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 Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Codona v Mid-Bedforshire District Council [2004] EWCA Civ 925 (15 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/925.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 925, [2005] LGR 241 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
B2/2003/2591 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LUTON COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE FARNWORTH
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
and
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE HOLMAN
____________________
LEANNE CODONA |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
MID-BEDFORSHIRE DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Joseph Harper QC and Mr Edmund Robb (instructed by Mills & Reeve) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 1st March 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Auld :
The facts
"… [did] not wish to be given bricks and mortar. She has always lived in a caravan, has only spent one night in a building in her life. Mrs Codona wishes to live in a caravan and have the support of her extended family around her."
"The Association … have a duty to secure suitable accommodation is available for your occupation and, in doing so, shall have regard to all the relevant circumstances relating to you and those who normally reside with you or might reasonably be expected to reside with you.
The Association is aware there are six/seven caravans on Plot 7, Woodside Caravan Park, Hatch, the occupants of which you have included in your homelessness application. The Association is also aware that you consider the occupants of these other vehicles as a part of your immediate household and that you have requested they be accommodated with you. In your application you have also indicated that you do not wish to live in accommodation made of bricks and mortar and that you would consider an offer of a plot/piece of land.
Unfortunately, as you are aware from previous meetings, the Association is unable to offer land and can only secure accommodation from either its own housing stock or, on some occasions, property owned by another Housing Association also operating within the Mid Beds area. Further, it is also highly unlikely the Association will be able to secure a single property large enough to accommodate all the occupants of Plot 7, Woodside Caravan Park. However, given that each family occupying Plot 7 resided in their own separate unit of accommodation, the Association does not consider it unreasonable to offer an individual property for each family on Plot 7 and will endeavour to ensure the properties offered are in as close proximity to each other as is reasonably possible."
"In relation to the question about reasonableness [sic] of an offer of Bed & Breakfast or other temporary accommodation I have reached the following conclusions:
…
… [The 1996] Act and the Code … also provide clarity of what constitutes suitable accommodation. Bed & Breakfast is deemed to be suitable accommodation particularly as … the Council have already confirmed that they will take all reasonable steps to minimise its use. Wherever reasonably practical the offer of any temporary accommodation would be within Mid Beds and that such accommodation as would be provided would be fit for occupation and would not result in statutory overcrowding [a reference to section 210 of the 1996 Act]
"… I note your concerns regarding a stay in bricks and mortar accommodation and would certainly not underestimate the differences (sic) which you would have to face having always lived in a caravan. I understand that you are concerned about living without the support of your family but again … [the Council] have advised that all practical steps would be taken to accommodate you as a close family unit.
Therefore having fully considered the details of your case and your cultural aversion to bricks and mortar as detailed … I find that, while sympathetic to them, I must also take into consideration the general makeup and stock of housing within the area and also the availability of suitable accommodation that … [the Council] can access. Mid Beds must also act within the available legislation and this leaves us with no alternative but to offer bricks and mortar accommodation.
…."
The law
"to provide individuals with [suitable] accommodation if they are homeless or threatened with homelessness within twenty-eight days, have a priority need for accommodation, are unintentionally homeless and have a connection with their area."
"(2) A person is … homeless if he has accommodation but –
"…
(b) it consists of a moveable structure, vehicle or vessel designed or adapted for human habitation and there is no place where he is entitled or permitted both to place it and to reside in it."
"… If a duty to secure accommodation arises in such cases, the housing authority are not required to make equivalent accommodation available (or provide a site or berth for the applicant's own accommodation), but they should consider whether such options are reasonably available, particularly where this would provide the most suitable solution to the applicant's accommodation needs."
The issues and the submissions
The authorities on the meaning of "suitability"
"… whether or not accommodation is suitable may depend upon how long it is to be occupied and what is available. It may be reasonable to expect a family to put up with conditions for a few days which would be clearly unsuitable if they had to be tolerated for a number of weeks. But there is a line to be drawn below which the standard of accommodation cannot fall."
"suitability has to take account of practicality. There is no point in …[an] authority being required to provide sites which do not exist".
"Although financial constraints and limited housing stock are matters that can be taken into account in determining suitability, 'there is a minimum and one must look at the needs and circumstances of the particular family and decide what is suitable for them, and there will be a line to be drawn below which the standard of accommodation cannot fall'. If the accommodation falls below that line, and is accommodation which no reasonable authority could consider to be suitable to the needs of the applicant, then the decision will be struck down, and an appeal to the resources argument will be of no avail."
"… Parliament has not qualified the duty in any way: it could have done. However, the situation for the council is not quite so desperate as might be thought. While the duty exists, no court will enforce it unreasonably. Mr Luba [counsel for the applicant] accepts that it would be unreasonable for an applicant to seek mandamus within a few days of the duty arising if it were clear that the council was doing all that it could, nor, in its discretion, would a court make such an order. Indeed, permission would probably be refused."
"33 … In order for the issue to be arrived at with which I have to deal, the person must satisfy the Inspector that he and/or his family do indeed subscribe to the relevant tenet or feature of Gypsy life in question here, namely he or she genuinely has, and abides by, a proscription of, and/or an aversion to, conventional housing: to bricks and mortar. Many Gypsies, certainly many Romanies, as I understand it, do not, and are not, prepared to live in bricks and mortar, but many, perhaps even many Romanies, may well-do or are prepared to do so, and each particular person or family must establish the position to the satisfaction of the Inspector.
34. … if such be established then, in my judgment, bricks and mortar, if offered, are unsuitable, just as would be the offer of a rat infested barn. It would be contrary to Articles 8 and 14 to expect such a person to accept conventional housing and to hold it against him or her that he has not accepted it, or is not prepared to accept it, even as a last resort factor.
"35. … this does not mean that in such a case planning permission must or will be granted. An authority or an Inspector may still, having considered the planning factors, and the personal circumstances of the applicant or appellant, including the fact that there is no accessible or alternative site or suitable accommodation, refuse planning permission. …"
"… the vulnerable position of gypsies as a minority means that some special consideration should be given to their needs and their different lifestyle both in the relevant regulatory planning framework and in arriving at decisions in particular cases. …"
"the claimant's cultural commitment to traditional life was so powerful as to present great difficulty in her living in conventional housing, it was not bound by duty to find her a pitch, but it would have been a significant factor in considering how far it should go to facilitate her traditional way of life."
"11.40 Under s 175(2) applicants are homeless if their accommodation is a caravan, houseboat, or other movable structure and they do not have a place where they are entitled, or permitted, to put it and live in it. If a duty to secure accommodation arises in such cases, the housing authority are not required to make equivalent accommodation available (or provide a site or berth for the applicant's own accommodation), but they should consider whether such options are reasonably available, particularly where this would provide the most suitable solution to the applicant's accommodation needs. These circumstances will be particularly relevant in the case of gypsies and travellers, whose applications must be considered on the same basis as all other applicants. If no pitch or berth is available to enable them to resume occupation of their moveable home, it is open to the housing authority to discharge its homeless obligations by arranging for some other form of suitable accommodation to be made available." [my emphasis]
"In order to meet the requirement to accord respect something more than 'taking account' of an applicant's gypsy culture is required. As the court in Chapman stated, respect includes the positive obligation to act so as to facilitate the gypsy way of life, without being under a duty to guarantee it to an applicant in any particular case."
. " … it seems to me that in the circumstances of this case the only way the local authority could proceed in discharging their duty to secure suitable accommodation was the way it has. To impose on them a duty faced with an application under Part 7 of the Housing Act of the present nature – and it has to be borne in mind that these are applications which are of necessity marked by a degree of urgency – in those circumstances to impose on the Housing Authority a duty to produce a pitch or berth for six or seven caravans is not supported by statute or case law, whether in this country or in Europe. It is wholly impractical to impose on the Council an impossible solution and, of course, to impose an impossible solution is an order that would be unenforceable for uncertainty.
"41. I do not consider that failure to refer expressly to consideration of Article 8 and/or 14 necessarily means the decision is flawed. The important issue, whether reference is made or not, is did the local authority in fact proceed in a way that was compatible with Human Rights legislation.
43. Article 8 deals with the right to respect for private and family life and Article 14 deals with prohibition of discrimination. In this case, I am satisfied that the local authority has proceeded throughout in a manner that has given full recognition of the appellant's status and with respect to her private and family life and her home and correspondence. That, I have to say and observe, is not just within the homelessness application but in the wider context of the planning and injunction proceedings to which I have already made reference. The original decision letter is very clear and very clearly acknowledges the appellant's situation. …,
"5… I also had regard to the cultural aversion to bricks and mortar accommodation mentioned in the witness statement of the claimant's solicitor, and is apparent from Aragon's file.
6. I also made verbal enquiries of colleagues within the Council's Planning Department to check whether the Council knew of or had available any land, with the benefit of the appropriate planning permission, on which the Claimant and her family could locate their caravans. The only appropriate caravan site managed or owned by the Council is that at Potton some 5 miles from the Claimant's present location. The site at Potton also falls under my direct management through which I was at all times aware that no vacancies existed for plots which could be offered to the claimant. The district of Mid Beds does contain two other privately owned and operated Gypsy and Traveller sites known as Cartwheel and Talamanca. At the time of considering this review I was advised by colleagues in the Council's Planning Department that Cartwheel is a privately run site, only accepting members of one family and that throughout the period of the original eviction Talamanca was not considered acceptable to the claimants family owing to cultural differences with the existing residents and the perceived violence which occurred on those sites. The Council owns no other land on which the Claimant and her family could lawfully have stationed their caravans.
7. I was satisfied that the other aspects of the Aragon decision were correct. I also determined that Aragon's indication that all that could be provided by way of urgent accommodation was bed and breakfast accommodation was an offer of accommodation which was 'suitable' in the circumstances. The circumstances being that neither the Council nor Aragon had available to it any land with planning permission onto which the Claimant and her extended family could lawfully re-locate themselves."
Lord Justice Thomas:
Mr Justice Holman: