HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE RECOMMENDATIONS

July 16th, 2024 by James Goudie KC in Social Care

In MM v GREENWICH RLBC (2024) UKUT 179 (AAC) Judge Stout holds that a FTT a First-tier Tribunal when considering an appeal in relation to an education health and care plan for a 16 year old boy had failed to consider whether he had capacity to litigate, and should have appointed his mother as alternative person.  The Upper Tribunal gave a guidance on the approach of the FTT to health and social care recommendations under the Special Educational Needs and Disability (First-tier Tribunal Recommendations Power) Regulations 2017.

The guidance, at paragraph 108, is as follows.

  • Although there was no freestanding right of appeal against the contents of the health and social care sections of the EHCP, once an appeal had been brought under s.51 of the Act, the tribunal’s powers to make recommendations under the 2017 Regulations were an equal part of its jurisdiction.
  • The fact that the local authority or responsible commissioning body was only required to provide a reasoned response to the tribunal’s recommendations rather than actually comply was not a reason for the tribunal to regard its decision-making task as any less important.
  • The tribunal exercised an inquisitorial jurisdiction in relation to health and social care in the same way as it did in relation to special educational needs.
  • The primary burden was on the parties to put before the tribunal the evidence necessary to make out their respective cases. If they failed to do so, the tribunal could decide the case on the evidence before it, or direct further evidence.
  • The tribunal was not required before deciding what to order to ensure that the various statutory steps that the local authority should have carried out before making or amending the EHCP had been completed.
  • There was no statutory requirement in relation to assessment before health or social care provision could be included in an EHCP, nor did the tribunal have any express jurisdiction to order or recommend that either the responsible commissioning body or the local authority carry out an assessment.
  • Although the tribunal was not required to comply with the decision-making frameworks applicable to the local authority or responsible commissioning body, it might be relevant for it to take certain elements into account when making recommendations.
  • The social care legislative framework might also inform the tribunal’s approach where there had been a breakdown in relationships between parent and social services.
  • As a matter of good practice, in cases where health and social care recommendations were sought under the 2017 Regulations, the tribunal should require the local authority or responsible commissioning body to provide it with the relevant local criteria.
  • If the evidence the tribunal had was “thin”, it could adjourn for further evidence, or refuse to make recommendations. There was in principle nothing wrong with making recommendations on a time-limited basis if the evidence available only related to a limited period.

 

HOUSING ASSISTANCE

July 15th, 2024 by James Goudie KC in Housing

In FERTRE v VALE OF WHITE HORSE DC ( 2024 ) EWHC 1754 ( KB ) it is held that pre-settled status granted to an EU national, who had moved to the UK before Brexit, and was economically inactive, had not conferred unconditional rights, including a right to housing assistance. She was not residing in the UK on the basis of the Agreement on the Withdrawal of the UK from the EU.

 

REMOTE HEARINGS

July 11th, 2024 by James Goudie KC in Decision making and Contracts

WALK SAFE SECURITY SERVICES LTD v LEWISHAM LBC ( 2024) EWHC 1787 ( Admin) raises a pure question of law whether it is lawful for a licensing hearing before a local authority licensing committee to be held remotely. Chamberlain J holds that it is lawful, pursuant to the Licensing Act 2003 and the Licensing Act ( Hearings ) Regulations 2005. He observes that the point is of wide significance, because many local authorities conduct all or most licensing hearings remotely.

He said, at para 43, that there were 5 points relevant to interpretation that taken together favour a construction according to which remote hearings are permissible in principle. First, the term “ hearing” can be applied to both in person hearings and remote hearings. Second, the legislative context includes reference to the “ place “ at which the hearing takes place, and an online platform can properly be described as a “ place “. Third, there are “ important differences “between licensing hearings and local authority meetings. Fourth, the Regulations do not prohibit them and confer maximum procedural flexibility on licensing committees. Fifth, there is nothing in the Strasbourg Court jurisprudence to suggest that remote hearings “necessarily” gives rise to a violation of any ECHR procedural rights, albeit ( para 48 ) “ they may do so in particular cases, in which case a licensing authority would be obliged to consider alternative arrangements.”

 

CONSULTATION

July 11th, 2024 by James Goudie KC in Planning and Environmental

In R (GURAJENA) v NEWHAM LBC (2024) EWHC 1745 (Admin) the Court holds that , for the purposes of determining whether a local authority had complied with its duty to consult in relation to planning applications, “ adjoining “ embraces not only properties which are contiguous, but also those that in the judgment of the authority are very near or lying close to the application site.

 

THE RULE OF LAW and BREXIT

July 11th, 2024 by James Goudie KC in Judicial Control, Liability and Litigation

The Supreme Court in LIPTON v BA CITY FLYER LTD ( 2024 ) UKSC 24 addresses important questions regarding the status of accrued EU law rights. An important question raised by the appeal was what law applied to a cause of action that accrued under an EU regulation prior to Brexit. The Supreme Court was required to examine the domestic legislation which implemented Brexit, notably the European Union ( Withdrawal ) Act 2018. The Supreme Court states that a basic principle of the rule of law is that the applicable law is that in force at the time an event occurs. It is not some different version introduced at a later date.

 

DEPRIVATION OF LIBERTY

July 8th, 2024 by James Goudie KC in Social Care

In J ( LOCAL AUTHORITY CONSENT TO DEPRIVATION OF LIBERTY ) ( 2024 ) EWHC 1690 ( Fam ) Lieven J hols that a local authority which held parental responsibility for a child under the age of 16, under a Care Order, pursuant to Section 20 of the Children Act 1989, could consent to the deprivation of liberty of that child, as corporate parent, pursuant to section 33 of that Act. No Deprivation of Liberty Order was required, notwithstanding that there was a deprivation of liberty within the meaning of Article 5 of the ECHR. The decision to deprive the child of his liberty was an exercise of the authority’s statutory duties to him. There was an obligation as carer to keep him safe. Far from the restrictions amounting to a serious infringement of his rights that no local authority could lawfully consent to, they were restrictions essential to securing his best interests. Indeed they were required by the positive obligations under Article 2 of the ECHR.

 

ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION

July 4th, 2024 by James Goudie KC in Environment, Highways and Leisure

In SURREY SEARCHES LTD v NORTHUMBRIAN WATER LTD ( ( 2024 ) EWHC 1643 ( Ch ) the Court was required to determine the interpretation and application of the ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION REGULATIONS 2004 ( the EIR ) in water and drainage Search Reports in conveyancing transactions. Personal search providers asserted that charges levied by water and sewage companies for property Search Reports were unlawful because they alleged the information should have been provided free, or for a reasonable charge, under the EIR. The Court however concluded that not all the information responsive to the questions was “ environmental information “ within the EIR.

The EIR fell to be interpreted in accordance with the language and objectives of Directive 2003/4, and the Directive, in turn with those of the AARHUS CONVENTION 2001.

The case also concerned ( 1 ) whether environmental information was “ held “ , (2)  whether information was “ personal data “ that did not have to be disclosed without a confidentiality restriction, and ( 3 ) the charging regime.

 

ENVIRONMENTAL PRINCIPLES

July 4th, 2024 by James Goudie KC in Planning and Environmental

In R ( Rights Community Action Ltd ) v SoS for LEVELLING UP ( ( 2024 ) EWHC 1693 ( Admin ) Lieven J holds that, where a written Ministerial Statement ( the Statement ) concerning the setting of ENERGY EFFICIENCY STANDARDS and  stricter emission controls  for newly built homes was published in the absence of an ENVIRONMENTAL PRINCIPLES POLICY STATEMENT ( EPPS ), required by Section 17 of the ENVIRONMENT ACT 2021 ( EA 2021 ), the Statement was not vitiated by a failure to have “ due regard “ to the EPPS, pursuant to Section 19(1) of EA 2021. This is because it could be assessed retrospectively against an EPPS prepared after publication of the Statement. The Statement was compatible with the power of local planning authorities pursuant to Section 1 of the PLANNING and ENERGY ACT 2008 to include, in their DEVELOPMENT PLAN, Policies imposing reasonable requirements for developments in their area to comply with “ energy efficiency standards “ that exceeded the energy requirements of Building Regulations.

 

PFI AGREEMENTS

July 4th, 2024 by James Goudie KC in Decision making and Contracts

In PEVENSEY COASTAL DEFENCE LTD v ENVIRONMENT AGENCY ( 2024 ) EWHC 1435 ( TCC ) it is held that, on the proper construction of a 25 year PFI agreement, for the provision of services, for the delivery of sea defences, the service provider could, retrospectively, make a claim for ADDITIONAL COST that it had incurred, as a result of a material increase in the FREQUENCY OF STORM EVENTS in the second decade of the PFI agreement, compared with its first decade. The ability to budget for a dynamic situation was a central element of the PFI agreement.

 

DISCHARGES OF UNTREATED SEWAGE

July 3rd, 2024 by James Goudie KC in Judicial Control, Liability and Litigation

The owner of a watercourse has a property right in the watercourse. That includes a right to preserve the quality of the water. That right is protected by the common law. The discharge of polluting effluent is an actionable nuisance if the pollution interferes with the use or enjoyment of the property.

A body which exercises statutory powers, such as a sewerage undertaker, is liable in the same way as any other person if it is responsible for a nuisance, trespass or other tort, unless either it: (i) is acting within its statutory powers, or (ii) has been granted some statutory immunity from suit. If a sewerage undertaker interferes with a person’s rights, it is therefore necessary to distinguish between interferences which Parliament has authorised, which are lawful, and interferences which Parliament has not authorised, which are unlawful. When drawing this distinction, two principles are relevant. First, a person’s rights to the peaceful enjoyment of its property and to access the courts are protected by both the common law and the Human Rights Act 1998. The principle of legality holds that fundamental rights cannot be overridden by general or ambiguous words. A statute will, therefore, only authorise what would otherwise be an unlawful interference with property rights, or deprive a person of the right to bring a legal claim, if this is clear from or a necessary implication of the express language used by Parliament. Secondly, Parliament will not be taken to have intended that statutory powers should be exercised, or duties performed, in a way which interferes with private rights, unless the interference is inevitable.

The issue before the Supreme Court in MANCHESTER SHIP CANAL COMPANY LTD v UNITED UTILITIES WATER LIMITED (2024) UKSC was whether, as a matter of statutory interpretation, the Water Industry Act 1991 excluded common law rights of action in nuisance and trespass. The Supreme Court held that it did not.