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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Faarah, R (on the application of) v London Borough of Southwark [2008] EWCA Civ 807 (11 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/807.html Cite as: [2009] HLR 12, [2008] EWCA Civ 807, [2008] BLGR 894, [2008] NPC 83 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
HHJ Mackie QC (Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
CO/9038/2007
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF FAARAH |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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MAYOR AND BURGESSES OF THE LONDON BOROUGH OF SOUTHWARK |
Appellant |
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Robert Latham (instructed by Southwark Law Centre) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 25 June 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson :
Introduction
"(1) Every local housing authority shall have a scheme (their "allocation scheme") for determining priorities, and as to the procedure to be followed, in allocating housing accommodation.
For this purpose "procedure" includes all aspects of the allocation process, including the persons or descriptions of persons by whom decisions are to be taken.
(1A) The scheme shall include a statement of the authority's policy on offering people who are to be allocated housing accommodation –
(a) a choice of housing accommodation; or
(b) the opportunity to express preferences about the housing accommodation to be allocated to them.
(2) As regards priorities, the scheme shall be framed so as to secure that reasonable preference is given to –
…
(c) people occupying insanitary or overcrowded housing or otherwise living in unsatisfactory housing conditions;
(d) people who need to move on welfare or medical grounds (including grounds relating to a disability);
…
(6) Subject to the above provisions, and to any regulations made under them, the authority may decide on what principles the scheme is to be framed."
(The section contains a number of provisions which give regulatory powers to the Secretary of State.)
"(8) A local housing authority shall not allocate housing accommodation except in accordance with their allocation scheme."
"(1) A local housing authority shall publish a summary of their allocation scheme and provide a copy of the summary free of charge to any member of the public who asks for one.
(2) The authority shall make the scheme available for inspection at their principal office and shall provide a copy of the scheme, on payment of a reasonable fee, to any member of the public who asks for one.
(3) When the authority make an alteration to their scheme reflecting a major change of policy, they shall within a reasonable period of time take such steps as they consider reasonable to bring the effect of the alteration to the attention of those likely to be affected by it."
Factual background: the old scheme and the new scheme
"Applicants who suffer from an illness or disability will be assessed by the Medical Assessment Service. These applications can be given the following priority:
Band 4
Households which include a person (or persons) with an illness or disability which is not helped by their current home and where a move is desirable (but not necessary) will remain in band 4. (original emphasis)
Band 3 – Medical Priority
Households which include a person (or persons) whose illness or disability is made worse by their present home and who need a move to improve the effect on their medical condition will be awarded Medical Priority or registration in Band 3." (original emphasis)
The issues
Pre-trial history
"Your client was awarded 20 medical points but that does not give her a medical priority so she does not qualify to be placed in band 2."
No further explanation was provided.
"I have been instructed that the applicants who had medical points before the current housing policy came into operation were put into different categories of A, B and N.
Those who had 21 points and above were put into category A, those who had between 10 and 20 points were put into category B and do not have a medical priority and those who had less than 10 points were put into category N. If more than one member of the family was in category B, this pushed the family into A and so it would have a medical priority."
"Please disclose the documentation relating to the decision to place applicants with 10 to 20 points in category B, and the decision to translate that to no priority under the new (Sept 05) scheme. In other words, it would seem that a group of people were given category B priority under the old scheme, and had that priority removed under the new scheme. Your published scheme does not include information about this process."
There was no reply.
Judicial review and Southwark's evidence in response
"Under the new banding scheme a household assessed with one A [i.e. 30 points] or one B plus one C (or more) [i.e. 30 points or more] would be deemed as meeting the minimum criteria for priority for band 3 on medical grounds."
"The proposal document was drafted by the senior IT officer and is generally correct in setting out the changes to the IT records and the general way forward on this. However, the description of the new codes is the individual IT officer's interpretation and does not reflect the provisions of the criteria for medical priority as set out in para 3.9 of the council's lettings policy. "
The first issue
The second issue
"In failing to give those who reach band 3, and then band 2, priority back to the date upon which they qualified for band 3 medical priority (i.e. 20 points) Southwark is failing to allocate fairly and rationally under the Act as regards those in the position of the claimant and to that extent is acting unlawfully."
"(i) The transitional arrangements whereby the defendant transposed medical points under the defendant's previous points based scheme into bands under the current choice based lettings scheme are unlawful in that an applicant awarded 20 medical points under the points scheme is not awarded band 3 medical priority under the current scheme;
(ii) Paragraph 3.1.2 of the defendant's allocation scheme is unlawful in that it does not accurately specify the basis upon which the relevant priority date is computed."
(1) I have already noted that the judge did not make a formal declaration that Ms Faarah was entitled to registration in band 2 with a priority date prior to the inception of the new scheme; nor is there a respondent's notice asking this court to make such a declaration. Mr Latham was wise in all the circumstances not to seek such a declaration. It would have given rise to a number of issues on which we have not heard full argument. My remaining conclusions are provisional and expressed only in the light of such argument as we have heard and in case they may assist the parties.
(2) It is questionable on what basis Southwark was entitled to give any applicant a priority date which preceded the inception of the new scheme. On its face the scheme does not suggest that any applicant could be given a priority date prior to the inception of the scheme because it states that the date that the relevant priority is awarded becomes the registration date within the relevant band, and the bands only came into existence on the inception of the new scheme. The point was not argued before us because neither party wished to dispute that Southwark might properly register an applicant with an earlier priority date. (Ms Faarah wants an earlier priority date, and it is not in the interests of Southwark to argue that no applicant could be given an earlier priority date since it has in practice given certain applicants earlier priority dates.)
(3) I can see arguments why it might be thought desirable that those previously on the housing list could be given an earlier priority date for reasons of equity and practicality (in particular, to avoid widespread random allocation of housing between a large number of applicants all registered on the same date). However, it is not obvious to me on the limited argument which we have heard that there is necessarily only one rational or fair way in which a system of earlier priority dates might work, and the comparative merits of different possible models would not be a matter for the court to determine.
(4) Any practice which Southwark may have of giving priority dates which precede the inception of the new scheme ought to be published, not only so that applicants may understand where they stand, but also so that any interested party who wants to question the legality of the practice may be in a position to do so. There is, of course, nothing to prevent Southwark from amending its allocation scheme so as to regularise its position for the future.
Relief
Lord Justice Wall:
Lord Justice Sedley: