Blamire v South Cumbria Health Authority: CA 1993

When assessing damages for losses arising through professional negligence by a school, the court arrived at a lump sum representing the loss of the opportunity to gain employment at the end of a successful period of education. The onus of proving what the plaintiff would have earned had he not been injured and what he was now likely to earn rested on the plaintiff throughout.

Judges:

Garland J, Steyn LJ

Citations:

[1993] P1QR Q1

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedLiennard v Slough Borough Council QBD 15-Mar-2002
The claimant sought damages from the respondents who had been responsible for his education, for having failed to diagnose his learning difficulties. The school had recognised that he was underachieving, but diagnosis as to the reason was not easy. . .
CitedVernon v Bosley (3) CA 19-Dec-1996
The plaintiff claimed damages for acute stress after failing to rescue his two daughters in an accident caused by the defendant. After the accident, he became involved in family proceedings concerning custody of other children. Medical reports used . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Damages, Personal Injury, Education

Updated: 06 May 2022; Ref: scu.184030

In re B (Infants): 1962

Citations:

[1962] Ch 201

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRe A Ward of Court FD 4-May-2017
Ward has no extra privilege from Police Interview
The court considered the need to apply to court in respect of the care of a ward of the court when the Security services needed to investigate possible terrorist involvement of her and of her contacts. Application was made for a declaration as to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Children

Updated: 06 May 2022; Ref: scu.588162

In re D (A Minor): 1987

A dispute as to whether the education authority is exercising its powers properly raises matters of public law to be determined by reference not to the principles of family law but to the principles of substantive public law applied by the Administrative Court.
Woolf LJ said: ‘ . . there is no reason whatever why the court should refrain from exercising its jurisdiction when it is desirable for it to do so in order to assist a local education authority to perform its statutory duties. It is only if the effect of exercising its powers would be to create a conflict between the role of the court and the role of the education authority, or the risk of such conflict, that the court should decline to intervene.’

Judges:

Woolf LJ

Citations:

[1987] 1 WLR 1400

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRe A Ward of Court FD 4-May-2017
Ward has no extra privilege from Police Interview
The court considered the need to apply to court in respect of the care of a ward of the court when the Security services needed to investigate possible terrorist involvement of her and of her contacts. Application was made for a declaration as to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Children, Education

Updated: 06 May 2022; Ref: scu.588163

Regina v Secretary of State for Education and Employment and Others ex parte B, Regina v Same ex parte T, Regina v Same, ex parte C: QBD 8 Jun 2001

The Convention gave a right to a fair reputation which had to be upheld in the law, but the disciplinary procedures within a school independent appeal panel did not directly affect that reputation, and the procedures had been designed to respect the potential for damage, and to provide proper protection. It was not necessary in this case to define the extent of such a right, but the right to a ‘fair reputation’ was to be preferred to an interpretation protect a ‘good reputation.’

Citations:

Times 08-Jun-2001

Statutes:

European Convention on Human Rights Art 6.1

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Human Rights, Defamation, Education

Updated: 05 May 2022; Ref: scu.88604

Regina v Special Educational Needs Tribunal Ex Parte South Glamorgan County Council: CA 12 Dec 1995

The Court of Appeal entertained an appeal by a respondent against the judge’s refusal to discharge leave granted ex parte. Challenges to decisions of tribunal should be by way of appeal not Judicial Review.

Citations:

Times 12-Dec-1995, [1996] ELR 326

Statutes:

Education Act 1993 168

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedKemper Reinsurance Company v The Minister of Finance and others PC 5-May-1998
(Bermuda) An appeal Court did have jurisdiction to hear an appeal against the discharge of leave to apply for certiorari order, since this was outside scope of the rule in Lane v Esdaille.
Lord Hoffmann said: ‘Nevertheless, the limited nature . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Litigation Practice

Updated: 05 May 2022; Ref: scu.88105

Regina v Gloucestershire County Council and another, ex parte H: QBD 21 Jan 2000

The claimant had appealed to the Special Educational Needs Tribunal. The authority had called two witnesses, as allowed and the representative also gave evidence. The claimants said that this was a breach of the rule allowing only two witnesses.
Held: The rules were designed to try to achieve equality of arms between the parties. The restriction in the rules on the calling of more than two witnesses without the consent of the tribunal, did not operate to prevent the authority giving evidence through its representative advocate. This restored parity with a claimant.

Judges:

Elias J

Citations:

Times 21-Jan-2000

Statutes:

Special Educational Needs Tribunal Regulations 1995 (1995 No 3113) 29(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Education, Local Government

Updated: 05 May 2022; Ref: scu.88472

David Brown, Moderator of The Synod of Aberdeen, and Others v Mr George Chalmers, Principal of The Old College of Old Aberdeen, and Others: HL 14 Mar 1734

Charter – Foundation – Trust Uses – Election of Professor. – Held, that the appellants having deviated from the directions contained in the Charter of Foundation, as to the election of a Professor of Divinity in King’s College, Aberdeen, the election was void and null.

Citations:

[1734] UKHL 6 – Paton – 663

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Education

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.554565

Regina v HM Treasury, Ex Parte University of Cambridge: ECJ 3 Oct 2000

When considering public law governed the procedural requirements for procurement contracts, the court had to consider whether body was financed ‘for the most part’ by public funds. The words referred to the majority of income, and the calculations of what was publicly financed was to include those sums received from government otherwise than for consideration by way of services or supplies. For an educational institution this would include funds by way of grants, but would not include payments for research and similar.

Citations:

Times 17-Oct-2000, C-380/98, [2000] All ER (EC) 920, [2000] 1 WLR 2514, [2000] EUECJ C-380/98

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Council Directive 92/50 relating to the co-ordination of procedures for the award of public service contracts

Jurisdiction:

European

Cited by:

CitedHampshire County Council v Beer (T/A Hammer Trout Farm); Regina (Beer) v Hampshire Farmers’ Market Ltd CA 21-Jul-2003
The applicant had been refused a licence to operate within the farmer’s market. It sought judicial review of the rejection, but the respondent argued that it was a private company not susceptible to review.
Held: The decisions of the Farmers . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.162516

Bunt v Kent: 1914

Citations:

[1914] 1 KB 207

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedIsle of Wight Council v Platt SC 6-Apr-2017
Regular school attendance is following the rules
The respondent had taken his child out of school during term time to go on holiday. The child otherwise had an excellent attendance record. The Council having failed on appeal to the Administrative Court, it appealed saying that the word ‘regularly’ . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.581441

Osborne v Martin: 1927

The parent had withdrawn his child from school every week for piano lessons. The court heard an appeal by the prosecutor against dismissal of a charge of failing to secure the child’s attendance at school.
Held: The parent had to cause the child to attend school at all times when required to do so by the bye-laws.
Lord Hewart CJ said: ‘It was never intended that a child attending the school might be withdrawn for this or that hour to attend a lesson thought by the parent to be more useful or possibly in the long run more remunerative. The time-table and discipline of a school could be reduced to chaos if that were permissible.’
Salter J pointed out that parents were not obliged to take advantage of the free education provided by the state, but if they did, they had to take it as a whole.

Judges:

Lord Hewart CJ, Salter J

Citations:

(1927) 91 JP 197

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedIsle of Wight Council v Platt SC 6-Apr-2017
Regular school attendance is following the rules
The respondent had taken his child out of school during term time to go on holiday. The child otherwise had an excellent attendance record. The Council having failed on appeal to the Administrative Court, it appealed saying that the word ‘regularly’ . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.581442

Hares v Curtin: 1913

Citations:

[1913] 2 KB 328

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedIsle of Wight Council v Platt SC 6-Apr-2017
Regular school attendance is following the rules
The respondent had taken his child out of school during term time to go on holiday. The child otherwise had an excellent attendance record. The Council having failed on appeal to the Administrative Court, it appealed saying that the word ‘regularly’ . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.581440

Ex parte the School Board of London, In re Murphy: 1877

Cockburn CJ said ‘an occasional omission might suffice’ to constitute the offence under the bye-laws of not securing the regular attendance of a child at school, contrasting it with the graver sanction of a school attendance order which might result from an habitual failure.

Judges:

Cockburn CJ

Citations:

(1877) LR 2 QBD 397

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedIsle of Wight Council v Platt SC 6-Apr-2017
Regular school attendance is following the rules
The respondent had taken his child out of school during term time to go on holiday. The child otherwise had an excellent attendance record. The Council having failed on appeal to the Administrative Court, it appealed saying that the word ‘regularly’ . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.581439

Hinchley v Rankin: QBD 1961

A father had been rightly convicted when his son had been recorded as absent because he had not been at school when the register was closed, for ‘it must be regular attendance for the period prescribed by the person upon whom the duty to provide the education is laid’

Citations:

[1961] 1 WLR 421

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedIsle of Wight Council v Platt Admn 13-May-2016
The Council appealed by case stated against a decision by magistrates that a parent who took his child out of school to take a holiday hod not failed to ensure that the child attended regularly. The record was otherwise regular and satisfactory.
CitedIsle of Wight Council v Platt SC 6-Apr-2017
Regular school attendance is following the rules
The respondent had taken his child out of school during term time to go on holiday. The child otherwise had an excellent attendance record. The Council having failed on appeal to the Administrative Court, it appealed saying that the word ‘regularly’ . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.564909

Malnak v Yogi: 2 Feb 1979

United States Court of Appeals – Third Circuit. The court considered whether the programme of teaching transcendental meditation and its associated Science of Creative Intelligence was a religious activity and so was not to be allowed to be taught in state schools.
Held: It was such. Judge Adams, said that religion bore the same meaning in that context as in the free exercise of religion clause of the Constitution, noting that the law had moved towards a broader approach in recognition of the fact that adherence to the traditional definition would deny religious identification to the faiths adhered to by millions of Americans.
Adams J thought that it wa one thing to conclude ‘by analogy’ that a particular group of ideas is religious; it was quite another to explain what indicia are to be looked at in making such an analogy and justifying it. He identified three such indicia.
The first was that the belief system is concerned with the ultimate questions of human existence: the meaning of life and death, mankind’s role in the universe, the proper moral code of right and wrong. The second was that the belief system is comprehensive in the sense that it provides an all-embracing set of beliefs in answer to the ultimate questions. The third was that there were external signs that the belief system was of a group nature which could be analogised to accepted religions. Such signs might include formal services, ceremonial functions, the existence of clergy, structure and organisation, and attempts at propagation. These indicia were not to be thought of as a final test for a religion. Rather, they were features which recognised religions would typically exhibit.

Judges:

Aldisert, Adams and Hunter, Circuit Judges

Links:

Worldlii

Cited by:

CitedHodkin and Another, Regina (on The Application of) v Registrar-General of Births, Deaths and Marriages SC 11-Dec-2013
The appellants sought to be married in their regular church in London. The minister would be pleased to perform the ceremony, but church to which they belonged was part of the Church of Scientology, and had been refused registration under the 1855 . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Ecclesiastical, International, Education

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.540527

Regina v Secretary of State for Education ex parte Talmud Torah Machzikei Hadass: 12 Apr 1985

The school challenged a decision of the respondent Secretary of State to the effect that it was not providing suitable education with the threatened loss of its accreditation. The teaching was based upon a narrow bible-centred fundamentalism.
Held: Woolf J said: ‘education is ‘suitable’ if it primarily equips a child for life within the community of which he is a member, rather than the way of life in the country as a whole, as long as it does not foreclose the child’s options in later years to adopt some other form of life if he wishes to do so.’ However: ‘the Secretary of State is entitled to regard a particular form of education as being too narrow but the requirements he lays down must not go beyond that which is necessary in his opinion to make the education suitable and he should be sensitive to the traditions of the minority sect and only interfere with them so far as this is necessary to make the school suitable.’

Judges:

Woolf J

Citations:

Times 12-Apr-1985

Education

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.452405

Phillips v Brown: QBD 20 Jun 1980

DONALDSON LJ: Mr. Phillips appeals by case stated against his conviction and a fine of andpound;5 imposed by Mr Loy, the Leeds Stipendiary Magistrates, in September 1978 for failure to comply with a School Attendance Order. It is not the conviction or the fine which irks Mr. Phillips. His irritation, and perhaps even anger, is based upon his belief that the local education authority has exceeded its powers under the Education Act 1944.

The facts can be stated relatively briefly, but it is necessary to refer to the correspondence which is exhibited to the case.

Mr. Phillips and Mrs. Reah, who was also charged and convicted, are the parents of Oak, who was born on or about 24th June 1971. At the relevant time Oak was thus of compulsory school age.

In October 1976 the local education authority (to whom I shall hereafter refer to as the ‘L.E.A.’), became aware that Oak was not attending any school. They wrote to the parents who replied by letter dated 11th October 1976 as follows: ‘Oak Reah receives efficient, full time education (from Mrs. R.H. Reah and Mr. J.D. Phillips) which is suitable to his age, aptitude, and ability: he receives this education otherwise than by regular attendance at school: he has already received this education since (and inclusive of) his 5th birthday: such education falls in accordance with current Educational Law.’

The authority then served a School Attendance Notice on the parents, which they ignored. However, when the matter came before the Leeds Magistrates Court on 6th April 1977, no evidence was offered and the complaint was dismissed.

This was the end of the first round in the contest. The second round, with which we are primarily concerned, opened less than two months later. Oak was still not attending any school and on 14th June 1977 the L.E.A. wrote to the parents as follows:
‘As your son, Oak, is now of compulsory school age, the Education Authority is required to satisfy itself that he is being educated in accordance with his age, ability and aptitude.

‘I must therefore request that you submit to the Education Authority details of the educational programme which Oak is now following, together with any relevant information which may assist the Authority in satisfying itself that the education being provided is appropriate in the circumstances.’
A copy of this letter has been forwarded to your Solicitor . . ‘ Somewhat surprisingly the reply came from solicitors, Victor D. Zermansky and Co., and was in the following terms: ‘We can do no more than reiterate what we have said previously. Your powers under the Education Act 1944 only come into operation if ‘it appears . . that the parents of any child . . are failing to perform their duty.’

‘In this case there has been nothing to give any such appearance. Our clients are conscious of their duty expressed in Section 36 of the Education Act 1944 to educate their child in accordance with that Section and confirm that they are so educating him.’
There followed a lull in hostilities and then on 24th January 1978 the L.E.A. wrote to the parents: ‘It would appear that you, being the parents of the above-named child have failed to cause your child to receive full-time education, suitable to his age, ability and aptitude, either by regular attendance at school or otherwise.

‘I therefore serve this notice upon you that you are required under section 37 of the 1944 Education Act to satisfy my authority by the 8th February 1978, that your child, Oak Reah, is receiving efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability and aptitude either by regular attendance at school or otherwise.’

Reply came there none and on 22nd February 1978 the L.E.A. again wrote to the parents and said that the authority noted their failure to satisfy the authority about the child’s education and continued: ‘The Authority therefore propose to serve upon you, under the provisions of section 37(2) of the Education Act, 1944, a School Attendance Order which will require you to cause the child to become a registered pupil at a particular school to be named in the Order. If you fail to comply with the Order, you will be guilty of an offence, and it will be the duty of the Authority to take proceedings against you.’
They later went on to deal with the rights of the parents to express view about the school concerned.

The School Attendance Order itself was dated 3rd April 1978 and required the parents to cause Oak to forthwith become a registered pupil of a named school in the Leeds area. The parents did not comply with this order.

At the hearing before Mr. Loy, the Senior Education Welfare Officer of the L.E.A. gave evidence that Oak was not a registered pupil at a Leeds school and that no information had been forthcoming from the parents regarding the child’s curriculum, timetable, subjects to be studied and whether these were appropriate to his age, ability and aptitude. She said that, from these facts, it appeared to the L.E.A. that the parents were failing to perform their duty under section 36 of the Education Act, 1944, and that accordingly, a section 37(1) notice had been served upon them. This was the letter dated 24th January 1978. The parents gave no evidence concerning Oak’s education, but took the point that before an L.E.A. could issue a notice under section 37(1) of the Act, something positive must have come to its notice as a result of which it could and did appear to the L.E.A. that there was a failure by the parents in their duty under section 36 of the Act. The parents contended that there was no evidence of any such matter. It followed that it could not appear to the L.E.A. that the parents were failings in their duty, the section 37(1) notice was invalid and so was the School Attendance Order based upon that notice.

The learned Magistrate’s conclusions were set out in paragraph 6 of the case as follows: ‘I was of the opinion: (a) That at the time the letter dated 14th June, 1977 was written the child was not attending school and the Local Authority had no information regarding his teaching. (b) That the letter written by the Local Education Authority dated 14th June 1977 was a perfectly proper request for information and one that they were entitled to make. (c) That the words ‘if it appears to a Local Education Authority’ in Section 37(1) of the Education Act 1944 make the respondents the judges on the question of whether or not there has been a failure on the part of the parents to perform their duties under the Education Act, and that the court cannot enquire into its judgment. (d) That in any event the failure to send the child to any school and to give any, or any satisfactory, information about the child’s schooling when asked by the respondents was sufficient evidence of ‘failure’ to make it their duty to serve notice under Section 37(1) of the Education Act 1944 asking for details of the child’s education. (e) Being satisfied that the respondents had carried out the statutory procedure and requirements of Section 37 of the Act, that the School Attendance Order had been served properly upon the appellants, that the appellants had failed to comply with the requirements of such order and no evidence being adduced before me by, or on behalf of either appellant to prove that the child was receiving efficient full-time education at school or otherwise, I found the summons proved against both defendants and fined them each the sum of andpound;5.00.’

Two questions are referred to this Court, namely the interpretation of the words ‘if it appears’ in section 37(1) of the Education Act 1944, and whether the respondent’s judgment was a matter about which the Court could enquire and if so whether there was sufficient evidence before the Court, or any evidence upon which it could be established that it did appear to the Local Education Authority.

Mr. Phillips has argued this case with conspicuous skill. In general terms he has two complaints. The first is that an L.E.A. exceeds its powers if it asks parents to prove that they are discharging their duty to ensure that their children are properly educated, unless it has some reason to doubt that this is the case. The second is that the learned Magistrate has held that the L.E.A. is the sole judge of whether it appears to it that parents have failed to discharge this duty, whereas Mr. Phillips contends that the Courts have at least a supervisory jurisdiction.

The starting point for Mr. Phillips’s argument is that the Education Act 1944 has placed the duty of securing that children are properly educated fairly and squarely upon the parents. This I accept. The duty is imposed by and expressed in section 36 of the Act, which provides that: ‘It shall be the duty of the parent of every child of compulsory school age to cause him to receive efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability, and aptitude, either by regular attendance at school or otherwise.’

Mr. Phillips says that no similar general duty is imposed upon L.E.A.S. This also I accept. However, it is not correct to conclude, and Mr. Phillips did not suggest, that L.E.A.s were not concerned with whether parents discharge this duty. In the circumstance prescribed by section 37(1) of the Education Act 1944, it is their duty ‘to serve upon the parent a notice requiring him, within such time as may be specified in the notice not being less than fourteen days from the service thereof, to satisfy the authority that the child is receiving efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability, and aptitude either by regular attendance at school or otherwise’. The prescribed circumstance is that ‘it appears to a local education authority that the parent of any child of compulsory school age in their area is failing to perform the duty imposed on him by the last foregoing section’.
Mr. Phillips submits that unless and until something comes to the notice of a local authority which causes it to conclude that prima facie particular parents are in breach of their duty under section 36 of the Education Act 1944 it is neither bound nor entitled to make inquiries of those parents. He claims than an L.E.A. is in the same position as a policeman and says that policeman do not go from house to house inquiring whether a burglary has been committed. Similarly L.E.A.s should not oppress parents by inquiring whether there has been a breach of section 36. In Mr. Phillips’s submission the L.E.A. in this case is seeking to invert section 37(1) and to treat it as if it authorised and required the making of inquiries of parents before and in order that the L.E.A. may consider whether it appears that there has been a breach of section 36.

Whilst I acknowledge the force of this argument, it seems to me that where an authority has a duty to take action in particular circumstances, it also has a duty to be alert in order to detect the possibility that those circumstances exist.

It needs to know what children of school age live in its area in order that it may perform its statutory duty to provide sufficient schools (section 8 of the Education Act 1944) and to ascertain what children require special educational treatment (section 34). It knows which of these children attend its own schools. It follows that an L.E.A. will or should know that certain children in its area are in a different category — namely being educated at other schools, being educated otherwise than by attendance at school or not being educated properly or even at all. Unless the L.E.A. knows into which sub-category a particular child falls, it is put on inquiry.

What should it do? I do not accept that it should do nothing. This would rightly be criticised as an attempt to because like an ostrich — to put its head in the sand in order that it should not learn of anything which might place upon it the burden of discharging its duty to consider making and, in appropriate cases, to make School Attendance Orders. The most obvious step to take is to ask the parents for information. Of course such a request is not the same as a notice under section 37(1) of the Education Act 1944 and the parents will be under no duty to comply. However it would be sensible for them to do so. If parents give no information or adopt the course adopted by Mr. Phillips of merely stating that they are discharging their duty without giving any details of how they are doing so, the L.E.A. will have to consider and decide whether it ‘appears’ to it that the parents are in breach of section 36. In this context there is no reason why it should necessarily accept the parents’ view — opinions differ on what has to be done in discharge of the duty — and if the parents refuse to answer, it could very easily conclude that prima facie the parents were in breath of their duty.

If the L.E.A., having considered the matter, is in a state of mind which can be described by saying that it appears to them that the parents are in breach of their obligation under section 36 of the Education Act 1944 it has no alternative but to serve notice on the parents under section 37(1) requiring the parents to satisfy them within a specified period, not being less than fourteen days, that the child is receiving efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability and aptitude either by regular attendance at school or otherwise.

What happens next is set out very clearly in section 37(2) in these terms: ‘If, after such a notice has been served upon a parent by a local education authority, the parent fails to satisfy the authority in accordance with the requirements of the notice that the child to whom the notice relates is receiving efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability, and aptitude, then, if in the opinion of the authority it is expedient that he should attend school, the authority shall serve upon the parent an order in the prescribed form (hereinafter referred to as a ‘school attendance order’) requiring him to cause the child to become a registered pupil at a school named in the order’. ‘Expedient’ in this context means ‘advantageous, fit, proper or suitable to the circumstances of the case’ (see the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary).

If the parents fail to comply with the School Attendance Order, they commit an offence unless they prove that they are causing the child to receive efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability and aptitude otherwise than at school. This is a matter which falls to be proved to the satisfaction of the magistrates to whom complaint is made that an offence has been committed.

Life would have been much easier for all concerned, including Mr. Phillips, if he had seen fit to place evidence before the Magistrate designed to prove this point, but he did not do so. Instead he sought to argue that the School Attendance Order itself should not have been made because it did not in fact appear to the L.E.A. that he and Mrs. Reah were it breach of their section 36 duty and accordingly the L.E.A. had not been entitled to issue the order. Alternatively, he would like to have contended that the L.E.A. could not have formed the opinion that it was expedient that Oak should attend school. The learned Magistrate held that it was not open to him to consider such an argument. Here I think that he erred.

In The Secretary of State for Employment v. ASLEF (No. 2) [1972] 2 Q B 455, [1972] 2 All ER 949 the Court of Appeal was concerned with a statute which authorised the making of an application to the Court ‘if it appears to the Secretary of State . .’ The Court held that this did not put the Minister’s decision beyond challenge. It was open to a respondent to the application to seek to show that the Minister had not acted bona fide or that he must have misdirected himself in law. Similarly, in the case of proceedings brought for non-compliance with a School Attendance Order, in my judgment it is open to the defendant parent to place evidence before the Court designed to show that it could not have appeared to a reasonable L.E.A., correctly directing itself as to what matters were relevant, that the parent was in breach of his section 36 duty or, as the case may be, that it was expedient that the child should attend school and that the making of the School Attendance Order was therefore unauthorised and a nullity. But Courts should not readily accede to such an argument in the absence of evidence that in fact the parents are discharging their section 36 duty and, if this is once proved, the defendant would in any event be entitled to be acquitted and the Court may make an order under section 37(6) of the Education Act 1944 that the School Attendance Order shall cease to be in force. In the circumstances parents would be well advised to concentrate upon the defence which is available to them under section 37(5) rather than to take on the very much heavier burden of seeking to attack the School Attendance Order in limine.

On the facts of this case the learned Magistrate should have applied his mind to the question of whether it could properly have appeared to the L.E.A. that the parents were in breach of their section 36 duty and whether it could properly have been of opinion that it was expedient that Oak should attend school and I answer the questions set out in the case stated accordingly. The conviction will be set aside and the matter remitted to the learned Magistrate for further consideration should the L.E.A. wish him to do so. However, if we were correctly informed by Mr. Phillips that Oak is no longer in his care and custody, it may be that the L.E.A. will think that no further action is called for in relation to this particular School Attendance Order.

Mr. Phillips also contended that he was in effect entitled to plead autrefois acquit on the basis of his acquittal of the complaint based upon the earlier School Attendance Order. Here he is wrong. The offence alleged in the second proceedings was a different offence, namely non-compliance with the second order. All that can be said is that if, which may or may not have been the case, no evidence was offered in support of the first complaint because the L.E.A. was satisfied that the parents were discharging their section 36 duty at that time, the Magistrate, in the absence of some explanation, might wonder why the positions was different at the time of the issue of the second School Attendance Order.

Finally, I should mention that Mr. Phillips expressed concern lest, if the Magistrate’s view of the law was right, it would be open to an L.E.A. to persecute a parent by issuing a series of School Attendance Orders at short intervals, making complaints that the orders were not complied with and on each occasion requiring the parent to prove that he was discharging his section 36 duty. There is no evidence whatsoever that this has happened in this case or in any other case. But Mr. Phillips need have no fear. Apart altogether from the power of the Magistrates Court to order that a particular School Attendance Order shall cease to be in force pursuant to section 37(6), the Divisional Court, in an appropriate case, has the necessary power and would have no hesitation in restraining such conduct by an L.E.A. by means of judicial review.
WOOLF J: I agree.
:
Conviction set aside, case remitted to the Magistrates.

Judges:

Donaldson LJ, Woolf J

Citations:

Unreported, 20 June 1980, 424/78

Statutes:

Education Act 1944 36 37(2)

Citing:

CitedSecretary of State for Employment v ASLEF (No 2) CA 1972
Railway employees had been instructed by their unions to ‘work to rule’ and more specifically to ban overtime, Sunday and rest day working. ‘Working to rule’ meant giving an unreasonably literal construction to certain requirements of the railway . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.452396

Camkin v Bishop: CA 1941

The Court heard an appeal by the school from a finding of liability where boys from the school were allowed to help a farmer by working in a field, unsupervised, and one of them was struck so badly in the eye by a clod of earth thrown amongst them during horseplay that his eye was lost. The claim against the headmaster that he was under a duty to arrange for the supervision of the boys whilst they were doing the work
Held: The appeal succeeded.
Scott LJ said: ‘The defendant, as headmaster, owed no duty to the boys to refuse to let them go to help the farmer in his need of labour without an under-master, or an under-nurse for that matter, in charge. The incident might have happened just as easily on a natural history expedition, or on any other country outing, on which the boys were regularly allowed to go without supervision. Indeed, it might have happened even if a master had gone for he might have been temporarily absent and the two boys who quarrelled might have done so during his absence.’
Goddard LJ said: ‘The question we have to determine is whether there was any breach of duty by the headmaster, his duty being that of an ordinary careful parent. I ask myself whether any ordinary parent would think for a moment that he was exposing his boy to risk in allowing him to go to a field with others to weed beet or lift potatoes, occupations far safer than bicycling about on the roads in these days.
I confess that I have some difficulty in appreciating the view taken by the judge. He found that the defendant failed in his duty by reason of a lack of supervision. If this means anything, it must mean that it is the duty of a headmaster to see that boys are always under supervision, not only while at work, but also at play, or when they are free, because at any time they may get into mischief. I should like to hear the views of the boys themselves on this proposition. Would any reasonable parent forbid his boy of 14 to go out with his school-fellows because they might possibly get up to mischief, as all boys will at times? Here at this school on free afternoons the boys are allowed out, their bounds being some 8 miles, and they are left to themselves, provided they are back by a certain hour. No complaint is made of this freedom. If there is nothing wrong in that, how can it be wrong to let a boy go with others to such a harmless occupation as doing some farm work of the most innocuous character? As Clauson LJ put it during the argument, if the headmaster is not guilty of any breach of duty in allowing the boys to go off for walks and so on by themselves, how can he become liable because during the walk they go and work in a field and meet with some accident while thus engaged? If he is liable in this case, so will he be if some boy does a mischievous act in the playing field which injures another while a master or prefect does not happen to be present, or while out for a walk climbs a tree and breaks his legs . .
Nor was there any duty on the master to ask the farmer to supervise the boys for their safety. How could it occur to anyone that there was any danger in the occupation? If every master is to take precautions to see that there is never ragging or horseplay among his pupils, his school would indeed be too awful a place to contemplate. Of course there was no supervision on this occasion. Nor was there any duty to provide it, having regard to the innocuous nature of the occupation. This case bears no anology to those in which boys have been allowed to handle dangerous chemicals or to be in proximity to dangerous machinery. There was no evidence, in my opinion, of any breach of duty whatever.
Boys of 14 and 16 at a public school are not to be treated as if they were infants at creches, and no headmaster is obliged to arrange for constant and perpetual watching out of school hours. For one boy to throw something at another is an ordinary event of school life, but the fact that there was in this particular case a disastrous and wholly unexpected result is no reason for throwing responsibility on the master.’

Judges:

Goddard, Scott LJJ

Citations:

[1941] 2 All ER 713

Cited by:

CitedWoodland v The Swimming Teachers’ Association and Others QBD 17-Oct-2011
The court was asked as to the vicarious or other liability of a school where a pupil suffered injury at a swimming lesson with a non-employee during school time, and in particular whether it had a non-delegable duty to ensure the welfare of children . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Negligence, Personal Injury, Education

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.445628

Hall v Hall: 31 Jul 1749

The guardian is a proper judge at what school to place his ward, and the court wll not indulge the infant in being put to a private tutor, or going to another sohool, and if he refuses to go will take a proper course to compel him.

Citations:

[1749] EngR 133, (1749) 3 Atk 721, (1749) 26 ER 1213 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Children, Education

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.378532

Rex v Davidson: 1792

Quaere. whether the Spiritual Court can punish a man for keeping a school without a licence from the Ordinary.

Citations:

[1792] EngR 1939, (1792) 1 Ld Raym 603, (1792) 91 ER 1303

Links:

Commonlii

Education

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.360151

Regina v Secretary of State for Education, ex parte G: 1995

The court was asked as to the need to give reasons in making a decision on a direction in a case of special educational needs.

Citations:

[1995] ELR 58

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHasan, Regina (on the Application of) v Secretary of State for Trade and Industry CA 25-Nov-2008
The claimant appealed refusal of leave to bring judicial review of decisions to sell arms to the Israeli state. He lived in Palestine and said that Israel had destroyed his farm, and that licences broke the criteria under the 2002 Act. He said that . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Judicial Review, Education

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.278282

De Hoop: ECJ 1998

(year?) The pursuit of education is an activity within the scope of the Treaty, with the result that Article 18 rights of residence apply when a citizen of the European Union is seeking to engage in it.

Citations:

C-224/98

Jurisdiction:

European

Cited by:

CitedAli v Secretary of State for the Home Department CA 3-May-2006
The applicants sought asylum. Their child had a right of residence as a European citizen.
Held: The applicants could not rely upon their child’s right of residence to establish one for themselves. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.242538

Dahlab v Switzerland: ECHR 15 Feb 2001

(Commission) A primary school teacher had been prohibited from wearing an Islamic headscarf at her school.
Held: The complaint was inadmissible. The court acknowledged the margin of appreciation afforded to the national authorities when determining whether this measure was ‘necessary in a democratic society’, and explained its role: ‘The Court’s task is to determine whether the measures taken at national level were justified in principle – that is, whether the reasons adduced to justify them appear ‘relevant and sufficient’ and are proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued . . In order to rule on this latter point, the Court must weigh the requirements of the protection of the rights and liberties of others against the conduct of which the applicant stood accused. In exercising the supervisory jurisdiction, the court must look at the impugned judicial decisions against the background of the case as a whole.’ The need to protect the principle of denominational neutrality in Swiss schools was an important factor which militated successfully against the applicant’s case.
‘freedom of thought, conscience and religion, as enshrined by Article 9 of the Convention, represents one of the foundations of a ‘democratic society’ within the meaning of the Convention. In its religious dimension, it is one of the most vital elements that go to make up the identity of believers and their conception of life, but it is also a precious asset for atheists, agnostics, sceptics and the unconcerned. The pluralism indissociable from a democratic society, which has been dearly won over the centuries, depends on it. While religious freedom is primarily a matter of individual conscience, it also implies freedom to manifest one’s religion. Bearing witness in words and deeds is bound up with the existence of religious convictions.’

Citations:

42393/98, ECHR 2001-V

Links:

HUDOC

Statutes:

European Convention on Human Rights 9

Cited by:

CitedSB, Regina (on the Application of) v Denbigh High School CA 2-Mar-2005
The applicant, a Muslim girl sought to be allowed to wear the gilbab to school. The school policy which had been approved by Muslim clerics prohibited this, saying the shalwar kameeze and headscarf were sufficient. The school said she was making a . .
CitedEweida And Others v The United Kingdom ECHR 15-Jan-2013
Eweida_ukECHR2013
The named claimant had been employed by British Airways. She was a committed Christian and wished to wear a small crucifix on a chain around her neck. This breached the then dress code and she was dismissed. Her appeals had failed. Other claimants . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Human Rights

Updated: 30 April 2022; Ref: scu.223117

Regina (Hounslow London Borough Council) v School Appeal Panel: CA 2002

There was a hearing before the panel relating to admission of children to particular schools.
Held: The proceedings had got ‘bogged down with questions of legality and the possibility of judicial review’. Applications for judicial review in the course of an appeal to an appeal panel were to be discouraged.

Judges:

May LJ

Citations:

[2002] EWCA Civ 990, [2002] 1 WLR 3147

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina on the Application of Mahfouz v The Professional Conduct Committee of the General Medical Council CA 5-Mar-2004
The doctor requested members of the disciplinary tribunal to recuse themselves when, after the first day of the hearing they saw prejudicial material in newspapers which material was not in evidence. They had further declined to allow an adjournment . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Judicial Review

Updated: 29 April 2022; Ref: scu.194653

S v Special Educational Needs Tribunal and the City of Westminster: QBD 1996

The court ruled that under RSC Order 55 Rule 8, the tribunal could not appear in the High Court because they were not a party to a statutory appeal from one of their decisions, but added: ‘But the court has ample power to permit the tribunal to appear and be heard in appropriate matters. Where, as in the present appeal, issues of general principle as to jurisdiction and procedure are raised, and the tribunal has relevant material to put before the court, it is obviously appropriate for the tribunal to appear and be heard.’ If the tribunal did appear for this limited purpose, it would not be making itself a party to the lis or be concerned to contest the appeal. It would simply be making its expertise and knowledge available to the court, and the very fact of its appearance would not make it any more susceptible to an adverse costs order than if it had not appeared.

Judges:

Latham J

Citations:

[1996] ELR 102

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina on the Application of Davies (No 2) v HM Deputy Coroner for Birmingham CA 27-Feb-2004
The claimant appealed against a costs order. She had previously appealed against an order of the High Court on her application for judicial review of the inquest held by the respondent.
Held: The coroner, and others in a similar position . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 29 April 2022; Ref: scu.194538

Regina (on the application of Dorling) v Sheffield City Council and the Governing Body of Woodthorpe Primary School (1): 2002

Teachers otherwise falling within the description in Clause 6.1 of the Burgundy Book, but who have not been given the notice of termination there referred to have no contractual right to insist upon service of such a notice upon them.

Citations:

[2002] ELR 367

Cited by:

CitedVerner, Sheppard, Ridley v Derby City Council, Norfolk County Council, St Thomas More Roman Catholic High School QBD 14-Nov-2003
The question was whether, when a teacher has applied for and accepted ill-health retirement benefit, usually a lump sum and a pension, on the ground of permanent incapacity, there exists a public law duty on his employer to dismiss the employee.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Employment

Updated: 29 April 2022; Ref: scu.187968

Regina (on the application of Dorling) v Sheffield City Council (2): 2002

The teacher had taken early retirement on sickness grounds, but said that he was not obliged to resign and the employer had said that the employment had automatically ended.

Judges:

Goldring J

Citations:

[2002] 486

Cited by:

CitedVerner, Sheppard, Ridley v Derby City Council, Norfolk County Council, St Thomas More Roman Catholic High School QBD 14-Nov-2003
The question was whether, when a teacher has applied for and accepted ill-health retirement benefit, usually a lump sum and a pension, on the ground of permanent incapacity, there exists a public law duty on his employer to dismiss the employee.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Employment

Updated: 29 April 2022; Ref: scu.187969

Regina v Inner London Education Authority, Ex parte Ali: 1990

The broad duty imposed on a local education authority by section 8 ‘to secure that there shall be available for their area sufficient schools . . for providing primary education’ is a ‘target duty’.

Judges:

Woolf LJ

Citations:

[1990] 2 Admin LR 822

Statutes:

Education Act 1944 8

Cited by:

CitedRegina v London Borough of Barnet ex parte G; Regina v London Borough of Lambeth ex parte W; Regina v London Borough of Lambeth ex parte A HL 23-Oct-2003
The applicants sought to oblige the local authority, in compliance with its duties under the 1989 Act, to provide a home for children, and where necessary an accompanying adult.
Held: There were four hurdles for the applicants to cross. They . .
CitedRegina v Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea (ex parte Kujtim) CA 31-Mar-1999
A person had been assessed by the local authority under section 47 as being a person in urgent need of care and attention which was not otherwise available to him, so that he satisfied the criteria laid down in section 21(1)(a). He claimed that, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 29 April 2022; Ref: scu.187190

Marshall v Graham: 1907

Parents were prosecuted for failing to send their children to school on Ascension Day. They argued that Ascension Day was a day ‘exclusively set aside for religious observance’ by the Church of England.
Held: A Church which is established is not thereby made a department of the State. The process of establishment means that the State has accepted the Church as the religious body in its opinion truly teaching the Christian faith, and given to it a certain legal position, and to its decrees, if rendered under certain legal conditions, certain civil sanctions. The Church seeks to serve the purposes of God, not those of the government carried on by the modern equivalents of Caesar and his proconsuls. This is true even though the Church of England has certain important links with the state. Those links, which do not include any funding of the Church by the government, give the Church a unique position but not that of a department of state.

Judges:

Phillimore J

Citations:

[1907] 2 KB 112

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedParochial Church Council of the Parish of Aston Cantlow and Wilmcote with Billesley, Warwickshire v Wallbank and another HL 26-Jun-2003
Parish Councils are Hybrid Public Authorities
The owners of glebe land were called upon as lay rectors to contribute to the cost of repairs to the local church. They argued that the claim was unlawful by section 6 of the 1998 Act as an act by a public authority incompatible with a Convention . .
CitedIsle of Wight Council v Platt SC 6-Apr-2017
Regular school attendance is following the rules
The respondent had taken his child out of school during term time to go on holiday. The child otherwise had an excellent attendance record. The Council having failed on appeal to the Administrative Court, it appealed saying that the word ‘regularly’ . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Ecclesiastical, Education

Updated: 29 April 2022; Ref: scu.184045

Regina v Devon County Council, ex parte George: HL 1989

A child lived 2.8 miles from school. The journey was rural and unlit. Whe he was 8, the education authority withdrew free transport saying it was practicable for a parent to walk with him.
Held: The decision whether to offer support was that of the local Authority exercising its administrative discretion in the circumstancs of each case. There was material before them to support their conclusion, and it could not be set aside. Lord Keith: ‘It is section 55(1) under which a local education authority provides free transport to and from school for pupils who reside outside the statutory walking distance. In the case of such pupils a local education authority would be acting unreasonably if it decided that free transport was unnecessary for the purpose of providing their attendance at school, because if it were not provided the parents of these pupils would be under no legal obligation to secure their attendance’.

Judges:

Lord Keith

Citations:

[1989] 1 AC 574, [1988] 3 WLR 1386

Statutes:

Education Act 1944 39(2)(c)(5) 55(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

ApprovedSurrey County Council v Ministry of Education 1953
The council had a scheme whereby for those who lived more than the walking distance from a school, only transport from their homes to the walking distance would be free. The scheme failed because transport has to be to and from school. A local . .

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Vale of Glamorgan County Council ex parte J CA 27-Apr-2001
The applicant sought assistance in getting to school by way of free transport. The education authority refused. He had moved school after racially motivated bullying. He was due to move to secondary school and sought to be sent to another racially . .
CitedJones, Regina (on the Application of) v Ceredigion County Council Admn 22-Jun-2004
The parents lawfully chose to send their child to a Welsh language school. The authority refused to provide free transport on the basis that a nearer school was available even though it was not a Welsh language school.
Held: Provided the . .
CitedRegina v Islington London Borough Council, ex parte G A (a Child) Admn 20-Oct-2000
The child was severely disabled and was to be schooled as a weekday boarder 75 miles from home. He sought assistance with the travelling expenses when his condition worsened and the arrangements became more burdensome.
Held: It was not open to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Administrative

Updated: 29 April 2022; Ref: scu.183060

Crump v Gilmore: 1969

Justices had found as facts, on a prosecution for non attendance of their child, that the parents had not known about relevant absences until after the event, and that there had been no neglect on their part. The justices acquitted the parents but on an appeal by the prosecutor it was held that the offence is an absolute offence and it is unnecessary to show knowledge on the part of the parents of the child’s absence or any neglect on their part. Such matters merely go to mitigation. The Divisional Court remitted the case to the justices with a direction to convict. The Divisional Court expressed a degree of sympathy with the parents.
Lord Parker of Waddington CJ said: ‘The real and only question here is whether the 12 occasions out of a possible 114 when this little girl was not attending school and had no reasonable excuse for not attending, amount to a failure to attend regularly.’, but went on to hold that they did and that the magistrates must have been of the same opinion.

Judges:

Lord Parker of Waddington CJ, Cantley J

Citations:

(1969) 68 LGR 56

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Not followedIsle of Wight Council v Platt SC 6-Apr-2017
Regular school attendance is following the rules
The respondent had taken his child out of school during term time to go on holiday. The child otherwise had an excellent attendance record. The Council having failed on appeal to the Administrative Court, it appealed saying that the word ‘regularly’ . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Crime

Updated: 28 April 2022; Ref: scu.179638

Regina (DR) (AM) v St George’s Catholic School and Others, Regina (A) v Kingsmead School Governors and Another: CA 13 Dec 2002

The applicants appealed the refusal of judicial review of the refusals of their appeals against exclusion from school.
Held: The Act provided a full appeal procedure from the initial decision of the school’s head teacher, first to the governors, and then to an independent appeal panel. They argued that Rowlands established that a right to a judicial review of an earlier decision survived a fairly conducted appeal against that decision.
Held: The Rowlands case applied only where a possibility of an appeal remained. A closer case was McMahon. The court must look at the statutory scheme as a whole. Where an early defect was capable of being cured by the later appeals, it must be rare (perhaps as in Calvin) for any right of review to survive.

Judges:

Lord Justice Keene, Lord Justice Kay, Lord Justice Simon Brown

Citations:

Times 19-Dec-2002

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Hereford Magistrates’ Court (ex parte Rowlands, Ingram); Regina v Harrow Youth Court (ex parte Prussia) Admn 10-Feb-1997
The power to adjourn a trial is conferred upon Justices by statute. The divisional court will intervene where defendants have been deprived of a fair opportunity to present their case. The decision whether to grant an adjournment is not a mechanical . .
Appealed fromRegina (A) v Kingsmead School Governors and Another QBD 13-Mar-2002
A permanently excluded pupil sought judicial review of the decision to exclude him. The school resisted saying that since there remained an avenue of appeal, a judicial review was inappropriate. He could still ask for a review of the decision of the . .
CitedLloyd v McMahon HL 12-Mar-1987
The district auditor had issued a certificate under the 1982 Act surcharging the appellant councillors in the sum of 106,103, pounds being the amount of a loss incurred or deficiency caused, as the auditor found, by their wilful misconduct.
CitedCalvin v Carr PC 15-Jan-1979
(New South Wales) It was argued that a decision of the stewards of the Australian Jockey Club was void for having been made in breach of the rules of natural justice.
Held: The stewards were entitled to use the evidence of their eyes and their . .

Cited by:

Appealed ToRegina (A) v Kingsmead School Governors and Another QBD 13-Mar-2002
A permanently excluded pupil sought judicial review of the decision to exclude him. The school resisted saying that since there remained an avenue of appeal, a judicial review was inappropriate. He could still ask for a review of the decision of the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Judicial Review

Updated: 28 April 2022; Ref: scu.178446

Regina (A) v Kingsmead School Governors and Another: QBD 13 Mar 2002

A permanently excluded pupil sought judicial review of the decision to exclude him. The school resisted saying that since there remained an avenue of appeal, a judicial review was inappropriate. He could still ask for a review of the decision of the independent appeal panel.
Held: Such a decision was of great importance to the child, and it was necessary that the procedure adopted should be fair. Those sitting on the discipline committee served a statutory function, and must fulfil their duties with care and independence. The availability of judicial review would serve to emphasise that duty. There would be no flood of cases because of the tests in Rowlands. Here, however, the defects in the consideration by the committee had been cured by the procedure adopted by the independent appeal panel, and the review was refused.

Judges:

Justice Mitchell

Citations:

Times 16-May-2002

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Hereford Magistrates’ Court (ex parte Rowlands, Ingram); Regina v Harrow Youth Court (ex parte Prussia) Admn 10-Feb-1997
The power to adjourn a trial is conferred upon Justices by statute. The divisional court will intervene where defendants have been deprived of a fair opportunity to present their case. The decision whether to grant an adjournment is not a mechanical . .
Appealed ToRegina (DR) (AM) v St George’s Catholic School and Others, Regina (A) v Kingsmead School Governors and Another CA 13-Dec-2002
The applicants appealed the refusal of judicial review of the refusals of their appeals against exclusion from school.
Held: The Act provided a full appeal procedure from the initial decision of the school’s head teacher, first to the . .

Cited by:

Appealed fromRegina (DR) (AM) v St George’s Catholic School and Others, Regina (A) v Kingsmead School Governors and Another CA 13-Dec-2002
The applicants appealed the refusal of judicial review of the refusals of their appeals against exclusion from school.
Held: The Act provided a full appeal procedure from the initial decision of the school’s head teacher, first to the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Judicial Review

Updated: 28 April 2022; Ref: scu.171182

Regina v Rotheram Metropolitan Borough Council, Ex Parte Clark and Others: QBD 20 Nov 1997

It was not unlawful for a Council to use catchment areas for the allocation of school places but they must first ascertain the parents’ wishes. A system for choosing secondary schools by default of the parent expressing preference did not give a proper choice satisfying Act.

Citations:

Times 20-Nov-1997, Times 04-Dec-1997

Statutes:

Education Act 1996 4(1)(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Education

Updated: 28 April 2022; Ref: scu.87648

P v National Association of School Masters/Union of Women Teachers: QBD 3 May 2001

Action taken by teachers to refuse to teach a disruptive pupil was in the nature of industrial action. Encouragement to take such action by the teachers’ union made the union responsible for such action. The breach related to a refusal to comply with the employer’s requests as to the manner and circumstances of performance of the employment contract obligations. An accidental failure to ballot each and every union member of staff, was not sufficient to remove the union’s exemption of liability where the mistake if corrected would clearly have made no difference to the result of the ballot.

Citations:

Times 03-May-2001

Statutes:

Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 235A 232B

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromP v National Association of School Masters/Union of Women Teachers CA 25-May-2001
Industrial action taken by teachers refusing to teach a disruptive pupil was related to their terms and conditions of employment. Encouragement to take such action by the teachers’ union made the union responsible for such action. The breach related . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Education

Updated: 28 April 2022; Ref: scu.84522

S v Special Educational Needs Tribunal and Another: QBD 28 Sep 1995

A child has no right of appeal in his own name against a Special Educational Needs Tribunal finding. He had not been a party to the original hearing. An appeal should be brought by the parents.

Citations:

Times 18-Dec-1995, Times 05-Oct-1995, Independent 28-Sep-1995

Statutes:

Tribunal and Inquiries Act 1992 11(1), Education Act 1993

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Education

Updated: 28 April 2022; Ref: scu.88962

S v Essex County Council and another: QBD 10 May 2000

The Special Educational Needs Tribunal had jurisdiction to hear an appeal by a parent against the decision of an education authority to cease to hold an assessment that a child had special educational needs once the child reached the age of sixteen, and education was not compulsory. The definition of a child with such needs was different from the general definition under the Act, and defined such a child as being under nineteen, not, as for other purposes, sixteen.

Citations:

Times 10-May-2000

Statutes:

Education Act 1996 Sch7 27 para 11, 579(1), 312(5)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Education

Updated: 28 April 2022; Ref: scu.88943

Metcalfe v Cox: HL 27 Jul 1896

An Ordinance of The University Commissioners under section 16 of the University (Scotland) Act 1889 incorporating the University College of Dundee with the University of St Andrews, is not subject to revocation under the provisions of sub-sec. 3 of section 15 or of sub-sec. 2 of section 21 of that statute.
Judgment of Second Division affirmed, but on different grounds.

Judges:

Lord Chancellor (Halsbury), Lords Watson, Herschell, Morris and Shand

Citations:

[1896] UKHL 6, 34 SLR 6

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Education

Updated: 27 April 2022; Ref: scu.634022

Nairn and Others v St Andrews and Edinburgh Universities’ University Courts and Others: HL 10 Dec 1908

On a consideration of the statutes dealing with the franchise for universities, that women graduates of a Scottish university are not entitled to vote at the election of a Member of Parliament for the university, and, not being voters, are not entitled to receive voting papers from the registrar of the university.

Judges:

Lord Chancellor (Loreburn), Lord Ashbourne, Lord Robertson, and Lord Collins

Citations:

[1908] UKHL 132, 46 SLR 132

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Elections, Education, Discrimination

Updated: 26 April 2022; Ref: scu.621531

KE and Others, Regina (on The Application of) v Bristol City Council: Admn 3 Aug 2018

‘The Claimants seek permission to challenge the decision of the Defendant made on 20 February 2018 to set a schools’ budget which included a reduction in expenditure of approximately pounds 5 million in the high needs block budget (the sums set aside for provision for those with special educational needs ; ‘SEN’). ‘

Judges:

Cotter QC HHJ

Citations:

[2018] EWHC 2103 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Education

Updated: 26 April 2022; Ref: scu.621159

Warwickshire County Council v Matalia: ChD 18 Jul 2017

Application for injunctive relief against the defendant for an allegedly threatened breach of confidence in disclosure of forthcoming exam questions.

Judges:

Simon Barker QC HHJ

Citations:

[2018] EWHC 1340 (Ch)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Intellectual Property, Education

Updated: 25 April 2022; Ref: scu.620091

Learn Direct Ltd v OFSTED: Admn 4 Aug 2017

Judicial review challenge to the defendant’s report of an inspection undertaken pursuant to section 126(1) of the 2006 Act, of the claimant’s provision of further education and skills training.

Citations:

[2017] EWHC 3730 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Education and Inspections Act 2006 126(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Education

Updated: 25 April 2022; Ref: scu.619952

Board of Education v Rice: HL 6 Apr 1911

A local education authority refused to pay salaries to teachers in a non-provided school at the same rate as it paid the teachers in provided schools. The managers of the non-provided school complained, and the Board of Education directed an inquiry, the result of which was a report that the local education authority had failed to maintain the school and keep it efficient. The ‘questions’ required by s. 7, sub-s. 3, to be determined by the Board of Education were: ‘(1.) Whether the local education authority have in fixing and paying the salaries of the teachers fulfilled their duty under s. 7, sub-s. 1, of the Act ; (2.) whether the salaries inserted in the teachers’ present agreements are reasonable in amount and ought to be paid by the authority, or what salaries the authority ought to pay.’ The Board purported to give its decision in a document which failed to deal with the matters in issue.
Held: Inasmuch as the Board had not determined the questions, the decision must be quashed by certiorari, and a mandamus must issue commanding the Board to determine the questions. The right of a local education authority to differentiate between schools in regard to the scale of salaries or the standard of efficiency, in the absence of special circumstances appropriate to the differentiation, discussed.
The Board’s decision was quashed and an order of mandamus issued.
Lord Loreburn LC said: ‘The board is in the nature of the arbitral tribunal, and a court of law has no jurisdiction to hear appeals from the determination either upon law or upon fact. But if the court is satisfied either that the board have not acted judicially in the way I have described, or have not determined the question which they are required by the Act to determine, then there is a remedy by mandamus and certiorari.’
‘In such cases the Board of Education will have to ascertain the law and also to ascertain the facts. I need not add that in doing either they must act in good faith and fairly listen to both sides, for that is a duty lying upon every one who decides anything . .
They can obtain information in any way they think best, always giving a fair opportunity to those who are parties in the controversy for correcting or contradicting any relevant statement prejudicial to their view.’
It should act judicially.

Judges:

Lord Loreburn LC

Citations:

[1911] AC 179, [1911-13] All ER 36, 104 LT 689, 80 LJKB 796

Links:

Commonlii

Statutes:

Education Act 1902 7

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHenshall v General Medical Council and others CA 13-Dec-2005
The claimant had lodged a complaint against a medical practitioner. The preliminary proceedings committee had accepted evidence from the doctor, but had not given the complainant opportunity to see it and comment upon it.
Held: the rules must . .
CitedRegina v Camden LBC ex parte Paddock 1992
Sedley LJ articulated the principle adumbrated by Lord Loreburn LC in Board of Education v Rice: ‘ . . that a decision-making body should not see relevant material without giving those affected a chance to comment on it and, if they wish, to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Natural Justice, Education

Updated: 25 April 2022; Ref: scu.237840

In Re K (A Child) (Secure Accommodation Order: Right to Liberty): CA 29 Nov 2000

An order providing that a child should stay in secure accommodation, was an order which restricted the child’s liberty. A justification for such a restriction had to be brought within the exceptions listed in article 5.
Held: Detention for educational supervision was permitted, and such supervision was not restricted to education in the sense of tuition in a school setting, but could be extended to include education in the more general sense of the exercise of parental rights by an authority in whose care the child was. Such an order did not therefore conflict with the child’s article 5 right.
The order was in conformity with the Convention as it came within the wide language of Article 5(1)(d) as being detention of a minor by lawful order for the purpose of educational supervision.
Judge LJ said: ‘There was some interesting discussion about the way in which parents restrict the movements of their children from time to time by, for example, putting young children into bed when they would rather be up, or ‘grounding’ teenagers when they would prefer to be partying with their friends, or sending children to boarding schools, entrusting the schools with authority to restrict their movements. All this reflects the normal working of family life in which parents are responsible for bringing up, teaching, enlightening and disciplining their children as necessary and appropriate, and into which the law and local authorities should only intervene when the parents’ behaviour can fairly be stigmatised as cruel or abusive. . . If the restrictions necessarily imposed on K for his own safety and that of others were imposed on an ordinary boy of 15, who did not pose the problems requiring a secure accommodation order, in my view, there would be a strong case that his parents were ill-treating him. As it is the local authority have been obliged, as a ‘last resort’, to seek authorisation to impose restrictions on the boy’s liberty which would otherwise be unacceptable, whether imposed by his parents or anyone else. That, as it seems to me, is the point of the unequivocal statutory language. The purpose is to restrict liberty, and there would be no point in such a restriction or the need for it to be authorised by the court, if it were not anticipated that much more was involved than ordinary parental control . . In short, although normal parental control over the movements of a child may be exercised by the local authority over a child in its care, the implementation of a secure accommodation order does not represent normal parental control . .
Therefore the restriction in Article 5(1)(d) is specifically directed to the situation of those minors who are beyond such normal control. Prosecution and punishment do not invariably present the most efficacious solution to the behavioural problems of children and young persons, and their long term development, whether viewed entirely as a matter of their own self-interest or the general benefit of the community as a whole. There is much to be gained if the underlying causes of the misbehaviour of a child or young person can be examined and addressed. Hence the need to allow restrictions on the liberty of minors with such problems, which goes beyond normal parental control and allows for the educational supervision.’
Butler-Sloss P said: ‘A child can be the subject of a secure accommodation order in circumstances in which the local authority does not share parental responsibility with the parents. It is a benign jurisdiction to protect the child as well as others: see In re W (Secure Accommodation Order: Attendance at Court) [1994] 2 FLR 1092, 1096 per Ewbank J, but it is none the less restrictive. If a parent exercised those powers by detaining a child in similar restrictive fashion and was challenged to justify such detonation, for my part I doubt whether the general rights and responsibilities of a parent would cover such an exercise of parental authority. It might be permissible for a few days but not for nearly two years.’

Judges:

Dame Elizabeth Butler Sloss P, Thorpe LJ

Citations:

Times 29-Nov-2000, Gazette 15-Dec-2000, [2001] 1 FLR 526, [2001] Fam 377, [2001] 2 WLR 1141

Statutes:

European Convention on Human Rights A5, Children Act 1989 25, Children Secure Accomodation Regulations 1991 (1991 No 1505)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedM (A Minor), Re Judicial Review QBNI 30-Jan-2015
The judicial review application is concerned with the lawfulness of the arrangements which have been made by the Trust in respect of M’s placement at X Care Home. These arrangements have arisen from the particular circumstances and background of M. . .
CitedRe D (A Child) CA 31-Oct-2017
The court considered an order effectively depriving child D of his liberty. . .
CitedRK v BCC and Others CA 20-Dec-2011
A young woman aged 17 suffered from autism, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and severe learning difficulties, as well as epilepsy. She had been looked after at home for nearly 16 years but was then accommodated by the local authority under . .
CitedRe D (A Child ; Deprivation of Liberty) FD 31-Mar-2015
The child, now 15 suffered several conditions which led to his challenging behaviour. He had been voluntarily admitted for assessment, and awaited placement in the community, but the Health trust now sought directions confirming the lawfulness of . .
CitedBirmingham City Council v D CoP 21-Jan-2016
D was a young adult with several disorders presenting challenging behaviour. The Hospital sought arrangements allowing control over him for his care and education. . .
CitedIn re D (A Child) SC 26-Sep-2019
D, a young adult had a mild learning disability and other more serious conditions. He was taken into a hospital providing mental health services. The external door was locked, and a declaration was sought to permit this deprivation of his liberty, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Children, Human Rights

Updated: 18 April 2022; Ref: scu.81968

Surrey County Council v Ministry of Education: 1953

The council had a scheme whereby for those who lived more than the walking distance from a school, only transport from their homes to the walking distance would be free. The scheme failed because transport has to be to and from school. A local education authority is bound to provide free transport to school wherever a parent would have a defence to a charge of not ensuring the child’s attendance. ‘The case put forward on behalf of the minister is that, if section 55 stood alone, and apart from anything else in the Act, that is a possible construction and a possible view; but it is argued that if that view is adopted it will result in a scheme which will not prevent the parent from taking advantage of the provisions of s.39(2)(c) if proceedings are taken against him for truancy; and it is said that a scheme with such results is obviously not a suitable arrangement within the words of s.55. Mr. Williams agreed that if the scheme would leave it open to the parent of a child residing outside the three-mile radius to take advantage of that excuse, it would not be considered a proper scheme within the meaning of section 55’.

Judges:

Lynskey J

Citations:

[1953] 1 WLR 516

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

ApprovedRegina v Devon County Council, ex parte George HL 1989
A child lived 2.8 miles from school. The journey was rural and unlit. Whe he was 8, the education authority withdrew free transport saying it was practicable for a parent to walk with him.
Held: The decision whether to offer support was that . .
CitedJones, Regina (on the Application of) v Ceredigion County Council Admn 22-Jun-2004
The parents lawfully chose to send their child to a Welsh language school. The authority refused to provide free transport on the basis that a nearer school was available even though it was not a Welsh language school.
Held: Provided the . .
CitedRegina v Islington London Borough Council, ex parte G A (a Child) Admn 20-Oct-2000
The child was severely disabled and was to be schooled as a weekday boarder 75 miles from home. He sought assistance with the travelling expenses when his condition worsened and the arrangements became more burdensome.
Held: It was not open to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 18 April 2022; Ref: scu.199245

Butt v Secretary of State for The Home Department: Admn 26 Jul 2017

Challenge to proposed scheme for management of extremism in Universities.
Ouseley J said: ‘I have referred to some only to explore, without questioning, whether they contained ‘evidence’ on a particular topic. I have read the contributions of the persons named by Mr Bowen to a debate in the House of Lords but consideration of them in this context seems to me to invite impermissible approbation, qualification, disagreement or comment on others whose contributions had been lauded by successive speakers. Any further use of the Parliamentary materials seems to me to fall foul of Article 9, and to create the risk that its use is unfair because it cannot be rebutted or criticised where it is against a party’s case. It may be that I have gone too far anyway, but its absence would not alter my decision.’

Judges:

Ouseley J

Citations:

[2017] EWHC 1930 (Admin), [2017] ACD 109, [2017] ELR 537, [2017] HRLR 12, [2017] 4 WLR 154, [2017] WLR(D) 543

Links:

Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Human Rights Act 1998

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedKimathi and Others v Foreign and Commonwealth Office QBD 20-Dec-2017
Parliamentary privilege The claimants sought to have admitted as evidence extracts from Hansard in support of their claim for damages arising from historic claims.
Held: The court set out the authorities and made orders as to each element. . .
Appeal FromButt, Regina (on The Application of) v The Secretary of State for The Home Department CA 8-Mar-2019
The claimant challenged rejection of his objection to the respondent’s ‘Prevent’ duty guidance which had prevented his speaking at universities. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Human Rights

Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.591226

London County Council v Maher: 1929

The list of permissible reasons for non attendance at school listed in the 1870 Act is non-exclusive.

Citations:

[1929] 2 KB 97

Statutes:

Elementary Education Act 1870

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedIsle of Wight Council v Platt SC 6-Apr-2017
Regular school attendance is following the rules
The respondent had taken his child out of school during term time to go on holiday. The child otherwise had an excellent attendance record. The Council having failed on appeal to the Administrative Court, it appealed saying that the word ‘regularly’ . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.581438

Regina (Southern, a Minor) v Oxfordshire County Council: QBD 23 Jan 2004

The claimant sought to oblige the local authoritry to support his exceptionally bright child by recognising her needs and paying for her education at a private high school.
Held: The authority had no power to make such an award under s18, but did have a discretion to make an award under the Regulations. It could not be said that the respondent authority applied a policy too rigidly, since there had not been enough shown to establish that any policy was in place.

Judges:

Andrew Nicol QC

Citations:

Times 03-Mar-2004

Statutes:

Education Act 1996 18, Scholarship and Other Benefits Regulations 1977 (1977 No 1443) 4

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Education, Local Government

Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.194273

Regina (Watford Grammar School for Girls and Another) v Adjudicator for Schools: QBD 8 Oct 2003

Two schools sought to object to the selection policy of a third, which, they said would lead to that school creaming of the most academically gifted children.
Held: The court asked whether the adjudicator was entitled to look at all effects of an admission policy, including the effect of sibling links. The Act was not clear. He should not have looked at selection in isolation, but should have considered other ways of achieving the objectives.

Judges:

Collins J

Citations:

Times 27-Oct-2003

Statutes:

School Standards and Framework Act 1998 89

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Education

Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.187199

Regina v Rotherham Metropolitan Borough Council ex parte Clark, Dakin and Others: CA 19 Nov 1997

Citations:

[1997] EWCA Civ 2768, (1998) ELR 152

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina (K) v Newham London Borough Council and Another QBD 19-Feb-2002
Parents applied for secondary school places, indicating three single sex schools. This was from a clear religious conviction. The local authority allocated another place, without giving reasons, but did provide a pamphlet setting out its policy, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.143167

Monk v Hereford and Worcester County Council and Special Educational Needs Tribunal: Admn 26 Jan 1998

Gilliatt Appeal against decision of LEA not to prepare a statement and SENT which upheld the LEA’s refusal. The LEA contended that the child’s needs were met within the school with input from the SENCO, and Educational Psychologist. The parents submitted evidence from a speech and language therapist and an educational psychologist that the child was suffering from a semantic pragmatic language disorder and his needs could not be met within the school. The tribunal’s reasons were not clear as to the extent to which they did or did not accept this evidence, or their reasons for not accepting some of it. The case was remitted to the SENT for rehearing.

Judges:

Mr Justice Kay

Citations:

[1998] EWHC Admin 64

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Education

Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.138185

White and Another v Ealing London Borough Council and Another etc: CA 1 Aug 1997

There is no duty to name a school in a special needs statement, but the education authority must pay for the school where one is named.

Citations:

Times 01-Aug-1997

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoRichardson v Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council Special Educational Needs Tribunal; White v London Borough of Ealing Special Needs Tribunal and Hereford and Worcester County Court v Karen Lane CA 12-Feb-1998
The need to specify the special educational needs for a child did not necessarily mean that any particular school must be nominated, nor even that the need must be met through a school. Whilst the definition of ‘special educational provision’ in . .
Appeal fromRobert Duhaney White v London Borough of Ealing and Special Educational Needs Tribunal Admn 8-Jul-1997
Gilliatt The court heard three separate appeals from decisions of SENTs where parents wished their autistic children to attend the Boston Higashi School, USA which involved a residential placement. Fees to attend . .

Cited by:

See AlsoRichardson v Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council Special Educational Needs Tribunal; White v London Borough of Ealing Special Needs Tribunal and Hereford and Worcester County Court v Karen Lane CA 12-Feb-1998
The need to specify the special educational needs for a child did not necessarily mean that any particular school must be nominated, nor even that the need must be met through a school. Whilst the definition of ‘special educational provision’ in . .
Appealed toRobert Duhaney White v London Borough of Ealing and Special Educational Needs Tribunal Admn 8-Jul-1997
Gilliatt The court heard three separate appeals from decisions of SENTs where parents wished their autistic children to attend the Boston Higashi School, USA which involved a residential placement. Fees to attend . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.90454

W v Gloucestershire County Council and Another: QBD 19 Jul 2001

The father had applied for an assessment of his son’s special educational needs. He was found to be in need of support, but the authority named a school other than the one the father nominated. He appealed, claiming that the authority had failed to allow for circumstances outside those which immediately gave rise to the special need. The child had completed one term of his GCSE course, and the authority had failed to enquire and consider the possible effect of moving schools with a different curriculum. The father’s appeal was allowed. The tribunal should at least have adjourned to allow an enquiry as to the change of curriculum, and a failure to do so was an error of law.

Citations:

Gazette 19-Jul-2001, Times 20-Aug-2001

Statutes:

Education Act 1996 324

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Education

Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.90210

Regina v Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain, Ex Parte Mahmood and Another: QBD 17 Oct 2000

It was proper for a professional body granting rights to practice by means of examination tests, to limit the number of attempts at such examinations. Although such a limit did operate as a restraint of trade, that restraint was justified in order to protect the public and maintain professional integrity. The maximum was not required to be imposed by statute, but it could not be said to be irrational.

Citations:

Times 17-Oct-2000

Statutes:

Pharmacy Act 1954 16

Health Professions, Education

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.87545

Regina v East Sussex County Council Ex Parte Tandy: HL 21 May 1998

A Local Authority may not take its own financial constraints into account when assessing what was an appropriate education for a child in special needs case. It was wrong to try to turn a statutory duty into a power or a discretion. Ordinarily cost, where relevant, will be a matter to be taken into account by a local authority when considering its response to an assessed need rather than at the stage of assessment. It is desirable to keep these two stages separate. Neither the cost of providing accommodation nor the availability of resources have any bearing on what is or is not reasonably practicable as to permit this would downgrade the duty into a discretionary power.

Judges:

Lord Browne-Wilkinson

Citations:

Times 21-May-1998, Gazette 01-Jul-1998, Gazette 17-Jun-1998, [1998] AC 714

Statutes:

Education Act 1996 19(1)

Citing:

Appeal fromRegina v East Sussex County Council ex parte Tandy CA 31-Jul-1997
A local education authority may properly take into account the financial resources available to it when setting the norm of standards of service and then apply that norm. . .

Cited by:

CitedRegina v London Borough of Barnet ex parte G; Regina v London Borough of Lambeth ex parte W; Regina v London Borough of Lambeth ex parte A HL 23-Oct-2003
The applicants sought to oblige the local authority, in compliance with its duties under the 1989 Act, to provide a home for children, and where necessary an accompanying adult.
Held: There were four hurdles for the applicants to cross. They . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Local Government

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.86613

Regina v Bradford Metropolitan Borough Council Ex parte Sikander Ali: QBD 21 Oct 1993

A Local Authority may use traditional school catchment areas as a basis for admissions policies for initial allocation of schools, without this being racially discriminatory. They are a valid basis of choice, despite supervening population shifts.

Citations:

Ind Summary 22-Nov-1993, Gazette 03-Nov-1993, Times 21-Oct-1993

Discrimination, Education, Local Government

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.86183

Regina v Birmingham City Council, Ex Parte Youngson (A Child): QBD 9 Jan 2001

The authority’s policy not to make an educational grant unless the parents demonstrated hardship, that financial assistance was unavailable elsewhere, and that no alternative to the educational avenue chosen was available, or that other exceptional circumstances applied, was lawful. In this case the student’s need for dancing tuition could be satisfied in a day school with supporting special tuition. The authority had a discretion about such payments, and in this case the discretion had not been exercised ultra vires. Parental preferences had to be balanced against unreasonable burdens on public expenditure.

Citations:

Times 09-Jan-2001

Statutes:

Education Act 1996 518, Scolarship and Other Benefits Regulations 1997 No 1443

Education, Benefits

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.86139

Regina v Richmond Upon Thames London Borough Council, Ex Parte C (A Child): QBD 26 Apr 2000

An appeal to the local education authority against a decision not to grant a place at the parents choice of primary school, because it would require additional resources to provide for larger class sizes, is by way of review, and not by way of a rehearing. Accordingly the appeal committee should base its decision on the information available on the original decision together with any information of which they should have been aware.

Citations:

Times 26-Apr-2000

Statutes:

Education Act 1966 (Infant Class Sizes) (Modification) Regulations 1998 (1998 no 1948)

Citing:

Appealed toRegina v Richmond Upon Thames London Borough Council and Another, Ex Parte JC (A Child) CA 10-Aug-2000
The restrictions placed upon the maximum class sizes in turn restricted the rights of parents to appeal against refusal of a school place. It is for the parent to satisfy the original admissions committee and the appeal committee of the need for a . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromRegina v Richmond Upon Thames London Borough Council and Another, Ex Parte JC (A Child) CA 10-Aug-2000
The restrictions placed upon the maximum class sizes in turn restricted the rights of parents to appeal against refusal of a school place. It is for the parent to satisfy the original admissions committee and the appeal committee of the need for a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Litigation Practice, Legal Aid

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.85462

Regina v Secretary of State for Education and Employment, Ex Parte National Union of Teachers: QBD 8 Aug 2000

The general power of the Secretary of State to promote education did not extend to provision for the terms and conditions of teachers’ employment or establishing systems for the payment of higher rates of pay to teachers meeting performance standards. Reference to Parliament was necessary. The Secretary of State had not followed consultation procedures set down for the making of significant alterations to teachers contracts.

Citations:

Times 08-Aug-2000

Statutes:

School Teachers’ Pay and Conditions Act 1991

Education, Employment, Administrative

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.85477

Regina v Muntham House School, Ex Parte R: QBD 26 Jan 2000

It was not possible to judicially review the admission policy of a private school. It was a private body, even though it received the bulk of its income from local authorities, and it was otherwise subject to strict statutory control.

Citations:

Times 26-Jan-2000

Judicial Review, Education

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.85418

Regina v Governors of Dunraven School, Ex Parte B (A Child): QBD 24 Sep 1999

The school investigated allegations of theft and expelled the child. The independent appela panel rejected the appeal. The child’s parents sought a judicial review because of the way the investigation had been handled.
Held: A school enquiring into allegations of dishonesty by a pupil and which lead to the child’s expulsion, had a duty to conduct such an enquiry with a high standard of fairness. The child should have been interviewed alone. Nevertheless, it was inappropriate to judge such actions by reference to the principles or rules which would apply to a police investigation under PACE. The allegations had been investigated and the conclusions drawn could be justified on the facts ascertained.

Judges:

Nigel Pleming QC

Citations:

Times 10-Nov-1999

Citing:

Appealed toRegina v Governors of Dunraven School Ex Parte B CA 21-Dec-1999
Three pupils were excluded after a finding of theft. On appeal the second child to be heard was not told what had been said by the first to be heard. The first was allowed back into the school, but not the applicant.
Held: The Act showed that . .
From LeaveRegina v Governors of Dunraven School, Ex Parte B (A Child) Admn 24-May-1999
Application for leave to bring judicial review. . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromRegina v Governors of Dunraven School Ex Parte B CA 21-Dec-1999
Three pupils were excluded after a finding of theft. On appeal the second child to be heard was not told what had been said by the first to be heard. The first was allowed back into the school, but not the applicant.
Held: The Act showed that . .
Full HearingRegina v Governors of Dunraven School, Ex Parte B (A Child) Admn 24-May-1999
Application for leave to bring judicial review. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Natural Justice, Education

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.85287

Regina v Clark, Ex Parte Jd and Others: QBD 26 May 2000

Where an adjudicator who had been appointed under the Act proposed to issue a critical report, it was incumbent upon him to make sure he had available to him all the relevant facts. It was not open to him to leave it to the school and local authority to guess what matters might be relevant and produce information accordingly. He had criticised the policy of admitting 15% of pupils with special musical ability, on the basis that this discriminated against poorer pupils, but failed to discover that the authority offered certain help.

Citations:

Times 26-May-2000

Statutes:

Schools Standards and Framework Act 1998 90

Education

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.85186

P v Swansea City and County and Another: QBD 1 Dec 2000

A pupil referral unit could exceptionally be named as an appropriate school for a child with special educational needs under part IV. There is no simple duty on the tribunal or the authority to specify a special needs school. Such a case might arise where the child had only a short time left in school and other solutions would be more disruptive. If the tribunal decided to not to follow the terms of a circular it, it should say why. That did not require it to state its reasons beyond a summary form.

Citations:

Times 01-Dec-2000

Education

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.84529

North of England Zoological Society v Commissioners of Customs and Excise: QBD 20 Oct 1999

For VAT purposes, as opposed to other forms of taxation, educational purposes meant education within a more formal class or lesson type structure. A zoo, open to the public but employing education officers to assist with education of visitors was not exempt from charging VAT upon its entrance fees. The education offered did not come within this definition.

Citations:

Times 02-Nov-1999, Gazette 20-Oct-1999

Statutes:

Value Added Tax Act 1994 31 Sch 9, Group 6, 1(a)

VAT, Education, VAT

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.84344

King v East Ayrshire Council: IHCS 3 Nov 1997

An application for the closure of a school need not be based upon an assessment of school’s pupil capacity as at time of assessment. The court may exercise its discretion to refuse judicial review where that is appropriate, having regard to the public interest in public authorities and third parties not being kept in suspense as to the legal validity of a decision for any longer than is absolutely necessary in fairness to the person affected by it.

Citations:

Times 03-Nov-1997, 1998 SC 182

Statutes:

Education (Publication and Consultation (Scotland)) Regulations 1985 (1985 No 1558) am

Citing:

AppliedO’Reilly v Mackman HL 1982
Remission of Sentence is a Privilege not a Right
The plaintiffs had begun their action, to challenge their loss of remission as prisoners, by means of a writ, rather than by an action for judicial review, and so had sidestepped the requirement for the action to be brought within strict time . .

Cited by:

CitedSomerville v Scottish Ministers HL 24-Oct-2007
The claimants complained of their segregation while in prison. Several preliminary questions were to be decided: whether damages might be payable for breach of a Convention Right; wheher the act of a prison governor was the act of the executive; . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Scotland, Judicial Review

Updated: 09 April 2022; Ref: scu.82784

Hackney London Borough Council v Silyadin: QBD 17 Sep 1998

The Special Educational Needs Tribunal should not order a Local Authority to provide services which went beyond the special needs of the child. No need in rejecting Authority’s proposal to accept parent’s alternate choice.

Citations:

Times 17-Sep-1998

Citing:

DistinguishedRichardson v Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council Special Educational Needs Tribunal; White v London Borough of Ealing Special Needs Tribunal and Hereford and Worcester County Court v Karen Lane CA 12-Feb-1998
The need to specify the special educational needs for a child did not necessarily mean that any particular school must be nominated, nor even that the need must be met through a school. Whilst the definition of ‘special educational provision’ in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.81122

Hardie v Edinburgh City Council: OHCS 16 Feb 2000

The question of whether a supply teacher had properly been removed form the Local Authority’s list, was a matter with public law issues, and was capable of being subject to a judicial review. The authority was fulfilling a statutory duty to provide adequate education, even there was no express duty to maintain such a list. In this case also there was no continuing private contractual relationship between the applicant and the authority.

Citations:

Times 16-Feb-2000

Judicial Review, Employment, Education

Updated: 08 April 2022; Ref: scu.81229