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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Waltham Forest v Maloba [2007] EWCA Civ 1281 (04 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/1281.html Cite as: [2008] 1 WLR 2079, [2008] HLR 26, [2008] WLR 2079, [2007] EWCA Civ 1281, [2007] NPC 131, [2008] BLGR 409, [2008] 2 All ER 701 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BOW COUNTY COURT
HHJ Hornby
6B052043
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
and
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
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THE MAYOR & BURGESSES OF THE LONDON BOROUGH OF WALTHAM FOREST |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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DAVIS MALOBA |
Respondent |
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-and- |
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THE LAW SOCIETY |
Interested Party |
____________________
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Robert Latham (instructed by Messrs A M Vance & Co) for the Respondent
David Holland (instructed by the Law Society) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 24th October 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson :
Introduction
The facts
"App said that the house in Kampala became the family house in 1993, when his father died. Any member of the family may live in the house."
"I advise you that with the information that you have provided through interviews and letters, we are of the opinion that you are not homeless. This is based on that you have accommodation at Kanyanya Kampala.
You have explained that the house in Kampala is a family house, where any member of the family may live. Therefore you are able to live at the house at Kanyanya Kampala. According to the Housing Act you are not homeless. The Housing Act states that you are homeless if you have no accommodation that you are not [sic] entitled to occupy. You have accommodation in Kampala that you are entitled to occupy. A person is homeless if they have accommodation that is available, however not reasonable to occupy [sic]. Your accommodation in Kampala is available and reasonable for you to occupy with your wife and daughter. You said that your wife lived in the annex of the house; therefore you are able to stay in the annex or the main part of the house in Kampala."
"I reply to inform you that I am homeless. In your letter you stated that I am not regarded homeless basing on the family house in Kanyanya in Kampala. But honestly I live here and work here. I hold a British passport, thus a British African. My future is here. I have been here for over fifteen years and because my future is here that's why I decided to invite my wife and daughter to join me here…I belong here, my future is here and not in Kanyanya, Kampala, Uganda."
"Unfortunately, that is not a valid reason for you to be entitled to housing in the UK. The law requires that we consider whether you have accommodation anywhere in the UK or elsewhere. Since we have identified that you do have an interest in your family home in Kanyanya, Kampala, Uganda, we are under an obligation to investigate if it is available and reasonable for you to remain."
"I have considered whether you are homeless from an address "elsewhere" that is reasonable and available for your continued occupation, as required by the homelessness legislation.
You have informed [the council] that your father had left the property at Kanyanya, Kampala, Uganda to you and your siblings after his death in 1993. You also informed us that the property consists of three bedrooms with an annex called "the boys quarters". Your wife resided in the annex from 2002 to 2004 before she came to join you in the UK. You have stated that the annex comprises of one bedroom, one living room and one bathroom. Your wife shared the kitchen facilities in the main house. You have not stated any other reason why this accommodation might be considered unreasonable for your continued use. I therefore consider this accommodation reasonable for your family to continue to occupy. "
Appeal proceedings
Arguments for the council
Arguments for Mr Maloba
The Act
"(1) A person is homeless if he has no accommodation available for his occupation, in the United Kingdom or elsewhere, which he—
(a) is entitled to occupy by virtue of an interest in it or by virtue of an order of a court,
(b) has an express or implied licence to occupy, or
(c) occupies as a residence by virtue of any enactment or rule of law giving him the right to remain in occupation or restricting the right of another person to recover possession.
(2) A person is also homeless if he has accommodation but—
(a) he cannot secure entry to it, or
(b) it consists of a moveable structure, vehicle or vessel designed or adapted for human habitation and there is no place where he is entitled or permitted both to place it and to reside in it.
(3) A person shall not be treated as having accommodation unless it is accommodation which it would be reasonable for him to continue to occupy.
(4) A person is threatened with homelessness if it is likely that he will become homeless within 28 days."
"A person becomes homeless intentionally if he deliberately does or fails to do anything in consequence of which he ceases to occupy accommodation which is available for his accommodation and which it would have been reasonable for him to continue to occupy."
The construction of s 175(3) – the first issue
"In my view, it is plain that Parliament was not using continued occupation in the sense of continuance of an actual occupation at the time of the application, but of continuance stemming from one of the entitlements to occupy specified in section 175(1)."
"For the reasons I have given, section 175(3) is relevant only to a person whose application is made from extant accommodation; in that event, but only then, does the reasonableness of continued occupation arise. Unlike Auld LJ, I see no discontinuity between this reading and the provision of section 177(1) that it is not reasonable to continue to occupy accommodation if is it probable that domestic violence would ensue. The predicate of the provision is precisely that the applicant is housed in such a situation; if she is not, then she risks being treated as intentionally homeless under section 191 if "it would have been reasonable" for her to stay where she was – and this is why section 177(2) makes domestic violence determinative of reasonableness in relation both to present accommodation (section 175(3)) and past accommodation (section 191(1)). The same explains the language of section 177(3)."
"It cannot mean simply premises in which the applicant and his family are presently lodging. In my judgment the accommodation must be such that it is reasonable for the applicant and his family to continue to occupy it, having regard to the general circumstances prevailing in relation to housing in the area of the housing authority to whom he has applied."
"So long as there is a roof over the head of the applicant and his family, and no doubt four walls to support that roof, it does not matter how unsuitable that accommodation is. Thus, an applicant and his family will not become homeless under the Act of 1977 unless and until they walk out of the accommodation or are threatened with being deprived of that accommodation."
The construction of s 175(3) – the second issue
The review letter
Result
Costs
1. Mr Maloba had been funded by the Legal Services Commission ("LSC") and was likely to be funded by it in any future appeal from a fresh determination.
2. The vast majority of s 204 appeals are unsuccessful.
3. Refusal of a stay would expose the council to the risk of being unable to set off any order for costs which might be made in its favour at the end of a future unsuccessful appeal by Mr Maloba against the council's costs liability in the present proceedings, and this would be unjust.
Lord Justice Carnwath:
"What is properly to be regarded as accommodation is a question of fact to be decided by the local authority. There are no rules…." (p 517E-G)
The purpose of the 1986 Act amendment was stated in Parliament to be to "restore homeless people's rights to the situation existing before the Puhlhofer judgment" (Baroness David, Hansard 28.10.86 Vol 481 col 648).
"to make a person eligible for Part VII housing notwithstanding that they have accommodation available, so long as it is not accommodation which they have previously occupied (section 175(3)), and so long as it is not located in the district of the local authority to which application is made (section 197)" (p 327)
"The upshot, in paraphrase, is that a person who has accommodation which nevertheless it would not be reasonable for him to occupy is to be regarded as having no accommodation. It does not mean that an applicant who has accommodation available to him is (unless it happens to be in the respondent authority's own district) entitled to have it disregarded if he has not previously lived there…." (s 27)
He then briefly considered the present issue, as one of two "unanswered questions":
"The first, which does not affect this appeal, is what happens where unfit accommodation is available in which the applicant has not previously lived: does Reg. v. Hillingdon London Borough Council, Ex parte Puhlhofer [1986] AC 484 continue to apply so as to force them to go into occupation, only to be rescued by section 175(3)? In my view no responsible local authority would ever contemplate testing the point, and the issue can properly be regarded as unreal."
"…in my view it makes no practical difference because, as he points out, no responsible authority would be likely to take the point that an applicant is homeless where the accommodation available is not reasonable for them to occupy, but it is not accommodation currently occupied. In the result it seems to me that the approach of the local authority should be to consider whether the accommodation is reasonable for the applicant to occupy, even if he has not previously occupied it." (p 332)
The President of the Queen's Bench Division: