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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Kelly, R (on the application of) v London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham [2004] EWHC 435 (Admin) (26 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/435.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 435 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF KELLY | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
LONDON BOROUGH OF HAMMERSMITH & FULHAM | (DEFENDANT) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR NORMAN JOSS (instructed by Thomas Watts & Co, London W8 4LF) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
Monday, 26 January 2004
"Any person aggrieved by any act done by the registrar in relation to a caution under this Act may appeal to the court in the prescribed manner."
(a) In about 1968 Mrs Herbert and her husband moved into the property at No.11. Their daughter, the claimant, was then aged 7 and moved in with them. The three of them continued to live there. When she became an adult, the claimant remained living there. In due course, namely in 1989, the claimant had a son, Dean, and he also lived there.(b) The property was council accommodation and during his lifetime Mr Herbert, husband of the deceased, was the tenant.
(c) Mr Herbert died in 1996. Then Mrs Herbert became the tenant of the property.
(d) In 1997 the claimant married. Her husband, Mr Kelly, came to live in the property with the claimant, with Dean, and with Mrs Herbert. Unfortunately since that time her husband has separated from the claimant and has left the property.
(e) For four years after the death of Mr Herbert the rent on the property was paid out of the claimant's bank account. At that time she was earning a good salary and her salary was being paid into the bank account. Mrs Herbert's only income was the state retirement pension. Mr Robb tells me on instructions that Mrs Herbert's pension was also paid into the claimant's bank account but that the claimant would pay her mother, Mrs Herbert, an equivalent sum in cash for her to deploy. How did she deploy it? There is no answer in the material before me. Perhaps it is a sensible guess to say that she will have spent that small amount of money one way or another for the benefit of the household.
(f) Late in 2000 Mrs Herbert, as a secure local authority tenant, applied to buy the property under the Right to Buy provisions of the Housing Act 1985. The papers relating to her application to the local authority are unfortunately not in evidence and would no doubt be produced in any enquiry which had as its centre the need to find facts. But it appears that Mrs Herbert used the right given to her under section 123 of the Act to require that the claimant, in her capacity as a member of her family who had been residing with her for more than one year, should share the right to buy with her.
(g) It appears that the freehold interest in the property was valued at that time in the sum of £120,000 and that, by virtue of the length of her and her deceased husband's tenancy of the property, Mrs Herbert was entitled under section 129 of the 1985 Act to a discount off that price of £50,000.
(h) The balance of £70,000 was borrowed by the claimant on mortgage. Although she was the sole borrower, she and Mrs Herbert jointly executed a mortgage over the property to secure that borrowing.
(i) The purchase was effected by a transfer dated 27 November 2000. It was the claimant who paid the legal and other incidental costs of purchase amounting to about £1,000. As I have said, the claimant and Mrs Herbert were the joint transferees of the freehold interest in the property. Paragraph 12 of the transfer form is designed to obviate issues as to the extent of equitable interest in cases of joint legal ownership. Paragraph 12 says:
"Declaration of trust. Where there is more than one transferee place X in the appropriate box."Then the first box is delineated. Against that box is the sentence:
"The transferees are to hold the property on trust for themselves as joint tenants."Then the second box is delineated. Against that box is the sentence:
"The transferees are to hold the property on trust for themselves as tenants in common in equal shares."Then the third box is delineated. Against that box is the sentence:
"The transferees are to hold the property (complete as necessary)."It is highly unfortunate that none of the three boxes was crossed. Conveyancers are repeatedly urged by the courts to ensure that, where legal title is taken by more than one person, the beneficial ownership is thus spelt out. I suppose conveyancers could respond that, if their instructions on the point are silent, they cannot do much to make the situation clear. However that may be overcharitable in any particular case. The result of the failure to place X in any of the three boxes is this, and perhaps more, litigation in this one case.
(j) Just before the transfer on 27 November 2000, namely earlier in that month, Mrs Herbert, then aged 70 and in poor overall health, had a fall and was taken to Charing Cross Hospital. As things turned out, she was never to return home. She was moved at one point to St Mary's Hospital and then in March 2001 she went to the Goldhawk Road Elderly Persons' Home run or on behalf of the local authority, where, as I have said, she stayed until her death in August 2002.
(k) At all times since that purchase the claimant has discharged the mortgage instalments out of her own resources without any contribution by Mrs Herbert even during her lifetime.
(l) Prior to her move into the elderly persons' home a form about Mrs Herbert's financial circumstances was completed by or on her behalf. It made no reference to any ownership of any interest, legal or beneficial, in No.11. So the charge made for the accommodation during her lifetime was the nominal charge referable to her exiguous state retirement pension.
(m) After her death the local authority caused a search to be made at the Land Registry and discovered that No.11 was held as a matter of law in the ownership of the claimant and of the deceased; so it reassessed the deceased so that she should pay the balance allegedly owing referable to accommodation, namely £46,182. It also caused a caution to be placed on the proprietorship register referable to the property on 5 December 2002.
(n) From November 2002 to July 2003, when these proceedings were launched, there was correspondence between the claimant's solicitors and the local authority.
(o) Mr Robb criticises the stance taken by the local authority early in the correspondence. For example he has pointed out a simple error which they made in a letter dated 19 November 2002. In that, however, the assault in these proceedings is on the validity of a decision reached in April 2003, it seems to me that errors articulated in November 2002, unless repeated, have little logical impact upon the validity of the later decision. It is quite clear that that particular error was perceived to be such by the local authority prior to April 2003.
(p) In a letter dated 13 February 2003 the claimant's solicitors said on her behalf:
"The purchase under the 'Right to Buy' scheme was essentially made at that time because in the middle of 1999 Mrs Herbert was becoming particularly frail and ill. The Council's Social Services Department had been involved in supplying equipment to the property to enable Mrs Herbert to use the stairs there but, in fact, this did not cure the problem as Mrs Herbert proved too frail to negotiate the stairs by herself which staircase had been of such construction that it was not possible for a chairlift to be fitted.As a result of her condition Mrs Kelly and her mother discussed the situation and reached the conclusion that as Mrs Herbert would have to move into a nursing home then Mrs Kelly and her son would, as a result, have nowhere to live because they would then have to move out of the property as they did not have security.Mrs Herbert and her daughter made the decision that Mrs Herbert should exercise her right to buy and they accordingly proceeded on that basis. The property had to be put in the joint names of both parties because it was Mrs Herbert's right that was being exercised. As Mrs Kelly was ... earning a salary of £29,000 per annum she could support the one hundred per cent mortgage of £70,000 needed for the purchase at the price of £70,000.The reason for the purchase was to provide a home for both Mrs Kelly and her son ...... It is quite clear that the purpose of the purchase was to provide a home not for Mrs Herbert but for her daughter and grandson ...In all the circumstances not only are we of the view that Mrs Herbert's interest in the property was of nil value, it is our opinion that the purchase was made for the sole purpose of providing a home for our client and her son and not for her mother, who at the time that the purchase was contemplated was no longer able to live other than where she could be provided with the appropriate nursing care."(q) In a reply dated 23 April 2003, received, according to the claimant's former solicitors, only on 30 June 2003, the local authority said:
"The legal advice given to date is that on the information currently available there is not sufficient evidence to contradict the presumption that Mrs Herbert had a beneficial interest in the house. Nor that if she had an interest that interest should be valued at nil or below the £19,000 threshold.However it may be that you are able to provide further information regarding these two issues. If so can you please write to the Head of Legal Services at London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham ... Useful submission would include:(1) Beneficial ownership issue:(i) objective evidence of intention, eg instructions to or advice given by [the solicitors representing the claimant and the deceased in the purchase] or a statutory declaration from the lawyer there who handled the purchase(ii) documentary evidence of the alleged agreement between mother and daughter, eg letters, proposed tenancy agreement to regulate Mrs Herbert's continued occupation(iii) copy of any return of her assets made to the probate office after Mrs Herbert's death.(2) Valuation issue:..."(r) The response of the claimant's solicitors to that demand for further evidence was that the local authority were asking for evidence which it knew did not exist and that an application for judicial review would be issued.
"Property to be taken into account
Legal and beneficial owners
7.009 The treatment of property will depend on whether the resident is a legal or a beneficial owner. A legal owner is a person in whose name the property is held. A beneficial owner is one who is entitled to receive the profits or proceeds of property. In most cases the legal and beneficial owners will be the same person but, where this is not the case, the value of the property will be valued according to the following paragraphs.
Legal ownership
7.010 For the purposes of assessing the resident's ability to pay a charge no account should be taken of the value of a property where the resident is a legal owner but has no beneficial interest in the property, ie the resident is holding the property on trust for the beneficial owners and has no right to the proceeds or profits should the property be sold.
Beneficial ownership
7.011 Where the resident is the sole beneficial owner of a property the capital value should be taken into account in full...
Joint beneficial ownership of property
7.012 Where a resident is a joint beneficial owner of property, ie he has the right to receive some of the proceeds of sale, it is the resident's interest in the property which is to be valued as capital, and not the property itself. The value of this interest is governed by
1. the resident's ability to re-assign the beneficial interest to somebody else
2. there being a market, ie the interest being such as to attract a willing buyer for the interest.
7.013 In most cases there is unlikely to be any legal impediment preventing a joint beneficial interest in a property being re-assigned. But the likelihood of there being a willing buyer will depend on the conditions in which the joint beneficial interest has arisen.
7.014 Where an interest in a property is beneficially shared between relatives, the value of the resident's interest will be heavily influenced by the possibility of a market amongst his fellow beneficiaries. If no other relative is willing to buy the resident's interest, it is highly unlikely that any 'outsider' would be willing to buy into the property unless the financial advantages far outweighed the risks and limitations involved. The value of the interest, even to a buyer, could in such circumstances effectively be nil. If the local authority is unsure about the resident's share, or their valuation is disputed by the resident, again a professional valuation should be obtained.
7.014A If ownership is disputed and a resident's interest is alleged to be less than seems apparent from the initial information, the local authority will need written evidence on any beneficial interest the resident, or other parties possess. Such evidence may include the person's understanding of events, including why and how the property came to be in the resident's name or possession. Where it is contended that the interest in the property is held for someone else, the local authority should require evidence of the arrangement, the origin of the arrangement and the intentions for its future use. The law of equity may operate to resolve doubts about beneficial ownership, by deciding what is reasonable by reference to the original intentions behind a person's action, rather than applying the strict letter of the law."
"...in the absence of an express declaration of the beneficial interests, the court will hold that the joint purchasers hold the property on a resulting trust for themselves in the proportions in which they contributed directly or indirectly to the purchase price, unless there is sufficient specific evidence of their common intention that they should be entitled in other proportions - eg in equal shares notwithstanding unequal contributions - to rebut the presumption of a resulting trust."
"Given that no actual common intention to share the property in equal beneficial shares was established, one is driven back to the equitable principle that the shares are presumed to be in proportion to the contributions. If the matter is approached in this way, it seems to me right in principle that the discount of 41 per cent should be regarded as a direct contribution by the woman to the purchase. That is how Mr Bush J, a most experienced judge, approached the matter in Marsh v Von Sternberg [1986] 1 FLR 526. And that is how I consider this court should approach the matter."
"The court may take failure to file acknowledgment of service into account when deciding what order to make about costs."