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

[2024] UKUT 128 (AAC)

Fecha: 20-Mar-2023

the residence of a child would almost always be aligned with the residence of his primary carer (save for some very narrow exceptional circumstances). It would be illogical for the question of residen

(2)

the residence of a child would almost always be aligned with the residence of his primary carer (save for some very narrow exceptional circumstances). It would be illogical for the question of residence of a parent under the 1996 Regulations to be determined according to ordinary residence, but the question of his child’s residence under s.24to be determined according to a test of mere presence.

(3)

it was right that regulation 5 of the 1996 Regulations expressly did not apply for the purpose of determining which authority's area a child was in under s.24, but that took the Council’s arguments no further. It was plain that the statutory material and the Code of Practice all pointed towards a test of ordinary residence. In other words, the 1996 Regulations were part of a legal framework which relied on a test of ordinary residence for the purposes of determining who could properly be said to be in a local authority’s area.