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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 >> Weintraub v London Borough of Hackney [2024] EWHC 845 (Ch) (16 April 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/845.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 845 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY APPEALS (ChD)
Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
YISROEL WEINTRAUB |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and – |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF HACKNEY |
Defendant/ Respondent |
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Mr Michael Paget (instructed by in-house Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 26 March 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Zacaroli:
Introduction
The law
"First, absence by the tenant from the dwelling may be sufficiently continuous or lengthy or combined with other circumstances as to compel the inference that, on the face of it, the tenant has ceased to occupy the dwelling as his or her home. In every case, the question is one of fact and degree. Secondly, assuming the circumstances of absence are such as to give rise to that inference:
(1) the onus is on the tenant to rebut the presumption that his or her occupation of the dwelling as a home has ceased;
(2) in order to rebut the presumption the tenant must have an intention to return;
(3) while there is no set limit to the length of absence and no requirement that the intention must be to return by a specific date or within a finite period, the tenant must be able to demonstrate a "practical possibility" or "a real possibility" of the fulfilment of the intention to return within a reasonable time;
(4) the tenant must also show that his or her inward intention is accompanied by some formal, outward and visible sign of the intention to return, which sign must be sufficiently substantial and permanent and otherwise such that in all the circumstances it is adequate to rebut the presumption that the tenant, by being physically absent from the premises, has ceased to be in occupation of it. Thirdly, two homes cases, that is to say where the tenant has another property in which he or she voluntarily takes up full-time residence, must be viewed with particular care in order to assess whether the tenant has ceased to occupy as a home the place where he or she formerly lived. Fourthly, whether or not a tenant has ceased to occupy premises as his or her home is a question of fact. In the absence of an error of law, the trial judge's findings of primary fact cannot be overturned on appeal unless they were perverse, in the sense that they exceeded the generous ambit within which reasonable disagreement about the conclusions to be drawn from the evidence is possible; but the appeal court may in an appropriate case substitute its own inferences drawn from those primary facts."
The judge's judgment
(1) Since 2017, Rabbi Weintraub visits the Property – if not daily – at least for a considerable portion of the week, for several hours at a time between his morning and evening visits to the synagogue (where he also bathes).
(2) He spends his time in the Property in study and prayer, and eating the packed lunch which his daughter prepares for him.
(3) He spends the nights either at his daughter's house, except at weekends when he stays with friends.
(4) He has an intention to return to the Property once the right to buy process is completed.
"56. However, this is not a case of abandonment but one to determine whether the premises are used as the Claimant's only or principal home. In my view, the premises are used (or were used at least from 2017 onwards) mainly for study purposes – however laudable that is.
57. The Claimant does not sleep there. He does not entertain there, apart from the odd visit such as family or friends. Not unnaturally in view of his age, he is heavily reliant on his daughter and son-in-law, and Mr Schiomoni (and indeed the local synagogue) for the remainder of his daily and, crucially, overnight living needs – but, in my view, that activity is largely centred around his daughter's home not the premises.
58. I do find it surprising that, irrespective of his frugal nature, that very little of his personal belongings are left in the premises. The basement contains only a few, as can be seen from the photographs taken by Mr Seridag. More importantly, the premises are practically empty, even if one recognises that the photographs, I have seen may not be completely exhaustive."
"76. Accepting that certain bills and bank account statements in the Claimant's name are delivered to the premises, and that he at least has a presence there during the daytime, such that he treats the premises as his home, that is, in my view, insufficient for him to demonstrate (on an objective basis) that this is his only or principal home – in accordance with the principles set out in Dove.
77. The contrary evidence is compelling. He sleeps elsewhere every night – mainly at his daughter and son in law's. They care for him substantially. Whilst accepting that he is a man who requires little in the way of material possessions, the evidence demonstrates that the premises are used solely for study purposes akin to a library environment. The premises look practically empty and unused. He attends the synagogue each day on two occasions – and they along with his family and friends provide for him.
78. Mr Heath has suggested that his situation could be categorised as one akin to a sofa surfer and that it must follow that, as he has only one flat, that must be his only or principal home. I cannot agree with that submission – the true test is an objective assessment of whether this is the case. From these findings and those that I have expressed at some length earlier in this judgment (and I refer to paragraphs 21-60), I cannot find this to be the case."
Grounds of appeal
First ground of appeal
Second ground of appeal
"I think there must be evidence of something more than a vague wish to return. It must be a real hope coupled with the practical possibility of its fulfilment within a reasonable time."