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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Law Commission >> RENTING HOMES 2: CO-OCCUPATION, TRANSFER AND SUCCESSION (A Consultation Paper) [2002] EWLC 168(3) (22 August 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/other/EWLC/2002/168(3).html Cite as: [2002] EWLC 168(3) |
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Part III
co-occupation Agreements
3.1 As noted at the outset of this paper, CP 162 was written on the deliberately simplistic assumption that the landlord would be entering into a contract granting the right to occupy premises with one person – the occupier. This was necessary to explain the basis of our proposed scheme.
(1) the current law of joint occupation, and how the principles of that law should be adapted to our proposed scheme;
(2) the creation of joint occupation agreements;
(3) the liability arising under joint occupation agreements;
(4) the circumstances in which new occupiers may enter a joint occupation agreement;
(5) how joint occupiers may seek to leave the agreement; and
(6) non-contractual arrangements.
3.3 At present, the rights of those who have entered agreements to share property are determined primarily by the principles of the law on joint tenancy and tenancy in common, found in land law. It is important to stress that these principles apply to all cases where there is co-ownership of land, not just to cases where land has been rented.[1] Furthermore, the principles do not apply to licensees who are sharing.
3.4 While it is not necessary for the purposes of this paper to give a full account of this law, a number of points should be noted.
3.5 First, an important distinction between joint tenancy and tenancy in common is that under joint tenancy a “right of survivorship” applies. This means that, on the death of one joint tenant, the survivor takes over the whole of interest in the property. This will often suit those who have lived together for many years, whether as husband and wife or in other long-term relationships. But where property has been acquired on the basis of sharply different contributions this may be unfair. Tenancy in common provides that property is held on undivided shares but, on the death of a co-owner, the interest holder has full testamentary powers to leave his or her share by will to another.
3.6 Secondly, another feature of joint tenancy (as opposed to tenancy in common)is that liability to meet the obligations under the joint tenancy agreement is, unless there is any provision to the contrary, “joint and several”. This means that each tenant is liable to meet in full the obligations under the agreement. This is so even where one tenant who was supposed to contribute to meeting those obligations fails to make the proper contribution, for example to payment of the rent.[2]
3.7 Thirdly, the law relating to joint tenancy limits the number of persons to whom a legal joint tenancy can be granted to four.[3] Any further joint tenants have only an equitable interest in the property. These are rules of long-standing, well understood by conveyancers and an integral part of the land registration requirements of HM Land Registry.
3.8 While these principles can be applied relatively easily in cases where the co-tenants are all named on the tenancy agreement, problems start to arise where premises are shared by a number of people, but only one is named on the agreement; or where one or more of the co-tenants leaves and the remaining ones wish to bring in new occupiers to take the place of those who have quit.
3.11 But we propose a new right whereby occupiers may seek to bring a new occupier into the agreement, with the consent of the landlord. This would replace the present legal position, which requires the original tenancy agreement to be assigned, or terminated and a new one created.[4] We regard this process as unnecessarily cumbersome and poorly understood.
3.16 There are, of course, good reasons to limit the numbers who may live in any particular home, which derive from more general considerations of public health. But these can quite properly be regulated through the law relating to overcrowding.[5]
3.19 The law on land registration would continue to require that the only first four named joint occupiers in agreement covered by our new scheme which counted as leases, rather than licences, could be registered at HM Land Registry. We have proposed that our scheme should apply to all agreements for periods of up to 21 years.[6] While currently none of the agreements covered by our new scheme would need to be registered, on the coming into force of the Land Registration Act 2002, leases for seven years or more will have to be registered and there will be voluntary registration for leases between three and seven years.[7] Nevertheless in the vast majority of cases, registration of occupation agreements will not be required as they would be for a period of less than three years.[8]
3.20 We suggested above that questions relating to the extent of the liabilities that arise under joint occupation agreements should be based by analogy on the current law of joint tenancy. This would mean that joint occupiers would have joint and several liability to meet the terms of the contract during the life of the agreement. In addition, when a joint occupier dies, the remaining joint occupiers should normally take over the rights and obligations under the agreement through the principle of survivorship.[9]
3.22 Under the present law relating to joint tenancy, each member of the group is normally liable to meet his or her obligations under the tenancy “jointly and severally”.[10] Thus each member of the group would be liable, individually, for the whole of the obligations imposed by the tenancy.
3.23 Although an arrangement may have started on the basis that each joint occupier will make a contribution to the rent, should one or more occupiers fail to keep up their contribution, responsibility for the total rent will fall on the shoulders of the remaining joint occupiers.[11]
3.25 Problems often arise where one of the group leaves the premises, and the occupiers are either unable to replace that person or under the terms of their agreement are prevented from doing so.[12] The question then arises: what rent should the remaining member(s) of the group be paying? And more generally, what is the scope of their liability under the contract? If there is joint and several liability under the contract, then the remaining party or parties to the contract remain liable for the payment of the whole rent, not just a proportion of it.
3.28 We provisionally propose that, where an occupation agreement is entered into by more than one occupier, there should be a default term that liability of the occupiers under that agreement should be on the joint and several basis.
3.33 A number of steps have already been taken in this direction:
(1) In 1996 the then Department of the Environment issued a circular,[13] now replaced by statutory guidance to which local authorities must “have regard”,[14] dealing with cases where there is a long term joint commitment to the home which is likely to continue. Situations envisaged included joint commitment by spouses, friends, or unpaid live-in carers. The guidance provides that local authorities “should normally” grant joint tenancies to such groups, subject to there being no adverse implications for good use of the stock. It also says local authorities should tell applicants of the availability of joint tenancies and give written reasons for any refusal to grant one.[15]
(2) The Housing Corporation’s “Assured Tenant’s Charter” states that assured tenants are entitled to know their landlord’s policy on the giving of joint tenancies.[16]
(3) The Housing (Scotland) Act 2001, section 11(5) goes further and creates a right to bring in a joint tenant. The existing tenant and a potential new joint tenant can apply jointly in writing to the landlord for the new person to be included as a new joint tenant. The incomer must either already live at the property as their only or principal home, or must intend to do so, but there is no requirement for any particular relationship to exist between the incomer and the current tenant.
The right is not an absolute one. The landlord can refuse the application. But the landlord must consent unless it has reasonable grounds not to. The Act does not define what would qualify as reasonable grounds. Like the rest of the Act the provision only applies to the social rented sector, not the private rented sector. It also applies to short Scottish secure tenancies.[17]
3.39 We have also asked ourselves whether the proposed new right should apply to all types of agreement or be limited to type I agreements. We accept that there is an argument that the desire of occupiers to bring new parties into a home is something that will occur in all parts of the rented sector of the housing market. If we do not provide for it across the board, occupiers will in practice enter into arrangements with joint occupiers without any reference to the landlord. On the other hand it could be argued that the policy developments relating to joint occupiers (see paragraph 3.33 above) have occurred exclusively in the social rented sector, and that therefore these proposals should be similarly limited. It could also be argued that private landlords should be able to have greater control over the identity of their occupiers.[18]
3.46 If the court agrees that the refusal of consent was unreasonable, we see no benefit in suggesting that there should be further formalities to be completed before a new joint occupier is added to the agreement. We therefore propose that, in an appropriate case, the court should have power to order that a new occupier be added to the agreement, as the result of which the new occupier would become a co-occupier from the date of the order or any other date fixed by the court.[19] We think it right to ask whether the court should, at the same time, have a power to amend any of the other terms of the agreement.
3.49 We invite views on whether the court should have any wider power to vary the terms of the agreement.
3.50 In any event, the order would take effect as a variation of the original agreement. It would therefore entitle both the new and existing occupiers to seek a revised version of the agreement from the landlord, taking account of this variation.[20]
3.57 If the landlord does not consent, and a court order that the refusal was unreasonable is not obtained, the person will not become a joint occupier. They might of course still move in to the property, but this will give them no contractual rights as against the landlord. Nor will it in itself give them any contract with the occupier. Their status will therefore be the same as other non-contracting occupiers, as outlined below at paragraphs 3.113 to 3.140. This will not directly affect the landlord. In fact they may commonly already have had this status before applying to become joint occupiers, for instance as the co-habitee or adult child of the occupier.[21] If they wish to enter into a contract to occupy the property, then they will have to do so with the occupier, rather than the landlord. They will then become the occupier’s lodgers or sub-occupiers, as described in Parts IV and V below.
3.59 There may be many reasons why those who have jointly entered an agreement giving them the right to occupy a dwelling find that the arrangements cannot continue as originally envisaged. A couple may fall out and decide to live apart; a group of friends may find they are not getting on as well as they anticipated; one joint occupier may receive an offer of employment in another part of the country, or abroad. It is important that our proposed scheme can cope with these common situations in a clear and flexible way that balances the interests of the occupiers and the landlord better than the current law.[22]
3.61 We discuss first what the formal route of withdrawing might be. We then consider the situation when a person withdraws without following the formal route.[23]
3.62 There are two key issues that need consideration:
(1) How can a joint occupier withdraw from the agreement?
(2) What formalities, if any, should be fulfilled by a joint occupier who wishes to withdraw from the agreement?
3.63 In CP 162, we proposed that there should be a type I agreement which would confer substantial security of tenure on an occupier. We anticipated that this type of agreement would be used primarily by social landlords. We also thought there would be little point in there being a type I agreement for a fixed term, rather than on a periodic basis,[24] and we do not consider the possibility of a fixed term type I agreement further here.
3.64 In CP 162 we considered the principal ways in which an occupier might bring an agreement to an end, formally, and proposed that the present ability of tenants to give notice should be reproduced in modified form.[25]
3.65 There is however one particular problem currently associated with the use of a notice to quit by a joint tenant. It is settled law that a notice to quit served by one joint tenant operates to bring the whole tenancy to an end, regardless of the wishes or indeed the knowledge of any other joint tenant.[26] It appears that attempts to attenuate the effect of a notice to quit served by a single joint tenant have so far met with failure.[27] It can be argued that the ability of one joint tenant to end the tenancy without the knowledge of the other, and possibly with the encouragement of the landlord, can cause injustice and hardship.
3.66 We acknowledge that the current law is commonly relied on, particularly by social landlords where a relationship between two joint tenants has broken down and one joint tenant leaves. Often this is in family sized property. The departing tenant takes the children, leaving the remaining tenant effectively under-occupying the premises. The landlord may agree to re-house the departing tenant in the original property (or elsewhere) only if the departing tenant gives notice to quit.[28] The landlord can then regain possession of the original property because the whole joint tenancy has been ended. Effectively the use of a tenant’s notice to quit operates as a way around the remaining tenant’s security of tenure, as the current repossession grounds only allow for the possibility of obtaining an order for possession on the basis of under-occupation where the tenant has succeeded to the tenancy.
3.68 In our view, joint occupiers should be able to withdraw from a joint occupation agreement by serving notice, but without artificially destroying the whole occupation agreement. At the same time, there is an argument that provision should be made to enable landlords to seek repossession in situations where the occupier(s) who have been left behind are not appropriate[29] to the home in question.
3.69 We are attracted by the provisions of the Housing (Scotland) Act 2001 relating to the right of joint tenants to extract themselves from their agreement. Under section 13 of that Act a joint occupier has a right to serve notice ending only his or her own interest, not the whole tenancy.[30]
3.70 It may be argued that this could prejudice the remaining occupiers who may find themselves liable on their own for the full rent. However, this is less prejudicial than finding themselves evicted without warning. In any event, the effect of one joint occupier leaving could also be mitigated by provisions which enable a new occupier to be brought into the premises, either as a new joint occupier or as a lodger.[31] Broadly, we think that it is reasonable to expect occupiers to realise that if they jointly take on a property which they cannot afford singly then they may either have to find somewhere cheaper to live if one of the joint occupiers quits or to find another person to join them.
3.74 If it is necessary to allow social landlords to repossess properties in this situation, then we provisionally consider that it would be better to do so directly by means of what we have, in CP 162, called the estate management circumstances justifying repossession.[32]
3.77 If the latter option is adopted, a new specific circumstance justifying repossession could be included in the list, on the model of that which already exists where a statutory successor succeeds to too large a property.[33]
3.89 The remaining occupier may then seek to bring an additional person into the premises, either through seeking to take in a lodger or by agreement with the landlord to grant a sub-occupation agreement of part of the premises, or – with consent – by bringing in a new joint occupier.[34]
3.90 However, given the lack of security of tenure, we do not think that there is the same need to confer a special opportunity for the landlord to seek an order for possession. The landlord may achieve this relatively easily by the “notice-only” procedure which attaches to the type II agreement.[35]
3.96 In CP 162 we suggested that it should be possible for landlords and occupiers to agree to bring a fixed-term agreement to an end, by a process analogous to surrender which applies in the context of the law of landlord and tenant. However we proposed that the current requirement that any express surrender be by deed should be replaced by a simple requirement of writing. In the context of a joint agreement, this could only be achieved where all the joint occupiers co-operate and agree to surrender their rights to occupy.[36]
3.97 Where a fixed-term agreement contains a break clause, we proposed in CP 162 that the occupier should be able to take advantage of any such break clause by giving notice to the landlord on a similar basis to the occupier’s notice to terminate a periodic agreement.[37] It would be possible for all the joint occupiers to act collectively in accordance with such a break clause and thereby terminate the agreement.
3.99 The remaining occupier(s) would still have the responsibilities and liabilities under the agreement. He or she would also be able to take advantage of the right to take in a lodger or to grant a sub-occupation agreement of the premises, as may be appropriate and in the latter case as agreed with the landlord.[38]
3.104 In CP 162 we suggested the adoption of a procedure for landlords to take possession after serving notice to check if the occupier has treated the agreement as terminated by abandonment, based on section 17 of the Housing (Scotland) Act 2001.[39] Section 20 of that Act provides for a similar procedure for the landlord to use where it appears a joint tenant has abandoned the premises.[40] There are some differences from the procedure for sole tenants, presumably to reflect the different position where there are other tenants still in occupation and so there will be less obvious evidence of abandonment.[41]
3.108 It is hard to predict the circumstances in which a landlord might wish to take advantage of the abandonment procedure. However one consequence of the process being completed is that the landlord and the remaining occupiers would then be clear that the departed occupier was no longer a party to the agreement. This might be the precursor to a social landlord bringing proceedings for possession against the remaining occupiers on the possible estate management basis discussed above.[42]
3.111 Departed occupiers may react in four main ways to the initial warning notice:
(1) They may fail to respond at all. In that case the procedure will entitle the landlord to serve the second notice. Unless the occupier applies to court, within the eight week period, to challenge that notice, the landlord will be entitled to treat the agreement as terminated in respect of that occupier.
(2) They may reply saying they wish to be released from the agreement. In that case the landlord should similarly be entitled to treat the agreement as terminated in respect of that occupier.
(3) They may reply in a way which satisfies the landlord that they have not abandoned the agreement. In that case the landlord will withdraw the notice. It will still be possible for the landlord to take any action against the other occupiers for any rent arrears. It will also be open to the other occupiers, under the normal principles in joint and several liability, to seek a contribution from the defaulting occupier if they have had to pay the landlord the full rent.
(4) They may reply in a way which does not make it clear that they no longer see themselves as bound by the agreement, but also does not satisfy the landlord that they have not abandoned. In that case the landlord should apply to court for a declaration as to whether the occupier has in fact abandoned. It would be for the court to decide on the evidence available, including any evidence from the occupier, whether the occupier regarded themselves as still bound by the agreement.
3.113 Where an occupier decides to permit others to live in his dwelling on a gratuitous basis, such arrangements will fall outside the scope of our scheme as there will be no contract which will fall within the scheme.[43]
3.114 There are, nevertheless, three issues which we think need consideration in this context:
(1) Whether non-contractual occupiers should have any protection when possession proceedings are brought against the occupier of the premises in which they are residing.
(2) Whether there should be any limits to the powers of landlords to impose restrictions on non-contractual occupiers occupying the premises.
(3) Whether the Family Law Act 1996 needs amendment to take account of non-contractual occupiers under our proposed scheme.
3.117 In mortgage possession proceedings, procedural rules which have a similar effect apply in England and Wales.[44] The mortgagee must serve a notice at the premises 14 days before the hearing, addressed to any occupiers there, that proceedings against the mortgagor are being taken. The occupiers may apply to be joined as defendants, at the court’s discretion. [45] Similarly in landlord and tenant cases if the landlord knows of anyone who may be entitled to claim relief against forfeiture as an under-lessee, the particulars of claim must be served on that person.[46]
3.124 At present, some rights to succession and assignment depend on the successor living in the property as their only or principal home.[47] At least in theory, therefore, such entitlements could be thwarted if the landlord could prevent the occupier moving into the home those who might claim these entitlements.
3.126 Such provisions may or may not be regarded as “unfair” under the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999, depending on the circumstances. The Office of Fair Trading suggest at group 18(h) in their guidance[48] that restrictions will be unfair if they are not required to protect the landlord’s legitimate interests. They state that terms against overnight guests are an example of a potentially unreasonable prohibition.
3.129 This could be achieved in one of two ways.
(1) The occupation agreement could contain a default term which allowed the occupier the freedom to control who would occupy the premises on a non-contractual basis, with departures from the default being regulated under the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations.
(2) Alternatively, the agreement might contain a compulsory term guaranteeing the occupier’s right to do so.[49]
In each case, the term would be subject to the premises not thereby being rendered statutorily overcrowded, and to the contracting occupier being responsible for any anti-social behaviour by non-contractual occupiers.
3.130 At least in the absence of evidence of abuse by landlords, we are not at this stage persuaded that a compulsory term is warranted.
3.131 We provisionally propose that the occupation agreement should contain a default term which allowed the occupier the freedom to control who would occupy the premises on a non-contractual basis, with any departures from the default being regulated under the Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999.
3.132 Nothing in our proposals seeks to alter the effect of the “matrimonial home rights” contained in Family Law Act 1996, section 30.[50] These provisions are mainly concerned with regulating housing rights as between spouses who are occupiers, rather than as between the occupiers and the landlord. Nevertheless, they include an important right in section 30(3), which will need to be preserved, to have payments of rent by the spouse who is not a tenant treated as made on behalf of the other spouse who is the tenant. There is also the right in section 30(4) to have a non-tenant spouse’s occupation of the home treated as occupation by the tenant spouse for the purposes of housing legislation.[51] Under section 35(13) or section 36(13), former spouses and current or former cohabitants who are granted an occupation order also obtain these matrimonial home rights.
3.134 Current housing legislation makes provision for those with “matrimonial home rights” in connection with the adjournment, stay, suspension or postponement of possession proceedings.[52] These provisions are commonly interpreted as meaning that the non-tenant spouse should have the same rights as the tenant, and even that the non-tenant spouse should be able to defend against the making of a possession order in the first place.[53] In fact all that the provisions do, on the face of the statute, is to preserve the rights in section 30 of the Family Law Act 1996 to occupy and tender rent. They do not create a right to make applications or put forward defences. If it were not for these housing law provisions those limited matrimonial home rights would terminate, under section 30(8)(b) of the Family Law Act 1996, on the making of a possession order.[54] The housing law provisions allow those matrimonial home rights to continue after the possession order “in relation to, or in connection with any adjournment, stay, suspension or postponement”. The result is that, for example, rent paid by the non-tenant spouse counts as compliance with the terms of the suspension of a possession order or the adjournment of proceedings. In CP 162, we provisionally suggested that the agreement should not end until the execution of a possession order.[55] In that case we believe the matrimonial home rights should continue to the same point.
3.138 We should note that occupation orders are only available between spouses or opposite-sex couples, not between same-sex couples. If those with occupation orders are given preferential treatment in terms of possession proceedings, as compared with other non-contracting occupiers, this will not be consistent with our view of same-sex relationships in the context of statutory succession.[56] However, it is not appropriate for this project to seek to interfere with the basis on which occupation orders are made in family law.[57] Rather the existence of this issue adds to the attraction of the option, suggested above at paragraphs 3.130 to 3.123, of allowing all non-contracting occupiers to join in possession proceedings.
(1) The non-contracting occupier may have the benefit of a duty of care in negligence.
(2) Statutory provisions such as the Occupiers Liability Act 1957 and the Defective Premises Act 1972 can benefit non-contracting occupiers in the property.
(3) If an order for possession is made on a basis which requires suitable alternative accommodation to be available, the needs of the tenant’s family, not just the tenant, must be taken into account.
(4) Under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 the landlord and contracting occupier can agree to give the benefit of any covenants to other non-contracting occupiers expressly.
[1]The Law Commission has recently considered these principles in its recent publication Sharing Homes: A Discussion Paper (2002), which can be found at http://www.lawcom.gov.uk/misc/property.htm.
[2]In such a case the joint tenant who has met the liabilities under the agreement is able to seek to recover from the other joint tenant to the extent of his share: Chalmers, Guthrie and Co v Guthrie (1923) 156 LTJ 382.
[3]Law of Property Act 1925, s 34(2).
[4]Secure tenants do not appear to be able to assign their tenancies to another person jointly with themselves – see Part VI below.
[5]See Housing Act 1985, Part X.
[6]See CP 162, para 9.18.
[7]See Land Registration Act 1925, s 8 – leases of 21 years and under are protected as overriding interests under s 70(1)(k). See also Land Registration Act 2002, s 4(1)(c) and s 33(b).
[8]Even though a periodic occupation agreement may last for many years, its length is for these purposes determined by the length of the periods at which the rent is paid (weekly, fortnightly or monthly) not the total period of occupation under the agreement.
[9]The issue is discussed at paras 7.7 to 7.15 below.
[10]See C Harpum, Megarry and Wade, The Law of Property (6th ed 2000) at paras 9–02 to 9–08.
[11]In the event of one of a number of joint occupiers having to pay the entirety of the rent, he or she will have – at least in theory – the right to claim reimbursement from the other joint occupiers: Chalmers, Guthrie and Co v Guthrie (1923) 156 LTJ 382. Under the new scheme, we will reproduce and extend the effect of the Landlord and Tenant (Covenants) Act 1995, s 13(3) – which applies the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978 to joint and several covenants in leases – to all agreements under our scheme, including licences.
[12]We discuss, at paras 3.29 to 3.50 below, the circumstances in which the right to occupy may be taken up by a person who is not a party to the original contract.
[13]Department of the Environment, Local Authority Joint Tenancies Circular 7/96 (May 1996).
[14]Department of the Environment and Department of Health, Code of Guidance on Parts VI and VII of the Housing Act 1996: Allocation of Housing Accommodation, Homelessness (1996) Annex C – published under Housing Act 1996, s 169 and s 182.
[15]Where joint tenancies are not used, the guidance seeks to achieve a similar effect on the death of the tenant. It says the local authority should give a tenancy of the property, or a suitable alternative, to another member of the household who is not a statutory successor. This only applies where the extra-statutory succession is to someone who has lived there for a year, or has been looking after the tenant or their dependants, and only where it is a priority given other demands on the stock. In fact, the person would seem to have to be able to qualify for allocation through Housing Act 1996, Part VI as there is no relevant exception.
[16]Housing Corporation, The Assured Tenant’s Charter (1998) p 15.
[17]Housing (Scotland) Act 2001, s 34(6). These are the equivalent of introductory tenancies or of certain uses of type II agreements by social landlords under our suggestions in CP 162, paras 11.16 to 11.29 (relating to probationary type II agreements).
[18]A similar argument is raised in the context of the right to take in a lodger not being extended to type II agreements: see paras 4.29 to 4.36 below.
[19]This power would be analogous to the power to make vesting orders under Family Law Act 1996, Sched 7.
[20]We discussed the rights of occupiers to a copy of varied agreements in CP 162, paras 6.156 to 6.158.
[21]The rights of a non-contracting spouse are greater than others by virtue of family law – see paras 6.57 to 6.71 below.
[22]See eg para 3.73 below.
[23]Of course, if the formal route can be made clear and straightforward, it may encourage more to follow it.
[24]CP 162, paras 7.12 to 7.17.
[25]CP 162, para 10.49.
[26]See Greenwich London Borough Council v McGrady (1982) 6 HLR 36 and Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council v Monk [1992] 1 AC 478.
[27]Newlon Housing Trust v Alsulaimen [1999] 1 AC 313. The service of a notice is not a disposition of property which can be set aside under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973, s 37(2)(b).
[28]In many of these cases this has occurred where a local authority has received a homelessness application from the departing tenant. However, this appears to be due to a misunderstanding of the effect of Housing Act 1996, s 175(3) and s 191(1) – under which a person who has a tenancy is already homeless if it is not reasonable for him or her to continue to occupy it. A person will only make him or herself intentionally homeless if he or she gives the accommodation up when it would have been reasonable to continue to occupy it.
[29]Eg because the home is too large for the occupiers left behind or contains special facilities – eg for people with disabilities – that are not needed by the remaining occupants.
[30]Under the Housing (Scotland) Act 2001, s 20a landlord can similarly use the abandonment procedure against some, rather than all, of the tenants – see para 3.104 below.
[31]See the provisional proposals at paras 3.40 above and 4.5 below respectively.
[32]CP 162, paras 7.77 to 7.83.
[33]CP 162, para 3.41, Table 3, Ground 16.
[34]See paras 3.29 to 3.50 above.
[35]See CP 162, paras 8.33 to 8.35.
[36]Hounslow London Borough Council v Pilling [1994] 1 All ER 432.
[37]CP 162, paras 8.60 to 8.68.
[38]See further paras 4.3 to 4.41 and 5.9 to 5.33 below.
[39]CP 162, para 10.65. This does not involve the landlord terminating the agreement, but rather checking that the occupier has abandoned the agreement. Thus any order by the court is in the nature of a declaration, rather than a mandatory possession order.
[40]The procedure applies where it appears that a joint tenant is not occupying the house and does not intend to occupy it as his or her home. The landlord may serve notice on the abandoning tenant stating: their belief that the tenant has abandoned the premises; requiring the tenant to reply within four weeks if he still intends to occupy the premises as his or her home and informing the tenant of the consequences if the landlord then remains of the belief that the tenant has abandoned the premises.
[41]Under s 20 the actual termination of the joint tenant’s interest follows the serving of a further notice on the abandoning tenant which, at the end of the notice period (which must be at least eight weeks), will bring his or her interest to an end. The abandoning joint tenant’s recourse to court, to challenge the abandonment decision, is more limited than that for a sole tenant, who under s 19(1) has six months from the date of termination to take proceedings. A joint tenant can apply to the court, provided any proceedings are started within the eight week notice period.
[42]CP 162, paras 7.77 to 7.83.
[43]CP 162, paras 6.5 to 6.8.
[44]See CPR Pt 55, r 10.
[45]See CPR Pt 19.
[46]See CPR Practice Direction 55.4, para 2.4.
[47]See Parts VI and VII below.
[48]See CP 162, para 6.11 and Office of Fair Trading, Guidance on Unfair Terms in Tenancy Agreements (November 2001).
[49]One of the objections to a compulsory term might be the lack of control that the landlord would then have, eg over the numbers of non-contractual occupiers. Statutory rules on overcrowding (for which we make provisional proposals as to repossession in CP 162 at para 7.91) are of limited effect, since a much higher level of overcrowding is set as the test for criminal liability under Housing Act 1985, Part X than would be acceptable to most landlords.
[50]These provisions are designed to ensure that a spouse or co-habitee who falls within the scope of the provision, but who is not a tenant, nevertheless has a right, as against the tenant, to occupy the premises. See the discussion at paras 6.57 to 6.71 below.
[51]This is currently important for preserving security, since each of the main Acts dictate that security is lost if the tenant ceases to occupy the property as their principal home.
[52]See Rent Act 1977, ss 100(4A) and (4B); Housing Act 1985, ss 85(5) to (5A) and Housing Act 1988, ss 9(5) and (5A). In CP 162, para 12.10 we provisionally proposed reproducing in our new scheme a right of adjournment, stay, suspension or postponement for occupiers who are party to the agreement.
[53]LAG: Luba, Madge and McConnell, Defending Possession Proceedings (5th ed 2002) p 32, para 2.58 and Shelter: Moroney and Harris, Relationship Breakdown and Housing: A Practical Guide (1997) p 251, para 11.31.
[54]This problem was recognised in Penn v Dunn [1970] 2 QB 686, which led to the introduction of these provisions in previous versions of the legislation.
[55]CP 162, para 12.52.
[56]See paras 7.56 to 7.59 below.
[57]The Family Law Act 1996 provisions originated in work by the Law Commission – cf Family Law: Domestic Violence and Occupation of the Family Home (1992) Law Com No 207. At that time the view was taken that same sex couples would be catered for adequately by covering them in the list of “associated persons”, and there was no discussion of covering them in the new category of cohabitees. The way that the provisions on occupation orders were drafted then meant that same sex partners could not acquire matrimonial home rights under occupation orders.