Must read

Establishing relevant defects under
the Building Safety Act
The First Tier Tribunal has provided helpful clarity on what amounts to a
“relevant defect” for the purposes of Remediation Orders and Remediation
Contribution Orders under the Building Safety Act 2022, writes Sarah Grant.
Establishing relevant defects under
the Building Safety Act
The First Tier Tribunal has provided helpful clarity on what
amounts to a “relevant defect” for the purposes of
Remediation Orders and Remediation Contribution
under the Building Safety Act 2022, writes Sarah Grant.


The Employment Rights Act 2025:
What Public Sector Employers Need to Know
Many of the changes in the Employment Rights Act 2025 will have a significant
operational and financial impact on public sector employers, particularly
local authorities and schools, where large workforces, high levels of unionisation
and public accountability increase exposure to risk.
The Employment Rights Act 2025:
What Public Sector Employers Need to Know
Many of the changes in the Employment Rights Act 2025 will
have a significant operational and financial impact on public
sector employers, particularly local authorities and schools,
where large workforces, high levels of unionisation and
public accountability increase exposure to risk.


The Practical impact of the Procurement Act 2023
– the challenges, the benefits and the legal lacunas
In the second of three articles for Local Government Lawyer on the Procurement
Act 2023 one year after it went live, Katherine Calder and Victoria Fletcher from
DAC Beachcroft consider some of its practical impact and implications, including
how to choose the right regime, how authorities are tackling the notice requirements,
considerations when making modifications, and setting and monitoring KPIs.
The Practical impact of the Procurement
Act 2023 – the challenges, the benefits
and the legal lacunas
Katherine Calder and Victoria Fletcher from DAC Beachcroft
consider some of its practical impact and implications,
including how to choose the right regime, how authorities
are tackling the notice requirements, considerations when
making modifications, and setting and monitoring KPIs.


Weekly mandatory food
waste collections
What are the new rules on food waste collections and why are
councils set to miss the March deadline? Ashfords’ energy
and resource management team explain.
Weekly mandatory food
waste collections
What are the new rules on food waste collections and why are
councils set to miss the March deadline? Ashfords’ energy
and resource management team explain.


The Procurement Act 2023: One Year On -
How procurement processes are evolving
Katherine Calder and Sarah Foster of DAC Beachcroft focus on
changes to procurement design at selection and tender stage in
three key areas of change that the Act introduced.
The Procurement Act 2023: One Year On -
How procurement processes are evolving
Katherine Calder and Sarah Foster of DAC Beachcroft focus on
changes to procurement design at selection and tender stage in
three key areas of change that the Act introduced.


Service charge recovery
and the Building Safety Act 2022
Zoe McGovern, Sian Gibbon and Caroline Frampton set out
what local authorities need to consider when it comes to
the Building Safety Act 2022 and service charge recovery.
Service charge recovery
and the Building Safety Act 2022
Zoe McGovern, Sian Gibbon and Caroline Frampton set out
what local authorities need to consider when it comes to
the Building Safety Act 2022 and service charge recovery.

Assets of Community Value – a sporting revolution
A new generation of development corporations
Further reform for public procurement – The British Goods and Services Bill
Titchfield Festival Theatre - the new chapter. Or not, as it happens
Housing offences and increased penalties
Establishing relevant defects under the Building Safety Act
Companies House Reform: Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023
Permission for Take Off: £205m Cardiff Airport Subsidy Authorised by the CAT
New Regulations for the Use of AI in Court Documents?
The Employment Rights Act 2025: What Public Sector Employers Need to Know
Expert evidence in children proceedings: principles for practice and better outcomes
Children law update - Easter 2026
Officer reports and decisions to close care homes
Ordinary residence - Worcestershire revisited?
Good practice in post-adoption contact
An ‘intolerable’ deprivation of liberty – and the need for reasons
DfE land transactions guidance 2026: For academy trusts and schools
The neighbourhood health framework
Capacity as a social construct, and the problem of untangling the spider’s web
Public money and double recovery
The new Housing Streamlined Route
Changes to the written representations procedure process for appeals
Planning committees and delegation
Injunctions to restrain breaches of planning control
Who bears the burden?
Lawfulness and applications for a CLEUD
The OIA’s 2026 operating plan: What universities need to know
The Cardiff Airport subsidy control ruling
White Paper on SEN reforms: some lessons from the current Welsh SEN system
Greyhound racing and the separation of powers
CILEX and others v Mazur and others [2026] EWCA Civ 369
The Hillsborough Law Bill: implications for public bodies
Dispensing with notice to father
Court of Protection case update April 2026
The new PD27A: a step change in Family Court bundle and document management
Déjà Vu – the implications of Zenobē Energy’s latest case for local government
The ERA – Benefits and Working Conditions
£150m Clean Maritime Grant Competition Opens – Critical Subsidy Control Steps for Applicants
Failure by Employers to Keep Holiday Records Becomes a Criminal Offence From April 2026
Why I Wanted to Explore Intensity of Review Across the UK and New Zealand
Asylum hotels, overcrowding and the HMO rules
Practical impact of the Procurement Act 2023 – the challenges, the benefits and the legal lacunas
Intentional homelessness and tenancies obtained by false statement
Defective but not fatal
Self-grants of planning permission, functional separation and demolition avoidance
The lawfulness of emailing licensing decision notices
Intervention: the Monitoring Officer’s view
The role of the backbench councillor
FOI and information held on computer systems
Sentencing guidelines for HSE offences and public bodies
Correcting mistakes in public decision making
The Supreme Court on termination of JCT contracts
Weekly mandatory food waste collections
Weekly mandatory food waste collections
Housing delivery stalling - role of local authorities
Renters’ Rights Act 2025 - what it means for local authorities
DOLS and Under 16s: Insights from Medway Council v A Father
The Local Power Plan: Putting Clean Power in Communities’ Hands
The powers of exclusion panels
Removal from kinship care
When school discipline meets disability
Navigating the expansion of foster care
Personal welfare deputies – Lawson and Mottram strikes back?
No "clinical decision" exemption from best interests
Local Government Reorganisation 2026
Adoption vs long-term fostering
Evolution of the academy trust and maintained school landscape
Care leavers and redaction of records
“Unusual facts and procedural irregularities”
Planning appeals and costs awards
Refusal of planning applications against officers’ advice
Land value and the principle of reality
The latest Sizewell C JR
Impecuniosity and other issues in credit hire claims
Anti-Money Laundering: Key Issues for Local Government Legal and Governance Teams
Arts and Culture, Community and Regeneration: The Two New Streamlined Subsidy Routes
Disclosure to the DBS
The CAT and the New Lottery Subsidy Control challenge
Gender-questioning children under draft KCSIE 2026
Accelerating the planning appeals process: unintended consequences
The convergence of DRS, Simpler Recycling and EPR
Reserve below-threshold contracts for UK or local suppliers under the 2026 Order
CMO Principle and Financial Assistance Further Clarified in Latest CAT Judgment on Subsidy Control
Make Europe Build Again – The EU Industrial Accelerator Act
Affordable housing funding news & unlocking S106 units
The Social and Affordable Housing Programme 2026–2036: new guidance
Local Government Reorganisation 2026
Cross-examination in judicial review
- Details
The High Court has rejected a parish council’s claim of legitimate expectation in a dispute over whether a district’s leader made a binding promise in a local meeting about the route of a ‘greenway’. Charles Streeten and Michael Feeney analyse the ruling.
Following a hearing at which five witnesses gave oral evidence, the High Court (Lieven J) has handed down judgment in R (Grantchester Parish Council) v Greater Cambridge Partnership [2025] EWHC 923 (Admin) dismissing the Claimant’s claim on all grounds.
The claim concerned a judicial review of a decision by the Greater Cambridge Partnership (GCP) in relation to its Greenways Project, a proposal for a network of greenways connecting outlying villages to the centre of Cambridge.
The Claimant’s particular concern was the proposal that the route of the Haslingfield greenway would go through the village of Grantchester. It argued that it had a substantive legitimate expectation that that route would not proceed in circumstances where a majority of Grantchester residents opposed it.
The claim was unusual in that the promise alleged to have created the legitimate expectation relied upon by the Claimant was said to have been given at a meeting between the Claimant and the Leader of South Cambridge District Council (SCDC) (who at the time was also a member of the GCP’s Executive Board) of which there was no contemporaneous record. The Leader and the GCP’s Head of Transport, both of whom were present at the meeting, denied that any such promise had ever been given. That was a dispute of primary fact which it fell to the Court to resolve.
Following the grant of permission for judicial review by Eyre J the Claimant applied for an order for cross-examination, following which Lang J ordered that five witnesses be cross-examined, namely: (1) the Chair of the Parish Council; (2) the Vice-Chair of the Parish Council; (3) a further member of the Parish Council; (4) the Leader of SCDC; and (5) The GCP’s Head of Transport.
The trial took place over three days and all witnesses-were cross examined.
In giving judgment, Lieven J followed the approach to assessing oral evidence for which the Defendant had contended, applying the dicta of Legatt J (as he then was) in Gestmin v Credit Suisse [2013] EWHC 3560 at para. 22 and more recently of Cockerill J in Jaffe v Greybull Capital LLP [2024] EWHC 2354 (Comm). Both judgments identify the fallacy of supposing that because a witness has confidence in his or her recollection and is honest, evidence based on that recollection provides any reliable guide to the truth, as well as identifying the importance of documentary evidence of memory and inherent probabilities (J77-78). In those circumstances, as Lieven J pointed out, oral evidence frequently does not, and did not in this case, much elucidate the situation (J59).
Lieven J nevertheless set out the evidence of the Claimant’s witnesses at J/60-69, recording that the concessions made included: (1) that the word ‘veto’ had not been used at the time and only appeared later in documents circulated by the Claimant (J61); (2) that the email (sent by the Claimant to the Defendant) closest in time to the meeting in question made no reference to the alleged promise of a veto, but referred only to a fresh consultation (J62); (3) that the part of a subsequent note purporting to record what occurred at the meeting when the promise was given represented the Parish Council’s commentary, rather than anything said by the Leader of SCDC at the meeting (J65); (4) that a subsequent parish newsletter characterised the promise as including giving local views “especial weight” (J66); (5) that the Vice-Chair of the Parish Council did not remember thinking during the meeting that what had been said by the Leader of SCDC meant the village had a veto (J68); and that it was only during discussions with the Chair of the Parish Council on the car journey home that the importance of what had been said occurred to him (J69).
For the Defendant, the evidence of the Leader of SCDC was that she had very little independent memory of the meeting, and Lieven J concluded that her evidence was based on what she thought she would have said, rather than actual memory of what she did say. She had accepted in her written evidence, that she might have said something along the lines of “the views of the village will be respected” but was clear that was in the sense of taking them into consideration, rather than necessarily complying with them (J70-71). The Head of Transport was clear that at no point in the meeting was a veto given, and that he would have intervened if he had heard the Leader of SCDC make any promise as alleged.
In light of all of the above Lieven J held that there was a strong element of “confirmation bias” in the Claimant’s evidence and that it was extremely unlikely that the Leader of SCDC would have given anything that amounted to a clear unequivocal promise that in effect the villagers would have a veto (J79).
Overall, dismissing the Claim on grounds of legitimate expectation, Lieven J:
- Held that the level of detail and specificity required for a legitimate expectation to arise will depend on the context and consequences of the promise. Given the substantive nature of the legitimate expectation alleged, any promise would have to be “particularly clear and unequivocal” to give rise to a binding legitimate expectation (see J88-89).
- Agreed with Counsel for the Defendant that to find a legitimate expectation of what was said in an oral conversation at an informal meeting with no minutes could open the floodgates to such claims, unless the evidence was very clear. It would also make it even more difficult for representatives of public authorities to have open and honest conversations because they would be so concerned about saying something that would then give rise to a claim like the present one. That does not mean that an oral promise could never give rise to a legitimate expectation, but it does make it even less likely to happen (J90).
- Found, in light of all of the evidence and the principles above, that no binding promise of the requisite level of clarity and unequivocally was given (J91).
- Went on to say that, even if that finding of fact was wrong, it was not reasonable for the Claimant to rely upon the promise allegedly given, not least as it knew that the Executive Board of the GCP was made up of three councillors and was a joint committee of three different authorities (J92-94).
Lieven J also rejected the Claimant’s second ground, which alleged a breach of the Tameside duty to inquire into the circumstances of the alleged promise by the GCP, rejecting the submission that there was a legal obligation that further investigation be conducted by an independent person, or by another officer of GCP.
The judgment will be of some interest to practitioners, given the exceptionality of disputes of fact resulting in orders for cross-examination in claims for judicial review, and Lieven J’s clear exposition of the contextual approach to determining whether an oral representation has given rise to a substantive legitimate expectation.
Charles Streeten is a barrister at Francis Taylor Building. He appeared for the successful Defendant (the Greater Cambridge Partnership) instructed by Pathfinder Legal Services and assisted by Michael Feeney, also of FTB, in earlier stages of the litigation.
Sponsored articles
Unlocking legal talent
Walker Morris supports Tower Hamlets Council in first known Remediation Contribution Order application issued by local authority
Solicitor/Lawyer - Planning
Senior Solicitor - Planning & Highways
Locums
Poll







