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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sheridan & Ors v Basildon Borough Council [2012] EWCA Civ 335 (21 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/335.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 335, [2013] PTSR D9 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE SOUTHEND ON SEA COUNTY COURT
HH Judge Peter Dedman
0BQ00819, 0BQ00930 and 0BQ00931
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LORD JUSTICE PITCHFORD
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Sheridan & Ors |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Basildon Borough Council (formerly Basildon District Council) |
Respondent |
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Ms Galina Ward (instructed by Basildon Borough Council) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 29th February 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
Introduction
"Unless the authority refer the application to another local housing authority (see section 198), they shall secure that accommodation is available for occupation by the applicant."
"A local housing authority may discharge their housing functions under this Part only in the following ways—
(a) by securing that suitable accommodation provided by them is available,
(b) by securing that he obtains suitable accommodation from some other person, or
(c) by giving him such advice and assistance as will secure that suitable accommodation is available from some other person."
" The risk would be particularly high at times of stress, and especially if he lost the support he receives from his wife and siblings, had reduced contact with his children, and was living in an isolated setting alien to his culture.
19.18 The prognosis for his drinking is that his alcohol intake will increase dramatically at times of stress, especially if the containing influence of his wife is not there.
19.19 Mr Sheridan has limited understanding of his diabetes, is poorly organised and has low motivation to manage his diabetes effectively. Although only 32 years old, he also has raised cholesterol and blood pressure and is extremely obese. Without adequate support, in particular someone to supervise his medication, his physical health would deteriorate.
19.20 The depression, drinking, and poor diabetic control would all worsen each other, leading to a recurrence of the life threatening condition Mr Sheridan had after the death of his parents.
19.21 Mr Sheridan reports that he comes from an Irish traveller background, has always lived in caravans and mobile homes, as have all his family. He describes how several of his siblings live on the same site and says how distressed and unable to cope if he were to lose the support of his wife. I have no reason to disbelieve his account.
19.22 Mr Sheridan has a general aversion to bricks and mortar accommodation, and this is in keeping with his cultural background.
19.23 I believe that if Mr Sheridan was forced to move to any bricks and mortar accommodation his mood would deteriorate as a direct result. Secondary effects would be the loss of the social and practical support he currently receives from his wife, siblings and others on the site. It would also be more difficult for him to maintain contact with his three children.
19.24 As a result, Mr Sheridan would become deeply depressed and, for the reasons and via the mechanisms I have outlined above, this would be life threatening. He has stated that he would become suicidal, and he told me that he would "drink himself to death", something he nearly did after his parents died.
19.25 Even if Mr Sheridan did not destroy himself through alcohol, failing to keep to his diabetic, cholesterol and blood pressure medication would dramatically increase his risk of suffering a fatal heart attack or stroke.
19.26 As I have stated in the report on Mrs Sheridan, if Mr Sheridan was forced to move to bricks and mortar accommodation, or just away from the support of his wife and siblings, Mrs Sheridan would worry about him. Her mental health would suffer and there would be additional adverse consequences for the children.
19.27 Overall, I believe that there would be a significant risk of Mr Sheridan suffering psychiatric harm if he was forced to accept the accommodation proposed by the Council. I do not think it would be overstating it to say that it could amount to a death sentence for him."
"17.3 I asked her what her views were about bricks and mortar accommodation and she said "I could not live in a house, I never have". I asked her what effect it would have on her if she was forced to do so and she said, "It would put my nerves at me, like I was locked in jail".
17.4 She went on, "Here I can get the shopping, friends visit me, talk to them. In a council house, people I don't know, I'd be a nervous wreck, terrified of people watching through the window, perverts taking the kids". She added, "I get depressed thinking about it."
17.5 I asked how she would feel if members of the community from the current site moved to the same area, i.e. she would have the same social contacts. She said, "It would be beautiful", but added, "but I still couldn't stay. We're quite happy here, want to stay"."
"19.7 In the documentation I have read, Mrs Sheridan has expressed multiple concerns about the accommodation she was offered by the Council. This includes a general aversion to bricks and mortar accommodation, something she reiterated to me. She also states that she would be unable to cope without the practical and social support from the other people on the current site. I have no reason to disbelieve this aspect of her account.
19.8 I believe that if Mrs Sheridan and the children were forced to move into any bricks and mortar accommodation, she would experience significant depression and anxiety, even if the house was of high quality. Her sense of dislocation would relate to losing her familiar location, a heightened sense of isolation from her culture and loss of the ready access to support she currently enjoys.
…
19.11 It is difficult to predict just how depressed Mrs Sheridan would become if she was forced to move to the house in Laindon, or other bricks and mortar accommodation. It is possible that her distress about what she would see as an impossible situation might drive her to deliberately harm herself, although I believe that any such act would not be with the intention of killing herself."
"The review panel have taken into consideration your strong cultural aversion to bricks and mortar accommodation. As a result, there has been a genuine consideration of ways and means to meet the needs arising from your way of life.
However, recent enquiries within confirm that there are, at present, no pitches available on any of the caravan sites provided by Essex County Council. The position will be monitored and, should any sites become available, you will be informed."
"We have taken into consideration the medical evidence provided, which comprises the report of Dr Slater. The panel notes your medical history and the finding of Dr Slater that there would be a significant risk of psychiatric harm were you forced to accept the accommodation that has been offered. However we have made extensive enquiries throughout Essex in relation to site availability and, at present, there are no available plots or pitches. Should you feel that your mental health was deteriorating at any time you should contact your G.P. for further medical input, which may include a referral to the mental health services.
We have also taken into account the submissions that you need to live alongside your extended family, and that you are dependant upon your estranged wife to administer your medication. However, your application was made as a single person household. The Council would have considered a joint homelessness application if you and your estranged wife wished to reside together. If you require specialist support whilst in the accommodation the Council can make referrals to the relevant agencies to ensure that support is provided."
"We have taken into consideration the medical evidence provided, which comprises the report of Dr Slater. The panel notes your medical history and the finding of Dr Slater that there would be a significant risk of psychiatric harm were you forced to accept the accommodation that has been offered. However we have made extensive enquiries throughout Essex in relation to site availability and, at present, there are no available plots or pitches. Should you feel that your mental health was deteriorating at any time you should contact your G.P. for further medical input, which may include a referral to the mental health services.
We have also taken into account the submissions that you need to live alongside your extended family, and that you offer your husband support in relation to administering his medication and that your children currently have daily contact with their father. However, your husband has made a separate homeless application and the Council would have considered a joint application had this been requested. Should your husband require specialist support whilst in Council accommodation referrals to the relevant agencies can be made to ensure that support is provided. In relation to your extended family, we can confirm that there are excellent public transport services within the District to enable you to continue to have contact with and support of your family and friends and there is no reason to suggest that Richard and John Sheridan would be unable to continue to provide transport to and from hospital appointments."
The s.193 duty
"36. Third, the duty to provide suitable accommodation is absolute in the sense that there is no statutory entitlement of, or duty on, a local housing authority, when determining suitability, to have regard to its resources or general practicability of offering accommodation to homeless persons. For that reason, I do not, with respect, consider that it would be sufficient, as Carnwath LJ suggested in Kayes & Traylen v. Waverley BC [2003] EWCA Civ 433, in paragraph 12 of a short judgment dismissing an application for permission to appeal, that:
"suitability has to take account of practicality. There is no point in … [an] authority being required to provide sites which do not exist".
37. Nevertheless, as Dyson J observed in ex p. Sacupima, at paragraphs 23 and 24 of his judgment, suitability is not itself an absolute concept. It may have various levels, though there is a Wednesbury minimum depending on the circumstances of each case, below which it cannot fall. In the following passage in paragraph 24 (seemingly accepted by this Court on appeal ((2001) 33 HLR 18, per Latham LJ at para 21, with whom Sir Murray Stuart-Smith and Henry LJ agreed), he explained what he meant, citing in part from a judgment of Collins J in R v. Newham LBC, ex p Ojuri (No 3) (1998) HLR 452, at 461:
"Although financial constraints and limited housing stock are matters that can be taken into account in determining suitability, 'there is a minimum and one must look at the needs and circumstances of the particular family and decide what is suitable for them, and there will be a line to be drawn below which the standard of accommodation cannot fall'. If the accommodation falls below that line, and is accommodation which no reasonable authority could consider to be suitable to the needs of the applicant, then the decision will be struck down, and an appeal to the resources argument will be of no avail."
38. And, fourth, where it is shown that a local housing authority has been doing all that it could, the court would not make an order to force it to do the impossible. Its duty was to secure the availability of suitable accommodation within a reasonable period of time, the reasonableness of that period depending on the circumstances of each case and on what accommodation was available. In ex p Begum, Collins J said, at 816:
"… Parliament has not qualified the duty in any way: it could have done. However, the situation for the council is not quite so desperate as might be thought. While the duty exists, no court will enforce it unreasonably. Mr Luba [counsel for the applicant] accepts that it would be unreasonable for an applicant to seek mandamus within a few days of the duty arising if it were clear that the council was doing all that it could, nor, in its discretion, would a court make such an order. Indeed, permission would probably be refused."
39. It is plain from the reasoning of Collins and Dyson JJ in those cases that suitability in this context should be regarded as an elastic concept in that the line below which no reasonable authority could consider accommodation to be suitable in an individual case is the Wednesbury line. So, on that approach, and subject to Article 8 considerations, the question for the Council and for Judge Farnworth, applying those general principles would be whether the offer by the Council of "bed and breakfast" accommodation to Mrs Codona and her extended family, given her aversion to "bricks and mortar" accommodation, falls below that line."
"44. As to Article 8, Newman J, at paragraphs 13 and 15 of his judgment, drew on the ruling of the European Court in Chapman, in particular at paragraphs 96 and 98 of its judgment, that, although Article 8 imposes a positive obligation on contracting states to facilitate the gypsy way of life, it does not oblige them to make available to their gypsy communities an adequate number of suitably equipped sites. As to our domestic legislation, he noted the effect of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 in: 1) its repeal of the duty formerly imposed on local authorities to provide caravan sites by Section 6 of the Caravan Sites Act 1968 to make sufficient site provision to meet the needs of gypsies in their areas, leaving it simply with the power to do so conferred by section 24 of the Caravan Sites and Control of Development Act 1960 ; and 2) its imposition in cases of homelessness resulting from insufficient provision of a duty to provide them with suitable alternative accommodation. In paragraph 15 of his judgment, he distilled the practical outcome of those two conclusions by reference to the following words of the European Court in paragraph 96 of its judgment in Chapman in explanation of its ruling that Article 8 imposes a positive obligation on contracting states to facilitate the gypsy way of life:
"… the vulnerable position of gypsies as a minority means that some special consideration should be given to their needs and their different lifestyle both in the relevant regulatory planning framework and in arriving at decisions in particular cases. …"
45. Newman J, in paragraph 20 of his judgment, gave practical application to such "special consideration" in this context by holding that if the respondent council in that case had concluded that:
"the claimant's cultural commitment to traditional life was so powerful as to present great difficulty in her living in conventional housing, it was not bound by duty to find her a pitch, but it would have been a significant factor in considering how far it should go to facilitate her traditional way of life."
46. In my view, there is no conflict in the mostly first instance authorities from which I draw three main criteria for "suitability" of an offer by a local housing authority of accommodation to homeless to vulnerable people like gypsies to whom it owes a statutory duty to secure the availability of accommodation: 1) suitability to a Wednesbury minimum level of suitability in the nature, location and standard of condition of the accommodation having regard to the circumstances of the applicant and his or her resident family, including the duration of their likely occupation of it; 2) the absolute nature of the duty which, though coupled with an elastic concept of suitability taking account of financial constraints and limited availability of accommodation, is not so elastic as to permit an offer below the Wednesbury minimum standard (or, as Mr Watkinson put it, outside the margin of appreciation); and 3) special consideration, in the regulatory provision for and in decision-making in individual cases, for the housing needs of particularly vulnerable applicants such as traditional gypsies with a view, so far as practicable and when considered with all the other circumstances, to facilitating their traditional way of life.
47. In my view, those criteria are not only supported by a consistent line of authority, but, together, are also a sound combination of principle and practicality. I respectfully endorse, in particular, the reasoning and approach of Newman J in Price with particular reference to the special needs of gypsies. I include in that his reservation in paragraph 15 of his judgment, having regard to paragraph 96 of the judgment in Chapman, of the suggestion in the last two sentences of the former paragraph 11.40 of the Code of Guidance] that gypsies or travellers should be considered on the same basis as any other applicant:
"11.40 Under s 175(2) applicants are homeless if their accommodation is a caravan, houseboat, or other movable structure and they do not have a place where they are entitled, or permitted, to put it and live in it. If a duty to secure accommodation arises in such cases, the housing authority are not required to make equivalent accommodation available (or provide a site or berth for the applicant's own accommodation), but they should consider whether such options are reasonably available, particularly where this would provide the most suitable solution to the applicant's accommodation needs. These circumstances will be particularly relevant in the case of gypsies and travellers, whose applications must be considered on the same basis as all other applicants. If no pitch or berth is available to enable them to resume occupation of their moveable home, it is open to the housing authority to discharge its homeless obligations by arranging for some other form of suitable accommodation to be made available." [my emphasis]
48. Clearly, in the light of the judgment in Chapman, "special consideration" given to the genuine needs of gypsies requires more effort on the part of a local housing authority than that suggested by the emphasised sentences in that paragraph. Newman J said, in paragraph 19 of his judgment in Price:
"In order to meet the requirement to accord respect something more than 'taking account' of an applicant's gypsy culture is required. As the court in Chapman stated, respect includes the positive obligation to act so as to facilitate the gypsy way of life, without being under a duty to guarantee it to an applicant in any particular case."
49. It requires the authority carefully to examine a gypsy's claim for such special consideration and, if satisfied that it is genuine, whether in all the circumstances of the case, it should attempt to meet it, and, if so, how. Those circumstances should, of course, include the likely duration of occupation in respect of which an offer is to be made. However, if despite such examination and, where appropriate, a genuine consideration of ways and means of meeting the gypsy's claim, an authority fails to provide a caravan site or pitch, it would only amount to a breach of its statutory duty or violate Article 8 if it produced an offer falling below the Wednesbury minimum line. It follows that where land is not available, or cannot readily be made available, on which a gypsy applicant can station his or her caravan, it is open to a local authority to provide other accommodation of the conventional bricks and mortar kind, providing that it satisfies the Wednesbury minimum line of suitability. As Collins J indicated in the passage from his judgment in ex p Begum that I have cited at paragraph 34 above, that line itself may vary according to the length of the expected likely stay in the accommodation offered."
"58. From all of this I conclude that the Council and the Judge in the way they respectively approached the effect of Mrs Codona's and her extended family's aversion to conventional bricks and mortar accommodation, identified the applicable domestic law, as I have summarised it, and properly, and compatibly with human rights principles, applied it to the facts of the case. It is plain too that the Judge did not simply consider the Article 8 balance by asking himself whether the Council's decision was, on the facts, one that it was entitled to make. As required by the decisions of the House of Lords in Porter and by this Court in Tonbridge & Malling BC, he formed his own view on the matter.
59. Put at its simplest, this was a case in which the Council was required as a matter of relative urgency to find accommodation for an extended family occupying some six or seven caravans, who were insisting, because of their aversion to conventional housing, on being provided an alternative site for all of their caravans on which they could continue to live together. Despite careful enquiries by the Council it could find no such site. Nor could it provide at short notice long-term conventional bricks and mortar housing for the extended family. It was driven, therefore, as a short-term measure, to offer short-term accommodation of a bed and breakfast nature. In doing so, it was clearly acting as a matter of last resort and with the clear understanding, as required by paragraphs 12.5 - 12.6 of the Code of Conduct, that the duration of their stay in such accommodation was to be kept as short as possible.
60. In my view, depending on the quality of bed and breakfast accommodation offered and, on the reasonable assumption that the Council will see to it that their stay there will only be for a short time, the Council has, so far, discharged its statutory duty to secure accommodation for the Codona family, and has done so without violation of Articles 8 and/or 14 ECHR. I say "so far" because the bed and breakfast accommodation offered could become unsuitable as a matter of domestic law and/or in violation of Article 8 if it goes on too long before suitable long-term accommodation in the form of conventional housing or, if it can be found, a caravan site can be provided."
"11. In the course of his decision the learned Recorder held that the complaint that RCT had not had proper regard or respect for the fact that Ms Lee was a gypsy and had an aversion to settling in bricks and mortar accommodation had not been made out. He said that there was no evidence that RCT had failed to make relevant enquiries about the feasibility of accommodating Ms Lee on a caravan site. The evidence was that they had made enquiries inside their own area and that there were no available sites. He further held, in paragraph 22, that it was unrealistic to require RCT to inquire into the possibility of acquiring a piece of ground for the siting of a single caravan for Ms Lee, nor was it appropriate for a panel, which was conducting a review of the decision to offer particular accommodation, to question or revisit strategic decisions about the provision of accommodation for gypsies in general. It is these conclusions that are challenged on this appeal brought with the permission of Arden LJ, who thought that it was arguable: 1) that RCT should have expressly considered whether to acquire a site for Ms Lee; 2) that the local authority could not be the final judge of what inquiries it should make; and 3) that the local authority had not satisfactorily applied their mind to the criticism of the relevant code of guidance, issued pursuant to section 182 of the 1996 Act, which was made in the case of Codona v Mid-Bedfordshire DC [2004] EWCA Civ 925.
….
15. It follows that, where land is not available or cannot readily be made available on which a gypsy applicant could stage his or her caravan, it is open to a local authority to provide other accommodation of the conventional bricks and mortar kind provided that it satisfies the Wednesbury minimum line of suitability. It is in the light of that legal position that Mr Knafler's arguments fall to be considered in the present case. It is clear from RCT's decision letter that RCT did give special consideration to Ms Lee's position as a gypsy since there is a paragraph headed "Aversion to bricks and mortar/change of lifestyle"; so the only question, as Newman J said, was whether that consideration was lawful and adequate.
16. Mr Knafler submits that it was not lawful and adequate because RCT did not consider whether they should acquire an alternative site. That however seems to me to be, in the context of a homelessness application, to be wrong, substantially for the reasons helpfully given by Mr Beglan for the local authority in his skeleton argument. Homelessness applications are expected to be determined within a short timeframe, ideally at least within 33 days of an acceptance of a requisite duty. If a new site is to be acquired for stationing a caravan for residential purposes, that will usually mean a new use which will typically require planning permission. That will require determination by the local authority planning committee, especially if it means a departure from the local development plan, which it may well, and any decision so made is liable to be appealed. After all that, land would have to be bought if it is not already owned by the local authority itself. All this is, in my judgment, inconsistent with the manner in which homelessness applications are expected to be dealt with by the housing department, and especially since they are expected to be dealt with with a degree of promptness. As, moreover, the Recorder himself observed, that is really inconsistent with the law as laid down by Price and Codona, to the effect that bricks and mortar accommodation is at any rate capable of being suitable accommodation even for a gypsy.
17. All that is not to say that there might not be unusual circumstances in which a local housing authority might be expected to do more than consider availability and sites within their own area. If, for example, there was a question of an applicant being at risk of suffering psychiatric harm, it might well be that the local authority should take that consideration into account, specifically in deciding what, or what further, enquiries they should make. In the present case, however, there is no risk of any such psychiatric harm and, moreover, the applicant has herself expressed a wish to live not merely in the local authority area but in a specific part of it, and that wish has been accommodated."
The appeals
"44. The Council, through Ms Ward, says relying upon the judgment in Lee v. Rhondda that it cannot be argued that land had to be purchased, since Longmore L.J had said in terms that the Recorder at first instance had held that it was unrealistic to require the Council to inquire into the possibility of acquiring a piece of ground for the siting of a single caravan for the Appellant and that it was not appropriate for the reviewing panel to question or revisit strategic decisions about the provision of accommodation for gypsies in general. The Court of Appeal said that once it is decided that the Council is not obliged to make such enquiries "it is not clear …what further enquiries the authority could be expected to make. She says that if there are unusual circumstances such as evidence of possible psychiatric harm to be suffered by an Appellant then the Council is or may be expected to do more than consider availability and sites within their own area and that the evidence in this case is that the Respondent has in fact done this by investigating the possibility of sites outside its own area. She says that the case of Lee, which is essentially the high point of the Appellants' cases does not go further than this even when the nature of the psychiatric evidence is not challenged.
45. Citing paragraph 16 of the judgment in Lee Ms Ward says that in determining a review the officer conducting it cannot off his or her own bat determine issues such as general planning duties of the Council in relation to, for example, the local development plan and their own strategic planning which are dealt with outside of the housing department and within a much longer time frame.
46. If it were right that a Council was obliged to provide a site for caravans where none exists this, says Ms Ward, would countermand the repeal of the statutory duty legislated by the 1994 Act.
47. Bearing all of these considerations in mind I was persuaded that Ms Ward was right. I think it is correct to say that it was not for the Review Panel to decide upon strategic issues nor to attempt to decide or subvert the planning process, even in connection with temporary planning permission, nor to act as an arm of social services, that their observation that any health problems could and should be addressed through the NHS or support services was sensible and realistic and the description of emergency accommodation under Part 7 of the Housing Act 1996 as it now is, is a "lifeline of last resort" as Lord Brightman described it in R. v. Hillingdon LBC ex p. Puhlhofer.
48. I was not convinced that the Council could have done more than they actually did when special consideration for gypsies and travellers and the obligations under the Race Relations Act are taken into account and I am unable to see what further enquiries they could have made when they had in fact made those enquiries envisaged by Longmore L.J. in Lee, i.e. considering whether other sites were available in Essex.
49. Whilst accepting for the argument under Article 8 pursued by the first and second Appellants that there has been an interference where there is an aversion to living in bricks and mortar nevertheless bearing in mind the duties of the Council towards all of its residents such interference was in the pursuit of a legitimate aim and proportionate to the problem faced by it as a whole. I agree."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Pitchford :
The Chancellor of the High Court :