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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Birmingham City Council v Balog [2013] EWCA Civ 1582 (12 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1582.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 1582 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE BIRMINGHAM COUNTY COURT
MISS RECORDER McNEILL QC
BM20270A
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
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Birmingham City Council |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Michael Balog |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
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Zia Nabi (instructed by The Community Law Partnership) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Introduction
The background
"You have provided an income and expenditure form for the period you were resident at the property. The form suggests that your income was £920 per month, and that your outgoings were £946.18 per month. You have not included housing benefit as income on the form and similarly not included your rent on the form as an outgoing. The figures provided suggest you have a deficit of £26.18 per month. I note that you have been employed during periods of the tenancy, and you have provided wage slips confirming your income. The wage slips you have provided correlate with periods when your housing benefit was reduced and you would have been required to pay a top up amount. I am satisfied that benefit services would have calculated your income and entitlement correct for this period, and that you would have been awarded the correct entitlement for housing benefit when considering your income. I am of the opinion that you could have afforded the rent during periods of employment, as your income increased by approximately £300 per month, and you were required to pay £180 towards your rent. I am satisfied during this period the rent was affordable. When your employment stopped, housing benefit covered your rent and I am therefore satisfied the rent was affordable for this period of your tenancy.
I note that there may have been a period you were required to pay £41.72 towards your rent whilst you were unemployed. I have considered your income and expenditure form for this period and considered if you could have reduced possible outgoings to ensure the top up amount could have been paid. I note that you have attributed £693 per month to housekeeping. Whilst I acknowledge you would have had essential housekeeping outgoings such as food shopping, I am satisfied £693 is a large amount for your family size and could have been reasonably reduced by more cost affecting [sic] shopping. I am satisfied that you could have reduced your outgoings by the stated £26.18 deficit and by a further £41.72 to ensure your rent was paid. I do not consider you would have had to sacrifice essential amenities to do so, and I am satisfied that you could have reasonably performed this task in your household. Accordingly, having considered your monthly outgoings, I am satisfied that the rent was affordable and it was reasonable for you to remain for this reason."
Legal framework
"191 Becoming homeless intentionally.
(1) 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 occupation and which it would have been reasonable for him to continue to occupy.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) an act or omission in good faith on the part of a person who was unaware of any relevant fact shall not be treated as deliberate.
(3) A person shall be treated as becoming homeless intentionally if:
(a) he enters into an arrangement under which he is required to cease to occupy accommodation which it would have been reasonable for him to continue to occupy, and
(b) the purpose of the arrangement is to enable him to become entitled to assistance under this Part,
and there is no other good reason why he is homeless."
"17.40 In considering an applicant's residual income after meeting the costs of the accommodation, the Secretary of State recommends that housing authorities regard accommodation as not being affordable if the applicant would be left with a residual income which would be less than the level of income support or income-based job seekers' allowance that is applicable in respect of the applicant, or would be applicable if he or she was entitled to claim such benefit. This amount will vary from case to case, according to the circumstances and composition of the applicant's household. A current tariff of applicable amounts in respect of such benefits should be available within the authority's housing benefit section. Housing authorities will need to consider whether the applicant can afford the housing costs without being deprived of basic essentials such as food, clothing, heating, transport and other essentials. The Secretary of State recommends that housing authorities avoid placing applicants who are in low paid employment in accommodation where they would need to resort to claiming benefit to meet the costs of that accommodation, and to consider opportunities to secure accommodation at affordable rent levels where this likely to reduce perceived or actual disincentives to work."
"47. However, a judge should not adopt an unfair or unrealistic approach when considering or interpreting such review decisions. Although they may often be checked by people with legal experience or qualifications before they are sent out, review decisions are prepared by housing officers, who occupy a post of considerable responsibility and who have substantial experience in the housing field, but they are not lawyers. It is not therefore appropriate to subject their decisions to the same sort of analysis as may be applied to a contract drafted by solicitors, to an Act of Parliament, or to a court's judgment."
"50. Accordingly, a benevolent approach should be adopted to the interpretation of review decisions. The court should not take too technical a view of the language used, or search for inconsistencies, or adopt a nit-picking approach, when confronted with an appeal against a review decision. That is not to say that the court should approve incomprehensible or misguided reasoning, but it should be realistic and practical in its approach to the interpretation of review decisions."
The judgment of Miss Recorder McNeill QC
"12. In the review decision letter, there were specific references both to a definition of hazards in certain local government regulations and to particular paragraphs in the July 2006 Guidance. Paragraphs 8.18, 8.26 and 8.27 of the July 2006 Guidance (none of which refers specifically to affordability) were set out in full in the decision. In contrast, in relation to affordability, there was no specific reference to any of the relevant provisions in the July 2006 Guidance and no reference, in particular to paragraph 17.40."
"13. There is nothing in the decision on affordability to indicate that the respondent had considered the appellant's residual income, after taking into account accommodation costs, by reference to whether such residual income might be less than income-based job seekers' allowance. The income and expenditure figures provided by the appellant demonstrated that the appellant's only family income consisted of job seekers' allowance, tax credits and child benefit. I was told by appellant's Counsel, and it was not disputed by the respondent, that job seekers' allowance is reduced to reflect the amount of tax credits. Neither party suggested that child benefit should be taken into account in assessing affordability in relation to the payment of rent. The figures provided by the appellant demonstrated that the appellant's expenditure, including the difference between his housing benefit and his rent when appropriate, left him with a shortfall of £67.90 per month. That was based in part on figures as to expenditure which were rough rather than exact."
"23. I considered, first of all, the fact that the appellant's income and expenditure were analysed by the respondent and whether such analysis demonstrated that the respondent had had regard to the provisions of the July 2006 Guidance on affordability in reaching its decision as to whether the appellant was intentionally homeless. I concluded that the respondent's analysis of the appellant's income and expenditure on its own was insufficient to demonstrate that the respondent had had regard to the relevant provisions of the July 2006 Guidance. It demonstrated only that income and expenditure were explored and that the respondent did consider affordability. That was not in dispute between the parties.
24. Having considered and weighed up the submissions of both parties, I concluded that the appellant's first ground of appeal should be upheld, namely that the respondent failed to take into account the relevant provisions of the July 2006 Guidance. Whilst the respondent carried out an analysis in relation to affordability, which included the income and expenditure analysis, it did not have regard to the July 2006 Guidance.
25. I reached this conclusion (a) because the relevant provisions of the July 2006 Guidance were not mentioned in the section of the review decision letter in which affordability was addressed and (b) because nowhere in its reasons did the respondent give any indication that it had considered whether the payment for accommodation would have left the appellant with less than the level of income based job seekers' allowance. Nowhere in its decision did the respondent state that it had decided that it was inappropriate to take into account the July 2006 Guidance nor did it give any explanation for not taking into account the provisions of the July 2006 Guidance. It appeared that the relevant provisions of the July 2006 Guidance on affordability, in particular paragraph 17.40, had simply been overlooked. The respondent did not of course have to follow the July 2006 Guidance but it did have to have regard to it.
26. Having considered the detailed analysis on affordability in the decision letter, I was not satisfied that the respondent had regard to the July 2006 Guidance at all in relation to the issue of affordability. Nor did I conclude that this was a case in which it was inevitable that the respondent would have reached the same result if the provisions of the July 2006 Guidance had been taken into account. There was simply no basis for making that finding. An analysis of the income and expenditure figures in the light of the relevant provisions of the July 2006 Guidance may have led to a different conclusion."
The appeal
Briggs LJ:
Sullivan LJ: