers offering services in their area and seek to work with providers facing challenges and understand their risks. Where needed, based on expected trends, local authorities should consider encouraging service providers to adjust the extent and types of service provision. This could include signalling to the market as a whole the likely need to extend or expand services, encourage new entrants to the market in their area, or if appropriate, signal likely decrease in needs – for example, drawing attention to a possible reduction in care home needs, and changes in demand resulting from increasing uptake of direct payments…..
4.35 Local authorities should consider the impact of their own activities on the market as a whole…. [It] may be the most significant purchaser of care and support in an area, and therefore its approach to commissioning will have an impact beyond those services which it contracts. Local authorities must not undertake any actions which may threaten the sustainability of the market as a whole, that is, the pool of providers able to deliver services of an appropriate quality, for example, by setting fee levels below an amount which is not sustainable for providers in the long-term."
18.8 The success of a policy by a local authority to delegate its functions to a third party will be determined to a large extent, by the strength and quality of the contracts the local authorities make with the delegated third party…..
18.13 Since care and support functions are public functions, they must be carried out in a way that is compatible with all of the local authority's legal obligations. For example, the local authority would be liable for any breach by the delegated party, of its legal obligations under the Human Rights Act.. Local authorities should therefore draw up its contracts so as to ensure that third parties carry out functions in a way that is compatible [with that]…"
"(i) First, there is the importance of local authorities assuring themselves and having 'evidence' that contractual fee levels are appropriate to provide the delivery of agreed care packages with agreed quality of care (para 4.31).
(ii) Secondly, there is the importance of local authorities understanding that a reasonable fee level allows for a reasonable rate of return by independent providers that is sufficient to allow the overall pool of efficient providers to remain sustainable in the long term (para 4.31). [Lavender J in R(Care England) at [6] called this and s.5(2)(d) CA 'the sustainability factor']
(iii) Thirdly, there is the point that local authorities must not undertake any actions which may threaten the sustainability of the market as a whole - the pool of providers able to deliver services of an appropriate quality - by setting fee levels below an amount which is not sustainable for providers in the long term (para 4.35)."
Both Fordham J in R(CNE) and Lavender J in R(Care England) focussed on the CA Guidance as they (like the present case) were challenges to local authority decisions after the Care Act and the CA Guidance had come into force in 2015. Neither case cited the earlier guidance relating to the predecessor legislation – s.21 NAA - called 'Local Authority Circular (2004)20' ('LAC (2004)20'). That had been issued in 2004 under s.7 Local Authority Social Services Act 1970. However, when the Care Act 2014 came into force in 2015, s.7 of the 1970 Act was amended to specify s.78 CA applies instead of s.7 for functions under Part 1 CA (including social care). Moreover, in R(Torbay Care) v Torbay Council [2018] PTSR 923 (CA), Beatson LJ (who dissented) suggested at [4] that the Care Act 2014 and CA Guidance had 'replaced' LAC (2004)20, but he declined to comment on whether the decision in that case on the old guidance would continue to have relevance to the new guidance.
"2.5.4 One of the conditions associated with the provision of preferred accommodation is that such accommodation should not require the council to pay more than they would usually expect to pay, having regard to assessed needs (the 'usual cost'). This cost should be set by councils at the start of a financial or other planning period, or in response to significant changes in the cost of providing care, to be sufficient to meet the assessed care needs of supported residents in residential accommodation. A council should set more than one usual cost where the cost of providing residential accommodation to specific groups is different. In setting and reviewing their usual costs, councils should have due regard to the actual costs of providing care and other local factors. Councils should also have due regard to Best Value requirements under the Local Government Act 1999…
2.5.7 Councils should not set arbitrary ceilings on the amount they expect to pay for an individual's residential care. Residents and third parties should not routinely be required to make up the difference between what the council will pay and the actual fees of a home. Councils have a statutory duty to provide residents with the level of service they could expect if the possibility of resident and third-party contributions did not exist…
3.3 When setting its usual cost(s) a council should be able to demonstrate this cost is sufficient to allow it to meet assessed care needs and to provide residents with the level of care services they could reasonably expect… if the possibility of resident and third-party contributions did not exist."
a. In R(Forest Care) v Pembrokeshire CC [2011] ACD 58, Hickinbottom J (as he was) set aside an authority's standard fee, but partly on its concession. Other than comments on the status of guidance and on Art.8 ECHR which I will mention later, of continuing present relevance, he said at [142]-[144]:
"142…As well as in the decision as to which the persons it should extend [accommodation to under] s.21 [NAA], the Council is entitled to take into account its own financial position when exercising its discretion as to the manner in which and the standard to which such assistance is given, provided that the minimum requirements of s.21 are met. That is clear as a matter of principle….In [R(Birmingham Care Consortium) v BCC [2002] EWHC 2188 (Admin) Stanley Burnton J] said (at paragraph 31): "… [A]ffordability is in general a highly relevant consideration to be taken into account by any local authority in making its decisions on rates to be offered to service providers, subject to the local authority being able to meet its duties at the rates it offers." With that, I respectfully agree.
143. However, when exercising its discretion in a manner which is adverse to an interested party – e.g. in this context, a provider or resident – the Council's own financial position is of course not necessarily determinative. It is bound to take into account and balance all relevant factors; and in particular bound to balance such matters as the quality of the service it provides and the need to maintain stability in the care services sector on the one hand, against the resources with which it has to provide that service on the other. The interests and rights of residents are of particular weight in that balance. The…. guidance makes them so, as does Article 8.
144. In my judgment, the Council was fully entitled to take into account its own financial position when determining the level of accommodation and care services upon the minimum required by section 21, and in setting the fee rate for those who provide those services. However, it erred in law in failing properly to take into account other factors which I have identified in this judgment, such as the potential adverse consequences of the decision for providers and residents, which it was required to balance against the constraints on its own resources. The manner in which the Council dealt with capital costs for the purposes of setting the rate was simply methodologically wrong; but the other sub-grounds succeed, because the Council failed to take into account matters other than its own financial resources in a proper and lawful way."
b. In R(Bevan) v Neath CBC [2012] ACD 62, Beatson J (as he was) dismissed a challenge to an authority standard fee relying on para 2.5.4 LAC (2004)20 and held it had 'due regard to the actual costs of providing care'. In doing so, Beatson J held the fee decision was amenable to judicial review (as discussed below). At [55], Beatson J agreed with Hickinbottom J in R(Forest Care) at [50] that it was inappropriate to use judicial review to challenge merits of an authority's 'usual cost' decision, adding at [56]-[58]:
"A public law decision-maker must know or be told enough to ensure that nothing that is necessary because it is legally relevant for him to know is left out of account. However, sifting by the decision-maker's officials is acceptable. They are not bound to bring to the attention of the decision-maker all the minutiae relating to the matter….Provided that which it is legally relevant for the decision-maker to know is brought to its attention, it is generally for the decision-maker to decide upon the manner and intensity of the inquiry to be undertaken into any relevant factor…A related principle is that provided the decision-maker has regard to a factor that is legally relevant for it to take into account, the weight given to it is a matter for the decision-maker. Absent Wednesbury unreasonableness or …'irrationality', it is not a matter for the court….[A] court will be particularly circumspect in engaging with conclusions of the primary decision-maker [on] complex economic and technical questions."
c. In R(South West Care Homes) v Devon CC [2012] ACD 108, Singh J (as he was) found an unlawful failure of consultation but refused relief (both of which I discuss later) but held the authority's fee decision had 'due regard to the actual costs of providing care' based on the careful analysis of such costs in detailed statements from the decision-maker. On the latter point, Singh J followed Beatson J's approach in R(Bevan) and elaborated at [25]:
"It will frequently be the case and is undoubtedly the case in the present context, that the relevant factors to which the decision maker must have regard do not all point in the same direction. They may well pull in different directions and a balance will have to be struck. This is quintessentially a function of the public authority concerned, subject always to judicial review on the ground of irrationality."
d. In Northumberland, Sullivan LJ upheld Supperstone J's decision that an authority fee decision had 'due regard to the actual costs of providing care' even without an arithmetical breakdown of all those costs (as had been suggested in some first-instance cases). Sullivan LJ noted 'due regard' also appeared in s.149 Equality Act 2010, but said at [16] and [18] that case-law on s.149 (see below in Ground 3) could not be 'read across' and at [17] that
"The circular contains guidance. It is not to be equated with a statutory duty….and as would be expected in the case of guidance, it does not prescribe any particular methodology, whether 'structured' or otherwise, which local authorities must adopt in order to have had 'due regard' to the actual costs of providing care."
Instead, he approved the observations in R(Bevan) and R(South West Care) to how the Court on judicial review should analyse the authority's decision.
e. Finally, in R(Torbay Care) v Torbay Council [2018] PTSR 923 (CA), after implementation of the Care Act but relating to a 2014 decision on the old law and para 5.2.4 LAC (2004)20, another fee decision was upheld as having 'due regard to the actual cost of care' by a majority (Beatson LJ, as he had become, dissenting). King LJ interpreted para 2.5.4. in the wider context of paras 1.3 and 3.3 LAC (2004)20 and that 'usual cost' (i.e. what the council would usually expect to pay for accommodation' was different from 'actual cost' to the provider in para 2.5.4. As she said at [78]:
"In my view, the figure fixed upon by the council (that is to say, the usual cost) does not necessarily have to be, and almost certainly will not be, synchronised with the actual cost to the provider…."
King LJ also held at [79]-[83] that para 3.3 LAC (2004)20 did not prevent an authority from taking into account other sources of provider income such as 'top-ups' in setting its usual rate under para 5.2.4. But she added at [76]:
"[O]ne topical example which may lead to a council revising its usual cost…might be a substantial, unexpected, increase in the national minimum wage with the consequence that the 'usual cost' becomes untenable and no longer realistically a sum the council could properly expect to pay for accommodation [and] contrary to best value."
a. Firstly, those authorities on LAC (2004)20 assist in the interpretation of the new CA Guidance at paras.11 Annex A that 'In all cases the local authority must have regard to the actual cost of good quality care… [and] should not set arbitrary amounts or ceilings for particular types of accommodation that do not reflect a fair cost of care'; and para 4.31 that: 'When commissioning services, local authorities should assure themselves and have evidence that…fee levels…are appropriate to provide….agreed care packages with the agreed quality of care'. Just like paras 2.5.4, 2.5.7 and 3.3 of LAC (2004)20, as explained in R(Torbay), paras.11 Annex A and 4.31 of the current CA Guidance do not require an authority's fee levels to 'synchronise with the actual cost to the provider' and the authority may take into account other sources of provider income (e.g. resident 'top-ups') in assessing the 'fair cost of care'. Moreover, as stated in R(Forest Care), the authority is also entitled to take into account its own resources, provided its fees do not set an 'arbitrary ceiling', especially if that ceiling undermines the provider's ability to provide the agreed care packages with the agreed quality of care.
b. Secondly, those authorities on LAC (2004)20 indicate the weight an authority must attach to the current CA Guidance more generally. There is no material difference in the legal status of guidance made under s.78 CA and LAC (2004)20 under s.7 of the 1970 Act. Whilst guidance is not a statute, as Sullivan LJ said in Northumberland, as Beatson LJ added in R(Torbay) (albeit dissenting) and Hickinbottom J said in R(Forest Care) at [28], guidance must still be taken into account by an authority as described by Sedley J (as he was) in R v Islington LBC exp Rixon [1997] ELR 66, 71:
"In my judgment Parliament… did not intend local authorities to whom ministerial guidance was given to be free, having considered it, to take it or leave it. Such a construction would put this kind of statutory guidance on a par with the many forms of non-statutory guidance issued by departments of state . . . In my view Parliament by s.7(1) has required local authorities to follow the path charted by the…. guidance, with liberty to deviate from it where the local authority judges on admissible grounds that there is good reason to do so, but without freedom to take a substantially different course."
Sedley J's last few words I have italicised have been questioned in later cases (including R(Forest Care) at [29] and R(Care England) at [59]). In my judgment it is preferable simply to state that authorities are free to depart from the CA Guidance if there is 'good reason to do so'. This would align with the modern approach to the status of an authority's internal policies in Mandalia v SSHD [2015] 1 WLR 4546 (SC) at [31], where Lord Wilson also emphasised the interpretation of policy or guidance was a matter for the Court, not the authority. Certainly, the status of DHSC guidance under s.78 CA, such as the CA Guidance here cannot be less: s.78 states that a local authority must act under the DHSC guidance in exercising its functions under the CA. But I do not accept there need be 'cogent reasons' for departure in the sense in Munjaz v Mersey NHS [2006] 2 AC 148 (HL) by Lord Bingham at [2], [21] and Lord Hope at [68]-[69]. Munjaz was concerned with a statutory Code of Practice laid before Parliament: more like legislation than government guidance (as Sullivan LJ differentiated in Northumberland). In any event, in the present context in R(Forest Care) at [28], Hickinbottom J equated 'good reasons' with the approach in Munjaz.
c. Thirdly, the Court's approach Beatson J described in R(Bevan) followed by Singh J in R(South West Care) and approved by Sullivan LJ in Northumberland is in essence what Fordham J in R(CNE) at [32] (citing Northumberland) called a 'light touch review'. That is of relevance not just to Grounds 4 and 2 like the last two points, but to all the Grounds, which is one reason I have addressed LAC (2004)20 and the authorities now. Indeed, it is relevant to the Courts approach to review generally, as I will explain.
"Art.8(1) Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
Art.8(2) There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others."
I will return to Art.8 itself when dealing briefly with Ground 5, but of wider importance to this whole case, especially the 'public/private' issue, are ss.6-7 HRA:
"6(1) It is unlawful for a public authority to act in a way which is incompatible with a Convention right.
(3) In this section 'public authority' includes— (a) a court or tribunal, and (b) any person certain of whose functions are functions of a public nature…
(5) In relation to a particular act, a person is not a public authority by virtue only of subsection (3)(b) if the nature of the act is private….
7(1) A person who claims that a public authority has acted (or proposes to act) in a way which is made unlawful by section 6(1) may — (a) bring proceedings against the authority under this Act in the appropriate court or tribunal…but only if he is (or would be) a victim of the unlawful act."
In R(South West Care) at [38] Singh J pointed that only a 'victim' of a breach of Art.8 ECHR can bring proceedings against an authority under s.7 HRA. That could include a resident of a care home at risk of losing their Art.8 'home' if a provider closed because it ceased to be economically viable due to below-inflation authority fees. But it does not on the face of it include the provider itself (they have a right to property under Art.1 Protocol 1 ECHR: Jain v Trent SHA [2009] 1 WLR 248 (HL) but that is not pleaded here and in any event justification under it is rather broader). Hickinbottom J was not referred to this point in R(Forest Care) on Art.8 ECHR at [42]-[44], nor was the judge in the case to which he referred at [44] in suggesting care home providers could be Art.8 claimants for those in their care (a defamation case: Green Corns Ltd v Claverley Group Ltd [2005] EWHC 958(QB)). In any event, this case is one step further removed, as the Claimant is not a care home provider, but a trade organisation: a point I analyse further in a moment. Therefore, Ground 5 is an Art.8 claim at two steps removed and I only deal with it very briefly below.
"46. The question whether a particular function is a public function has been the subject of considerable analysis and differences of approach by courts: see for example YL v Birmingham CC [2008] AC 95… and R (Weaver) v London and Quadrant Housing Trust [2010] 1 WLR 363. In those cases the context was whether the bodies were public bodies within [s.6 HRA]. Weaver considered whether, when terminating a tenancy, a registered social landlord, a 'hybrid' rather than a 'core' public body…was subject to s.6 and to public law principles.
47. It is clear that, because the purpose of attaching liability under [s.6 HRA] is different to the purpose of subjecting a body to public law principles, 'it cannot be assumed that because a body is subject to one set of rules it will therefore automatically be subject to the other': Elias LJ in Weaver at [37]. However, the approach taken by the majority of the court in Weaver's case to [s.6 HRA] is in its broad thrust, of analogical assistance in the present context. Elias LJ (at [83]) indicated that he agreed with the Divisional Court's view that the landlord's decision to terminate a tenancy was governed by public law principles and susceptible to judicial review on conventional public law grounds…..
48. [In R(Weaver)] for Elias LJ (at [55] and [57]) the starting point is 'to focus on the nature of the act in the context of the body's activities as a whole'. The act in the present case is the fee-setting decision of the Council. In respect of that decision, the wider context is the function of a local authority under the [NAA] in providing care or making arrangements for others to provide care for those who need it. That is a public function. While the fee-setting function of the Council is less closely regulated than those of a registered social landlord, the statutory and regulatory framework shows that a Council does not have the freedom that a private individual would have to use its bargaining power to drive down the price as far as possible. The mere fact the decision concerns the setting of a fee under a contract does not mean it is to be characterised as a private act. In Weaver.. Elias LJ (at [76]) distinguished acts necessarily involved in the regulation of what is a public function, which he considered to be public acts, from those which are purely incidental or supplementary to it. The decision in this case cannot be characterised as purely incidental or supplementary to the function of making arrangements for the provision of care in care homes operated by third party providers for those who qualify under the [NAA]."
I should add that in YL, which Beatson J mentioned in R(Bevan) at [46], the Lords decided by a majority that a privately-run care home accommodating residents placed by a local authority was not exercising 'public functions' under s.6(3) HRA. However, the result in YL was reversed by Parliament in s.145 Health and Social Care Act 2008, which has now been effectively re-enacted in s.73 CA, to provide that a registered care home providing nursing or personal care arranged and (at least part-)funded by an authority under the CA also exercises public functions under s.6(3) HRA. However, this simply means the Claimant's member providers are also 'public authorities' under the HRA, not that an authority's fee decision relating to a contract with them is amenable to judicial review. However, by analogy to s.6(5) HRA, Beatson J in R(Bevan) found that a fee-setting decision by a local authority was amenable to judicial review (albeit as Mr Straker says, it was to set fees under prospective 'IPA' contracts, rather under a 'framework provider contract' as here). I return to R(Bevan) and the 'public/private' issue after dealing with 'alternative remedy'.
Does the Claimant have an alternative remedy to Judicial Review?
"50 The forms of relief available in a claim for judicial review are discretionary (albeit the ambit of the discretion may in the event be very small or non-existent in the circumstances of a particular case). The availability of the judicial review procedure is likewise discretionary. A court may refuse to grant leave to apply for judicial review or refuse a remedy at the substantive hearing if a suitable alternative remedy exists, but the claimant has failed to use it. As stated in R(Glencore) v HMRC [2017] 4 WLR 213, para 55, 'judicial review in the High Court is ordinarily a remedy of last resort, to ensure that the rule of law is respected where no other procedure is suitable to achieve that objective'…If other means of redress are conveniently and effectively available, they ought ordinarily to be used before resort to judicial review: Kay v Lambeth London Borough Council [2006] 2 AC 465, para 30…
51 Where Parliament has enacted a statutory scheme for appeals in respect of certain decisions, an appeal will in ordinary circumstances be regarded as a suitable alternative remedy in relation to such decisions which ought to be pursued rather than having resort to judicial review: Glencore…paras 55-58… Otherwise, use of judicial review would undermine the regime for challenging decisions which Parliament considers to be appropriate in that class of case….
55….As a matter of principle, in civil litigation it is for a claimant to choose which form of claim to assert and against which party to assert it. The court then rules upon that claim; it has no role to say that the claimant should have sued someone else by a different claim. The question of whether a claimant has a suitable alternative remedy available to them falls to be addressed by reference to the type of claim the claimant has chosen to bring and what relief they have sought against the particular defendant….
59 Judicial review is a comparatively speedy and simple process, involving significantly less time and cost than would be likely to be required for a trial in a private prosecution or in a civil claim in nuisance. Those procedures would involve calling witnesses and extended cross-examination which take time and involve cost and which are not necessary in judicial review. There is no good reason why Ms McAleenon should be expected to take on the additional burden [of] such proceedings, in place of the comparatively less expensive course of bringing the judicial review claim she chose to bring against the…regulators."
Lord Sales therefore found the claim for judicial review against regulators for failing to stop a nuisance should not be refused on the basis that either a private prosecution of or a civil claim against the polluter for nuisance was an alternative remedy and nor was a complaint about the regulators to their Ombudsman.
"[A]lternative remedies will ordinarily, whether sought or not, preclude judicial review. A contract, as here, between two legal persons will necessarily, as here, include remedies, which the parties have agreed to seek as appropriate. It has, of course, been stated that judicial review is a remedy of last resort, and this plays a role in determining, as a matter of discretion, that judicial review in an individual case should not be available. Further, the existence of an alternative remedy must strongly influence a decision that a matter is one of private law rather than public law. The law will always seek to avoid the possibility of conflicting decisions."
"The Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999
Any person who is not a party to the Agreement (including… any …representative…of either the Council or the Provider), save for Residents and Sponsors, shall not have any right to enforce any term of the Agreement. This clause does not affect any right or remedy of any person which exists or is available otherwise than pursuant to that Act."
s.1 of the 1999 Act enables a non-party to enforce a contract if either it expressly provides that they may by name or as a member of a class (as with residents and sponsors), or the term purports to confer a benefit on the so-identified non-party unless on proper construction the parties did not intend to confer that benefit on him (see the recent analysis of the Supreme Court in DEFRA v PCSA [2024] 3 WLR 1059 (SC)). The Claimant, as already explained, is not a party to the Contract, which was made between the Defendant and individual providers – the Claimant is the representative of some providers. Clause 25 clearly excludes the Claimant having a contractual remedy under the Contract, since it is neither a resident nor a sponsor. Mr Straker could submit that the Claimant could arrange for individual disgruntled providers to sue the Defendant (e.g. for a prohibitory injunction restraining reliance on the 1.4% uplift, or indeed damages for breach of contract on the basis that the Defendant's contractual exercise of its discretion to increase fees under Clause 18.3 was irrational: see Braganza v BP [2015] 1 WLR 1661 (SC)). However, just as Lord Sales said in McAleenon at [55] the alternative remedy principle did not require the same claimant to use different means to challenge different defendants, nor would it here require different claimants to use different means to challenge the same defendant. Moreover, even if it did, as Mr Rule noted, Lord Sales in McAleenon at [59] also said it was relevant to consider that Judicial Review was a quicker way of achieving particular relief than an ordinary civil action. As already pointed out, Fordham J said in R(CNE) that challenges to care home fees decisions should be expedited and one of Mr Straker's other strings to his bow is a submission that relief should be refused because of detriment to good administration. That in itself shows why an ordinary civil action – even if the Claimant could bring it – would not be a suitable alternative remedy to the much speedier quashing order that it seeks.
"The need for leave to start proceedings for remedies in public law is not new. It applied previously to applications for prerogative orders, though not to civil actions for injunctions or declarations. Its purpose is to prevent the time of the court being wasted by busybodies with misguided or trivial complaints of administrative error, and to remove the uncertainty in which public officers and authorities might be left as to whether they could safely proceed with administrative action while proceedings for judicial review of it were actually pending even though misconceived…..It would, in my view, be a grave lacuna in our system of public law if a pressure group… were prevented by outdated technical rules of [standing] from bringing the matter to the attention of the court to vindicate the rule of law and get the unlawful conduct stopped."
Moreover, the standing of pressure groups has been increasingly recognised in the intervening decades and it is notable that in R(Bevan) at [52] Beatson J held that a group of care home operators had standing to claim Judicial Review and standing was not doubted in similar claims to this by trade organisations in Northumberland in the Court of Appeal, or recently R(CNE) in the High Court (which as I shall discuss was also all about a provider contract). Therefore, even on reflection I maintain my view the Claimant has standing to claim Judicial Review, although I return to the Defendant's concerns about the views of third-party providers (indeed residents) not involved in the claim at the end of my judgment. However, in one minor respect the Defendant's standing point does succeed – in relation to Ground 5 and the alleged breach of Art.8 ECHR. As explained above at paragraph 44, Ground 5 can only succeed if the Claimant is a 'victim' under s.7 HRA. It plainly is not – indeed not even its member providers are, only their residents: R(South West Care) at [38]. The most that can be said is the level of fees might cause residents to lose their Art.8 ECHR 'home', but there is no evidence of that risk before me at all. However, as Singh J also discussed in R(South West Care) at [40]-[42], if an authority fails to pay any regard to the undoubted Art.8 rights of residents at all in a decision, this might be unlawful on orthodox principles of public law as a failure to take into account a relevant consideration. Similarly, it may also be relevant to whether the Defendant had 'due regard' to any discriminatory impact on residents under the PSED in Ground 3 (but not as a separate ground) and I touch on it again there. However, both are different types of challenge than Ground 5 where the Claimant alleges breach of Art.8 ECHR by the Defendant. I dismiss Ground 5.
Does this claim have a 'sufficient public law element' for Judicial Review ?
"One can test whether this is a public or private law case by looking at the decision sought to be reviewed, and the relief sought. The former…refers to a decision of 4 July 2024, which was undoubtedly a contractual decision. It was the determination, under Cl.18.3, by the Council, as required by the contract, following consultation with the Provider, of an annual indexation. It plainly arises in the light of all the detailed provisions of the contract.
By way of relief the Claimant seeks an order that the Council, i.e., the other contracting party, should undertake a lawful consultation. This is not defined by the Claimant but must mean a consultation pursuant to the contract, which is, at length, recited in the statement of facts and grounds. If it means consultation other than pursuant to the contract, then the Administrative Court is being invited to be party to a breach of contract.
Accordingly, the function sought to be performed is a contractual one, but it is wholly illegitimate to do so by way of judicial review…If it be asserted the function being performed is not contractual then the Claimant is simply exposed as seeking to litigate in circumstances liable to create a conflict between the supposed public law position and the contractual relationship.
In Supportways v Hampshire CC [2006] EWCA Civ 1035 Neuberger LJ said (at paragraph 38) that the fact a party alleged to be in breach of contract is a public body cannot transform a private law claim into a public law claim. If the claim is fundamentally contractual in nature and involves no allegation of fraud or improper motive or the like against the public body it would, in the absence of very special circumstances, be right as a matter of principle to limit a claimant to private law remedies. At paragraph 43 Neuberger LJ said it was wrong in principle for a person who would otherwise be limited to a private law claim to be entitled to base his claim in public law merely because private law does not afford him a sufficiently attractive remedy. It can be noted that in R (Birmingham Taxi Association) v Birmingham Airport [2009] EWHC 236 Wyn Williams J said a court should be extremely cautious about imposing public law duties which have the effect of diluting or altering contractual terms freely concluded…"
"43. Judicial review is only available against a body exercising public functions. There are, broadly, two approaches to the question of whether a person or a body is exercising a public function. First, if a person or body is exercising power derived from statute (or the prerogative, if the matter is justiciable), the person or body is generally assumed to be exercising public functions. The courts have recognised that there are cases where a power may be derived from statute but the nature of the decision is such that it does not involve the performance of a public duty to the individual in the particular circumstances of the case….
….(See, for example, R (Tucker) v Director-General of the National Crime Squad [2003] ICR 599 where a decision to terminate the secondment of a police officer did not involve a public function). Furthermore, even if a decision is amenable to judicial review, the available grounds of challenge in public law may be more limited in certain contexts, such as in a commercial context (see, for example, The State of Mauritius v The (Mauritius) CT Power Ltd. [2019] UKPC 27 and Mercury Ltd v Electricity Corporation [1994] 1 WLR 521).
44. Secondly, the courts may have regard to the nature of the function being performed to determine whether that function has a sufficient public element such as to make it amenable to judicial review. A number of considerations may be relevant which include, but are not limited to, the extent of government or other public authority involvement in the function, whether and to what extent the exercise of the function is performed against a background of statutory powers, and the nature and importance of the function. As it was expressed by Sir John Donaldson MR at page 381E-F of R v Take-over Panel, ex parte Datafin Plc [1987] 1 QB 825: "Possibly, the only essential elements are what can be described as a public element, which can take many different forms, and the exclusion from the jurisdiction of bodies whose sole source of power is a consensual submission to its jurisdiction."
45. Judicial review is also only available against public law bodies in respect of public law matters. Judicial review is not available to enforce purely private law rights such as rights derived from contract or tort. Such rights are enforceable by way of claims in the civil courts, not a claim for judicial review in the Administrative Court as explained in R v East Berkshire Area Health ex p. Walsh [1985] QB 152."
a. The first strand is the 'amenability' to review of the defendant's decision. This was the issue in R(Shashikanth) where the defendant unsuccessfully argued a decision of a statutory adjudicator, resolving a dispute between a GP and a NHS Clinical Commissioning Group over the terms of a contract between them, was not amenable to Judicial Review. Lewis LJ considered that since the adjudicator was exercising statutory functions, there was a presumption their decision was amenable to review, as he said at [43]. He concluded that presumption was not rebutted merely because the adjudicator was deciding private law rights under the disputed contract. In other words, the adjudicator was exercising public functions, not private ones like the suspension in R(Tucker). That is analogous to the purely 'private act' of a 'public authority' under s.6(5) HRA considered in R(Weaver) noted in R(Bevan) (to which I return). Another context in which 'amenability' of a defendant's decision arises is whether an ostensibly private body is actually exercising public functions as in ex p Datafin, which obviously does not arise in this case as the Defendant is plainly a public authority.
b. The second strand is the one relied on by the Defendant here –whether the 'substance' of the Claimant's challenge is in private law even if its 'form' is public law. That is exemplified by Walsh, where a nurse was dismissed for misconduct and claimed Judicial Review to quash the dismissal decision for procedural unfairness. Unsurprisingly, his claim was refused, not least as May LJ observed, he had an alternative remedy in unfair dismissal. But the main basis for the Court's decision was there was no 'public law element in the complaint to give rise to any entitlement to public law remedies', as Sir John Donaldson MR said at pg.166B. Likewise, at pg.173F, Purchas LJ said the issue was whether there was an 'abuse of process' adding at pg.178G in the 'obverse' sense to O'Reilly v Mackman [1983] 2 AC 237 where the Lords struck out a private law action as an abuse of process which should have been brought as a claim for Judicial Review with its procedural safeguards (e.g. the time limit). Purchas LJ observed at p.g178D-E:
"[T]he inquiry ought to be directed towards the rights alleged to be infringed and the remedies sought, rather than the status enjoyed, qua contract or appointment, by the applicant….If the remedy sought is a purely private contractual remedy, then it is difficult to see how such a remedy could attract the supervisory powers of the court…."
Interestingly, in R(Tucker), involving a Judicial Review challenge to the termination of a (quasi-)employee police officer's national secondment, Scott Baker LJ distinguished Walsh and preferred to analyse whether there was a 'sufficient public law element' in the defendant's decision rather than in the claimant's challenge. However, the principle in Walsh that Judicial Review is not available to enforce a purely private law contractual challenge remains, as recently recognised in Lewis LJ in R(Shashikanth) at [45].
c. The final strand in the 'public/private law divide' referred to by Lewis LJ in R(Shashikanth) at [43] applies even if the Defendant's decision is amenable to Judicial Review and the Claimant's challenge is legitimately one in public law, but nevertheless the context narrows the scope of the Court's review, as in Mercury where Lord Templeman in the Privy Council said at pg.529B:
"It does not seem likely that a decision by a state enterprise to enter into or determine a commercial contract to supply goods or services will ever be the subject of Judicial Review in the absence of fraud, corruption or bad faith.'
As Lewis LJ noted in R(Shashikanth), this principle was more recently reaffirmed by the Privy Council in Mauritius Power, where a public authority's decision not to enter into a contract to build a power plant was not an abuse of process given a pending claim for damages (see [39]) and was amenable to judicial review (see [43]), but failed on the narrowed scope of review explained in Mercury (see [66]). As Beatson J said in R(Bevan) at [54], this 'narrowed scope for review' in relation to public authority decisions whether to enter or terminate contracts can be a particular issue in the field of public procurement (I attempted to pull together the key cases there in Dukes v Breckland [2023] 210 Con LR 223 at [108]). This point was touched on in Supportways, the main authority relied on by Mr Straker, although as I will explain, Supportways itself was akin to Walsh: the substance of the claim was private law, even though its form was (partly) public law.
a. The first level, as Mr Straker and Sanghera say, is in exercise of a contractual discretion under Clause 18.3 of the Contract, affecting all the contracts in that form between the Defendant and the various providers.
b. However, the second level of the Decision is partly exercise of the Defendant's 'market-shaping duty' under s.5 CA to promote efficient and effective operation of the local market in care provision. The Decision affected the providers, not just under the Contract for that year, but as it acknowledged, their future sustainability, which is why the Decision stressed that the Defendant 'did not want to lose any provision from the local market' and it proposed a package of support for providers outside the fee. Moreover, the Decision affected residents (and their families) in providers' care, since as Beatson J added in R(Bevan) at [52], the level of the standard fee would have an effect on the level of any 'top-up' providers charged.
"[35] In my judgment, the basis of the company's case was not in public law, but only in private law. The company's complaint was that the council had failed to comply with the agreement, and the company accordingly was seeking to enforce the council's compliance….[S]uch a complaint and such enforcement would appear to me respectively to involve a private law claim and a private law remedy, both of which are contractually based…
[36]… The fact that a contractual obligation is framed by reference to a statutory duty does not, in my view, render that obligation a public law duty. Of course, where the statutory duty is owed to a contracting party independently of the contractual obligation, he can normally expect to be able to seek a public law remedy by reference to the duty, as well as, or instead of, a private law remedy by reference to the obligation. However, in the present case, the council's public law duty…under s 93, was owed to the Secretary of State in relation to the provision of grants. There was…no question of [it]….being owed to providers such as the company.
[37] [Counsel for the company] next relied on the fact that the nature of the agreement, involving as it did the council performing public administrative functions, was such that a claim brought under it would be a public law claim. That cannot, I think, be right. Virtually any contract entered into by a local authority, almost by definition, will involve it acting in such a way, as otherwise it would be acting ultra vires. Yet, it is clear that…in the case of alleged breaches of many such contracts, a private law claim is the only type of claim which can be brought.
[38] Thus, the mere fact that the party alleged to be in breach of contract is a public body plainly cannot, on its own, transform what would otherwise be a private law claim into a public law claim. There are, of course, circumstances where, in a contractual context, a public body is susceptible to public law remedies…
However, where the claim is fundamentally contractual in nature, and involves no allegation of fraud or improper motive or the like against the public body, it would, at least in the absence of very unusual circumstances, be right [in] principle, to limit a claimant to private law remedies.
[42] However, it cannot be right that a claimant suing a public body for breach of contract, who is dissatisfied with the remedy afforded him by private law, should be able to invoke public law simply because of his dissatisfaction, understandable though it may be…[I]t would place a party who contracts with a public body in an unjustifiably more privileged position than a party who contracts with anyone else, and a public body in an unjustifiably less favourable position than any other contracting party.
[43] Equally importantly, it appears to me that it would be wrong in principle for a person who would otherwise be limited to a private law claim to be entitled to base his claim in public law merely because private law does not afford him a sufficiently attractive remedy. It is one thing to say that, because a contracting party is a public body, its actions are, in principle, susceptible to judicial review. It is quite another to say that, because a contracting party is a public body, the types of relief which may be available against it under a contract should include public law remedies, even where the basis of the claim is purely contractual in nature…"
"The causes of action based on breach of statutory duty, abuse of a monopoly position and administrative impropriety are only relevant if the causes of action based on contract are rejected. If the causes of action based on contract are rejected, the other causes of action will only constitute attempts to obtain, by the declaration sought, specific performance of a non-existing contract. The exploitation and extension of remedies such as judicial review beyond their proper sphere should not be encouraged."
Whilst Walsh was not cited in either case, both this point made by Lord Templeman in Mercury at pg.429F and the consistent theme of Neuberger LJ's analysis in Supportways at [35]-[43] which I have italicised above are focussed not on the defendant's decision in either case (as in R(Shashikanth), Datafin, R(Tucker) or indeed R(Bevan)), but on the claimant's claim or remedy sought, just as in Walsh. Neuberger LJ's observations that it would be wrong to use public law to get round an absence of remedies in private law, or to improve upon them, chimes with Walsh. Moreover, whilst Mummery LJ in Supportways at [52] described the issue there as one of 'amenability' to Judicial Review, he noted at [54] that Mr Straker had not suggested the mere presence of a contract made it 'non-amenable' (which would have been inconsistent with Mercury where Lord Templeman specifically said at pg.526D the decision to terminate a contract there was amenable to judicial review). Mummery LJ at [62] concluded the claim was 'essentially for breach of contract', just as Mr Straker again argues in this case: he once again focusses on the claim.
"In …Supportways…the substance of the dispute was whether or not a contract between the Council and Supportways had come to an end in accordance with its terms… Mummery LJ at [60]. Supportways's complaint was 'solely based on the contention that the Council failed to comply with its (purely contractual) obligation…': Neuberger LJ at [40]."
Supportways was distinguished on a similar basis by Fordham J in R(CNE). It concerned, as Mr Straker says, a 'provider contract' of a kind similar to the one here (which Fordham J called 'the SP Contract Arrangement'), but with a specific clause not present here: a timetable for annual indexation consultation. Holding that contractual clause was relevant 'context' to a conventional Tameside challenge, but holding the decision was lawful, Fordham J summarised the authorities at [33]:
"(i) In…Supportways, at para 36, the then Neuberger LJ said this:
"The fact a contractual obligation is framed by reference to a statutory duty does not….render that obligation a public law duty. Of course, where the statutory duty is owed to a contracting party independently of the contractual obligation, he can normally expect to be able to seek a public law remedy by reference to the duty, as well as or instead of a private law remedy by reference to the obligation…"
(ii) In Birmingham Taxi [2009] LLR 727, para 41, Wyn Williams J said:
"….In my judgment, a court should be extremely cautious about imposing public law duties upon the contracting party which have the effect of diluting or altering contractual terms freely concluded."
(iii) In British Gas [2023] EWHC 737 at [168], the Divisional Court said:
"The commercial context is important because the context is one in which the court is called upon to perform a relatively 'light touch' intensity of judicial review. This is far from a context such as that concerning, for example, the liberty of the individual, in which a more intensive scrutiny would be called for."
(iv) In [Northumberland] paras 19 and 32…Sullivan LJ said:
"It is important to remember that, provided some inquiry into the relevant factor to which due regard has to be paid is made by the decision-maker, 'it is generally for the decision-maker to decide on the manner and intensity of the inquiry to be undertaken into any relevant factor' … [to] produce some form of arithmetical calculation setting out the figures attributed to the individual cost elements of providing care, such as: occupancy, staff, operating costs, management and administration, capital values per bed and financing costs … is one way of having 'due regard for the actual costs of providing care' but it is not the only legally permissible way."…..
36 In Bevan, Beatson J explained…Supportways was a case where the substance of the dispute was whether or not a contract had come to an end in accordance with its terms, and the complaint was 'solely' about whether the…authority had failed to comply with a 'purely' contractual obligation.
38…How does the content of the provisions within an SP Contract Arrangement fit alongside the contextual shape of the conventional grounds for judicial review? In my judgment, the principled position is this:
(i) The contextual application of conventional judicial review grounds can be informed by the contents of an SP Contract Arrangement. This cuts both ways, where the agreement makes express provision for the local authority's decision-making approach in setting care home fees. First, the judicial review court may need to ensure that conventional judicial review standards—contextually applied—do not go beyond an express provision for the local authority's decision-making approach. Secondly, the judicial review court may need to ensure that conventional judicial review standards —contextually applied—do not fall short of an express provision for the local authority's decision-making approach. No more; but no less.
(ii) This idea of principled convergence, in certain situations, of public law duties and the contents of an SP Contract Arrangement—as to the decision-making approach—is consistent with the idea behind the Supportways principle. It fits with the Birmingham Taxi principle about a contractually agreed procedure, endorsed in Bevan [at] para 54. The judicial review court may need to be cautious so as not to cut across the contract. The content of conventional judicial review grounds—contextually applied— may match the decision-making approach in the SP Contract Arrangement…"
a. Firstly, the claim impacts on third parties. This is one of the Defendant's own submissions: that quashing the Decision would unsettle arrangements with many providers who have accepted it. I return to that at the end of this judgment. Likewise, the Claimant also says its claim affects third parties, not only providers (whether or not content with the Decision), but also residents. As in R(Bevan) at [52], they may be asked to pay more in 'top-ups' for the providers to remain viable (since the IPA Cl.8 is indexed based on the actual cost of care). Indeed, some residents' Art.8 ECHR rights may be engaged if their providers close particular care homes. As I will also emphasise at the end of the judgment, all these effects are asserted more than proven on current evidence, but it is not disputed the claim will have a direct impact on third parties, which makes the case different than Walsh.
b. Secondly, unlike Walsh, Supportways and indeed Mercury, whilst the claim does involve a contract, the Claimant is not the contracting party. This is not just an issue of the Claimant's (alternative) remedies, as I discuss next. After all, the Contract gives a contractual remedy to residents or sponsors even though they are not parties, under Clause 25 and the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999. More fundamentally, the Claimant's third-party status illustrates that its challenge does not rely on its private law rights, as it has none. Indeed, a similar challenge theoretically could have been made by anyone, subject to standing: R v IRC exp NFSB (which I have already resolved in the Claimant's favour, save on Ground 5). As with its impact on third parties, that is characteristic of a 'sufficient public law element'.
c. Thirdly, as I found earlier, the Claimant does not have an alternative remedy in contract, again unlike Walsh, Supportways and Mercury (and indeed Mauritius Power where the claimant had even brought a private law claim for damages). Moreover, in this case, the Claimant does not seek damages (available in Judicial Review providing it is not the only remedy sought: CPR 54.3(2)), or any other classic private law remedies like specific performance as in Supportways. Here, the Claimant only seeks classic public law remedies in the Claim Form 'remedy box' and the SFG 'prayer':
"…(i) A quashing order for the decision of 4 July 2024;
(ii) A declaration of the unlawful conduct of the Defendant; and/or
(iii) An order the Defendant shall undertake a lawful consultation and thereafter shall lawfully reconsider the fees it sets for residential care homes paying proper regard to the relevant considerations."
Whilst Mr Straker and Mr Sanghera's Skeleton Argument suggests the 'lawful consultation' would have to be pursuant to the Contract (or it would breach it), that presupposes there is no other lawful basis for consultation. The SFG at para.60 asserts a contractual duty to consult, but also a Common Law one, which I address under Ground 1. Mr Rule's Skeleton says the object of this claim is for the Defendant to revisit its unlawful decision-making and arrive at a lawful decision by a lawful and fair process, not for the Court to fix the fees at a particular level or award particular damages.
d. Fourthly, the Claimant's claim, unlike in Supportways, Walsh, Mercury and even R(CNE), is truly independent of the Contract. As Mr Rule pointed out, in his SFG Grounds themselves as opposed to the background, the Contract is only mentioned, let alone relied on, (i) in the asserted contractual duty to consult in Ground 1 at para.60 and in passing at para 67(b). (ii) in Ground 2 at SFG paras. 73(i) and (xi). This is why this case is distinguishable from R(CNE), where Clause 17.4 of the contract there was central to the claim. This claim has less of a 'private law element' than R(CNE) and is further away on the spectrum from Supportways. However, that is not to prioritise form over substance, as Mr Straker complains of Mr Rule's submissions. As I said earlier, their different perspectives on the case reflect their different focus on the two levels of the Decision: Mr Straker focusses on its 'private law level' as an exercise of a contractual discretion under Clause 18.3 of the Contract, Mr Rule on its 'public law level' as an exercise of the Defendant's 'market-shaping duty' under s.5 CA. The truth is that the Decision was both. However, the Claimant's challenge essentially targets its 'public law level'. By contrast to what Neuberger LJ said in Supportways at [36], the Claimant here can - indeed must – (it has no private law rights) rely on statute and guidance 'instead of' the Contract; and by contrast to what he said at [42]-[43], here it does not seek to supplement its (non-existent) private law rights.
e. Finally, unlike Supportways, Walsh, Mercury and even R(CNE), the present claim raises five (remaining) classic public law grounds of challenge. Ground 1 is failure to consult (which as I shall explain, is independent of the Contract notwithstanding the way it was initially put at para.60 SFG). Ground 4 alleges failure to take into account statutory guidance and Ground 3 alleges breach of the Public Sector Equality Duty, neither of which have anything whatsoever to do with private law generally, still less the Contract. Nor did Ground 5, although I have dismissed that based on standing. Ground 2: the failure to take into account relevant considerations, at least insofar as those considerations are expressly or impliedly required by statute, is a classic public law challenge. Ground 6 is a conventional public law complaint, albeit one that could also be made in breach of contact: Braganza. However, Grounds 2-5 do not sound in private law at all.
For those reasons, I conclude there is a 'sufficient public law element' to the claim and I reject the central submissions of the Defendant on this issue.
"52. [The Council submitted] in the light of the contractual context, the scope of review is narrow (see Mercury…) and normally confined to fraud, corruption or abuse of power. It is said to be common ground that none of those exists in the present case. This may certainly be true as far as fraud and corruption are concerned. But 'abuse of power' is an umbrella term that is often used... to refer to the conventional grounds of failure to take account of relevant considerations or to exclude irrelevant considerations, propriety of purpose and perversity, Wednesbury unreasonableness or irrationality. The claimant…rel[ies] on a number of these.
54. Subject to two qualifications, in a case such as this the scope of review in principle extends to all the conventional public law grounds. The first qualification is the caution expressed by Stanley Burnton J in the Birmingham Care Consortium case at [31] - [32] about the court interfering in a process in which the local authority is in effect engaged in a contractual negotiation with providers, who may wish to improve their contractual negotiating position by recourse to public law principles….[The other relates to public procurement contracts]…"
Whilst Lord Carnwath in Gallaher Group v CMA [2018] 2 WLR 1583 (SC) at [41] suggested the phrase 'abuse of power' 'adds nothing to the ordinary principles of Judicial Review' such as legitimate expectation and irrationality, as Mr Straker himself pointed out, it was the traditional basis for Judicial Review (see e.g. [69] of R v North East Devon Health Authority exp Coughlan [2001] QB 213 (CA). Beatson J in R(Bevan) was making a similar point not on the current role of 'abuse of power' as a concept, but what Lord Templeman in Mercury over a decade earlier had meant. One can debate whether Lord Templeman did indeed mean 'abuse of power' to mean all 'the conventional grounds' of Judicial Review. Certainly, Lord Sales in Mauritius Power at [66] in reaffirming Lord Templeman's approach in Mercury at pg.429A-B quoted above called it 'the limited scope for a judicial review challenge'. However, the real point is not that 'Mercury-style review' permits all the conventional grounds of review, but rather that the present context is different from Mercury, for the reasons Beatson J explained in R(Bevan). Therefore, it is unnecessary in this case to adopt the narrowed scope of 'Mercury-style review'.
"I have repeatedly referred to judicial review grounds as contextual. It is a golden rule of public law that conventional grounds, as Beatson J described them in Bevan are context-specific in nature and application. The present context does not warrant a 'close scrutiny' approach seen in a human rights context.….All of those conventional grounds for judicial review which fall within the overarching principle of public law reasonableness must be applied with full recognition of the latitude of the primary decision-maker. This is a supervisory, not a substitutionary, review jurisdiction."
Ground 1: Did the Defendant fail to consult adequately with the Claimant ?
"35. The common law imposes a general duty of procedural fairness upon public authorities exercising a wide range of functions which affect the interests of individuals, but the content of that duty varies almost infinitely depending upon the circumstances. There is however no general common law duty to consult persons who may be affected by a measure before it is adopted. The reasons for the absence of such a duty were explained by Sedley LJ in R (BAPIO Action Ltd) v SSHD [2008] ACD 20, paras 43-47. A duty of consultation will however exist in circumstances where there is a legitimate expectation of such consultation, usually arising from an interest which is held to be sufficient to found such an expectation, or from some promise or practice of consultation. The general approach of the common law is illustrated by…Baker and R v North East Devon Health Authority exp Coughlan [2001] QB 213 with which the BAPIO case might be contrasted."
"There will be a period of consultation when reviewing the pricing structures that will be reasonable, proportionate and fair where SARCP will be able to make submissions and within the Gunning principles."
As Mr Rule says, this was a clear and unambiguous promise to the Claimant, not just its member providers (who had a distinct right to consultation under Clause 18.3 of the Contract in any event). Even if not a 'promise', this statement reflects the long-established prior practice, which Mr Bull describes in his statement and is not disputed, of the Defendant consulting the Claimant about contracts and fees, which accordingly had a 'legitimate expectation' it would consult with it this time. I do not agree with Mr Straker that the Defendant's common law duty to consult the Claimant diluted, altered or 'cut across' its contractual duty to consult providers (c.f. Birmingham Taxi quoted in R(CNE) at [33(ii)] and at paragraph 57 of this judgment above). On the contrary, the different duties to consult were in harmony with each other because they fed into one consultation exercise with the providers and the Claimant. Moreover, the Defendant obviously did not think its promise to consult the Claimant undermined its duty to consult providers under the Contract.
"First, that consultation must be at a time when proposals are still at a formative stage. Second, that the proposer must give sufficient reasons for any proposal to permit of intelligent consideration and response. Third . . . that adequate time must be given for consideration and response and… fourth, that the product of consultation must be conscientiously taken into account in finalising any statutory proposals."
Those four 'Gunning principles' were in turn approved by Lord Wilson in Moseley at [25], who stressed at [23] that however a duty to consult is generated, the same common law duty of fairness and Gunning principles apply. Whilst Lord Reed at [36]-[38] of Moseley doubted that with a statutory consultation, as noted he differentiated common law consultation as in Baker and Coughlan where the Court of Appeal at [108] made the same point as Lord Wilson later did. As the present case also involves common law consultation, the Gunning principles apply - as indeed the Defendant promised the Claimant that they would. I consider each one.
"This proposal is being placed before Cabinet for their consideration and comment/ approval within the month. Please can you consider the proposed increase and respond to by 5pm Wednesday 19th June 2024..."
Mr Rule complains that this letter gave inadequate time' as it stated 'the proposal' would go back to Cabinet 'within the month' i.e. by the end of May. If that had indeed been the timetable, there may well have been 'inadequate time' to respond (although much longer than the few days in Baker). But on a fair reading of a (badly-drafted) letter, what was being said (as happened with Mr Tomlin's report for Cabinet on 21st May discussed above at paragraph 30) was the Defendant's 'proposal' to delay implementation of the earlier Cabinet approval of 0% to allow consultation on the new proposal of 1.4%. That is why the 8th May letter specifically set a timetable for responses by 19th June. Had there been any real doubt due to the unfortunate wording, the Claimant could have clarified with the Defendant and I note it was able to submit an extremely detailed consultation response on 11th June. Whilst the Claimant also complains the consultation did not include residents, there is no evidence they had a 'legitimate expectation' of consultation. Although, as I said, it had an impact on them: it was not a proposal to close their home like Baker and Coughlan. Therefore, I find the third Gunning criterion was not breached.
"[C]onsultation is not litigation: the consulting authority is not required to publicise every submission it receives or (absent some statutory obligation) to disclose all its advice. Its obligation is to let those who have a potential interest in the subject matter know in clear terms what the proposal is and exactly why it is under positive consideration, telling them enough (which may be a good deal) to enable them to make an intelligent response. The obligation, although it may be quite onerous, goes no further than this."
The SFG makes three distinct complaints here: omission of relevant considerations like actual cost of care etc; undue focus on resources; and failure to propose alternatives as in Moseley. However, Moseley was a public consultation, here the Claimant was an expert who knew full well the relevant considerations and prepared a very detailed response addressing all of them. It also had Mr Tomlin's explanation of the Defendant's position (including the budgetary and capacity issues) at the earlier meeting on 1st May and Mr Tomlin's public reports. It was perfectly able to suggest alternatives and did. The second Gunning criterion was not breached.
"[I]t is the Minister's conscientious consideration of the response which matters: [NAHS v Department of Health [2005] EWCA Civ 154]. The extent of the consideration given by officials is only relevant to the extent to which they were sufficiently informed to present the relevant material to the Minister for decision…."
(I cannot resist the observation that, as Ouseley J noted at [821], the judgment in NAHS was by Sedley LJ - who as counsel had coined the Gunning criteria in the first place - and who rejected at [37] the idea that an ignorant Minister could rely on the knowledge of officials as 'The Law according to Sir Humphrey Appleby'). An example of the fourth Gunning criterion not being met in the present context (which I referred to in the permission decision) is the judgment of HHJ Raynor QC in R(Sefton Care) v Sefton Council [2011] EWHC 2676 (Admin). It was described by Sullivan LJ in Northumberland at [34], without criticism, as turning on its own facts. However, it is a useful example of an authority's failure properly to consult, including not conscientiously considering responses. HHJ Raynor said at [89(c)]:
"The Defendant did not engage with the Claimants on the concerns they expressed, including the contention the basic fee was set at a level 'far below the price necessary to allow a viable sector' and at a rate which did not reflect the actual costs of providing care. The[ir] concerns regarding the future were simply discounted, with no attempt being made by the Defendant to obtain substantiation of th[eir] contentions. There is no evidence whatsoever the claimants' views and concerns were taken into account either 'conscientiously' or at all…when the ultimate decision was taken by the Council. Indeed, it does not appear that those concerns and expressions were ever communicated to the Cabinet or Council."
"Following a review of the responses, the City Council will be going ahead with the proposed 1.4% increase for placements at the band 1 and band 2 rates ['Residential' and 'Residential Enhanced']...backdated to 8th April. During the next 12 months we will be developing a package of support for care home providers, such a moving to payment on gross, removing restrictions on uplifting third party contributions, reviewing of training offer and developing our new care home contract in partnership with yourselves. We will be looking at how we can utilise Care Cubed [a updated economic tool for care costs] to inform and benchmark future fee uplifts. I want to stress again, that whilst the City Council's commissioning intentions are to support people to remain in their own homes for a long as possible, we do not want to lose any provision from the local market and I am happy to discuss our commissioning intentions with any provider on an individual basis to explore options for future working."
I have italicised the only 'reason' for (as opposed to mitigation of) the Decision to raise fees only by 1.4%, which simply baldly stated that the original proposal had been adopted, without explaining why by reference to the Defendant's own justification in Mr Tomlin's reports, let alone by 'conscientious consideration' of the Claimant's very detailed consultation response, indeed even the stand-out points in it like inflation and the National Living Wage. If the Decision had referred to Mr Tomlin's Cabinet reports and the 1st May meeting to explain the below-inflation rise and even very summarily replied to all the major headings in the Claimant's response, that would have sufficed. But as it is, unlike Singh J in R(South West Care), I have no statement from the decision-maker to explain what they knew (and Mr Tomlin's knowledge or reasoning cannot be attributed to them: NAHS - even if they were less senior than him as it appears), or how they 'conscientiously considered the consultation', even if that had been admissible to amplify their reasoning: c.f. R v Westminster CC exp Ermakov [1996] 2 All ER 302 (CA). Therefore, I have no hesitation in concluding the fourth Gunning criterion was clearly breached.
Grounds 4 and 2: Failing to follow guidance or consider relevant statutory factors
"82 [The Care Act 2014 ('CA') Guidance] at… "Annex A: Choice of accommodation and additional payments" is clear also that:
"…4) Local authorities should also be mindful of their duties under Section 1 of the Care Act 2014 to promote individual wellbeing'…
11) In all cases the local authority must have regard to the actual cost of good quality care in deciding the personal budget to ensure that the amount is one that reflects local market conditions… In addition, the local authority should not set arbitrary amounts or ceilings for particular types of accommodation that do not reflect a fair cost of care. Guidance on market shaping and commissioning is set out in Chapter 4..
34) Arrangements will need to be reviewed from time to time, for example in response to …a change in provider costs……."
83(v) In departure from [the CA Guidance], [the Defendant failed] to have regard to the actual cost of good quality care; and/or set...arbitrary amounts or ceilings for particular types of accommodation that do not reflect a fair cost of care, or change in provider costs."
"(i) First, there is the importance of local authorities assuring themselves and having 'evidence' that contractual fee levels are appropriate to provide the delivery of agreed care packages with agreed quality of care (para 4.31).
(ii) Secondly, there is the importance of local authorities understanding that a reasonable fee level allows for a reasonable rate of return by independent providers that is sufficient to allow the overall pool of efficient providers to remain sustainable in the long term (para 4.31). [Lavender J in R(Care England) at [6] called this and s.5(2)(d) CA 'the sustainability factor']
(iii) Thirdly, there is the point that local authorities must not undertake any actions which may threaten the sustainability of the market as a whole - the pool of providers able to deliver services of an appropriate quality - by setting fee levels below an amount which is not sustainable for providers in the long term (para 4.35)."
a. Firstly, in setting a fee increase of 1.4%, the Decision did not expressly or implicitly 'have regard to' the actual cost of good quality care' under para.11 Annex A (or what evidence it relied on for that under para.4.31 CA Guidance), if only to explain how that was outweighed by other factors such as over-capacity in the residential care home market or the Defendant's budgetary constraints, as Mr Tomlin's Cabinet reports had done.
b. Secondly, the 1.4% minimum uplift in Clause 1.4% effectively acted as an 'arbitrary ceiling' on the Decision rather than a 'contractual floor', since it reflected inflation of 1.4% three years earlier and lacked justification as to its consistency with having regard to 'the actual cost of good quality care'.
c. Thirdly, the Decision did not just 'take into account' the contractual minimum uplift in Clause 18.3, it appeared to focus exclusively on the contractual dimension of the relevant Decision rather than the duty under s.78 CA to have regard to the statutory guidance. Like the Defendant's argument on 'the public/private law divide', it focussed on the contractual dimension to the exclusion of the statutory and guidance dimension.
d. Fourthly, whilst the Defendant 'did not want to lose any provision from the local market' and mentioned potential packages of support, it failed to acknowledge that a reasonable fee level (as opposed to other mitigating measures) allowed for a reasonable rate of return to allow efficient operators to remain sustainable in the long-term as required by para.4.31, or at least explain why that factor was outweighed by others such as budgetary ones.
e. Fifthly, the Decision implicitly recognised that the sustainability of the market was at risk by acknowledging the risk of loss of provision and by offering support. However, it failed to recognise that the decision to limit fee uplift to 1.4% was the action threatening that sustainability, again if only to explain how it was outweighed by countervailing factors like budget.
Therefore, I uphold Ground 4 as the Decision failed to follow the CA Guidance.
"30. The approach of the court in response to…an allegation [of failure to take into account relevant considerations] has been discussed in a number of authorities. I sought to summarise the principles in Derbyshire Dales DC v SSCLG [2010] 1 P & CR 19... [which concerned alternative sites] I said:
"17. It is one thing to say consideration of a possible alternative site is a potentially relevant issue, so that a decision-maker does not err in law if he has regard to it. It is quite another to say that it is necessarily relevant, so that he errs in law if he fails to have regard to it.
"18. For the former category the underlying principles are obvious. It is trite and long-established law that the range of potentially relevant planning issues is very wide…[and] that, absent irrationality or illegality, the weight to be given to such issues in any case is a matter for the decision-maker… On the other hand, to hold that a decision-maker has erred in law by failing to have regard to alternative sites, it is necessary to find some legal principle which compelled him (not merely empowered) him to do so."
31 I referred to the discussion of this issue in a different context by Cooke J in the New Zealand Court of Appeal, in CREEDNZ Inc v Governor General [1981] 1 NZLR 172, 182 (adopted by Lord Scarman in the House of Lords in In re Findlay [1985] AC 318, 333–334 [original emphasis]:
"26. [Cooke J] took as a starting point the words of Lord Greene MR in Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corpn [1948] 1 KB 223, 228… 'What has to be emphasised is that it is only when the statute expressly or impliedly identifies considerations required to be taken into account by the authority as a matter of legal obligation that the court holds a decision invalid on the ground now invoked. It is not enough it is one that may properly be taken into account, nor even that it is one many people, including the court itself, would have taken into account if they had to make the decision …'
"27. In approving this passage, Lord Scarman noted that…'[I]n certain circumstances there will be some matters so obviously material to a decision on a particular project that anything short of direct consideration of them by the ministers … would not be in accordance with the intention of the Act.' (In re Findlay at p 334.)
"28… Short of irrationality, the question is one of statutory construction. It is necessary to show that the matter was one which the statute expressly or impliedly (because 'obviously material') requires to be taken into account 'as a matter of legal obligation'."
"(1) A local authority must promote the efficient and effective operation of a market in services for meeting care and support needs with a view to ensuring that any person in its area wishing to access services in the market — (a) has a variety of providers to choose from who (taken together) provide a variety of services; (b) has a variety of high-quality services….
(2) In performing that duty, a local authority must have regard to the following matters in particular…(d) the importance of ensuring the sustainability of the market…; (e) the importance of fostering continuous improvement in the quality of such services and the efficiency and effectiveness with which such services are provided and of encouraging innovation in their provision; (f) the importance of fostering a workforce whose members are able to ensure the delivery of high quality services (e.g. they have relevant skills and appropriate working conditions).
(4) In arranging for the provision… of services for meeting care and support needs, a local authority must have regard to the importance of promoting the well-being of adults in its area with needs for care and support…"
In my judgment, even if I am wrong on Ground 4, the Decision's lack of 'due regard to the actual cost of care' and 'the need to avoid setting arbitrary cost ceilings' in the sense in paras.5.2.4 and 5.2.7 LAC (2004)20 are implicitly 'statutory factors' to be taken into account under s.5(2)(d) and (e), which the Defendant failed to do. Alternatively, the Decision failed to take into account expressly statutory factors:
a. Firstly, the Decision failed to take into account its duty under s.5(1) to promote the efficient and effective operation of a market with a view to ensuring a variety of providers and high-quality services (compare paras.73(vi) and (vii) SFG).
b. Secondly, whilst the Decision acknowledged the risk of some providers leaving the market and so the impact on market sustainability, it failed to take into account under s.5(2)(d) the importance of ensuring the market remained sustainable, e.g. by setting fees at sustainable level, not just offering other support. (Compare the pleading at paras 73(v) and (vi) SFG).
c. Thirdly, the Decision failed to have regard under s.5(2)(e) to the importance of fostering continuous improvement in the quality of care services and indeed the ability of providers to comply with CQC standards and improve quality given the pressures on overheads by low fees (compare paras.73(vii) and (xii) SFG).
d. Fourthly, the Decision failed to have regard under s.5(2)(f) to the importance of fostering a workforce able to deliver high-quality care, in particular by failing to have regard to how a 1.4% rise in fees could absorb a 9.8% rise in the National Living Wage when staff costs were typically c.70% of actual costs of care (compare paras.73(x) and (xi) SFG) that in R(Torbay) at [76] King J suggested may justify increasing standard fees (but I place no reliance on Cl.21 Contract).
e. Finally, the Decision failed to have regard under s.5(4) of the importance of promoting the well-being of care-home residents due to the 'indirect impact' on them of Defendant fees not covering the provider's actual costs of care, either inhibiting providers from meeting all their needs and/or leading them to increase the level of 'top-ups' from residents or their families (compare p.73(viii) SFG).
Therefore, insofar as it adds anything to Grounds 1 and 4, I also uphold Ground 2.
Grounds 3 and 6: Public Sector Equality Duty and Irrationality
"(1) A public authority must, in the exercise of its functions, have due regard to the need to— (a) eliminate discrimination, harassment, victimisation and any other conduct that is prohibited by or under this Act; (b) advance equality of opportunity between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it…
(3) Having due regard to the need to advance equality of opportunity between persons who share a relevant protected characteristic and persons who do not share it involves having due regard, in particular, to the need to— (a) remove or minimise disadvantages suffered by persons who share a relevant protected characteristic that are connected to that characteristic; (b) take steps to meet the needs of persons who share a relevant protected characteristic…different from the needs of persons who do not share it
(4) The steps involved in meeting the needs of disabled persons that are different from the needs of persons who are not disabled include, in particular, steps to take account of disabled persons' disabilities….
(6) Compliance with the duties in this section may involve treating some persons more favourably than others; but that is not to be taken as permitting conduct that would otherwise be prohibited by…this Act"
"Where, as here, the person concerned is [by definition] disabled and the public authority is discharging its functions under statutes which expressly direct their attention to the needs of disabled persons, it may be entirely superfluous to make express reference to section 49A and absurd to infer from an omission to do so a failure on the authority's part to have regard to their general duty under the section…The question is one of substance, not of form. This case is wholly unlike Pieretti…"
Likewise in Powell v Dacorum BC [2019] HLR 21 (CA) at [44], McCombe LJ differentiated cases about 'strategic' decisions from those involving individuals.
"….(iv) The duty to have 'due regard' applies both to the formulation of policy and its implementation in individual cases
(v) The duty is a continuing one:
(vi) [T]he PSED is a duty of process and not outcome. That does not, however, diminish its importance. Public law is often concerned with the process by which a decision is taken and not with the substance of [it].
(vii) The duty is not simply to 'have regard' to the relevant aims. The regard must be 'due'. This requires 'a proper and conscientious focus on the statutory criteria'…. What constitutes 'due regard' is, however, context-specific. The greater the relevance and potential impact, the higher the regard required by the duty. Thus, where large numbers of vulnerable people, very many of whom fall within one or more of the protected groups, [are affected] the due regard necessary is very high. The same will be true if the adverse impact of the policy is very high albeit it affects a smaller group of people. The duty is a flexible one….What is 'due regard' in one case will not necessarily be 'due regard' in another. It will vary, perhaps widely, according to circumstances: for example, the subject-matter of the decision being made, the timing of that decision, its place in a sequence of decision-making to which it belongs, the period for which it will be in effect, the nature and scale of its potential consequences, and so forth.
(viii) A decision-maker must have due regard to the need to obtain relevant information in order for him properly to discharge his section 149 duty,
(ix) A decision-maker should be able to evidence the discharge of the duty
(x) A Policy Equality Statement ('PES') [or 'Equality Impact Assessment' ('EIA')] can evidence compliance with the PSED… but it must do so in substance. The mere existence of a PES is not enough.
(xi) The question whether a decision-maker has had 'due regard' to the relevant aims is for the court to determine for itself on judicial review….[P]rovided the decision-maker has had 'due regard' to the relevant aims, the weight which he attaches to any relevant factors, including any countervailing factors, and his assessment as to what specific steps to take to achieve those aims, may only be challenged if [irrational]."
Relief and Consequential Orders
a. Firstly, the minimum uplift of 1.4% in Clause 18.3 adopted in the Decision probably reflected the rate of inflation in April 2021 around the time the 2021 Provider Contract was concluded. However, in the 'Cost of Living Crisis' which has ensued since, inflation has been far higher: in the 12 months to April 2024 the CPI rose to 2.3% and there has been an increase of 9.8% in the National Living Wage (bearing in mind under the old costs model, wage costs constituted 70% of care home costs). Mr Bull gave some examples of the financial pressures care home providers are under in the present financial year, including substantial rises in staffing and utility costs etc. For one provider with three care homes, the total costs rose by up to 18.5% in 2023/2024. Yet in 2024/25, the Defendant has only increased its fees by 1.4%.
b. Secondly, despite that, out of the 181 care homes accommodating the 814 residents funded by the Defendant, 99 have specifically signed the contract extension with the 1.4% rise, whilst another 57 have effectively agreed to it, as I said 94% of the 166 care homes in Stoke-on-Trent and Staffordshire the Defendant funds (and 86% of its total care home placements). The Claimant has only named five providers who positively support this claim and I am not prepared to assume that is the tip of the iceberg, or that most of the 156 care homes who have positively agreed with the Decision did so because they thought they had no choice. The evidence suggests the Claimant speaks for a small minority of care homes. The majority of others with whom the Defendant deals do not actively oppose the Decision (whether or not they are happy about it).
c. Thirdly, this may be because many providers recognise that just as they are under financial pressure, so too are local authorities. As I have explained, the Defendant's overall budget shrank by about 30% in real terms between 2010/11 and 2023/24 and in particular the Adult Social Care budget has been squeezed. According to a table Mr Tomlin has provided, whilst the Defendant pays less than some other Midlands local authorities including Staffordshire (the Defendant is a City Authority), but its fees are higher than some nearby comparable City Authorities like Wolverhampton and Walsall. The cost challenges are universal. However, providers' pragmatism about the Decision may also be because, as Mr Rule pointed out, Mr Tomlin's own evidence suggests the Defendant already pays on average more than the set standard rate of £600 per week reflected in the 1.4% rise in the Decision. Moreover, Mr Tomlin also mentioned some providers had refused to accept the Decision but had negotiated bespoke fee rates themselves.
d. Fourthly, whilst Mr Tomlin issued dire warnings about the effect of a quashing order on the Defendant's budget, on other local authorities and even on delaying the hospital discharge process in a time of acute need in the NHS (indeed at its busiest time of year), those all seem rather speculative. Quashing the Decision and re-taking it does not necessarily entail a different outcome and even if it did, on Mr Tomlin's own evidence, a 0.1% increase in residential care home fees would cost the Defendant £17,000 on current expenditure, not a large sum in the context of a £4.9 million rise in the Adult Social Care budget for 2023/24. Likewise, given Mr Tomlin's evidence also suggests there is a great variability in the rates different authorities pay (and the Defendant is towards the bottom of the table in terms of fees paid), it seems unlikely that quashing its decision to pay a contractual minimum reflecting inflation in 2021 is likely to have a significant impact on other authorities. Finally, the effect of a quashing order on hospital discharges seems to be extremely tenuous. Whilst I am equally unimpressed with Mr Bull's Dickensian warnings if the Decision is not quashed of vulnerable old people being evicted at the height of winter (the Care Act imposes a duty on the Defendant to step in anyway), he also makes a fairer point that increased fees can be off-set to a certain extent by increases in residents' pensions year-on-year. Further, since the Defendants' fees can be supplemented by residents' or sponsors' 'top-ups', re-making the Decision does not necessarily entail reaching a different result.
e. Finally, however Mr Tomlin makes a stronger point about the impact of a quashing order on pending negotiations with providers on fees for 2025/26 and beyond. The Decision comprises the last of the rates set under the 2021 Provider Contract which cannot be extended beyond 2025. Just before Christmas 2024, the Defendant began negotiations with providers (and it hopes to include new providers now the bidding process has been simplified by the Procurement Act 2023) for a new 'provider contract' as part of wider consultations for the fee-setting process for 2025-26 for Adult Social Care generally. (It supports 13,000 citizens of Stoke-on-Trent, not just the 814 residents it funds in care homes). For the new Provider Contract negotiations, the Defendant has organised on-line and one-to-one meetings with providers to discuss proposed uplifts (not now to be governed by the 1.4% 'floor' in the 2021 Provider Contract). Mr Tomlin promises a report to Cabinet reflecting that consultation process, consideration of the challenges providers currently face and the Defendant's duties under the PSED and Care Act. Doubtless he will also be keen to avoid a repetition of the confusion and delay in the Defendant's 2024 process. I accept Mr Tomlin's concern that its wider consultations on Social Care generally and specifically the new negotiations for a Provider Contract from 2025 would be skewed and confused by in parallel re-opening the consultation process under the 2021 Provider Contract for the 2024/25 fee uplift. The Defendant's budget is not elastic – the more money it must spend on the re-opened 2024/25 fees, the less in the pot for the new contract fees. That creates a tension between different providers: those like the Claimant pushing for increased 2024 fees and more pragmatic existing providers or even new providers who would not welcome that. That would risk conflict, distraction and muddle in the negotiations for the 2025 contract, which is in no-one's interests. For the reasons Mr Tomlin gives, I accept the majority of providers, who do not actively object to the Decision, would prefer the Defendant to focus on fair and sustainable rates for fees from 2025 going forward. However, such potential disruption would not be a risk if all the Defendant was doing was simply re-making the Decision, conscientiously considering the Claimant and others' previous consultation responses, its duties under the Care Act, its related guidance and the PSED for residents. That re-made decision, potentially by Mr Tomlin himself, could be prepared within a couple of weeks without interfering in any way with the new consultation about the new contract. Indeed, the re-taken decision would not have any real impact on third parties at all unless it changed the rate, which might well itself be a relevant consideration for the decision-maker in deciding whether the rate should change in the first place.
"(1) A quashing order may include provision— (a) for the quashing not to take effect until a date specified in the order, or (b) removing or limiting any retrospective effect of the quashing..
(8) In deciding whether to exercise a power in subsection (1), the court must have regard to— (a) the nature and circumstances of the relevant defect; (b) any detriment to good administration that would result from exercising or failing to exercise the power; (c) the interests or expectations of persons who would benefit from the quashing of the impugned act; (d) the interests or expectations of persons who have relied on the impugned act; (e) so far as appears to the court to be relevant, any action taken or proposed to be taken, or undertaking given, by a person with responsibility in connection with the impugned act; (f) any other matter that appears to the court to be relevant.
Moreover, it has long been the case that if there has been 'undue delay' by the claimant, the relief discretion is qualified by s.31(6) SCA:
"Where the High Court considers that there has been undue delay in making an application for judicial review, the court may refuse to grant…(b) any relief sought on the application, if it considers that the granting of the relief sought would be likely to cause substantial hardship to, or substantially prejudice the rights of, any person or would be detrimental to good administration."
Whilst there have as yet been very few examples of deferred or prospective quashing orders under s.29A SCA, there are many examples of 'undue delay' under s.31(6)(b) SCA, including in the present context Singh J's judgment in R(South West Care) (No.1) where he refused to quash a care home fees decision (which was unlawful only by reason of inadequate consultation) on grounds of delay and good administration at [53]-[60]:
"53…[J]udicial Review, quite apart from the questions of delay is always discretionary. One of the factors that the court will have to regard to in its discretion is the interests of good public administration (see R v Monopolies & Mergers Commission ex parte Argyll Group Plc [1986] 2 All E R 257, at 266) in the judgment of Sir John Donaldson MR (as he then was) where he said: "Good public administration requires decisiveness and finality unless there are compelling reasons to the contrary."
54. On the facts of the present case I accept the defendant's submissions and, in the exercise of the court's discretion, would not quash the decision which is under challenge. My reasons, in brief, are as follows: first, the relevant financial year has ended…It is obvious that many transactions…such as Tax Returns will have been concluded and submitted on the understanding that the defendant authority's budget was as had been finalised in March and April of 2011 and would not be reopened now.
55. Secondly, there is a more specific type of detriment to others to which the defendants can point. [In their defence] "A grant of relief in the present case, if it resulted in increase in care home fees for 2011/12 would cause a further and more specific detriment to good administration and hardship to third parties. At the suit of a small number of providers the defendant would have to find a very large sum overall, a windfall to those providers who appear to have been content with a decision. This in turn could necessitate recovery of the unpaid part of the increased fee from those who pay the full cost of their care through the local authority or from the relatives of those who have died in the interim. The alternative would be to place the burden on council tax payers ... the potential for hardship and distress as well as administrative inconvenience and expense is obvious."
58. As I have said, even if one puts to one side questions of delay, I have had regard to the principle in the Argyle case and accept the defendant's submissions that it would be detrimental to the interests of good administration to grant a quashing order in this case….
60. For the claimants it was submitted that they do not seek a mandatory order requiring the court to order the defendant authority to increase the fees in question. The claimant submits that such an order would usurp the role of a public authority in making the relevant decision: so they submit the court should not hesitate to grant a quashing order. In my view, this argument is a little disingenuous, since the claimants wish there to be consultation with a view to achieving a real change in practice and not for academic reasons. If there is a real prospect of a change in practice then, in my view, for the reasons I have already given, there would be detriment to good public administration and, in the exercise of the court's discretion, I would not grant a quashing order."
"I would not have been persuaded by the Council's arguments about detriment to good administration, independently of delay. Judicial review remedies are a matter of judgment and discretion. There is a narrow band, within which detriment to good administration could justify the refusal of a remedy – in the context and circumstances – even where a claimant has acted promptly. But, where a claimant has done all that could have been expected, and can show unlawfulness, the court will be extremely circumspect about the blanket denial of any remedy."
I emphasise 'any remedy', as Fordham J said in R(CNE) at [52(ii)], a declaration is a significant remedy in itself, quite aside from a quashing order. To like effect, in R(South West Care No.1), Singh J said at [62]:
"[A declaration] would vindicate the rule of law….Granting a declaration can serve a valuable function in guiding future conduct. A declaration is a flexible and proportionate remedy: it can be tailored to fit the facts of the particular case before the court and to reflect the particular breach of public law which the court has identified."
Whilst Fordham J in R(CNE) at [53(iii)] did not mention specific authority for the 'narrow band' for refusing relief without undue delay, he doubtless had in mind the leading authority quoted in other cases in this field (e.g. R(South Tyneside) and R(Torbay)) and in his own book 'Judicial Review Handbook' (7th Ed) at para.24.3.14, namely: R(Edwards) v Environment Agency [2009] 1 All ER 57 (HL), where Lord Hoffmann said at [63]:
"It is well settled that 'the grant or refusal of the remedy sought by way of judicial review is, in the ultimate analysis, discretionary' (Lord Roskill in IRC v National Federation of Self Employed and Small Businesses [1981] 2 All ER 93 at 116). But the discretion must be exercised judicially and in most cases in which a decision has been found to be flawed, it would not be a proper exercise of the discretion to refuse to quash it. So, in Berkeley v Secretary of State for the Environment [2000] 3 All ER 897 it was conceded, and the House decided, that the Court of Appeal had been wrong to refuse to quash a planning permission granted without the impact assessment required by the EIA directive on the ground only that the outcome was bound to have been the same. …[However,] the speeches in Berkeley need to be read in context. Both the nature of the flaw in the decision and the ground for exercise of the discretion have to be considered."
Indeed, in Edwards itself, Lord Hoffmann distinguished Berkeley and refused a quashing order since the flaw in the planning decision in Edwards was much more limited and the ground for not quashing was entirely different: since the unlawful decision, new information had shown a different position and it would be pointless to re-open consultation on out-of-date data. Similarly in Moseley, the Supreme Court agreed it would be disproportionate to re-run a consultation exercise which had been running for two years. Another example in the Supreme Court, albeit not cited to me, is Hunt v North Somerset Council [2015] 1 WLR 3575, where the Court of Appeal had held a reduction of a budget for youth services had breached the PSED but refused to quash it because it would be detrimental to good administration to re-open the decision as by that time the financial year had closed and the budget would have to be re-opened (not the same as 'undue delay'). The Supreme Court rejected the appeal for a declaration instead of quashing, since whilst it would 'usually' be appropriate where other orders were not made, in that case it had not been sought. In my judgment, the common law discretion to refuse relief (including a quashing order outright) if it would cause detriment to good administration even in the absence of undue delay survives Parliament's modest intervention with s.29A SCA and 'deferred' and 'prospective' quashing orders. Indeed, detriment to good administration is one of the statutory factors in s.29A(8) SCA and the others are consistent with the focus in Edwards: on the nature of the unlawfulness and the reason for refusing relief, including the impact of refusing or granting it on third parties.
a. The nature of the unlawfulness in the present case is exclusively the Decision itself for the reasons I gave when upholding Ground 1 (in part), but also Grounds 2, 3, 4 and 6. On one hand, that is much more extensive than the limited failures in consultation in R(South West Care No.1) where Singh J refused relief (and there was also there undue delay by the claimant), or indeed the limited failure to disclose information to consultees in R(Edwards). On the other hand, under Ground 1, I found there was no unlawfulness in the consultation process leading up to the Decision. Therefore, the Claimant's preferred remedy that the Decision should be quashed and the consultation process be re-opened (rather than the Decision simply being re-made) actually goes further than necessary to correct the unlawfulness that I have found.
b. The detriment to good administration in the present case is also more limited than in R(South West Care No.1) where (as in R(Hunt)) the financial year had closed and quashing the decision would require re-opening the local authority's budget. By contrast in the present case, due to the expedition of the claim, we are still only three-quarters of the way through the financial year. So, if the Decision is re-taken and changes, any change in fees can be dealt with within the present year's budget (and the extent of fee increase obviously influenced by that to the extent of £17,000 per 0.1% increase). For the reasons I have given, any detriment to the Defendant's good administration is limited to the disruptive effect of the Claimant's proposal to re-open the consultation process for the 2024 fees on the current contract negotiations for the new 2025 contract, which is another reason not to accede to the Claimant's suggestion of re-opening the consultation process. By contrast, if the Decision is simply quashed and re-taken within a few weeks, there would be no detriment to good administration at all, at least unless it was decided to increase the fees. However, that is not a good reason not to quash the decision, because Mr Tomlin says himself that there is a significant likelihood the outcome may not differ if the decision were to be retaken and I accept that, providing the new decision takes in account the existing consultation responses, the Care Act duties and guidance and PSED and reaches a rational decision and complies with the various legal requirements I have explained in this judgment.
c. Likewise, the effect of quashing on third parties depends on whether (i) the consultation process re-opens and (ii) the fee is increased in the re-made decision. I accept that were the consultation process to be re-opened, there would be a detrimental effect on other providers seeking to negotiate rates in the new contract (especially new providers who do not stand to gain from any increase in the 2024 fees), but if it were not re-opened, it would have no effect on third parties unless the fee changed. The Claimant argues that other existing providers, residents and sponsors would only stand to gain from an increase in the 2024 fees and there is considerable force in that, although the Defendant will be entitled to reach its own conclusion (which also takes into account its own budgetary pressures) providing it does so lawfully. Contrarily, I have rejected Mr Tomlin's unevidenced warnings about the effect on residents and hospital discharges if the decision is re-made and any evidenced risk on those grounds can be a relevant factor in the new decision.
"In my view, Supportways, Walsh, Mercury, R(CNE) and R(Bevan) can be seen as at different points along a spectrum of a mixture of public and private law elements, rather than in separate watertight categories. At one end of the spectrum is Supportways, where in essence the whole basis of the claim was a contract between the claimant and defendant. Indeed, Supportways in the same claim sought private law remedies, with public law remedies effectively in the alternative. In Walsh, the employee sought only public law remedies (in modern language, a quashing order) but where the Court considered the substance of his claim was really in private law (which also afforded an alternative remedy). In Mercury, there was another mixed public/private law claim but the Privy Council preferred to dismiss it on a narrowed scope of review rather than on the same basis as the Court later did in Supportways. (Indeed, in the more recent similar case of Mauritius Power, even a parallel private law claim for damages alongside the Judicial Review claim did not mean the latter was an abuse of process). In R(CNE), the terms of the contract were central 'context' to a conventional Tameside public law claim which again failed on its merits. Finally, in R(Bevan), the claim was entirely independent of the contract (to use Neuberger LJ's word in [36] of Supportways), as it pre-dated particular placement contracts, but where the decision clearly did impact on those contracts."
I went on to explain at paragraph 60 of this judgment that the present claim's point on that 'spectrum' was that it had a 'sufficient public law element' for Judicial Review to lie. Mr Straker submitted by reference to the test for permission to appeal in CPR 52.6 that my 'public/private law divide' analysis was arguably wrong or that there was some other compelling reason for the Court of Appeal to consider this issue, given its wider implications for care home fee decision-making by local authorities. It seems to me the latter issue is best considered by the Court of Appeal itself if the Defendant appeals, especially given its very recent judgment in R(Shashikanth). Likewise, the Court of Appeal will have its own view on whether my 'public/private law' analysis was arguably wrong (I consider it was not for the reasons I gave). Therefore, I refuse permission to appeal, but extend time for appealing to 28 days from the date of my order, aligning the time to appeal with the time I have given the Defendant to re-take the Decision. This is because the re-taken Decision may affect whether the Defendant wishes to pursue an appeal, rather than forcing it to appeal simply to preserve its position pending the re-taken Decision, which would not be a productive use of public money and time (especially in a period when I am requiring the Defendant to focus on re-taking an unlawful Decision and producing a lawful one).