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Week in local government law: procurement, healthcare, housing, children’s and social care, education, prosecutions, licensing and planning—key cases, consultations and guidance (15 February 2024)

Published on: 15 February 2024

Published by a LexisNexis Local Government expert
Legal News
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In this issue:

  • Public procurement
  • Healthcare
  • Social housing
  • Children's social care
  • Social care
  • Education
  • Local authority prosecutions
  • Licensing
  • Planning
  • Daily and weekly news alerts
  • Updated content

Public procurement

Inadvertent scoring mistake held not sufficiently serious or material enough to warrant award of damages (Braceurself Ltd v NHS England)

In this matter, a clerical scoring error—one that would have shifted the result by 0.25% in favour of the incumbent—was found neither sufficiently serious nor material to justify an award of damages. If the error had not been inadvertent, or had crossed the 'sufficiently serious' threshold, the Court of Appeal would probably, applying the Francovich case tests, have reached a different outcome and ruled for the aggrieved bidder. Summarising Francovich, Lord Justice Coulson noted that, although the principle originates in European law and remains untouched by the new Procurement Act 2023, it does not readily align with English common law generally, or with public procurement challenges in particular...

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