Thom, Esq, Advocate, Claiming The Office of Civilian In The King’ College of Old Aberdeen; and similar: HL 22 Feb 1763

College – Election of Professor – Casting Vote. –
(1) Held, in the election of a Rector, andc., in King’s College, Aberdeen, that the principal of the College was not entitled to a double or casting vote. (2) Held also in the election of a civilian of the College, that the respondent, Dalrymple, had the greatest number of votes, and that his election had been duly and regularly made. Affirmed on appeal.

(1763) 6 Paton 737, [1763] UKHL 6 – Paton – 737
Bailii
Scotland

Education

Updated: 11 January 2022; Ref: scu.560593

St Ursula’s Catholic Infant School (Education (School)): ICO 18 Nov 2015

ICO The complainant has requested from St Ursula’s Catholic Infant School (the ‘School’) a copy of its employee handbook and a list including the details of all the clubs which operate within the School. The School provided a copy of its employee handbook and some information relating to details of the School’s clubs. However, following a further investigation of the case, the Commissioner considers that the School failed to issue an adequate response to part (b) and (g) of the request. By failing to issue an adequate response, the School breached sections 1 and 10 of the FOIA. The Commissioner requires the School issue a response to part (b) of the request to the complainant under the FOIA. This response should take into account the clarification the complainant provided as outlined in paragraph 25. Issue a fresh response to part (g) of the request to the complaint under FOIA. This response should provide a list of each club and the location each club uses for example: Karate – school hall; or if the school considers this information to be exempt the school should provide the complainant with a response stating which exemption applies and why. The School must take these steps within 35 calendar days of the date of this decision notice. Failure to comply may result in the Commissioner making written certification of this fact to the High Court pursuant to section 54 of the Act and may be dealt with as a contempt of court.
FOI 1: Upheld FOI 10: Upheld

[2015] UKICO FS50593883
Bailii
England and Wales

Information, Education

Updated: 08 January 2022; Ref: scu.556731

Nyoni, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills and Others: Admn 4 Dec 2015

Sir Brian Keith
[2015] EWHC 3533 (Admin)
Bailii
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedTigere, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills SC 29-Jul-2015
After increasing university fees, the student loan system was part funded by the government. They introduced limits to the availability of such loans, and a student must have been lawfully ordinarily resident in the UK for three years before the day . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Benefits

Updated: 07 January 2022; Ref: scu.556474

HM Revenue and Customs v Brockenhurst College: CA 2 Dec 2015

Application of the exemption from VAT in Article 132(1)(i) of the Principal VAT Directive (2006/112/EC) (formerly Article 13A(1)(i) of the Sixth VAT Directive (77/388/EEC)) to certain supplies made by the respondent College namely: ‘the provision of children’s or young people’s education, school or university education, vocational training or retraining, including the supply of services and of goods closely related thereto, by bodies governed by public law having such as their aim or by other organisations recognised by the Member State concerned as having similar objects.’

Sir Terence Etherton Ch, Patten, Christopher Clarke LJJ
[2015] EWCA Civ 1196
Bailii
England and Wales

VAT, Education

Updated: 07 January 2022; Ref: scu.556456

Essex County Council v Secretary of State for Education: CA 14 Oct 2015

Renewed application for permission to apply for judicial review of a decision of the Secretary of State in which he refused retrospectively to permit carry forward of finance with one exception, the finance being required to initiate or to complete various projects for preschool or school buildings and facilities.

Sir Stanley Burnton
[2015] EWCA Civ 1237
Bailii
England and Wales

Administrative, Education

Updated: 07 January 2022; Ref: scu.556262

‘S’ v Cardiff City Council M Tudur, Chair of Special Educational Needs Tribunal: Admn 13 Oct 1998

Gilliatt Parents of a child with a dyslexic condition appealed against the LEA’s refusal to provide a statement. The LEA contended that the child’s needs could be met within resources normally available to mainstream schools. There was an issue between the parents and the LEA as to the severity of the child’s learning disability, the parents believing it to be serious. The tribunal failed to make a finding on this issue but rejected the parents’ case.
Held: The parents could not understand from the reasons given why their appeal had failed. The tribunal had not properly dealt with the key issue: whether a statement was needed.

Mr Justice Tucker
[1998] EWHC Admin 950
England and Wales

Education

Updated: 07 January 2022; Ref: scu.139071

Fox and Others, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for Education: Admn 25 Nov 2015

This judicial review claim calls into question the lawfulness of the approach adopted by the defendant, the Secretary of State for Education, to the striking of a balance between the teaching at GCSE level of religious and non-religious world views.

Warby J
[2015] EWHC 3404 (Admin)
Bailii
England and Wales

Education

Updated: 06 January 2022; Ref: scu.554986

James Watson of Saughton Esq; v Robert Watson of Muirhouse Esq: HL 13 Jul 1715

Tutor and Pupil – Acceptance of the office of tutory found not proved by tutorial inventories, which were not judicially signed, and wanted writer’s name and witnesses, unless posterior acts of administration were instructed; nor by a missive letter not holograph, and without solemnities, consenting to lend the pupil’s money.
Certain acts of administration not sufficient to infer the acceptance of the office.
An affirmance with 30 l. costs.

[1715] UKHL Robertson – 134, (1715) Robertson 134
Bailii
Scotland

Education

Updated: 04 January 2022; Ref: scu.553485

James Hamilton of Dalziel Esq v The Principal, Masters, and Professors of The University of Glasgow: HL 9 Jun 1716

Superior and Vassal – An university having acquired righ to an adjudication of lands, held in ward, for a debt due to them, the Court found that the superior must enter the university, or pay the debt to the extent of the value of the lands: but upon appeal the judgment is reversed; and it is ordered, that the superior should admit such proper person for vassal as the university should nominate.
Bona fide Possession – The superior, notwithstanding the reversal, is obliged to account for the rents since the charter was offered to him by the university, he having deduction of his casualties as if the old vassal then entered.

[1716] UKHL Robertson – 172, (1716) Robertson 172
Bailii

Scotland, Education, Landlord and Tenant

Updated: 04 January 2022; Ref: scu.553496

G v London Borough of Barnet Special Educational Needs Tribunal: Admn 22 Oct 1997

Gilliatt A parent wished to have a child with SEN educated at a fee paying Jewish school. The LEA took the view that the child’s needs could properly be met within a mainstream maintained school.
Held: Although the LEA had a duty to take account of cultural or religious factors, these factors did not themselves form part of the child’s special educational needs. In fact the private school was named in the statement on the basis that the LEA understood that the fees would be met by the parents. The court held that the tribunal had no authority to rule on any funding obligation of the LEA and therefore no appeal could lie to the court from the SENT about such a ruling. Challenge should be made by way of judicial review of the LEA.

Mr Justice Ognall
[1997] EWHC Admin 912
England and Wales

Education

Updated: 03 January 2022; Ref: scu.137857

Regina v Leeds Metropolitan University ex parte Manders: Admn 9 Oct 1997

The claimant complained that his examinations had been wrongly marked, failing to allow for his chronic fatigue syndrome. He had recorded a tutorial in which he claimed he had been abused. The Deputy Vice Chancellor had said the tape was unclear and possible edited.
Held: The evidence did not establish bias and the complaint for judicial review had been deleyed very considerably. Review was refused.

[1997] EWHC Admin 852
Bailii
England and Wales

Education, Judicial Review

Updated: 03 January 2022; Ref: scu.137797

Regina v London Borough of Havering ex parte ‘K’: Admn 20 Aug 1997

A statement of special education needs stated in Part IV that the child’s mother was to be responsible for providing transport at her own expense. She subsequently became unable to maintain the transport provision due to her personal circumstances and she unsuccessfully sought local authority assistance.
Held: A Council deciding on the need for school transport cannot say that other schools are a available after a statement providing that a particular school was appropriate. Non-educational provision under this sub-section includes the provision of transport to school.

Sedley J
Times 18-Nov-1997, [1997] EWHC Admin 780, [1998] ELR 402
Education Act 1996 444(7)
England and Wales
Cited by:
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: 03 January 2022; Ref: scu.137725

Littlechild v Angela Clarke (Chair of Special Educational Needs Tribunal) v Somerset County Council: Admn 29 Aug 1997

Gilliatt The parents appealed against the SENT’s decision not to treat a statement which did not specify the number of hours a particular type of support should be given as unlawful and to uphold the LEA’s recommendation as to placement. The parents had withdrawn their child from a state school and transferred him to a fee paying school suitable for children with severe dyslexia. The court followed the decision of Schiemann J in R v Cumbria County Council ex parte P [1995] ELR 337 and ruled that there was no requirement to quantify a certain number of hours of support. The court allowed the appeal in relation to the placement issue. The SENT’s reasons referred to an ‘absence of evidence’ to show that the state school could not have met the child’s educational needs. There had been such evidence before the SENT. The court considered this to cast doubts on the quality of their decision and the case was remitted for rehearing.

Mr Justice Laws
[1997] EWHC Admin 792
Bailii
England and Wales

Education

Updated: 03 January 2022; Ref: scu.137737

Hunt v North Somerset Council: SC 22 Jul 2015

The appellant had sought judicial review of a decision of the respondent to approve a Revenue Budget for 2012/13 as to the provision of youth services. He applied for declarations that the respondent had failed to comply with section 149 of the Equality Act 2010 and section 507B of the Education Act 1996 and for an order quashing the decision to approve the budget.
Held: Where a court finds for a claimant on the substantive elements and refuses a remedy for the sole reason that it was too late to reverse the decision (here the adoption of the budget for a financial year which had expired) the court should look at the claimant as a successful party when considering the award of costs.
As to the costs appeal: ‘the Court of Appeal said that it reached its decision as a matter of principle, treating the respondent as the ‘successful party’. In adopting that approach, I consider that the court fell into error. The rejection of the respondent’s case on the two issues on which the appellant was given leave to appeal was of greater significance than merely that the respondent had increased the costs of the appeal by its unsuccessful resistance. The respondent was ‘successful’ only in the limited sense that the findings of failure came too late to do anything about what had happened in the past, not because the appellant had been slow to raise them but because the respondent had resisted them successfully until the Court of Appeal gave its judgment. The respondent was unsuccessful on the substantive issues regarding its statutory responsibilities.’

Baroness Hale of Richmond DPSC, Lord Wilson, Lord Reed, Lord Hughes, Lord Toulson JJSC
[2015] UKSC 51, [2015] WLR(D) 331, UKSC 2014/0023
Bailii, Bailii Summary, WLRD, SC, SC Summary
Equality Act 2010 149, Education Act 1996 507B
England and Wales
Citing:
At First InstanceHunt v North Somerset Council Admn 18-Jul-2012
The claimant who required support from the Council for his ADHD disorder challenged the respondent’s budget insofar as it limited support for children’s services in the Revenue Budget. Ge said that in making its decision to cut the budget, the . .
Appeal fromHunt, Regina (on The Application of) v North Somerset Council CA 6-Nov-2013
Appeal against an order dismissing the challenge by the appellant, to the lawfulness of the decision of the respondent, the Council to cut its Youth Services budget for the year 2012/2013. The claimant suffered ADHD and relied on services supported . .
Costs at CAHunt, Regina (on The Application of) v North Somerset Council CA 21-Nov-2013
Reasons for costs order made on failure of the claimant’s applications.
Held: The respondent should be entitled to recover half of its costs of the appeal. Rimer LJ said that by the time that the appeal came on for hearing, it was far too late . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Local Government, Education, Judicial Review, Costs

Updated: 02 January 2022; Ref: scu.550392

S v Oxfordshire Schools Appeal Panel: QBD 26 Jan 2005

The claimant had been excluded from school after assaulting a younger pupil. Though his behaviour was found not to justify a permanent exclusion, re-instatement was not ordered because of fears of the psychological impact of his return, partiuclarly on his victim. He complained that having conducted a balancing exercise to decide the exclusion was not permanent, it was wrong to repeat the exercise on re-instatement.
Held: The court had to look to see if the process as a whole was fair. It was. It would have been bizarre for his re-instatement to be ordered without considering the effect on the victim only because the same head had been considered under permanent exclusion.

Bennett J
Times 11-Feb-2005
England and Wales

Education

Updated: 02 January 2022; Ref: scu.223353

Pfaffinger and Another v City of Liverpool Community College and Another: EAT 4 Mar 1996

The EAT considered the status of part time lecturers of courses at colleges of higher education. They were employed on fixed term contracts for a term at a time. The court was asked whether, if a contract was not renewed, that amounted to a dismissal.
Held: The employees’ appeals succeeded. The claimants had each been dismissed, and had been so dismissed for redundancy. In the first case, the claimant continued work for the defendant after the nominal expiry of her employment contract so as to help prepare for the next academic year. The effect of Ford was that a teacher employed in successive years under fixed term contracts, with periods of unemployment during vacations, has continuous employment for the purposes of claiming unfair dismissal and redundancy payments.

Mummery P
[1996] UKEAT 423 – 95 – 0403
Bailii
Employment Protection (Consolidation) Act 1978 Sch 13 para 9(1)
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedFord v Warwickshire County Council HL 1983
In deciding whether in the case of employment under a series of short contracts the intervals between the contracts amount to temporary cessation of work, one must look back from the date of termination of the employment over the whole period during . .
CitedNottinghamshire County Council v Lee CA 1980
In the case of a fixed term contract which expired and had not been renewed: ‘Why was not the employee’s contract renewed?’ If the answer was, in the case of a teacher, that there was no more work for him to do and the requirements of the school or . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Education

Updated: 01 January 2022; Ref: scu.208282

Cranford College Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v The Secretary of State for The Home Department: Admn 24 Apr 2015

‘rolled-up’ hearing of the Claimant’s application for permission for judicial review against decisions made by the Defendant to suspend and then revoke its Tier 2 and Tier 4 sponsor licences

Andrews DBE J
[2015] EWHC 1090 (Admin)
Bailii
England and Wales

Education, Immigration

Updated: 29 December 2021; Ref: scu.545930

Akande, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for The Home Department (IJR): UTIAC 1 Oct 2014

Judicial review of the Secretary of State’s decision to set removal directions for the applicant’s removal to Nigeria following the refusal of the applicant’s application for leave to remain in the UK as a Tier 4 (General) Student Migrant under para 245ZX of the Immigration Rules (HC 395 as amended) and for a Biometric Residence Permit.

Grubb UTJ
[2014] UKUT 468 (IAC)
Bailii
England and Wales

Immigration, Education

Updated: 23 December 2021; Ref: scu.539106

Worcestershire CC v JJ (Tribunal Procedure and Practice (Including UT) : Set Aside Applications): UTAA 10 Sep 2014

The decisions of the First-tier Tribunal (Health, Education and Social Care Chamber) following the hearing involve an error on a point of law.
The Upper Tribunal is not in a position to re-make the First-tier Tribunal’s decision on the Respondent parent’s appeal against the local authority’s refusal to make an assessment of special educational needs in relation to M. It therefore follows that the case is remitted to be re-heard by a different First-tier Tribunal, subject to the Directions below.

[2014] UKUT 406 (AAC)
Bailii
England and Wales

Education

Updated: 23 December 2021; Ref: scu.539073

Rasheed v Secretary of State for The Home Department: CA 20 Nov 2014

Until 6th April 2012 students who had completed further education courses in this country could apply for leave to remain for up to 2 years in order to enter employment as Tier-1 (Post-study Work) migrants. It was hoped that the scheme would attract high quality graduates to this country, but in March 2011 the government concluded that it had not succeeded in doing so and announced that it had decided in principle to close that particular route to entry from April the following year. In the event the new rules took effect from 6th April 2012.

Moore-Bick LJ VP CA, Sir Stanley Burnton
[2014] EWCA Civ 1493
Bailii
England and Wales

Immigration, Education

Updated: 23 December 2021; Ref: scu.538911

Federacion Espanola De Hostelera v EACEA: ECFI 16 Oct 2014

ECFI Judgment – Action for annulment – Programme in the field of education and training throughout life – Contract for the project ‘Virtual Simulator for language learning for tourism professionals (email client)’ – letter prior information – Contractual nature of the dispute – Non recourse – No reclassification of contract – Inadmissible

T-340/13, [2014] EUECJ T-340/13, ECLI: EU: T: 2014 889
Bailii
European

Education

Updated: 22 December 2021; Ref: scu.537694

Europaische Schule Munchen v Oberto: ECJ 4 Sep 2014

ECJ Advocate General’s Opinion – Statute of the European Schools – Powers of the Board of Appeal of the European schools or courts at the place of schools to approve a contract for fixed-term work concluded between the European school and not attached or seconded by a Member State Teacher

M Paolo Mengozzi AG
C-464/13, [2014] EUECJ C-464/13 – O, ECLI:EU:C:2014:2169, [2015] EUECJ C-464/13
Bailii, Bailii

European, Employment, Education

Updated: 21 December 2021; Ref: scu.536492

Winstanley v Sleeman and Another: QBD 13 Dec 2013

The claimant’s PhD thesis had initially failed, but on an internal appeal that decision was reversed, the appellate body accepting the contention that the supervision or other arrangements during his period of study had been unsatisfactory. The defendants no wapplied to strike out a clai for negligence.
Held: The application failed: ‘If a university fails to take proper care of a student’s career by falling short in the delivery of the processes involved in obtaining the qualification for which the student is studying, why is it not arguable that it is foreseeable that the claimant will suffer some loss or injury as a result? The nature of the injury need not, as a matter of law be foreseeable but the possibility of injury of some description is surely foreseeable, or at least arguably so.’

Saffman HHJ
[2013] EWHC B43 (QB), [2013] EWHC 4792 (QB)
Bailii
Senior Courts Act 1981 9
England and Wales
Cited by:
CitedSiddiqui v University of Oxford QBD 5-Dec-2016
The University applied to have struck out the claim by the claimant for damages alleging negligence in its teaching leading to a lower class degree than he said he should have been awarded.
Held: Strike out on the basis that the claim was . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Negligence

Updated: 20 December 2021; Ref: scu.535721

Innes v Information Commissioner and Another: CA 31 Jul 2014

Appeal against a decision upholding the decision of the First Tier Tribunal which upheld a decision of the Information Commissioner, the First Respondent rejecting a complaint brought by the Appellant. It arises out of a series of requests made by Mr Innes in the course of 2009 and 2010 under the terms of the Freedom of Information Act 2000 to Buckinghamshire County Council, the Second Respondent, about the operation of the 11+ exam in the county.

Longmore, Underhill LJJ, Sir David Keene
[2014] EWCA Civ 1086, [2014] WLR(D) 358
Bailii, WLRD
Freedom of Information Act 2000
England and Wales

Information, Education

Updated: 18 December 2021; Ref: scu.535518

Ipsea Ltd, Regina (on the Application of) v Secretary of State for Education and Schools: Admn 26 Mar 2002

IPSEA (a national charity active in supporting children with special educational needs) applied for judicial review in relation to the status of non-statutory guidance issued by the Secretary of State in a document called the ‘SEN Toolkit’. The court refused to grant a judicial review but gave useful guidance on how the guidance in the toolkit might be amended and clarified and the context in which it should be viewed i.e. as secondary to the statutes and statutory codes.

Mr Justice Newman
[2002] EWHC 504 (Admin)
Bailii
England and Wales

Education, Administrative

Updated: 18 December 2021; Ref: scu.168744

Goodred v Portsmouth City Council: Admn 16 Nov 2021

This judicial review concerns a challenge by the claimant to the way in which the defendant discharges its statutory responsibilities under the Education Act 1996 in respect of children of school age who are not receiving education at a school. The claimant contends that her children are receiving a suitable education at home. She complains that the defendant is imposing on her and others in a similar position, the burden of proving that her children are receiving a suitable education at home, when the statutory scheme does not (at that point) impose such a burden; and that the defendant is fettering its discretion by refusing, as a matter of principle, to accept information provided by the claimant as demonstrating that her children are receiving a suitable education.

Mr Justice Lane
[2021] EWHC 3057 (Admin)
Bailii
England and Wales

Education

Updated: 18 December 2021; Ref: scu.669873

Biblical Centre of The Chuvash Republic v Russia: ECHR 12 Jun 2014

ECHR Article 9-1
Freedom of religion
Dissolution of religious community without relevant and sufficient reasons: violation
Facts – The applicant was a Pentecostal mission that registered as a religious organisation in November 1991. In 1996 it founded a Biblical college and Sunday school. However, it was dissolved with immediate effect in October 2007 by order of the Supreme Court on the grounds that it had conducted educational activities without authorisation and in breach of sanitary and hygiene rules.
Law – Article 9 of the Convention interpreted in the light of Article 11: The applicant’s dissolution amounted to an interference with its rights to freedom of religion under Article 9 of the Convention interpreted in the light of the right to freedom of association enshrined in Article 11. The dissolution was ordered in accordance with the law and pursued the legitimate aims of protecting health and the rights of others by putting an end to unlicensed education in inadequate sanitary conditions.
The applicant had founded the Biblical college and the Sunday school in 1996 and had run them for more than eleven years without interruption. A federal court had stated in 2002 that Sunday school fell outside the scope of the Education Act and did not require a licence. In these circumstances, the novel interpretation of the Act with regard to the mandatory licensing of Sunday schools adopted by the courts in the present case was not sufficiently foreseeable to enable the applicant to anticipate its application and adjust its conduct accordingly. Indeed, some nine months after giving judgment upholding the applicant’s dissolution, the Supreme Court had reversed its stance on the licensing of Sunday schools, holding that teaching religion to children in such schools did not amount to education and that alleged breaches of the sanitary rules could not justify dissolving a religious organisation.
It had not, therefore, been convincingly established that the applicant had received advance notice that its activities were in breach of the law. The Supreme Court had ordered its dissolution just one day after finding it liable for a breach of the sanitary rules., despite the fact that there was nothing to indicate that any of defects were irremediable or constituted a clear and imminent danger to life and limb and without offering it a choice between rectifying the breaches or discontinuing the activities related to the instruction of its followers.
Nor did the Court accept that the dissolution of the applicant, a registered religious organisation, was necessary because the Sunday school or Biblical college were not registered as separate legal entities. The domestic courts had not indicated what other, less intrusive, means of achieving the declared aim of the protection of the rights of students had been considered and why they had been deemed insufficient. Accordingly, the domestic authorities had not shown that the dissolution, which undermined the very substance of the applicant’s rights to freedom of religion and association, was the only option for the fulfilment of the aims they pursued.
Regarding the nature and severity of the sanction, as a result of the Russian courts’ decisions, the applicant had ceased to exist as a registered religious organisation and its members were divested of the right to manifest their religion in community with others and to engage in the activities indispensable to their religious practice.
As the Court noted in Jehovah’s Witnesses of Moscow v. Russia, by virtue of section 14 of the Religions Act the only sanction which Russian courts could use against religious organisations found to have breached the law is forced dissolution. The Act provided no possibility of issuing a warning or imposing a fine. The sanction of dissolution could be applied indiscriminately without regard to the gravity of the breach in question, a practice which the Constitutional Court had found to be incompatible with the constitutional meaning of the relevant provisions as long ago as 2003. In ordering the applicant’s dissolution, the Russian courts did not heed the case-law of the Constitutional Court or the relevant Convention standards and they to assess the impact of dissolution on the fundamental rights of Pentecostal believers. In sum, the applicant’s dissolution had not been necessary in a democratic society.
Conclusion: violation (unanimously).
Article 41: Finding of a violation constituted sufficient just satisfaction in respect of any non-pecuniary damage.

33203/08 – Chamber Judgment, [2014] ECHR 606, 33203/08 – Legal Summary, [2014] ECHR 806
Bailii, Bailii
European Convention on Human Rights 9-1
Human Rights

Human Rights, Ecclesiastical, Education

Updated: 17 December 2021; Ref: scu.535170

Regina on Application of A v Head Teacher of Penlan School And; Governors of Penlan School and and City and County of Swansea: Admn 31 Aug 2001

A school wrote a letter to a child’s parents saying that he would be permanently excluded after verbal violence against a teacher. This was said to have followed earlier serious and repeated problems of indiscipline. His appeal was successful, and he was returned to the class The teachers proposed a strike. The head teacher wrote to say that he could not guarantee the child’s health and safety at school. The Act only allows exclusion on disciplinary grounds. The reference to health and safety, and the implicit threat amounted to an unlawful exclusion.

Mr Justice Hooper
[2001] EWHC Admin 721, [2002] ELR 244
Bailii
School Standards and Framework Act 1998 64(4)
England and Wales
Cited by:
CitedBegum, Regina (on the Application of) v Denbigh High School Admn 15-Jun-2004
A schoolgirl complained that she had been excluded from school for wearing a form of attire which accorded with her Muslim beliefs.
Held: The school had made great efforts to establish what forms of wear were acceptable within the moslem . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Children, Health and Safety

Updated: 16 December 2021; Ref: scu.166589

Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families v Philliskirk: Admn 31 Oct 2008

Collins J considered the ability of the Care Standards Tribunal to determine issues of primary fact: ‘Of course, it is right that the Tribunal is reviewing the Secretary of State’s decision, and clearly if it was not a reasonable decision, then the Tribunal will interfere. But, as it seems to me, the Tribunal has its own independent judgment to exercise. It looks at the material that was before the Secretary of State and it decides, on that material, whether in its judgment the relevant prohibition or the relevant sanction was or was not one which ought to have been, in its view, imposed. It may be that one can say, if one is talking in strict judicial review terms, that the decision of the Secretary of State was reasonable in the sense that it is one which was open to him. But that would mean, if that is the narrow basis upon which the Tribunal approaches the matter, that it is disabled from exercising its own judgment. It is the exercise of its own judgment that is important. But, as the regulation makes clear, that judgment must be exercised upon and only upon the material that was before the Secretary of State.’

Collins J
[2008] EWHC 2838 (Admin), [2009] ELR 68
Bailii
England and Wales
Citing:
Appeal fromPhilliskirk v Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families CST 20-May-2008
. .

Cited by:
CitedG, Regina (on The Application of) v X School and Others CA 20-Jan-2010
The claimant was a teaching assistant. A complaint had been made that he had kissed a boy having work experience at the school, but it had been decided that no criminal prosecution would follow. He sought judicial review of the school’s decision to . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 11 December 2021; Ref: scu.278424

Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families v JN: Admn 9 May 2008

Dyson LJ
[2008] EWHC 1199 (Admin)
Bailii
England and Wales
Citing:
AppliedFH v Secretary of State for Education CST 7-Feb-2006
The tribunal was not to determine, or re-determine, matters of primary fact. . .

Cited by:
CitedG, Regina (on The Application of) v X School and Others CA 20-Jan-2010
The claimant was a teaching assistant. A complaint had been made that he had kissed a boy having work experience at the school, but it had been decided that no criminal prosecution would follow. He sought judicial review of the school’s decision to . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 11 December 2021; Ref: scu.278420

Regina (M) v Sutton London Borough Council: QBD 6 Feb 2007

The child was subject to a special needs statement. The parents decided upon a particular school, but the authority set out in the statement its own preference for a nearer school, and its decision accordingly to refuse free transport to school.
Held: The incorporation in the statement of a decision about the provision of transport costs, was not properly based, and could not be used to justify the withholding of a contribution to such costs.

Goldring J
Times 01-Mar-2007
England and Wales

Education, Local Government

Updated: 10 December 2021; Ref: scu.253201

A J S B v Essex County Council and others: QBD 13 Jul 2007

The defendant local authorities sought summary judgment against the claims brought by the claimants who said that their exclusions from schools infringed their human rights. Each claimant was subject to a special educational needs statement.
Held: The actions should be struck out on the ground that they had no realistic prospect of success; but, since the claim had been brought out of time, for reasons which the court went on to give he would in any event not have granted the necessary enlargement of time.

Field J
[2007] EWHC 1652 (QB)
Bailii
Education Act 1996
England and Wales
Cited by:
Appeal FromA v Essex County Council CA 16-Apr-2008
The claimants had been excluded from school in ways which they said infringed their human rights. They now appealed against a striking out of their claims given on the ground that the claim had no prospect of success. The claimants also needed . .
At First InstanceA v Essex County Council SC 14-Jul-2010
The claimant, a severely disabled child sought damages, saying that for well over a year, the local authority had made no provision for his education.
Held: His appeal against the striking out of his action failed. The correct approach had . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Human Rights, Education

Updated: 07 December 2021; Ref: scu.254585

Ben Alaya v Bundesrepublik Deutschland: ECJ 12 Jun 2014

ECJ (Advocate General’s Opinion) Area of ??freedom, security and justice – Directive 2004/114 / EC – Conditions for admission of third-country nationals for the purposes of study – Refusal of admission of a person fulfilling the conditions laid down in the 2004 Directive / 114 / EC – Regulation of a Member State providing for a discretion of the administration

C-491/13, [2014] EUECJ C-491/13 – O
Bailii
European
Cited by:
OpinionBen Alaya v Bundesrepublik Deutschland ECJ 10-Sep-2014
ECJ Reference for a preliminary ruling – Area of freedom, security and justice – Directive 2004/114/EC – Articles 6, 7 and 12 – Conditions of admission of third-country nationals for the purposes of studies – . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Immigration, Education

Updated: 04 December 2021; Ref: scu.526674

Regina (Williamson and Others) v Secretary of State for Education and Employment: Admn 15 Nov 2001

A genuine religious belief which supported the use of corporal punishment in schools was not itself either a manifestation of religious belief which required protection under the convention, or a religious and philosophical conviction for the purposes of the right to education provisions of article 2. A religiously founded belief that corporal punishment should be imposed was not a philosophical or religious conviction.

Justice Elias
Times 12-Dec-2001, [2001] EWHC Admin 960, [2002] ELR 214
Bailii
European Convention on Human Rights Art 2, 9, Education Act 1996 548
England and Wales
Cited by:
Appeal fromRegina (Williamson and Others) v Secretary of State for Education and Employment CA 12-Dec-2002
The claimants sought a declaration that the restriction on the infliction of corporal punishment in schools infringed their human right of freedom of religion. The schools concerned were Christian schools who believed that moderate corporal . .
CitedRegina v Secretary of State for Education and Employment and others ex parte Williamson and others HL 24-Feb-2005
The appellants were teachers in Christian schools who said that the blanket ban on corporal punishment interfered with their religious freedom. They saw moderate physical discipline as an essential part of educating children in a Christian manner. . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Children, Human Rights

Updated: 04 December 2021; Ref: scu.167115

Whitton v Scottish Ministers: SIC 29 Apr 2014

SIC List of schools with pupils attending St Mary’s Music School – On 7 November 2013, Mr Whitton asked the Scottish Ministers (the Ministers) for the names of the schools with pupils who had accessed St Mary’s Music School (St Mary’s) in Edinburgh during the last five years. The Ministers told Mr Whitton that they did not hold this information.
Following an investigation, the Commissioner found that the Ministers had been entitled to tell Mr Whitton that they did not hold the information.

[2014] ScotIC 091 – 2014
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Scotland, Information, Education

Updated: 03 December 2021; Ref: scu.525544

Chandler v London Borough of Camden: Admn 13 Feb 2009

Forbes J considered the test for whether apparent bias was shown when it was suggested that the local authority may have already made up its mind on a school re-organisation.

Forbes J
[2009] EWHC 219 (Admin), [2009] ACD 50, [2009] BLGR 417, [2009] Eu LR 615
Bailii
England and Wales
Citing:
AppliedLewis, Regina (on the application of) v Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council and Another CA 15-Jan-2009
The claimants sought registration of land as a common, saying that it had been used by the local residents for social activities for many years. The council had licenced the land for use as a golf course for many years.
Held: The residents’ . .

Cited by:
CitedCheltenham Borough Council v Laird QBD 15-Jun-2009
The council sought damages saying that their former chief executive had not disclosed her history of depressive illness when applying for her job.
Held: The replies were not dishonest as the form could have been misconstrued. The claim failed. . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Administrative, Education

Updated: 03 December 2021; Ref: scu.293915

Grenville College London Ltd and Another, Regina (on The Application of) v The Secretary of State for The Home Department: Admn 9 Apr 2014

Grenville College sought to challenge by way of judicial review the Defendant’s decisions: to reduce its Confirmation of Acceptance for Studies allocation to zero; to suspend its Highly Trusted Status licence; and to require it to apply for a new licence. Birmingham College of Law and Management sought to challenge by way of judicial review the Defendant’s decisions: to suspend its HTS licence; and to revoke its HTS licence.

Coe QC
[2014] EWHC 1065 (Admin)
Bailii
England and Wales

Immigration, Education

Updated: 02 December 2021; Ref: scu.523637

Stanley College London UK Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for The Home Department: Admn 9 Apr 2014

Challenge to the decision of the Defendant to refuse the Claimant’s application for highly trusted sponsor status under Tier 4 of the points-based system of the Immigration Rules.

Hamblen J
[2014] EWHC 1038 (Admin)
Bailii
England and Wales

Education, Immigration

Updated: 02 December 2021; Ref: scu.523639

Cornerstone (North East) Adoption and Fostering Service Ltd (T/A Cornerstone), Regina (on The Application of) v The Office for Education, Children’s Services and Skills: Admn 27 Jul 2020

Mr Justice Julian Knowles
[2020] EWHC 2031 (Admin), [2020] WLR(D) 396
Bailii, WLRD
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedMathieson v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions SC 8-Jul-2015
The claimant a boy of three in receipt of disability living allowance (‘DLA’) challenged (through his parents) the withdrawal of that benefit whilst he was in hospital for a period of more than 12 weeks. He had since died.
Held: The appeal . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education

Updated: 30 November 2021; Ref: scu.652933

The Educational Institute for Scotland, Re Judicial Review: SCS 29 Jan 2014

(Inner House) Petition for judicial review, the Educational Institute of Scotland challenge the lawfulness of a decision of the Director of Education of Glasgow City Council. The EIS characterise that decision as ‘[introducing] a policy (a) whereby the position of head of a nursery school could be held by individuals without teaching qualifications and who are not registered teachers’: statement 2 of the petition. The Council describe the decision as an approval of a job specification inviting qualified persons, including non-teachers, to apply for posts as ‘head of nursery or family learning centre’

Lady Paton
[2014] ScotCS CSIH – 13, 2014 SLT 291, 2014 SC 457, 2014 GWD 5-96
Bailii
Scotland

Education

Updated: 29 November 2021; Ref: scu.520903