BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
High Court of Ireland Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Mc D. [a minor] -v- Minister for Education & Science & Ors [2008] IEHC 265 (29 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2008/H265.html Cite as: [2008] IEHC 265 |
[New search] [Help]
Judgment Title: Mc D. [a minor] -v- Minister for Education & Science & Ors Composition of Court: Judgment by: O'Neill J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2008] IEHC 265 THE HIGH COURT 2005 No. 1381 J.R. S. McD (A MINOR SUING BY HIS NEXT FRIEND, M. McD) APPLICANT AND MINISTER FOR EDUCATION AND SCIENCE, HEALTH SERVICE EXECUTIVE, IRELAND AND ATTORNEY GENERAL RESPONDENTS
The applicant was born on 20th May, 1996. Early in his life, in 1999, he was diagnosed as suffering from a pervasive developmental disorder within the autism spectrum and mild developmental delay. In the year 2000, he commenced school in a national school in a class for autistic children. There were six children in the class and three special needs assistants. At the same time he commenced home tuition. This was for two hours per day, Monday to Friday during school terms. The tuition involved using the Applied Behavioural Analysis (A.B.A.) and the Treatment and Education of Autistic and related Communication Handicapped Children (T.E.A.C.C.H.) methods and was given by a tutor trained in these methods of teaching. The A.B.A. programme addressed core academic areas including reading, writing and mathematics and also self help skills, care of the environment, social skills and language. This tuition was paid for by the first named respondent. Each year the applicant’s parents applied for the grant for the tuition. Their applications were granted each time until September 2005. The applicant progressed very well under these arrangements, to the point that in 2006, he was considered by all the professionals dealing with him suitable for inclusion in a mainstream class in September, 2006. The applicant’s parents were naturally very pleased with this state of affairs and were fully supportive of the decision to move the applicant to a mainstream class in September, 2006. By a letter dated 27th September, 2005, the first named respondent intimated a very significant change to the arrangements that had prevailed in the preceding years. The relevant part of that letter reads as follows:
In the circumstances the Department has discontinued the practice whereby children who are in full-time education provision would also be able to avail of home tuition grants. Therefore any new applicants for home tuition who are in full-time educational placement are not being provided with home tuition grants also. The Department accepts that in the case of your child it has to date provided a home tuition grant even though your child is attending school on a full time basis. You should note that the Department will not be in a position to continue to do so on a permanent basis going forward. However, rather than withdraw the home tuition grant without further consideration being given to the needs of your child, the Department can confirm that it will continue to provide a home tuition to you in respect of your child until the 22nd of December 2005. In addition to providing you with the home tuition grant, the Department is also referring details of your child’s case to the local Special Educational Needs Organiser (SENO) for your area. Since the 1st January 2005 SENOs have been employed in each county and are responsible for ensuring that an appropriate education is provided to all children with special educational needs. In addition, the SENOs are responsible for co-ordinating and facilitating delivery of educational services to children with disabilities at local level. One of the main roles of the SENO is to act as a focal point of contact for parents/guardians and schools, and process applications for resources for children with disabilities who have special educational needs. With this in mind, the Department has requested the school to make contact with the SENO in order that the capacity for the school to meet the needs of your child will be examined with a view to ensuring that an appropriate educational response is available to your child in the school which s/he is attending, without the need for home tuition to be provided in addition to the educational response being provided by the school.. (sic) In this regard, it is envisaged that the process will involve discussions between you, as the parents, the school and the SENO. Your local SENO is...” The second named respondent withdrew the speech and language therapy and the occupational therapy services that the applicant had been in receipt of from the “B” Outreach Service as of March 2007. These services had, according to the second named respondent, been provided for six months only for the purpose of assisting the applicant with his transition into a mainstream class. Following assessments of the needs of the applicant by members of the “B” Outreach Service team it was concluded that discharge from the service and integration into mainstream school was the most appropriate course for the applicant. The first named respondent refused to revisit her decision to withdraw the home tuition grant and on 19th December, 2005, the applicant obtained the leave of this Court (Peart J.) to pursue by way of judicial review the reliefs sought in these proceedings. In summary, the reliefs sought are an order of certiorari quashing the decision of the first named respondent to withdraw the home tuition grant; a declaration that the first named respondent has failed to protect and vindicate the applicant’s constitutional right to education under Articles 40.3, 42.3.2 and 42.4 of the Constitution; a declaration that the respondents have failed in their statutory obligations pursuant to the Education Act, 1998 (the Act of 1998) to provide for and maintain an appropriate education for the applicant; a declaration that the respondents failed in their statutory obligations to the applicant, a person with special educational needs as defined by the Special Educational Needs Act, 2004 (the Act of 2004) and with a disability under the Disability Act, 2005 (the Act of 2005) and a declaration that the respondents have failed to vindicate the rights of the applicant under Article 2 of Protocol I of the European Convention on Human Rights Act, 2003. Orders of mandamus were sought directing the respondents to comply with the subject matter of the foregoing declarations. Relief under the European Convention on Human Rights was not pursued at the hearing. The grounds upon which the leave was granted may be summarised as follows:
2. That s. 13 of the Act of 2004 imposes on the first named respondent a duty to make resources available for the education of persons with special educational needs and inter alia for the greater involvement of parents in the education of children with special educational needs. 3. That the Act of 2005 provides for the assessment of health and education needs occasioned to persons with disabilities by their disabilities and it is for the first named respondent to make provision for those needs. 4. That the first named respondent, in deciding to withdraw the home tuition grant, applied a policy decision without any regard or any adequate or proper regard to the particular circumstances and needs of the applicant and was made without notice to the applicant or to his next friend and represented an invidious discrimination against the applicant and was detrimental to his welfare. 5. That the first named respondent is responsible for providing appropriate education and support services to the applicant and, in withdrawing the home tuition grant from the applicant, the first named respondent has failed to provide the appropriate educational facilities, health services and support services for the applicant under the Act of 1998 and the Act of 2004. 6. That the first named respondent’s failure will result in the breach of the applicant's right to an inclusive education pursuant to the Act of 2004 and/or his personal right to be educated. 7. That the guarantees under Article 40.3 and Article 42 of the Constitution to provide for and maintain a suitable education for the applicant have been violated. 8. That the respondents have breached their statutory obligations under Article 2 of Protocol 1 of the European Convention on Human Rights Act 2002.
ss. 1, 2 and 13 of the Act of 2004. The objects of the Act of 1998 are set out in s.6 in the following terms:
(b) to provide that, as far as is practicable and having regard to the resources available, there is made available to people resident in the State a level and quality of education appropriate to meeting the needs and abilities of those people; (c) to promote equality of access to and participation in education and to promote the means whereby students may benefit from education;....”
(b) to determine national education policy, and (c) to plan and co-ordinate -
(b) to monitor and assess the quality, economy, efficiency and effectiveness of the education system provided in the State by recognised schools and centres for education, having regard to the objects provided for in section 6 and to publish, in such manner as the Minister considers appropriate, information relating to such monitoring and assessment;... (f) to do all such acts and things as may be necessary to further the objects for which this Act is enacted.”
(a) psychological services; (b) guidance and counselling services;
(d) provision for students learning through Irish sign language or other sign language, including interpreting services; (e) speech therapy services; (f) provision for early childhood, primary, post primary, adult or continuing education to students with special needs otherwise than in schools or centres for education; (g) teacher welfare services; (h) transport services; (i) library and media services; (j) school maintenance services; (k) examinations provided for in Part VIII,
Section 2 of the Act of 2004 provides for the right of a child with special educational needs to be educated in an inclusive environment. It states:-
(b) the effective provision of education for children with whom the child is to be educated.”
(b) that the objective of the educational provision made by this Act is to ensure that children with special educational needs have the same right to avail of, and benefit from, appropriate education as do their peers who do not have such needs.” Counsel for the applicant, Ms. Walley S.C., submitted that the decision to withdraw the home tuition grant represented a blanket policy decision and not a decision based on the applicant’s special educational needs and, as such, was in breach of the applicant’s constitutional and statutory rights and was ultra vires. She further submitted that the withdrawal of the home tuition, which focused on the needs of the applicant, addressing communication skills, social skills and socialisation, would render the applicant incapable of functioning in a mainstream class and that this would amount to a denial of his constitutional and statutory rights. Ms. Walley S.C. submitted that the first named respondent had flagrantly breached a duty owed to the applicant under s. 7(1) of the Act of 1998. Notwithstanding the fact that s. 7 is headed the “functions of the Minister” it was submitted that, in the context of the Act as a whole and given the mandatory wording of s. 7 of the Act of 1998, that this section imposed binding duties on the first named respondent. Those duties of the first named respondent under s. 7 of the Act of 1998, it was submitted, have been enhanced by the rights under s. 2 of the Act of 2004 and it was irrelevant that s. 13 of the Act of 2004 has not yet come into force. Counsel for the first, third and fourth named respondents, Mr. McDonagh S.C., contended that appropriate provision was being made for the applicant’s educational needs and that the decision to withdraw the applicant’s home tuition grant was not made without notice to applicant and there was no failure to take his needs into account when making the decision. It was submitted that the applicant had been referred to the local Special Educational Needs Organiser (S.E.N.O.) in order for his needs to be dealt with in the school but that the applicant’s parents had failed to engage with the S.E.N.O. Mr. McDonagh disputed that s. 7 of the Act of 1998 imposed any binding statutory duties on the first named respondent. In the alternative, to the extent that any duties were imposed, he argued that such duties were not enforceable or actionable at the suit of an individual such as the applicant. Mr. McDonagh S.C. pointed to s. 7(4) of the Act of 1998 which obliges the first named respondent to have regard to a number of factors in carrying out her functions, which in his submission, amounted to the exercise of a discretion. He contended that the conferral of functions on the first named respondent did not impose liability on her in respect of any failure to carry out those functions, at the suit of an individual, but the first named respondent was accountable politically to the Oireachtas, in respect of the discharge by her of functions under s. 7(4) of the Act of 1998 and beyond that, to the people through the democratic process. The Acts of 1998 and 2004 represent a statutory expression of the first named respondent's constitutional obligations and of a child’s right to free primary education as guaranteed in Article 42.4 of the Constitution. These Acts cannot diminish a child’s constitutional right to a free primary education but may enhance it. In light of this legal framework, the logical starting point is to consider whether the applicant’s constitutional rights were breached and then to proceed to assess whether there has been any violation of his statutory rights. Primary education is not defined in the Constitution. There are a number of cases which provide assistance in defining the term. The first time “education” was considered by the courts was in Ryan v. Attorney General [1965] IR 294. Kenny J. construed the term as follows at p.310:
I am also satisfied that the statement of the law by O’Hanlon J. in O'Donoghue v. Minister for Health [1996] 2 I R 20 is correct. It is not material in this context that the respondents did not proceed with their appeal in that case, since it would be open to this court in the present case to disapprove of the decision.”
That is not the form of ‘primary education’ to which the first plaintiff was found to be entitled in O'Donoghue v. Minister for Health [1996] 2 I R 20 by O'Hanlon J. and to which Barr J. found the first plaintiff in this case to be entitled. The latter's needs at this stage of his life still do not extend significantly beyond the basic skills which more fortunately endowed children acquire in the home between birth and four.”
It is apparent that there are two opposing views as to the meaning of primary education. One is a narrow formulation confined to scholastic pursuits. The other is a broader concept encompassing the full development of a child. The applicant is now in a mainstream class thereby availing of the normal scholastic classroom education. A question arises as to whether he can continue to avail of this scholastic education without the provision of home tuition and, if not, would his constitutional right to a free primary education be violated? If one adopts the broader definition of education, socialisation and the learning of skills necessary to integrate with society would have to be considered a part of primary education. In primary education, a child moves from the exclusive care of family into a school setting and there commences the process of encountering and engaging with society. Children without disabilities naturally learn how to react to and assimilate with their peers and teachers in the classroom. In contrast, autistic children do not learn these skills naturally and must be taught these intensively through methods, such as A.B.A. Socialisation and integration with society are essential developmental steps or milestones in the life of every human being. Whether viewed in the context of a narrow definition or a broader definition of primary education, learning these steps must be considered part of primary education, because if a child does not learn the skills or arts necessary to integrate with peers and society in general, the child will be unable to survive the scholastic process, even though possessed of the general intellectual ability to benefit from that education. I am satisfied that regardless of whether one adopts the broader definition of primary education or the narrow one urged on the Court by Mr. McDonagh, and in this respect I am of the opinion that the weight of authority favours the broader definition, the tuition of the applicant in socialisation and integration in society must be regarded as included in the State’s constitutional obligation to provide free primary education to the applicant. The first named respondent says it has not breached the applicant’s constitutional right to a free primary education because, in terminating home tuition in favour of inclusive education in the school setting, it made provision for the special educational needs of the applicant through supplying an S.E.N.O. and it gave a commitment in the letter of the 27th September, 2005, to provide whatever additional services or therapies as are necessary to meet the applicant’s needs. The applicant, through his parents, rejected this proposal. It must be questioned whether that rejection is justified in circumstances where there has been a failure on the part of the applicant’s parents to engage with the S.E.N.O. and to explore and implement the proposals made by the first named respondent. Paragraph 10 of the affidavit of John P. Kelly, Acting Principal Officer in the Department of the first named respondent, sworn on 20th February, 2006, sets out in detail the efforts made by the S.E.N.O. to engage with the applicant’s parents as follows:
9. I further say that requests for service would have to be initiated by the parents and not the school, leaving [S. McD’s] teacher with no support whatsoever, when clearly [S.McD’s] pragmatic speech is clearly a problem area, as identified in the reports of Marie-Louise Hughes, David Carey and Aisling Towey.” The expert evidence before this court on whether the withdrawal of the home tuition will impact upon the applicant’s continuing development is contradictory. Experts retained by the applicant were of the opinion that in order for the applicant to actually enjoy his right to an inclusive education that the home tuition must continue. The following is contained in the report of Aisling Towey B.A., M.Psych. Sc., Clinical Psychologist of January 2006:
I do not see how this can be accomplished within the school setting alone. This is particularly relevant when the school records clearly indicate that no sustained attention has been paid to this target in general and, in fact, it has been nearly entirely ignored in the available records.”
Following a review, a programme may remain unchanged, may be minimally adjusted or may be radically altered or discontinued, depending on changes in circumstances for the child. [S. McD’s] home programme is premised on the belief that he requires it and that it is necessary to his continued progress. The writer’s view is that this premise is mistaken. The writer disagrees with the reported opinion of Ms. Towey that [S. McD’s] progress will deteriorate if his programme ceases at this stage. On the contrary, a positive consequence for [S. McD] is that anxiety or annoyance associated with his intensive home programme will dissipate. It is important to note that a diagnosis of ASD does not suggest an educational requirement for intensity as measured by one-on-one tutoring. Research issues on the issues of intensity are divided and controversial.”
It is apparent that the State’s decision to discontinue the home tuition scheme for children in full-time educational placement amounted to a policy decision. It was based on the belief of the first named respondent, following a review undertaken by her Department that “school-based education provision is the most appropriate intervention for all children, including those with special educational needs”. Such an approach is wholly consistent with s. 2 of the Act of 2004. The first named respondent is entitled to change its policy but it must have regard to the particular circumstances and educational needs of an individual, such as the applicant in so doing. The first named respondent appointed a S.E.N.O., a person charged with ensuring the needs of the applicant were considered and that appropriate services would be provided in the school setting to meet the needs of the applicant. As discussed above, this arrangement was met by a refusal by the applicant, through his parents, to avail of the new arrangements to provide for his special educational needs, in place of the home tuition grant. In so doing, the applicant’s parents have placed themselves in the position of condemning support services that they have refused to avail of even on an experimental basis. In adopting this posture, they cannot establish to the satisfaction of this court that the measures proposed by the first named respondent would fail to meet the educational needs of the applicant. All this combines to satisfy me that the applicant has failed to discharge the onus that rests on him of proving that the withdrawal of the home tuition grant amounts to a breach by the first named respondent of her constitutional obligations to the applicant under Article 42.4 of the Constitution. The next issue which falls to be determined is whether s. 7 of the Act of 1998 imposes actionable duties on the first named respondent. The purpose of the Act of 1998 is described in its Preamble as “An Act to make provision in the interests of the common good for the education of every person in the State, including any person with a disability or who has other special educational needs...” Section 2 of the Act of 1998 defines the term “functions” as including “powers and duties”. Where, as in ss. 7(1) and 7(2) of the Act of 1998, a function is conferred on the first named respondent, having regard to the definition of “function” in the Act, the function may involve a power or a duty or indeed both. Manifestly, where the first named respondent is tasked to do something that function will always confer a power to do it. The difficult question is to determine, when the carrying out of a function imposes a legally binding duty to a person or class of persons with a consequent legal liability to those persons in respect of a failure to perform the function. A starting point in the analysis is to bear in mind that s. 6(1) of the 1998 Act states unequivocally that one of the objects of the Act is to give practical effect to the constitutional rights of children, including children who have a disability or who have other special educational needs, as they relate to children. This is obviously of direct relevance where primary education is involved. Where a legally binding duty can be identified under Article 42.4 of the Constitution and where a corresponding function exists under s. 7, it necessarily follows that the discharge of that function will unavoidably carry with it a legally binding duty which could not be of lesser legal force or effect than the constitutional duty. Construing the concept of “function” in s. 7 of the Act of 1998 in a manner consistent with the Constitution inevitably leads to that conclusion. There are two judgments of this Court where there is an acknowledgment of a statutory duty on the part of the first named respondent under s. 7 of the Act of 1998 namely, Cronin v. Minister for Education (Unreported, High Court, Laffoy J., 6th July, 2004) and Nagle (A Minor) v. South Western Area Health Board and the Minister for Education (Unreported, High Court, Herbert J., 30th October, 2001). These were judgments in applications for mandatory interlocutory orders. The question of whether the first named respondent owed a duty under s. 7 of the Act of 1998 was considered only in the context the balance of convenience and whether there was a fair question to be tried. Thus, there was no determination following a full hearing on whether s. 7 of the Act of 1998 imposed a legally binding duty. In O’Carolan (A Minor) v. The Minister for Education and Science & Others [2005] IEHC 296, this Court (MacMenamin J.) found that the placement of the autistic applicant child in an institution nominated by the Minister was appropriate for his education despite the view of the parents that he should be placed in a different institution. The Court, in its consideration of s. 7 (1) (a) of the Act of 1998, stated as follows:
A correct construction of ss. 6 and 7 of the Act of 1998 might also, in respect of primary education, indicate additional duties on the part of the first named respondent beyond those required by the Constitution, although in this case that does not arise because, as said earlier, the tuition of the applicant in socialisation skills is comfortably included in any concept of primary education as provided for in Article 42.4 of the Constitution. The additional tuition and/or services which the applicant requires are clearly included in the lists of “support services” set out in s. 2 of the Act of 1998 and therefore, prima facie, properly the subject matter of a statutory duty under s. 7(1) or s. 7(2) of the Act of 1998. Section 6 of the Act of 1998 states that the first named respondent “shall” have regard to the list of objects set out in the section. The use of the word “shall” indicates that it is mandatory for the first named respondent to have regard to the objects as outlined. Section 7(1) of the Act of 1998 also contains the word “shall”. It provides that a number of exercises “shall” be a “function” of the Minister under the Act. Section 7(2) goes on to specify that it shall be a function of the Minister to provide “support services” to students who have a disability, amongst others. The use of the word “shall” in these contexts, and particularly in the context of the function under s. 7(2) of providing support services tends to suggest an obligation to provide a service to cater for the specific educational needs of a particular person. Given that this provision may be exclusive to that person, the use of the expression “shall” in this regard is persuasive that it was intended by the Oireachtas that a failure to discharge the duty to provide would be actionable at the suit of the person denied the service in question. In my view, in this case, the constitutional obligation of the first named respondent under Article 42.4 corresponds in all material respects with the first respondent's statutory functions under s. 7(1) or s. 7(2) of the Act of 1998, and having held earlier that the first named respondent had a constitutional duty to the applicant to provide for the tuition he needs to achieve an appropriate level of socialization skills, in my opinion, it cannot be said that the function of the first named respondent of providing for that tuition under s. 7 of the Act of 1998 involves a lesser degree of legal obligation than the duty imposed on the first named respondent under Article 42.4 of the Constitution, particularly when s. 6(1) of the Act of 1998 expressly states that giving practical effect to the constitutional rights of children with disabilities or special educational needs is an object of the Act. I am satisfied that there is a binding statutory duty actionable at the suit of the applicant, to provide him with the appropriate tuition and training in socialisation skills. In essence, the first named respondent is required by the Constitution and by the Act of 1998 to ensure that this appropriate tuition and training of the applicant is provided to the applicant. As outlined above, the State attempted to address the special educational needs of the applicant and to provide appropriate support services to him on the termination of the home tuition grant, in an effort to comply with its constitutional and statutory duties. The applicant, through his parents, did not participate in the first named respondent’s assessment of his special educational needs and refused to consider or participate in any alternative arrangements to home tuition. I am not satisfied that the applicant has demonstrated deficiencies in the proposed services, as there has been no engagement with these arrangements. Therefore, the applicant has failed to prove a breach of a statutory duty on the part of the first named respondent. In these circumstances, I have come to the conclusion that I must refuse the relief claimed in these proceedings. |