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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Bediako, R (on the application of) v London Borough Of Southwark [1997] EWHC Admin 166 (19th February, 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/1997/166.html Cite as: [1998] 30 HLR 22, [1997] EWHC Admin 166 |
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1. MR
RICHARDS:
These
two applications for judicial review were heard together and raise the
identical issue of law, namely the effect of section 9(2) of the Asylum and
Immigration Act 1996 upon an application for housing made to a local authority
before the date when the section came into force (19 August 1996).
2. In
brief, section 9(2), in conjunction with an Order made by the Secretary of
State, denies the benefit of the homelessness provisions of the Housing Act
1985 to asylum seekers who arrived in this country after 5 February 1996 and
did not claim asylum upon arrival. Each of the present applicants arrived in
this country after 5 February 1996 and neither claimed asylum on arrival.
However, after arrival and before 19 August 1996 each of them had applied for
accommodation to a local housing authority. In each case the local authority
had accepted that the applicant might be homeless and have a priority need and
had therefore put in hand further inquiries pursuant to section 62 of the 1985
Act and had provided accommodation in the interim pursuant to section 63. No
final decision had been made on their applications by 19 August 1996. On that
date, each local authority decided immediately to withdraw accommodation and
discontinue enquiries on the basis that any eligibility under the homelessness
provisions had ceased. By subsequent decisions each of the applicants was
given a short period of grace, for reasons to be explained later, and it is the
substitute decisions that are now challenged by way of amendment to the notices
of application (pursuant to leave granted by me at the hearing). But the
essential question is whether the local authorities were right in their view
that the applicants’ eligibility under the homelessness provisions ceased
at the time when section 9(2) came into force.
3. It
is common ground that this very issue has already been decided adversely to the
applicants by Carnwath J in
R
v. Secretary of State for the Environment, ex parte Shelter and The Refugee
Council
(23 August 1996, not yet reported). The applicants, however, mount a frontal
challenge to that decision. They submit that it was wrong and should not be
followed.
4. That
leads me at once to consider the circumstances in which it would be open to me
not to follow Carnwath J’s decision. Mr Luba, for the applicants, drew
my attention to the judgment of Sir Louis Blom-Cooper QC in
R
v. Hertsmere Borough Council, ex p. Woolgar
(1995) 27 HLR 703 in which the position was summarised as follows:
5. Those
observations are consistent with the general approach laid down in
R
v. Greater Manchester Coroner, ex p. Tal
[1985] 1 QB 67 at 81A-D.
6. In
the present case it is not suggested that Carnwath J's decision in
ex
p. Shelter
was reached per incuriam. I must therefore follow his decision unless
convinced that it was wrong. The threshold of conviction must be all the
higher when I am sitting as a deputy judge and am asked not to follow a
decision of a High Court judge. Plainly Mr Luba has a very heavy burden to
discharge. Equally plainly I must form my own judgment on the points advanced
and cannot simply rely on Carnwath J’s decision. Moreover I have borne
in mind that my judgment as to the strength of the points advanced will be
highly material to any question of leave to appeal even if Mr Luba fails to
convince me that the decision in
ex
p. Shelter
was wrong. Leave to appeal was refused in
ex
p. Shelter
,
in part because the judge had reached a reasonably clear view and in part
because an appeal would have to displace other matters in the legal vacation
and it was therefore thought appropriate to leave it to the Court of Appeal to
decide whether to entertain an appeal. In the event an appeal was not pursued
by the applicants in that case.
7. The
statutory provisions and the background to them are set out in some detail in
Carnwath J's judgment and need not be repeated in full. It is, however,
helpful to set out the structure of the homelessness provisions contained in
Part III of the 1985 Act, as well as the main relevant provisions of the 1996
Act.
8. As
regards the 1985 Act, Carnwath J refers to the summary by the Master of the
Rolls in
R
v. Wandsworth Borough Council, ex p. Mansoor
[1996] 3 WLR 283, which he then condenses yet further:
9. One
has, therefore, three different types of substantive duty and they are
accompanied by other obligations, both procedural and substantive
obligations..." (tr. 7-8).
11. A
person subject to immigration control is, by section 13(2), "a person who under
the 1971 Act requires leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom (whether
or not such leave has been given)". That includes asylum seekers. Such
persons are not eligible for accommodation or assistance under “the
homelessness Part”, i.e. Part III of the 1985 Act (see section 9(4)),
unless they are of a class specified in an order made by the Secretary of
State. Article 4 of the Housing Accommodation and Homelessness (Persons
subject to Immigration Control) Order 1996, SI 1996 No. 1982, specifies a
number of classes under section 9(2). Class E includes persons who have made a
claim for asylum which is recorded by the Secretary of State as having been
made on arrival in the United Kingdom and which has not been recorded by the
Secretary of State as having been determined or abandoned. As I have already
stated, neither of the applicants falls within that description or otherwise
falls within a class specified in the Order.
12. The
case for the applicants is that section 9(2) of the 1996 Act on its true
construction can have no effect upon an application made under Part III of the
1985 Act prior to its coming into force, because (1) on its plain words section
9(2) has only prospective effect on future applicants; or, in the alternative,
(2) on its plain words it operates with immediate effect on an extant
application under Part III and thus operates by implied repeal of the scope of
Part III, and by section 16 of the Interpretation Act 1978 such an implied
repeal cannot affect rights or benefits accrued before the section came into
force; or, in the alternative, (3) the provision is ambiguous, in which case
the common law ensures that it is not applied so as to have retrospective effect.
13. In
developing his submissions on the first point, Mr Luba sought to contrast the
prospective wording of section 9(2), "shall not be eligible", with the use of
"is" in section 9(1). The suggested contrast is to my mind non-existent if
section 9(1) is read as a whole: it provides that housing authorities "shall
secure" that no tenancy or licence "is granted" to certain persons. Each
provision is of course prospective in the sense that it looks to the time after
the section comes into force and lays down the regime applicable at that time,
e.g. what housing authorities are to do and who is to be eligible for
accommodation at that time. But that is an entirely normal form of
prospectivity in the case of statutory provisions, and the language used to
achieve it in section 9(2) is likewise entirely normal. So the linguistic
point seems to me to get the applicants nowhere.
14. Mr
Luba went on to contend that section 9(2) introduced a new concept of
"eligibility" as from the date when the section came into force. That concept
must, he contended, be directed towards future applications, i.e. applications
made after the date when the section came into force. That is because
eligibility falls to be tested at the time when an applicant seeks access to
that for which he is eligible, which in this context is the time when
application is made for accommodation under the homelessness provisions of the
1985 Act. If that were not so, he asked rhetorically, where would the duty
arise to accommodate applicants while inquiries were being carried out?
15. The
proposition central to those contentions is that, under the scheme of Part III
of the 1985 Act, eligibility is to be determined once and for all at the date
of the initial application for accommodation; so that an applicant who
satisfied the relevant statutory conditions at the time when he applied is
entitled to a favourable decision even if the conditions have since been
changed and he does not satisfy those changed conditions. Carnwath J rejected
that approach towards Part III and I agree with him. In the passage that I
have already cited from his judgment, Carnwath J points to the different stages
that exist under Part III, each involving different duties and associated
rights: application, duty of inquiry, initial view as to homeless and priority
need (which may give rise to the interim housing duty), completion of inquiries
and final decision (which may give rise to the temporary housing duty or the
full housing duty). The statutory provisions governing each stage are
expressed in the present tense and there is nothing to suggest that the
determinative date is in each case the date of the application. Under section
62(1), the duty to make inquiries arises if a person applies for accommodation
and the authority "have reason to believe that he may be homeless or threatened
with homelessness". Under section 63(1), the interim duty to accommodate
applicants while inquiries are being carried out arises if the authority "have
reason to believe that an applicant may be homeless and have a priority need".
Under section 64, the authority's duty is to notify the applicant of its
decision as to whether "he is homeless or threatened with homelessness" and "he
has a priority need". The past tense is used in relation to the decision on
intentional homelessness ("whether he became homeless or threatened with
homelessness intentionally") because the question is necessarily historical;
but that serves, if anything, to emphasise the fact that the other conditions
are all expressed in the present tense. So too under section 65 the housing
duties arise where the authority is satisfied that "he is homeless", "he has a
priority need", etc.
16. Mr
Luba suggested that the draughtsman may have proceeded on the assumption that
there would be no appreciable lapse of time between application and final
decision. The fact that provision is made for inquiries to be carried out and
for accommodation to be provided in the interim casts doubt on that suggestion.
But in any event the legislative scheme admits of the possibility of a lapse of
time between the various stages and provides at each stage for matters to be
looked at in the present tense rather than by reference back to the time of the
application.
17. I
should also mention that I had cited to me
R
v. Newham London Borough Council, ex p. Smith
(The Times, 11 April 1996), a case in which Sir Louis Blom-Cooper QC, sitting
as a deputy judge of the High Court, held that the relevant date for
considering whether an applicant had a "local connection" with the district of
a housing authority for the purposes of Part III was the date of the
application. Unfortunately a transcript was not available to me and the report
in The Times does not reveal the underlying reasoning. I can well understand
that it would be contrary to the scheme of Part III to allow a person to
acquire
a local connection by reason of being given temporary accommodation by an
authority pursuant to its interim duty under section 63. Such a conclusion
would not, however, entail the more general conclusion that the date of the
application is the material date for other purposes. I do not therefore feel
compelled by the decision in
ex
p. Smith
to alter the views that I have otherwise reached on that issue.
18. It
therefore seems to me that the final decision on homelessness is one to be
taken after inquiries have been made and in the light of the information
available to the authority as to the position of the applicant at the time when
the decision is taken. If the authority's inquiries show that the applicant
does not at that time satisfy the statutory conditions, then the authority is
entitled to make its decision on that basis and to notify the applicant
accordingly. That is the position even if the applicant did satisfy the
statutory conditions at the date of the initial application. Such a view
accords with the wording of the Act and is consistent with the statutory
policy. An applicant who satisfied the relevant conditions at the time of his
application should have benefited from the protection afforded by the interim
duty. If he no longer satisfies the relevant conditions at the time when the
final decision comes to be taken, there is no evident reason why Parliament
should have intended him to gain the benefit of the temporary or full housing
duty. To put the point another way, one would expect the regime to be flexible
enough to cope with changes in circumstances rather than to be governed rigidly
by the state of affairs existing at the moment when the application was made.
19. Coming
back to section 9(2) of the 1996 Act in the light of those considerations, the
effect was that persons of the specified description ceased to be eligible for
accommodation under Part III from the date when the subsection came into
force. I agree with Carnwath J (at tr. 16B-C) that "eligibility" connotes
qualification for a right or benefit, though I am less certain about the
contrast that he seems to draw between "eligibility" and the concept of
"entitlement" found in sections 10 and 11 of the 1996 Act. Thus, from 19
August 1996 persons of the specified description ceased to qualify for
accommodation under Part III. For the reasons that I have given, they ceased
to qualify even if their applications for such accommodation had been made
before 19 August 1996. If a local authority had not yet reached a final
decision on their applications, as from 19 August 1996 it was entitled to reach
a decision that they were not eligible and to notify them accordingly. Part
III does not shelter existing applicants from the impact of section 9(2) merely
because they made their applications and thereby came within the "protection"
of the 1985 Act prior to 19 August 1996. I therefore reject the submission
that Carnwath J was wrong to hold:
20. In
reaching his conclusion, Carnwath J referred in passing to, but did not place
reliance on, certain transitional provisions in the Asylum and Immigration
Appeals Act 1993 (tr. 10G-11A). I take the view that, as submitted by Mr Hill
and Miss Henderson on behalf of the respondent authorities, those provisions
reinforce Carnwath J's conclusion. Sections 4 and 5 of the 1993 Act made
provision in respect of the housing of asylum seekers and their dependants.
They did so by reference to
applications
made by asylum seekers under the homelessness legislation. For example,
section 4(1) provided: "If a person ¼ makes an application under the
homelessness legislation for accommodation ..." Schedule 1 to the Act
contained supplementary provisions, including, in paragraph 8, provision in
respect of existing applicants:
21. In
those provisions Parliament drew a clear distinction between existing and
future applications as regards the effect of the changes it had made to the
homelessness regime. Had it wished to draw a similar distinction in the 1996
Act, one might reasonably have expected a similar approach. The approach in
fact adopted in section 9(2) of the 1996 Act is very different. There is
nothing in the language of the subsection to suggest that it is to apply only
to future applications. Nor is there any equivalent of paragraph 8 of Schedule
1 to the 1993 Act. This tells strongly in favour of the view that the
provision is intended to refer to existing as well as future applications.
22. I
turn to consider the second, and alternative, main submission made on behalf of
the applicants. It proceeds on the basis that section 9(2) does apply to
applications made under Part III of the 1985 Act before the subsection came
into force. The argument advanced is that section 9(2) effects an implied
partial repeal of Part III and that section 16(1) of the Interpretation Act
1978 therefore applies to save pre-existing rights. Section 16(1) of the 1978
Act provides:
23. The
contention that an enactment may be partially repealed by a later Act excluding
a particular case from its operation derives support from Halsbury's Laws,
Vol.44(1), paragraph 1306 and the cases there cited, including
Heston
and Isleworth Urban District Council v. Grout
[1897] 2 Ch 306. I do not need, however, to decide the point, for the simple
reason that in my judgment section 16 of the 1978 Act is of no assistance to
the applicants even if section 9(2) of the 1996 can be regarded as involving in
that sense a partial repeal of Part III of the 1985 Act. The effect of section
16 of the 1978 would be to preserve any rights that had accrued under the 1985
Act prior to the coming into force of section 9(2) of the 1996 Act. In order to
succeed in these proceedings, the applicants have to show that they had an
accrued right of such a nature as to entitle them to have their applications
for accommodation determined on the basis of the conditions of eligibility
existing at the time of their application (or at any rate prior to 19 August
1996). For reasons already given in the course of examining the first main
submission, and in common with the analysis of Carnwath J in
ex
p. Shelter
,
I do not think that the applicants had any such right. Under Part III an
authority is under different duties at different stages. Those duties may be
enforced by applicants as a matter of public law. In addition, once the
authority has reached a decision at any particular stage that the statutory
conditions relevant to that stage are satisfied, rights are created in the
field of private law:
Cocks
v. Thanet District Council
[1983] 2 AC 286. At no point is there a right, whether in public or private
law, to have the application determined on the basis of conditions other than
those applying at the time of the determination. Similarly I reject the
proposition put forward by Mr Luba that the process of inquiry and final
decision is one of
discovery
of rights to accommodation existing at the date of the initial application.
24. The
third and final main submission was in the alternative to that based on section
16 of the 1978 Act. It relied on the well established principle of statutory
interpretation that a statute should not be interpreted as having retrospective
effect, so as to impair existing rights and obligations, unless that result is
unavoidable on the language used. This point was considered by Carnwath J in
ex
p. Shelter
and some of the relevant authorities are cited in his judgment (tr. 12-13).
Indeed, in
ex
p. Shelter
the common law principle was examined first and section 16 of the 1978 Act was
held, in my view rightly, to raise a similar presumption and not really to give
rise to separate considerations. Again I agree with the conclusion reached by
Carnwath J. The simple answer is that section 9(2) does
not
have retrospective effect if construed in the way in which I have construed it.
The fact that it bites on existing applications does not make it retrospective
in effect. It bites on those applications only in so far as future stages of
the process are concerned, including in particular any final decision yet to be
taken at the time when the subsection comes into force. It does not impair
existing rights or obligations. As Carnwath J puts it:
25. He
went on to consider the nature of the obligations of local authorities with
regard to matters such as the giving of notice and periods of grace. The
authorities in the present proceedings had not acted initially in accordance
with the approach laid down by him, but took fresh decisions in the light of
his judgment. There is no challenge to that aspect of the judgment.
26. Accordingly
I reject Mr Luba's third submission as well and the application must be
dismissed. It would be sufficient to dismiss it on the basis that Mr Luba has
failed to convince me that
ex
p. Shelter
was wrongly decided. But I go further than that. I take the view that
ex
p. Shelter
was correctly decided; and, like Carnwath J, have reached a reasonably clear
view on the matter.
27. In
this case I have handed down the judgment and, for the reasons given in that
judgment, the application is dismissed.
28. MR
HUNT: My Lord, I appear on behalf of the City of Westminster. I understand
the applicant is legally aided and I and instructed to ask for the respondent's
costs not to be enforced without leave of the court.
29. MR
LUBA: My Lord, may I first deal with the application for costs which I hear
from my learned friend on behalf of Westminster with some surprise. My Lord
will appreciate that not only is Mr Zafru legally aided, but he is a person who
is entirely dependent for his income upon the respondent, the Westminster City
Council, as a result of the assistance provided to him under the National
Assistance Act. He has no means or resources independently whatsoever. My
friend presses his application for costs presumably on the basis of the usual,
as it were, football pools order, but I wonder if that is at all appropriate in
this type of case. My Lord, in those circumstances I respectfully resist his
application for costs against this particular applicant.
30. MR
RICHARDS: On that point I am against you, Mr Luba. I shall make the order
not to be enforced without leave of the court.
31. MR
LUBA: I am very much obliged, my Lord. My Lord, I am dealing only with Mr
Zafru for present purposes, because my friend Mr Hunt appears only for
Westminster, and I seek, firstly, an order for legal aid taxation of his costs.
33. MR
LUBA: I am very much obliged. My Lord, I do have an application for leave in
the case of Mr Zafru, but I do not wish to cause any embarrassment to the other
respondent, namely Southwark, by making that application in their absence. It
may be that Mr Hunt can assist as to the position of Southwark.
37. MR
LUBA: I cannot assure your Lordship that they were notified by the court; I
assume that to be the case.
38. MR
RICHARDS: The associate confirms that that was so. In that case in their
absence let us proceed with whatever can be proceeded with in relation to them.
39. MR
LUBA: My Lord, in relation to Bediako, there being no application for costs, I
invite your Lordship to make no order save legal aid taxation of Mr Bediako's
costs.
40. MR
LUBA: My Lord, in both matters therefore I seek your Lordship's leave to
appeal to the Court of Appeal. My Lord will recall, and indeed my Lord
reflects this in the judgment, the difficulty that faced me in arguing the case
in the first place, and my Lord has made it apparent from the very helpful way
in which the judgment is expressed that the question of leave to appeal has
been given consideration, and my Lord identifies with Mr Justice Carnwath a
plain or clear view on the law. My Lord, I do, however, seek your Lordship's
leave to appeal on three grounds. The first is, as my friend Mr Stephenson
was just identifying, that I ought to invite your Lordship to give leave if the
issue in the case is one of pure law, and I say that this is, as your Lordship
will appreciate, a matter of pure statutory construction.
41. My
Lord, the second is that I ought to demonstrate to your Lordship that the
matter is of public importance. My Lord knows that on Monday of this week
judgment was given in the Court of Appeal in other matters touching on asylum
seekers and their Lordships in that court identified some thousands of people,
over 2,500 reported in London alone, to be affected by the provisions,
excluding those who applied post-arrival for asylum from the Social Services,
Social Security and housing provision. My Lord, I have not been able, and I
apologise, in the period of your Lordship's reservation of judgment to identify
precisely how many people were affected by the section 9 point. That is in
large part because they are masked by the present arrangements under section 21
of the National Assistance Act.
42. MR
RICHARDS: Of course if those present arrangements stand as currently they do
the point is of less practical significance.
43. MR
LUBA: Yes, indeed it is, my Lord, and in case my Lord does not know it
already, I should indicate that the Court of Appeal on Monday refused leave to
petition the House of Lords so that at least for the time being that matter is
settled, but my Lord will also know that all three of the respondents in that
case, the two local authorities and the Secretary of State, indicated that they
would seek leave and they are petitioning the Lords so as to join in the
hearing of an associated appeal which is now listed for June. So, my Lord,
this may resurrect itself as an issue in much the way it might have done had
the first instance decision simply stood pending leave to the Court of Appeal.
So, my Lord, I do submit that it is a point of public importance, albeit not
yet crystallised into an issue of severe practical importance.
44. My
Lord, the third aspect, and it is a rather unusual aspect which arises only in
the field of judicial review, is the difficulty which will arise if the Court
of Appeal is invited to entertain the same point not on appeal from a full
judgment but on a renewed application for leave. It must follow from your
Lordship's judgment and the judgment of Mr Justice Carnwath that the prospects
are that any subsequent application for leave on the same point will be
refused. The applicant in such a case will, as of right, be entitled to invite
the Court of Appeal to consider itself granting leave to move. We say that is
an unsatisfactory basis upon which an issue of statutory construction be
tested. The opportunity should be given to the court, we say, to examine the
issue of statutory construction with the benefit of a full and reasoned
judgment such as that which your Lordship has delivered, and my Lord knows that
those three points, as it were, the pure law, the practical importance and the
special circumstances of pressure on the Crown Office List producing a
prospective renewal of the leave application, might well have persuaded Mr
Justice Carnwath to grant leave had it not been the vacation when he heard the
case. My Lord, it is not the vacation now, this matter can be entertained in
the Court of Appeal's ordinary business and I invite your Lordship to give me
leave.
45. MR
RICHARDS: Mr Luba, I accept that this is a point of law. I am prepared to
accept it is a point of public importance. If I were in substantial doubt as
to the answer, I would give you leave to appeal, but because I have reached, in
common with Mr Justice Carnwath, a reasonably clear view of the law, it does
not seem to me that it would be appropriate for me to give you leave to appeal.
I am afraid that this is a matter you must pursue with the Court of Appeal.
46. MR
LUBA: I am very much obliged. My Lord, may I thank you for arranging for
these judgments to be given together.
47. MR
RICHARDS: Not at all. I am sorry it has taken some weeks to get them out;
other pressures, I am afraid.