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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 >> Slattery v Basildon Borough Council [2014] EWCA Civ 30 (22 January 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/30.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 30 |
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ON APPEAL FROM SOUTHEND COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Moloney QC
1BQ00503
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
and
MR. JUSTICE ARNOLD
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KATHLEEN SLATTERY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BASILDON BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Respondent |
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GALINA WARD (instructed by BASILDON BOROUGH COUNCIL) for the RESPONDENT
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Briggs :
"It seems to me that there are no absolute standards to be applied to this issue. There will obviously be exceptional cases where the degree of impairment to the physical or mental wellbeing of the applicant consequent on their being housed in the accommodation will be so serious that nothing can justify it being treated as suitable. R v Brent London Borough Council, ex p Omar (1991) 23 HLR 446 was just such a case involving, as it did, the accommodation of a Somalian refugee who had been imprisoned and tortured in her own country in a filthy, cockroach infested basement flat with high windows and soaking walls. But at the other end of the scale the risk (e.g.) of depression may be slight and the consequences easily contained. It is clear that in Lee Longmore LJ (albeit obiter) did not regard the possibility of psychiatric harm as sufficient to take the accommodation below the Wednesbury line. In principle, I agree with this. If the local authority has no available accommodation in the form of a caravan site it is not, in my view, required to acquire land as part of its duty to provide accommodation for the applicants. As Longmore LJ explains in paragraph 16 of his judgment in Lee, the provisions of s.193 contemplate the performance of the duty using the housing authority's existing resources within a limited timescale. A cultural aversion to bricks and mortar is not enough to make the offer of such accommodation Wednesbury unreasonable even if (as in Mrs Sheridan's case) it may risk bouts of depression. It is reasonable for those to be treated if they occur in just the same way as she has sought and obtained treatment for depression in the past."
"Although these are powerful points, I am not persuaded that they can be addressed through the medium of a s.204 appeal. It seems to me to be completely unrealistic to expect a housing officer on a s.202 review to conduct a general inquiry into strategic questions about the preparation of a homelessness strategy and the adequacy of site provision. This would require the officer to review the planning policies of the local authority; the history of site provision; the inadequacy or otherwise of decisions taken about the change of use of land from a planning perspective; and the accuracy of its estimates of gypsy and Traveller numbers over the relevant period. These are matters which fall well outside the expertise of a housing officer and would require detailed and probably extensive evidence. I do not accept that Parliament can have intended the review machinery provided by s.202 to encompass an inquiry of that kind. The review must have been intended to have a much narrower focus of whether the offer of accommodation from within the housing authority's existing resources adequately met the applicant's needs."
1) That the judge was wrong to find that the Review Decision had reasonably concluded that the proffered accommodation was suitable;
2) That the judge had been wrong to conclude that the Review Decision was a proportionate interference with her Convention rights;
3) That the judge had been wrong to treat himself as bound by the Sheridan case, in relation to the question whether the Council could rely upon the absence of available caravan sites or pitches.
Grounds (1) and (2)
Dr. Slater's report
"If eviction was associated with a removal of Ms. Slattery's support, as would probably be the case, it is highly likely that she would be completely unable to cope, and become very distressed. This may well be so pronounced that she might require admission to a psychiatric hospital which she would find extremely stressful in itself. It is often the case that for Travellers hospital admission can manage immediate risk, but is actually an obstacle to recovery due to the person being removed from their familiar environment and support network, as well as their having an aversion to 'bricks and mortar'.
If Ms. Slattery were forced to accept the accommodation she has been offered by the Council, it is likely that she would become more depressed and anxious, and her post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms would worsen. In fact, as the prospect of moving in became more immediate, her anxiety would reach such a pitch that she would probably be unable to enter the property at all. In the event that she was able to move in, it is highly likely that her distress would steadily increase until it became so intense that she would leave the property and ask to be taken in by another Traveller.
In such circumstances, it is unlikely that Ms. Slattery would be able to care adequately for her 12-year old son, and he would have to live elsewhere. Although I have not addressed Ms. Slattery's son, it is likely that he would also be very distressed about having to move away from the familiar environment of Dale Farm and the sense of community that exists there."
The Review Decision
"It has been submitted that there is a real risk of you suffering significant psychiatric harm if you were to live in conventional housing, and Dr. Slater's evidence is noted and has been fully taken into account. The review panel have considered Dr. Slater's report, and note that he states that after the incident in Wolverhampton you have been depressed and have been suffering moderate depression since 2008. He further states that you are still suffering from mild post traumatic stress disorder. The panel note that none of this is related to the prospect of your having to live in Bricks and Mortar type accommodation. Dr Slatter (sic) talks largely of the effects of the eviction from Dale Farm upon you, however it has been agreed in the Courts that the eviction will take place and a move to alternative accommodation is inevitable. Should you feel that your mental state deteriorates at any time in the future you should seek medical input from your G.P, which might include a referral to the mental health services."
The judgment
"The review panel's main reason for rejecting Dr. Slater's report was that it linked the adverse consequences of the move to the eviction rather than to "bricks and mortar". This was half right; he linked them to the move, not the eviction but more to the effects of separation from friends and family than to "bricks and mortar" itself."
Analysis
Ground 3
"And, fourth, where it is shown that a local housing authority has been doing all that it could, the court would not make an order to force it to do the impossible. Its duty was to secure the availability of suitable accommodation within a reasonable period of time, the reasonableness of that period depending on the circumstances of each case and on what accommodation was available. In ex p Begum, Collins J said, at 816:
"… Parliament has not qualified the duty in any way: it could have done. However, the situation for the council is not quite so desperate as might be thought. While the duty exists, no court will enforce it unreasonably. Mr Luba [counsel for the applicant] accepts that it would be unreasonable for an applicant to seek mandamus within a few days of the duty arising if it were clear that the council was doing all that it could, nor, in its discretion, would a court make such an order. Indeed, permission would probably be refused.""
Mr. Justice Arnold :
Lord Justice Sullivan :