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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> East Renfrewshire District Council v Glasgow City Council [2008] ScotCS CSOH_175 (12 December 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_175.html
Cite as: 2009 SC 197, 2009 SLT 482, 2009 GWD 16-256, [2008] CSOH 175, [2008] ScotCS CSOH_175

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2008] CSOH 175

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD PENROSE

 

in the cause

 

EAST RENFREWSHIRE DISTRICT COUNCIL

Pursuers;

 

against

 

GLASGOW CITY COUNCIL

Defenders:

 

_______

 

 

 

 

Pursuer: Sanderson; Brodies

Defenders: Lindsay, City of Edinburgh Council Legal Division

 

 

12 December 2008

 


[1] The parties are the education authorities for their respective areas. As such each has the duty to secure that there is made for its area adequate and efficient provision of school education: Education (
Scotland) Act 1980, the "1980 Act", section 1(1). That duty may be discharged by the provision of school education within the authority's area, or, in appropriate circumstances, in the areas of other education authorities. Accordingly, section 23 of the 1980 Act, as amended, empowers education authorities to provide education and other services for a pupil or pupils belonging to the area of another education authority. So far as is material for present purposes, children of families resident in one authority's area may be provided with school education in another authority's area under and in terms of arrangements agreed between the authorities, or as a result of the exercise by the parents of a child of the right of choice, within certain constraints, of the school in which that child receives school education.


[2]
The dispute between the parties relates to the cost of the provision, in the course of school education at establishments managed by the pursuers within their area, of additional support services for children of families ordinarily resident in the defenders' area, who therefore 'belong' to the defenders' area. In each case the child was placed in school as a result of a parents' application to the pursuers. The debate proceeded on the basis that all of the children in question in the present case were already in schools managed by the pursuers in May 2004 when local government reorganisation took effect. Neither then nor subsequently have there been arrangements between the parties relating to the school education of the children in question. With the possible exception of children D.D. and L.McG, all of the children were placed following applications made under and in terms of section 28 of the 1980 Act. As from 14 November 2005, section 28 was superseded in relation to children with additional support needs by schedule 2 to the Education (Additional Support for Learning) (Scotland) Act 2004 (the 2004 Act). The new provisions, defining the authorities' obligations, were discussed in WD v Glasgow City Council 2007 SC 11. Neither party suggested that the issue depends to any extent on which statute providing for parental choice is applicable. In each case, a high priority is given to parental choice in the selection of the school at which the child receives school education. The authority addressed may place the child without the consent of the authority to whose area that child belongs.


[3]
It was agreed that, in terms of the 2004 Act, the pursuers had at all material times the obligation to provide for the additional support needs of the children identified in the pleadings. Section 4(1) of the 2004 Act provides, subject to qualifications that are immaterial for present purposes:

"Every education authority must -

(a)                in relation to each child and young person having additional support

needs for whose education the authority are responsible, make adequate and efficient provision for such additional support as is required by that child or young person..."

Section 29(3) of the 2004 Act provides:

"In this Act, references to a child ... for whose school education an education authority are responsible are to any child ... being, or about to be, provided with school education -

(a) in a school under the management of the education authority, or

(b) in pursuance of arrangements made or entered into by the authority."

It follows that by whichever mechanism an authority becomes responsible for the school education of children and young persons, it has obligations under the 2004 Act to those children to provide for their additional support needs.


[4]
Each party lodged notes of argument relating to the live issues in the case, to which they adhered in the course of submissions. The gist of the defenders' argument was that they were not obliged to provide for additional support of the children in question because they were not responsible for their school education, and were therefore not liable for the relative costs. They had not been involved in the placement of the children, and there was no arrangement between them and the pursuers that provided for payment. The pursuers argued that the defenders were liable because the children belonged to their area, and that liability for the cost of additional support fell to be determined on that basis. Each argument depended on close analysis of the material statutory provisions.


[5]
At various stages in the defenders' submissions it was argued that the approach for which they contended was supported by common sense, or by the obvious policy underlying the legislation. I have not found this a useful approach. It is generally understood that many elements of grant distribution to local authorities are based on the "client group method", using statistically relevant indicators many of which are population based. Expenditure on basic school education in the primary and secondary sectors is funded using the relevant school rolls for primary and secondary pupils. However, expenditure on pupils with additional support needs is included in the category of special education. The Scottish Executive's publication "Expenditure on School Education in Scotland 2006-07", paragraph 8, states:

"It is not possible to calculate expenditure per pupil in special education. Expenditure in this category includes additional support for pupils in mainstream schools as well as funding of special schools, and in some cases covers funding for pupils in neighbouring authorities' special schools or additional funding of their support in their mainstream schools ... "

While this paragraph refers specifically to the statistical data for the period of the report, it reflects a distinction of some importance between the funding of general school education and the funding of special education, including additional needs funding. While the former is funded on a per capita basis by reference to school rolls, the latter is funded on a population basis.


[6]
As a result of these funding arrangements, the pursuers do not receive funding from Scottish Ministers for the provision of the additional support needs of pupils belonging to the Glasgow area. The defenders do receive grant, on a population basis, which includes funding of additional needs of children belonging to their area. There would be a superficial policy attraction, favourable to the pursuers, in a solution that transfers grant money to the authority incurring the relevant expenditure. On the other hand, for reasons related to the detailed terms of the 1980 Act following amendment, the defenders may not be relieved of the obligation to provide for children with additional needs who belong to their area, except where there is in place an arrangement with the providing authority. That is the basis of the policy argument advanced by the defenders, as I understand it. In such circumstances common sense, generally or in the context of local government finance, is unlikely to provide guidance on the proper disposal of the issue that arises in this case.


[7]
There is an issue on record whether Scottish Ministers were entitled to determine the quantification of the pursuers' claims. But that is resolved by the answer to the question whether the pursuers are entitled to any payment at all. If they are, Scottish Ministers were entitled to determine the issue of quantification: section 23(2) of the 1980 Act. If they are not, there is no issue of quantification. The issue between the parties depends on the sound construction of the statutory provisions as they are found. The parties are in agreement that if the defenders are liable in principle, the sums sued for are payable.


[8]
Read short, the material provisions of section 23 of the 1980 Act, on which the debate turned, are as follows:

"(1) An education authority shall have power to provide in or in connection with any public school ... additional support within the meaning of the Education (Additional Support for Learning) (Scotland) Act 2004 ... for any pupil belonging to the area of some other education authority ...

(1A) Without prejudice to any other provision of this Act [or any provision of the 2004 Act] ... an education authority shall have power to make arrangements with another education authority (in this subsection referred to as a 'provider authority') for the provision of ... additional support within the meaning of the 2004 Act ... for any pupils belonging to the area of the authority in a school ... of the provider authority.

(2) Where an education authority ... have provided school education ... for any pupil belonging to the area of some other authority [or have provided additional support within the meaning of the 2004 Act for any such pupil], the education authority ... may, if a claim therefore is made within the prescribed period, recover from that other authority such contributions in respect of such provision as may be agreed by the authorities concerned ... or, in default of such agreement, as may be determined by the (Scottish Ministers), who shall have regard to the estimated cost of such provision."


[9]
As already mentioned, section 4 of the 2004 Act places responsibility for making adequate and efficient provision for the additional support needs of the relevant children on the pursuers. The section provides that the responsible authority should also "make appropriate arrangements" for review of the additional support needs of and the adequacy of the additional support provided for those children. Expressions containing the word "arrangement(s)" appear throughout the provisions in question. In section 4 the 'arrangements' appear clearly to be administrative arrangements made by the authority in order to implement its duties to provide appropriate school education.


[10]
Section 23(1A) of the 1980 Act envisages "arrangements" of a different character from those put into effect to comply with the education authority's internal operations. These appear to be arrangements entered into between two education authorities, for placing pupils belonging to one area in schools managed by the provider authority. In the aftermath of the reorganisation of local government, and the resulting allocation of responsibility for school education to new local authorities, there was a clear risk that the new boundaries would separate children belonging to one area from the schools provided by the superseded regional authority for their education. Subsection (1C) provided that any pre-existing arrangements for the school education of such children should continue until changed. Subsection (1A) appears to have envisaged that similar new arrangements might be required between two or more of the new education authorities.


[11]
The power to enter into arrangements under subsection (1A) is wide, and clearly may result, for example, in general arrangements for the movement of all children living in specified parts of the area to which they belong across local authority boundaries for school education. Subsection (1B) allows the local authority for the area to which such children belong to take such arrangements into account when addressing the arrangements they themselves are obliged to put in place for the provision of school education within their own area. Section 23(2) makes provision for the allocation of the costs of such provision as between the authorities involved. In that way, the actual provision of additional support and the incidence of the cost of that provision correspond.


[12]
The defenders contend, in substance, that that exhausts the scope of section 23(2). The provision, on the defenders' argument, only comes into play when there are arrangements entered into between the authorities, consequent on a request by the authority to which a child belongs to a providing authority to place the child, and a child is placed in a school under the management of the providing authority in implement of those arrangements. The defenders contend that placement across local authority boundaries, in response to parental choice, does not fit into the scheme of section 23 as amended. The defenders make appropriate provision for additional needs within their area, and subsection (1B) does not entitle them to restrict the provision so made to allow for parental placing requests that cross boundaries. The defenders advance a separate argument based on the language of section 23(1). It is contended that the provision of additional support for the children in question is a matter of obligation, in terms of section 4(1) of the 2004 Act, and does not result from the exercise of the power to make such provision conferred by section 23(1). The provision in question therefore does not fall within section 23 at all. The circumstances fall entirely outwith the scope of the section.


[13]
The pursuers' response to the primary contention of the defenders is that there is no warrant on a sound interpretation of the 1980 Act as amended for restricting section 23(2) to circumstances falling within subsection (1A). There is no anomaly such as would be required to justify a departure from the clear words of the statute. In response to the second contention, it is argued that the defenders confuse two concepts, that of 'responsibility' for additional needs, with which the 2004 Act is concerned, and the issue of liability for the cost of provision with which section 23 is concerned. Section 29(3) of the 2004 Act applies exclusively for the purposes of that Act, and has no bearing on the interpretation of the 1980 Act as amended. The defenders' equiparation of responsibility under the 2004 Act and financial liability underlines the fallacy in their approach.


[14]
In my opinion the defenders' argument depends on the restriction of the scope of subsection (2) by implying language that does not appear in the provision, and offends against the basic rules of interpretation of statutory provisions. In effect it requires the subsection to be read as if it contained some such words of qualification as 'in accordance with an arrangement made under and in terms of subsection (1A) of this section'. Mr Sanderson referred to Crais on Legislation, ninth edition, paragraphs 17.1.4., 17.1.6 and 17.1.9, and to the observations in Stock v Frank Jones (Tipton) Ltd [1978] 1 WLR 231 of Viscount Dilhorne at 234 and of Lord Simon of Glaisdale at page 643 in support of his submission that it was inappropriate to gloss the plain words of section 23(2) as Mr Lindsay's argument required. In my opinion he was correct in so submitting.


[15]
Prior to the amendments introduced by the 2004 Act, the material parts of section 1(1) and 1(2) of the 1980 Act existed in substantially the form they now have with the exception of the express references to the provision of additional support services. On the face of the provisions, the amendments of sub-section (1) had as their objective the widening of the power of an education authority to provide for children belonging to other local authority areas by extending the power to include additional support within the 2004 Act, and the corresponding amendment of sub-section (2) made correlative changes to the financial provisions consequent on the provision of such additional support services. There is nothing to suggest that subsection (2) should be construed restrictively as applying only where there was in force an arrangement under sub-section (1A).


[16]
There may be a lack of structural consistency in the current provisions which is highlighted by the defenders' argument. The allocation of funds for special education, including additional support, on a population basis is consistent with the view that the authority receiving the allocation of central government funds has the obligation to secure provision for special needs and additional support needs for pupils belonging to their area. Section 1(1) of the 1980 Act is uncompromising in its terms: every education authority has a duty to secure that there is made for their area adequate and efficient provision of school education. Unless the local authority's obligation to provide for children belonging to its area is qualified in an appropriate way, there is a risk of over-provision arising from over-lapping supplies since there is a clear obligation on the education authority actually responsible for the provision of school education also to secure necessary additional support. Since section 23(1B) is restricted in its scope to situations covered by subsection (1A), there would appear to be little or no scope for implying a power to reflect an allowance for parental placing requests in the source authority's own arrangements, so restricting its section 1(1) duties. However, the introduction of subsections (1A), (1B) and (1C) left subsection 23(1) substantially unaffected, and there was no material alteration in the terms or scope of subsection (2).


[17]
As I understand the general structure of the provisions, there may therefore be an anomaly in respect that the defenders lack specific statutory authority to restrict the arrangements they put in hand in discharging their own educational responsibilities to reflect the assumption of responsibility by the pursuers. But one could not on any view describe the result as involving that "clear and gross balance of anomaly" identified by Lord Simon of Glaisdale as the starting point for a departure from the plain words of the statute. Further, if there is an anomaly, it can readily be addressed by an arrangement between the two authorities that takes account of their liabilities and falls within subsection (1A). In my opinion, so far as the primary argument of the defenders is concerned, the plain language of the statute entitles the pursuers to recover from the defenders appropriate sums reflecting the cost of additional support services provided by them to children belonging to the defenders' area notwithstanding that the children were placed in response to parental choice. If there is an anomaly, on a proper understanding of the funding arrangements for school education, which cannot be removed by arrangement between the authorities, that is a matter for the Scottish Parliament to resolve.


[18]
So far as the second contention of the defenders is concerned, I consider the approach of the pursuers to be correct. The 2004 Act places responsibility for the provision of additional support on the authority responsible for the school education of relevant children. That is agreed. The scope of the powers of an education authority to provide services for the benefit of those who do not belong to its area remains a matter regulated by the 1980 Act, as are the financial implications of the supply of such services. Without the amendments to section 23 expressly referring to the 2004 Act, issues might have arisen whether the power conferred extended to additional support, and issues could clearly have arisen whether the cost of any services so provide could have been recovered. It could no doubt have been argued that the provider authority had implied power to do what the 2004 Act obliged it to do. But the amendments to the 1980 Act put all such issues beyond question. So far as section 23 deals with these issues, it is, in my opinion, independent of the allocation of responsibility in the 2004 Act.


[19]
In the whole circumstances, I shall sustain the first plea-in-law for the pursuers, repel the pleas-in-law for the defenders and grant decree de plano as concluded for.

 


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_175.html