[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Ibrahim v London Borough of Wandsworth [2013] EWCA Civ 20 (30 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/20.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 20, [2013] PTSR 898, [2013] WLR(D) 38 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2013] PTSR 898] [View ICLR summary: [2013] WLR(D) 38] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM WANDSWORTH COUNTY COURT
HHJ REDGRAVE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ETHERTON
and
SIR STEPHEN SEDLEY
____________________
FALIS IBRAHIM |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
LONDON BOROUGH OF WANDSWORTH |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
David LINTOTT (instructed by Sharpe Pritchard) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 4th October 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Stephen Sedley:
The issue
Procedure on a Review
8. (1) the reviewer shall, subject to compliance with the provisions of regulation 9, consider-
(a) any representations made under regulation 6 and, in a case falling within regulation 7, any responses to them; and
(b) any representations made under paragraph (2) below.
(2) If the reviewer considers that there is a deficiency or irregularity in the original decision, or in the manner in which it was made, but is minded nonetheless to make a decision which is against the interests of the applicant on one or more issues, the reviewer shall notify the applicant-
that the reviewer is so minded and the reasons why; and
that the applicant, or someone acting on his behalf, may make representations to the reviewer orally or in writing or both orally and in writing.
The facts
The original decision
"The Council's obligation towards persons considered to be in priority need but intentionally homeless is limited to providing them with advice and appropriate assistance to enable them to find their own accommodation. This means that you are not entitled to rehousing by the Council under the provisions of the above-mentioned Act. In order for you to obtain advice and assistance about the means by which you might find your own accommodation, I have arranged an appointment for you on:
Wednesday 20TH April at 9.15 a.m. with the Council's Housing Options Team.
As you have dependant children I will arrange for you to be referred to our Social Services Department, Children & Families division, in order that they can make an assessment of any further assistance that you might be eligible to, under the provisions of the Children Act 1989.
As you are in temporary accommodation provided by the Council, legal proceedings will be taken to repossess this accommodation."
"For all of these reasons, I have upheld the decision that you are in priority need, but that you are intentional homelessness. This means that the Council now owes you a duty to secure accommodation for your occupation for such a period that will give you a reasonable opportunity of making your own housing arrangements and to provide you with advice and assistance in any efforts you may make to secure accommodation for yourself.
The decision set out in this letter represents the Council's decision on review and, under the 1996 Act, concludes all internal review processes. In reaching this decision I have found no irregularity, defect or deficiency in the decision-making process adopted by the Council and in the absence of a material change in your circumstances, I regret to inform you that the Council will remain satisfied that you are intentionally homeless."
The first appeal
"was not of sufficient importance to justify engaging regulation 8(2). The issue between the parties was whether the appellant had made herself intentionally homeless, not whether the local authority had a duty to temporarily rehouse her. In the circumstances, where the appellant was being temporarily provided with accommodation, the reviewer's failure to engage regulation 8(2) was not unreasonable."
The arguments
The authorities
"[29] The word 'deficiency' does not have any particular legal connotation. It simply means 'something lacking'. There is nothing in the words of the rule to limit it to failings which would give grounds for legal challenge. If that were the intention, one would have expected it to have been stated expressly. Furthermore, since the judgment is that of the reviewing officer, who is unlikely to be a lawyer, it would be surprising if the criterion were one depending solely o legal judgment. On the other hand, the 'something lacking' must be of sufficient importance to the fairness of the procedure to justify an extra procedural safeguard. Whether that is so involves an exercise of 'evaluative judgment' (see Runa Begum v Tower Hamlets London BC [2003] 1 All ER 731 at [114], [2003] 2 AC 430 at [114] per Lord Walker of Gestinthorpe), on which the officer's conclusion will only be changeable on Wednesbury grounds.
[30] To summarise, the reviewing officer should treat reg. 8 (2) as applicable, not merely when he finds some significant legal or procedural error in the decision, but whenever (looking at the matter broadly and untechnically) he considers that an important aspect o he case was either not addressed, or not addressed adequately, by the original decision-maker. In such a case, if he intends to confirm the decision, he must give notice of the grounds on which he intends to do so, and provide an opportunity for written and (if requested) oral representations."
"71. A literal interpretation of reg. 8 (2) would make it difficult to reach the conclusion that "there is a deficiency… in the original decision". On a literal approach the natural meaning of the words suggests that the focus is on the position as at the date of the decision, and my initial inclination was that there would be no deficiency in the type of case with which this court is concerned. But an important objective of reg. 8 (2) is to ensure that, where the reviewing officer is minded to confirm a decision on different grounds, the applicant should be given an opportunity to make representations. I was convinced by the argument for Mr Banks that a purposive construction should be given to reg. 8 (2) to ensure that its objective is achieved. Mr Banks having become homeless, the original decision had become deficient in that it did not address the question of priority need. In fact (and I shall revert to this point) in case of this kind, where there has been a change of circumstances, a fresh application can be made, and the objective can be achieved equally in that way. But this is a system in which the applicant will be acting in person, and I consider that reg. 8 (2) should be interpreted so as to ensure that the individual is afforded the procedural safeguard even if the review route is taken."
"12. Section 184 (1) contemplates two decisions. The first is whether the applicant is eligible for assistance. The second is whether any duty, and if so what duty, is owed to him under the Act. The second decision is thus concerned with the duty owed by the local housing authority; not whether the applicant is intentionally homeless or has a priority need. These questions are, in the terminology of s. 184 (3), "issues" which need to be determined on the way to the ultimate decision. Nor is the decision concerned with the local housing authority's powers as (opposed to duties).
13. Thus in the present case the initial decision under s. 184 was a decision that Camden had a duty to provide advice and assistance. Section 203 (4) distinguishes between a "decision" and an "issue". Regulation 8 (2) also speaks of a deficiency in a "decision" and distinguishes that from "issues" on which the reviewer is minded to find against the applicant. Thus a thread running through both the primary legislation and regulations is a clear and consistent distinction between the decision on the one hand, and issues on the other. Mr Russell argues that it is the decision that is subject to review, and that it is wrong t split a decision into discrete issues in order to consider whether there is a deficiency in the decision. In my judgment he is right."
"50. …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.
51. Further, as the present case shows, a decision can often survive despite the existence of an error in the reasoning advanced to support it. For example, sometimes the error is irrelevant to the outcome; sometimes it is too trivial (objectively, or in the eyes of the decision-maker) to effect the outcome; sometimes it is obvious from the rest of the reasoning, read as a whole, that the decision would have been the same notwithstanding the error; sometimes there is more than one reason for the conclusion, and the error only undermines one of the reasons; sometimes, the decision is the only one which could rationally have been reached. In all such cases, the error should not (save, perhaps, in wholly exceptional circumstances) justify the decision being quashed."
Discussion
113. Far from being difficult, as Lord Brown tentatively suggested it was, it is in my respectful view seductively easy to conclude that there can be no answer to a case of which you have only heard one side. There can be few practising lawyers who have not had the experience of resuming their seat in a state of hubristic satisfaction, having called a respectable witness to give apparently cast-iron evidence, only to see it reduced to wreckage by ten minutes of well-informed cross-examination or convincingly explained away by the other side's testimony. Some have appeared in cases in which everybody was sure of the defendant's guilt, only for fresh evidence to emerge which makes it clear that they were wrong. As Mark Twain said, the difference between reality and fiction is that fiction has to be credible. In a system which recruits its judges from practitioners, judges need to carry this kind of sobering experience to the bench. It reminds them that you cannot be sure of anything until all the evidence has been heard, and that even then you may be wrong. It may be, for these reasons, that the answer to Baroness Hale's question – what difference might disclosure have made? – is that you can never know.
114.This is why Megarry J's celebrated dictum in John v Rees about the fallibility of judgment based on partial evidence matters so much. Judges are not proof against the human delusion that one has heard enough to be sure that there is no answer. They have to guard themselves against it, and the way in which the law ensures they do so – not only the common law but all the systems governed by the European Convention on Human Rights and many others beside – is to insist, not that everything must be known before judgment is given, but that everyone affected must have had a proper chance (which they may of course forfeit) to advance as much material as may help the tribunal in reaching a judicious conclusion.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Etherton :
Lord Justice Mummery: