BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Raw, R (on the application of) v London Borough of Lambeth [2010] EWHC 507 (Admin) (12 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/507.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 507 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF COLIN RAW |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
LONDON BOROUGH OF LAMBETH |
Defendant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
WAYNE BEGLAN (instructed by LONDON BOROUGH OF LAMBETH LEGAL SERVICES) for the DEFENDANT
Hearing dates: 29 and 30 October
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Stadlen:
The Background
"1.Your application for housing
You have been referred to Lettings First by the Homelessness Prevention and Advice Team. You agree that the many benefits of using the Letting First scheme have been explained to you, including the provision by Lambeth of a deposit which will help you secure suitable accommodation of your choice. You also understand that although you may still join Lambeth's Housing Register for the allocation of permanent housing, the chances of being made an offer by that route are far lower than if you made a successful homelessness application to Lambeth.
By agreeing to seek housing through the Letting First Scheme, you understand (and have decided) that you will not be making, or continuing with a homelessness application to Lambeth or to any other local authority. If, however, you were to become homeless from the tenancy arranged for you then, subject to (a) Lettings First seeking to assist you again and (b) issues of intentional homelessness from that tenancy, you may be able to seek assistance from Lambeth as a homeless person.
2. Your tenancy
- The tenancy will be initially for one year
- It will be an assured short hold tenancy
- The tenancy will be a private tenancy agreement between you and the landlord/agent
- Initial sign up will not take place without the agreement of Letting First staff
- No sign up will be agreed until full proof of income and proof of identity has been received from you, the tenant
- No sign up will be agreed until the landlord/agent has provided relevant safety certificates and proof of ownership and/or authority to rent
3. Your deposit
We will pay up to £1500 to your landlord or agent for one year's assured short-hold tenancy.
You can use the deposit to:
- Re-negotiate the tenancy at the same property at the end of your first year
- To ask for your deposit to be transferred to a new landlord through Lettings First in order to secure another property.
Your landlord will be entitled to keep the whole or part of the deposit should you fail to maintain the tenancy by
- Causing malicious damage
- Causing a nuisance by noise or allowing your family or vistors to cause nuisance
- Falling into rent arrears either by not paying the rent yourself or by failing to inform Housing Benefit of any change in your circumstances, or by failing to provide documentation requested by Housing Benefit departments or by Lettings First to sustain your rent payment
If this happens and you are unable to re-negotiate your tenancy with the same landlord, or to secure another tenancy because your deposit is used up, the council could deem you to be intentionally homeless and will offer no further assistance either by offering you housing or a further deposit.
You are required to sign this letter as confirmation that you have understood and accept the above terms and conditions."
The legislative framework
(1) A person is homeless if he has no accommodation available for his occupation in the United Kingdom or elsewhere, which he –(a) is entitled to occupy by virtue of an interest in it or by virtue of an order of court,(b) has an express or implied licence to occupy, or occupies as a residence by virtue of any enactment of rule of law giving him the right to remain in occupation or restricting the right of another person to recover possession….(3) A person shall not be treated as having accommodation unless it is accommodation which it would be reasonable for him to continue to occupy.
(4) A person is threatened with homelessness if it is likely that he will become homeless within 28 days.
Section 179
(1) Every local housing authority shall secure that advice and information about homelessness and the prevention of homelessness is available free of charge to any person in their district….
Section 182
(1)In the exercise of their functions relating to homelessness and the prevention of homelessness a local housing authority or social services authority shall have regard to such guidance as may from time to time be given by the Secretary of State….
Section 183
(1)The following provisions of this Part apply where a person applies to a local housing authority for accommodation or for assistance in obtaining accommodation and the authority have reason to believe that he is or may be homeless or threatened with homelessness.
(2) In this Part - ….
"applicant" means a person making such an application"assistance under this Part" means the benefit of any function under the following provision of this Part relating to accommodation or assistance in obtaining accommodation, and"eligible for assistance" means not excluded from such assistance by section 185 (persons from abroad not eligible for housing assistance)…(3) Nothing in this section or the following provision of this Part affects a person's entitlement to advice and information under section 179 (duty to provide advisory services).
Section 184
(1) If the local housing authority have reason to believe that an applicant may be homeless or threatened with homelessness, they shall make such inquiries as are necessary to satisfy themselves –
(a) whether he is eligible for assistance, and(b) if so, whether any duty and if so what duty, is owed to him under the following provisions of this Part.(2) They may also make inquiries whether he has a local connection with the district of another local housing authority in England, Wales or Scotland.
(3) On completing their inquiries the authority shall notify the applicant of their decision and, so far as any issue is decided against his interests, inform him of the reasons for their decision…
(4) A notice under sub-section (3) or (4) shall also inform the applicant of his right to request a review of the decision and of the time within which such a request must be made…
Section 188
(1) If the local housing authority have reason to believe that an applicant may be homeless, eligible for assistance and have a priority need, they shall secure that accommodation is available for his occupation pending a decision as to the duty (if any) owed to him under the following provisions of this Part.
(2) The duty under this section arises irrespective of any possibility of the referral of the applicant's case to another local housing authority (see section 198 – 200).
(3) The duty ceases when the authority's decision is notified to the applicant, even if the applicant requests a review of the decision (see section 202).
(4) The authority may secure that accommodation is available for the applicant's occupation pending a decision on a review.
Section 189 priority need for accommodation.
(1) The following have a priority need for accommodation –
(a) a pregnant woman or a person with whom she resides or might reasonably be expected to reside,(b) a person with whom dependent children reside or might reasonably be expected to reside,(c) a person who is vulnerable as a result of old age, mental illness or handicap or physical disability or other special reason, or with whom such a person resides or might reasonably be expected to reside,(d) a person who is homeless or threatened with homelessness as a result of an emergency such as flood, fire or other disasters.(2) The Secretary of State may by order –
(a) specify further descriptions of persons as having a priority need for accommodation, and(b) amend or repeal any part of sub-section (1)…Section 190
(1)This section applies where the local housing authority are satisfied that an applicant is homeless and is eligible for assistance but are also satisfied that he became homeless intentionally.
(2) If the authority are satisfied that the applicant has a priority need, they shall
(a) secure that accommodation is available for his occupation for such period as they consider will give him a reasonable opportunity of securing accommodation for his occupation, and(b) provide him with or secure that he is provided with advice and assistance in any attempts he may make to secure that accommodation becomes available for his occupation.(3) If they are not satisfied that he has a priority need they shall provide him with or secure that he is provided with advice and assistance in any attempts he may make to secure that accommodation becomes available for his occupation.
(4) The applicant's housing needs shall be assessed before advice and assistance is provided under sub-section (2)(b) or (3)…
Section 191
(1) A person becomes homeless intentionally if he deliberately does or fails to do anything in consequence of which he ceases to occupy accommodation which is available for his occupation and which it would have been reasonable for him to continue to occupy…
Section 192
(1) This section applies where the local housing authority –
(a) are satisfied that an applicant is homeless and eligible for assistance and(b) are not satisfied that he became homeless intentionally but are not satisfied that he has a priority need.(2) The authority shall provide the applicant with or secure that he is provided with advice and assistance in any attempts he may make to secure that accommodation becomes available for his occupation.
(3) The authority may secure that accommodation is available for occupation by the applicant.
(4) The applicant's housing needs shall be assessed before advice and assistance is provided under sub-section (2)
(5) The advice and assistance provided under sub-section (2) must include information about the likely availability in the authority's district of types of accommodation appropriate to the applicant's housing needs (including in particular the location and sources of such types of accommodation).
Section 193
(1)This section applies where a local authority are satisfied that an applicant is homeless, eligible for assistance and has a priority need and are not satisfied that he became homeless intentionally.
(2) Unless the authority refer the application to another local housing authority (see section 198) they shall secure that accommodation is available for occupation by the applicant.
(3) The authority are subject to the duty under this section until it ceases by virtue of any of the following provisions of this section…
(5) The local housing authority shall cease to be subject to the duty under this section if the applicant, having been informed by the authority of the possible consequence of refusal and of his right to request a review of the suitability of the accommodation refuses an offer of accommodation which the authority are satisfied is suitable for him and the authority notify him that they regard themselves as having discharged their duty under this section.
(6) The local housing authority shall cease to be subject to the duty under this section if the applicant –
(a) ceases to be eligible for assistance,(b) becomes homeless intentionally from the accommodation made available for his occupation(c) accepts an offer of accommodation under Part VI (allocation of housing) or(cc) accepts an offer of an assured tenancy (other than an assured short hold tenancy) from a private landlord(d) otherwise voluntarily ceases to occupy as his only principal home the accommodation made available for his occupation.(7) The local housing authority shall also cease to be subject to the duty under this section if the applicant, having been informed of the possible consequence of refusal and of his right to request a review of the suitability of the accommodation, refuses a final offer of accommodation under Part 6.
(7B) The authority shall also cease to be subject to the duty under this section if the applicant accepts a qualifying offer of an assured short hold tenancy which is made by a private landlord in relation to any accommodation which is, or may become, available for the applicant's occupation.
(7C) The applicant is free to reject a qualifying offer without affecting the duty owed him under this section by the authority.
(7D) For the purposes of sub-section (7B) an offer of an assured short hold tenancy is a qualifying offer if –
(a) it is made with the approval of the authority in pursuant of arrangement made by the authority with the landlord with a view to bringing the authority's duty under this section to an end,(b) the tenancy being offered is a fixed term tenancy (within the meaning of Part 1 of the Housing Act 1988); and(c) it is accompanied by a statement in writing which states the term of the tenancy being offered and explains in ordinary language that –i. there is no obligation to accept the offer, butii. if the offer is accepted the local housing authority will cease to be subject to the duty under this section in relation to the applicant…(9) A person who ceases to be owed the duty under this section may make a fresh application to the authority for accommodation or assistance in obtaining accommodation…
Section 195
(1) This section applies where the local housing authority are satisfied that an applicant is threatened with homelessness and is eligible for assistance.
(2) If the authority –
(a) are satisfied that he has a priority need, and(b) are not satisfied that he became threatened with homelessness intentionally, they shall take reasonable steps to secure that accommodation does not cease to be available for his occupation…(3A) The authority shall, on becoming subject to the duty under this section, give the applicant a copy of the statement included in their allocation scheme by virtue of section 167 (1A) (policy of offering choice to people allocated housing accommodation under Part 6).
(4) Where in pursuance of the duty under sub-section (2) the authority secure that accommodation other than that occupied by the applicant when he made his application is available for occupation by him, the provisions of section 193 (3) to (9) (period for which duty owed)… apply with any necessary modification, in relation to the duty under this section as they apply in relation to the duty under section 193.
(5) If the authority –
(a) are not satisfied that the applicant has a priority need, or(b) are satisfied that he has a priority need but are also satisfied that he became threatened with homelessness intentionally,they shall provide him with (or secure that he is provided with) advice and assistance in any attempts he may make to secure that accommodation does not cease to be available for his occupation.(6) The applicant's housing needs shall be assessed before advice and assistance is provided under sub-section (5)…
(7) The advice and assistance provided under sub-section (5) must include information about the likely availability in the authority's district of types of accommodation appropriate to the applicant's housing needs (including, in particular, the location and sources of such types of accommodation).
(8) If the authority decide that they owe the applicant the duty under sub-section (5) by virtue of paragraph (b) of that sub-section, they may, pending a decision on a review of that decision – (a) secure that accommodation does not cease to be available for his occupation; and (b) if he becomes homeless, secure that accommodation is so available.
(9) If the authority –
(a) are not satisfied that the applicant has a priority need;
(b) are not satisfied that he became threatened with homelessness intentionally, the authority may take reasonable steps to secure that accommodation should not cease to be available for the applicant's occupation.Section 206
(1) A local housing authority may discharge their housing functions under this Part only in the following ways –
(a) by securing that suitable accommodation provided by them is available,(b) by securing that he obtains suitable accommodation from some other person, or(c) by giving him such advice and assistance as will secure that suitable accommodation is available for some other person.
"…assistance (e.g. rent deposit or guarantee) to obtain accommodation in the private rented sector." Paragraph 6.4 then states: "Housing authorities should ensure that the implications and likely outcomes of the available housing options are made clear to all applicants, including the distinction between having a priority need for accommodation under Part 7 and being in a "reasonable preference" category for an allocation of housing under Part 6. Authorities must not avoid their obligations under Part 7 (especially the duty to make inquiries under section 184), but it is open to them to suggest alternative solutions in cases of potential homelessness where these would be appropriate and acceptable to the applicant." (emphasis added).
Should the court decide the general question posed by the second declaration sought by the claimant?
"(iii) Discussion
32. The starting point for considering whether a court should permit a party to pursue an academic point in a public law case is the classic statements of Lord Slynn of Hadley in R v Secretary of State for the Home Department ex parte Salem [1999] 1 AC 450 in a speech with which other members of the Appellant Committee agreed when he explained (with my emphasis added) that:
"…I accept, as both counsel agree, that in a case where there is an issue involving a public authority as to questions of public law, your Lordships have a discretion to hear the appeal, even if by the time the appeal reaches the House, there is no longer a lis to be decided which will directly affect the rights and obligations of the parties inter se… The discretion to hear disputes, even in the area of public law, must be exercised with caution and appeals which are academic between the parties should not be heard unless there is a good reason in the public interest for doing so as for example (but only by way of example) where a discrete point of statutory construction which does not involve detailed consideration of the facts, and where large number of similar cases exist or are anticipated so that the issue will most likely need to be resolved in the near future"
33. One of the reasons for this approach was expressed by Lord Goff in R v Secretary of State fo the Home Department ex parte Wynne [1993] 1 WLR 115 at 120A-B where he said that:
"It is well established that this House does not decide hypothetical questions. If the House were to do so, any conclusion, and the accompanying reasons, could in their turn constitute no more than obiter dicta expressed without the assistance of a concrete factual situation, and would not constitute a binding precedent for the future".
34. These statements refer to the approach of the House of Lords but there is no reason why they should not apply with equal force to other courts. This approach to academic issues was considered further in the speeches by the members of the Appellate Committee in R (on the application of Rushbridger) v Attorney General [2004] 1 AC 357 in which:
(a) Lord Hutton explained that "it is not the function of the courts to decide hypothetical questions which do not impact on the parties before them" (page 371 E [35])
(b) Lord Hutton expressly approved at page 371 [35] the statement of Lord Justice-Clerk Thompson in Macnaughton v Macnaughton's Trustees [1953] SC 387-392 that "our courts have consistently acted on the view that it is their function in the ordinary run of contentious litigation to decide only live, practical questions, and they have no concern with hypothetical, premature or academic questions, not do they exist to advise litigants as to the policy which they should adopt in the ordering of their affairs"; and
(c) Lord Scott of Foscote stated that "the valuable time of the courts should be spent on real issues" (page 374 E[45]).
35. Similar principles have been applied in the Administrative Court, for example, by Munby J in Smeaton v Secretary of State [2002] 2 FLR 146, 244 [420] ("the facts remain that the court-including the Administrative Court – exist to resolve real problems and not disputes of merely academic significance") and by Davis J in BBC v Sugar [2007] 1 WLR 2593, 2606 [70] ("to grant remedies by reference to a decision made in now outmoded circumstances seems to me to be an arid and academic exercise. It is not something that, as an Administrative Court Judge, I would have been minded to do") Although these statements indicate that if an issue is academic, the court cannot determine it, these statements must be subject to what was said in Salem and which has, as far as I can discover, not been disapproved of or qualified in any manner in any later case." (paras 32-35).
"36. In my view these statements show clearly that academic issues cannot and should not be determined by courts unless there are exceptional circumstances such as where two conditions are satisfied in the type of application now before the courts. The first condition is in the words of Lord Slynn in Salem (supra) that "a large number of similar cases exist or anticipated" or at least other similar cases exist or are anticipated and the second condition is that the decision in the academic case will not be fact-sensitive. If the courts entertained academic disputes in the type of application now before the court but which did not satisfy each of these two conditions, the consequences would be a regrettable waste of valuable court time and the incurring by one or more parties of unnecessary costs.
37. These points are particularly potent at the present time where the Administrative court is completely overrun with immigration, asylum and other cases and where it would be contrary to the overriding objectives of the CPR for an academic case to be pursued. After all one of those overriding objectives is "dealing with a case justly [which] includes, so far as is practicable ….(e) allotting to it an appropriate share of the court's resources, while taking into account the need to allot resources to other cases" (CPR Part 1.1) It is noteworthy that there have been a number of cases where the court has considered it appropriate to hear an academic issue but those cases, which often concerned statutory construction or the impact of the European Convention on Human Rights on English statutes, satisfied the two test which I have set out in paragraph 36 above (see generally the examples given in R (on the application of B) v Dr SS, Dr AC and the Secretary of State for the Home Departments of Health [2005] EWHC 86(Admin) [47])." (paras 36 and 37 ibid).
"Postponement of decisions
Although the obligation to reach a decision is not spelled out in the section, it is implicit: an authority may not defer the obligation in the hope or expectation of a change in circumstances such as might reduce their duties, for example, by loss of priority need (ibid)…"
But he said that it would not be right to express a view going beyond the circumstances of that case. "Suffice it to say that in the case of a 17 year old child, it would not seem to me to be lawful for a local authority to postpone the taking of a decision even for a short period on the basis that by postponing that decision the child will have reached the age of 18 before the decision is taken. Thus if the decision on 10 March had been "if we were to take the decision today, this child would be in priority need, but we will postpone it until tomorrow when she will be 18 and circumstances will have changed" that would in my view have been an unlawful decision" (paras 37 and 38). Waller LJ continued: "…The question to which I have not found it easy to provide a clearly defined answer, is whether the authority in making its inquiries under section 184(1) as to what duty is owed to a 17 year old is entitled to persuade the parties to take up some form of mediation procedure before reaching its final decision, (providing temporary accommodation meanwhile); or whether it has to reach a decision without the aid of mediation, and then use mediation as a means of fulfilling its full duty to provide accommodation under section 206 on the basis that if mediation works, the authority would be "securing suitable accommodation from some other person" or possibly giving...assistance as will secure that suitable accommodation is available for some other person"; see section 206(1)(b) and (c)…In my view it cannot be right that an authority can persuade a family into mediation while a child is 17 and use the time that the mediation would take to deprive the child of a right that it would have had without mediation. …but if an authority are of the view that a child genuinely has no place to go unless a mediation can sort matters out, and a mediation cannot take place without depriving the child of a right it would otherwise had had, then in my view the authority has to take the view that its full duty must be performed and use mediation in order to fulfil that duty" (para 39 and 41).