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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Nutting v Southern Housing Group Ltd [2004] EWHC 2982 (Ch) (21 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/2982.html Cite as: [2005] HLR 25, [2004] EWHC 2982 (Ch), [2005] 2 P & CR 14, [2005] 1 FLR 1066, [2005] 1 P & CR DG22, [2005] Fam Law 210 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MARK NUTTING |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SOUTHERN HOUSING GROUP LIMITED |
Respondent |
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T.Vanhegan (instructed by Harris & Co) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 15/12/2004
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr. Justice Evans-Lombe :
“17(1) In any case where
(a) the sole tenant under an assured periodic tenancy dies, and
(b) immediately before the death, the tenant's spouse was occupying the dwelling-house as his or her only or principal home, and
(c) the tenant was not himself a successor, as defined in subsection (2) or subsection (3) below, [not applicable]
then, on the death, the tenancy vests by virtue of this section in the spouse (and, accordingly, does not devolve under the tenant's will or intestacy)…
(2)…
(3)…
(4) For the purposes of this section, a person who was living with the tenant as his or her wife or husband shall be treated as the tenant's spouse…. ”
“36 In my judgment the relationship, to come within the subsection, cannot have a single (or even a simple) definition. Human relationships are too complex and varied for that to be the case. There are, however, indicia. I have chosen to put them by questions, which must be answered in the affirmative, as follows:
(a) Have the parties openly set up home together?
(b) Is the relationship an emotional one of mutual lifetime commitment rather than simply one of convenience, friendship, companionship or the living together of lovers?
(c) Is the relationship one which has been presented to the outside world openly and unequivocally so that society considers it to be of permanent intent – the words “till death us do part” being apposite?
(d) Do the parties have a common life together, both domestically (in relation to the household) and externally (in relation to family and friends)?
37 The above indicia (which may overlap) must principally be objectively assessed by reference to what the outside world can see (albeit that the domestic aspect may not be viewable without visitors) and the indicia at (b) must also be assessed by reference to the viewpoint of the parties themselves, so far as that can be ascertained on evidence. In that regard the relationship of spouse does have some subjective element to it, but accompanying its subjectivity there must be express or implied communication of one party to the other by way of a demonstration of a lifetime emotional commitment. Whilst the length of time which the relationship has been in existence is irrelevant to the above indicia, it may sometimes corroborate them or even, in appropriate cases, be of sufficient length to satisfy a court that they are satisfied that the relationship of spouse exists.”
“47 … I find that it [the relationship between Mr Roberts and Mr Nutting] was a co-dependant relationship and Mr Nutting did believe that he loved Mr Roberts (albeit that the shelter of Mr Roberts flat was preferable to a hostel for the homeless, which was the alternative) and Mr Roberts lacked companionship… and lacked the will to resist Mr Nutting's determination to spend time with him. Each abused the other. Each cared for the other so far as their alcoholic lifestyle allowed….
48 But I do not find that the relationship reached the point where they were committed to the other “till death us do part” they were in a repeat cycle of mutual abuse…
49 I do not find any evidence to the effect that the parties have committed themselves to the other for the rest of their lives. Their mutual companionship and partnership did not go that far.
50 Whilst the parties lived together, they did not “set up home together”. Mr Nutting moved in with Mr Roberts at his first flat and moved in again when Mr Roberts moved to the new flat. In my judgment Mr Roberts intention was, when moving, was to separate from Mr Nutting… that intention was unable to resist Mr Nutting's wish to live with Mr Roberts, but that does not turn Mr Nutting moving in with Mr Roberts into a setting up of home together…
51 …their life was violent, dysfunctional and socially impoverished but had sufficient common strands to satisfy indicia (d).”
“92 The expression “living together as man and wife” or “as husband and wife” is in general use and well understood. It does not mean living together as lovers whether of the same or the opposite sex. It connotes persons who have openly set up home together as man and wife. While other factors may be significant where the question arises between the parties themselves, in a context such as the present it must depend largely if not exclusively on outward appearances. It cannot depend on the relationship being a happy, or long lasting, or stable one. This would be contrary to the Parliament's long-standing policy: the survivor must succeed by virtue of his or her status. He or she is to be treated as having been the spouse of the original tenant because that is what, to all intents and purposes and to all outward appearances, the claimant was. This is, of course, not to say that they must hold themselves out as husband and wife: couples who live together as husband and wife rarely do so. It means only that they must appear to the outside world as if they were husband and wife.”
“The common feature of all these relationships is that they are open relationships between persons of the opposite sex. Persons who set up home together may be husband and wife or live together as husband and wife; they may be lovers; or brother and sister; or friends; or fellow students; or share a common economic interest; or one may be economically dependent on the other. But Parliament did not extend the right to persons who set up home together; but only to those who did so as husband and wife.”
“Working out whether a particular couple are or were in such a relationship is not always easy…what matters most is the essential quality of the relationship, its marriage-like intimacy, stability, and social and financial inter-dependence.”
And at paragraph 140 she highlights the fact that homosexual couples frequently go through ceremonies of commitment in order to present themselves to the world as if they were married. And then at paragraph 142 she says:-
“142 Some people, whether heterosexual or homosexual, may be satisfied with casual or transient relationships. But most human beings eventually want more than that. They want love. And with love they often want not only the warmth but also the sense of belonging to one another which is the essence of being a couple. And many couples also come to want the stability and permanence which go with sharing a home and a life together, with or without the children…
143 It follows that a homosexual couple whose relationship is marriage-like in the same ways that an unmarried heterosexual couple's relationship is marriage-like are indeed in an analogous situation.”
“but, be that as it may, it seems to me that this court has, by a majority, decided that a woman who has had a sufficiently permanent relationship with a man over a period of years, but has not been married to him, may, nonetheless, have acquired the status of a member of that man's family. Accordingly, logically it can be argued – and one sees the force of the argument- that if in such circumstances that applies so as to enable a woman to become a statutory tenant by succession of a man, so in similar circumstances it should equally apply to enable a man to become a statutory tenant by succession of a woman…that being so, it seems to me it must be a question of fact and degree in each case - whether a sufficient state of permanence has been reached so that the surviving party can fairly be said in all the circumstances to be a member of the original tenant's family…the case was obviously fully and carefully argued before him [the judge] and he, for the reasons which appear in his judgment, expressed the view that the necessary degree of permanence in this particular relationship had not been shown; and he accordingly held that the defendant could not be and was not a statutory tenant by succession.”
“ It was also argued that the absence of children and the shortness of the relationship should have resulted in a different conclusion. Counsel cited the very much longer periods in the reported cases referred to above. In my judgment, there can be no rule about length. Of course, the longer the relationship, the easier it will be to infer permanence, but there can be no rule about length. For a relationship of only two years to be regarded as permanent must be rare, but the judge for reasons which he gave found this was permanent and I see no reason for disagreeing. The appellants also submitted that there were periods of being apart, e.g. when the deceased was in Egypt and at holiday time, but I do not think that these made any difference.
Finally, it was submitted that the fact that she still used her maiden name indicated that they did not constitute a family. This I found the most persuasive of all the appellants' arguments, but at the end of the day the judge had to make a finding of fact bearing in mind the authorities I have quoted. He heard the evidence, he applied the right test and he came to the conclusion that this was a permanent relationship, so recognised by others, and that Miss Lopez was “a member of the tenant's family”. I can see no reason for interfering with this conclusion…”