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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> C1 & C2, R (on the Application of) v London Borough of Hackney [2014] EWHC 3670 (Admin) (07 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/3670.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3670 (Admin), [2015] PTSR 1011, [2014] WLR(D) 507 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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R (on the application of C1 and C2) (by their mother and litigation friend) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF HACKNEY |
Defendant |
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Mr Ali Reza Sinai (instructed by In House Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 29th October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Turner:
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
THE CHILDREN ACT 1989
SECTION 27
"(1) Where it appears to a local authority that any authority or other person mentioned in subsection (3) could, by taking any specific action, help in the exercise of any of their functions under this Part, they may request the help of that other authority or person, specifying the action in question.
(2) An authority whose help is so requested shall comply with the request if it is compatible with their own statutory or other duties and obligations and does not unduly prejudice the discharge of their functions.
(3) The persons are —
(a) any local authority; …
(c) any local housing authority; …"
BYAS
"Mr. Westgate on behalf of the applicant submitted to the learned single judge, and has repeated his submissions to this court, that that section catches the situation that prevailed in this case, in the sense that, one department of the same local authority was seeking help, within the same local authority, from another department, and that it is not necessary so to construe the section as to involve two separate local authorities.
The problem, amongst many, which confronts Mr. Westgate, in my judgment, is that his construction of section 27 offends the plain and natural meaning of the words used in the section and, furthermore, falls foul of section 29, which, in general terms, enables the authority which is requested to give the assistance contemplated by section 27 to recoup from the requesting authority the cost of the provision of services. It is a short point of construction that is involved, and the learned judge described that placed upon it by the applicant as "so strained as to be out of the question." I agree with that assessment. This is simply another way of saying that the point taken is unarguable."
"In my judgment, this application is perfectly hopeless. Section 27 of the Children Act 1989 enables a local authority to ask for the help of one of the other authorities mentioned in section 27(3). It seems to me quite unarguable that the requesting authority can itself be the authority to which the request is addressed. You cannot ask yourself for help."
LATER CASES
"62 … When enacting the Children Act 1989 Parliament envisaged that a local authority might need to seek help from other authorities, such as a local housing authority, in discharging its functions under Part III of the Act. Section 27 of the Children Act 1989 provides that the requested authority must comply with the request if it is compatible with its own duties and does not "unduly prejudice" the discharge of its own functions. The relevant authorities are obliged to cooperate with each other. So in discharging its duty under section 17(1) Lambeth council's social services department, as the local social services authority, may request help from the housing department, as the local housing authority, in re-housing A and her family. The housing department must comply with the request if it is compatible with its own duties and does not unduly prejudice the discharge of any of its functions. I emphasise the word "unduly". If such a request is made the housing department, much pressed as it undoubtedly is, must nonetheless take note that the department responsible for safeguarding the welfare of children has decided that these two children need better housing. The housing department will wish to consider the practicability of accelerating the provision of accommodation which at least in some respects is more suitable for the acute needs of these two disabled children."
"44 But that is by the way. It is one thing to hold that the actions of a local children's services authority should be categorised according to what they should have done rather than what they may have thought, whether at the time or in retrospect, that they were doing. It is another thing entirely to hold that the actions of a local housing authority should be categorised according to what the children's services authority should have done had the case been drawn to their attention at the time. In all of the above cases, the children's services authority did something as a result of which the child was provided with accommodation. The question was what they had done. In this case, there is no evidence that the children's services authority did anything at all. It is impossible to read the words -
"a child who is … provided with accommodation by the authority in the exercise of any functions … which are social services functions within the meaning of the Local Authority Social Services Act 1970 …"
to include a child who has not been drawn to the attention of the local social services authority or provided with any accommodation or other services by that authority. Once again, had this been a non-metropolitan authority, the housing authority could not have provided accommodation under section 20 and the social services authority could not have provided interim accommodation under section 188 . The position cannot be different as between the unitary and the non-unitary authorities."
THE ARGUMENT FROM THE ABSURD
"First, it was said that the housing authority were under a duty to provide permanent accommodation for the family of Mr. Smith at the request of the social services authority. Secondly, it was said that following that request, the housing authority should at least have given further consideration to the possibility of providing permanent accommodation for the Smith family. Thirdly, it was said that the housing authority should at least have provided and paid or considered the provision and payment for temporary accommodation. Fourthly, it was said that the letter dated 19 January 1993 did not give adequate reasons for refusing to comply with the request made by the social services authority for permanent accommodation and did not give any reason at all for refusing to comply with the request made by the social services authority for temporary accommodation. My Lords, these arguments demonstrate the need to prevent the functions of a housing authority and the functions of a social services authority becoming blurred. If any of these arguments were accepted, every social services authority will understandably seek to exercise their powers under section 27 in order to transfer the burden of the children of a person intentionally homeless from the social services authority to the housing authority. Every refusal by a housing authority to comply with a request under section 27 will be scrutinised and construed with the object of discovering grounds for judicial review. The welfare of the children involved the welfare of children generally and the interests of the public cannot be advanced by such litigation."
"…Parliament intended that the requesting local authority and the requested authority should co-operate in exercising their respective and different functions, under the relevant statutory schemes. Parliament did not, however, intend that the nature or scope of those respective functions of the requesting local authority and the requested authority should change, as a result of the imposition of a duty to co-operate."
"The social services authority are responsible for children and the housing authority are responsible for housing. The two authorities must co-operate. Judicial review is not the way to obtain co-operation. The court cannot decide what form co-operation should take."
"In conclusion I wish to express my complete agreement with the views expressed by my noble and learned friend, Lord Templeman, upon the effect of section 27 of the Children Act 1989. That section does not amend the Housing Act 1985. It is to be hoped that as a matter of normal practice a social services authority, faced with the problem of children who are threatened with homelessness, will explore the possibility of obtaining council accommodation informally and in a spirit of mutual co-operation rather than by an immediate formal request, unsupported by any offer of contribution, under the provisions of section 27."
ARTICLE 3
"1. In all actions concerning children, whether undertaken by public or private social welfare institutions, courts of law, administrative authorities or legislative bodies, the best interests of the child shall be a primary consideration.
2. States Parties undertake to ensure the child such protection and care as is necessary for his or her well-being, taking into account the rights and duties of his or her parents, legal guardians, or other individuals legally responsible for him or her, and, to this end, shall take all appropriate legislative and administrative measures.
3. States Parties shall ensure that the institutions, services and facilities responsible for the care or protection of children shall conform with the standards established by competent authorities, particularly in the area of safety, health, in the number and suitability of their staff, as well as competent supervision."
"The welfare of the children involved, the welfare of children generally and the interests of the public cannot be advanced by such litigation."
SUBSTANTIVE CONCLUSION
COSTS
i) the claimants shared the responsibility with the defendant for the drafting of the consent order;
ii) the defendant has already paid the costs of the entirety of the earlier proceedings notwithstanding the fact that responsibility for the wording of the ineffective undertaking which brought them to a conclusion was a shared effort;
iii) The claimants were on notice that the defendant was taking the section 27 issue by 18 September 2014 when the defendant filed Summary Grounds of Resistance.
Exercising my discretion in the light of these factors, I will order that the claimant shall pay two thirds of the defendant's costs of the claim on the standard basis to be assessed if not agreed. My order will contain other ancillary terms as to costs the details of which I do not propose to rehearse in this judgment.
PERMISSION TO APPEAL
"(1) whether there is a real prospect of success; or
(2) there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard".
I find neither of these threshold criteria to be made out with respect to all or, indeed, any of the grounds.
GROUND ONE
The Judge failed to recognise that a local housing authority and a local authority (with functions, powers and duties under adult community care legislation and the Children Act 1989) are to be treated as distinct and separate bodies, see R (M) v Hammersmith and Fulham LBC [2008] 1 WLR 535. Therefore, an "other authority" within s. 27 can refer to a different department of a Unitary Local Authority to the requesting department of the same Unitary Local Authority. Such an approach would provide consistency between unitary and non-unitary authorities and give effect to the purpose of section 27 which is to ensure that the needs of 'children in need' are met.
Reasons for Refusal
This point is specifically dealt with in paragraphs 33 and 34 of the judgment in this case. The Hammersmith and Fulham case was concerned with an entirely different statutory framework. It had nothing to do with section 27 Children Act 1989. The passage relied upon does nothing to undermine the reasoning of the Court of Appeal in Byas.
GROUND TWO
The Judge was wrong to have found that neither article 3 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) nor section 11 of the Children Act 2004 "can operate so as to equip me to subject section 27 to what I consider would be a strained and wholly artificial interpretation". Where there are two possible interpretations of the statutory provision the interpretation that should be followed is that which is consistent with the purpose of the provision and consistent with the international obligation found in article 3 UNCRC. The obligation on courts to ensure that the best interests of children are a primary consideration are not, as the judge found, met in the prioritisation of banding employed by the Respondent. The evidence before the court was to the effect that these children would be in unsuitable accommodation for many months if not years under the Respondent's banding system for the allocation of housing and that the younger child would be at risk on a daily basis.
Reasons for Refusal
This point is dealt with in paragraphs 47 to 51 inclusive of the judgment in this case. There are two central problems with this proposed ground. Firstly, my finding was that there were not two possible interpretations of section 27 but only one. Secondly, and in any event, the proposed ground wrongly equiparates the interests of the particular children in this case with the interests of children as a whole to which Article 3 and section 11 are directed.
GROUND THREE
The Judge found against the Appellants' interpretation of s. 27 because it would mean that "any inter-departmental request for help requiring specified action in the exercise of functions falling within the broad parameters of Part III of the 1989 Act would engage the requirements of sub-section 2." This statement is incorrect as it is clear from the language of s. 27 that a requesting authority would have to make plain it was making a request under that section, and that other requests would not invoke the requirement of the receiving authority to comply with that request. The Judge was therefore wrong in observing that "It is difficult to believe that Parliament could have intended to have created such a mechanistic and casual autogamy of a reviewable decision."
Reasons for Refusal
This issue is dealt with in paragraph 30 of the judgment. I am unable to identify anything in the wording of section 27 which requires the requesting authority to identify the section under which it is made or to clothe the request in any particular formality. In any event, it is clear from the judgment that my conclusion on this issue is not one upon which my decision rests.
GROUND FOUR
The rejection of the observations of Lord Nicholls in the House of Lords decision in R (G) v Barnet LBC [2004] 2 AC 208 was unwarranted. Even if there had not been argument directed on the interpretation of section 27 in that case, it can be assumed that Lord Nicholls had read the provision and on an ordinary reading had interpreted it in the same way as the Appellants have done so in the instant case. The Judge failed to place any weight on this which he should have done given that this interpretation of s. 27 was provided by a Judge of the highest court.
Reasons for Refusal
This issue is dealt with in paragraphs 31 and 32 of the judgment in this case. In summary, the observations of Lord Nicholls were:
i) Obiter;
ii) Deployed in a dissenting speech in support of a conclusion rejected by a majority of their Lordships;
iii) Almost certainly made without the benefit of argument; and
iv) Without reference to contrary Court of Appeal authority directly in point.
GROUND FIVE
The Judge wrongly rejected the Appellants' argument that it would be absurd if a distinction could be drawn between, on the one hand, a children's services authority in a shire county requesting help from a district council with housing functions and, on the other, a unitary authority from its own housing department. The former would fall within section 27 and the latter would not. In rejecting the "absurdity argument" the Judge relied upon his view that the Appellants had "over-estimated the practical public law consequences of a section 27 referral in any event." However, this point could not assist in providing an answer to the true construction of section 27 and the Judge erred in relying upon his view of the practical consequences of a section 27 request in deciding upon the correct interpretation of that section.
Reasons for Refusal
This issue is dealt with in paragraphs 35 to 46 inclusive of the judgment. The court is perfectly entitled to take into account the practical consequences of an argument of statutory construction based on absurdity. See Stock v. Frank Jones (Tipton) Ltd. [1978] 1 W.L.R. 231 and Canterbury City Council v Colley [1993] A.C. 401. "A court would only be justified in departing from the plain words of the statute were it satisfied that: (1) there is clear and gross balance of anomaly; (2) Parliament, the legislative promoters and the draftsman could not have envisaged such anomaly, could not have been prepared to accept it in the interest of a supervening legislative objective; (3) the anomaly can be obviated without detriment to such legislative objective; (4) the language of the statute is susceptible of the modification required to obviate the anomaly." There is no "gross balance of anomaly" in cases where the practical consequences are negligible or non-existent. In any event, the distinction between different authorities and departments within the same authority are by no means conceptually absurd in the first place and, even if it were, any alternative construction would be "so strained as to be out of the question", "perfectly hopeless" and "quite unarguable" (Byas and paragraphs 14 to 29 of the judgment). In short, even if the consequences of a straightforward construction were absurd (which they are not) not one of the four conditions laid down in Stock are fulfilled in this case.