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Horgan and another v Minister for Education & Skills and others

European Union – Employment. Article 2(2)(b) of Directive (EC) 2000/78 should be interpreted to the effect that a measure which, as of a specific date, provided for the application on the recruitment of new teachers of a salary scale and classification on that scale which were less advantageous than that applied, under the rules previous to that measure, to teachers recruited before that date did not constitute indirect discrimination on the grounds of age within the meaning of that provision. The Court of Justice of the European Union so held in a preliminary ruling in proceedings concerning the lawfulness of a national measure applied, from a certain date, to newly recruited public servants, including teachers in national schools, which provided for a salary scale and classification on that salary scale upon recruitment which were less advantageous than that applicable to teachers already employed as such.

Re Buivids

European Union – Data protection. Article 9 of Directive (EC) 95/46 should be interpreted as meaning that factual circumstances such as those of the case in the main proceedings, namely, the video recording of police officers in a police station, while a statement was being made, and the publication of that recorded video on a video website, on which users could send, watch and share videos, could constitute a processing of personal data solely for journalistic purposes, within the meaning of that provision, in so far as it was apparent from that video that the sole object of that recording and publication thereof was the disclosure of information, opinions or ideas to the public, that being a matter which it was for the referring court to determine. The Court of Justice of the European Union so held, among other things, in a preliminary ruling in circumstances where the defendant had allegedly infringed Latvian national law by publishing a video, filmed by him, on the internet site www.youtube.com of the statement he had made in the context of administrative proceedings involving the imposition of a penalty in a station of the Latvian national police.

Fearn and others v Board of Trustees of the Tate Gallery

Nuisance – Flats. The claimants' claim in nuisance and under the Human Rights Act 1998 (the HRA 1998) failed. The claimants owned flats in a block which, they alleged, was looked into by visitors to the neighbouring Tate Modern Museum (the Tate). The Chancery Division held that the Tate had not been exercising a governmental function, and hence the claim under the HRA 1998 failed. With regard to nuisance, while the law of nuisance was capable, in an appropriate case, of operation to protect the privacy of a home as against another landowner, the claimants had been occupying a particularly sensitive property, but they had been operating in a way which had increased that sensitivity.

ME v MP and another

Family proceedings – Orders in family proceedings. Where a judge in earlier proceedings had found that a child (R) had suffered, and was likely to suffer, significant emotional harm as a result of the actions of the mother, that finding, was contrary to the local authority's conclusion that the threshold for public law intervention had not been met. Having made that finding prior to finally determining the private law applications and before, in particular, the contact applications, the parties and the court should have considered the further role the authority might have been required to play in fulfilment of their statutory obligations to R. The Family Division so ruled in allowing a father's appeal (in part) against, among other things, the decision that R should have no direct contact with him. The court held that, in the circumstances, the judge should not have proceeded to a final determination that there should be no contact where there were still potential steps that could be taken to promote such contact.

Eze v Conway and another

Contract – Breach of Contract. The defendant was liable to the claimants for breach of contract for failing to complete the purchase of the claimants' property after the parties had exchanged contracts. The Court of Appeal, Civil Division, held that the contract was valid and enforceable despite the payment of a fee by the claimants to the defendant's purported agent without the defendant's knowledge.

Meadows v Khan

Negligence – Medical negligence. Following the lifting of interim anonymity provisions by a consent order, the present judgment of the previously anonymised version ([2018] All ER (D) 151 (Nov)) was handed down. In allowing the appellant doctor's appeal against the award of damages for his admitted negligence, the Court of Appeal, Civil Division, held that the judge was required to apply the 'scope of duty test' as set out in South Australian Asset Management Corportation v York Montague Ltd (SAAMCO). The SAAMCO test required there to be an adequate link between the breach of duty and the particular type of loss claimed and accordingly the appellant although liable for the costs associated with the respondent's sons haemophilia, was not liable for the cost's associated with his autism.

Yilmaz and another v Government of Turkey

Extradition – Prohibition of torture. The Divisional Court held that it needed further information in order to have objective, reliable, specific and properly updated evidence of the conditions in which the appellants would be held in prison in Turkey, before it could decide whether there was a real risk that they would be subjected to inhuman or degrading treatment. Accordingly, it adjourned the appellants' appeal against orders for their extradition to Turkey for offences described as plunder, torment and restriction of freedom of person by using coercion, threat or deceit imputed on the suspect pending receipt of answers to specified questions.

*AAA v A Chief Constable

Police – Informer. The claimant confidential human intelligence source's contractual claim for damages against the defendant Chief Constable's police force, for failure to pay him what was agreed between them under alleged contractual arrangements and for other losses, failed. The Queen's Bench Division held that there had never been any binding contract between him and the Chief Constable as pleaded or as alleged in his evidence.

Mrs K v Chief Constable, Police Service of Scotland

Personal injury – Workplace stress – Police officer – Duty of care – Foreseeability – Causation. Court of Session: In an action in which a former police officer sought damages for psychiatric injury caused by a failure to afford her fair treatment in carrying out an investigation into her conduct and performance and in moving her to another department, the court held that the defender was responsible for any act or omission giving rise to a breach of duty which the pursuer might establish as a matter of fact, the pursuer had established a breach of duty, her psychiatric injury was reasonably foreseeable, and there was a causal link between the breach complained of and the psychiatric injury she sustained.

Commodity Solution Services Ltd and another v First Scottish Searching Services Ltd

Negligence – Duty of care – Pure economic loss – Search of public register. Sheriff Appeal Court: In an appeal in an action by the holders of an inhibition over property, which was properly registered in the Register of Inhibitions and Adjudications, against searchers instructed to carry out a search on behalf the sellers prior to the purchase of the property, the defenders searches not having disclosed the inhibition, which was not discharged before the sale, and the purchasers' title having been registered in the Land Register without qualification, the court held that the sheriff reached the correct decision on the principal issue, ie that a firm of professional searchers, instructed by the seller of heritable subjects to carry out a search in the Register of Inhibitions and Adjudications, owed a duty of care to a creditor who had registered an inhibition in that register; however, the sheriff went too far in fixing a proof and in repelling the pleas that he did; the remaining questions of law as regards good faith and loss were best resolved after a proof before answer.

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