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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> St George's, University of London v Rafique-Aldawery, R (On the Application Of) [2018] EWCA Civ 2520 (13 November 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/2520.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 2520, [2019] 2 All ER 703, [2019] PTSR 658, [2019] ELR 119 |
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ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MR JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE IRWIN
and
LADY JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES DBE
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ST. GEORGE'S, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON |
First Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN on the application of MAZZ RAFIQUE-ALDAWERY |
First Respondent |
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- and - |
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OFFICE OF THE INDEPENDENT ADJUDICATOR |
Interested Party |
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UNIVERSITY OF LEICESTER |
Second Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN on the application of MITHILAN SIVASUBRAMANIYAM |
Second Respondent |
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- and - |
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OFFICE OF THE INDEPENDENT ADJUDICATOR |
Interested Party |
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Laura Farris (instructed by EJ Winter & Son LLP) for the Interested Party
The First and Second Respondent did not appear and were not represented
Hearing date: 9 October 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Nicola Davies DBE:
i) OIA proceedings have been issued, no judicial review proceedings have been issued but the student wishes to reserve the right to bring such proceedings;
ii) OIA and protective judicial review proceedings have been issued;
iii) Judicial review proceedings have been issued but the student does not wish to refer the complaint to the OIA.
The respondents take issue with this guidance which is said to be rigid and too prescriptive. In granting permission Jackson LJ observed that if the appeal did not succeed the Civil Procedure Rule Committee should "consider whether to amend CPR Part 54 in order to address the problem highlighted by" the cases.
"Referral of qualifying complaints
3. (1) Condition B is that the scheme provides that every qualifying complaint made about the qualifying institutions to which it relates is capable of being referred under the scheme.
(2) A scheme does not fail to meet condition B only because it contains some or all of the following—
…
(c) Provision that a qualifying complaint is not to be referred under the scheme if—
(i) relevant proceedings have been concluded, or
(ii) relevant proceedings that have not been concluded have not been stayed."
"1. Purpose
The main purpose of the Scheme is the independent, impartial and transparent review of unresolved complaints by students about acts and omissions of Member HE Providers and, through learning from complaints, the promotion of good practice.
3. Complaints not covered
The Scheme does not cover a complaint to the extent that….
3.3 the matter complained about was the subject of court or tribunal proceedings and those have been concluded or the matter is the subject of court or tribunal proceedings and those proceedings have not been stayed."
"The OIA will not consider matters which have already been decided by the courts. We cannot consider complaints where the matter is or becomes the subject of court or tribunal proceedings which have not been stayed (adjourned or put on hold). In signing the Complaint Form the student acknowledges that s/he must inform the OIA immediately if any part of the complaint is being dealt with in the courts or by another body.
We may ask to see the claim form and any defence filed in order to establish whether the legal proceedings relate to the same subject matter. If the legal proceedings have been 'stayed' or 'adjourned' by the court, we may ask to see the relevant court order.
If a student has applied for permission to bring a judicial review claim against the Member HE Provider and has been refused permission, we would normally consider that those proceedings have been concluded and we would not look at their complaint. However, we may accept the complaint if the judge has identified the OIA as an 'alternative remedy' available to the student, and has refused permission on that basis. We would only accept such a complaint for review provided the judge has not made any findings on the merits of the case."
"6. Review Procedures
6.1 Once a determination has been made under Rule 5.3, the Reviewer will carry out a Review of the complaint to decide whether it is Justified, Partly Justified or Not Justified.
6.2 In deciding whether a complaint is Justified the Reviewer may consider whether or not the Member HE Provider properly applied its regulations and followed its procedures and whether or not a decision made by the Member HE Provider was reasonable in all the circumstances.
6.3 The Review will normally consist of a review of documentation and other information and the Reviewer will not hold an oral hearing unless in all the circumstances he or she considers that it is necessary to do so.
6.4 The Reviewer shall not be bound by legal rules of evidence nor by previous decisions of the OIA.
6.5 The nature and extent of the Review will be at the sole discretion of the Reviewer. When the Reviewer has determined that he or she has all of the material he or she considers necessary to make a decision, the Reviewer will issue a Complaint Outcome."
"Parliament has conferred on the designated operator a broad discretion. It is not prescriptive as to how complaints should be considered when making a decision whether they are justified. OIA is able, both in defining its scheme and in deciding whether particular complaints are justified, to exercise a discretion in determining how to approach the particular complaint. OIA is entitled to operate on the basis that different complaints may require different approaches. In assessing whether a complaint has been approached in a lawful manner, the court will have regard to the expertise of OIA, which in turn should have regard to the expertise of the HEI. OIA is entitled in most cases, if it sees fit, to take the HEI's regulations and procedures as a starting point and to consider, when assessing a complaint, whether they have been complied with." [[53]: Pill LJ]
"The OIA's concern that the availability of judicial review will impair the efficient operation of the Scheme by introducing undue formality and legalism is misplaced. The number of cases in which an application for judicial review could get past the permission stage is likely to be very small. There is a broad discretion under the Scheme as to how the review of a complaint will be carried out (see below). The decision whether a complaint is justified involves an exercise of judgment with which the court will be very slow to interfere. A complainant dissatisfied with the OIA's decision will often have the option of pursuing a civil claim against the HEI, which may well be an appropriate alternative remedy justifying in itself the refusal of permission to apply for judicial review of the OIA's decision. In the present case, permission was granted only because certain issues of general principle were raised. In the ordinary course a case of this kind could be expected to have little chance of getting through the permission filter." [[74]: Richards LJ]
"… (1) The OIA is amenable to judicial review for the correction of legal errors in its decision-making process.
(2) That process involves conducting, in accordance with a broad discretion, a fair and impartial review of a student's unresolved complaint about the acts or omissions of an HEI and to do so on the basis of the materials before it, also drawing on its own experience of higher education, all with a view to making recommendations.
(3) The function of the OIA is a public one of reviewing a 'qualifying complaint' made against an HEI and of determining 'the extent to which it was justified.'
(4) For that purpose the OIA considers whether the relevant regulations have been properly applied by the HEI in question, whether it has followed its procedures and whether its decision was reasonable in all the circumstances.
(5) It is not the function of the OIA to determine the legal rights and obligations of the parties involved, or to conduct a full investigation into the underlying facts. Those are matters for judicial processes in the ordinary courts and tribunals. Access to their jurisdiction is not affected by the operations of the OIA.
(6) The review by the OIA does not have to follow any particular approach or to be in any particular form. The OIA has a broad discretion to be flexible in how it reviews the complaint and in deciding on the form, nature and extent of its investigation in the particular case.
(7) The courts will be slow to interfere with review decisions and recommendations of the OIA when they are adequately reasoned. They are not required to be elaborately reasoned, the intention being that its operations should be more informal, more expeditious and less costly than legal proceedings in ordinary courts and tribunals"
Mummery LJ rejected the idea that the function of the OIA was to act as a surrogate of the county court. He stated:
"32. … the practice and procedures for the review and resolution of a wide range of student complaints under the independent scheme operated free of charge and largely as an inquisitorial on a confidential basis by the OIA under the 2004 Act, is quite different from civil proceedings. Its informal inquisitorial methods, which are normally conducted on paper without cross examination and possibly leading to the making of recommendations in its Final Decision, mean that the outcome is not the product of a rigorous adversarial judicial process dealing with the proof of contested facts, with the application of the legislation to proven facts, with establishing legal rights and obligations and with awarding legal remedies, such as damages and declarations. ...
33. In my judgment, the courts are not entitled to impose on the informal complaints review procedure of the OIA a requirement that it should have to adjudicate on issues, such as whether or not there has been disability discrimination. Adjudication of that issue usually involves making decisions on contested questions of fact and law, which require the more stringent and structured procedures of civil litigation for their proper determination.
…
37. If the approach advocated by [the Claimant] were correct, it is difficult to see what point there would be in having a scheme, which was established under the 2004 Act not as another court of law or tribunal, but as a more user friendly and affordable alternative procedure for airing students' complaints and grievances. The judicialisation of the OIA so that it has to perform the same fact-finding functions and to make the same decisions on liability as the ordinary courts and tribunals would not be in the interests of students generally.
38. Recent years have seen the growth of alternative processes of inexpensive dispute resolution: they are not intended to be fully judicial, or to be operated in accordance with civil law trial procedures, or to be dependent on what is fast becoming a luxury of legal advice and representation. The new processes have the advantage of being able to produce outcomes that are more flexible, constructive and acceptable to both sides than the all-or-nothing results of unaffordable contests in courts of law."
"Judicial review is a remedy of last not first resort. I wish to make it clear, both to this claimant and to others in a similar position to her, that complaints of this nature should not ordinarily be pursued by judicial review, but should be pursued where a sensible offer is made, as here, by accepting that offer or, in the absence of such an offer, by complaint to the Office of the Independent Adjudicator. That is the appropriate procedure for resolving complaints about allegedly unfair expulsion from a university."
The facts
"The [first appellant] has a power to consider appeals lodged outside the primary time limit [set out in its rules];
Any decision on an application of the rules was a matter for the Chair of Council [rather than the Head of Governance, Legal and Assurance Services];
In order to comply with its duties under the Equality Act [specifically sections15, 19, 20 and 91, also the Public Sector Equality Duty] the [first appellant] needs to operate its rules to consider evidence of a disability, particularly where it was hard for that evidence to be obtained earlier in proceedings;
The sanction imposed was disproportionate or not properly arrived at".
i) Offended the provisions of the Equality Act 2010, in particular section 149 of that Act (the Public Sector Equality Duty);
ii) Failed to make adjustments to accommodate the second respondent's disabilities;
iii) Breached the prohibition on direct disability discrimination;
iv) Acted unreasonably, irrationally and unlawfully;
v) Failed to give adequate reasons;
vi) Breached the Consumer Rights Act 2015, section 62.
Discussion and conclusion
i) Impel students to issue judicial review proceedings for fear of losing a legitimate means of protecting themselves and their rights. This could result in the instruction of lawyers, a step they would be unlikely to take in respect of complaints to the OIA;
ii) Deprive the HEI of its normal protection in judicial review proceedings, namely short time limits. The timings in the guidance are longer and incompatible with the timings in judicial review proceedings. The effect would be to place student claimants in a different position to other claimants in judicial review proceedings;
iii) Undermine the statutory complaints procedure by encouraging the students protectively to issue applications for judicial review simultaneously with complaints to the OIA.
In my view there is force in each of these points.
Lord Justice Irwin:
Lord Justice Lindblom: