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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 >> Mansfield District Council v Langridge [2008] EWCA Civ 264 (13 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/264.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 264 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE CALVERT-SMITH)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
SIR PETER GIBSON
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MANSFIELD DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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LANGRIDGE |
Respondent |
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Mrs J Henderson (instructed by Messrs Martin Lee & Co) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
"I have already decided, in the framework of what should happen, that the stay on the possession proceedings should be removed and they should be tried at Mansfield County Court on 19th September, which is a bit over five weeks away, but the question has arisen what should happen in the meantime. The council have in fact identified separate accommodation in another area of Mansfield where Mr Langridge can live in the meantime under an insecure tenancy on licence while his position at this flat is still maintained, he having said in July that he did not want to go to 7 Mappleton Drive. He may have changed his mind in the process of doing so and his attention focuses on that address at the moment. I have ventured the opinion, looking at the evidence as a whole, including the evidence of the state of the flat in early 2006, that it is likely that the case for an outright order for possession of 7 Mappleton Drive will prove overwhelming. I can say that because I am not likely to be trying the case in September, but it is the plain drift of the evidence, despite the denials, at least in part, that appear in the Defence. The plain fact is likely to be that, with this man with his misfortunes and problems, accommodation in this sort of residential unit is likely, wherever he is, to cause significant trouble and be unsuitable for him. That does not get away from the fact that on the face of it he is entitled to his injunction to go back into 7 Mappleton Drive and I would grant such an injunction but for the fact that there has been arranged somewhere else for him to go in Mansfield. The point is made by Mr Wright on his behalf that, if he has the intervening weeks at 7 Mappleton Drive, it will give him an opportunity to clear the place up and demonstrate that he can operate there appropriately, but he is surrounded there by a number of people, some of whom are likely to be giving evidence in the case, and he is a man who, plainly, from the evidence of Dr Holden, has a tendency to be impulsive and paranoid. I think it would simply be asking for trouble and undermine his case in other directions if he were at 7 Mappleton Drive. All that in the context that I can arrange the hearing at Mansfield in the next few weeks that will determine the underlying issues and whether he will be able to remain in this flat makes me come to the conclusion that, although I grant the injunction, it will not be effective until the trial of the possession action. There will be permission to apply to the court on short notice at Nottingham for the injunction to remain effective if for any reason this accommodation that he is being offered does not materialise or becomes difficult or unavailable, because he is entitled to have somewhere to live. That being afforded to him, in my judgment, it is appropriate to grant the injunction but to stay its effectiveness until the trial of the action. There will be permission to apply on short notice to make it effective."
"IT IS ORDERED THAT
1. The Defendant may not exclude the Claimant from 7 Mappleton Drive, Mansfield and must deliver to him the keys to the property, this order will not come into effect until the conclusion of the trial of the Defendant's possession action against the Claimant 6MF00829 or further order.
"2. Permission to Claimant to apply to the Court to make the order in paragraph 1 effective forthwith in the event of the Claimant becoming homeless..."
"Your client will be expected to sign a licence agreement to occupy the premises at 30 Willoughby Court, Bellamy Road Estate. We request that you confirm to us that it is accepted by your client that the agreement for his occupation of these premises is on the basis of a licence granted to him and will not create a secure tenancy as defined by the Housing Act 1985. The agreement will expire on 22nd September 2006 and is purely for the purpose of providing him temporary accommodation pending trial of the possession proceedings which have now been listed for hearing at Mansfield County Court on 19th, 20th and 21st September 2006."
"Mansfield District Council
Housing Department
Licence Agreement.
I, PAUL DEREK LANGRIDGE agree to become the licensee of 30 WILLOUGHBY COURT, from 14th day of AUGUST 2006 and to expire on 22nd day of SEPTEMBER 2006.
I agree to abide by the matters set out below and in the schedule hereto and shall in consideration pay the sum of £40.06 per week to the council (the licensor).
It is understood by the licensor and the licensee that this licence does not fall within the protection of the Rent Act 1977 (as amended) or Housing Act 1985.
(1) The licence is entered into by the licensor and the licensee on the above Basis only.
(2) The licensee shall have the right to use the premises stated above and the furniture, fittings and effects therein.
(3) The licence shall not exceed a maximum period of 28 days from the date that the licensee is served notification of determination.
(4) The licensee acknowledges that this licence is personal to the licensee and does not permit the licensee to authorise the use of premises or effects by any other person.
(5) The licensee acknowledges that he/she has received a copy of this licence."
"A tenancy under which a dwelling-house is let as a separate dwelling is a secure tenancy at any time when the conditions described in sections 80 and 81 as the landlord condition and the tenant condition are satisfied."
The effect of that is subject to a number of exceptions referred to in sub-section (2) and principally set out in schedule one to the Act. Sub-section (3) is as follows:
"The provisions of this Part apply in relation to a licence to occupy a dwelling-house (whether or not granted for a consideration) as they apply in relation to a tenancy."
Sub-section (4) needs to be noted as well:
"Subsection (3) does not apply to a licence granted as a temporary expedient to a person who entered the dwelling-house or any other land as a trespasser (whether or not, before the grant of that licence, another licence to occupy that or another dwelling-house had been granted to him)."
"The tenant condition is that the tenant is an individual and occupies the dwelling-house as his only or principal home; or, where the tenancy is a joint tenancy, that each of the joint tenants is an individual and at least one of them occupies the dwelling-house as his only or principal home."
"A tenancy granted in pursuance of any function under Part VII of the Housing Act 1996 (homelessness) is not a secure tenancy unless the local housing authority concerned have notified the tenant that the tenancy is to be regarded as a secure tenancy."
"7. A tenancy is not a secure tenancy if—
(a) the dwelling-house has been made available for occupation by the tenant (or a predecessor in title of his) while works are carried out on the dwelling-house which he previously occupied as his home, and
(b) the tenant or predecessor was not a secure tenant of that other dwelling-house at the time when he ceased to occupy it as his home."
"Despite some submissions to the contrary, it seems to me plain that I should find as a fact that this licence agreement was entered into as a result of the indication given by Judge Inglis and the undertaking given to him by Mr Lee on behalf of Mansfield District Council. It was the mutual understanding and intention that the occupation of 30 Willoughby Court was linked inextricably to the possession proceedings and was to provide temporary accommodation to Mr Langridge until such time as his status at 7 Mappleton Drive could be clarified by a final order of the court, either that he would be evicted by order of the court or that he be reinstated under the terms of the injunction order made by HHJ Inglis, but suspended."
Later, at paragraph 39 he said this:
"30 Willoughby Court is geographically certainly well separated from 7 Mappleton Drive even though, as I find as a fact, there was an inextricable link between the grant of the licence to occupy 30 Willoughby Court and the possession proceedings."
He summarised his conclusion at paragraph 46 as follows:
"For the avoidance of doubt I find that he occupied and continues to occupy those premises as his sole and principal residence; secondly, that it was the mutual intention at the time that agreement was entered into that it should limited in time to the delivery of judgment in the possession proceedings; thirdly, that no action since then on the part of the Council has changed the nature of that licence; fourthly, that the purpose for which the licence was given has now fallen away."
"Having considered the arguments on both sides and the careful judgment of His Honour Judge O'Rorke, I find that the respondent did occupy 30 Willoughby Court as his sole residence, that it was the intention of both parties that the Appellant's right to occupy was to be limited in time to the delivery of judgment in the possession proceedings[,] that nothing occurred in the interim period to change the nature of that agreement, and that consistent with the principles set out in, and the decision on similar facts in Tyler, the dwelling was not a separate dwelling and that the right to occupy ceased when the underlying assumption underlying the agreement fell away."
He therefore dismissed the appeal.
"These exceptional circumstances are not to be found in the present case where there has been the lawful, independent and voluntary grant of exclusive possession for a term at a rent."
"The words 'dwell' and 'dwelling' are not terms of art with a specialised legal meaning. They are ordinary English words, even if they are perhaps no longer in common use. They mean the same as 'inhabit' and 'habitation' or more precisely 'abide' and 'abode', and refer to the place where one lives and makes one's home. They suggest a greater degree of settled occupation than 'reside' and 'residence', connoting the place where the occupier habitually sleeps and usually eats."
"Under the Rent Acts, in order to create a letting or part of a house as a separate dwelling there must be an agreement by which the occupier has exclusive possession of essential living rooms of a separate dwelling house."
"Section 79(3), he said, applied to any licence to occupy a dwelling house. This submission would confer security of tenure on a lodger and on a variety of licensees and it is contrary to the language of section 79(3) which applies the provisions of part IV of the Act to a licence 'as they apply in relation to a tenancy.' Part IV only applies to a tenancy of a dwelling house let as a separate dwelling, namely with exclusive possession. Part IV therefore applies to a licence which has the same characteristics. A tenant or licensee can only claim to be a secure tenant if he has been granted exclusive possession of a separate dwelling house."
"In my opinion the position is relatively straightforward. The first step is to identify the subject matter of the tenancy agreement. If this is a house or part of a house of which the tenant has exclusive possession with no element of sharing, the only question is whether, at the date when the proceedings were brought, it was the tenant's home. If so, it was his dwelling. (He must also occupy it as his only or principal home, but that is a separate requirement). If the tenancy agreement grants, in addition, the right to the shared use of other rooms, the question is whether the room or rooms of which he has exclusive possession are his dwelling place or any part of it. That depends on the nature and extent of the right and the character of the other rooms. The right to occupy a living room in common with and at the same time as the landlord is such an invasion of his privacy that Parliament cannot be taken to have intended that the tenant should enjoy security of tenure. For this purpose a kitchen is a living room, at least if it is possible to occupy it and not merely to cook and wash up in it; so that a right to occupy a kitchen (as distinct from a right to make some limited use of its facilities) in common with the landlord will take the tenancy out of the Acts. The presence or absence of cooking facilities in the part of the premises of which the tenant has exclusive occupation is not relevant."
Sir Peter Gibson:
Sir Mark Potter P:
Order: Appeal allowed