BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Flores, R (on the application of) v London Borough of Southwark [2020] EWHC 1279 (Admin) (20 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/1279.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1279 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of Favio Ortega Flores |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
London Borough of Southwark |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Christopher Baker (instructed by London Borough of Southwark) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 29 April 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: this judgment was handed down by the Judge remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be at 10.30am on 20 May 2020.
MR JUSTICE MARTIN SPENCER :
"At the outset you were overcrowded in your accommodation, lacking one bedroom. It cannot be therefore be said that your current overcrowding has come about as a result of natural increase. As a result your household does not qualify for band 1 priority or the associated priority star …"
The letter confirmed that the family would be registered on the Borough's housing register under band 4.
"I believe I should qualify for band 3 on the housing register as an overcrowded household and I should not be given reduced priority band 4.
In the decision letter, Ms McFarlane explains that we do not qualify for band 1 for being statutory [sic] overcrowded. We have never requested to be placed into band 1 for statutory overcrowding. …
I believe I should qualify for band 3 for overcrowding for the following reasons: …" [emphasis added]
This led to the Defendant's first review decision in a letter dated 27 June 2019 when the Defendant confirmed its decision to place the Claimant in band 4. However, the letter recognised that, as from 27 July 2019, the Claimant would meet the Defendant's residential criteria and invited the Claimant to contact the Authority again after that date. The letter stated:
"By your own admission, you do not meet the residential or employment local connection [criteria]. I acknowledge that you should meet the local connection criteria on 27/07/2019 if your circumstances are unchanged however we are not able to permit you to join the register on the basis that you almost meet this criteria. This would not be fair practice for all other applicants who are required to meet the criteria in full.
I therefore invite you to make contact on 27/07/2019 and we will take steps to reassess your application to join the housing register."
"However as natural increase has not occurred, whereby you had moved into overcrowded accommodation at the outset, you do not meet the criteria to be awarded statutory overcrowded priority on the council's home search bidding scheme, nor do you meet the criteria to be awarded any associated priority star, in accordance with the allocations' policy … having considered all of the information above in accordance with our current allocations' scheme I confirm that your application has now been reassessed into priority band 3 for overcrowding. You are able to bid for two-bedroomed properties on account of your household composition. Please note that this decision is final and not open to further review."
"I explained that I did not consider that the band 1 priority or the associated priority star was appropriate because the Claimant confirmed that his present accommodation was overcrowded (though not statutorily overcrowded) when he first moved into it and therefore it could not be said that the current overcrowding had come about as a result of natural increase in the number of people in the household. As an indication of the general extent of overcrowding among applicants under the scheme, I distinguished his position from that of 2,961 other households in the borough who did meet the local connection criteria and had not deliberately moved into accommodation which was overcrowded at the outset."
In her statement, Ms Tait compares the number of statutory overcrowded applicants registered in band 1 which numbers only 27 at the time she made her statement. She says:
"The figures accordingly help to illustrate why, as at 17 May 2019, I did not consider that band 1 was appropriate in this case."
In the Claimant's letter of 24 May 2019, seeking further review, the Claimant contended that he should qualify for band 3, not band 4 and have a priority star but stated that:
"We have never requested to be placed in band 1 for statutory overcrowding."
"The main point in my view was to consider how the overcrowding had come about and later become statutory overcrowding. The overcrowding had started from when the Claimant initially moved his family of four into the current one-bedroomed flat. There was nothing to indicate that this was anything other than a voluntary act. The Claimant never suggested otherwise and I considered it to have been a deliberate act."
This is a reference to the Defendant's priority needs bands contained within s.6.2 of the Housing Allocation Scheme which includes within band 1 the following:
"Applicants who are statutorily overcrowded as defined by Part X of the Housing Act 1985 and have not caused this statutory overcrowding by a deliberate act."
"The operation of the scheme involves knowledge, experience and sensitivity in relation to the varied, competing, widespread and demanding housing needs across the borough. It is widely recognised that in Southwark, as in London generally and other parts of the country, housing need and demand for housing vastly exceed the available supply. There is a wealth of data widely available to demonstrate this. A consequence is that in taking decisions on housing applications, in particular about the relative priority to be given to differing situations, we need to address very carefully the particular circumstances in each case in order to ensure fairness between applicants and that the more pressing needs and priorities are met before others. One of the categories of case we have been aware of for a very long time in Southwark concerns people who apply for rehousing having moved from outside the borough into statutorily overcrowded accommodation in the borough. The wording in paragraph 6.2 of the scheme, which limits band 1 priority in cases of statutory overcrowding to applicants who have not themselves deliberately caused that state of affairs, helps us to confine this priority group to the most needy and deserving cases. It also helps to prevent or reduce other applicants, particularly those who have been waiting longest with relatively lower priority, being leap-frogged by those who have deliberately caused their statutory overcrowding; and it is a disincentive for people to seek to move into the borough and occupy statutory overcrowded housing."
"In the Claimant's case the statutory overcrowding was caused when his oldest son turned 10 years old. Their statutory overcrowding cannot, therefore, be said to have been caused by a deliberate act. However the Defendant fails to apply this test and instead applies an unwritten test for overcrowding (and not statutory overcrowding)."
The letter criticises the Defendant for applying a test to determine eligibility for band 1 which is whether the overcrowding was caused "as a result of natural increase, this not being a criterion contained within the housing allocations policy for band 1.
"It was not reasonable for your client to move into a one-bedroomed property and then put in a request to be placed in band 1 on the ground that the family are statutorily overcrowded. The fact that his older son turned 10 is not a 'natural increase'. Everyone gets older every year. If your client had had another child after he moved into the property, that would have constituted a 'natural increase'. It is a fact that Southwark's allocation policy permits applicants to bid for properties smaller than their bed need. The 'natural increase' clause in the allocations policy would also be applied to those who do so. They cannot request band 1 on the ground that they are statutorily overcrowded because they made a voluntary choice to move into a property smaller than their bed need. … if applicants are allowed to jump the queue by claiming an eligibility for band 1 on the basis of statutory overcrowding which has been caused by their moving into properties which were clearly unsuitable right from the start of the tenancies, that is manifestly unfair to other applicants on the waiting list. … he had a choice to secure suitable accommodation for the size of his family …"
Permission to Apply for Judicial Review
(i) It is put on a basis which was never put to the decision-maker at the time;
(ii) he has twice sought and obtained a review of his priority on a different basis; and
(iii) he has exhausted the Scheme's mechanism for review.
He submits that it was incumbent on the Claimant to bring forward at the time all matters relevant to the review and, having failed to do so, he should not now be allowed to ask the court to review the decision.
"13. I then considered the matter afresh, having regard to the previous decisions and review requests made by the Claimant. My resulting decision was notified in my letter dated 11 October 2019. …
14. By this time, it was apparent that circumstances had changed because, on the information provided by the Claimant, he had satisfied the 5-year residential local connection criteria as from 27 July 2019. Accordingly, the Claimant was qualified to join the housing register without more, and it was therefore no longer the case of admitting him to the register with band 4 priority under paragraph 5.23.5(a) of the Scheme.
15. In other respects, however the circumstances had not changed and the earlier decision letters, particularly mine dated 17 May 2019, explained why band 1 priority had not been awarded.
16. The main point in my view was to consider how the overcrowding had come about and had later become statutory overcrowding. The overcrowding had started from when the Claimant initially moved his family of four into the current one-bedroom flat. There was nothing to indicate this was anything other than a voluntary act. The Claimant never suggested otherwise and I considered it to have been a deliberate act. The flat was overcrowded from the outset by reference to the bedroom standard set out at Appendix B in the Scheme which required two bedrooms. This was therefore different from the situation where a family's current accommodation had once met the family's needs but those needs had naturally increased as a result of the birth or adoption of children so that the accommodation no longer met their needs. In the present case, given the size of the household, this accommodation was never going to be suitable for the Claimant's family in the long or medium term. The statutory overcrowding then came about simply because, as mentioned above, the Claimant's younger son reached the age of 10 years, which meant that the space standard under s326 Housing Act was contravened. Again. This was not a case of natural increase in the size of the household and there was no other change of circumstances to break the chain of causation which led back to the Claimant's action in moving his family into the accommodation. …
18. It was therefore my view that band 1 did not apply, because the Claimant had caused the statutory overcrowding by a deliberate act."
Discussion
The Substantive Application for Judicial Review
(i) By subsection (1), every local authority must have a scheme for determining priorities, and as to the procedure to be followed, in allocating housing accommodation. The procedure includes all aspects of the allocation process including the person or descriptions of persons by whom decisions are taken.
(ii) By subsection (3) as regard priorities, the scheme shall, subject to secure that a "reasonable preference" is given to a number of categories of persons. This includes:
(c) people occupying insanitary or overcrowded housing or otherwise living in unsatisfactory housing conditions."
(iii) By subsection (9), the scheme must be framed so as to secure that an applicant for an allocation of housing accommodation—
(a) has the right to request such general information as will enable him to assess—
(i) how his application is likely to be treated under the scheme (including in particular whether he is likely to be regarded as a member of a group of people who are to be given preference by virtue of subsection (3)); and
(ii) whether housing accommodation appropriate to his needs is likely to be made available to him and, if so, how long it is likely to be before such accommodation becomes available for allocation to him;
(b) has the right to request the authority to inform him of any decision about the facts of his case which is likely to be, or
has been, taken into account in considering whether to allocate housing accommodation to him; and
(c) has the right to request a review of a decision mentioned in paragraph (b), or in section 160ZA(9), and to be informed
of the decision on the review and the grounds for it.
(iv) By subsection (14) a local authority shall not allocate housing accommodation except in accordance with their allocations scheme.
"Deliberately worsening housing circumstances
3.5.20 where there is clear evidence and a conclusion can properly be drawn that an applicant has deliberately worsened their circumstances in order to qualify to join the housing register, then that applicant will not qualify to join the housing register. The group services manager for homelessness and housing options will make this decision.
Examples of this include:
(a) Selling a property that is affordable and suitable for the applicant's needs.
(b) Moving from a secure tenancy or suitable private rented tenancy which variable to maintain to insecure or less settled or overcrowded accommodation creating a situation of overcrowding and sharing of bathroom/kitchen.
(c) Requesting or colluding with a landlord or family member to issue them with a notice to quit.
(d) Deliberately overcrowding property by moving in friends and/or other family members who have never lived together previously and/or have not lived together for a long time, then requesting re-housing to large accommodation."
5.2 Southwark's banding scheme
5.2.1 An applicant's circumstances are assessed and his/her application placed in either Band 1, Band 2, Band 3 or Band 4 (the reduced priority band) as explained in section 6.2. Within each band, priority is accorded by:
(1) a priority star system and
(2) the date of registration as explained below.
In broad terms, the greatest priority is awarded to those assessed as having the highest housing need.
5.2.2 Priority star system
Within each band, applicants are prioritised, first by reference to a priority star system. This operates as follows:
One priority star will be awarded for each of the following where applicable
1. People owed a statutory homelessness duty under either s.193(2) or s.195(2) Housing Act 1996,
2. People occupying unsanitary or statutory overcrowded housing (as defined by Part X of the Housing Act 1985) or otherwise living in unsatisfactory housing conditions in accordance with hazards identified through housing health and safety rating scheme as confirmed by the London B
5.24.1 Where there is clear evidence that a conclusion can properly be drawn that an applicant has deliberately made worse their circumstances in order to achieve higher priority on the register or (in the case of an applicant who has not been disqualified for this reason) to qualify to join the housing register, then reduced priority will be given. The group services manager for homelessness and housing options service will make this decision. Examples of this include:
(a) selling a property that is affordable and suitable for an applicant's needs.
(b) moving from a secure tenancy or settled accommodation to insecure or less settled or overcrowded accommodation.
(c) requesting or colluding with the landlord or family member to issue them with a notice to quit.
(d) deliberately overcrowding properties by moving in friends and/or other family members who have never lived together previously and/or have not lived together for a long time, then requesting re-housing to larger accommodation.
The above list is not exhaustive. This will ensure that households will not be treated as occupying overcrowded accommodation unless the overcrowding has come about by natural increases due to birth/adoption of a child or the addition or other persons to the household with the written consent of the London Borough of Southwark.
6.2 Priority needs Bands
Band 1
…
Applicants who are statutorily overcrowded as defined by Part X of the Housing Act 1985 and have not caused this statutory overcrowding by a deliberate act …".
"Band 2
Applicants who have a severe medical, welfare award or disability (including learning disability, where the current accommodation is unsuitable, or it is unreasonable to remain in occupation …
Band 3
Those who are homeless and toward whom the London Borough of Southwark has a statutory duty to accommodate pursuant to Part VII of the Housing Act 1996. …
Overcrowded but not statutorily overcrowded as defined by Part X of the 1985 Housing Act …".
The Claimant's case
"No one suggests that [the Claimant] has a right to a house. At most, he has a right to have his application for a house properly considered in accordance with a lawful allocation policy. Part VI of the 1996 Act gives no one a right to a house. This is not surprising as local housing authorities have no general duty to provide housing accommodation".
(i) Whether they were able to afford larger accommodation, for example two-bedroom accommodation.
(ii) Whether or not they were aware of the Council's allocations scheme.
(iii) Whether or not larger accommodation was affordable to them in the context where the Cl was in fact working and therefore would not want to lose his employment.
(iv) The extent of any advice they received at the time.
(v) Their needs in terms of locality to maintain employment and or family support. Other options open to them at the time.
(vi) Whether or not there was an intention to queue jump in the way alleged.
(vii) Consideration of the local housing allowance in the area and the question of whether or not someone on a low income could ever afford a two-bedroom property.
(viii) Consideration as to whether persons in like circumstances to the Claimant would ever be put in such accommodation by the local authority when applying as homeless. It is often the case that families are put into accommodation that will within a short time span result in statutory overcrowding, due to the shortage of larger affordable accommodation.
However, this did not happen and there was no detailed interview with the Claimant or his partner to ascertain the circumstances as to his housing when he arrived in the UK and how they ended up in this one-bedroom property. It is submitted that no account was taken, but should have been, as to the fact that at the outset the premises were not statutorily overcrowded.
The Defendant's case
"It was the family's occupation of the flat which was necessary to and underlay it being statutorily overcrowded. The effective cause of that occupation was the Claimant's action in obtaining the tenancy of it and moving his family into it in 2014. Further there was never any suggestion by the Claimant that his action in moving into the flat in 2014 had not been deliberate. Accordingly the requirements for band 1 priority were not satisfied because the Claimant had 'caused this statutory overcrowding by a deliberate act'. The rehousing manager contrasted the position in the present case with the situation where a family household has grown in size by 'natural increase' which will include the birth or adoption of a further child."
It is further pleaded that the distinction between natural increase and natural growth is consistent with the statutory scheme under Part X of the Housing Act 1985. The Defendant disputes any obligation on its part to 'investigate' matters in relation to an application for an allocation for social housing under Part VI of the Housing Act 1996. They say that the onus was on the Claimant to put any relevant information before the borough.
Discussion