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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Cardinal Vaughan Memorial School, R (on the application of) v Roman Catholic Archbishop of Westminster & Ors [2010] EWHC 3325 (Admin) (25 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/3325.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 3325 (Admin), [2011] ELR 126 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF THE PARENT GOVERNORS OF THE CARDINAL VAUGHAN MEMORIAL SCHOOL | ||
(John Murphy, Jacqueline Knight, James King, Andrzej Rumun and Jan Zajaczkowski) | Claimants | |
v | ||
(1) ROMAN CATHOLIC ARCHBISHOP OF WESTMINSTER | ||
(2) THE WESTMINSTER ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESE TRUSTEE | Defendants | |
(1) THE OTHER MEMBERS OF THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE SCHOOL AS AT 31 AUGUST 2010 | ||
(2) THE DEFENDANT'S PROPOSED APPOINTEES TO THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE SCHOOL WITH EFFECT FROM 1 SEPTEMBER 2010 | ||
(The Reverend Father Michael Johnson, Miss Bwalya Kanga, Mr Rory O'Hare and Mr Paul Barber) | Interested Parties |
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(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ms Francesca Quint (instructed by Winckworth Sherwood) appeared on behalf of the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
"Voluntary aided schools
18(1) The governing body of a voluntary aided school is to comprise the following:
(a) at least one but no more than one tenth LEA governors;
(b) at least two but no more than one third staff governors;
(c) at least one parent governor;
(d) such number of foundation governors as out number all the other governors listed in sub-paragraphs (a) to (c) by two; and
(e) such number of foundation governors who are eligible for election or appointment as parent governors that, when they are counted with the parent governors, comprise one third or more of the total membership of the governing body."
"8(1) In these Regulations—
"foundation governor" means a person who is appointed as a governor otherwise than by the
local education authority and who—
(a) is appointed for the purposes of securing that the character of the school, including where the school has a particular religious character, such religious character, is preserved and developed, and
(b) where the school has a foundation, is appointed for the purpose of securing that the school is conducted in accordance with the foundation's governing documents, including where appropriate, any trust deed relating to the school..."
"The Governing Body shall consist of twenty governors of which there shall be:
(a) 11 foundation governors (of whom, two shall, at the time of their appointment, be eligible for election or appointment as parent governors);
(b) 5 parent governors;
(c) 1 LEA Governor;
(d) 3 staff governors."
"Foundation governors shall be appointed and may be removed by the Archbishop of Westminster (or any other person exercising Ordinary jurisdiction on his behalf).
7(a) The holder of the following office shall be the foundation governor ex-officio: The Archbishop of Westminster or his nominee ...
8 The term of office for every foundation governor shall terminate on 31st August following the third anniversary of the date of appointment."
"8. Where a vacancy for a parent governor arises, the appropriate authority must take such steps as are reasonably practicable to secure that every person who is known to them to be a parent of a registered pupil at the school ... is:
a) informed of the vacancy and that it is to be filled by election;
b) informed that he is entitled to stand as a candidate and vote in the election; and
c) given the opportunity so to do."
"The number of parent governors required must be made up by parent governors appointed by the governing body, if one or more vacancies for parent governors arises and either ..."
Three possible scenarios are then set out. The first is that the number of parents standing for election is less than the number of vacancies. The second and third possibilities do not apply here. One relates to a school where there are boarders (I do not believe that is the case here), and the other is in relation to community special or foundation special schools established in a hospital.
"10(1) Except where paragraph 11 applies, the governing body must appoint as a parent governor—
(a) a parent of a registered pupil at the school;
(b) a parent of a former registered pupil at the school; or
(c) a parent of a child under or of compulsory school age.
(2) The governing body may only appoint a person referred to in sub-paragraph (1)(b) or (c) if it
is not reasonably practicable to appoint a person referred to in the sub-paragraph which immediately precedes it."
"13. There have been great tensions between the Diocese and the school in the recent past. In particular there have been two major disputes:-
(1) In 2009, the Diocese made an objection to the Schools Adjudicator against a number of aspects of the school's admission arrangements. In particular the Diocese said that the school (which is highly successful and routinely massively oversubscribed) should not apply tests to assess the Catholicity of applicant families in giving admission priority, but should adopt a test of whether the child has been baptised. The resultant adjudication gives a measure of the depth and breadth of the disagreements. The Diocese's objections were partially upheld by the Adjudicator..."
"(2) On 20th July 2010 solicitors acting for the school sent the Diocese a letter referring to ongoing discussions about what the school alleged was a failure of the trustees properly to administer trust property, namely the freehold at [an address in West London]."
"11. There appears to be an inbuilt assumption that because I am an employee of the defendant, I would be unable to act independently of the Diocese if my own conclusion did not accord with their view. I do not believe that to be the case. It also presupposes that there will be a conflict between the governors and the school's trustee. That is not necessarily the case. There will be a wide number of areas where the interests of the school and the interests of the trustee will be the same interest and will coincide, not least because the objects of the school as set out in its trusts are identical to those of the trustees ...
14. if an instance arose where there was a potential conflict between my position as an employee of the Defendant and my position as a foundation Governor, I would declare that interest and would not vote on that particular issue. This of course is the required approach to take in such circumstances and is in accordance with the School Governance Regulations."
"7. ... Nevertheless, as the Archbishop's nominee, it is me, and not the Archbishop who holds the office of foundation governor. I am therefore under an obligation to make my own mind up about decisions I am called upon to make relating to governance of the school. In other words, I consider myself to be a representative of the Archbishop, not his delegate ..."
"9. If such a decision risked breaching a serious legal or moral obligation, I might feel obliged to consider my position as a governor. If the difference were one of policy, I accept that in common with all governors, I would be bound by the collective decision reached by the governing body ...
11. In circumstances where a personal conflict of interest arose on any particular matter, I am clear that I would be under an obligation to declare it and to withdraw from the debating or voting on the point in question. Such a conflict has not arisen in practice..."
"It is rightly and inevitably conceded by Mr Goudie QC, for the ILEA, that governors are in no sense delegates of the authority by whom they were appointed and cannot be required to vote on any particular matter as the authority wishes."
"... The authority has a wholly unfettered discretion as to whom it will appoint or reappoint. This is clearly correct ... Precisely because the decision whether or not to reappoint is unfettered and unchallengeable, whereas the discretion to remove under section 21 must be exercised on lawful grounds, there is no analogy between the two situations..."