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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 >> Kowalek & Anor v Hassanein Ltd [2022] EWCA Civ 1041 (25 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1041.html Cite as: [2022] 1 WLR 4558, [2022] WLR 4558, [2022] HLR 42, [2022] EWCA Civ 1041, [2022] WLR(D) 339 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(LANDS CHAMBER)
Martin Rodger QC, Deputy Chamber President
[2021] UKUT 143 (LC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
and
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
____________________
MAREK KOWALEK KAHORI KOWALEK |
Applicants/Appellants |
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- and - |
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HASSANEIN LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Mathew McDermott and Robert Winspear (instructed by Benchmark Solicitors LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5 July 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Newey:
Facts
"20. In the light of the above when considering financial circumstances, the Tribunal should not consider profit, mortgage payments or reasonableness. So, the Tribunal did not take account of any of these points when coming to the amount of the rent repayment order. However, following the point regarding the utilities the Tribunal thought that some allowance should be made with regard to the payment of service charges.
21. The Tribunal then turned to the matter of the conduct of the parties. The landlord should have licensed this property but didn't. This is a significant factor even though the company director said he relied upon his agents in all matters relating to the letting of the property and did so as he was not a professional landlord. However, it still remains the case that this property should have been licensed and ignorance of the law does not assist the [Company], it remains liable.
22. However, the position is different with regard to the conduct of the tenant. Substantial rent arrears have been allowed to accrue. The payment of rent is the paramount duty of a tenant and in this case the applicant is in clear breach of that duty. There are also unsettled allegations of damage to the property on the applicants vacating the premises.
23. Consequently, while the Tribunal started at the 100% level of the rent it thought that reductions were appropriate proportionate and indeed necessary to take account of the factors in the Act. Therefore, the Tribunal decided particularly in the light of the rent arrears and the absence of a licence that there should be a reduction of 50% from the maximum figure of £23819.98 giving a final figure of £11909.99. This figure represents the Tribunal's overall view of the circumstances that determined the amount of the rent repayment order."
i) Whether money paid after a landlord has ceased committing a relevant housing offence to discharge the tenant's liability for rent falling due while the offence was being committed, should be part of the sum which a rent repayment order may require a landlord to repay; and
ii) Whether the existence of rent arrears amounts to relevant "conduct" which may be taken into consideration in determining the amount of a rent repayment order.
The statutory framework
"The section provides … that a landlord who receives rent while operating an unlicensed property could be liable to a penalty equivalent to any rent received during the period of the offence, up to a maximum of 12 months. The RPT [i.e. Residential Property Tribunal] has the power to make a 'rent repayment order', imposing this penalty where it determines that an offence has been committed under section 72(1)."
"A tenant may apply for a rent repayment order only if —
(a) the offence relates to housing that, at the time of the offence, was let to the tenant, and
(b) the offence was committed in the period of 12 months ending with the day on which the application is made."
"(1) Where the First-tier Tribunal decides to make a rent repayment order under section 43 in favour of a tenant, the amount is to be determined in accordance with this section.
(2) The amount must relate to rent paid during the period mentioned in the table.
If the order is made on the ground that the landlord has committed |
the amount must relate to rent paid by the tenant in respect of |
an offence mentioned in row 1 or 2 of the table in section 40(3) |
the period of 12 months ending with the date of the offence |
an offence mentioned in row 3, 4, 5, 6 or 7 of the table in section 40(3) |
a period, not exceeding 12 months, during which the landlord was committing the offence |
(3) The amount that the landlord may be required to repay in respect of a period must not exceed—
(a) the rent paid in respect of that period, less
(b) any relevant award of universal credit paid (to any person) in respect of rent under the tenancy during that period.
(4) In determining the amount the tribunal must, in particular, take into account—
(a) the conduct of the landlord and the tenant,
(b) the financial circumstances of the landlord, and
(c) whether the landlord has at any time been convicted of an offence to which this Chapter applies."
The issues
i) Can a payment made at a time when a landlord is no longer committing an offence be taken into account when assessing the amount of a rent repayment order if it related to rent which fell due when the offence was still being committed?
ii) Is the £2,000 payment which Mr and Mrs Kowalek made on 28 January 2020 to be attributed to rent for a period when the Company was committing an offence under section 95 of the 2004 Act?
iii) Was the FTT entitled to take the rent arrears into account as "conduct" of Mr and Mrs Kowalek for the purposes of section 44(4) of the 2004 Act?
Issue (i): Rent paid when the landlord is no longer committing an offence
"The first limitation focusses on when the payment was made: 'the amount must relate to rent paid during the period mentioned in the table'. The second limitation is provided by the requirement in the table heading that 'the amount must relate to rent paid by the tenant in respect of' the appropriate period. This focusses on the period in respect of which the payment was made - what the payment was for, not when it was made. Both conditions must be satisfied before a sum paid as rent can be the subject of a rent repayment order."
In paragraph 32, the Deputy President observed:
"Properly understood, there is no contradiction between the different parts of section 44(2), and no need to give priority to one over the other. The consequences which [counsel for Mr and Mrs Kowalek] suggested were undesirable are in fact quite consistent with the policy of the Act to deter the commission of housing offences and to encourage compliance by landlords with their licensing and other obligations. It is no surprise that a landlord is not at risk of having to repay rent paid by the tenant at a time when the landlord was not committing any offence"
Issue (ii): Allocation of the £2,000 payment
Issue (iii): The significance of the rent arrears
"That submission is untenable. The word 'conduct' should be given its ordinary meaning. Although there may be no exact synonym, its use in this subsection is equivalent to 'behaviour'. A standing by can amount to conduct just as much as a positive step. To take a pertinent fact in this case, a failure to pay rent is part of the conduct of a tenant. It may or may not enable the tenant to be evicted."
The Court was also unpersuaded by an argument that, "by mitigating the Housing Act damages because of non-payment of rent and ordering the appellants to pay the unpaid rent, the judge was punishing the tenants twice or, put the other way round, was giving the respondents double recovery". Aldous J said at 626-627:
"That submission, in my view, disregards the difference between Housing Act damages and an order for payment of rent due. The latter is an order for an amount due by contract. The former is statutory damages assessed on a particular basis so as to deter landlords from evicting tenants unlawfully. Those damages may be reduced under section 27(7) because of the conduct of the tenant. The Act is not concerned with the other claims. The sole question is whether the conduct of the tenant was such that damages should be reduced and, if so, by what appropriate amount. The test to trigger mitigation is conduct such that it is reasonable to mitigate. The amount of reduction is that amount that the judge, acting judicially, considers appropriate."
"The circumstances of the present case are a good example of why conduct within the landlord and tenant relationship is relevant; it would offend any sense of justice for a tenant to be in persistent arrears of rent over an extended period and then to choose the one period where she did make some regular payments – albeit never actually clearing the arrears – and be awarded a repayment of all or most of what she paid in that period. That default, together with the respondent's kindness and the respondent's financial circumstances, led the FTT to make a 75% reduction in the maximum amount payable, and I see no reason to characterise any of those considerations as irrelevant or the decision as falling outside the range of reasonable orders that the FTT could have made."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Coulson:
Lord Justice Warby: