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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 >> Williams, R (On the Application Of) v Caerphilly County Borough Council [2020] EWCA Civ 296 (03 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/296.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 296, [2020] WLR(D) 138, [2020] PTSR 1130 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT IN WALES
(Mr Justice Swift)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HADDON-CAVE
and
LORD JUSTICE MALES
____________________
THE QUEEN (ON THE APPLICATION OF SHANE WILLIAMS) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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CAERPHILLY COUNTY BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Respondent |
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James Goudie QC and Ronnie Dennis (instructed by Caerphilly County Borough Council Legal Services) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 20th February 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Males :
Introduction
"Where necessary, as and when required, the strategy implementation will be supported by more detailed communications, consultation, and business cases for action to support reports to the relevant Scrutiny Committee, Cabinet and/or Full Council."
"A rationalisation of facilities will result in 4 strategic, high quality, multi service leisure centres that are managed by the authority's Sport and Leisure Service. The 4 strategic centres will be located in Risca, Caerphilly, and Newbridge, and one in Bargoed/Aberbargoed areas to serve the north of the county borough. It is therefore anticipated that the other leisure centres would either transfer to school management (if they are joint use facilities located on a school site, subject to governing body approval) or could close completely. Careful consideration will be given to opportunities for alternative provision before any facilities are withdrawn."
(1) the decision to adopt the Strategy was a decision which could only be made by the full council;
(2) the cabinet failed to have regard to the cost of implementing the Strategy which was a material consideration; and
(3) the Strategy was an "arrangement to secure continuous improvement in the exercise" of the council's functions within the meaning of section 2 of the Local Government (Wales) Measure 2009 ("the 2009 Measure") which required the council to have regard to the efficiency (and thus the cost) of its proposals and to undertake a consultation pursuant to section 5 of the Measure.
The facts
The Strategy Decision
"9. The Council's description of the Sports Strategy is that it sets out the future purpose and direction for the provision of sport and active recreation in the County Borough, and establishes ' the key principles and vision over the next 10 years'. This description is accurate. On consideration of the document, it is clear that it is genuinely a strategy document. It identifies the Council's 'vision' to 'encourage healthy lifestyles and support residents to be more active more often'. It identifies the role of the Council's Community and Leisure Service as being to lead 'the promotion of sport and active recreation' and to co-ordinate the delivery of the Strategy. In this way the Sports Strategy signals the Council's intention to move from an approach which assumed that the Council would be the main provider of leisure facilities, and towards one resting on a mix of Council-provided facilities and facilities provided by others. The Sports Strategy next sets out how the Council's approach will fit with the '7 Wellbeing Goals' listed in the Wellbeing of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015, and the Wellbeing Objectives in the Council's own corporate plan. While it would be wrong to describe these parts of the Sports Strategy as purely aspirational, it is certainly the case that the Strategy is not written in hard-edged or prescriptive language. Rather, the document describes a collection of ideas, principles and objectives. It is not a set of marching orders. In this same vein, the Sports Strategy states that the Council will, in respect of facilities, adopt the approach advocated by the Welsh Government and Sport Wales in their March 2016 document 'Facilities for Future Generations', including what is referred to as the 'Decision-Making Matrix' contained in that document to determine which leisure facilities are to be considered 'strategic leisure facilities' and are to be directly managed by the Council. Under the heading 'What Needs to be Done', the Sports Strategy sets out the Council's Corporate Policy; states that the facilities it will provide are to comprise four 'strategic, high quality, multi-service leisure centres' in Risca, Caerphilly, Newbridge and either the Bargoed area or the Aberbargoed area; states that a plan will be developed to enhance outdoor recreational spaces; develop a plan for swimming facilities; and will seek to collaborate with schools, community groups and clubs through a recreation outreach and intervention programme."
"Members were reminded of the time frame within which the strategy would operate and the importance of remembering that any decisions arising from it would be taken over a ten year period and would therefore be subject to further and specific reports to Cabinet. Officers advised that current provision cannot continue in its present form as it is not sustainable.
Officers referred to paragraph 4.13 in the report where it was highlighted that a number of responses [to the consultation] centred specifically on concerns relating to the potential closure of two facilities, Pontllanfraith Leisure centre and Cefn Fforest Leisure Centre, and with 52% of the respondents stating that any closure of facilities would have a negative impact. In terms of Leisure Centre provision Officers confirmed that any proposals for the closure of facilities would be the subject of further reports which would be presented to Members for consideration. "
"An important factor for Members to consider is the period of time (2019-2029) be covered by the Strategy. It is therefore important to remember that any decisions arising from the Strategy (if adopted) will be taken over the 10 year period and will be the subject of specific reports to Cabinet."
"The Council is acutely aware of concerns regarding any potential loss of facilities and will give careful consideration to opportunities for alternative provision before any facilities are withdrawn. Decisions on each will be the subject of separate reports and a specific decision making process as the Authority evolves to the new model of provision over the lifetime of the Strategy."
"There are no financial implications at this stage. Should the Strategy be formally adopted then proposed actions will be the subject of separate reports over the 10 year course of the Strategy that will include detailed financial implications. Any decisions will be dependent on the availability of funding and the approval of a robust business case."
"1. Do nothing and continue to subsidise at present values.
2. Refurbishment Option 1 Circa £5.188m
3. Refurbishment Option 2 Circa £8.915m
4. New Build Option Circa £13-15m"
"A local authority may provide, inside or outside its area, such recreational facilities as it thinks fit and, without prejudice to the generality of the powers conferred by the preceding provisions of this subsection, those powers include in particular powers to provide
(a) indoor facilities consisting of sports centres, swimming pools, skating rinks, tennis, squash and badminton courts, bowling centres, dance studios and riding schools;
(b) outdoor facilities consisting of pitches for team games, athletics grounds, swimming pools, tennis courts, cycle tracks, golf courses, bowling greens, riding schools, camp sites and facilities for gliding; "
Ground 1 not within the responsibility of the cabinet
The legislation
"(1) This section has effect for the purposes of determining the functions of a local authority which are the responsibility of an executive of the authority under executive arrangements.
(2) Subject to any provision made by this Act or by any enactment which is passed or made after the day on which this Act is passed, any function of a local authority which is not specified in regulations under subsection (3) is to be the responsibility of an executive authority under executive arrangements.
(3) The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make provision for any function of a local authority specified in the regulations (a) to be a function which is not to be the responsibility of an executive of the authority under executive arrangements
(10) Accordingly any function which is the responsibility of an executive of a local authority under executive arrangements
(a) may not be discharged by the authority. "
"Discharge of specified function by authorities
(1) Subject to paragraph (2), a function of any of the descriptions specified in column (1) of Schedule 4 (which, but for this paragraph, might be the responsibility of an executive of the authority), is not the responsibility of an executive in the circumstances specified in column (2) in relation to that function."
(1) Function | (2) Circumstances |
The adoption or approval of a plan or strategy (whether statutory or non-statutory), other than a plan or strategy for the control of the authority's borrowing or capital expenditure or referred to in Schedule 3. | The authority determines that the decision whether the plan or strategy should be adopted or approved should be taken by them. |
The determination of any matter in the discharge of a function which (a) is the responsibility of the executive; and (b) is concerned with the authority's budget, or their borrowing or capital expenditure. |
The individual or body by whom, by virtue of any of sections 14 to 17 of the Local Government Act 2000 or provision made under section 18 or 20 of that Act, the determination is to be made (a) is minded to determine the matter contrary to, or not wholly in accordance with (i) the authority's budget; or (ii) the plan or strategy for the time being approved or adopted by the authority in relation to their borrowing or capital expenditure; and (b) is not authorised by the authority's executive arrangements, financial regulations, standing orders or other rules or procedures to make a determination in those terms. |
The determination of any matter in the discharge of a function (a) which is the responsibility of the executive; and (b) in relation to which a plan or strategy (whether statutory or non-statutory) has been adopted or approved by the authority. |
The individual or body by whom, , by virtue of any of sections 14 to 17 of the Local Government Act 2000 or provision made under section 18 or 20 of that Act, the determination is to be made, is minded to determine the matter in terms contrary to the plan or, as the case may be the strategy adopted or approved by the authority. |
" The language of 'plan or strategy', read in the context of the 2000 Regulations, denotes something that operates at a general level. It cannot embrace any and every decision that may be taken on an individual issue. If it did, it would undermine the basic distinction between executive and non-executive functions which lies at the heart of the relevant part of the 2000 Act. The basic idea is that the full council may in certain respects set the policy framework for the authority, but its detailed implementation is a matter for the executive (provided that what it does is not contrary to and is wholly in accordance with the budget). "
The judgment
The submissions on appeal
Discussion
"10. Mr Howells relies in particular on the part of the Sports Strategy that refers to the four proposed strategic leisure centres, to support his submission that the Strategy Decision was a 'gateway decision' which committed the Council to clear and prescribed courses of action. As such, he submitted, the Sports Strategy was a strategy for investment. Although he accepted that the Sports Strategy was not itself a mandate to close or redevelop any specific leisure facility, he contends that when the Sports Strategy was adopted a die was cast. In my view this is a significant over-reading of the Sport Strategy. The Strategy sets a direction but only in generic terms. Any specific decision, for example to redevelop or close a leisure centre could not be taken by the Council simply on the basis that it was, in general terms, in-keeping with the Sports Strategy; rather, the specifics of any such proposal would have to be worked through in detail. Even by reference to the four strategic leisure centres, the Sports Strategy goes no further than saying that over a 10 year period these facilities should be provided. That is a policy objective rather than a hard-edged plan. The cost or other implications of that objective could significantly change over the 10 year life of the Strategy. Those matters are only capable of being distilled in specifics at such time as the Council chooses to make an operational decision. Put shortly, the Sports Strategy is a demonstration of intent; the way in which or the extent to which that intent becomes manifest in the course of the next 10 years is not set in stone.
11. I now turn to the second question posed at paragraph 6 above was the discharge of the section 111 power, the decision to adopt the Sports Strategy, 'concerned with' the Council's budget, borrowing or capital expenditure? The words 'concerned with' have a flexible meaning. At one end of a scale, any decision that could, even indirectly, result in expenditure or borrowing might be said to be 'concerned with' those matters. Yet that would not be a realistic application of those words in the context in which they appear. How they are applied must be guided by the purpose of paragraph 2 of Schedule 4 to the 2007 Regulations, namely that decisions which are inconsistent with a relevant budget or borrowing or capital expenditure plan should only be taken by persons authorised under the Council's own executive arrangements to take decisions which have those consequences. Thus while the words 'concerned with' are to be applied taking good account of the specifics of the decision in hand, the focus should be on the direct consequences of the decision. Applied to the facts of this case, I do not consider it is correct to say that the Strategy Decision was a decision concerned with the Council's budget, borrowing or capital expenditure. Most obviously, the Strategy Decision was concerned with the Council's policy for sports and leisure provision over the period to 2029. It was not in the nature of the Sports Strategy as I have described it above that it was concerned with the Council's budget, borrowing or capital expenditure. The Sports Strategy contained no decision that committed the Council, as a matter of law, to specific expenditure, capital expenditure or borrowing. The fact that the Sports Strategy might be described as a plan that if implemented would inevitably entail expenditure of Council funds, is not to the point. Such spending decisions are yet to be taken; when proposals for development are put forward they will have to be assessed by the Council, on their own terms. (The Officer's Report for the Cabinet meeting on 14 November 2018 said as much at paragraph 7.1 see below at paragraph 15 of this judgment)."
(1) The council recognised when adopting the Strategy that any closure of a leisure centre would require a future decision. I have set out above the repeated statements to that effect in the minutes of the cabinet meeting and the report presented to the meeting.
(2) Any such future decision would not be determined by the Strategy, but would require its own justification in accordance with relevant public law principles and would be open to legal challenge.
(3) The decision on 10th April 2019 to close the Pontllanfraith centre was in fact successfully challenged and the decision was quashed.
(4) In contrast with adoption of the Strategy, a future decision to build or refurbish one leisure centre, or to close another, would have financial implications and would be subject to the availability of funding.
(5) When the time came for such a future decision to be made, the Strategy would be a relevant and important consideration to be taken into account, but it would not be the only consideration.
Ground 2 failure to have regard to the cost of implementing the Strategy
The judgment
"17. My conclusion is that the Strategy Decision was not unlawful by reason of a failure to take account of the likely costs of implementing the Sports Strategy. The Strategy Decision did not commit the Council to any specific expenditure. As is apparent from paragraph 7.1 of the Officer's Report, a decision to adopt the Sports Strategy ran the risk of political embarrassment if over the 10 year period the Council lacked the resources to realise the Strategy. Yet in my view, that is an approach that the Council was entitled to take. Given that the Sports Strategy was set to endure for 10 years, it is equally reasonable to assume that anything approaching detailed costings would be either impossible or artificial given the difficulty of estimating now the cost of works that might not commence for 5, 7 or even 10 years.
18. In the premises the second ground of challenge fails. Once the nature and substance of the Sports Strategy, as I have described it, is taken into account, it was not Wednesbury unlawful for the Council to adopt the Sports Strategy without information about the likely cost that its implementation might entail. Given that the Strategy Decision did not commit the Council to any specific programme of work, it was open to the Council to proceed on the basis that information about the cost of implementation was not a material consideration at that stage, and that such financial considerations would be addressed step by step as implementing plans came forward. This ran a political risk if implementation turned out not to be possible; but that is not a matter going to the legality of the decision."
The submissions on appeal
Discussion
Ground 3 an "arrangement to secure continuous improvement in the exercise" of the council's functions
The legislation
"2 General duty in relation to improvement
(1) A Welsh improvement authority must make arrangements to secure continuous improvement in the exercise of its functions.
(2) In discharging its duty under subsection (1), an authority must have regard in particular to the need to improve the exercise of its functions in terms of
(a) strategic effectiveness;
(b) service quality;
(c) service availability;
(d) fairness;
(e) sustainability;
(f) efficiency; and
(g) innovation.
(3) For the meanings of paragraphs (a) to (g) of subsection (2), see section 4.
3 Improvement objectives
(1) For each financial year, a Welsh improvement authority must set itself objectives for improving the exercise of its functions during that year ('improvement objectives').
(2) A Welsh improvement authority must make arrangements to secure achievement of its improvement objectives.
(3) An improvement objective must be framed so as to improve the exercise of the function or functions to which it relates in terms of at least one of the following
(a) strategic effectiveness;
(b) service quality;
(c) service availability;
(d) fairness;
(e) sustainability;
(f) efficiency; and
(g) innovation.
(4) For the meanings of paragraphs (a) to (g) of subsection (3), see section 4."
"4 Aspects of improvement
(1) This section provides for the meanings of paragraphs (a) to (g) of:
(a) section 2(2); (b) section 3(3); and (c) section 8(5).
(2) A Welsh improvement authority improves the exercise of its functions in terms of:
(a) strategic effectiveness, if it exercises its functions in a way which is reasonably likely to lead to the achievement of, or assist in achieving, any of its strategic objectives;
(b) service quality, if there is an improvement in the quality of services;
(c) service availability, if there is an improvement in the availability of services;
(d) fairness, if
(i) disadvantages faced by particular groups in accessing, or taking full advantage of, services are reduced; or
(ii) social well-being is improved as a result of the provision of services or the way in which functions are otherwise exercised;
(e) sustainability, if services are provided or functions are otherwise exercised in a way which contributes towards the achievement of sustainable development in the authority's area;
(f) efficiency, if there is an improvement in the efficiency with which resources are used in the provision of services or in the way in which functions are otherwise exercised; and
(g) innovation, if the way in which services are provided or functions are otherwise exercised is altered in a manner which is reasonably likely to lead to any outcome described in paragraphs (a) to (f)."
"69. I start with sub-section (1), which establishes the substantive best value duty. I would analyse it as follows:
(1) The core subject-matter is 'the way in which' the authority's functions are exercised. That is very general language. It could in a different context cover almost any choice about anything that the authority does. But in this context it seems to me clear that it connotes high-level choices about how, as a matter of principle and approach, an authority goes about performing its functions. I do not say that the choice of whether, or to what extent, to outsource is the only such choice; but in the light of the legislative background outlined above the 'ways' in which functions can be performed must include whether they are performed directly by the authority itself or in partnership with others: indeed that would seem to be a paradigm of the kinds of choices with which section 3(1) is concerned.
(2) The duty is aimed at securing 'improvements' in the way in which the authority's functions are exercised. That inevitably means change, where the authority judges that change would be for the better having regard to the specified criteria.
(3) The actual duty is not formulated as a duty to secure improvements simpliciter but as a duty to 'make arrangements' to do so. I am not sure why this formula was adopted. I do not think that the draftsman was concerned with administrative 'arrangements'. It may have been thought that to impose a duty simply 'to secure improvements' would expose authorities to legal challenges from those who contended that particular decisions were for the worse, or that authorities were wrong in failing to take particular steps which it was asserted would make things better: the reference to 'making arrangements' would make it clear that the duty was concerned with intentions rather than outcome. It may also be that the draftsman wanted to emphasise the need to build the fulfilment of the best value duty into authorities' plans and procedures. Or perhaps it is just circumlocution. But, whatever the explanation, the important point for present purposes is what the arrangements are aimed at, namely securing improvements in the way in which authorities perform their functions.
It follows that one of the effects of the best value duty is to require local authorities to outsource or, if you prefer, to make arrangements to outsource the performance of particular functions where it considers, having regard to the specified criteria, that would constitute an improvement."
"5 Consultation about the general duty and improvement objectives
(1) For the purpose of deciding how to fulfil the duties under section 2(1) and 3(1) a Welsh improvement authority must consult
(a) representatives of persons resident in the authority's area;
(b) representatives of persons liable to pay non-domestic rates in respect of any area within which the authority carries out functions;
(c) representatives of persons who use or are likely to use services provided by the authority; and
(d) representatives of persons appearing to the authority to have an interest in any area within which the authority carries out functions.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) "representatives" in relation to a group of persons means persons who appear to the authority to be representative of that group."
The judgment
"20. The first point is the way in which the section 2(1) duty is formulated. It is not for example, in the manner of the public sector equality duty under section 149(1) of the Equality Act 2010 expressed in terms of an obligation to have regard to prescribed considerations whenever a decision is taken. Rather, it is an obligation to 'make arrangements to secure continuous improvement in the exercise of functions'. This suggests that the section requires relevant authorities to put in place free-standing measures to improve decision-making processes by reference to the criteria listed at section 2(2) of the 2009 Measure. These arrangements are distinct from what a relevant authority might do in the exercise of its ordinary substantive functions; the section 2 arrangements are intended to improve the way in which those other functions are used.
21. None of this is to say that the section 2 duty is not enforceable through judicial proceedings. However, it does indicate that section 2 is aimed at matters which are in their nature arrangements for the improvement of the exercise of functions; this is something discrete from a relevant authority's 'ordinary' executive decision-making. My conclusion is that neither the section 2 duty, nor the section 5 obligation to consult is a criterion for the legality of the Strategy Decision, because that decision was not in the manner of a decision to make improvement arrangements, and for that reason was not a decision within the scope of section 2 of the 2009 Measure."
The submissions on appeal
Discussion
"24. The conclusion in Nash on the application of section 3 of the 1999 Act to the decision under challenge turned on the nature of that decision. Underhill LJ's reasoning cannot be understood as meaning that every 'high level' decision necessarily falls within the scope of the section 3 duty (or, for the purposes of the present case, the duty at section 2 of the 2009 Measure). Rather, given the way in which the duty is formulated (both under the 1999 Act and under the 2009 Measure) the issue must be whether the decision taken was by its nature, a decision on the arrangements to be made by the authority to secure improvement in the exercise of its functions. The decision under challenge in Nash clearly was of this nature since it entailed wholesale contracting-out of functions. That contracting-out was an arrangement aimed at improving the delivery of services.
25. Not every strategic decision will be of this nature. In fact it is more than likely that the majority of such decisions will not. This stems from the fact that the improvement obligation is free-standing of the exercise of functions per se. This is underlined by the various provisions directed to securing compliance with the improvement obligation. So far as concerns the 2009 Measure I have referred to them above; so far as concerns the 1999 Act, sections 10 15 of that Act establish a system for inspection of compliance and give the Secretary of State powers of direction in instances where there is a failure to comply with obligations under Part 1 of the 1999 Act. This structure is material since it displaces any incentive to construe or apply the obligations under section 3 of the 1999 Act or section 2 of the 2009 Measure as if they attach to all, or any class of, instances of decision-making.
26. Turning to the Strategy Decision, the Sports Strategy was in the nature of a plan for the future exercise of functions under section 19 of the Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1976. That decision is qualitatively different to the contracting-out decision in Nash. The Strategy Decision was not in the nature of an arrangement to secure continuous improvement in the exercise of functions. It was a strategy for the steps the Council wanted to take in respect of its provision of recreational facilities. It would be wrong to construe section 2 of the 2009 Measure as applying to any/every strategic decision. That would be an artificial application of section 2 of the 2009 Measure. It would also have the unwarranted consequence of creating via section 5 of the 2009 Measure a statutory obligation to consult in respect of any proposed strategic decision. While it may be a matter of good practice that strategic decisions should be the subject of consultation, applying the section 5 obligation to all such decisions would be a step too far, absent an express statutory provision to that effect.
27. For these reasons, the challenge to the Strategy Decision based on the 2009 Measure fails. The proposal to adopt the Sports Strategy was not an arrangement falling within the scope of section 2(1) of the 2009 Measure; in consequence the section 5(1) obligation to consult did not arise."
Disposal
Lord Justice Haddon-Cave:
Lord Justice Flaux:
UPON the Appellant's appeal against paragraph 3 of the Order of Mr Justice Swift dated 26 June 2019
AND UPON reading the written submissions and hearing Leading and Junior Counsel for each of the parties at a hearing on 20 February 2020
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. The appeal is dismissed.
2. The Appellant shall pay the Respondent's costs of and incidental to the appeal in an amount to be determined in accordance with section 26 of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 and Regulations made under it.
3. There shall be a detailed assessment of the Appellant's legal aid costs.
4. Permission to appeal to the Supreme Court is refused.