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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> S, R (on the application of) v Coventry City Council [2009] EWHC 2191 (Admin) (13 May 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/2191.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2191 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Priory Courts 33 Bull Street Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN on the application of S |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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COVENTRY CITY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr McGuire appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Beatson:
"In general, I think he is able to cope with the normal activities of daily living. This may be compromised if his pain was not controlled adequately."
"…the duration of his ongoing requirement for physiotherapy treatment is at present unpredictable, as this will depend on his response to treatment. In any case, the duration and nature of his symptoms suggest that his condition will require ongoing self-management following discharge from physiotherapy."
I emphasise that in that physiotherapy context what was being referred to was self-management.
"Difficulties with Cov. City Council: may have benefits suspended and no more accommodation because he is no longer seen to have a life threatening illness as in remission. Discussed. Plans to see Cov. Refugee Centre and a solicitor"
And for 17 June 2008:
"Under considerable pressure about accommodation. Council have withdrawn flat now that health has improved. Symptoms of dizziness have recurred."
And for 20 August 2008:
"…he does require specialist NHS treatment and follow-up and care needs are more than the average healthy person and need for supported social housing is important to maintain optimal health in light of his chronic health problems"
"…Mr S's current state of remission from Follicular Non-Hodgkins lymphoma ('NHL') was greatly assisted by his ability to benefit from stable accommodation and financial support whilst he underwent treatment. If that support is withdrawn, the consequences are extreme stress and physical neglect which will very likely precipitate a relapse of NHL."
"His condition is quite unlike the circumstances of an average healthy person, in that he is always at risk of relapse of disease progression."
"The position is that this authority is always prepared to conduct a reassessment or review when the circumstances warrant it; or where there has been a change of circumstances or where the passage of time causes the authority to consider whether its original assessment remains sound.
However, whilst taking account of the medical report dated 29th October 2008 which you copied to us, we can see nothing in the circumstances of your client's case which would warrant such a reassessment or review."
The letter attached a copy of a letter to the claimant and the Notice to Quit.
"The points you seek to make are contrary to [and they refer to numbered points]. A medical need is not a need for care and attention. A future need for medical treatment or otherwise is not a need for care and attention. Your client does not need to be looked after, he is not in need of care and attention, he is not entitled therefore to a service under Section 21. We see no qualification in the judgment of the House of Lords which would permit continued reliance on the case of Pajaziti contrary to the clear guidance given as to how the term care and attention is to be interpreted."
And so the issue between the parties was identified at that stage. I turn to the statutory regime.
"residential accommodation for persons aged eighteen or over who by reason of age, illness, disability or any other circumstances are in need of care and attention which is not otherwise available to them."
But Schedule 3 to the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 provides, in summary form, that those to whom paragraph 1 applies are not eligible for support under a raft of statutory provisions, including section 21 of the 1948 Act, and those persons include those whose applications for asylum have been refused and their appeal rights exhausted, unless they fall within paragraph 3 of the Schedule.
"Paragraph 1 does not prevent the exercise of a power or the performance of a duty if, and to the extent that, its exercise or performance is necessary for the purpose of avoiding a breach of --
(a) a person's Convention rights;"
"The main issue is the precise meaning of the words "in need of care and attention which is not otherwise available to them". It may well be that those who drafted section 21(1)(a) in 1948 assumed that it only applied to people who needed extra care and attention which could not be provided in their own homes. They undoubtedly drew a distinction between the ordinary homeless, who were catered for under what was then section 21(1)(b), and those with special needs, who fell within section 21(1)(a)."
I observe that in 1977 the Housing (Homeless Persons Act) replaced the provision for the homeless and section 21(1)(b) was repealed.
"…we are required, by the NASS case, to accept that people who need care and attention which could be provided in their own homes, if they had them, can fall within section 21(1)(a). But that does not answer the question in this case."
She then referred to the conditions which she had suggested in R (Wahid) v Tower Hamlets LBC [2002] EWCA Civ 287 at paragraph 30, which Lord Hoffmann had found helpful in the NASS case. These were:
"First, the person must be in need of care and attention; secondly, the need must arise by reason of age, illness, disability or 'other circumstances' and, thirdly, the care and attention which is needed must not be available otherwise than by the provision of accommodation under section 21."
Mr Howell, who appeared on behalf of the appellant council, had argued that there must be some meaningful content in the need for care and attention. At first he had argued that it was care and attention to physical needs such as feeding, washing and toileting, and not simply shopping, cooking, laundry and home-help type services. He accepted, however, that the provision had to cater for people who did not need:
"personal care of this sort but did need to be watched over to make sure that they did not do harm to themselves or others by what they did or failed to do."
His argument was that the essence was that the person needed someone else to look after him because there were things that he could not do for himself.
"'care and attention" must mean something more than 'accommodation'. Section 21(1)(a) is not a general power to provide housing. That is dealt with by other legislation entirely, with its own criteria for eligibility. If a simple need for housing, with or without the means of subsistence, were within section 21(1)(a), there would have been no need for the original section 21(1)(b)."
She concluded that it was not intended by Parliament in enacting the 1977 Act that people who did not qualify under housing legislation should be able to turn to local social service departments.
"…care and attention" in this context is "looking after". Looking after means doing something for the person being cared for which he cannot or should not be expected to do for himself: it might be household tasks which an old person can no longer perform or can only perform with great difficulty; it might be protection from risks which a mentally disabled person cannot perceive; it might be personal care, such as feeding, washing or toileting. This is not an exhaustive list. The provision of medical care is expressly excluded."
She considered that that construction was consistent with the authorities and referred, as the only passage which might cast doubt on this approach, to Lord Woolf's statement in ex parte M that authorities could "anticipate the deterioration which would otherwise take place" and intervene before a person's health had been damaged.
"There has to be some sensible flexibility here. Section 21(1)(a) requires that the person "are in need of care and attention" so that the primary focus must be on present rather than future needs. But if there is a present need for some sort of care, then obviously the authorities must be empowered to intervene before it becomes a great deal worse."
"A person must need looking after beyond merely the provision of a home and the wherewithal to survive -- beyond, therefore, the needs able to be met by NASS for suitable accommodation and subsistence. The looking after required does not have to be for either nursing or personal care. It must, however, be of such a character as would be required even were the person wealthy."
In short, one is looking to the need, not the means to provide it. Lord Brown said:
"It is immaterial that this care and attention could be provided in the person's own home if he had one (as he would have if he were wealthy). All that is required is that the care and attention needed must not be available to him otherwise than by the provision of section 21 accommodation."
"that the words "care and attention" in section 21 (1)(a) 'must be given their full weight. Their natural and ordinary meaning in this context is 'looking after': this can obviously include feeding the starving, as with the destitute asylum-seekers in [Ex parte M]'."
He continued that it would not be right to regard all destitute asylum seekers as in imminent need of care and attention. That was a view which he had expressed in ex parte O. But, in the light of Baroness Hale's analysis, he resiled from that view.
"M is not 'in need of care and attention' simply because he is without accommodation. However, in addition to being without accommodation, he is HIV-positive (and may have AIDS), he consequently must take medication which is provided to him by the NHS, he requires the use of a refrigerator in which to keep the medication; and he needs access to a medical practitioner four or five times a year. However, his illness does not otherwise affect him, and he can look after himself. The absence of somewhere to live, coupled with the requirement for medication, refrigerator use and access to a doctor, even taken together, cannot, in my view, be said to amount to a need for care and attention, as a matter of ordinary language. M simply does not need looking after."
"It will be recalled that the effect of that Schedule [Schedule 3 of the 2002 Act], as was held by Lloyd Jones J in the AW case, is that support under section 21 of the 1948 can only be provided if such support is necessary for the purpose of avoiding a breach of the applicant's Convention rights. That, it seems to me, might properly be regarded as a logically prior eligibility question, before turning to other judgments to be made for the purposes of section 21. Mr Holbrook told me that in practice local authorities would go to the more general questions first. One reason was that it was often difficult for a local authority to obtain good evidence about a claimant's immigration status. However, he acknowledged that that was not the case here." [Paragraph 65]
Order: Permission to appeal granted; application dismissed
MR DE MELLO: My Lord the claimant has the benefit of a publicly funded certificate. May I have the nominal…?
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: You are entitled to that, I think
MR DE MELLO: I am grateful.
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: Mr McGuire?
MR MCGUIRE: (inaudible) purely in terms of the order I …
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: I have got something to say about that. Let me say something before you say that.
MR MCGUIRE: Yes.
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: We are now not in London. We are now in Birmingham.
MR MCGUIRE: Yes
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: I am going to make a practice of asking counsel to help with the order. In London counsel very often help draw up the order. As we get started here with a less intense number of Administrative Court cases it is going to be very helpful for my learned clerk and for others if counsel can help draw up the order. Now with respect to the order…
MR MCGUIRE: Of course. With respect to the order there is a practical difference as to whether permission is granted but the case is dismissed or permission is refused. One practical difference is whether the case is capable of being reported for any purposes. It is a matter entirely for your Lordship whether he regards the arguments as having been arguable but that… I suppose there is a second issue and that is, if the matter went back to the Court of Appeal, the question is whether it would go back right to the start or whether one could …
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: Well I have, I think, given permission and made a decision. I smile a little bit when you talk about reportability. Very often, particularly defendants who have succeeded in persuading a court not to give permission say: "But can I please rely on this. You have given such a full judgment so that…". That is a forensic presentational difference. But I have given permission. What I have not done is decided the point on the Article 3 point, which I did not think was necessary.
MR MCGUIRE: My Lord, I am grateful for that. There is one other matter I need to take instructions on.
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: Yes.
MR MCGUIRE: My Lord, we don't seek costs in the particular circumstances.
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: You don't seek costs. Well we have been able to deal with this in a disappointing way to Mr De Mello's client, but we have been able to deal with this very quickly.
MR DE MELLO: Yes of course …
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: And although I would not have given you expedition, I think you have got expedition plus in London terms.
MR DE MELLO: Given that you have clarified that permission has been granted but you have dismissed the application, I will as a matter of course just ask for permission to appeal. I anticipate what your answer is, and maybe it is not the right case to …
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: I don't think this is the right case to test that point. I don't and so …
MR DE MELLO: Formally …
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: Have you got a form for me to fill in for appeal? Well, I need to do it now because counsel need to see it so I'll rise if everybody could wait …
MR DE MELLO: Yes, of course.
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: I will then deal with that.
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: It's the 13th today isn't it?
MR DE MELLO: Yes.
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: Right. What I have put under the reasons is "No reasonable prospect of success on section 21 point. While Schedule 3 paragraph 3 of the National Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 may be of significance in another factual context it does not arise in this case." But it is really for the Court of Appeal to decide (inaudible) on a case of this sort. They sometimes do. You may, Mr De Mello, dangle it in front of them. They may like it.
MR DE MELLO: Yes, I can see that perhaps the facts are not (inaudible) think about it.
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: But my own view, bluntly, is that even in a public law case the court should be deciding cases where it makes a difference so…
MR DE MELLO: Yes and that's (inaudible).
MR JUSTICE BEATSON: Right. Thank you very much.