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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Holmes & Anor v South Yorkshire Police Authority [2008] EWCA Civ 51 (07 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/51.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 51 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE SHEFFIELD COUNTY COURT
RECORDER ARMITAGE
6BY02241
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER
and
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
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HOLMES AND ANOTHER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SOUTH YORKSHIRE POLICE AUTHORITY |
Respondent |
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Mr WB Phillips (instructed by South Yorkshire Police Authority) for the Respondent
Hearing date: Thursday 17 January 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
The legal framework
"….. a tenancy is not a secure tenancy if the tenant is a member of a police force and the dwelling-house is provided for him free of rent and rates in pursuance of regulations made under s.33 of the Police Act 1964…"
The final reference, for self-evident reasons, has since been amended to s.50 of the Police Act 1996. By paragraph 1 of Sch.8 to the 1996 Act it was expressly provided that neither the continuity of the law nor the effect of subordinate legislation should thereby be affected.
"When the occupant of a police house ceases to be a serving officer, a Notice to Quit will be served. This must be observed within the specified period."
An officer wishing to vacate is require to give 4 weeks' notice. In my judgment a fair construction of this document is that it creates not a periodic tenancy but one limited in time to the duration of the tenant's police service provided a notice to quit is then served. We are not required to decide whether it is subject to sooner termination on notice.
The arguments
Have the tenancies become secure tenancies?
"The effect [of the argument] would be that where a pre-1994 officer has the benefit of housing rather than a rent allowance at the choice of the police authority the Regulations would nonetheless operate to give a greater security than that which the officer had before. That cannot be right … The objective was to preserve the entitlement, not to improve upon it…."
Is the accommodation provided "free of rates"?
Is the police authority bound by its promise?
(i) An equity arises where –
(a) the owner of land (O) induces, encourages or allows the claimant (C) to believe that he has or will enjoy some right or benefit over O's property;
(b) in reliance upon this belief, C acts to his detriment to the knowledge of O; and
(c) O then seeks to take unconscionable advantage of C by denying him the right or benefit which he expected to receive.
(ii) This equity gives C the right to go to court to seek relief. C's claim is an equitable one subject to the normal principles governing equitable remedies.
(iii) The court has a wide discretion as to the manner in which it will give effect to the equity, having regard to all the circumstances of the case and in particular to both the expectations and conduct of the parties.
19. …. Assurances were certainly given that serving officers could expect to stay in their existing homes until retirement. I must ask myself: did either man act to his detriment, to the knowledge of the police authority? If he did, then the burden shifts to the defendant to show that that detrimental act was not done in reliance on the assurance…
30. The question is whether had he known in 2000 that he could not remain beyond 2008 he would have done other than to remain? Has he acted to his detriment in remaining or would he have remained anyway? If he has to leave in 2008 he will have to rent earlier than he would have done, albeit that he now says he may buy, and he will have to rent a three bedroom house because of his family needs, albeit that he will get a rent allowance of £240 per month that he does not now receive. Again, I am sorry indeed to say that I see little evidence at all that Officer Holmes would have bought any property in 2000 had he known he could not stay beyond 2008. There is simply a one line statement in his supplementary statement, and not in his original statement, that he would have done so. Again, there is no evidence at all of his ability to do so; how he could have done so; what his mortgage capacity might have been, and so on. And so I find, reminding myself again of the principles relating to proprietary estoppel that I set out earlier, I find that the reality is that Police Officer Holmes would have stayed in his present house so long as he was able and then sought other rented accommodation. If, in fact, he would have sought to buy on retirement he is not prevented from doing so.
"Once it is shown that O gave assurances or other encouragement to A, and A suffers detriment, it will readily be inferred that the detriment was suffered as a result of the encouragement; the burden of proof is on O to show that A's conduct was not induced by the assurances".
This, with respect, depends upon the very thing that Mr Westgate lacks, namely proof of detriment. As to this, as Farquharson LJ held in Stevens and Cutting Ltd v Anderson [1990] 11 EG 70, it is for the party claiming detriment to show that he sustained it.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Rimer:
Lord Justice Hooper: