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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Holley & Anor v London Borough of Hillingdon [2016] EWCA Civ 1052 (01 November 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/1052.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 1052, [2017] PTSR 127, [2016] WLR(D) 561 |
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ON APPEAL FROM WILLESDEN COUNTY COURT
AND FAMILY COURT
Her Honour Judge Karp
2UB00871
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
and
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
____________________
ANTHONY HOLLEY & ANR |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF HILLINGDON |
Respondent |
____________________
for the Appellant
Ranjit Bhose QC and Emma Dring (instructed by London Borough of Hillingdon)
for the Respondent
Hearing date : 12 October 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Briggs:
"6.1.3 Succession Tenancies:
In limited circumstance cases the Council is required by law to award tenancies to dependents of previous tenants. This is called succession, and is defined by Section 87 of the Housing Act 1985, which states that a person is qualified to succeed if he or she occupies the property as his or her only or principal home at the time of the tenant's death and is either:
1. The tenant's spouse.
2. Another member of the tenant's family who has lived with the tenant for the twelve months ending with the tenants death. Family members include husband/wife, parents, grandparents, children, grandchildren, brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, nephews and nieces. Step and half relatives are treated as full blood relatives.
In line with statute, Hillingdon allows one succession for each secure tenancy. This means that if there has already been a succession to a property, no further succession will be allowed. The only exception to this is where the potential second successor is agreed to be vulnerable and meets the following criteria:
1. Have a clear housing need and
2. Be aged 65 yrs+ or 50 yrs+ with learning difficulties and
3. Have lived at the property for the last 10 years or as long as the property has been available."
Being only in his thirties at the relevant time, the appellant did not meet the second of the three criteria for potential second succession there set out. I will call it the age criterion.
i) The eviction of the appellant was a disproportionate interference, within the meaning of Article 8, with his right to respect for his home. This was based upon the fact that the appellant had lived in the property all his life, and upon his mental health difficulties.ii) That in deciding not to afford him a second succession, the respondent had without justification discriminated against him upon the grounds of his age. This was because he did not satisfy the age criterion in paragraph 6.1.3 of the respondent's allocation scheme, and that was why the respondent had decided to evict him.
Article 8
"1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interest of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others."
The general principles which govern the application of Article 8 to a claim for possession by a local authority of property forming part of its social housing stock from a person with no other right to be there are well settled, by the twin decisions of the Supreme Court in Manchester City Council v Pinnock [2011] 2AC 104 and Hounslow London Borough Council v Powell [2011] 2AC 186.
"27. In the present case, as Mr Kohli has submitted, there is a further important policy consideration on which the Council is entitled to rely. That is Parliament's decision under the 1985 Act to limit the persons and the occasions for automatic succession to a secure tenancy. As Brooke LJ said in Wandsworth LBC v Michalak [2002] EWCA Civ 271, [2003] 1 WLR 617, at [41]:
"It appears to me that this is pre-eminently a field in which the courts should defer to the decisions taken by a democratically elected Parliament, which has determined the manner in which public resources should be allocated for local authority housing on preferential terms. Parliament decided to continue to adopt the Rent Act concept of "a member of the tenant's family" when identifying who might succeed to a secure tenancy, but to introduce a measure of legal certainty, a concept prized by Strasbourg, when explaining with precision the type of close relative who should be entitled to be the first (and only) successor to a secure tenancy."
28. In R (on the application of Gangera) v Hounslow LBC [2003] EWHC 794, [2003] HLR 68, Moses LJ elaborated on the policy underlying the restrictions on statutory succession as follows:
"22. … The policy underlying the rules of succession contained within the 1985 Act, in the context of the legislative provisions relating to the management and allocation of local authority housing, is clear. As Dawn Eastmead, a divisional manager in the Directorate of Housing of the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, points out in her witness statement, at the time of the introduction of the Housing Act 1980 the Minister observed that it was necessary to strike a balance between the needs of the tenant's family and the duty of a local housing authority to manage its housing stock in the interests of the locality and of those in greatest need (see para.13). The restriction on the rights to assign provide for some limitation to the duration of a secure tenancy so as to make available local authority housing in the interests of the needs of others (see para.20). Every secure tenant, whether sole or joint, is limited to one assignment or other transmission of the secure tenancy. The rule limiting succession to one transmission applies to all secure tenants equally. In Wandsworth London Borough Council v Michalak … Mance L.J. commented upon these provisions:
"The reality is that Parliament has, in the provisions of ss.87 and 113, considered and determined the extent to which those residing with a secure tenant should be entitled to succeed to the benefits of secure tenancy. Outside the categories of spouse and members of the tenant's family, as defined, others residing were not to succeed to any secure tenancy and Parliament necessarily contemplated that the dwelling house would become available once again to the relevant local authority for use in the ordinary way, as it should determine. That expectation is reinforced by the common law principle and statutory provisions relating to the making and suspension of possessions orders (in particular s.89 of the Housing Act 1980)." (See para.[63], my parenthesis).
23 It is plain that Parliament had to strike a balance between security of tenure and the wider need for systematic allocation of the local authority's housing resources in circumstances where those housing resources are not unlimited. The striking of such a balance is pre-eminently a matter of policy for the legislature. The court should respect the legislative judgment as to what is in the general interest unless that judgment was manifestly without reasonable foundation (see Mellacher v Austria (1989) 12 EHRR 391 [45]; Lord Woolf C.J. in Poplar Housing Association Ltd v Donoghue [2002] QB 48 at [69]). There is no basis for contending that the statutory scheme, which seeks to allocate public resources for the provision of local authority housing to those most in need, amounts to a disproportionate interference with a person's right to respect for his home. No such contention is made in the instant case. …"
"The fact that they have occupied the Property for some time is in itself irrelevant since Parliament has limited the number of successions to a secure tenancy however long a person's association with, and emotional ties to, a property, and that legislative policy does not infringe art.8."
"10. I have been greatly assisted by the helpful skeleton arguments of both parties' Counsel and their oral submissions. So far as the Article 8 defence is concerned, the Defence says that the proportionality defence is seriously arguable in this case because the Defendant has lived in the property all of his life and, in addition, suffers from very severe depression, anxiety and panic attacks for which he is currently receiving treatment and that this case can, therefore, be distinguished from the circumstances in Thurrock v West [2012] EWCA Civ 1435, which referred to a young family who had occupied the property only shortly before the tenant died.
11. The Claimants argue that there is nothing exceptional about these circumstances; that people suffering from mental illness are exactly the type of occupiers who commonly do occupy social housing and that the question of the length of residence was specifically addressed by Etherton LJ in this very same case, Thurrock v West commenting that the fact that they had occupied the property for some time is, in itself, irrelevant since Parliament has limited the number of successions to a secure tenancy, however long the person's association with and emotional ties to a property, and that legislative policy does not infringe Article 8.
12. I find that the Article 8 defence does not reach the threshold of seriously arguable for these reasons. It does come within very similar circumstances to those that have already been adjudicated upon in the case of Thurrock v West. The longer length of occupation in this case if a matter specifically considered in the earlier authority. The question of mental illness, sadly, for the Defendant concerned does not bring this case into a particular category that would enable the Article 8 defence to be argued as seriously arguable. And, for those reasons, I strike out the Article 8 defence."
The Public Law Defence
"Hillingdon's claim for possession was vitiated by their failure to have considered whether Mr Holley's personal circumstances justified making an exception to their discretionary second succession policy and granting him the tenancy of the premises; and the Judge's disposal of the claim on the preliminary issue cannot stand because the above unlawfulness was a foundation in the Judge's reasons for holding that the defence was not seriously arguable."
"Direct allocations (lettings outside of the choice based lettings scheme) can only be authorised by the designated senior officer. Direct allocations may be made in the following circumstances:
1. If a nomination is required to enable best use of housing stock.
…
4. A direct allocation in exceptional or emergency circumstances for effective management of social housing stock as determined by the designated senior officer in conjunction with Hillingdon Housing services or a Registered Provider"
On one view, the effective management of social housing stock is no more nor less than a summary of the whole purpose of the local authority's social housing function, so that sub-paragraph 4 contained a sufficient general discretion. Alternatively it might be said that this provision falls short of a full residual discretion because of its emphasis on effective management.
Lord Justice Underhill:
Lady Justice Arden: