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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Conville v London Borough of Richmond-Upon-Thames [2006] EWCA Civ 718 (08 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/718.html Cite as: [2006] WLR 2808, [2006] 1 WLR 2808, [2006] EWCA Civ 718 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE GOLDRING
(CO/3679/2005)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
and
LORD JUSTICE GAGE
____________________
THERESE CONVILLE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF RICHMOND-UPON-THAMES |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR MATTHEW HUTCHINGS (instructed by London Borough of Richmond Legal Services) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill :
The 1996 Act and the judgment of Goldring J
"(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 the subsection (2)(b) or (3).
(5) The advice and assistance provided under subsection (2)(b) or (3) 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)."
"[H]ousing authorities will need to consider each case on its merits. In particular, housing authorities will need to take account of the housing circumstances in the local area, including how readily other accommodation is available in the district, and have regard to the particular circumstances of the applicant, including the resources available to him or her to provide rent in advance or a rent deposit where this may be required by private landlords".
"62. In my view, words "reasonable opportunity of securing accommodation" involve consideration by the local authority both of the applicant's individual situation and that of the authority itself. In this case, that would involve consideration of the claimant's financial difficulties, but not to the exclusion of all else. It seems to me quite plain that Parliament intended that the local authority should exercise its judgment having regard to those factors it reasonably considered relevant. Those must include such things as the resources available to the authority, the demand for housing in the area, the demand from those who are not intentionally homeless and so on. If Miss Davies [counsel for the appellant] is right, on facts such as the present, such would be the obligation on the local authority that any distinction between the intentionally and unintentionally homeless person would to all intents and purposes disappear. For the practical effect of her submissions would be a virtually open ended obligation upon the authority to provide accommodation until such time as the claimant has obtained sufficient funding to rent property. That does not seem to me to have been Parliament's intention."
The parties are at odds as to whether the appellant's case was put as the judge understood it to have been put but the appeal will not turn on that issue. The judge found that the council had adequately discharged their duty under the section and had sufficiently expressed their reasons.
"87. While in its earlier approach there was an over emphasis by the defendant upon eligibility under its scheme, it seems to me that by 9 June 2005 it was approaching the question of financial assistance in a way it was entitled to. It had regard to all the material aspects of the claimant's position. It was aware of its power to give financial assistance in terms of its obligations under section 190(2)(b). It placed such reliance on the terms of its scheme as it was entitled to. It was entitled to approach the claimant's application in the way it did. It was entitled to reject it. As to the reasons provided, they seem to be adequate. No doubt they could be expressed at greater length and in more detail. However, it is not appropriate in my view to subject the reasons expressed for a decision lawfully reached to over legalistic, textual analysis. As in all such situations the practical realities need always to be born in mind. No doubt those with responsibility for homelessness in an authority such as the defendant have difficult decisions to take and explain, often under considerable pressure."
The decision not to provide financial assistance is not now challenged.
The submissions
"G" and further submissions
"13. The extent to which a duty precludes a local authority from ordering its expenditure priorities for itself varies from one duty to another. The governing consideration is the proper interpretation of the statute in question. But identifying the precise content of a statutory duty in this respect is not always easy. This is perhaps especially so in the field of social welfare, where local authorities are required to provide services for those who need them. As a general proposition, the more specific and precise the duty the more readily the statute may be interpreted as imposing an obligation of an absolute character. Conversely, the broader and more general the terms of the duty, the more readily the statute may be construed as affording scope for a local authority to take into account matters such as cost when deciding how best to perform the duty in its own area. In such cases the local authority may have a wide measure of freedom over what steps to take in pursuance of its duty.
14. Towards one edge of this spectrum are instances such as section 23(1) of the Children Act 1989. Under this subsection it is the duty of a local authority looking after a child to provide accommodation for him while he is in the authority's care. This is a duty of an absolute character. An example of the opposite edge of the spectrum, taken from the field of education, is the broad duty imposed on a local education authority by section 8 of the Education Act 1944, now section 14 of the Education Act 1996, "to secure that there shall be available for their area sufficient schools ... for providing primary education". In R v Inner London Education Authority, Ex p Ali [1990] 2 Admin LR 822, 828, Woolf LJ described this as a "target duty"."
"30. Thus far I am broadly in agreement with the interpretation urged by the claimants. But I stop short of the conclusion submitted by them. In my view section 17(1) does not impose an absolute, or near absolute, duty on local authorities to meet the specific needs of every child who is in need, whatever those needs may be. There is no place for absolutes in such a wide-ranging duty regarding the welfare of children. Nor would that be consistent with the qualified nature of some of the specific duties imposed in Part I of Schedule 2. The "needs" of a child for services is itself an inherently imprecise concept. "Needs" are open-ended. Some limit can be placed on what are to be regarded as the needs of a child for the purposes of this legislation if the legislation is read, as it should be, as a reference to reasonable needs. Even so, this leaves much scope for differing views. Questions of degree will often arise. Likewise, the statutory obligation to provide a range and level of services "appropriate" to the needs of children in need gives a local authority considerable latitude in determining what is "appropriate" in an individual case in all the circumstances. In some cases the type and level of service provided may properly fall short of meeting all the child's needs as assessed. The extent of the latitude in each case depends upon the circumstances, prominent among which are the nature of the service in question and the nature and extent of the needs of the child. Cost is also an element which may properly be taken into account in deciding what is "appropriate" in a particular case. The extent to which cost, and hence the resources of a local authority, may be taken into account depends upon all the circumstances including how basic is the assessed need, the ease or difficulty with which it may be met, and the consequences of not meeting it. In a word, despite this latitude the council must act reasonably."
The second ground
"64. It seems to me that reflects a sufficient consideration of the issues raised in this case by section 190(2)(a). It seems to me the defendant was entitled to come to the decision expressed in that letter whether the starting date was 22 February or 11 May.
65. It is not necessary to analyse the earlier decision letters or make any findings regarding them. By 8 June 2005 the defendant had adequately discharged its duty under section 190(2)(a) for reasons sufficiently expressed."
"Having taken into account the scarcity of housing in the locality for people who are on benefits, your client's circumstances including the fact that she does not have a deposit or advance rent, and the difficulties this poses for her, and the other points raised in your letter of [31] May 2005, the Council is satisfied that, regardless of whether the relevant period of time started on 22 February 2005 or 11 May 2005, the period during which accommodation has been provided has been sufficient to give your client a reasonable opportunity of securing accommodation."
"28. I was satisfied that regardless of whether the relevant period started on 22 February 2005 or 11 May 2005, the period during which accommodation was provided was sufficient to give the Claimant a reasonable opportunity of securing accommodation. In coming to this view, I had taken into account the following:
(a) the scarcity of housing in the locality for people who are on benefits
(b) the Claimant's circumstances including the fact that she does not have a deposit or rent in advance and the considerable difficulties this poses for her and
(c) the other points raised in the pre-action letter
(d) the limited resources of the Council and the needs of other homelessness applicants"
Conclusions
"It is plain, in my opinion, that in relation to each of these specific duties the local authority can take into account among other things, its overall financial resources and, in particular, the cost of taking a specific step that, if taken, would benefit the child and meet some need. Whether the taking of a particular step is "reasonable" or "reasonably practicable" cannot be divorced from the financial implications of taking the step".
An example of the use of the word "reasonable" in that sense also appears in Section 208 of the 1996 Act, cited at paragraph 22 of this judgment. I cite the paragraph from Lord Scott's speech to make the distinction between the effect of the word reasonable in those paragraphs and its different effect in Section 190(2)(a). In deciding whether a step by the authority is reasonable, regard may be had to its own resources. In Section 190(2)(a), however, it is the opportunity given to the appellant which must be reasonable and not what is reasonable from the authority's standpoint.
Lord Justice Keene:
Lord Justice Gage: