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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Crossley v City of Westminster [2006] EWCA Civ 140 (23 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/140.html Cite as: [2006] NPC 20, [2006] EWCA Civ 140, [2006] HLR 26 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE COLLINS CBE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
and
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
____________________
CROSSLEY |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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CITY OF WESTMINSTER |
Appellant/ Defendant |
____________________
Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr J Luba QC and Ms Y Adedeji (instructed by Gillian Radford & Co) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
The judgment which follows is the judgment of the court.
The appeal
The background
" ..
Mr Crossley has been a client of our organisation for in excess of 15 years. Throughout the vast majority of that time he has lived on the streets of Soho or in short term hostels. Throughout the course of this time his self-care has been extremely poor, and his mental state has often been a cause for concern. We have, one one occasion, had to resuscitate and hospitalise him after he took a life-threatening heroin overdose. Mr Crossley is subject to intense depression following a difficult upbringing and a serious assault he underwent a few years ago, and has throughout this period, wrestled with a severe and enduring addiction to heroin and crack cocaine.
Since he was temporarily housed we have noticed a significant upturn in Mr Crossley's engagement with services, and are pleased that he now regularly receives methadone maintenance treatment, and has largely broken his ties to the street-drug scene. He remains severely depressed, but has recently with our and the Caravan's help, sought specialist counselling services with a view to beginning to address the causes of his long-term mental ill-health, and we are hopeful that, if this trend continues, he stands a fair chance of finally beginning to build on his recent progress and perhaps moving forward toward a steadier state of mind which may enable him to undertake independent living eventually. We would be concerned at the prospect of Mr Crossley losing access to housing at this stage, as it is our belief that it has played a vital role in enabling him to begin to move tentatively forward, and the recent beginning of counselling will, we think, render him vulnerable to relapse in the near future if his current support network is weakened by a return to the street-scene.
."
"My client is currently 9 weeks abstinent from all street illicit drugs and is receiving treatment for depression and methadone maintenance at the Westminster Treatment Team in Paddington .
It is my professional opinion that Mr Crossley would benefit immensely from secure independent housing to further support and facilitate his recovery."
It was on the day this letter was written that Mr Crossley was provided with temporary accommodation by Westminster. It followed that his progress with the Caravan Project had been made while he was still living on the streets.
" .
Mr Crossley is a 34 year old unemployed man with as long history of drug dependency which began at the age of 13. He has a very poor family background of violence and alcoholism and appears to have known little affection and support in his youth. It is not surprising that he drifted into substance misuse and criminal activities and has spent much time in prison. It is very encouraging that he is presently drug-free and he is to be applauded for returning to treatment despite his lapses. I believe he is a vulnerable man, suffering from depression which is very likely to deteriorate if he is roofless. Hepatitis C needs to be further investigated and may adversely affect his health. It is also predictable that he will lapse into substance abuse if he does not have accommodation and adequate support.
."
The law
"8.19 Housing authorities will need to make enquires into an applicant's childhood history to establish whether he or she had been looked after, accommodated or fostered in any of these ways. If so, they will need to consider whether he or she is vulnerable as a result. In determining whether there is vulnerability (as set out in paragraph 8.13, above), factors that a housing authority may wish to consider are:
i) the length of time that the applicant was looked after, accommodated or fostered;
ii) the length of time since the applicant was looked after, accommodated or fostered, and whether the applicant had been able to obtain and/or maintain accommodation during any of that period;
iii) whether the applicant has any existing support networks, particularly by way of family, friends or mentor."
In relation to the category of "other special reason" it says:
"8.28 Section 189(1)(c) provides that a person has a priority need for accommodation if he or she is vulnerable for an "other special reason". A person with whom such a vulnerable person normally lives or might reasonably be expected to live also has a priority need. The legislation envisages that vulnerability can arise because of factors that are not expressly provided for in statute. It does not permit housing authorities to predetermine that some groups can never be considered vulnerable for an "other special reason". Each application must be considered in the light of the facts and circumstances of the case. Moreover, other special reasons giving rise to vulnerability are not restricted to the physical or mental characteristics of a person. Other special reasons may include a combination of factors and circumstances that render a person less able than others to fend for him or herself when homeless. Where applicants have a need for support but have no family or friends on whom they can depend they may be vulnerable as a result of an other special reason."
The decision
The judgment
"The reviewing officer appears to have compressed the information that the appellant's drug abstinence was of comparatively short duration, in the context of a clear medical history of constant relapsing, into an unqualified statement that the appellant has remained abstinent from all illicit street drugs. In my judgment that is a misleading compression."
He went on to note the passage of the decision letter (§6) which acknowledged the upturn in Mr Crossley's engagement with the support services since he was temporarily housed that is, since 2 August 2004 - but which continued:
"I am not satisfied that if you were to continue to be homeless you would not be able to continue to receive treatment and support I am satisfied that you would be able to continue to remain abstinent from illicit drugs."
The judge's view about this was unequivocal:
"I am bound to say it does not seem to me that there was any material upon which the reviewing officer could sensibly come to such a confident statement about the future. If he had said 'I am satisfied that there is a reasonable chance or a worthwhile chance of your being able to remain abstinent from illicit drugs', one would not have quarrelled. But the confidence with which the reviewing officer expresses himself is, in my judgment, simply not justified by any material whatsoever."
The compression of the evidence, foreshortening as it did the evidence of an ongoing risk of relapse, in the judge's view vitiated the reviewing officer's conclusion that there was no 'special reason' bringing Mr Crossley within the statutory class.
"Even if you did recommence using illicit drugs and continue to abuse alcohol I am not satisfied that it would make you less able to fend so that you would suffer injury or detriment greater than an ordinary homeless person."
Although this contingent finding might otherwise have shielded the decision-maker's conclusion, it too depended on the 'compression' of facts identified by the judge. The most that could legitimately be said at the point of review was that the prospects of continued recovery over what was inevitably going to be a prolonged period - were uncertain if Mr Crossley were back on the streets; and even this might have been attacked as over-sanguine in the light of such evidence as that of Dr Hickey.
Discussion
"24. In conclusion, he would be likely to be less able to look after his physical health than an ordinary homeless person so that injury or detriment in the terms of increased drug addiction, possible infection, possible suicide, possible risks of death from overdoses would result, when a less vulnerable man would be able to cope without having those harmful effects. It seems to me that in coming to a contrary view the reviewing officer was Wednesday [sic] unreasonable and perverse in his assessment of the facts. Alternatively on a narrower basis, that it was a central question in the case which he did not seriously engage with at all."
"Further to this, taking into account your social, financial, medical and housing circumstances together I am not satisfied that you are vulnerable for a special reason."
Conclusion