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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> The London Borough of Croydon v Lopes [2017] EWHC 33 (QB) (18 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/33.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 33 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE LONDON BOROUGH OF CROYDON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MS VANDA LOPES |
Respondent |
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Adrian Berry (instructed by Hansen Palomares) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 3 November 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Lewis:
INTRODUCTION
THE FACTS
The Application For Housing Assistance
"so when her friend suggested that she come to the UK to look for work she came here and her partner and children remained at home with her mother and she found work they came to reside with her in the UK".
"based on the information provided in her previous interview she was not homeless I advised that whilst she had a difficult relationship with her 'mother in law' she had not been asked to leave I advised that she had come to the UK as her friend had suggested that she could find work her[e], I advised that the properties that she had stayed in since being in the UK were only temporary and that her family only joined her when she found work and that she planned her move to the UK rather than her mother-in-law evicting her from the property".
The Decision of 13 September 2013 on the Application
"When asked you confirmed you and your household had not been asked to leave, you said that you and Joao and been unable to find employment in Portugal so when a friend suggested that you come to the UK and look for employment you made a joint decision with Joao that you would come to the UK and once you found employment your partner and children would join you."
and later in the letter that:
"My reasons for reaching this decision are that you have accommodation that you are entitled to occupy by virtue of your interest in it which is available to you and members of your household including anyone that might reasonably be expected to reside with you.
"Whilst you state the living conditions in Portugal were cramped, I am mindful that you and your household were residing in the accommodation in Portugal for the last three years. In addition you confirmed that you had not been asked to leave the accommodation in Portugal and although you state it was at Joao's mother's invitation that you find a solution to the arguments you were having with Joao's brother, you made a joint decision with Joao, following your friend's suggestion, to come to the UK to look for work. You confirmed that you planned your move to the UK and when you found work your partner and children moved from the property in Portugal to join you in the UK.
"Therefore I am satisfied that you have accommodation in the United Kingdom or elsewhere which is available to you and any other members of your household that reside or might reasonably be expected to reside with you.
"I am also satisfied that your accommodation is reasonable for you to continue to occupy having taken into consideration all your personal and housing circumstances including whether your accommodation is affordable for you to continue to live at your address".
The Request for a Review and the Decision of the Review Officer of 13 May 2014
"you stated that although your partner's mother would not confirm that you were homeless, this is because it is not the custom in Portugal but that despite the fact that your partner and children had returned to the property you were not able to do so. I am not satisfied that that is true, I am satisfied that your family bond is sufficiently strong to enable you to return to the property."
The Appeal to the County Court
"I write this letter to inform you that I would not be able to accommodate Ms Vanda Lopes and his [sic] two children as well as my own son Joao Fernandes this because the house if have is very small and my other son is currently living with me, his wife and children. Furthermore, during the time that Vanda lived in my house with kids, we always had many problem and she's also not up very well with my other son and the wife. If she comes back to Lisbon, I do not have means of accommodating her. I understand that this matter involves my son Joao and my grandson Miguel but I do not want to go back to the same problems we had in the past and my son Joao Fernandes is very keen in defending his partner even when he knows that she is wrong. I am really sorry but there is no place in my house for Miss Vanda and her family".
The Costs Order
"1. The Appellant filed an appeal on 4 June 2014 in Lambeth County Court against the Review Officer's decision of 13 May 2014 that she was not homeless. At Section 8 of her appeal notice she set out the Order that she was seeking as:
(1) The Respondent's decision of 13 May 2014 be varied to a decision that the Appellant is homeless.
(2) In the alternative that the decision be quashed
(3) The Respondent pays the Appellant's costs of the appeal to be assessed if not agreed.
…..
"2. Both parties filed skeleton arguments in support of the appeal. The Appellant's skeleton argument is a fully fleshed skeleton and argues strongly for the relief sought as outlined above. I will not rehearse the arguments advanced in this short ruling. Suffice it to say that the Appellant was able to mount a strong case that the Respondent should not have proceeded on the evidence before it and that it should have conducted proper and further enquiries before arriving at the settled conclusion. There was no effective case argued for a variation of the review officer's decision, with the court substituting it own decision in favour of the Appellant.
…..
"4. The Appellant's case is straightforward. By the compromise embodied in the Consent Order the Respondent has agreed to undertake a further review. The Appellant has therefore 'succeeded in securing the relief that she would have obtained had she won her appeal'. She therefore submits that she is entitled to her costs.
"5. The Respondent's response draws attention to the fact that the Appellant's notice seeks an Order, first and foremost that the Court vary the Review Officer's decision to one that the Appellant be determined homeless. This is not relief granted to her under the Consent Order ,she only has her second ground of relief, namely the (implied) quashing of the Review Officer's decision and the holding of a further review. Not only this, the strength of the Appellant's case was greatly assisted by new evidence from the Appellant's mother-in-law. The appropriate order is no order as to costs.
"6. In reply the Appellant urges that while the mother-in-law's statement was new evidence the Respondent could very easily have obtained this evidence for itself, 'a simple matter of a phone call to Portugal' and indeed, given its obligations to undertake reasonable and proper enquiries this evidence should have been obtained by Respondent without the need for the 'new' evidence submitted in this appeal by the Appellant.
"7. In reality, this was a 'failure to make proper enquiries' appeal. There was never any prospect that the court would take it upon itself to vary the decision of the review officer but difficult for the Respondent to maintain that it had discharged its obligations to make enquiries. As I see the position there must be an Order for costs in favour of the Appellant. The issue is whether there should be a discount to reflect the fact that she sought to achieve more than she could reasonably expect to achieve in her appeal in seeking an order to vary, and fell back on the standard relief in such appeals, that of quashing the decision and a further review.
"8. In the modern climate parties are encouraged to restrict their claims to those reasonably achievable and not to additional claims for which they cannot realistically have much hope of success. The additional claim involves an amount of additional work although in the context of the claim as a whole this is very small indeed. It is only correct however that some deduction is made to reflect the fact that the Claimant raised but had, realistically, to abandon a claim that the Order be varied. In my judgment the appropriate order is that the Claimant should be awarded 85% of her costs."
The Application for Permission to Appeal against the Costs Order
"70 The council has, in my view, a realistic prospect of establishing that the judge was in error on the following basis, which is well arguable. The judge's order effectively gave the applicant her costs save for a modest deduction to take account of the fact that she had sought more than she got. However, the critical aspect of the case was that the council had declined to find that she was homeless on the strength of her own repeated statements as understood and recorded by them on 29 August and 4 September 2013 that she had not been asked to leave her mother-in-law's flat in Portugal. The scope of the inquiries required to be made is, absent perversity, for the council to decide: see R v Kensington and Chelsea Royal London Borough Council, ex p. Bayani (1990) 22 HLR 400 and Cramp v Hastings Borough Council [2005] 4 All ER 1014. The judge did not refer to these cases and does not appear to have taken them into account. The council could not be regarded as perverse in taking the applicant at her word on more than one occasion; or for remaining of the view that she could live with her mother-in-law in Portugal despite what she claimed in her letter of 22 September. In short the council was, originally and on review, entitled to make the findings that it did. What then happened was that the appeal was rendered academic by the production of the mother-in-law's letter. That could realistically be said to be good reason not to award the applicant her costs. The council should have recovered its costs subject to the costs protection provided for a legally aided litigant. At the highest there should have been no order as to costs—the default order envisaged by Stanley Burnton LJ in R (M) v Croydon London Borough Council [2012] 1 WLR 2767, para 77.
This is the judgment on the appeal.
THE ISSUES
(1) Was the judge wrong in ordering the Council to pay 85% of the costs of the appeal? and
(2) If so, what is the correct order for costs, is that (1) Ms Lopes pay the costs of the appeal or (2) that there be no order for costs?
THE FIRST ISSUE – DID THE JUDGE ERR IN ORDERING THE COUNCIL TO PAY 85% OF THE COSTS OF THE APPEAL?
"… 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."
"it was for the council to judge what inquiries were necessary and it was susceptible to a successful challenge on a point of law if and only if a judge in the county court considered that no reasonable council could have failed to regard as necessary the further inquiries suggested by the appellant's advisers".
THE SECOND QUESTION – THE APPROPRIATE COSTS ORDER
"6.1. An appellant who does not wish to pursue an application or appeal may request the appeal court to dismiss the application or the appeal. If such a request is granted it will usually be subject to an order that the appellant pays the costs of the application or appeal.
"6.2 If the appellant wishes to have the application or appeal dismissed without costs, his request must be accompanied by a letter signed by the respondent stating that the respondent so consents.
"6.3 Where a settlement has been reached disposing of the application or appeal, the parties may make a joint request to the court for the application or appeal to be dismissed by consent. If the request is granted the application or appeal will be dismissed."
CONCLUSION