[2024] UKUT 128 (AAC)
Upper Tribunal Administrative Appeals Chamber

[2024] UKUT 128 (AAC)

Fecha: 20-Mar-2023

s.24(1) of the 2014 Act should be interpreted as denoting a test of ordinary residence the judgment in R(L) was no longer good law. The legal effect of regulation 2(4) of the Belonging Regulations was simply that they did not dictate the meaning of s

(1)

s.24(1) of the 2014 Act should be interpreted as denoting a test of ordinary residence

(2)

the judgment in R(L)was no longer good law. The legal effect of regulation 2(4) of the Belonging Regulations was simply that they did not dictate the meaning of s.24 of the 2014 Act. Thus, mere disapplication of the Belonging Regulations to s.24 did not mean that s.24 could not be interpreted as denoting an ordinary residence test

(3)

The Department’s guidance was a persuasive external aide to the construction of s.24 of the 2014 Act. Both the 2009 Guidance and the SEND Code of Practice set out a test of ordinary residence. The statutory scheme should be interpreted in a coherent way. The Belonging Regulations were not drafted in conflicting terms to the 2014 Act. There was no reason why s.24 should not be read concordantly with the definitions in the Belonging Regulations and the guidance, all of which specified an ordinary residence test.