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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Wetherell v Student Loans Company Ltd [2024] EWHC 1443 (KB) (13 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2024/1443.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1443 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
On appeal from the County Court at Newcastle
HH Judge Freedman
1 Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MARK WETHERELL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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STUDENT LOANS COMPANY LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Michael Rapp (instructed by Mills & Reeve LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 17th May 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Eyre:
The Proceedings in the County Court.
"The Student Loans Company is a non-profit making government-owned organisation that administers loans and grants to students in universities and colleges in the UK.
The Student Loans Company is an executive non-departmental public body, sponsored by the Department for Education.
I should make it clear that the Student Loans Company is not an emanation of the state. It is not a body that provides a public service under the control of government. It is simply a vehicle for the administration of student loans and it has no special powers."
"As is common knowledge, the whole system of funding higher education was reformed, broadly in accordance with the recommendations of Lord Browne's report, Securing a Sustainable Future for Higher Education (October 2010), in 2011... The fees which universities were allowed to charge their students would increase to something closer to what it cost to educate them; the fees paid by the students, and a sum for their maintenance, would be financed by loans from Government (through an arms-length entity); these loans would only be repaid when the students could afford to do so and at a rate which they could afford..."
"Student loans are provided out of public funds on terms which are much more advantageous to students than any commercial alternative. They are a form of state benefit..."
"Specifically, it is not clear to me at this stage how it can be argued that the European directive is somehow different, or materially different to the terms of the Health and Safety Regulations, and therefore, upon what basis it can be said that the regulations should be invoked, notwithstanding, the provisions of section 69 of the Act. It seems to me, on the face of it, that the directives can only be engaged if it can be demonstrated that UK legislation has failed successfully to implement the directives into the regulations, in other words, to follow the directives when drafting the regulations. On the face of it, whilst there may be some nuanced difference in wording, for example, in relation to foreseeability, in practical terms, there is no material distinction between how a Court should interpret the directives and how a Court should interpret the regulations... "
"... what it does fall for determination now, is whether this defendant can properly be described as an emanation of state. If it is not, then Mr Carter, as he must, accepts that all his arguments about invoking the European directives fall away. It is, in other words, a pre-requisite, as he demonstrates that Student Loans Company Ltd is an emanation of state..."
"The role of the Student Loans Company Ltd is to administer loans to students on behalf of the government; that much is clear. Its role, further, is to administer those loans in accordance with the regulations brought into being by a statutory instrument. The relevant regulations are the Education Student Support Regulations 2011. I am satisfied, on the basis of what Mr Carter has told me, and his citation from the case of R (on the application of Tigere) (Appellant) v Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills (Respondent) [2015] UKSC 57, that this company is responsible for administering the loan scheme provided for under the relevant regulations.
It is also accepted within the defence, that whilst the defendant is a private limited company, it is an executive non-departmental public body. I am unclear what that phrase actually means, but I understand it to mean that it is connected to the government. It is a public body, and I am prepared to have regard to what is said in Mr Carter's skeleton argument in relation to this matter, in particular, his citation from the web where the company is described as a non-profit making government-owned organisation that administers loans and grants to students in colleges and universities in the UK.
The only other evidence that I have in relation to the duties, powers, responsibilities, and obligations of this company comes from a very brief statement from Mark Brennan. It is his second statement in this case, and it deals specifically with this point, and he says he agrees that it is a non-profit making government-owner organisation, and it administers loans and grants to students in universities and colleges in the UK. He agrees it is an executive non-departmental public body. He says:
'It is not an emanation of the state. It is not a body that provides a public service under the control of government. It is simply a vehicle for the administration of student loans and has no special powers'."
"That is the extent of the evidence placed before me. As I observed in the course of argument, and I do not think counsel disagree with me, there is a serious and material dearth of evidence as to the true status of this company, and as I have already observed as to its powers, duties, and responsibilities. It seems to me that if I am to make a ruling that this is an emanation of the state in the face of the evidence from the senior estate manager, Mr Mark Brennan, that it is not an emanation of the state for the reason which he gives, namely that it is simply administering the policy of the government, then I need persuasive, extensive and compelling evidence of which I have none.
I say again, all I know is that it is a vehicle for the administration of the government scheme. I am prepared to accept that it is only this company that is responsible for the administration of the loan scheme. I have no idea, what, if any, part it plays in the recovery or repayment of the loans once a student has graduated. There is simply no evidence before me about that, and so I find myself in very considerable difficulty in trying to come to a conclusion as to whether it is an emanation of the state."
"On the information before me, all I know is that it is an administrative vehicle doing that which it is required to do by the government. I have no information whether it be the case or not, as to whether it has a discretion about whether loans can be advanced or not, whether it has any powers of decision-making at all. Thirdly, in the British Gas case, it was said it had the powers of borrowing from the Secretary of State. I very much doubt if that is something that arises in the instant case"
"On the evidence before me, I am wholly unconvinced that that constitutes a special power. What it does do, is describe its function. Its function as a limited company is to administer loans, but it does so, as I understand it, pursuant to instruction and on authority of the government. It does not seem to me that that necessarily, at any rate, confers special powers upon it. The fact that it is the only company that is engaged by the government to perform that role, again, does not seem to me to give it a special power.
One can think of many examples when a company has a specific designated power to do something, but it does not mean that that equates to a special power. The reality here is that on the evidence I have, this company is no more than an administrative body, albeit answerable to the government. To be compared and contrasted with a Health Authority or a Local Authority, which has its own powers of self-regulation, its own powers of control, and which has its own mechanisms for decision-making and the like, I do not understand this company, absent any further evidence, to have any control, responsibility, duty or power to do anything other than apply and enforce the regulations made under a statutory instrument.
In short, on the evidence before me, I cannot be satisfied that it possesses a special power..."
The Grounds of Appeal.
"The Judge misdirected himself that any finding that the Appellant could rely on the principle of vertical direct effect required an express or implied criticism of the removal of the civil cause of action based on a breach of the Regulations made under the relevant Directive by virtue section 69 of the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013. In fact, the only three requirements for the Appellant to on the principle of vertical direct effect were that the Directive was unconditional and sufficiently precise, the Appellant's cause of action accrued after the Directive was implemented and that the Respondent was an emanation of the state."
"Insofar as he made any finding on this issue, the Judge erred in concluding that the effect of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 meant that the Appellant could not rely on the principle of direct effect. The Appellant's cause of action accrued in 2014. The relevant test for the Respondent's duty was the applicable at the time which was that under the EU Directive."
The Permission given by Foster J.
"… it is clear from his reasoning that the learned judge of first instance was not given the assistance he required to determine the issue which required the application of law to a detailed factual background. That factual background was lacking …"
"The Appellant, if he chooses to proceed with appeal, would be well advised to make a close assessment of the facts he relies upon to assert the status of the Respondent, and decide whether it is proper in light of that to continue with this appeal, in particular as he appears to be in receipt of public funding."
The Circumstances in which there can be Direct Enforcement of an European Directive.
"a body, whatever its legal form, which has been made responsible, pursuant to a measure adopted by the state, for providing a public service under the control of the state and has for that purpose special powers beyond those which result from the normal rules applicable in relations between individuals"
"performed its public service of providing a gas supply under the control of the state. The B.G.C. was not independent; its members were appointed by the state; the B.G.C. was responsible to the minister acting on behalf of the state, and the B.G.C. was subject to directions given by the Secretary of State"
The Respondent's Status and Powers.
i) That there is a scheme for higher education finance governed by statute and taking the form of loans made to students.
ii) That the scheme is administered only by the Respondent.
iii) That the provision of loans under the student loan scheme is different from other forms of financial provision in that repayment is by way of payments through the tax system, whether by way of PAYE or self-assessment, with repayment only being due after the debtor's income has crossed a relevant threshold.
Is the Respondent an Emanation of the State?