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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 >> Ugiagbe v London Borough of Southwark [2009] EWCA Civ 31 (10 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/31.html Cite as: [2009] NPC 25, [2009] PTSR 1465, [2009] EWCA Civ 31 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE LAMBETH COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WELCHMAN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
and
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
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IYEKEKPOLOR UGIAGBE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE LONDON BOROUGH OF SOUTHWARK |
Respondent |
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Donald Broatch (instructed by Legal & Democratic Services, London Borough of Southwark) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 22 January 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Housing Act 1996, section 191
"(1) A person becomes homeless intentionally if he deliberately does or fails to do anything in consequence of which he ceases to occupy accommodation which is available for his occupation and which it would have been reasonable for him to continue to occupy.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) an act or omission in good faith on the part of a person who was unaware of any relevant fact shall not be treated as deliberate.
(3) A person shall be treated as becoming homeless intentionally if—
(a) he enters into an arrangement under which he is required to cease to occupy accommodation which it would have been reasonable for him to continue to occupy, and
(b) the purpose of the arrangement is to enable him to become entitled to assistance under this Part,
and there is no other good reason why he is homeless."
Previous decisions as to "good faith"
"So there is a distinction between honest blundering and carelessness on the one hand, where a person can still act in good faith, and dishonesty on the other hand whether there can be no question of the person acting in good faith."
The judge set aside the council's decision and directed it to be reconsidered.
"They [i.e. the council] have addressed themselves only to the question whether it was reasonable for the present appellant to come back, without making enquiries, expecting that the flat would be available to him although in truth it was not; they have not addressed themselves to whether he was acting in good faith. But the Act does not, unfortunately, make the reasonableness of the person's conduct in ignorance or without inquiring into a material fact, the criterion of ignorance of that fact. Therefore the decision made cannot stand."
"24. If the reviewing officer's letter had to be considered simply as an exercise of judgment about whether the O'Connors were a deserving case, I would think it entirely rational. Everything in it makes perfectly good sense. But the local authority has to start not from the broad question whether applicants have behaved wisely or prudently, or even reasonably, but from the statutory tests."
"29. Here the operative cause on which the respondent now founds, contending that it is not saved by s.191(2), is the O'Connors' decision to leave the dwelling in the care of others without "safeguarding [their] interest", in particular by notifying the Housing Trust of their absence. But s.191(2) also operates on a single cause – "unaware of any relevant fact" – and the appellants here say, and have said throughout, that they acted in good faith, unaware that Walton was not to be trusted, that the rent had not been paid and that possession proceedings had been brought. That they could and should have notified the Housing Trust and used its procedure for absent tenants, they say, may well be right, but s.191(2) sets a minimum, not an optimum, standard of care for one's own interests.
30. It is no doubt because of the harshness of s.191(1), which fixes people with all the unintended and unpredictable consequences of what may have been perfectly reasonable and prudent acts, that s.191(2) is there to mitigate it. It does so, however, not by breaking the chain of cause and effect where the effect was unintended and unpredictable, but by qualifying the deliberate act which has produced the effect: see the analysis made by this court in R v Tower Hamlets LBC, ex parte Rouf (1991) 23 HLR 460, 467, 470. It subtracts from the category of deliberate acts and omissions those done in good faith and in ignorance of "any relevant fact". Importantly, it imposes no requirement that such ignorance must be reasonable. Without attempting an exhaustive definition, "any relevant fact" must include, if it is not confined to, facts which in the event have brought about the applicant's homelessness. Secondly, wilful ignorance, at least, must fail the good faith test."
Later he said this:
"34. The judge's finding, like the review decision, makes perfectly good common sense, but it does not reflect the test set out in the statute. In particular, as Dillon LJ pointed out in Ex parte Rouf, s.191(2) does not qualify the word 'unaware' by requiring the lack of awareness to have been reasonable. A person's ignorance may well be due to their having behaved unreasonably but what they do in consequence may still be done in good faith. The statutory dividing line, as it seems to me, comes not at the point where the applicant's ignorance of a relevant fact was due to his own unreasonable conduct but at the point where, for example, by shutting his eyes to the obvious he can be said not to have acted in good faith."
"In conducting a review under section 202 of the 1996 Act, a local housing authority is obliged to consider the effect of section 191(2), even if they have not been specifically invited to do so (O'Connor paragraphs 35, 40, 54), if it is sensibly capable of arising on the facts (Aw-Aden paragraphs 10-12). An applicant's appreciation of the prospects of future housing can be treated as "awareness of a relevant fact" for the purposes of the sub-section, provided that it is sufficiently specific and provided that it is based on some genuine investigation and not mere aspiration (Obeid at page 398; Aw-Aden paragraphs 10, 11). If it is established that the applicant was unaware of a relevant fact, the question is not whether the ignorance was reasonable but whether it was in good faith. The statutory dividing line comes not at the point where the applicant's ignorance of a relevant fact was due to his own unreasonable conduct but at the point where, for example, by shutting his eyes to the obvious he can be said not to have acted in good faith. Wilful ignorance, at least, must fail the good faith test (O'Connor paragraphs 34, 30). If the prospect of future housing rests on little more than a wing and a prayer, it cannot be said that an original decision maker or a review panel falls into legal error by failing to invoke section 191(2) in favour of the applicant (Aw-Aden paragraph 11). In such a case, section 191(2) is a non-starter and no specific reference to it is needed (Aw-Aden paragraph 12)."
"Ms Rowlands' first and complete answer to the first ground of appeal, which I would accept, is that the review decision did not accept the facts upon which it was suggested that section 191(2) arose for consideration. It was not accepted that the claimant had been told that housing benefit would cover the rent of the larger property. It was not accepted that the appellant thought that housing benefit would pay the rent in full. Further, the facts found, in my view, show at best that she took the tenancy of the larger property not knowing whether housing benefit would cover the rent and not being bothered about the rent. She thus at best proceeded on a wing and a prayer, so that section 191(2) did not arise for consideration. In my view, her conduct may be characterised as wilful ignorance or shutting her eyes to the obvious, thus failing the good faith test. It is not as if she was not warned that she risked being found intentionally homeless if she gave up the council flat tenancy. In human terms, this is a profoundly sad conclusion, which does not address the plight of her and her children. But within the confines of the 1996 Act and the authorities which I have referred, I consider it to be the correct analysis."
"The effect of those judgments, as I understand them, is that an applicant's appreciation of the prospects of future housing or future employment can be treated as 'awareness of a relevant fact' for the purposes of this subsection, provided it is sufficiently specific (that is related to specific employment or specific housing opportunities) and provided it is based on some genuine investigation and not mere 'aspiration'."
"In considering whether there was sufficient evidence of intentional homelessness before the judge one must consider the plan he had to set up a business by charging his house for the purpose of raising the necessary funds. It is not enough simply to find that he was a hopeless businessman or that the venture was ill-advised, but it is necessary to look at all the circumstances of the case to decide whether, on the one hand, he honestly believed he was acting sensibly or, on the other, he knew perfectly well the risk he was taking namely that his house might be repossessed."
Later on the same page, identifying factors which had to be considered:
"Fourthly, that there had been no testing on his part of the market before he entered into the transaction. It was really pointless asking the local authority if they were prepared to use his bed and breakfast accommodation after the money had been expended. He would need to know whether that was a possibility beforehand. In that, once again, it is possible to detect an element of recklessness in his approach to the transaction."
Summarising the effect of the various factors, at 306, he said:
"These factors, in my judgment, take this case beyond the stage of honest incompetence and provide material upon which it can be said that the applicant was deliberately putting his house at risk."
Was the Appellant's act done in good faith?
Remedy
Lord Justice Jacob
Lord Justice Sedley