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Catholic Care (Diocese of Leeds) v Charity Commission for England and Wales

Charity Tribunal: McKenna, President, June 2009 Adoption agency – Equality Act (Sexual Orientation) Regulations – charitable objects

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 August 2009

Ruth Arlow
Affiliation:
Barrister, Deputy Chancellor of the Dioceses of Chichester and Norwich
Will Adam
Affiliation:
Rector of Girton, Ely Diocesan Ecumenical Officer
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Abstract

Type
Case Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 2009

The appellant was a Roman Catholic adoption agency. Prior to the coming into force of the Equality Act (Sexual Orientation) Regulations 2007 (‘the Regulations’) it had never, for religious reasons, provided adoption services to homosexuals. Regulation 18(1) provides an exemption where a person acts ‘in pursuance of a charitable instrument, and the restriction of benefits to persons of [a specified] sexual orientation is imposed by reason of or on the grounds of the provisions of the charitable instrument’. The agency therefore sought the Charity Commission's consent to replace the objects clause in its Memorandum of Association with a new one intended to bring it within the exemption under Regulation 18(1). The Commission refused and the charity appealed.

The tribunal was mindful of the human rights of ‘hard-to-place’ children and the charity's success with such children but nevertheless ruled that, to allow the appeal, it would have to be satisfied that the public benefit arising from the charity's activities was sufficiently linked to its ability to discriminate on grounds of sexual orientation. The Regulations had to be interpreted as a coherent whole, mindful of the mischief that Parliament had intended to avert. The tribunal concluded that Regulation 18 permitted discrimination by charities only when their activities did not stray into the areas covered by the other regulations. Regulation 18 could not be relied upon to condone activity that was no longer permitted or made unlawful by another regulation. The charity had been permitted under Regulation 15 to continue with its activities as described but this had been time limited, expiring in December 2008. The appeal was dismissed because the discrimination proposed by the charity was unlawful under regulations 8 and 14(8).

This is an edited version of a case summary prepared by Frank Cranmer for Law and Justice and it is reproduced here with permission. A transcript of the tribunal's interim determination may be found at http://www.charity.tribunals.gov.uk/documents/decisions/Ruling_on_Preliminary_Question_(13March2009).pdf and of its final determination at http://www.charity.tribunals.gov.uk/documents/decisions/CatholicCareDecision_1609v2.pdf.