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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Minott v Cambridge City Council [2022] EWCA Civ 159 (18 February 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/159.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 159, [2022] PTSR 786, [2022] WLR(D) 90 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE AND PLANNING COURT
Judge Lickley QC (Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division))
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LADY JUSTICE MACUR
____________________
LEMARI MINOTT |
Claimant/Appellant |
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- and - |
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CAMBRIDGE CITY COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Nicholas Grundy QC and Elizabeth England (instructed by Cambridge City Council) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 26 January 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Macur LJ:
The relevant statutory scheme
"10.5 … 'normal residence' is to be understood as meaning 'the place where at the relevant time the person in fact resides.' Residence in temporary accommodation provided by a housing authority can constitute normal residence of choice and can contribute towards a local connection.
10.6 In the case of a person who is street homeless or insecurely accommodated ('sofa surfing') the housing authority will need to carry out a different type of inquiry to be satisfied as to their 'normal residence' than would be required for an applicant who has become homeless from more settled accommodation. If an applicant has no settled accommodation elsewhere, and from inquiries the authority is satisfied that they do in fact reside in the district, then there will be normal residence for the purposes of the 1996 Act.
10.7 The Local Authorities Agreement suggests that a working definition of normal residence sufficient to establish a local connection should be residence for at least 6 months in an area during the previous 12 months, or for three years during the previous five-year period.
…
10.13 The test regarding local connection, as set out in section 199(1) should be applied, … The fact that an applicant may satisfy one of these grounds will not necessarily mean that they have been able to establish a local connection.
10.14 The overriding consideration should always be whether the applicant has a connection 'in real terms' with an area and the housing authority must consider the applicant's individual circumstances, particularly any exceptional circumstances, before reaching a decision."
"… It is suggested that a working definition of "normal residence" should be residence for at least 6 months in the area during the previous 12 months, or for not less than 3 years during the previous 5-year period. The period taken into account should be up to the date of the authority's decision. This should include any periods living in temporary accommodation secured by the authority under s.188 (interim duty pending inquiries);"
The relevant facts leading to the second homelessness application
"For me it is clear that you started to reside in Cambridge on 26 March 2019 when the Council provided you with interim accommodation and you have not accrued six months residency in this area.
Given the above, I am not satisfied that you have been resident in the district of Cambridge for 6 out of the last 12 months or 3 out of the last 5 years."
The Judgment below
The appeal
Lewison LJ:
Introduction
The facts
The basic framework
"(1) A person has a local connection with the district of a local housing authority if he has a connection with it —
(a) because he is, or in the past was, normally resident there, and that residence is or was of his own choice,
(b) because he is employed there,
(c) because of family associations, or
(d) because of special circumstances."
"… "normal residence" is to be understood as meaning "the place where at the relevant time the person in fact resides". Residence in temporary accommodation provided by a housing authority can constitute normal residence of choice and can contribute towards a local connection."
"It is suggested that a working definition of "normal residence" should be residence for at least 6 months in the area during the previous 12 months, or for not less than 3 years during the previous 5-year period."
"A local connection not founded upon any of the four stated factors is irrelevant. The fundamental concept of section [198 (2)] is local connection, not any local connection, but a local connection having any of the origins described in section [199]. The opinion which has to be formed by a notifying housing authority in a residence case is not whether the homeless person is now or was in the past normally resident in the area of the notifying authority, but whether the applicant has now a local connection with either area based upon the fact that he is now or was in the past normally resident in that area."
"The fundamental question is the existence of a "local connection." In construing section [198 (2)] it is only to be expected that the emphasis falls on "local connection," and not on past or present residence or current employment, etc. The Act is one which enables a homeless person in certain circumstances to jump over the heads of all other persons on a housing authority's waiting list, to jump the queue. One would not expect any just legislation to permit this to be done unless the applicant has in a real sense a local connection with the area in question. I accept that "residence" may be changed in a day, and that in appropriate circumstances a single day's residence may be enough to enable a person to say that he was normally resident in the area in which he arrived only yesterday. But "local connection" means far more than that. It must be built up and established; by a period of residence; or by a period of employment; or by family associations which have endured in the area; or by other special circumstances which spell out a local connection in real terms."
Multiple and sequential applications
What is a fresh application?
"It is Harrow's case that a person making a second application must demonstrate a change of circumstances which might lead to the second application being successful and it is for the local authority to decide whether that test has been satisfied. So, it is said, in the present case Mrs Fahia had not shown any new circumstance which could lead to the conclusion that she was not intentionally homeless and that accordingly Harrow could refuse to go through the whole process of making statutory inquiries again."
"I have sympathy with Harrow's case on this point but I am unable to extract from the statutory language any sufficient justification for the suggested short cut. Under section [184] the statutory duty to make inquiries arises if (a) a person applies for accommodation and (b) "the authority have reason to believe that he may be homeless or threatened with homelessness."… when an applicant has been given temporary accommodation under section [188] and is then found to be intentionally homeless, he cannot then make a further application based on exactly the same facts as his earlier application: see Delahaye v Oswestry Borough Council, The Times, 29 July 1980. But those are very special cases when it is possible to say that there is no application before the local authority and therefore the mandatory duty imposed by section [184] has not arisen. But in the present case there is no doubt that when Mrs. Fahia made her further application for accommodation she was threatened with homelessness. Moreover in my judgment her application could not be treated as identical with the earlier 1994 application…. It is impossible to say that there has been no relevant change in circumstances at all."
"… on receipt of what purports to be an application, an authority are bound to make inquiries, if they have reason to believe that the applicant is or may be homeless, unless the purported application can be shown to be no application. The only relevant basis upon which a purported subsequent application may be treated as no application, according to Fahia at p 1402, appears to be where it is based on "exactly the same facts as [the] earlier application"." (Emphasis added)
"Secondly, if the subsequent application document purports to reveal new facts which are, to the authority's knowledge, and without further investigation, not new, fanciful, or trivial then the same conclusion applies. The facts may not be new because they were known to, and taken into account by, the authority when it offered the applicant accommodation to satisfy the earlier application. It is not appropriate to expand upon what may constitute or are fanciful or trivial alleged new facts, because that must inevitably turn on the particular circumstances of the particular case."
i) Stage 1: it is an application at all? The answer will only be no if it is based on precisely the same facts as an earlier application (disregarding fanciful allegations and trivial facts);
ii) Stage 2: if it is an application, is it well-founded? That will require the housing authority to carry out the inquiries required by section 184. If an application passes stage 1, there is no available short cut.
"Thirdly, I turn to a case where the subsequent application document appears to reveal new facts, which are, in light of the information then available to the authority, neither trivial or fanciful, although they may turn out to be inaccurate or insufficient for the applicant's purposes on investigation. In such a case, I consider that the authority must treat the subsequent application as a valid application, because that is what it is, in light of the reasoning of the House of Lords in Fahia…. In particular, I do not consider that in such a case the authority would be entitled to investigate the accuracy of the alleged new facts before deciding whether to treat the application as valid, even where there may be reason to suspect the accuracy of the allegations. Such an investigation would, in my view, fall foul of the manifest disapproval in Fahia of non-statutory inquiries. Even if an investigation to decide whether the application is valid is expected to be comparatively short and simple, it seems to me that it would transgress that disapproval, as well as running into the other difficulties I have referred to, based on the wording and structure of Part VII of the 1996 Act ."
"(2) This subsection applies if the person has been assessed by a local housing authority under this section on a previous occasion and the authority is satisfied that—
(a) the person's circumstances have not changed materially since that assessment was carried out, and
(b) there is no new information that materially affects that assessment."
Lapse of time
Stage 2
Previous cases
Was Mr Minott's application a fresh application?
"4. For me it is clear that you started to reside in Cambridge on 26 March 2019 when the Council provided you with interim accommodation and you have not accrued six months residency in this area.
5. Given the above, I am not satisfied that you have been resident in the district of Cambridge for 6 out of the last 12 months or 3 out of the last 5 years."
"… our client has instructed us not to pursue an appeal in the County Court. This is because a material change in circumstances has occurred. This material change is that he has resided in the Cambridge area for more than six months. … There can therefore be no doubt that our client now has a local connection with Cambridge."
Result
Underhill LJ:
(1) Cambridge was only entitled to reject Mr Minott's application if it was identical to his previous application in the sense established by the decision of the House of Lords in Fahia and further explained by Neuberger LJ in Rikha Begum
(2) That condition was not satisfied in the present case because the new application relied on what was plainly a "new fact" which was neither fanciful nor trivial, namely that by the date that it was made Mr Minott had been resident in Cambridge for the six-month period referred to at para. 10.7 of the Code.
(3) It was not open to Cambridge to rely on the argument that in the particular circumstances of his case (including the unlawfulness of his continued occupation of his interim accommodation) Mr Minott's six-months' residence did not establish that he had a local connection. That is an argument that the change was not "material", which is precisely what was held in Fahia to be inadmissible. The argument could only be run at the next stage.