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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 >> Campbell, R (On the Application Of) v London Borough of Ealing [2024] EWCA Civ 540 (17 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/540.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Civ 540, [2024] WLR(D) 258 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE O'CONNOR (SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT)
CO/1931/2022
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MALES
and
LORD JUSTICE DINGEMANS
____________________
THE KING (ON THE APPLICATION OF DWAINE CAMPBELL) |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF EALING |
Defendant/ Respondent |
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Joshua Swirsky (instructed by Ealing Legal and Democratic Services) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 1 May 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean :
Factual background:
The Defendant's decision of 28 February 2022
"Why is the Council doing this?
My client department has been funding your accommodation at 117 Northcote Avenue Southall for more than 5 years on the understanding that you would, through Ealing Council's Housing Allocation System, bid for properties for which you were eligible.
You have recently issued court proceedings against my client department and their Housing colleagues.
You indicated in your claim that you are dissatisfied with the temporary accommodation, which my client department has been funding on your behalf for 5 years.
You have made it clear that you wish to live elsewhere, and it had been anticipated given your view about your current accommodation that you would be eager to take steps to bid for properties and pursue other measures available to you to resolve your permanent housing situation.
My client department has done its best to assist you to avail yourself of the resources available to you to resolve your housing issues.
My client department have referred you to agencies to assist you in this regard.
However, you have rejected these offers of assistance and agencies that were initially prepared to assist you have withdrawn their help."
"Notice of withdrawal of funding on 25th April 2022
My client department believes it is not unreasonable to bring its funding of your current accommodation to an end on reasonable notice.
The withdrawal of funding for your current accommodation by my client department is on the basis that it is not unreasonable to expect an adult who is unhappy with their current temporary accommodation and seeks alternative permanent accommodation to be proactive in using the resources available to him to secure permanent alternative accommodation for himself as soon as possible.
You appear to have been happy for my client department to fund your current accommodation for over 5 years; accommodation with which you are dissatisfied.
My client department does not feel that this situation can continue indefinitely.
Therefore, my client department reasonably expects that during the notice period i.e., between now and 25th April 2022 that you will vigorously pursue the above options, with the assistance of your legal advisors, for identifying alternative permanent accommodation for yourself.
Please accept this letter therefore, as notice that my client department Ealing Adult Social Care will be ending the funding of your bed and breakfast accommodation in 8 weeks' time i.e. [8 weeks from 28th February 2022] on 25th April 2022. My client department will be letting your landlord know of this decision.
For the avoidance of doubt, I would make clear that your current accommodation was not funded by my client department because of any duty to provide care and support to you under the Care Act 2014."
The relevant statutory framework
The Care Act 2014
"(3) A local authority may meet an adult's needs for care and support which appear to it to be urgent (regardless of whether the adult is ordinarily resident in its area) without having yet—
(a) carried out a needs assessment or a financial assessment, or
(b) made a determination under section 13(1)."
"(1) A local authority may not meet needs under sections 18 to 20 by doing anything which it or another local authority is required to do under—
(a) the Housing Act 1996, or
(b) any other enactment specified in regulations."
The Housing Act 1996
The decision under appeal
"50. It is clear that although the need for accommodation is not a need for care and support under the Care Act, local authorities have a power to provide accommodation under the Care Act in circumstances where accommodation is required to effectively deliver care and support. This follows from the decision in [R (Aburas) v London Borough of Southwark [2019] EWHC 2754 (Admin)] and also flows from the decision of the Court of Appeal in R (SG) v London Borough of Haringey and the Secretary of State for the Home Department [2017] EWCA Civ 322. This power is not however unfettered, and the difficulty the Claimant faces is in establishing that this power extends to scenarios in which section 23 of the Care Act bites.
51. Both Aburas and SG were cases involving Claimants who were excluded from the provision of accommodation under the Housing Act by virtue of their immigration status…
52. Insofar as the Court in Aburas sought to extend the 'accommodation plus' principle to cases which engage section 23 of the Care Act, this was plainly obiter dicta and, in my conclusion, I do not regard it as precedent on the interpretation of section 23, and I do not follow it.
53. There is only one decision before me on the application and interpretation of section 23 of the Care Act, and that is the decision in [R (Idolo) v Bromley LBC [2020] EWHC 860 (Admin); [2021] HLR 17]. I can see no reason to depart from, and agree entirely with, the conclusion therein (at [47]) that there is an intention in section 23 to give a measure of priority to the general scheme of the Housing Act over the specific scheme of the Care Act. Housing needs, even if identified through the Care Act route, cannot shortcut the detailed system of balanced priorities within Housing Act schemes, but must find their proper place within those schemes.
54. In the circumstances of the instant case, this leads me to conclude that if section 23 is of application, the Defendant has no power or duty under the Care Act to meet the Claimant's care and support needs with the provision, or funding, of accommodation under the Care Act.
…
57. The Defendant is, and was at the material time, required to provide the Claimant with housing under the Housing Act. The Claimant is a qualifying person under Part VI of the Housing Act, as supported by the fact that he has been put on the Defendant's housing register and is still on that register........ The Claimant has made a number of unsuccessful bids for accommodation. Since January 2022, the Defendant has also made four direct offers of accommodation to the Claimant outside of the usual bidding process. The Claimant rejected those offers on the basis that he considered the properties to be unsuitable. The fact the Defendant has not yet provided accommodation to the Claimant under Part VI of the Housing Act does not mean that it is not 'required' to do so.
58. It may also be the case that the Claimant became homeless within the terms of section 175(3) of the Housing Act, in the sense that the accommodation in which he was living was not accommodation which it was reasonable for him to continue to occupy. Ms McGibbon contends that this is speculative in that the Claimant has never been found to be statutorily homeless by the local authority so as to give rise to a duty. I observe that the Claimant has made three unsuccessful applications under Part VII of the Housing Act……..Each of the applications was closed by the Defendant, not because the Defendant concluded that the Claimant was not owed a duty under Part VII of the Housing Act, but rather because the Claimant indicated that he wanted a particular housing solution that was unavailable under the Part VII process, and his preference was to continue to pursue suitable accommodation under the Part VI process.
59. Drawing this together, I reject the Claimant's contention that the Defendant had an ongoing duty under Part I of the Care Act to provide him with, or to fund his, accommodation. The consequence of this finding is that the Claimant's Ground 1 must fail."
The grounds of appeal:
Ground 1: The judge erred in concluding that s 23 of the Care Act 2014 prevented the Defendant from funding the Claimant's accommodation under Part I of that Act.
Ground 2: The judge erred in concluding that the Defendant's decision of 28 February 2022 was not irrational or taken for an improper purpose.
Ground 3: The judge erred in concluding that the Claimant's protected act in bringing a claim under the Equality Act 2010 did not "significantly influence" the Defendant's decision of 28 February 2022.
The permission to appeal decision:
"1. Ground 1, concerned with the impact of section 23 of the Care Act 2014, raises a point which merits consideration by this court.
2. Ground 2 is closely related to, and follows from the court's decision on ground 1.
3. As to ground 3, the judge was entitled on the evidence to conclude that the Council's decision was not made because of the applicant's Equality Act claim. That is a conclusion of fact with which this court will not interfere. An appeal on this ground would therefore have no real prospect of success."
The Claimant's 2023 tenancy agreement
The Appellant's submissions in this court
"Nothing in this section shall authorise or require a local authority to make any provision authorized or required to be made (whether by that or by any other authority) by or under any enactment not contained in this Part of this Act or required to be provided under the National Health Service Act 2006."
The Respondent's submissions
"There is a distinct statutory scheme for the principled and orderly approach to local authority housing, including local authority duties owed to those who are homeless. That distinct scheme is to be found in the Housing Act 1996, and there are boundaries between the statutory schemes (see too the Care Act 2014 section 23). It would undermine the integrity of a coherent statutory framework if CA 2014 became a 'back-door' route to claims based on accommodation needs, circumventing the scheme of HA 96 and jumping the homelessness queue."
Discussion
"45. This argument, however, has to confront the provision made in s.23 of the Care Act. That expressly excludes from the ambit of the council's Care Act responses anything which it is required to do under the Housing Act. On the face of it, if the council was already required under the Housing Act to rehouse Mr Idolo it had neither the duty, nor any power, to meet his care and support needs in that way; and the only obvious way to determine what it was required to do under the Housing Act was to apply its housing priority scheme.
46. Counsel were unable to identify any judicial consideration of the effect of s.23. That is perhaps surprising, since the question is likely to arise in any case in which an existing council tenant's housing needs fall to be reconsidered in the light of supervening illness or disability. The explanatory notes prepared for the legislative passage of this provision say that section 23 "sets out the boundary in law between local authorities' care and support functions, and their housing functions". The notes suggest that s.23 prevents local authorities from meeting needs for care and support by doing anything the Housing Act requires them to do – "to generally provide housing" – but that that "does not prevent local authorities in their care and support role from providing more specific services (such as housing adaptations), or from working jointly with housing authorities". This suggests that housing adaptations fall on the Care Act side of the line, while a move to, or for the purpose of, adapted housing falls on the Housing Act side. I was taken to some pre-Care Act authorities in an effort to shed light on this, one of which I consider below. But in my view the question cannot properly be answered as an isolated point of interpretation in this way, and without pulling back the focus to a broader perspective. It is necessary to consider the meaning and intention of this 'boundary in law' and what it is trying to achieve.
47. It is clear that there is an intention in s.23 to give a measure of priority to the general scheme of the Housing Act over the specific scheme of the Care Act. That should not come as a surprise. On the one hand, local authorities face the irresistible force of demand to meet properly assessed needs for adult social care, including needs for decent adapted or adaptable housing. On the other hand, they face the immovable object of limited housing resources, and the housing duties they owe to others in the community. The solution the law appears to provide is that (re)housing needs, even if identified through the Care Act route, cannot shortcut the detailed system of balanced priorities within Housing Act schemes, but must find their proper place within those schemes.
48. That is not a conclusion reached simply by extrapolation from s.23 of the Care Act. It is also suggested by s.166A of the Housing Act. Subsection (3) of that section requires housing schemes to be framed so as to secure that "reasonable preference" is given to certain categories of people including the homeless and "people who need to move on medical or welfare grounds (including any grounds relating to a disability)", whether or not, presumably, that need itself technically amounts to 'homelessness' under s.175(3). This is a clear housing duty. The council's housing prioritisation scheme has to discharge that housing duty. Section 23 ensures that the Care Act does not cut across that duty, or that scheme of priority."
Lord Justice Males:
Lord Justice Dingemans: