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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 >> Green & Anorv London Borough of Croydon [2007] EWCA Civ 1367 (19 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/1367.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 1367 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM WANDSWORTH COUNTY COURT
MR RECORDER SPON-SMITH
Claim No: 6WT11503
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
and
MR JUSTICE MANN
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(1) FRED GREEN (2) MARYANN COYNE |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF CROYDON |
Respondent |
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MR. WAYNE BEGLAN (instructed by Messrs. Wragge & Co) for the Respondent.
Hearing date : 6th December 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
Factual background
"As I have already said, I think, the complaint against the local authority is that, having had it drawn very clearly to their attention or/and [sic] in writing on more than one occasion by both the appellants and latterly by the appellants' solicitors, that the appellants asserted that in fact there had been no rent arrears at the time the possession order was made, the local authority failed to make proper or perhaps any, it could be said, inquiries into whether or not that was the case. Was that an unreasonable approach on the part of the local authority? In my judgment, plainly it was not. The local authority were faced with a judicial decision to the effect that, on 4th January 2006, when the possession order was made, they were in arrears of rent to the extent of £2,830 and that they had been in arrears of rent at least to the extent of two months' rent at the time when the proceedings were issued. If the District Judge had not made findings to that effect, he would not have made the order that he did.
…..
10. I cannot accept that it was unreasonable on the part of the local authority to decline to go in some way behind that judicial decision. If the appellants were unhappy with the decision made by the District Judge on 4th January, their remedy was possible to apply for the order to be set aside, alternatively to appeal against the order. But neither of those courses was taken…"
The argument on this appeal
Was the council in breach of duty?
"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." [my emphasis]
The emphasised words are important. The inquiries have to be "such…as are necessary". The question is therefore what is necessary in any given circumstances?
"But the introduction of the word 'necessary' indicates that there is a standard which these inquiries must observe. In other words, the inquiries must be those which are 'necessary' to enable the authority to make a decision. If the court is to intervene by way of judicial review, it must be on the basis, as I see it, that the inquiries have not reached the required standard in the circumstances of the case. The appropriate test in a case of possible intentional homelessness is whether a reasonable authority, having made the inquiries and only the inquiries which the authority in question in fact made, could have been satisfied that the applicant was homeless intentionally…. In deciding how a reasonable authority would have acted and what inquiries they would have made in the circumstances, the court must have regard to the speech of Lord Brightman in R v Hillingdon LBC ex parte Puhlhofer [1986] AC 484…"
"68. …although a decision of a judge in the county court has no binding force in precedential terms, these two cases evidence a worrying tendency in judges at that level to overlook the fact that it will never be easy for a judge to say that an experienced senior housing officer on a homelessness review, who has considered all the reports readily available, and all the representations made by the applicant's solicitors, has made an error of law when she considered that it was unnecessary to put in train further detailed inquiries, not suggested by the applicant's solicitors, before she could properly make a decision on the review. The need to correct that tendency raises an important point of practice. The duty to decide what inquiries are necessary rests on her, and her decision will be a lawful decision unless no reasonable council could have reached the same decision on the available material."
i) It is a long and ostensibly very thorough document, running to some seven pages.
ii) It sets out the sort of material relied on in assessing the position of the appellants, which is said to include information from the council's housing benefit records, information concerning the county court action and a rent account statement. It is also claimed that there was a consideration of the fruits of various meetings between the council's housing officers and the appellants.
iii) The correct statutory background is referred to.
iv) So far as the payment of rent is concerned, it says this on page 2:
"At the beginning of the tenancy…Mr Green and Miss Coyne agreed to pay a rent of £650 per month…The rent increased to £700 during the course of the tenancy and from the information and rent receipts provided by the applicants and rent account statement provided by the agents for the landlord, arrears began to accrue on the account from May 2002. Whilst payments were received from Mr Green and Miss Coyne, these were paid in arrears, were frequently not in the amount owing and cheques were returned as unpaid by the bank on nine occasions between August 2002 and November 2004."
v) It refers to the "notice seeking possession" and identifies the discrepancy in rent amounts appearing in the claim form:
"A Notice Seeking Possession was issued on 7th October 2005 when the arrears again amounted to over £1,700. It is noted that the claim form quotes the original rent and not the rent as had been due since at least May 2002 and which had been accepted by your clients. Nevertheless, this had become the rent for the property since that time and at no point prior to the possession proceedings did your clients question this amount or seek the advice of the authority in this regard. Indeed, Mr Green admitted to having £2,000 rent arrears as at 3 January 2006 and the rent account statement shows no further payments following £500 in early December 2005. Mr Green also confirmed at interview that the rent was increased by verbal agreement with the agents in 2002. It would be unreasonable to expect that a market rent would not increase at some point in the course of a five year tenancy and your clients had clearly accepted this as the amount due since 2002. In addition, a file note of 6th March 2006 shows Mr Green as stating that he received housing benefit payments but if a bill arose, he would use the housing benefit money to pay."
vi) It deals with a suggestion made by Messrs Flack & Co, who were solicitors for the appellants by that time, that the council was at fault in not making sure that the appellants received legal advice much earlier than they in fact did, and in particular before the possession order was made. This is not a point which arises on this appeal.
vii) It states that inquiries made of Miss Jones about the meeting immediately before the possession hearing revealed that Miss Jones said that the appellants had already partially completed a form of defence and she advised them to include their concerns about the accuracy of the arrears statement in their defence at court, and Mr Green told her he had already done so. I deal below with the contents of the defence. At this point I would observe that that information from Miss Jones does not appear in an attendance note that she took at the meeting.
viii) It rejects, as an issue in the review, whether the outcome of the possession proceedings would have been different had the appellants been legally represented. It states that this is no more than speculation.
ix) It rejects a number of other allegations about failures to make inquiries. It makes the point that the appellants were aware of their obligation (in general terms) to pay rent for premises which they occupy. It refers more than once to the claiming of housing benefit, and in particular says this:
"Indeed, they claimed housing benefit for part payment of their rent and cashed the cheques sent to them, yet still failed to pay in full the rent due to the landlord, Mr Green admitting that the housing benefit payments were not always used to pay rent."
What the reviews officer's letter does not do is state what the appellants claimed their rent to be in their applications for housing benefit. There is no direct evidence before us of what they said their rent was, but it seems to me to be highly likely that the appellants claimed housing benefit on the footing of a rent of £700 per month and not £650 per month.
x) Having considered a large number of matters put to them by Messrs Flack & Co, the letter concludes that there was a persistent failure to pay rent, and taking all of the matters into consideration, the reviews officer came to the conclusion that the failure to pay rent was a deliberate act and that the appellants were intentionally homeless.
i) The housing benefit records.
ii) A long letter from Messrs Flack & Co drawing various matters, including the alleged unreliability of rent arrear figures, to the attention of the reviews officer.
iii) A rent schedule showing £700 per month to have been demanded and paid on a large number of occasions.
iv) A large number of receipts for rent, provided by Mr Green, which again show £700 to have been frequently paid.
v) It is said that the form of defence was available to the reviews officer, and I am prepared to assume that it was. That document contained two elements which are said to be inconsistent with each other and which should have put the reviews officer on inquiry as to the true rental position. On the first page, under a tick box indicating that the appellants did not agree with what was said about the premises and the tenancy agreement in the particulars of claim, the following reason was given:
"Tenancy agreement states rent of £650 but for the past three years we have been paying £700. Nothing was signed to agree the increase."
Over the page, against the question "Do you agree that there are arrears of rent as stated in the particulars of claim?" a tick is put in the "Yes" box.
vi) An interview note taken by Miss Jones on 3rd January 2005 contains the following words: "Cust [i.e. customer] claim form filled in and I have advised him to speak to me tomorrow to let me know the outcome". That is probably a reference to the defence form being filled in at that time. The evidence is equivocal as to when and by whom the defence form was filled in. However, nothing in this note or in any other note records an agreement by Mr Green that the increased rental was agreed. To that extent there is no support for the statement to that effect in the reviews officer's decision letter.
vii) On 6th February 2006 a standard form inquiry was made of the landlord. In answer to the question "How much was the weekly/monthly rent?" the landlord's agents have answered (by marking the amount in the appropriate place on a copy of the letter) "£700". That letter seems to have been followed up by an oral inquiry on 6th March 2006 in which the agents are reported as having complained about "constant arrears" and bounced cheques. The note of Miss Yamin who apparently took the telephone call records "As can see on rent statement printout rent was never paid up to date, very erratic payment". The agents were thereby reinforcing the landlord's case that £700 per month was due.
viii) The possession order showed a daily rate figure which, as pointed out above, is consistent only with £700 per month being paid as rent. It also showed that counsel had attended the hearing for the claimant.
"There is an important point of practice here, namely, what is the breadth of a housing authority's duty to make inquiries when there is credible evidence before it to the effect that the basis on which unrepresented litigants were evicted from their home was clearly wrong."
It is now apparent that this question does not arise in this case because there is no case for saying that the decision of the district judge was clearly wrong. There is merely a basis for saying that there might have been an issue for the district judge to consider. Mr Beglan, who appeared for Croydon, sought to establish a point of principle about this. He said that it was the case that the authority was never obliged to go behind what a court had seemingly decided on a possession action when the authority was considering whether an applicant had been rendered intentionally or unintentionally homeless. I do not think that it is necessary to make a decision on that point, and in saying that I would not wish either to encourage or to discourage any future case on which that point may arise. This appeal turns on the facts of this particular case. The reviews officer cannot be criticised for having not embarked on any further inquiry. I do not decide anything going beyond that. This is not the case to test the boundaries (if there are any) of the housing authority's duties in this respect so as to consider whether there would ever be circumstances in which the authority could not properly rely on what a court of competent jurisdiction had apparently decided. While it can certainly be said that in the normal case a housing authority can rely on what a court decides or seems to have decided, it will have to be decided elsewhere whether there can ever be a case which is abnormal enough to require a different view to be taken. All I will say is that I would expect that to be an extreme case, if it exists at all.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Jacob
Lord Justice Mummery