The High Court has provided important guidance on the ‘absolute duty’ to secure special educational provision, writes Ollie Persey.

Following a successful claim for judicial review brought by a severely disabled 17-year-old, the High Court in R(JSH by his father and litigation friend, RRB) v Westmorland and Furness Council [2024] EWHC 3362 (Admin) granted declaratory relief and a mandatory order requiring the Defendant to secure the special educational provision in the Claimant’s Education, Health and Care Plan (‘EHCP’) within five weeks.

The case is a rare example of a judicial review challenging a breach of section 42 of the Children and Families Act 2014 of reaching a final hearing. The judgment is therefore likely to be of significant interest to families, local authorities and lawyers as it contains guidance of more general application regarding the duty to secure special educational provision in an EHCP.

The Claimant is 17 years old, with diagnoses of profound autism, profound communication delay, severe learning difficulties and profound sensory processing disorder. Due to those needs, the Claimant’s functioning is significantly reduced compared to that of young people of his chronological age and he is reliant on adults to meet the majority of his needs. His developmental age has been informally described as that of a “young infant”.

The Claimant’s previous school gave notice in April 2024 that his place there would be terminated at the end of the summer term. Despite this, there was still no special educational provision in place by the start of September 2024. By the date of the hearing on 20 November 2024, the Defendant had identified a social care residential placement that it stated would be available by December 2024. The Defendant explained that it planned to put in place a package of Education Otherwise than at School (‘EOTAS’) at the social care placement.

The Claimant’s family was concerned that this was not a ‘concrete’ option and that there had been significant drift and delay given that the Claimant would miss a term of education even if the Defendant’s proposed EOTAS package was implemented. The failure to secure special educational provision was having a severe impact on the Claimant, with an eight-fold increase in his self-injurious behaviour.

The Defendant’s primary position was that despite the Claimant not receiving any special educational provision for an entire term, this was not a breach of the section 42 duty and that if it was a breach, it was only a ‘technical breach’ and not a ‘material breach’. As such, the Court should not even grant permission for the Claimant to bring his claim for judicial review.

The Court granted permission, made a declaration of breach of section 42 of the Children and Families Act 2014 and issued a mandatory order.

The following parts of the judgment provide guidance that is of more general application in respect of the section 42 duty:

The judgment is particularly helpful for its guidance on the need for local authorities to be proactive to avoid a potential breach. As soon as it appears likely that there will be a period in which special educational provision will not be secured for a child or young person with an EHCP, a local authority should take all reasonable steps to put in place alternative arrangements before going into breach. A failure by a local authority to take preventative action ahead of a breach will weigh in favour of a Court intervening to grant a mandatory order after only a short period of breach.

Ollie Persey, of the Garden Court Chambers Public Law and Education Law Teams, acted for the successful Claimant, instructed by Helen Barker of Irwin Mitchell LLP.