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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Wood v Kingston Upon Hull City Council [2017] EWCA Civ 364 (19 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/364.html Cite as: [2018] PTSR 131, [2017] EWCA Civ 364, [2017] WLR(D) 343 |
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ON APPEAL FROM UPPER TRIBUNAL LANDS CHAMBER
DEPUTY PRESIDENT RODGER QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
____________________
DAVID WOOD |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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KINGSTON UPON HULL CITY COUNCIL |
Appellant |
____________________
David Wood (Litigant in Person)
Hearing date: 4 May 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
i) Taking down a section of the original ceiling in the ground floor flat and constructing a new plasterboard ceiling; or
ii) Installing a suitably certificated fire resistant product between the floor joists of the existing timber floor of Flat 4 in a corresponding area.
i) Since the first of the remedial schemes required work to be carried out wholly within the ground floor flat, it should have been excluded from the notice served on Mr Wood.
ii) In relation to the second scheme of works, notices were correctly served on both Mr Wood and Ms Peacock.
iii) There was no legal bar on the inclusion in a notice of alternative schemes of remedial work, although it was undesirable to include alternatives where the alternatives were to be carried out by different owners.
iv) Mr Wood could not be required to contribute to the first of the alternative schemes. If the second of the alternative schemes were to be carried out, then Mr Wood and Ms Peacock should contribute equally to its cost.
v) However, the second scheme would be more expensive (£7,000 as opposed to £1,000) and more disruptive than the first scheme. It was irrational for the local authority to have required the carrying out of the second scheme when a cheaper and easier alternative was available.
i) The irrationality conclusion was beyond the scope of the appeal; and
ii) In any event the irrationality conclusion was wrong.
i) A notice should not include alternative schemes to remove the same hazard where the alternatives would involve different owners because that would be likely to give rise to disputes between neighbours;
ii) A property owner should contain a hazard within his or her own property and should maintain his or her own property. These considerations mean that responsibility for eliminating the hazard should lie with the owner of the ground floor flat.
"any risk of harm to the health or safety of an actual or potential occupier of a dwelling or HMO which arises from a deficiency in the dwelling or HMO or in any building or land in the vicinity (whether the deficiency arises as a result of the construction of any building, an absence of maintenance or repair, or otherwise)."
i) The risk of harm to human health or safety of an occupier of a dwelling and
ii) The deficiency which gives rise to that risk.
In many cases the risk and the deficiency will be located in the same dwelling. But there may be cases, of which this is one, where the risk that arises in one dwelling (i.e. the risk of injury from fire to an occupier of Flat 4) is caused by a deficiency in another dwelling (i.e. the inadequacies of the ceiling in the ground floor flat).
"(2) An improvement notice under this section is a notice requiring the person on whom it is served to take such remedial action in respect of the hazard concerned as is specified in the notice in accordance with subsection (3) and section 13.
(3) Subsections (3) and (4) of section 11 apply to an improvement notice under this section as they apply to one under that section.
(4) An improvement notice under this section may relate to more than one category 2 hazard on the same premises or in the same building containing one or more flats.
(5) An improvement notice under this section may be combined in one document with a notice under section 11 where they require remedial action to be taken in relation to the same premises."
"(3) The notice may require remedial action to be taken in relation to the following premises—
(a) …;(b) if those premises are one or more flats, it may require such action to be taken in relation to the building containing the flat or flats (or any part of the building) or any external common parts;(c) ….
Paragraphs (b) and (c) are subject to subsection (4).
(4) The notice may not, by virtue of subsection (3)(b) or (c), require any remedial action to be taken in relation to any part of the building or its external common parts that is not included in any residential premises on which the hazard exists, unless the authority are satisfied—
(a) that the deficiency from which the hazard arises is situated there, and(b) that it is necessary for the action to be so taken in order to protect the health or safety of any actual or potential occupiers of one or more of the flats."
"(2) The notice must specify, in relation to the hazard (or each of the hazards) to which it relates—
(a) …,
(b) the nature of the hazard and the residential premises on which it exists,
(c) the deficiency giving rise to the hazard,
(d) the premises in relation to which remedial action is to be taken in respect of the hazard and the nature of that remedial action,
(e) … and
(f) …."
"In this Part of this Act "specified premises", in relation to an improvement notice, means premises specified in the notice, in accordance with subsection (2)(d), as premises in relation to which remedial action is to be taken in respect of the hazard."
"(1) This paragraph applies where any specified premises in the case of an improvement notice are—
(a) a dwelling which is not licensed under Part 3 of this Act, or
(b) an HMO which is not licensed under Part 2 or 3 of this Act,
and which (in either case) is a flat.
(2) In the case of dwelling which is a flat, the local housing authority must serve the notice on a person who—
(a) is an owner of the flat, and
(b) in the authority's opinion ought to take the action specified in the notice."
"An appeal may be made by a person under paragraph 10 on the ground that one or more other persons, as an owner or owners of the specified premises, ought to—
(a) take the action concerned, or
(b) pay the whole or part of the cost of taking that action."
"(2) The appeal—
(a) is to be by way of a re-hearing, but
(b) may be determined having regard to matters of which the authority were unaware.
(3) The tribunal may by order confirm, quash or vary the improvement notice."
"Subsection (4) restricts the premises in relation to which remedial action may be required. A notice may not require action to be taken in relation to any part of the building that is not included in residential premises on which the hazard exists unless the authority is satisfied that two conditions are met. The first is that the deficiency from which the hazard arises must be situated in that part of the building; the second is that it must be "necessary for the action to be so taken" in order to protect the health or safety of the occupiers of one or more of the flats. Two important matters should be noted when considering the second of these conditions. The first is that the statute prescribes a test of necessity, not convenience; it must be "necessary" for action to be so taken. The second is that it must be necessary for the action to be "so taken" i.e. it must be necessary for the remedial action to be taken in a part of the building which is not the residential unit on which the hazard exists. The condition is not simply that it must be necessary for action to be taken somewhere; it must be necessary that it be taken outside the unit where the hazard arises." (Emphasis in original)
"The principle which underlies these provisions seems to me to be clear. It is that wherever possible remedial action should be taken in the residential premises on which the hazard exists. Only if a hazard arises as a result of a deficiency situated outside the residential premises on which the hazard exists may remedial action be required to be taken somewhere other than those premises; and even then such action may be required only if action outside the premises on which the hazard exists is the only way of protecting the health or safety of the occupiers of those premises. If there is more than one way of remedying a hazard, the preferred method, if it is available, is therefore always to require action within the premises on which the hazard exists. But if the hazard is caused by a deficiency in other premises and the only way of removing the hazard is by work to those other premises, an improvement notice may require work to the premises on which the deficiency exists in order to protect the occupiers of the premises on which the hazard arises."
""Necessary" is a word in common usage in everyday speech with which everyone is familiar. Like all words, it will take colour from its context; for example, most people would regard it as "necessary" to do everything possible to prevent a catastrophe but would not regard it as "necessary" to do everything possible to prevent some minor inconvenience. Furthermore, whether a particular measure is necessary, … involves the exercise of a judgment upon the established facts. … I doubt if it is possible to go further than to say that "necessary" has a meaning that lies somewhere between "indispensable" on the one hand, and "useful" or "expedient" on the other, and to leave it to the judge to decide towards which end of the scale of meaning he will place it on the facts of any particular case. The nearest paraphrase I can suggest is "really needed.""
"A notice served on each of the owners requiring that each carry out part of the work within their own flat would be unsatisfactory, since this is a single scheme of work. A pragmatic solution would be to regard Ms Peacock and Mr Wood jointly as the appropriate addressees of such a notice. Each of them is a necessary addressee of an improvement notice requiring work within their own flat. To the extent that the fire resistant material is to be [laid] in an area forming part of the Ground Floor Flat, a notice must be served on Ms Peacock; the work also requires action in Flat 4, to lift floor boards and gain access to the space between the joists, so Mr Wood is also a necessary recipient. There is only one scheme of work and rather than serving separate notices on each owner requiring each to carry out the part within their own premises it would seem preferable for a single notice to be addressed to them both."
"… it is highly undesirable to require two persons to remedy a hazard by taking either remedial action A or remedial action B, unless they are joint owners of the same interest in the premises on which the action is to be taken. A notice should not require a recipient to carry out work on premises in which they have no interest."
"Even if it is permissible to serve a notice requiring A and B to carry out alternative courses of action, I do not think it would be desirable for an authority to do so and, as a matter of discretion at least, it ought to be avoided. In particular I consider that it is essential that an improvement notice should not require alternative forms of remedial action to be taken where one of the alternatives is to carry out work in premises of which one of the recipients of the notice is the sole owner, and the other alternative is to carry out work either in the premises of the other owner or in both of the premises. As a matter of practicality the better course in any case is likely to be to serve a notice specifying a single course of remedial action to be carried out by a single owner acting alone. If it is not possible to do so, because a single course of remedial action is required to be carried out in premises belonging to different owners, the proposal of alternative courses of action risks making the necessary cooperation more difficult to achieve and, for that reason, should be avoided."
"whether the alternative course of action should have been included, requiring Ms Peacock and Mr Wood to cooperate in installing fire resistant material between the floor joists. Despite such a course of action being undesirable, for the reasons I have given, it would be necessary to go further before it would be possible to describe it as unlawful."
"In my judgment it would be irrational to require more expensive and more disruptive work where a cheaper and easier alternative is available. It would be irrational to require action which would cost both parties to incur expenditure of £3,500, where alternative action would achieve the same result at a cost to one of £1,000 and at no cost to the other."
Lord Justice Underhill:
Lord Justice Patten: