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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> London Borough of Wandsworth v Dixon [2009] EWHC 27 (Admin) (15 January 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/27.html Cite as: [2009] NPC 21, [2009] EWHC 27 (Admin), [2009] L & TR 28 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(Transferred from the Wandsworth County Court)
2 Park Street, Cardiff |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
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LONDON BOROUGH OF WANDSWORTH |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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DARRELL DIXON |
Defendant/ Applicant |
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Mr Terence Gallivan (instructed by Flack & Co.) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 27th November 2008
at the Royal Courts of Justice, Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Bidder QC :
INTRODUCTION
HISTORY
"Your conviction of an arrestable offence is grounds for possession and therefore your application for a discretionary tenancy of 81 Macey House will no longer be considered. You are therefore advised to provide the council with vacant possession of 81 Macey House by returning the keys to the property and removing all your belongings by Monday 15th May 2006. If you fail to do this you are advised that our Borough Solicitor will be instructed to seek a possession order for the property and for you to be liable for any costs incurred in this action."
THE LAW
"(1) that although domestic courts were not strictly required to follow the rulings of the European Court of Human Rights they were obliged to give practical recognition to the principles it expounded; that effective implementation of the Convention depended on constructive collaboration between the Strasbourg court and national authorities and, while it was for that court as the highest judicial authority to interpret Convention rights as they were uniformly to be understood by all member states, it was for domestic courts to determine initially how the principles it laid down were to be applied in the domestic context; that adherence to precedent was a cornerstone of the domestic legal system by which a degree of certainty in legal matters was best achieved; that judges could give leave to appeal where they considered a binding precedent was inconsistent with Strasbourg authority and that they should follow the ordinary rules of precedent, save in an extreme case where the decision of a superior court could not survive the introduction of the 1998 Act;
…
(3) that the right of a public authority landlord to enforce a claim for possession under domestic law would, in most cases, automatically supply the justification required by article 8(2) for an interference with the occupier's right to respect for his home; that the public authority was not required to plead or prove justification in every case and courts were to assume that domestic law struck the proper balance of the competing interests and was compatible with article 8; that a challenge to the making of an order could be raised in the possession proceedings in the county court, so far as its jurisdictional limits permitted, if the defendant could, exceptionally, show a seriously arguable case that the relevant domestic law was incompatible with the Convention; but that (Lord Bingham of Cornhill, Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead and Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe dissenting) where the requirements of the law had been satisfied and the right to recover possession was unqualified no challenge based only on a defendant's individual circumstances was permissible"
"… article 8 is not available as a defence to the possession proceedings, even though the premises in question were the 'home' of the occupant for the purposes of the article. The council acted lawfully and within its powers in obtaining the notice to quit, which had the effect of terminating the secure tenancy. There was no dispute but that the tenancy had been brought to an end by the wife's notice to quit. Under ordinary domestic law the council had an unqualified right to immediate possession on proof that the tenancy of the premises had been brought to an end. The statutory procedure in section 82 of the 1985 Act, which is available to a local authority landlord for terminating a secure tenancy, does not apply to a case where the secure tenancy has been terminated by the tenant's notice to quit. That notice to quit was effective, even though the notice was signed without appreciating the consequences for the occupier of the premises.
This is not a 'wholly exceptional' case where, for example, something has happened since the service of the notice to quit, which is fundamentally alter the right and wrongs of the proposed eviction and the council might be required to justify its claim to override the Article 8 right."
"9. In Kay, para 110, I said that where domestic law provides for personal circumstances to be taken into account, as in a case where the statutory test is whether it would be reasonable to make a possession order, then a fair opportunity must be for the arguments in favour of the occupier to be presented. But if the requirements of the law have been established and the right to recover possession of the public authority landlord is unqualified, the only situations in which it would be open to the court to refrain from proceeding to summary judgment and making the possession order are these:
(a) if a seriously arguable point is raised that the law which enables the court to make the possession order is incompatible with article 8, the county court in the exercise of its jurisdiction under the Human Rights Act 1998 should deal with the argument in one or other of two ways: (i) by giving effect to the law, so far as it is possible for it to do so under section 3, in a way that is compatible with article 8, or (ii) by adjourning the proceedings to enable the compatibility issue to be dealt with in the High Court;
(b) if the defendant wishes to challenge the decision of a public authority to recover possession as an improper exercise of its powers at common law on the ground that it was a decision that no reasonable person would consider justifiable, he should be permitted to do this provided again that the point is seriously arguable: Wandsworth London Borough Council v Winder [1985] AC 461."
I added that, as the common law as explained in Wandsworth Borough Council v Winder was compatible with article 8, it provided an additional safeguard. Lord Scott of Foscote (para 174), Baroness Hale of Richmond (para 192) and Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood (para 212) agreed with what I said in that paragraph."
"I remain of the view which I expressed about this in para 114 of my opinion in Kay. Primary legislation which cannot be read or given effect in a way which is compatible with the Convention right must nevertheless still be enforced, unless the decision of the public authority to seek eviction can be said, when judicially reviewed, to be arbitrary, unreasonable or disproportionate. That is the effect of section 6(2)(b) of the Human Rights Act 1998. The question is whether, having decided to do what it is doing, the public authority landlord is doing what it has been authorised to do by the primary legislation: R v Kansal (No 2), para 88. If it is, giving effect to it cannot be held to be unlawful within the meaning of section 6(1) of that Act: see further paras 43, 44. That is the system which applies in domestic law, which preserves the sovereignty of Parliament. Incompatible primary legislation remains fully effective unless and until it has been repealed or modified. The solutions that are available to the domestic court in response to decisions of the court in Strasbourg are limited by this fundamental principle. As I indicated in Kay, it reinforces the proposition that a defence under article 8 must be struck out unless the legislation can be read and given effect in a way that is compatible with the Convention right. Nothing that was said by the Strasbourg court in McCann can alter, or has altered, the way acts authorised by primary legislation must be dealt with under section 6(2) of the 1998 Act.
The basic law
22. So I must make it clear at the outset that nothing that I may say in this opinion is to be understood as detracting in any way from the basic law as laid down by the majority in Qazi and re-affirmed by the majority in Kay."
"It is not open to the court, once it has decided in any individual case that the effect of the legislation is that the public authority's right to possession is unqualified, to hold that the exercise of that right should be denied because of the occupier's personal circumstances."
"I think that in this situation it would be unduly formalistic to confine the review strictly to traditional Wednesbury grounds. The considerations that can be brought into account in this case are wider. An examination of the question whether the respondent's decision was reasonable, having regard to the aim which it was pursuing and to the length of time that the appellant and his family have resided on the site, would be appropriate. But the requisite scrutiny would not involve the judge substituting his own judgment for that of the local authority. In my opinion the test of reasonableness should be, as I said in para 110 of Kay, whether the decision to recover possession was one which no reasonable person would consider justifiable."
"Home occupiers whose contractual and statutory rights to remain on the property have come to an end are in no different state. Such balance as is required to be struck between the rights of home occupiers and the rights of the private owners of the properties on which the homes have been established has been struck by the domestic law and, unless a gateway (a) attack on the domestic law can be sustained, e.g. an attack based on discrimination as in Connors, article 8.2 has no further part to play. Qazi established that that was so and its authority in that respect remains unaltered. But public authorities, and in particular local authorities, are in a different position. Their decision making powers are subject to the constraints of Wednesbury reasonableness, and they must not act in a way that is incompatible with Convention rights (section 6 of the 1998 Act). But those public law constraints strike, in my opinion, the balance that article 8.2 requires (see the penultimate sentence of Lord Hope's para.110). [i.e. 'The common law as explained in {Winder}is, of course compatible with article 8. It provides an additional safeguard'."
"I am not prepared to do so because I consider the McCann judgment to be based on a mistaken understanding of the procedure in this country whereby proceedings brought by a local authority owner of residential property for the purpose of recovery of possession of the property from a defendant who has, or had had, his home on the property can be defended by reliance on article 8. I consider, also, that the McCann judgment discloses a misunderstanding of the various factors that would have been taken into account by the domestic court that dealt with the possession application in concluding that the defendant, Mr McCann, had no arguable article 8 defence."
"The Fourth Section appear to believe that on an application for a summary judgment the court cannot consider 'any issue concerning the proportionality of the possession order'. Not so. An article 8 defence requires the judge to review the lawfulness of the local authority's decision to recover possession of the property in question and, in doing so, to review the factors that a responsible local authority ought to have taken into account in reaching its decision. The proportionality of the decision in all the circumstances of the case would be central to the review and if the local authority's decision could be shown to be outside the range of reasonable decisions that a responsible local authority could take, having regard both to the circumstances of the defendant as well as to all the other relevant circumstances, the decision would be held to be unlawful as a matter of public law. But in a case in which it is not reasonably arguable on the face of the pleadings, or from the contents of the affidavits that have been filed, that that is so, the judge can be expected to make a summary order for possession. The adjective 'summary' in this context does not mean that the judge would not have considered the proportionality of the requested possession order. It means that the article 8 case put forward by the defendant for a conclusion that a possession order would be disproportionate is not, in the opinion of the judge, capable of being sustained by serious argument. The notion that a defence based on an article 8 right to respect for a home requires the case to proceed to a full trial even though it is apparent that the defence cannot succeed is clearly absurd. An application for a summary judgment does require the defendant's contention that a possession order would be disproportionate to be given proper attention and, if reasonably arguable, to be permitted to proceed to a full trial."
"100. At common law, a landlord is entitled to possession of the demised premises if the tenant's lease or tenancy has expired or been validly terminated, and similarly a fortiori if there was only a licence. To that extent the appellant and the Secretary of State are correct in saying that the City Council was, in seeking possession, relying on a common law right. That is part of the picture, but it is far from the whole picture, and in my opinion it would be unrealistic, and productive of error, not to look at the whole picture. The fact is that the City Council's common law right was surrounded on all sides by statutory infrastructure, like a patch of grass in the middle of a motorway junction. The field of social housing is, as Baroness Hale of Richmond observed in Kay (para 185)
'an area of the law much trampled over by the legislature as it has tried to respond to shifting and conflicting social and economic pressures.' "
"119. By contrast, the important distinction drawn by our housing legislation between tenancies as to which the court must be satisfied, and those as to which it need not be satisfied, that it is reasonable to make a possession order is, Kay tells us, not open to attack under section 4 of HRA, because Parliament has over a long period worked out arrangements which strike a fair balance between the article 8 rights of existing tenants (who may be only probationary, or may have lost secure status as a result of past failings) and the claims of others with a pressing need for social housing. So the important distinctions drawn by the Housing Act 1985 (as amended) between different types of tenancy cannot, since Kay and at the legislative level, be attacked as incompatible with article 8 rights.
120. But Connors and McCann show that the decisions that a housing authority makes in giving effect to the legislation may be open to attack, subject to section 6(2)(b), as having been made with insufficient respect towards the tenant's article 8 rights. It is understandable that housing authorities, faced with long waiting lists and limited human and financial resources to deal with possession cases, should seek the simplest and cheapest way of obtaining possession from tenants or former tenants. Why embark on proceedings which may involve a day or more's oral evidence (possibly involving witnesses liable to be intimidated) if there appears to be a route under which the defendant will not be able to resist summary judgment? Does not the authority's duty to its council tax payers, and in particular to those on the waiting list, compel the choice of the simpler, cheaper remedy?
121. The decisions of the Strasbourg Court in Connors and McCann show that housing authorities may find that, in the long run, that course will not be simpler and cheaper. Their housing policies ought to take account of the article 8 rights of tenants or ex-tenants, even if they are protected by section 6(2)(b) from direct challenge in the courts."
"160. The next question is whether paragraph 110 in Kay itself prevents a challenge on article 8 grounds to the validity of the notice to quit. In my opinion, it does not. Both Qazi and Kay were, as I have shown, concerned with circumstances where it was clear or was held that there existed an unqualified domestic law right to possession. It was in that context that gateway (b) in paragraph 110 addressed the possibility of a challenge to the local authority's 'decision….. to recover possession as an improper exercise of its powers at common law', and defined the possibility of such a challenge by reference to conventional common law grounds of judicial review. Gateway (b) was not conceived with reference to a challenge on Human Rights Convention grounds to the validity of a public authority's exercise of a contractual right which if good would mean that no right to possession arose at all. My noble and learned friend, Lord Hope, underlined this distinction in Qazi itself. In paragraph 79 he identified as a 'wholly exceptional case' - in relation to which he reserved his opinion as to whether article 8 issues might be raised in the county court - a case 'where proceedings for possession were being taken following the service of a notice to quit by the housing authority, bearing in mind as Lord Millett points out that its decision to serve the notice to quit would be judicially reviewable in the High Court so long as the application was made within the relevant time limit'. He went on to distinguish Qazi on the basis that 'The situation in the present case is different, as it was a notice to quit served by one of the joint tenants that terminated the tenancy'. Since Kay the principle in Wandsworth LBC v. Winder allows judicial review points to be raised by way of defence and without time limit in the county court, but the distinction remains between cases (like Qazi and Kay) where the challenge is to a decision to enforce an undoubted right to possession by court proceedings and cases (like the present) where the challenge is to the decision to serve a notice to quit which is a contractual pre-condition to any right to possession."
The Arguments on Gateway (a) and my ruling
"I do not say that the right to respect for the home is irrelevant. But I consider that such interference with it as flows from the application of the law which enables the public authority landlord to exercise its unqualified right to recover possession, following service of a notice to quit which has terminated the tenancy, with a view to making the premises available for letting to others on its housing list does not violate the essence of the right to respect for the home under article 8(1). That is a conclusion which can be applied now to all cases of this type generally."
"It is primarily in relation to joint tenancies in these categories that the question whether or not notice to quit given by one of the joint tenants can determine the tenancy is of practical importance, particularly where, as in the instant case, the effect of the determination will be to deprive the other joint tenant of statutory protection. This may appear an untoward result and may consequently provoke a certain reluctance to hold that the law can permit one of two joint tenants unilaterally to deprive his co-tenant of 'rights' which both are equally entitled to enjoy. But the statutory consequences are in truth of no relevance to the question which your Lordships have to decide. That question is whether, at common law, a contractual periodic tenancy granted to two or more joint tenants is incapable of termination by a tenant's notice to quit unless it is served with the concurrence of all the joint tenants. That is the proposition which the appellant must establish in order to succeed.
As a matter of principle I see no reason why this question should receive any different answer in the context of the contractual relationship of landlord and tenant than that which it would receive in any other contractual context. If A and B contract with C on terms which are to continue in operation for one year in the first place and thereafter from year to year unless determined by notice at the end of the first or any subsequent year, neither A nor B has bound himself contractually for longer than one year. To hold that A could not determine the contract at the end of any year without the concurrence of B and vice versa would presuppose that each had assumed a potentially irrevocable contractual obligation for the duration of their joint lives, which, whatever the nature of the contractual obligations undertaken, would be such an improbable intention to impute to the parties that nothing less than the clearest express contractual language would suffice to manifest it. Hence, in any ordinary agreement for an initial term which is to continue for successive terms unless determined by notice, the obvious inference is that the agreement is intended to continue beyond the initial term only if and so long as all parties to the agreement are willing that it should do so. In a common law situation, where parties are free to contract as they wish and are bound only so far as they have agreed to be bound, this leads to the only sensible result."
The arguments on gateway (b) and my ruling
"The only behaviour which may be regarded by the authority (if he were a secure tenant of the authority) entitle the authority to a possession order under section 84 of the Housing Act 1985 on any ground mentioned in Part 1 of Schedule 2 to that Act (other that ground 8);…."
"Assuming, without deciding, that Article 8 is engaged at all – and the judge gave what seems to me to be a good reason why it was not – but assuming that it is engaged, it seems to me that Article 8 takes the applicant no further than his arguments based on the statutory scheme itself. Part 6 of the Housing Act as amended strikes the balance which Article 8 demands, and the code to which I have not referred in detail (but is a detailed exposition of how the authority should approach these statutory provisions) must, it seems to me, reflect – as I think Mr Gallivan was inclined to accept – the Article 8 considerations. Therefore, whether one is considering a case of this kind under Article 8 or under the statutory scheme makes no difference. In other words, Article 8 adds nothing to the applicant's points made under the statutory scheme".