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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> East Lothian Council, Re Application for Judicial Review [2008] ScotCS CSOH_137 (12 September 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_137.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotCS CSOH_137, 2008 SLT 921, 2008 GWD 30-459, [2008] CSOH 137

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2008] CSOH 137

 

P1512/08

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD WOOLMAN

 

in the Petition of

 

EAST LOTHIAN COUNCIL

Pursuers

 

against

 

For Judicial Review of an Interlocutor dated 22 August 2008 of the Sheriff at Haddington under section 28F of the Education (Scotland) Act 1980

 

Defender:

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

 

Pursuers: Sir Crispin Agnew, Q.C; Allan McDougall & Co SSC

Defenders: Mrs Scott, Q.C.; Campbell Smith WS

 

 

12 September 2008

 

The Statutory Framework

[1] This case concerns a "placing request" made by the respondents, Mr. and Mrs D, under the Education (Scotland) Act 1980. Such requests are made under Part II of the Act, which is headed "Rights and Duties of Parents and Functions of Education Authorities in relation to Individual Pupils". Section 28 sets out the general principle that "so far as is compatible with the provision of suitable instruction and training and the avoidance of unreasonable public expenditure, pupils are to be educated in accordance with the wishes of their parents."

[2] Teeth is given to that principle by section 28A, which states

"(1) Where the parent of a qualifying child makes a written request to an education authority to place his child in the school specified in the request, being a school ... under their management, it shall be the duty of the authority, subject to subsections (2) (3) (3A) and (3F) below, to place the child accordingly."

The subsections in question list a number of different conditions which entitle an authority to refuse a placing request.

[3] Senior counsel for the respondents said that when the provision was first introduced it was dubbed "the parents' charter", because it gave them an enforceable choice of school. An authority was bound to place a child in accordance with the parents' wishes, unless the exceptions applied.

[4] Parents have a right of appeal against a decision refusing a placing request, first to an appeal committee and then to the sheriff. In the case of an appeal to the sheriff, section 28F (5) provides:

"The sheriff may on an appeal under this section confirm the education authority's decision if he is satisfied-

(a) that one or more of the grounds of refusal specified in section 28A(3) of this Act exists or exist; and

(b) that, in all the circumstances, it is appropriate to do so

but shall otherwise refuse to confirm their decision and shall, where he so refuses, require the authority to give effect to the placing request to which the appeal relates.

The judgment of the sheriff on an appeal is final (s28F (9))."

 

The Employment of an Additional Teacher

[5] One of the exceptions which entitles an authority to refuse a placing request occurs where to place the child in a specified school would make it necessary for the authority to take an additional teacher into employment (s28A (3) (a) (1)).

[6] The Education (Lower Primary Class Sizes) (Scotland) Regulations 1999 (SI 1999 No. 1080) were made under the 1980 Act and are relevant in this regard. They establish that the maximum size for a primary one class conducted by a single qualified teacher is 30 pupils. It follows that when the maximum size is exceeded, an additional teacher must be employed by the education authority.

[7] However, the 1999 regulations also provide that a child placed in the class by the decision of an appeal committee or a sheriff shall not count for the purposes of determining the maximum size (Regulations 3, 4 and Schedule para. 4). I shall refer to such children as "excepted pupils".

[8] The Scottish Executive Education Department issued further guidance to education authorities about class sizes in April 2007. Circular no. 1/2007 states that from August 2007, primary 1 classes should have a maximum of 25 pupils. However, it also stipulates that the provisions relating to excepted pupils would continue to apply. That means that they are not included in counting the class size.

 

Background Circumstances

[9] The sheriff heard evidence from seven witnesses over a period of three days. Neither party took issue with his findings regarding the background circumstances. Accordingly, with minor modifications, I gratefully adopt those of his findings which are germane to the argument presented to me.

[10] Mr. and Mrs D are the parents of twin children, A and J, who are nearly five years old. They also have a two year old child. The family live in the catchment area for the A Primary, although the B Primary is the closest school to their home. There are sufficient places for the twins in Primary 1 at the A Primary. A small number of children from the pursuers' street attend the A Primary; a more significant number attend the B Primary.

[11] There are 24 children in the P1 class at the B Primary. The Council had allocated 22 children places in the class, allowing them to keep 3 as reserved places. Two further children had been placed in the class as a result of appeal committee decisions made in or about May 2008. A number of parents had made unsuccessful placing requests for the B Primary P1. The defenders had established a waiting list with 11 children on it, ranked in order of geographical proximity to the school, as that had been a common factor in the placing requests. The twins were ranked ninth and tenth on the list.

[12] The twins attended the nursery school at the B Primary from November 2006 to June 2008. Mrs D regularly walked to and from nursery with them, by a route that was safe, well-lit and largely traffic-free. This took her about 20 minutes. She became involved in the school parents' association and got to know the school staff. The twins enjoyed nursery and, having initially relied mostly on each other, established friendships. Many of their friends from nursery or home have places at the B Primary, and Mrs D knows many of the P1 parents. Although Mr. and Mrs D have two cars in the family, they are keen for their children to be able to walk safely to and from school.

 

The Placing Request

[13] In December 2007 Mr. and Mrs D made a placing request to have the twins attend the B Primary. The authority refused the request and allocated the twins places in the A Primary. An appeal by Mr. and Mrs D to the Education Appeal Committee was refused after a hearing on 28 May 2008.

[14] Mr. and Mrs D then appealed to the Sheriff under section 28F. The authority defended the decision primarily on the basis that placing the twins in the B Primary would make it necessary for it to take an additional teacher into employment.

 

The Factual Issues before the Sheriff

[15] There were three disputed questions of fact before the sheriff: (a) had the local authority in fact adopted the terms of Circular 1/2007 as its policy? (b) what would be the effect on the twins if they were required to move to a new and unfamiliar school, that is the A Primary? and (c) were the available routes for walking to and from the family home to the A Primary School suitable?

[16] The sheriff resolved these three issues as follows. He held that the authority had adopted the Circular as its policy. He was satisfied that moving the twins to the new school would not have an unduly adverse effect upon them. Finally, he decided that one of the routes - while less than ideal - was capable of being made suitable after appropriate intervention by the authority.

 

The Sheriff's Decision

[17] On 22 August 2008, the sheriff held that the authority had failed to establish that placing the twins in the B Primary "would ... make it necessary for the authority to take an additional teacher into employment". As this was the sole ground on which it relied, his decision meant that the placing request was granted.

[18] The sheriff set out his reasoning in three paragraphs:

"26. There is no doubt that placing A and J in the P1 class at would bring the total number of children in the class to 26, of whom 4 would have been placed by virtue of appeal committee or shrieval decisions. Equally, however, the plain implication of the Schedule of excepted pupils, which appears in both the 1999 Regulations and the 2007 Circular, is that these 4 pupils would not count towards class size limits during the 2008-09 school session. On moving into P2 in August 2009, the applicable class size limit would be 30, as per the 1999 Regulations.

27. The committee report from which I was prepared to infer that the defenders had adopted as their policy the 25 limit for P1 was very brief. It did, however, acknowledge that Scottish Executive guidance (that is, Circular 1/2007) allowed for the exceptions as set out in the 1999 Regulations. The exceptions must thus form part of the defenders' policy.

28. Whatever the defenders might consider ideal or desirable, in terms of their policy it is thus clear that the defenders would not require to employ an additional teacher in 2008-09 if A and J were now placed in [the B] Primary. Nor would they need to budget for employing an additional teacher in future years, since by the time the 4 excepted children counted towards the class size maximum, that maximum would be 30 rather than 25 and the class would contain only 26 pupils."

 

Submissions for the Petitioners

[19] Sir Crispin Agnew QC, senior counsel for the petitioners, invited me to reduce the interlocutor of 22 August 2008 and remit the case back to the sheriff for reconsideration. He said that the decision was flawed and therefore susceptible to judicial review.

[20] As a preliminary issue, senior counsel stated that a subsidiary argument had been presented to the sheriff regarding "reserved places" in terms of section 28A (3A) of the 1980 Act. Contrary to what the sheriff had said in his judgment, the petitioners had not abandoned that argument. However, as he made no further submissions on the matter, I have not considered it in the course of this opinion.

[21] The principal submission for the petitioners was that by disregarding the Scottish Executive policy and guidance, the sheriff had failed to take into account a material consideration. He ignored the fact that the authority would require to employ an extra teacher to comply with the guidance and the policy. In consequence, he had incorrectly construed the phrase "make it necessary". By starting with the proposition that his placing of the twins would make them excepted pupils, the sheriff had overridden the regulations, the policy and the guidance. Senior counsel said that the sheriff's approach meant that no class size policy could ever operate, because a sheriff could always add extra pupils to the class. That effectively negated the policy.

[22] Senior counsel suggested that the correct approach was to accept that once the primary one class size exceeded 25 pupils, the authority was bound to employ an additional teacher, in order to comply with the guidelines. The sheriff should then have gone on to consider the second part of the statutory test, that is whether in all the circumstances, it was appropriate to place the twins in the B Primary School.

[23] Sir Crispin also pointed out that the sheriff's decision does not just affect the twins. Under the provisions of section 28F (6), the authority would be bound to review the decisions in respect of the other 9 pupils on the waiting list.

[24] He referred to Dundee City Council Petitioners 1999 Fam LR 13; and Smiles v City of Edinburgh Council 2006 SLT (Sh. Ct) 6. Sir Crispin used these cases to vouch the proposition that the sheriff should have taken account of all of the authority's policies in arriving at his decision. He should have accepted the evidence of Mrs Maureen Jobson (Acting Head of Education) that an additional teacher would have to be employed, if the twins' placing request was granted.

 

Submissions for the Respondents

[25] Mrs Scott QC invited me to refuse the motion for reduction and to recall the interim suspension of the sheriff's decision. The practical consequence would be that the twins could start at the B Primary School as soon as possible.

[26] Mrs Scott confirmed that no issue was taken with the competency of judicial review in this case. She founded on two propositions of law:

1. The sheriff did not exceed his jurisdiction in deciding as a matter of fact that placing request for the twins would require an additional teacher to be employed.

2. Esto the case turns on the petitioners' policy, the sheriff was entitled to find as a fact that they had adopted Circular of 2007/1 and in consequence the excepted pupils provision applied, so that the twins fell out of account for the purposes of class size.

As the Sheriff had not erred in law, there was no basis to interfere with his decision.

[27] Senior counsel said that section 28A of the 1980 Act created a charter of parental rights. An authority's primary duty was to place a child in accordance with their parents' wishes, unless certain exceptions applied. If the education authority could adopt a policy which would defeat those rights, that would drive a proverbial coach and four through the charter.

[28] Mrs Scott said that the sheriff was not bound to accept the evidence of Mrs Jobson. He was entitled to look behind her evidence and to conclude that it was not necessary to employ an additional teacher.

[29] Mrs Scott said that the term 'necessary' in section 28A of the 1980 Act fell to be construed in accordance with the 1999 Regulations. Parliament had carefully attempted to balance two different interests: (a) the parents' wish to have their child educated at a school of their choice; and (b) the education authority's aim to keep class sizes to the agreed minimum.

[30] Inevitably, there had to be a compromise between these two aspirations. Parliament had recognized that in some instances, the tension between these two goals would result in class sizes greater than 30 pupils. In this case, however, even if the twins were included, the class would not reach the statutory maximum.

[31] Senior counsel also drew attention to the normal placing process. All placing requests normally had to be made prior to 30 April each year. It was only after that date that the appeal committee or the sheriff could determine whether any appeals against refusal should be allowed.

[32] Mrs Scott said that neither of the cases referred to by the petitioners was in point and that they did not assist in the resolution of this case. The sheriff had to answer one question - would placing the twins in this school require the employment of an additional teacher? He had correctly answered that question in the negative. It was not necessary for the authority to employ an additional teacher under the regulations, because the class size did not exceed 30. Nor was it necessary in terms of the policy, because the twins would not be included in assessing the class size at 25. In other words, the sheriff had reached a decision that he was entitled to take on the facts and his decision was final.

 

Decision

[33] I wish to begin by emphasising the narrowness of the legal issues in this case. The sheriff was being asked to consider a decision in which the authority relied on only one ground to justify its refusal of the placing request. Parliament has declared that decision to be final. A judicial review can only scrutinize the sheriff's decision-making process in accordance with accepted principles. It is not an appeal.

[34] In my view, the critical question that the sheriff required to address was whether the placing of the twins in the B Primary School would "make it necessary for the authority to take an additional teacher into employment." (s28A (3)). In particular, he required to construe the term "necessary".

[35] In my opinion that is just what he did. Paragraph 28 of this judgment makes it plain that he directly addressed the issue of whether or not an additional teacher was required if the twins were placed in the B Primary.

[36] On the question of what were relevant and irrelevant considerations for the sheriff to take into account in arriving at his construction, I drew parties' attention to the judgment of Dyson LJ in Pabari v Secretary of State [2005] 1 All ER 287.

 

"'Necessary' is a somewhat protean word whose meaning depends on the context in which it is used. In some contexts, it means 'indispensable' or 'essential'. (para. 53)

...

In some contexts, the word 'necessary' has a weaker meaning. But it will usually bear the connotation of some degree of compulsion or exigency. The context will determine where on the spectrum of compulsion or exigency the word 'necessary' is placed (para. 55)."

[37] Each party, perhaps unsurprisingly, contended that these remarks assisted their own case. Sir Crispin suggested that it was necessary for the authority to employ an additional teacher, having regard to the policy guidelines and the evidence of Mrs Jobson. By contrast, Mrs Scott said that the context in this case meant the statutory context.

[38] In my view, the sheriff was entitled to approach the matter on the basis that the term "necessary" did require to be interpreted in accordance with the 1999 regulations. He did not misdirect himself, nor did he take into account an irrelevant consideration. He was entitled to hold that it was not necessary for the authority to employ and additional teacher if the twins were placed at the school of their choice.

[39] Parliament has expressly determined that class sizes are not affected by pupils placed by sheriffs or appeal committees. It follows that it is not a legal requirement for an authority to appoint an additional teacher. The legislation expressly allows for that contingency.

[40] The regulations themselves are not engaged here, because the class size would not reach the statutory maximum even with the twins. Further, as the excepted

pupils' provisions were translated into the authority's policy adopted in accordance with Circular 2007/1, the sheriff was also entitled to hold that it was not bound to appoint an additional teacher in order to comply with that policy.

[41] I shall therefore refuse the prayer of the petition and recall the interim suspension granted on 24 August 2008.

 

 

 

 


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