[2025] UKUT 308 (AAC)
Upper Tribunal Administrative Appeals Chamber

[2025] UKUT 308 (AAC)

Fecha: 17-Sep-2024

any reasonable person, standing in the shoes of the Trust, should have realised attracted an obligation of confidence

(g)

any reasonable person, standing in the shoes of the Trust, should have realised attracted an obligation of confidence.

54.

The Commissioner went on to:

(a)

find that disclosing the information would prejudice SoSE’s commercial interests. It would limit SSE’s ability to exploit the information for commercial gain;

(b)

find that the Trust would be unlikely to be able mount a viable public interest defence to an action for breach of confidence. A review of the withheld material led the Commissioner to conclude that nothing within it clearly misrepresented the law or was so obviously inappropriate as to justify overriding the Trust’s duty of confidence;

(c)

recognise that, in this ‘area’, parents have rights to decide what is and is not taught to their children and that those rights cannot meaningfully be exercised without knowledge of the subject matter of lessons. Nevertheless, unrestricted disclosure would not be a proportionate or necessary means of achieving any legitimate interest in keeping parents informed.