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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Law Commission >> RENTING HOMES 1: STATUS AND SECURITY (A Consultation Paper) [2002] EWLC 162(13) (28 March 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/other/EWLC/2002/162(13).html Cite as: [2002] EWLC 162(13) |
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Part XIII
Anti social behaviour
(1) the need to combat anti social behaviour;
(2) the current law;
(3) the categories of landlord and their responsibilities in relation to anti social behaviour;
(4) a general duty to deal with anti social behaviour; and
(5) dealing with serious anti social behaviour, looking at
(a) the concept,
(b) type II (probationary) agreements, and
(c) type I agreements.
13.3 It is, perhaps, only comparatively recently that the housing world has woken up to the extent and seriousness of anti social behaviour by occupiers. The last few years have seen the gradual emergence of a consensus on the prevalence, seriousness and cost of anti social behaviour, articulated by, amongst others, the Social Landlords Crime and Nuisance Group,[1] the Cabinet Office Social Exclusion Unit[2] and the Labour Party.[3] We have already learned that it is a matter of the gravest concern to tenants’ groups.
13.5 The term “anti social behaviour” covers a disparate and broad range of behaviour ranging from the relatively mild, though annoying, tensions that can arise between neighbours to serious, violent and intimidatory behaviour, which makes the lives of those affected a complete misery.[4] Some forms of anti social behaviour, for instance noise nuisance, are closely associated with the occupation of the home. Other types of behaviour cause people to feel particularly stressed and insecure within their home, for example racist behaviour.
13.6 The legal framework is only a part, albeit an important part, of any strategy for dealing with anti social behaviour. It is also important that social landlords use the whole range of powers available to them to tackle anti social behaviour, and that effective schemes are developed for the rehabilitation of anti social occupiers. We are not the right body to seek to improve good practice, nor can we develop rehabilitative schemes. These are for Government and the wider housing world. The importance the Government attaches to both enforcement and rehabilitation is evidenced in the recent joint Department for Transport, Local Government and the Regions and Home Office consultation paper on anti social behaviour.[5]
13.7 However, any effective strategy needs the right legal basis. The proposals that follow have been informed by our understanding of some of the requirements for effective action to stop anti social behaviour. That understanding comes, in part, from the policy documents footnoted in this Part, but also from what we have learned from representatives of landlords and tenants in the course of the preparation of this paper. Their desired outcome is not to remove the anti social occupier, but to change behaviour. In this connection, we are impressed with the success claimed by Manchester City Council for the use of injunctions in changing behaviour.[6] Eviction is, in some senses, an admission of failure.
13.9 This Part considers what powers should exist to enable social landlords to deal with those types of anti social behaviour which impact upon the occupation of residential premises or the locality of the premises or the management of that premises. In many instances the criminal law provides a solution. However housing law must supplement the criminal law because of the different procedures and purposes of criminal regulation. In particular, requirements of the criminal burden of proof and the need for witnesses, whilst necessary for civil liberty purposes, can in practice limit an authority’s ability to intervene. Further, criminal sanctions are designed to punish the perpetrator and are not necessarily orientated towards either the protection of the victim[7] or the landlord’s property.
13.11 Part V of the Housing Act 1996 introduced a raft of measures including
(1) a power for local authority landlords to let on introductory tenancies,[8]
(2) the extension of the discretionary ground for possession available to landlords on the basis of nuisance or annoyance to neighbours,[9]
(3) expedited notice for possession proceedings based upon those grounds,[10]
(4) a new power of arrest for certain injunctions against breaches of a nuisance clause in an occupier’s agreement,[11] and
(5) a new injunction and power of arrest for local authorities to restrain people other than their occupiers from anti social behaviour in the locality of local authority housing.[12]
Also relevant is the power available to a local authority under section 222 of the Local Government Act 1972, to take part in court proceedings – whether suing, prosecuting or defending – when it considers it expedient to do so for the promotion or protection of the interests of the inhabitants of its area.[13]
13.12 These provisions have been supplemented by other legislation,[14] including the Noise Act 1996, the Protection from Harassment Act 1997 and, most particularly, the anti social behaviour orders set out in section 1 of the Crime and Disorder Act 1998. Anti social behaviour orders can be obtained from the magistrates’ court by the police or the local authority[15] against a person aged ten years or over who has been behaving in an anti social manner and the order is necessary to protect others from further anti social behaviour. Breaches of the order are punished as criminal offences.
13.13 The strategic role of local authorities has been strengthened by section 6 of the Crime and Disorder Act 1998 which imposes a duty on local authorities – in partnership with the police, probation, health authorities and others – to produce and implement a local strategy for the reduction of crime and disorder.[16]
13.14 Further statutory innovations are contained in the Homelessness Act 2002, which requires local authorities to consider the impact of violence on an applicant for accommodation under the homelessness legislation, extending a similar provision which previously applied only to domestic violence. Thus a local authority will be potentially liable to house a person forced to leave a home because of anti social behaviour by others. In relation to the allocation of social housing, another section allows a local authority to decide that an applicant is ineligible on the basis of his or her unacceptable behaviour. The Act[17] amends Part VI and Part VII of the Housing Act 1996, which regulate the allocation of local authority housing and local authorities duties to the homeless. Local authorities are given the power to design their allocation schemes in such a way as to reduce the priority given to applicants who behave in an anti social manner. Finally, local authorities are not required to give any priority at all to applicants if they or members of their household are guilty of unacceptable behaviour, if, at the time the case is considered, they do not deserve to be treated as a member of a group of people who are to be given preference.
13.15 Even more recently, the Department for Transport, Local Government and the Regions and the Home Office have published a consultation paper outlining further suggested legislative changes to combat anti social behaviour.[18] The proposals in that paper, of course, would change the current law, rather than being applicable to our proposed new legislative scheme. We have, however, shared the ideas discussed in this Part with the Department, who have adapted some of them to the current law. As such, they feature in the joint consultation paper along with other ideas.
13.16 Currently, legislation gives local authorities more powers to deal with anti social behaviour than it gives to other social landlords. Most of these powers belong to them as local authorities rather than as landlords.[19] However, local authorities also have powers as landlords to use introductory tenancy schemes, which are not available to other social landlords.[20]
13.17 We do not think that in this context the distinction between local authority landlord and other registered social landlords is generally justified, in so far as we are considering combating housing-related anti social behaviour. Both are social landlords, in the sense that they are providers of housing for a social rather than a commercial purpose, and as such have a general obligation to the community in which their housing is located. This is perhaps particularly so now, at a time when the registered social landlord sector is growing enormously as a result of large scale transfers of local authority stock. We note that the Government are moving in a similar direction in that, at the time of writing, amendments are being made to the Police Reform Bill to allow registered social landlords to apply for anti social behaviour orders.[21]
13.19 We invite views on whether unregistered housing associations should have similar powers and duties.
13.21 The Government does have concerns about the prevalence of anti social behaviour in the private rented sector in some areas of low housing demand and has recently completed a consultation exercise on proposals to license landlords in these areas.[22] Additionally the government has discussed withholding housing benefit from both occupiers and landlords who engage in or condone anti social behaviour.[23] These concerns however fall outside of the remit of our project.
13.23 Currently the law does not impose a duty on landlords to combat anti social behaviour.[24] Occupiers who are the victims of anti social behaviour have attempted to utilise the law of nuisance to impose liability on the landowner of the perpetrator occupiers, but to limited effect. As Susan Bright points out “[t]he parameters of nuisance law are unclear, and malleable.”[25] Occupiers, in particular, receive extremely limited protection against the actions of other occupiers from the law of nuisance. Essentially, a landlord will be only be liable if he or she has expressly or implicitly licensed the behaviour about which complaint is made.[26] In Hussain v Lancaster City Council[27]the Hussains, who ran a small shop on a local authority estate, were not able to persuade the council to take action to evict the perpetrators of appalling racial harassment. This was despite the fact that the perpetrators were council tenants or family members of council tenants, and therefore the council had sufficient powers. The Court of Appeal struck out the Hussains’ claim against the council.
13.24 The same result was reached in Mowan v London Borough of Wandsworth.[28] The Court of Appeal held that Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights did not require the law to be changed. Sir Christopher Staughton did, however, remark that this was “a deplorable result”.
13.25 We consider that local authorities should be subject to a generally worded public law duty to combat anti social behaviour. As a general duty it should not found a cause of action for breach of statutory tort. That would make it individually actionable by the aggrieved occupier. (If that was the desired effect, we would use the proposal for a contractual duty outlined below in paragraphs 13.33 and 13.34). Although – in the current state of administrative law[29] – it would not in practice allow an individual occupier who claimed to be a victim of anti social behaviour to take legal action against a particular decision of the local authority, such a general duty would nevertheless have several advantages.
13.27 We have already said that we consider that it is desirable to give local authorities and social landlords the same powers and duties in relation to anti social behaviour. However, whether housing associations (which constitute the great bulk of registered social landlords) are public bodies who can be made liable to such a general public law duty is currently very unclear.[30] Thus, we cannot simply address a generally worded duty to registered social landlords, as well as local authorities, and expect it to apply in a public law context. We are, however, anxious to maintain the principle of equality between local authorities and registered social landlords in respect of duties relating to anti social behaviour.
13.28 We consider that broadly the same effect could be achieved if legislation specified that registered social landlords were covered by a duty in the same terms as that imposed on local authorities (which would be expressed as not to take effect as a statutory tort). The legislation would then also impose a requirement on the Housing Corporation to have regard to the duty in performing its regulatory functions.[31] The result would be that the duty would become effective through the regulatory structure, rather than as a matter of public law. Other agencies involved with housing associations would also take the existence of the general duty into account, for instance, the Independent Housing Ombudsman.[32]
13.29 Alternatively if, as the case law develops, it appears that registered social landlords come to be generally regarded as public bodies, then it might be appropriate to give the Secretary of State a power to impose the duty on them, similar to the “general statutory duty” to promote race relations contained in section 71(1) of the Race Relations Act 1976 – as amended by section 2 of the Race Relations (Amendment) Act 2000. This may be extended to other bodies by order, provided that “the Secretary of State considersthat the extension relates to a person who exercises functions of a public nature”.[33]
13.33 It is, however, possible to go further by imposing a requirement that social landlords[34] include, in their agreements, a term specifying that the landlord should take all reasonable steps to ensure that the occupier should be able to occupy the home unaffected by anti social behaviour by other occupants of other premises owned by the landlord. Breach of such a term would provide the occupier with specific and individual remedies, including a right to damages in the event of breach. An advantage of this approach would be that, because it arose out of the agreement, it could be equally imposed on both local authorities and registered social landlords. Such a requirement would further reinforce the principle that both landlords and occupiers have rights and responsibilities arising from the community nature of the provision. The duty would be drafted so as not to interfere with local authorities’ right to allocate according to its allocation scheme. Any decision not to re-house someone for previous anti social behaviour should be taken in the context of proper decision making on homelessness, not as a result of pressure arising from the duty. We acknowledge that such a term would place a burden on landlords and might have significant resource implications.
13.35 If there were such a term, clearly it would be for the benefit not only of the occupier but also members of his or her family or household. It would be possible to expressly make provision for the members of the occupier’s household to enforce it, as well as the occupier, by using the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.[35] This option would be helpful if for some reason the occupier him or herself was unwilling or unable to enforce the term, but another member of the household could and would. If this option were adopted, however, there would have to be an express term to the effect that the agreement could be rescinded or varied without the consent of the third party, to ensure that members of the occupier’s family did not a veto over those matters.[36]
13.41 Here we consider a proposal for a new procedure for the summary eviction of occupiers with type II (probationary) agreements.[37] The introductory tenancy regime, as originally intended by Parliament, was designed to give local authority landlords sufficient speed and certainty to deal with serious anti social behaviour. As a result of decisions by the courts, we have concluded that the introductory tenancy regime is not as speedy and certain as Parliament thought. In addition, the introductory tenancy regime was never available to social landlords.
13.43 One approach would be to use existing procedures to afford the occupier a bare minimum level of Article 6 rights. The Court of Appeal in McLellan v Bracknell Forest BC[38]found that a combination of an internal review process before an application to the court for a possession order with judicial review while proceedings in the county court were adjourned, was compliant with Article 6. The problem with such a procedure is that it does not achieve the swift and certain removal of the alleged perpetrator of the anti social behaviour. At the same time, it can be seen as cutting the alleged perpetrator’s Article 6 rights to the minimum, providing an unsatisfactory, even if compliant, mechanism for judicial fact finding.
13.45 We have considered two options.
13.46 The features of Option A would be as follows.
(1) The landlord would apply to the county court for a formal order for possession, on the ground that the occupier had breached the term of the agreement prohibiting anti social behaviour. The procedure for obtaining the order would be a paper only one, the court being required only to satisfy itself that any relevant notices had been complied with. There would be no procedure for adjournment.
(2) After eviction, the occupier would be entitled to apply to the court to consider the eviction. The court would determine whether the occupier had indeed breached the term prohibiting anti social behaviour, and, if he or she had, would go on to consider whether it was reasonable in all the circumstances to have evicted the occupier (using the structured discretion we propose below[39]).
(3) If the court found that the occupier had not breached the term, or that he or she had done so but that nevertheless the eviction was unreasonable, then the occupier would be entitled to
(a) be re-housed by the landlord in similar accommodation in the same general area, and /or
(b) compensatory damages.
13.47 The features of Option B would as follows.
(1) There would be a statutory internal review procedure, similar to that for introductory tenancies, requiring notice to be given to the occupier of the decision, with reasons, followed by, at the request of the occupier, a further review by a senior officer which included a right to an oral hearing, representation and examination of witnesses.
(2) On completion of the review process, and on the assumption that the occupier had failed to reverse the landlord’s decision, the landlord would obtain a summary possession order from the court.
(3) The occupier would be entitled after eviction to apply to the county court to judicially review the decision to evict, the degree of judicial review being such as was necessary to make the procedure as a whole complaint with Article 6.
(4) The reviewing county court would have the power to quash the order, substitute another order and/or make a declaration in relation to the case, and, at its discretion, order re-housing and/or damages as in option A.
13.49 We have considered whether this process, taken as a whole, would amount to an effective remedy, as required by Article 13.[40] Article 13 is an auxiliary provision, dependent on an arguable claim that another Convention right has been breached, but it should also be seen as a long stop in that it imposes only minimal procedural safeguards. Where another Article in the Convention imposes a higher standard, then generally Article 13 has no application. In particular, Article 13 generally has no application where Article 6(1) is in play.[41]
13.50 The point could be made that the requirement for an effective remedy requires a domestic procedure “to deal with the substance of the relevant Convention complaint and to grant appropriate relief”.[42] One might think, therefore, that even if a court procedure was fully Article 6 compliant, it might not be an effective remedy if the court did not have power to grant appropriate relief.
13.51 However, the way in which the European Court on Human Rights has dealt with this is influenced by its approach to the relationship between Article 13 and the substantive Convention rights. The requirements of the Article are to be read in the light of the Convention as a whole, with the result that the remedy need only be as effective as is possible in the circumstances. If it were otherwise, then a finding that Article 8, for instance, had not been breached by German legislation regulating the interception of communications could be collaterally attacked using Article 13.[43]
13.52 The result has been that in practice, the argument has resolved itself into one about whether or not judicial review is (in the circumstances) adequate. Thus, although judicial review was adequate in Vilvarajah and Others[44] and Soering,[45] it was not in Chahal v UK[46] where the risk of treatment breaching Article 3 on the deportation of a Sikh activist to India required “independent scrutiny of the claim that there exist substantial grounds for fearing a real risk of treatment contrary to Article 3”. Judicial review in a “national security” case could not, under the rules then obtaining, satisfy that requirement. The court had already found a breach of Article 5(4), which is similar, for these purposes, to a breach of Article 6.
13.56 We invite views on whether option A or option B is to be preferred.
13.62 Currently secure and assured tenants can be evicted for anti social behaviour where the court decides that it is reasonable to do so.[47] There is clearly a concern that it takes too long to get an order for possession and that the judicial outcome is too uncertain. We propose a number of innovations designed to enable the landlord to respond more effectively to anti social behaviour.
13.64 We proposed above that there should be a single definition of serious housing related anti social behaviour.[48] If that proposal is adopted, the power of arrest could be made available for injunctions by social landlords to restrain breaches of their nuisance term, where the breach amounted to serious housing related anti social behaviour according to that definition. This would effectively replace the cumbersome requirements of section 153. We consider that a power of arrest is a valuable tool both in restraining anti social behaviour and providing protection for its victims. This is particularly so where violence or threats of violence are involved.
13.67 We invite views on whether the power of arrest should be available in respect of
(1) only behaviour involving violence or the threat of violence;
(2) behaviour involving violence or the threat of violence, or which would result in serious harm to another; or
(3) all breaches amounting to serious housing related anti social behaviour.
13.70 We have been concerned about suggestions of a lack of consistency in judicial decision making on the question of the reasonableness of granting a possession. We have proposed above[49] that there should be a statutory structuring of the discretion. In the context of appropriate remedies for anti social behaviour by occupiers we consider that further constraints on judicial discretion would be justified.
13.72 This would be broadly in line with the current case law. In Woking BC v Bistram[50]the Court of Appeal explained that, in exercising their discretion in granting possession for anti social behaviour, judges must give proper weight to the local council's obligations to other occupiers on the estate. Further, in City of Bristol v Mousah,[51] the Court of Appeal held that where there are serious breaches of the terms of a tenancy, it is only in exceptional cases that it is not reasonable to make an order for possession.
(1) demoted to a type II (probationary) agreement, to which the summary eviction procedure could then apply;
(2) relocated elsewhere; and either demoted as in (1) above or offered supported housing; or
(3) immediately evicted, if it is reasonable to do so.
(1) the landlord chooses to do so;
(2) the court so orders, on the application of the occupier after a certain time has elapsed; or
(3) a certain period of time elapses.
13.81 The relocation order we propose would be appropriate where the physical removal of the occupier (and/or his or her household) from the immediate locality was expected by the landlord to stop the anti social behaviour. The order would operate in a similar way to a mandatory ground to evict where alternative accommodation is available.
13.82 The social landlord would not be restricted to letting within the local area, but the social landlord must continue to be the occupier’s landlord (so if, for instance, the occupier is accommodated in the private sector, the social landlord would rent the premises from the private landlord, and then sub-let them to the occupier).
13.83 We provisionally propose that, where an occupier is relocated under the order referred to in paragraph 13.76(2), the alternative accommodation should be suitable as defined in sections 206 and 210 of the Housing Act 1996, that is the landlord must have regard to the law governing unfitness, overcrowding and houses in multiple occupation, and the accommodation should also be affordable by the occupier and not put the occupier at risk of physical violence or racial harassment. The landlord should not be restricted as to its location.
13.84 Local authorities have the power to obtain anti social behaviour orders against a wide range of people for a wide range of behaviour, and the power is now being extended to registered social landlords.[52] Originally, anti social behaviour orders could only be obtained from the magistrates’ court, and breach proceedings similarly were confined to that court. With the amendments currently being made in the Police Reform Bill, county courts will be able to make orders, but only where the person against whom the order is made is a party to proceedings before it. Only local authorities, registered social landlords and the police can seek the order, but if they are not already a party to the proceedings before the court, they can be joined for the purpose of applying for the order. Breaches are still to be enforced in the criminal courts.
13.88 We provisionally propose that where the anti social behaviour orders can be certified as including a finding that the conduct of the occupier included behaviour within our concept of serious housing-related anti social behaviour[53] then a local authority or registered social landlord would be able to choose to take breach proceedings in the county court, which would be able make an order to transfer, demote or (subject to reasonableness) evict the occupier, once breach is established. The court would then be empowered to commit the occupier to the magistrates’ court or the Crown Court for sentence for breach of the order.
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[1]A lobbying group set up following a major local authority conference on anti social behaviour in 1995.
[2]Cabinet Office Social Exclusion Unit, National Strategy for Neighbourhood Renewal – Report of the Policy Action Team 8: Anti social behaviour (March 2000) and National Strategy for Neighbourhood Renewal – Report of the Policy Action Team 7: Unpopular Housing (October 1999).
[3] Labour Party, A Quiet Life: Tough Action on Criminal Neighbours (June 1995).
[4]There is a variety of definitions provided in statute and policy documents. Eg the Crime and Disorder Act 1998, s 1(1)(a) defines acting in an anti social manner as acting in “a manner that caused or was likely to cause harassment, alarm or distress to one or more persons not of the same household as himself”.
[5]For which see para13.15 below.
[6]Neighbourhood Nuisance Strategy Group figures for 2001, provided by Manchester City Council, indicate that of the 378 injunctions obtained only 21 resulted in committal to prison.
[7]Eg a victim may be best served by the removal of the perpetrator from the locality – something only provided for by imprisonment and then only on a temporary basis.
[8]Housing Act 1996, s 124.
[9]Housing Act 1985, Sched 2, ground 2, as amended by Housing Act 1996, s 144; and Housing Act 1988, Sched 2, ground 14, as amended by Housing Act 1996, s 148. This applies to private landlords as well as social landlords.
[10]Also available to private landlords as well as social landlords: Housing Act 1985, s 83(3), as amended by Housing Act 1996, s 147(1); and Housing Act 1988, s 8(4), as amended by Housing Act 1996, s 151.
[11]Housing Act 1996, s 153, available to councils and other social landlords. Private landlords continue to be able to take injunctions against breaches of their tenancy agreements, but cannot obtain a power of arrest to enforce them.
[12]Ibid, s 152, not available to other social landlords nor to private landlords.
[13]It is important to note that s 222 does not create a new cause of action or offence. The use of this power was recently considered by the Court of Appeal in the context of anti social behaviour in Nottingham City Council v Z [2001] EWCA Civ 1248; (2002) 1 WLR 607. Nottingham City Council was seeking an injunction based on the tort of public nuisance to restrain a drug dealer from entering a housing estate; it is not stated in the report but this was presumably not a council estate or Housing Act 1996, s 152 would have been available with a power of arrest. The Court of Appeal – overturning the district judge’s striking out of the application – held that the authority was entitled to use the protection of the interests of local inhabitants under s 222 to justify instituting civil proceedings for public nuisance, even where the nuisance also constituted a criminal offence.
[14]For a useful analysis cf the article by Caroline Hunter, “Anti social behaviour – can law be the answer?” in Dave Cowan and Alex Marsh (eds), Two Steps Forward: Housing policy into the new millennium (2001) at p 221.
[15]Note the amendments to the Police Reform Bill – note 21 below.
[16]The significance of the strategies produced by local Crime and Disorder Reduction Partnerships in reducing anti social behaviour is made explicit by the Cabinet Office Social Exclusion Unit, A New Commitment to Neighbourhood Renewal: National Strategy Action Plan (January 2001) at para 4.31.
[17]For a summary of the Bill, as originally published, cf Caroline Hunter, “‘The Good, the Bad and the…’: Reasonable Preference, Exclusion and Choice in Housing Allocation” [2001] JHL 77.
[18]Department for Transport, Local Government and the Regions, Tackling Anti Social Tenants (2 April 2002). The consultation period closes on 12 July 2002.
[19]Eg anti social behaviour orders under the Crime and Disorder Act 1998, s 1 and injunctions under the Housing Act 1996, s 152. However, note the amendments to the Police Reform Bill – cf note 21 below.
[20]Under Housing Act 1996, ss 124 to143 (see paras 11.17 to 11.21 above). Registered social landlords have been using assured shorthold tenancies as an alternative.
[21]Cf Hansard (HC) 12 March 2002, cols 722-730 for the amendments made. Other amendments made at the same time introduce an interim anti social behaviour order and extend the geographical area over which an anti social behaviour order can extend. Anti social behaviour orders are also made available to the county court, where there are existing proceedings against the alleged perpetrator, and become a sentencing option in the criminal courts following conviction for any offence. The amendments insert new sections into the Crime and Disorder Act 1998.
[22]Department for Transport, Local Government and the Regions, Selective Licensing of Private Landlords – A Consultation Paper (November 2001) available at: http:// www.housing.dtlr.gov.uk/information/consult/licensing/index.htm.
[23]Cf Department of the Environment, Transport and the Regions, Quality and Choice: A Decent Home for All, The Housing Green Paper (April 2000) at para 5.46: “There are also situations where the claimant is not so much the victim of the bad landlord as his accomplice, and where his own anti social behaviour is an important part of the problem. Here too it has been suggested that the benefit rules could be adapted to encourage both occupiers and landlords to behave responsibly. Housing Benefit could be reduced for unruly occupiers, whilst the method of direct payment could be denied for landlords who failed to do what they could to control the behaviour of their occupiers. Objective tests would need to be devised of the behaviour to be required of tenants and landlords for this purpose.” Available at: http://www.housing.dtlr.gov.uk/information/consult/homes/green/index.htm
[24]Hussain v Lancaster City Council [1998] EWCA Civ 834; [2000] QB 1.
[25]Susan Bright, “Liability for the Bad Behaviour of Others” (2001) 21OJLS 311 at 312.
[26]Lippiatt v South Gloucestershire County Council [1999] EWCA Civ 1151; [2000] QB 51.
[28][2000] EWCA Civ 357; [2000] All ER (D) 2411.
[29]Cf Wade and Forsyth, Administrative Law (8th ed 2000) pp 580 to 581.
[30]Peabody Housing Association v Greene (1978) 38 P & CR 644; R v Servite Houses, ex p Goldsmith [2000] EWHC Admin 338; [2001] LGR 55 (QBD). See further the discussion in paras 5.42 to 5.53 above about the status of housing associations.
[31]The Housing Corporation has extensive powers over registered social landlords. Of particular relevance in this context, it has the power to set performance standards under Housing Act 1996, s 34 and to publish housing management guidance under Housing Act 1996, s 36. The Corporation already provides regulatory guidance, information and advice to registered social landlords on anti social behaviour – cf documents at: http://www. housingcorplibrary.org.uk.
[32]Cf Housing Act 1996, Sched 2, para 2; information on the Independent Housing Ombudsman is available at: http://www.ihos.org.uk.
[33]Race Relations Act 1976, s 71(5). The power has been used to extend the duty to the Tate Gallery, the Britain-Russia Centre and the Wine Standards Board.
[34]We do not envisage this requirement being imposed on private landlords.
[35]Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999, s 1.
[36]Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999, s 2(1) would have this effect, if such a provision was not made under s 2(3)(a).
[37]By a type II (probationary) agreement, we mean a type II agreement without the six months’ moratorium. See the discussion in paras 11.22 to 11.29.
[39]See 13.71 below.
[40]Article 13 is not one of the Convention rights to which the Human Rights Act 1998 applies, but we would not provisionally propose a procedure that we did not consider compatible.
[41]Keir Starmer, European Human Rights Law (1999) p 143; Lester and Pannick,Human Rights Law and Practice (1999) p 217;Van Dijk and Van Hoof, Theory and Practice of the European Convention on Human Rights (3rd ed 1998) p 700 to 702. It is perhaps worth noting that the authors of the last work (one of whom was for a considerable period a respected judge of the Court) are critical of the Court’s development of Article 13, concluding that “the meaning of Article 13 is virtually nullified”: ibid at p 710.
[42]Aksoy v Turkey Reports of Judgments and Decisions vol 1996 part VI p 2260; 23 EHRR 553, para 95 (emphasis added).
[43]Klass and Others v Germany Series A (Judgments and Decisions) vol 145 (1978); 2 EHRR 214.
[44]Series A (Judgments and Decisions) vol 215 (1991); 14 EHRR 248.
[45]Series A (Judgments and Decisions) vol 161 (1989); 11 EHRR 439.
[46]Reports of Judgments and Decisions Vol 1996 part V p 1831; 23 EHRR 413.
[47]Housing Act 1985, Sched 2, ground 2 and Housing Act 1988, Sched 2, ground 14.
[48]See paras 13.39 and 13.40 above.
[49]See paras 12.27 and 12.28 above.
[50](1993) 27 HLR 1.
[51][1997] EWCA Civ 1081; (1998) 30 HLR 32. Other cases make the same point, cf: Darlington BC v Sterling [1996] EWCA Civ 808, (1997) 29 HLR 309; Kensington and Chelsea RLBC v Simmonds (1997) 29 HLR 507; Northampton BC v Lovatt [1997] EWCA Civ 821,(1998) 30 HLR 875; Camden LBC v Gilsennan (1999) 31 H L R 81; West Kent Housing Association v Davies [1999] EWCA Civ 1087, (1999) 31 HLR 415; Newcastle CC v Morrison (2000) 32 HLR 891; Watford BC v Simpson (2000) 32 HLR 901; Canterbury CC v Lowe (2001) 33 HLR 583.
[52]See note 21 above.
[53]See paras 13.39 and 13.40 above.