![]() |
[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 >> Francis v Brent Housing Partnership Ltd & Ors [2013] EWCA Civ 912 (29 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/912.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 912 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Moloney QC
Claim No: ICL02029
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
____________________
CAROLINE FRANCIS |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) BRENT HOUSING PARTNERSHIP LIMITED (2) THE LONDON BOROUGH OF BRENT (3) VINETTE WILLIAMS |
Respondents |
____________________
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)
Mr Ranjit Bhose QC and Mr Simon D. Butler (instructed by Mr Ash Vyas, Brent Housing Partnership Limited) for the First and Second Respondents
Mr Adrian Davis (instructed by Guile Nicholas) for the Third Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
Introduction
The facts
'A tenancy under which a dwelling-house is let as a separate dwelling is a secure tenancy at any time when the conditions described in sections 80 and 81 as the landlord condition and the tenant condition are satisfied'.
As the interest of the landlord in relation to No 25C at all times belonged to Brent, a local authority, 'the landlord condition' was unquestionably satisfied. As for 'the tenant condition', section 81 provides, so far as material, that:
'The tenant condition is that the tenant is an individual and occupies the dwelling-house as his only or principal home; …'.
There is no dispute that down to 18 April 1991 Ms Francis was a tenant of No 25C and that she occupied it as her 'only or principal home'. She was therefore a secure tenant of No 25C. There is also no dispute that from 18 April 1991 to about 22 May 2005, when she moved to No 1, she continued to occupy No 25C as her 'only or principal home'. There is, however, a question as to whether during that latter period she was ever a tenant of No 25C.
The decant agreement
'2.1 [Brent] is required to perform works to the Tenant's permanent accommodation which is let to the Tenant by [Brent] pursuant to the secure agreement.
2.2 [Brent] has agreed to make available the temporary accommodation for the Tenant's occupation while [Brent] performs the works to the permanent accommodation.
2.3 On completion of the works to the permanent accommodation the Tenant will give up occupation of the temporary accommodation and resume occupation of the permanent accommodation.'
'Now the Parties Hereby Agree and Declare
3. The agreement will commence on the commencement date and will terminate:
3.1 28 days following receipt by [Brent] from the Tenant … of a notice to quit; or
3.2 on the date stated in an Order of possession of the Court being the date the Tenant is ordered to give up possession of the temporary accommodation; or
3.3 in accordance with clause 8 of the Agreement
4. The agreement is subject to [Brent's] standard terms and conditions of a secure tenancy which are by this clause incorporated into the agreement
5. From the commencement date:
5.1 the secure agreement will continue on the same terms and conditions but as a non-secure tenancy by virtue of the Tenant's failure to comply with section 81 of the Housing Act 1985; and
5.2 the parties to the secure agreement will be suspended from all rights and obligations imposed by the secure agreement
5.3 the parties shall be entitled to the rights and bound by the obligations imposed by this the [sic] agreement
6. On completion of the works and on [Brent] being satisfied that the permanent accommodation is available for occupation by the Tenant [Brent] will serve a notice on the Tenant … certifying that the works to the permanent accommodation have been completed, that the permanent accommodation is again available for occupation by the Tenant under the secure agreement and requiring the Tenant to give up occupation of the temporary accommodation within 21 days of the date of the notice and resume occupation of the permanent accommodation
7. The Tenant within 21 days of the date of the notice specified in clause 6 of the agreement will:
7.1 give up occupation of the temporary accommodation; and
7.2 resume occupation of the permanent accommodation under the secure agreement.
8. On the date the Tenant gives up occupation of the temporary accommodation in accordance with clause 7.1 of the agreement the agreement will terminate by surrender.
9. On the date the Tenant resumes occupation of the permanent accommodation in accordance with clause 7.2 of the agreement:
9.1 The secure agreement will resume as a secure tenancy by virtue of the Tenant complying with section 81 of the Housing Act 1985; and
9.2 The parties to the secure agreement will again be bound by all the rights and obligations imposed by the secure agreement.
10. Should the Tenant be in breach of clause 7.2 of the agreement [Brent] will be at liberty to terminate the secure agreement by serving a notice to quit on the Tenant … and the secure agreement will terminate on the first day of the rent period under the secure agreement and at least 28 days following its service on the Tenant
11. Should the Tenant be in breach of clause 7.1 of the agreement [Brent] will be at liberty to commence possession proceedings against the Tenant for recovery of the temporary accommodation on Ground 8 of Schedule 2 to the Housing Act 1985.'
More facts
'As you are aware, it came to my attention that you had gained entrance and taken up occupation of [No 25C]. I attended with the police on 27 January 2010 and you were removed from the property along with some of your possessions. The removal of your personal effects from the communal area was completed on 28/29 January, 2010.
When you were initially decanted to [No 1] it was on a temporary basis. However, at that point the extent of the works was not known and along with some other delays, your stay in the property extended beyond 12 months. The policy and practice is that where someone has been displaced for a period in excess of 12 months, the decant becomes permanent. As you have occupied [No 1] since 22 May, 2005 this is now considered to be your permanent home.
Tenants who are permanently decanted are entitled to a payment of compensation in the sum of £4,700 for the permanent loss of their home. I can find no record of you having been informed of this. Please accept my apologies for that oversight on our part.
Please find enclosed the Home Loss Application which you need to complete and return to us as soon as possible. I would further advise that if there are any rent arrears on your account at the time of processing your forms, it will be deducted from your entitlement.'
The judge's judgment
'10. So she had performed her obligations, she had largely restored her standing, nothing that she had done had been inconsistent with her reinstatement as a tenant; and then we see (she says through her counsel) this decant agreement, which expressly recognises her as a secure tenant and sets out an elaborate mechanism for the preservation and perpetuation of her rights in No 25C and her restoration to it as a single tenant once the works are completed'.
'In some respects it remains perfectly clear and perfectly workable, and there would appear to be no reason not to give it its natural effect. It purports to create an immediate secure tenancy of … [No 1]. It also purports to give Ms Francis a legitimate expectation of returning to No 25C, perhaps even returning to No 25C as a secure tenant following the completion of the works. But those contractual consequences are not the same as conferring on her a present interest in [No 25C] in the form of a tenancy, whether a non-secure tenancy, as it is described in the decant agreement itself, or a secure tenancy or any other kind of tenancy'.
The appeal
(a) Was Ms Francis a 'secure tenant' of No 25C at the date of the decant agreement?
'It cannot be right to impute to the parties an intention to create a legal relationship such as a secure tenancy or licence unless the legal structures within which they made their agreement force that conclusion'.
'37. For the reasons explained by Lord Browne-Wilkinson, a new tenancy will not generally arise from the fact that a tolerated trespasser remains in possession with the landlord's consent. Rather more is required to take the case out of the everyday situation where landlords simply allow former tenants to remain in occupation if they make satisfactory payments and their occupation is otherwise satisfactory. …
40. This is not a case in which it was open to the tolerated trespasser to make an application under s. 82. She could have applied, for instance, for the order for possession to be postponed. If she had done that, her original tenancy would have revived. This is not therefore a case where the court is compelled to conclude that the acts of the parties could be referable only to an intention to create a new tenancy.' (Emphasis supplied)
'60. The Burrows case establishes that "special circumstances" are required before a new tenancy can be found between a tolerated trespasser and the former landlord who has permitted him to remain in occupation. …
64. … The speech of Lord Browne-Wilkinson makes it clear that it is not enough that the facts are consistent with a new tenancy: they must actually force that conclusion.' (Emphasis supplied)
(b) Did Ms Francis acquire a 'replacement tenancy' on 20 May 2009?
'15. In this Part of this Schedule "an original tenancy" means any secure tenancy … -
(a) in respect of which a possession order was made before the commencement date, and
(b) which ended before that date pursuant to the order but not on the execution of the order.
16. (1) A new tenancy of the dwelling-house which was let under the original tenancy is treated as arising on the commencement date between the landlord and the ex-tenant if –
(a) on that date –
(i) the home condition is met, and
(ii) the ex-landlord is entitled to let the dwelling-house, and
(b) the ex-landlord and the ex-tenant have not entered into another tenancy after the date on which the original tenancy ended but before the commencement date.
(2) The home condition is that the dwelling-house which was let under the original tenancy –
(a) is, on the commencement date, the only or principal home of the ex-tenant, and
(b) has been the only or principal home of the ex-tenant throughout the termination period.
(3) In this Part of this Schedule "the termination period" means the period –
(a) beginning with the end of the original tenancy, and
(b) ending with the commencement date. …
17. The new tenancy is to be –
(a) a secure tenancy if –
(i) the original tenancy was a secure tenancy, or …
21. (1) The new tenancy and the original tenancy are to be treated for the relevant purposes as –
(a) the same tenancy, and
(b) a tenancy which continued uninterrupted throughout the termination period.
(2) The relevant purposes are –
(a) determining whether the ex-tenant is a successor in relation to the new tenancy,
(b) calculating on or after the commencement date the period qualifying, or the aggregate of such periods, under Schedule 4 to the Housing Act 1985 (qualifying period for right to buy at a discount),
(c) determining on or after the commencement date whether the condition set out in paragraph (b) of Ground 8 of Schedule 2 is met, and
(d) any other purposes specified by the appropriate national authority by order.'
'The dwelling-house was made available for occupation by the tenant (or a predecessor in title of his) while works were carried out on the dwelling-house which he previously occupied as his only or principal home and –
(a) the tenant (or predecessor) was a secure tenant of the other dwelling-house at the time when he ceased to occupy it as his home,
(b) the tenant (or predecessor) accepted the tenancy of the dwelling-house of which possession is sought on the understanding that he would give up occupation when, on completion of the works, the other dwelling-house was again available for occupation by him under a secure tenancy; and
(c) the works have been completed and the other dwelling-house is so available.'
Disposition
Lord Justice Beatson :
Lord Justice Laws :