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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Cocks v Thanet DC [1981] UKHL 10 (25 November 1981) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1981/10.html Cite as: [1983] 2 AC 286, [1982] 3 All ER 1135, [1981] UKHL 10 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/18/242
Cocks (Respondent)
v.
• Thanet District Council (Appellants)
(on appeal from the Queen's
Bench Division of the
High Court of Justice)
JUDGMENT
Die Jovis 25° Novembris 1982
Having heard Counsel as well on Wednesday the
6th as
on Thursday the 7th days of October last upon the
Petition
and Appeal of Thanet District Council, P.O. Box 9,
Cecil
Street, Margate, Kent praying that the matter of the
Order
set forth in the Schedule thereto, namely an Order of
the
Queen's Bench Division of Her Majesty's High Court of
Justice
of the 18th day of May 1982 might be reviewed
before Her Majesty
the Queen in Her Court of Parliament
and that the said Order might
be reversed, varied or
altered or that the Petitioners might have
such other
relief in the premises as to Her Majesty the Queen in
Her
Court of Parliament might seem meet (which said Appeal
was
heard ex parte as to the Respondent William Charles
Cocks,
he not having lodged a Case in answer to the said
Appeal
though ordered so to do) ; and due consideration had
this
day of what was offered for the Appellants:
It is Ordered and Adjudged, by
the Lords Spiritual
and Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her
Majesty the
Queen assembled. That the said Order of the Queen's
Bench
Division of Her Majesty's High Court of Justice of the
18th
day of May 1982 complained of in the said Appeal be,
and the same
is hereby, Set Aside except so far as regards
the words "and
it is further adjudged that the Plaintiff's
Costs be taxed in
accordance with the Second Schedule to
the Legal Aid Act 1974";
And that it be, and the same is
hereby. Declared that the
Respondent is not entitled to
continue the proceedings brought in
the Thanet County
Court Plaint No. 8200265 otherwise than by an
application
for judicial review; And it is further Ordered,
That the
Cause be, and the same is hereby, remitted back to
the
Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice to
do
therein as shall be just and consistent with - this
Judgment.
Cler: Parliamentor:
HOUSE OF LORDS
COCKS
(RESPONDENT)
v.
THANET
DISTRICT COUNCIL
(APPELLANTS)
(ON APPEAL
FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION OF
THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
Lord
Diplock
Lord Fraser of
Tullybelton
Lord Keith of Kinkel
Lord
Bridge of Harwich
Lord Brightman
Lord Diplock
my lords.
I have had
the advantage of reading in draft the speech of my noble and
learned
friend, Lord Bridge of Harwich. I agree with it and would allow
the
appeal and concur in the order which he proposes.
Lord Fraser of Tullybelton
my lords,
I have had
the advantage of reading in draft the speech prepared by my
noble
and learned friend, Lord Bridge of Harwich. I agree with it, and
with
the order proposed by him.
Lord Keith of Kinkel
my lords,
I have had
the benefit of reading in draft the speech to be delivered by
my
noble and learned friend. Lord Bridge of Harwich. For the
reasons
which he gives I would allow the appeal and concur in the
order which he
proposes.
Lord
Bridge of Harwich
my lords,
The
Housing (Homeless Persons) Act, 1977 has been, and will no
doubt
continue to be. a fruitful source of litigation. The rights
of an applicant
for accommodation under the Act, and the
corresponding duties of the
housing authority, depend upon three
questions with respect to the applicant:
Is he homeless or threatened with homelessness?
If yes, has he a priority need?
If yes, did he become homeless intentionally?
The primary duties of the housing authority are fourfold:
If the
housing authority have reason to believe that the applicant
may
be homeless or threatened with homelessness, they must make
such
inquiries as are necessary to satisfy themselves of the answers
to
the three questions indicated above (" the duty to
inquire "): section
3(1) and (2).
If they
have reason to believe that he may be homeless and have
a
priority need, they must accommodate him pending the outcome
of
their inquiries (" the temporary housing duty "): section
3(4).
2
If they are satisfied that
questions (1) and (2) should be answered
affirmatively, but are
not so satisfied as to question (3), they must provide
permanent
accommodation for the applicant (" the full
housing
duty "): section 4(5).
If they are satisfied that all
three questions should be answered
affirmatively, they must
provide him with interim accommodation and
with advice and
assistance (" the limited housing duty "): section
4(2)
and (3).
Normally there will be no room for
dispute as to whether or not an appli-
cant is (a) homeless or
threatened with homelessness or (b) has a priority need.
But the
question whether or not a person became homeless intentionally
may
frequently give rise to difficulties, as is shown by the many
reported
cases on the subject, including two in your Lordships'
House: Din (Taj)
v. Wandsworth London Borough Council
[1981] 3 WLR 918; Reg. v.
Hillingdon London Borough
Council, Ex pane Islam (Tafazzul) [1981]
3 W.L.R. 942.
Moreover, it is the resolution of this question, when disputed,
which
is of crucial importance both to the applicant and to the
housing
authority because of the great practical differences in
effect for both parties
between the full housing duty and the
limited housing duty. The rights
claimed by the respondent to the
present appeal probably turn in the end
on the question of
intentional homelessness. But the issue for your
Lordships'
decision on this occasion is concerned, not with the substance
of
that question, but with the procedure by which that and other
questions
under the Act ought properly to be resolved.
The respondent instituted these
proceedings in the Thanet County Court
on 29th January 1982. By
his particulars of claim he pleads, in effect, that
since 21st
December 1981 he and his family have been homeless
(although
accommodated at the home of a friend) and in priority
need and that his
frequent applications to the appellant housing
authority for accommodation
since that date have been refused. The
pleading makes no reference to any
decision of the appellants
notified to the respondent pursuant to section 8
of the Act, but
asserts, baldly and boldly, that the appellants owe to the
respondent
and are in breach of both the temporary and the full housing
duty.
The prayer for relief claims, inter alia, a declaration to
that effect,
consequential mandatory injunctions and damages. I
mention in passing
that the appellants might well have applied to
strike out the pleading as it
stands as disclosing no cause of
action, but this would probably only have
led to an amendment of
the pleading to identify and particularise the
precise issues
which the respondent seeks to litigate. Sensibly, no doubt,
the
parties sought and obtained a consent order from Master Elton
which
(a) transferred the proceedings to the Queen's Bench
Division of the High
Court and (b) ordered trial of a preliminary
issue as to whether the
proceedings were properly brought by
action or could only be brought by
application for judicial
review. That issue was heard before Milmo J.
on 30th April 1982,
when Mr. Scrivener Q.C., for the appellants, conceded
that the
learned judge was bound by the decision of the Court of Appeal
in
De Falco v. Crawley Borough Council [1980] 1 Q.B. 460 to
decide the
issue in favour of the respondent. The learned judge
granted an appropriate
certificate under section 12 of the
Administration of Justice Act 1969 for
appeal direct to your
Lordships' House and in due course leave to appeal
was granted.
The procedural issue on which the
appeal turns will naturally fall for
decision in the light of the
principles expounded in the speech of my noble
and learned friend,
Lord Diplock in the case of O'Reilly v. Mackman in
which
judgment has just been delivered. But before attempting to
apply
those principles, it is necessary to analyse the functions
of housing authorities
under the Act of 1977. These functions fall
into two wholly distinct
categories.
On the one hand, the housing
authority axe charged with decision-
making functions. It is for
the housing authority to decide whether they
have reason to
believe the matters which will give rise to the duty of inquiry
or to the
temporary housing duty. It is for the housing authority, once
the
duty of inquiry has arisen, to make the appropriate inquiries and
to
decide whether they are satisfied, or not satisfied as the case
may be, of the
matters which will give rise to the limited housing
duty or the full housing
duty. These are essentially public law
functions. The power of decision
being committed by the statute
exclusively to the housing authority, their
exercise of the power
can only be challenged before the courts on the
strictly limited
grounds (i) that their decision was vitiated by bias or
procedural
unfairness; (ii) that they have reached a conclusion of fact
which
can be impugned on the principles set out in the speech of
Lord Radcliffe
in Edwards v. Bairstow [1956] AC 14; or
(iii) that, in so far as they have
exercised a discretion (as they
may require to do in considering questions
of reasonableness under
section 17(1)(2) and (4)), the exercise can be
impugned on the
principles set out in the judgment of Lord Greene M.R.
in
Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd. v. Wednesbury
Corporation
[1948] 1 KB 223. All this is trite law and the
contrary has, so far as I
know, never been argued in any case
which has come before the courts
under the Act of 1977.
On the
other hand, the housing authority are charged with
executive
functions. Once a decision has been reached by the
housing authority
which gives rise to the temporary, the limited
or the full housing duty,
rights and obligations are immediately
created in the field of private law.
Each of the duties referred
to, once established, is capable of being enforced
by injunction
and the breach of it will give rise to a liability in damages.
But
it is inherent in the scheme of the Act that an appropriate public
law
decision of the housing authority is a condition precedent to
the establish-
ment of the private law duty.
When the
Court of Appeal, of which I was a member, decided De Falco's
case
(supra), we did not, of course, have the benefit of Lord
Diplock's
analysis of the consequences of the introduction in 1977
by the amended
Order 53 of the Rules of the Supreme Court of the
new public law procedure
by way of an application for judicial
review. That apart, I believe our
decision was influenced by a
failure to appreciate the significance of the
dichotomy of
functions to which I have drawn attention in the two fore-
going
paragraphs and a consequent misunderstanding of the true effect
of
the earlier Court of Appeal decision in Thornton v.
Kirklees Metropolitan
Borough Council [1979| 1 Q.B. 626.
The view expressed in De Falco
(supra) by Lord Denning M.R.
at p.476 and by myself at p.480, that an
applicant for
accommodation under the Act of 1977 who wishes to challenge
the
housing authority's decision that he was intentionally homeless can
do
so either by action or by application for judicial review, I
can now see to
have been based on false reasoning. I am the more
ready to say so since
Lord Denning has also subsequently resiled
from his previous opinion:
see Lambert v. Baling London
Borough Council [1982] 1 W.L.R. 550
at p.557.
Thornton
v. Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council (supra) was
an
appeal from a decision to strike out the plaintiff's
particulars of claim in
the county court on the ground that they
disclosed no reasonable cause
of action. The sole issue canvassed
on the appeal was whether a breach
of the duty under section 3(4)
of the Act (what I have called the temporary
housing duty) gave a
cause of action in damages against the housing
authority, which
was essential to found jurisdiction in the county court.
The Court
of Appeal held that it did. On such an application to strike
out,
the court necessarily assumed the truth of the facts pleaded and
these
were taken sufficiently to allege both the existence and the
breach of a
duty owed to the plaintiff under section 3(4). On
these assumptions the
decision was, in my respectful view,
correct. But the decision is authority
for no more extensive
proposition than that once the existence of a duty
resting on a
housing authority under the Act of 1977 to provide accommoda-
tion,
whether temporary or permanent, has been established, an action
for
damages for breach of that private law duty lies. It is to be noted
that
in that
case the housing authority did not object to the proceedings in
the
county court as an abuse of process. If they had done so, they
would
have been entitled, for the reasons which I am about to
develop, to have
the action struck out on that ground.
After reference to Thornton (supra), in De Falco (supra) 1 said, at p.480:
" If
an ordinary action lies in respect of an alleged breach of duty,
"
it must follow, it seems to me, that in such an action the
plaintiff
" as well as claiming damages or an injunction as
his remedy for the
" breach of duty can claim any declaration
necessary to establish that
" there was a relevant breach of
duty, and, in particular, a declaration
" that a local
authority's decision adverse to him under the Act was
" not
validly made."
In the
light of the dichotomy between a housing authority's public
and
private law functions, this is a non-sequitur. The
fallacy is in the implicit
assumption that the court has the power
not only to review the housing
authority's public law decision but
also to substitute its own decision to
the contrary effect in
order to establish the necessary condition precedent
to the
housing authority's private law liability.
I have
already indicated my agreement with the views of my noble and
learned
friend, Lord Diplock, as expressed in O'Reilly's case, and I
grate-
fully adopt all his reasons for the conclusion that:
" It
would ... as a general rule be contrary to public policy and
"
as such an abuse of the process .of the court, to permit a person
"
seeking to establish that a decision of a public authority
infringed
" rights to which he was entitled to protection
under public law to
" proceed by way of an ordinary action
and by this means to evade
" the provisions of Order 53 for
the protection of such authorities."
Does the
same general rule apply, where the decision of the public
authority
which the litigant wishes to overturn is not one alleged
to infringe any
existing right but a decision which, being adverse
to him, prevents him
establishing a necessary condition precedent
to the statutory private law
right which he seeks to enforce? Any
relevant decision of a housing
authority under the Act of 1977
which an applicant for accommodation
wants to challenge will be of
that character. I have no doubt that the same
general rule should
apply to such a case. The safeguards built into the
Order 53
procedure which protect from harassment public authorities on
whom
Parliament has imposed a duty to make public law decisions and
the
inherent advantages of that procedure over proceedings begun
by writ or
originating summons for the purposes of investigating
whether such decisions
are open to challenge are of no less
importance in relation to this type of
decision than to the type
of decision your Lordships have just been consider-
ing in
O'Reilly's case. I have in mind, in particular, the need to
obtain
leave to apply on the basis of sworn evidence which makes
frank disclosure
of all relevant facts known to the applicant; the
court's discretionary
control of both discovery and
cross-examination; the capacity of the court
to act with the
utmost speed when necessary; and the avoidance of the
temptation
for the court to substitute its own decision of fact for that of
the
housing authority. Undue delay in seeking a remedy on the part of
an
aggrieved applicant for accommodation under the Act of 1977 is
perhaps
not often likely to present a problem, but since this
appeal, unlike O'Reilly's
case, arises from proceedings
commenced after the coming into operation
of the Supreme Court Act
1981, it is an appropriate occasion to observe
both that section
31 of that Act removes any doubt there may have been
as to the
vires of the 1977 amendment of Order 53 and also that
section
31(6), by expressly recognising that delay in seeking the
public law remedies
obtainable by application for judicial review
may be detrimental to good
administration, lends added weight to
the consideration that the court, in
the control of its own
process, is fully justified in confining litigants to the
use of
procedural machinery which affords protection against
such
detrimental delay.
5
Even though nullification of a
public law decision can, if necessary, be
achieved by declaration
as an alternative to an order of certiorari, certiorari
to quash
remains the primary and most appropriate remedy. Now that
all
public law remedies are available to be sought by the unified
and
simplified procedure of an application for judicial review,
there can be
no valid reason, where the quashing of a decision is
the sole remedy sought,
why it should be sought otherwise than by
certiorari. But an unsuccessful
applicant for accommodation under
the Act of 1977, confronted by an
adverse decision of the housing
authority as to, say, the question of his
intentional
homelessness, may strictly need not only an order of certiorari
to
quash the adverse decision but also an order of mandamus to the
housing
authority to determine the question afresh according to
law. I have said
that the court has no power to substitute its own
decision for that of the
housing authority. That is strictly
correct, though no doubt in practice
there will be cases where the
court's decision will effectively determine the
issue, as for
instance where on undisputed primary facts the court holds
that no
reasonable housing authority, correctly directing itself in
law,
could be satisfied that the applicant became homeless
intentionally. But
it will be otherwise where the housing
authority's decision is successfully
impugned on other grounds, as
for instance that the applicant was not
fairly heard or that
irrelevant factors have been taken into account. In
such cases
certiorari to quash and mandamus to re-determine will, in
strict-
ness, be the appropriate remedies and the only appropriate
remedies.
It follows from these
considerations that proceedings in which an
unsuccessful applicant
for accommodation under the Act of 1977 sets out
to challenge the
decision of the housing authority against him will afford
another
application of Lord Diplock's general rule and will amount to
an
abuse of the process of the court if instituted otherwise than
by an applica-
tion for judicial review under Order 53.
In view of some technical but
significant differences in the approach
to the question raised in
this appeal between the law of England and the
law of Scotland,
which is to be considered in the next judgment of your
Lordships'
House to be delivered, and in order to dispel any possible doubt,
I
think it appropriate to emphasise that the conclusion reached in
this
appeal arises from the English court's inherent jurisdiction
to control its
own process to prevent abuse, and has nothing to do
with any limitation
on the jurisdiction of the county court. As
Lord Diplock has observed
in O'Reilly's case, the validity
of a public law decision may come into
question collaterally in an
ordinary action. In such a case the issue would
have to be decided
by the High Court or the county court trying the action,
as the
case might be.
My Lords, I would allow this
appeal, set aside the order of the learned
judge and determine the
preliminary issue by declaring that the respondent
is not entitled
to continue these proceedings or to seek any of the relief he
claims
otherwise than by an application for judicial review.
Lord Brightman
my lords,
I also would allow this appeal for
the reasons given by my noble and
learned friend, Lord Bridge of
Harwich.
3143905—3 Dd 8209971 C3 11/82