Skull wrote:
According to Plato, “he doesn't know what justice is, but he knows what justice is not”.
Did Noble's ruling punish the council and prevent or discourage them from making future transgressions? Could any protections be drawn from his ruling in respect to the present sisted cases or future applicants? Compelling the council to act fairly when confronted with an application protecting the rights of the individual.
Justice is an abstract term it's a hard one to argue but as Plato pointed out “he knows what justice is not”.
In my mind at least, Noble failed to punish the council and to protect the rights of individuals from further abuse.
I am no Sheriff, and I couldn't begin to rewrite Noble's ruling but as I said before, I know what Noble failed to deliver and who it has failed to protect.
Now you tell me Dusty, who ultimately got punished and who has been afforded the protection of the law?

Obviously I agree that it's all pash, but under the current legislation and legal system I can't really see what more could have been expected from the sheriff.
He was asked to rule on the narrow issue of the status of a closed waiting list and the status of one applicant who wasn't on the list, which he did (and why CEC ever thought that would survive a legal challenge is beyond me).
So the council won't do that again, and costs were awarded against them.
Of course, that doesn't make the system as a whole much less unfair, but what I'm getting at is that you knew how the legal system worked so I'm not sure how you could have really expected much more from the ruling.
And obviously there could well be other grounds for a challenge, but that wasn't on the table for the sheriff to consider in this case.
And of course the other big facet to the whole thing is that ultimately the legislation and the decision whether or not to restrict numbers is a political decision rather than a legal one, thus in that respect not one for the courts to entertain.