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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> SB & Anor, R (On the Application Of) v London Borough Of Newham [2023] EWHC 2701 (Admin) (30 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/2701.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2701 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
____________________
THE KING | ||
(ON THE APPLICATION OF | ||
(1) SB | ||
(2) SBO) | Claimant | |
-and- | ||
LONDON BOROUGH OF NEWHAM | Defendant | |
-and- | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT | Interested Party |
____________________
Catherine Rowlands instructed by London Borough of Newham for the Defendant
Sian Reeves instructed by the Government Legal Department for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 18 October 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Dan Kolinsky KC:
The Proceedings
"I am satisfied that there is an arguable issue as to whether the Defendant owes a duty to house the Claimants, in circumstances where the Claimant has care needs, and accommodation is required to effectively deliver care and support, but those needs do not require the provision of residential care or supported accommodation and (says the Defendant) could be met in accommodation that should be provided by the Interested Party under s95 of the [IAA 1999]".
a. Background (including the assessments and the decision under challenge) (para 10)
b. The parties' positions (para 30)
c. Legal Context (para 36)
d. Analysis (para 73)
i. Preliminary issue (para 74)
ii. Ground 1 (para 102)
iii. Ground 2 (para 113)
iv. Ground 3 (para 122)
v. Alternative remedy (para 127)
vi. The position of the Second Claimant (para 130)
e. Relief (para 132)
Part A: Background (including the assessments and the decision under challenge)
a. Set out the First Claimant's medical history (p.8), noting he has (p.9) "moderate-severe learning disabilities", "delayed movement development" and "autistic features".
b. Noted the role of the Second Claimant as an informal carer (p.13).
c. Analysed the First Claimant's care and support needs in respect of "managing and maintaining nutrition" (p.15-16), noting that this could not be met independently. The outcome was recorded as: "Based on all of the information gathered it is evident that C1 will still require support to achieve this outcome independently. C1 will need support to build his confidence in using appliances in the kitchen and choosing healthy meals to prepare". In respect of the role of C2 as carer it was noted: "C2 supports him by providing and cooking his meals. Instead it would be advised that mum supports C1 in completing these tasks alone in order to support his independence". In terms of the support needed from adult social care services, it was noted: "It is recommended that C1 has a care package to support him to meet this domain independently as the reablement period was not sufficient to meet this need independently. A period of support over 6-12 months is recommended to allow C1 to be able to meet this domain independently".
d. In respect of developing and maintaining relationships, noted (p.18-19) the benefit of the First Claimant attending structured activities without his mother and that he would be supported to identify activities which he could attend with support from a community link worker.
e. In respect of accessing community facilities (p.19-20), identified the need for support to access community facilities and that the need could not be met independently.
f. In respect of maintaining a habitable home environment (p.21-23), noted needs which could not be met independently. The outcome recorded as "C1 will still require support to achieve this outcome independently. C1 will need further ongoing support to maintain a habitable home environment". In terms of the role of C2 as a carer, it noted that she helped him to maintain a habitable home environment but stated: "Instead, C1 would benefit from a carer to regain the skills he needs to maintain his space, complete his laundry without his mother's help". The assessment envisaged a role for additional support as follows: "It is recommended that C1 has a care package to support him to maintain a habitable home independently as the reablement period was not sufficient to meet this need independently".
g. Identified (at page 26) that the First Claimant had the following eligible needs: (i) managing and maintaining nutrition, (ii) developing and maintaining family or other personal relationships, (iii) making use of necessary facilities or services in the local community, (iv) maintaining a habitable home environment and (v) assessing and engaging in work/training.
h. Contained (at page 30) the pro-forma question, "are the person's needs best met in accommodation based services". The answer given was "no".
i. Set out in pages 30-32 a summary and "practitioner justification". The summary recorded the views of others including the reablement officer who noted that C1 "still requires support to access the community and in maintaining a habitable home environment". The practitioner justification noted "it is my view that a further period of support from an external agency will further enhance C1's capabilities to complete his day to day tasks independently, with focus in the domains below: - managing and maintaining nutrition, making use of necessary facilities or services in the local community, including public transport, and recreational facilities or services, developing and maintaining family or other relationships, maintaining home environment, work, training, education or volunteering" (emphasis added).
j. Contained the following recommendation (p.32): "It is my professional opinion that C1 has a commissioned care package of 4 hours per week to support him to access the community and identify activities that he can attend on a weekly basis".
"R (Westminster CC) v National Asylum Support Service [2002] UKHL 38 confirmed that asylum support is residual, and cannot be provided to individuals who are entitled to accommodation and support from a local authority, e.g.under the Care Act 2014. Your authority has accepted that my client has eligible care needs, some of which can only be met through the provision of accommodation. He is therefore not destitute and not eligible for s.95 support".
"the Claimants are entitled to accommodation and support under the Care Act 2014 because the First Claimant has eligible care needs that result from his disability and are accommodation-related. Although the Claimants are asylum seekers, the caselaw and legislation confirms that asylum support under s.95 of the [IAA 1999] is residual, and only available if there is no other form of support. As the Claimants are entitled to local authority accommodation and support under the Care Act 2014, they are not "destitute" for the purposes of s.95 of the [IAA 1999], and therefore are not eligible to be granted s.95 support" (emphasis original).
"C1 and his mother, C2, were provided accommodation and subsistence by the London Borough of Newham Adult Service on a non-prejudice basis. The purpose of the accommodation provided to C1 and his mother C2, was solely to undertake a Community Care Assessment which has now been completed, he was assessed as having an eligible needs and appropriate support is in place. C2 has no eligibility needs but she is deemed to be the sole carer for her son and appropriate carer assessment has been carried out under the Care Act 2014 as well. The Care Act 2014, does not allow Local Authorities to meet mainstream housing needs. Neither, C1 or his mother C2 require specialist housing. Similarly, C1 or his mother C2 was also assessed as not eligible for housing assistance under the Housing Act 1996 due to him not having recourse to public funds.
It has recently been brought to our notice that C1 & C2 have an active Asylum claim with the home office Therefore, would be eligible for accommodation and subsistence under s.95 Immigration and Asylum Act 1999.
Therefore, we are writing to inform you, the London Borough of Newham has no duty to provide accommodation or subsistence and we will terminate the current accommodation and subsistence provision in 28 days this will take us to 2nd June 2023".
Part B: The parties' positions
a. First, that the Defendant had erred in relying on the availability of asylum support under s.95 of the IAA 1999.
b. Second, that the Defendant failed to apply the correct test in deciding whether to accommodate the Claimants. This ground, as pleaded, took issue with the Defendant's reliance on the fact that the First Claimant did not require specialist accommodation or residential care. It contended (at para 48): "This is a misdirection in law. The question is not whether he required "specialist accommodation" or "residential care" or "accommodation from the local authority", or any variation of these formulations. The question is whether the care and support which the First Claimant requires is "of a sort which is normally provided in the home (whether ordinary or specialised) and would be "effectively useless" if he had no home"" (emphasis original). The grounds for judicial review made clear (at paragraph 51) that "The Court is not invited to answer this question for itself. But the Defendant, as primary decision maker, should be required to reconsider the matter correctly".
c. The third ground was that the Defendant had misdirected itself in relying on s.23 of the CA 2014 because asylum seekers were excluded from eligibility to homelessness assistance under the Housing Act 1996.
Part C: Legal Context
(1) CA 2014
"1.1 The core purpose of adult care and support is to help people to achieve the outcomes that matter to them in their life…Underpinning all of these individual 'care and support functions' (that is, any process, activity or broader responsibility that the local authority performs) is the need to ensure that doing so focuses on the needs and goals of the person concerned."
(2) Accommodation-related needs for care and support
a. In R (SG) v Haringey London Borough Council [2015] EWHC Civ 2579 (Admin), at para 66, John Bowers QC sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge summarised the applicable approach as follows:-
i. The services provided by the council must be accommodation-related for accommodation to be potentially a duty.
ii. In most cases the matter is best left to the good judgment and common sense of the authority.
iii. Accommodation-related care and attention means care and attention of a sort which is normally provided in the home or will be effectively useless if the claimant has no home.
b. The correctness of the approach in SG was endorsed in R (GS) v Camden LBC [2016] EWHC 1762 (Admin) paras 25-29 by Peter Marquand sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge who concluded that a need for care and assistance did not include a need for accommodation alone (para 29).
c. In R (Aburas) v Southwark LBC [2019] EWHC 2754 (Admin) Michael Fordham QC (as he then was) sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge explained at para 6:-
i. "the need for accommodation is not itself a "looked after need" but the provision of accommodation may be called for under CA 2014 so as to secure effective care and support for a looked after need.
ii. It was agreed between Counsel in that case that accommodation becomes appropriately provided pursuant to CA 2014 "when the person has a "looked after need" of care and support whose effective delivery requires accommodation".
iii. the importance for a "disciplined focus on looked after needs" to avoid undermining the integrity of the statutory framework in the CA 2014 by allowing it to become a backdoor route to claims based on accommodation needs circumventing the Housing Act scheme and jumping the homelessness queue.
"The need has to be for care and attention which is not available otherwise than through the provision of such accommodation. As any guidance given on this point in this judgment is strictly obiter, it would be unwise to elaborate, but the care and attention obviously has to be accommodation-related. This means that it has at least to be care and attention of a sort which is normally provided in the home (whether ordinary or specialised) or will be effectively useless if the claimant has no home. So the actual result in the Mani case may well have been correct. The analysis may not be straightforward in every case. The matter is best left to the good judgment and common sense of the local authority and will not normally involve any issue of law requiring the intervention of the court" (emphasis added).
(3) Accommodation and financial support under IAA 1999
" (1) This regulation applies where it falls to the Secretary of State to determine for the purposes of section 95(1) of the Act whether– (a) a person applying for asylum support, or such an applicant and any dependants of his, or (b) a supported person, or such a person and any dependants of his, is or are destitute or likely to become so within the period prescribed by regulation 7……. (3) The Secretary of State must ignore– (a) any asylum support, and (b) any support under section 98 of the Act, which the principal or any dependant of his is provided with or, where the question is whether destitution is likely within a particular period, might be provided with in that period. (4) But he must take into account– … (b) any other support which is available to the principal or any dependant of his, or might reasonably be expected to be so available in that period"
(4) Relationship between the CA 2014 and IAA 1999
"..the national scheme is designed to be a scheme of last resort. The regulations require the Secretary of State, in deciding whether an asylum seeker is destitute, to take into account any other support available to the asylum seeker, including support available under section 21 of the 1948 Act: Asylum Support Regulations 2000 (SI 2000/704), regulation 6(4)(b); the Slough case, para 27. Conversely, the local authority, in answering the questions raised by that provision, must disregard the support which might hypothetically be available under the national scheme: see e g R (O) v Barking and Dagenham London Borough Council (The Children's Society intervening) [2011] 1 WLR 1283, para 40." (emphasis added)
(5) Applicability of the Homelessness provisions under the Housing Act 1996
Part D: Analysis
(1) The Preliminary issue
a. In respect of managing and maintaining nutrition, where the First Claimant is said to need support to build his confidence in using appliances in the kitchen and choosing healthy meals to prepare (p.16); and
b. In respect of maintaining the home environment, where it is said that the First Claimant needs ongoing support to maintain a habitable home environment and explicitly envisages this support being provided by adult social care services.
(2) Ground 1
103. It is clear that the role of the local authority under the CA 2014 is to address the issue of whether there are eligible needs for care and support which are accommodation related. It should do so focussing on the Claimant's wellbeing, individual circumstances and eligible needs for care and support without reference to the SSHD's residual powers. This is made clear in the existing authorities – see Lord Hoffmann's characterisation of the Secretary of State's powers as "residual" in para 38 of R (Westminster City Council) v NASS, Lord Carnwath's explanation of the scheme being designed as one of last resort (in para 9 of L) and the concession of the Defendant in paragraph 15 of SG v Haringey.
104. By contrast, in this case the Defendant relied on the availability of accommodation from the SSHD without lawfully addressing the prior issue of whether the First Claimant had accommodation-related eligible needs for care and support.
105. Applying the legal framework described in Part C above to the Defendant's decision in its letter dated 5 May 2023, it is clear in my view, that the Defendant misdirected itself by treating the availability of accommodation under s.95 of the IAA 1999 as the answer to the request which the Claimants made to meet (what they asserted were) the First Claimant's accommodated related eligible needs for care and support.
106. It would have been open to the Defendant to engage with the premise of that contention and decide for itself whether the Claimant had accommodation-related needs for care and support (applying the correct legal approach). As I have explained above, it did not do so.
107. For these reasons, ground 1 succeeds.
108. I record the SSHD's position on the interplay of the statutory provisions.
109. First, the SSHD stressed that the focus of the CA 2014 was to undertake a person centred assessment of needs for care and support which includes the impact of decisions on the person's wellbeing.
(3) Ground 2
a. The SSHD Guidance is not intended for local authorities or to provide guidance as to how local authorities discharge obligations arising under the CA 2014.
b. It is not accepted that the SSHD's Guidance in any way precludes the Defendant from providing the First Claimant with accommodation under the CA 2014 for 3 reasons.
i. First, the SSHD's guidance makes it clear that it is her understanding that "Local Authorities are generally only expected to provide accommodation to asylum seekers if their assessment shows that the person needs the sort of residential care that LA adult services are required to provide" (SSHD's emphasis).
ii. Second, the Guidance does not purport to fetter in any way the local authorities' discretion as to when to provide and/or the nature of support required to secure practical and effective delivery of eligible care or for "accommodation-related needs".
iii. The decision of the Defendant needs to be viewed against the Defendant's relevant statutory obligations and relevant case law, as opposed to the SSHD's Guidance (which in any event is not applicable to local authorities).
(4) Ground 3
(5) Alternative Remedy
(6) The Position of the Second Claimant
Part E: Relief