A town council has accepted the advice of a leading QC that there are insufficient grounds to make any claim with any likelihood of recovering costs after it was left more than £200,000 out of pocket when it unsuccessfully defended a judicial review claim brought by one of its councillors.

Ledbury Town Council had commissioned Richard Clayton QC of Ely Place Chambers to review the handling of the litigation.

The case arose out of sanctions imposed by the town council in 2016-17 on Cllr Elizabeth Harvey following a complaint by the clerk and deputy clerk.

Cllr Harvey was barred from sitting on committees or representing the council on outside bodies. These restrictions continued even after she was found by a Herefordshire Council-appointed external investigator, Jonathan Goolden of Wilkin Chapman, not to have been in breach of the code of conduct.

Cllr Harvey challenged the restrictions successfully by judicial review, with a High Court judge ruling that the council was not able to sanction her other than going through the procedural safeguards of a code of conduct process.

Mrs Justice Cockerill also found that the conduct of the grievance process through which the restrictions were imposed was unfair.

A report on Richard Clayton QC’s advice revealed amongst other things that:

The report said the council was “satisfied that Mr Clayton rigorously considered all available options and have reluctantly accepted his advice that there is no realistic prospect of recovering any money back”.

In an annual report given last Sunday (28 April), Ledbury chairman Cllr Nina Shields said: “I very much hope that the new council will draw a line under this. Otherwise it will be like a festering sore that will waste energy and continue to do damage. Our solicitor has advised that to spend any more money on this will raise issues about the council’s duty of care.”