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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Wall v Sheffield City Council [2006] EWCA Civ 495 (23 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/495.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 495 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM SHEFFIELD COUNTY COURT
MR RECORDER AKE
(LOWER COURT NO. SE 355037)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
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STEVEN WE PING WALL | APPELLANT | |
- v – | ||
SHEFFIELD CITY COUNCIL | RESPONDENT |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR THOMAS TYSON (instructed by Sheffield City Council Legal Department, Town Hall, Pinsent Street, Sheffield S1 2HH) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
"A person is qualified to succeed the tenant under a secure tenancy if he occupies the dwelling-house as his only or principal home at the time of the tenant's death and either –
…
(b) he is another member of the tenant's family and has resided with the tenant throughout the period of twelve months ending with the tenant's death; …"
(a) that the appellant was not a member of Mrs Wall's family for the purpose of section 87 of the Act, in particular by reason of the definition of membership of a person's family contained in section 113 of the Act.
(b) that the appellant had not resided with Mrs Wall throughout the period of twelve months ending with her death, namely the twelve months between 22 June 2002 and 21 June 2003.
(a) In 1986 Mrs Wall, who had previously lived elsewhere in Stannington, was granted a tenancy of the property, a two bedroom house. The tenancy was on the express basis that the occupants of the property would be Mrs Wall herself and her "son", this being a reference to the appellant.
(b) In fact in 1985, when he was aged 19, the appellant had embarked upon an undergraduate study of law at Hull University, whence he successfully graduated in 1988. I cannot, however, think that there could be any sensible dispute but that, as a student away during term time at Hull, the appellant during those years remained resident at the property.
(c) It seems that, following graduation in 1988, the appellant had some difficulty, or perhaps some hesitation, about pursuing a career in law. For the next eleven years, namely until 1999, he seems to have pursued other courses of study, in particular, between 1996 and 1999, a BA degree course in insurance at London Metropolitan University. Again there is no clear evidence that he had ceased to reside with Mrs Wall during those 11 years.
(d) In September 1999 the appellant won a two year training contract with the well-known firm of solicitors, DLA, in Sheffield. During that time, according to him, he lived with Mrs Wall at the property.
(e) With effect from 1 September 2001, however, the appellant was transferred to work under a six months' contract, i.e. until 1 March 2002, with DLA at their London office. Because he was to be working in London, the appellant entered into a tenancy agreement to rent a flat in Brentwood, Essex. Unable to take the tenancy only for six months, he took it for one year, from September 2001, but with the facility to break it at the end of six months.
(f) In November 2001 the appellant was admitted as a solicitor. It was, as Mrs Wall and the other members of the family proudly agreed, a great achievement on his part.
(g) In February 2002 DLA extended the appellant's contract for work in their London office for three months until 1 June 2002. Later, in May 2002, when he apprised them of the fact that he had proved unable to extricate himself from his tenancy of the flat in Brentwood until 28 June 2002, DLA extended the contract for a further four weeks until that date.
(h) Thus the appellant's work in London for DLA ultimately ended on 28 June 2002. To use neutral terminology, he physically returned to live with Mrs Wall at the property. He did so in two stages: he partly moved back during a weekend around 29/30 June 2002 and he fully moved back, with all his belongings, on 6 July 2002.
(i) The appellant's intention was to find work as a solicitor in Sheffield. But he does not seem to have found it easy to do so. On 1 August 2002 he claimed jobseekers' allowance. Thereafter a deterioration in Mrs Wall's health led him to postpone active attempts to find professional or other work. In February 2003 Mrs Wall was diagnosed with cancer and her condition inexorably worsened. For about three months between February and May 2003 she was in hospital. Thereupon she returned to live in the property until her death on 21 June 2003. Throughout her last months the appellant, residing at the property, sought lovingly to care for her. Her death has clearly had a profound effect upon him.
(1) the appellant had never figured on the electoral register as resident at the property;
(2) for every year from 1998 until her death Mrs Wall, who was found, on a mass of evidence, to be a conspicuously honest woman, had consistently claimed the discount for council tax available to sole occupants of a property;
(3) in April 2001, in the course of an application to be registered for re-housing, Mrs Wall had said that, in the proposed new property, she would be living alone.
(4) in claiming jobseekers' allowance in August 2002, and in doing so again in February 2003, the appellant had claimed that he was living at the property with Mrs Wall but that they were not living in the same household;
(5) on 15 April 2003, i.e. two months prior to Mrs Wall's death, Mrs Harvey, a social worker whom the appellant called to give evidence, noted during or following an interview with Mrs Wall in hospital "son living temp. only" and, following a second interview eight days later, she again noted "son only with her temp."; and
(6) in a written claim for housing benefit signed by her in May 2003, i.e. a month prior to her death, Mrs Wall answered the question "does anyone else normally live with you?" with a tick in the box marked "no".
"Going through the whole thread of these matters is the common principle that, in order to occupy premises as a home, first, there must be signs of occupation – that is to say, there must be furniture and so forth so that the house can be occupied as a home – and, secondly, there must be an intention, if not physically present, to return to it."
(1) where absence is more prolonged than is to be explained by holiday or ordinary business reasons and is unintermittent, the onus lies on the absent person to establish an intention to return;
(2) an inward intention is insufficient; it must be accompanied by some outward sign of the person's intention;
(3) the person must show that there is a real possibility that the intention to return will be fulfilled within a reasonable time; and
(4) the person's case can prevail even though he has another home or residence but the court will look with particular care at two-home cases.
Then, extending those principles to the argument under section 87 which was before the court, Thorpe LJ added that it was clear that a period of absence did not necessarily break the continuity of residence and that, in determining whether departure had that consequence, regard had to be had to the nature and extent of the continuing connection with the property throughout the period of absence and the quality of the intention to return.
"I have to say with some regret that I did not find the defendant to be a convincing or credible witness. None of the above taken individually can be said to decide the matter one way or another, but as I have said, I have to look at all the surrounding circumstances. There are too many ambiguities in this case, and taking all the circumstances into account, I cannot say that the defendant has discharged his burden of proof. I cannot say on balance that I am satisfied as a matter of fact that he has satisfied the twelve-month residence qualification. I cannot therefore say that I am satisfied on balance that he either regarded number 18 as his permanent home or habitually lived there. It may be, and I do not have to decide this, that he used it as an accommodation address and only lived there in between jobs or when studying away. He fails to satisfy the residence qualification and therefore it follows that I must grant the council's application for possession."
"Mr Wall registered with this agency on 11 June 2002. Our records show that he gave his home address as 18 Oldfield Terrace … He informed us he was shortly finishing a contract with DLA in London and was returning to his home in Sheffield. He asked us to find him a locum IT position around Sheffield or the neighbouring cities … as he intended to commute from home".
That document was not mentioned by the recorder in his judgment. It seems to me to be consistent with an intention, in June 2002, to return to and to occupy the premises in Sheffield as the appellant's home. In those circumstances it was a document of some potential significance.
"Steven left our employment on 28/06/2002 at the end of a temporary contract [emphasis added]. At the time of employment our records show his address was given as 18 Oldfield Terrace, Stannington, Sheffield, S6 6EB and next of kin details were June Wall, Mother, of the same address".
"… having moved down from Sheffield to the London office on 31 August 2001. He was employed as a non-qualified solicitor on a 6 month fixed term contract … This contract ran from 1 September 2001 to 28 February 2002, and was extended until 28 May 2002. However, due to minimum notice requirements on his flat, his contract was further extended to 28 June 2002. Steven's address is shown on our records as: 18 Oldfield Terrace, Stannington, Sheffield, S6 6EB."
Coupled with the letter from the employment agency, that is highly material evidence of his intention at the material time, and it needed to be referred to in a proper judgment of the court.
Order: Appeal allowed.
Application for permission to rely on further evidence refused.