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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 >> Yildiz v London Borough of Hackney [2019] EWCA Civ 1331 (24 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1331.html Cite as: [2019] WLR 6264, [2019] 1 WLR 6264, [2019] EWCA Civ 1331, [2019] WLR(D) 423 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT CENTRAL LONDON
His Honour John Hand QC (sitting as a Deputy Circuit Judge)
Case C01EC947
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
and
LADY JUSTICE SIMLER
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YAVUZ YILDIZ |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF HACKNEY |
Respondent |
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Mr Adrian Davis and Miss Miriam Shalom (instructed by Hackney Legal Services) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Newey:
"After this date [i.e. 20 July 2015], court proceedings may be begun at once or at any time during the following twelve months. Once the twelve months are up this Notice will lapse and a new Notice must be served before possession can be sought."
"The dwelling-house is in England, the accommodation afforded by it is more extensive than is reasonably required by the tenant and—
(a) the tenancy vested in the tenant by virtue of section 89 (succession to periodic tenancy) or 90 (devolution of term certain) in a case where the tenant was not the previous tenant's spouse or civil partner, and
(b) notice of the proceedings for possession was served under section 83 (or, where no such notice was served, the proceedings for possession were begun) more than six months but less than twelve months after the relevant date.
For this purpose 'the relevant date' is—
(a) the date of the previous tenant's death, or
(b) if the court so directs, the date on which, in the opinion of the court, the landlord (or, in the case of joint landlords, any one of them) became aware of the previous tenant's death.
The matters to be taken into account by the court in determining whether it is reasonable to make an order on this ground include—
(a) the age of the tenant,
(b) the period (if any) during which the tenant has occupied the dwelling-house as the tenant's only or principal home, and
(c) any financial or other support given by the tenant to the previous tenant."
Section 83, so far as relevant, is in these terms:
"(A1) This section applies in relation to proceedings for an order mentioned in section 82(1A) [i.e. for, among others, an order for possession] other than—
(a) proceedings for possession of a dwelling-house under section 84A (absolute ground for possession for anti-social behaviour), including proceedings where possession is also sought on one or more of the grounds set out in Schedule 2, or
(b) proceedings for possession of a dwelling-house under section 107D (recovery of possession on expiry of flexible tenancy).
(1) The court shall not entertain proceedings to which this section applies unless—
(a) the landlord has served a notice on the tenant complying with the provisions of this section, or
(b) the court considers it just and equitable to dispense with the requirement of such a notice.
(2) A notice under this section shall—
(a) be in a form prescribed by regulations made by the Secretary of State,
(b) specify the ground on which the court will be asked to make the order, and
(c) give particulars of that ground.
…
(4) Where the tenancy is a periodic tenancy and Ground 2 in Schedule 2 is not specified in the notice, the notice—
(a) shall also specify the date after which proceedings for the possession of the dwelling-house may be begun, and
(b) ceases to be in force twelve months after the date so specified.
…
(5) The date specified in accordance with subsection (3), (4) or (4A) must not be earlier than the date on which the tenancy could, apart from this Part, be brought to an end by notice to quit given by the landlord on the same date as the notice under this section.
…
(7) Regulations under this section shall be made by statutory instrument and may make different provision with respect to different cases or descriptions of case, including different provision for different areas."
"The accommodation afforded by the dwelling-house is more extensive than is reasonably required by the tenant and-
(a) the tenancy vested in the tenant, by virtue of section 30 of this Act, on the death of the previous tenant;
(b) the tenant was qualified to succeed by virtue of subsection (2)(b) of the section; and
(c) notice of the proceedings for possession was served under section 33 of this Act more than six months, but less than twelve months, after the previous tenant's death."
As for section 33 of the 1980 Act, that stipulated that the Court should not entertain possession proceedings unless the landlord had served a notice complying with provisions of the section and, in the case of a periodic tenancy, the notice was still in force at the time the proceedings were begun (see section 33(1)). Unlike section 83 of the 1985 Act, however, section 33 of the 1980 Act did not confer a power to dispense with the notice requirement.
"The accommodation afforded by the dwelling-house is more extensive than is reasonably required by the tenant and—
(a) the tenancy vested in the tenant by virtue of section 89 (succession to periodic tenancy), the tenant being qualified to succeed by virtue of section 87(b) (members of family other than spouse), and
(b) notice of the proceedings for possession was served under section 83 more than six months but less than twelve months after the date of the previous tenant's death…."
"notice of the proceedings for possession was served under section 83 (or, where no such notice was served, the proceedings for possession were begun) more than six months but less than twelve months after the relevant date".
"The second ground is correct as stated if it is taken in isolation. It is entirely right that in the absence of a section 83 notice or the commencement of proceedings within the time limit there is no jurisdiction to make a possession order unless of course the position can—I use the word with no intended gloss at this stage—be cured by the operation of an estoppel."
"Ground 15A and the amended ground 16 provide that the notice may now either be served within one month after the death of the tenant or, if the court so directs, the date on which, in the opinion of the court, the landlord became aware of the previous tenant's death. This reverses the decision of the Court of Appeal in Newport CC v Charles. The court held that the notice had to be given within 12 months of the tenant's death irrespective of when the landlord learnt of it.
In the event that the landlord still serves the notice out of time, the requirement cannot be avoided by the landlord inviting the court to dispense with a notice altogether because the grounds provide that where no notice is served, the proceedings for possession must still have been commenced within the same six-month 'window'."
Mr Fitzpatrick stressed the last sentence.
i) I find it difficult to see why Parliament should have wished a landlord to be able to claim possession under ground 15A (or ground 16) where a notice has been served and allowed to expire but not where no notice has been served. A notice warns the tenant that proceedings may be begun "during the following twelve months" after the specified date and states in terms that, once the twelve months are up, the notice will lapse and a new notice must be served before possession can be sought. A notice cannot, therefore, be regarded as containing a warning that it might enable the landlord to bring possession proceedings more than a year after the specified date;
ii) Were Mr Davis' construction of ground 15A correct, it would seem that a landlord which had served a notice less than 12 months after the "relevant date" could invoke the ground any number of years later without obtaining any dispensation under section 83(1)(b). There would appear to be nothing to prevent a landlord satisfying section 83 by serving a further notice and issuing proceedings before that later notice ceased to be in force. It would then be able to say that it had satisfied both ground 15A(b) (by serving a notice within the prescribed window) and section 83 (by launching proceedings during the currency of the second notice). There would be no need to ask the Court to dispense with the notice requirement;
iii) Mr Davis' explanation of section 147(3) of the 1996 Act does not strike me as compelling. A landlord which was in a position to begin proceedings within 12 months of the "relevant date" would presumably also be in a position to serve a notice within that period. Why then should Parliament have thought that it would be of benefit to landlords to allow them to bring proceedings without a prior notice "less than twelve months after the relevant date"? It is more probable, in my view, that section 147(3) was designed to ensure that, now that the re-cast section 83 was to make it possible to dispense with the need for a notice, ground 16 was still subject to a longstop. The idea, in other words, is likely to have been to impose on landlords a requirement that, absent a notice (in particular, because the requirement for one had been dispensed with under the new section 83), proceedings based on ground 16 had to be brought within a year of the "relevant date".
"notice of the proceedings for possession was served under section 83 (or, where no such notice was served, the proceedings for possession were begun) more than six months but less than twelve months after the relevant date".
Where a landlord brings proceedings for possession relying on ground 15A, notice of those proceedings must, as I see it, have been served under section 83 less than 12 months after the "relevant date". Section 83 provides, however, for a notice to cease to be in force 12 months after the date specified in it. The better view, I think, is that that means that a notice cannot constitute notice of proceedings begun more than 12 months later than the specified date. In other words, it is not good enough that the landlord at some stage, however long ago, served a notice which, pursuant to both its own terms and those of section 83, is now spent. A notice must still be current if a landlord is to issue possession proceedings on the strength of it. In the absence of a relevant notice (because either none was ever served or any notice that was served had expired), a claim for possession based on ground 15A will be possible only if the proceedings were begun less than 12 months after the "relevant date".
Lady Justice Simler:
Lord Justice Hamblen: