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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> South Gloucestershire Council v Titley & Anor [2006] EWHC 3117 (Admin) (07 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2006/3117.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 3117 (Admin) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
ADMINSITRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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South Gloucestershire Council |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Malcolm Titley Colin John Clothier On appeal from the Severnside Valuation Tribunal |
Respondent (CO/10647/2005) Respondent (CO/1291/2005) |
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WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Daniel Kolinsky for the Respondent Malcolm Titley, instructed by RNID Casework Services
The Respondent Mr Clothier in person
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Crown Copyright ©
" a. a disabled person having his sole or main residence in the dwelling concern;
b. the circumstances of, or other matters relating to, that person;
c. the physical characteristics of, or other matters relating to, that dwelling."
"(1) … a person is an eligible person for the purposes of these Regulations if
(a) he is a liable person as regards a dwelling which is the sole or main residence of at least one qualifying individual and in which there is provided –
(i) a room which is not a bathroom, a kitchen or a lavatory and which is predominantly used (whether for providing therapy or otherwise) by and is required for meeting the needs of any qualifying individual resident in the dwelling; or
(ii) a bathroom or kitchen which is not the only bathroom or kitchen within the dwelling and which is required for meeting the needs of any qualifying individual resident in the dwelling; or
(iii) sufficient floor space to permit the use of a wheelchair required for meeting the needs of any qualifying individual resident in the dwelling; and
(b) as regards the financial year in question, an application is made in writing by him or on his behalf to that authority.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1), and subject to paragraph (3), references to anything being required for meeting the needs of a qualifying individual are reference to its being essential or of major importance to his well-being by reason of the nature and extent of his disability.
(3) A wheelchair is not required for meeting an individual's needs if he does not need to use it within the living accommodation comprising or included in the dwelling concerned'.
The facts and the findings of the tribunals
Mr Titley
"the hearing loop and associated equipment certainly are for his well-being and the room is predominantly used for that purpose as he occupies the house. The room may be a living room, but that does not alter the fact that it is predominantly for his use. Without the adaptations in there, his quality of life could be much impaired."
Mr Clothier
"the two rooms are predominantly used for meeting the needs of the disabled persons by providing a therapeutic environment as required under [regulation] 3(1)(a)(i). The rooms do provide space for the well-being of the individual and [this does] in the view of the tribunal form a direct causal link between the bedroom and the disability. It is a therapeutic environment for the individuals and a place to which they can return without concern."
The authorities
"The applicant seeks to bring her case within section 1(2)(a). That paragraph imposes two requirements: first, that the room must be predominantly used (whether for therapy or for other purposes) by a disabled person; and secondly that it is required for meeting the needs of that person. The meaning of the latter requirement is expanded by section 1(3), which provides that references to anything being required for meeting the needs of a disabled person are references to its being "essential or of major importance to his well-being by reason of the nature and extent of his disability". Section 1(2)(a) must therefore be rewritten as referring to a room which is predominantly used (whether for therapy or for other purposes) by, and is essential or of major importance to, the well-being of a disabled person by reason of the nature and extent of his disability. The living room is predominantly used by the applicant, who is the sole occupant of the flat. But one has to ask: is the living room essential, or of major importance, to her well-being by reason of the nature and extent of her disability? The question has to be posed in relation to the room itself, because it is evident from section 1(2)(a) that it is the room which must be required for meeting the needs of the disabled person.
It is clear, in my view, that the living room, as such, is not essential or of major importance to the well-being of the applicant by reason of the nature and extent of her disability. She needs the living room as such, merely in the way that anybody, whether disabled or not, needs a living room as part of ordinary life. She does not need the room because of the nature and extent of her disability.
That, however, is not the end of the matter. The living room is equipped with a night storage heater because the applicant needs extra heat on account of her disability. I should add that the heater is simply an additional heater; it is not an item which affects the rateable value. Her rates are just the same as they would be if she did not have the storage heater. The judge decided that because the additional heating was necessary by reason of the applicant's disability, it could be said that the room was of essential or of major importance to her well-being by reason of the nature and extent of her disability. I do not feel able to accept that. What is necessary by reason of the nature and extent of the applicant's disability is the heating, not the room. Of course, she needs a room in which to put the heater, but I think that the real question is: Why is she using the room? It cannot have been the intention of Parliament to grant a rebate merely because a room is predominantly used by a disabled person; that is quite inconsistent with the language of the sections. It seems to me that the user of the room must be related to the disability. Section 1(2)(a) refers to both user and to the fact that the room must be required to meet the needs of the disabled person because of the disablement. The form of the paragraph is such that the two requirements are very closely related; that, I think, is emphasised by the word "required" – the room must be required to meet the needs of the disabled person by reason of the disability.
It seems to me that the applicant uses the living room simply because, like anybody else, she needs a living room, and not because of her disability. She uses it as an ordinary living room; she requires it as a room to live in, and not as a room to put the heater in. She needs the heater to give her extra warmth because of her disability; she might equally need extra blankets on her bed, but that would not have the consequence that her bedroom because a room within section 1(2)(a). If a disabled person requires an additional room in the flat to house a particular piece of equipment which is necessary by reason of the disablement – for example, a kidney machine – the case might fall within paragraph (a) because, assuming the room to be predominantly used in the way provided by paragraph (a), the room would be used because of the disability; but the applicant does not use her living room because of her disability. In my view, therefore, section 1(2)(a) does not apply to this case". [emphasis added]
"It is necessary first to consider the context of the statutory material which is in play: that is to say, the purpose of the statutory instrument in question is to provide for discounts from council tax in what I would simply describe as "appropriate cases". The context is what used to be known as rating, now council tax. Some of the essential elements in a valuation for rating purposes of a hereditament will have consisted of the numbers of rooms and the areas of rooms, leading in the end to a valuation of that hereditament for rating purposes. Such indeed was precisely the statutory context in the case of Howell-Williams v Wirral BC. The first holding there was to the following effect: the living room was not essential or of major importance to the well-being of the respondent ratepayer by reason of the nature and extent of her ability, since she needed the living room in the way that anybody, whether disabled or not, needed a living room as part of an ordinary life…..
It is, in my judgment, as I have already indicated, necessary to contemplate what is the statutory purpose of these particular regulations. The answer, in my judgment, plainly is to relieve an eligible person of what would otherwise be an increase in their council tax liability when they needed a room in their dwelling "which is required for meeting the needs" of a qualifying individual resident in the dwelling. In the present case there is no additional room required to meet the needs of the respondent." [emphasis added]
"It is important that any tribunal that has to consider whether or not a person is entitled to exemption under regulation 3 should consider if there has been the appropriate causative link between the disability and the requirement for the use of the room, because the use of the room has to be essential or of major importance because of the nature and the extent of the disability…. It is important to stress that the Howell -Williams case is authority for the need for the causal link to which I have referred".
"40. The liable person may apply for a reduction in the bill under SI 1992/554. A reduction is applicable if one of the following is a feature of the dwelling, and is required as essential or of major importance to the well-being of a disabled person (child or adult) resident in the dwelling because of the nature and extent of his disability:
(a) a room other than a bathroom, kitchen or lavatory which is used predominantly by the disabled person;
(b) an additional bathroom or kitchen; or
(c) sufficient floor space inside the property to allow for wheelchair circulation.
In deciding whether this condition applies, authorities should consider whether, if the room or extra feature were not available:
(i) the disabled person would find it physically impossible or extremely difficult to live in the dwelling;
(ii) his health would suffer or the disability would be likely to become more severe.
41. Regulation 3(2) of SI 1992/554 states that for these purposes references '…to anything being required for meeting the needs of a qualifying individual are references to its being essential or of major importance to his well-being by reason of the nature and extent of his disability.'
This implies that the room or space concerned must be required by the disabled resident as a result of his disability, and that it would not be required if he were not disabled. In this sense the room or space must be 'extra'. However, a reduction may be granted in respect of an extension or any existing room; there is no requirement that the accommodation has been specially adapted or constructed."
20. I can find no basis in the regulations for a requirement that without the room or extra feature the disabled person must find it physically impossible or extremely difficult to live in the dwelling, or that his health would suffer or the disability would be likely to become more severe; though such factors would point inexorably to the requirements of the Regulation being satisfied. But, as will be seen below, I consider that paragraph 41 of the Practice Note is correct in saying that the room must be extra (or, as Fox LJ and Turner J put it, additional), in the sense that it would not be required for the relevant purpose if the qualifying individual were not disabled.
The construction of regulation 3
(1) not a bathroom, kitchen or lavatory;
(2) predominantly used by a qualifying individual, whether for providing therapy or otherwise; and
(3) essential or of major importance to his well-being by reason of the nature and extent of his disabilities.
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