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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Westminster City Council v Clarke [1992] UKHL 11 (06 February 1992) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1992/11.html Cite as: [1992] UKHL 11, [1992] 1 All ER 695, [1992] 2 AC 288 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/18/252
Lord Mayor etc. of the City of Westminster (Appellants) v.
Clarke (A.P.) (Respondent)
JUDGMENT
Die Jovis 6° Februarii 1992
Upon Report from the Appellate
Committee to whom was
referred the Cause Lord Mayor and Citizens
of the City of
Westminster against Clarke, That the Committee had
heard
Counsel as well on Tuesday the 10th as on Wednesday the
11th
and Thursday the 12th days of December last, upon the
Petition
and Appeal of the Lord Mayor and Citizens of the City
of
Westminster, praying that the matter of the Order set forth
in
the Schedule thereto, namely an Order of Her Majesty's Court
of
Appeal of the 21st day of March 1991, 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; as upon the case
of John Joseph
Clarke lodged in answer to the said Appeal; and
due
consideration had this day of what was offered on either
side
in this Cause:
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 Her Majesty's Court of
Appeal of the 21st day of
March 1991 complained of in the said
Appeal be, and the same is
hereby, Set Aside save as to legal
aid taxation and that
the Order of Westminster County Court of
the 16th day of October
1989 be, and the same is hereby,
Restored, save that in
paragraph 1 for the words "13th
November 1989" there
shall be substituted the words "5th March
1992": And it
is further Ordered, That the costs of the
Appellants in
this House and in the Court of Appeal be paid
out of the Legal Aid
Fund in accordance with section 18 of the
Legal Aid Act 1988, such
order to be suspended for four weeks
to allow the Legal Aid Board
to object if they wish: And it
is further Ordered, That the
costs of the Respondent be taxed
in accordance with the Legal Aid
Act 1988: And it is also
further Ordered, That the Cause
be, and the same is hereby,
remitted back to the Westminster
County Court to do therein as
shall be just and consistent with
this Judgment.
Cler: Parliamentor:
Judgment: 6 February 1992
HOUSE OF LORDS
LORD MAYOR ETC. OF THE CITY OF WESTMINSTER
(APPELLANTS)
v.
CLARKE
(A.P.)
(RESPONDENT)
Lord
Bridge of Harwich
Lord Templeman
Lord Griffiths
Lord
Ackner
Lord Lowry
LORD BRIDGE OF HARWICH
My Lords,
I have had the
advantage of reading in draft the speech of
my noble and learned
friend, Lord Templeman and, for the reasons
which he gives, I
would allow the appeal and restore the trial
judge's order.
LORD TEMPLEMAN
My Lords,
The
appellants Westminster City Council, have provided
accommodation
for the respondent, Mr. Clarke, and the question is
whether Mr.
Clarke is a licensee or a secure tenant.
Part
III of the Housing Act 1985 which begins at section 58
and ends
with section 78 requires a local housing authority to
provide
accommodation to certain persons who are homeless and in
need.
B
y section 58:
"(1) A
person is homeless if he has no accommodation in
England, Wales or
Scotland.
(2) A person
shall be treated as having no accommodation if
there is no
accommodation which he, together with any
other person who
normally resides with him as a member of
his family . . .
(a) is
entitled to occupy by virtue of an interest in it
or by virtue of
an order of a court, or
(b) has
an express or implied licence to occupy, . . .
or
(c) occupies as a residence by virtue of any enactment or rule of law giving him the right to remain in occupation or restricting the right of another person to recover possession."
By section
59(1) certain homeless persons are classified as
having:
"... a priority need for accommodation -
a pregnant woman . . . ;
a person with whom dependent children reside . . . ;
(c) a
person who is vulnerable as a result of old age, mental
illness or
handicap or physical disability or other special
reason. . . . ;
(d) a
person who is homeless or threatened with
homelessness as a result
of an emergency such as flood, fire
or other disaster."
By section 62:
"(1) If a
person (an 'applicant') applies to a local housing
authority for
accommodation, . . . and the authority have
reason to believe that
he may be homeless or threatened
with homelessness, they shall
make such inquiries as are
necessary to satisfy themselves as to
whether he is homeless
or threatened with homelessness.
(2) If they are
so satisfied, they shall make any further
inquiries necessary to
satisfy themselves as to -
(a) whether he has a priority need, and
(b) whether
he became homeless or threatened with
homelessness
intentionally;
and if they
think fit they may also make inquiries as to
whether he has a
local connection with the district of
another local housing
authority . . . . "
Section 63
makes provision for the temporary
accommodation of some applicants
where the local authority is
making the necessary inquiries:
"(1) If
the local housing authority have reason to believe
that an
applicant may be homeless and have a priority need,
they shall
secure that accommodation is made available for
his occupation
pending a decision as a result of their
inquiries under section
62."
On completing
their inquiries under section 62 the local
housing authority must
decide whether the applicant is homeless, if
so, whether he has a
priority need, and if so, whether he became
-2-
homeless
intentionally and whether they propose to refer him to
another
local authority on grounds of local connection. By section
64
these decisions must be notified to the applicant supported
by
reasons. By section 65 where a local authority are satisfied
that
the applicant is homeless and:
"(2) . . .
they are satisfied that he has a priority need and
are not
satisfied that he became homeless intentionally, they
shall,
unless they notify another local housing authority in
accordance
with section 67 (referral of application on
grounds of local
connection), secure that accommodation
becomes available for his
occupation."
Section 65(3)
imposes on a local housing authority a duty to
house temporarily
an applicant found to have a priority need but
to have become
homeless intentionally and also a duty to house an
applicant
sending a determination as to whether the conditions for
the
referral of the application to another local housing authority
are
satisfied.
The appellant
Council are a local housing authority. The
respondent, Mr. Clarke,
satisfied the council that he was homeless,
and that he had a
priority need as a vulnerable person under
Section 59 (1) (c) of
the Act. The council were not satisfied that
Mr. Clarke had become
homeless intentionally and they did not
refer Mr. Clarke's
application for accommodation to another local
housing authority.
The council accepted towards Mr. Clarke the
duty imposed on them
by section 65(2) to "secure that
accommodation becomes
available for his occupation."
The Council own
a terrace of houses 131-137 Cambridge
Street. The premises are
used by the Council as a hostel. There
are 31 single rooms each
with a bed and limited cooking facilities.
There was originally a
common room which has since been
vandalised. The occupiers of the
hostel are homeless single men,
including men with personality
disorders or physical disabilities,
sometimes eccentric, sometimes
frail, sometimes evicted from
domestic accommodation or discharged
from hospital or from
prison. Experience has shown the possibility
that the hostel may
have to cope with an occupier who is suicidal
or alcoholic or
addicted to drugs. There is a warden supported by
a resettlement
team of social workers. The hope is that after a
period of
rehabilitation and supervision in the hostel, each
occupier will be
able to move on to permanent accommodation where
he will be
independent and look after himself. In the case of Mr.
Clarke,
the hostel was designed to be a halfway house for
rehabilitation
and treatment en route to an independent home. In
these
circumstances Mr. Clarke was provided with accommodation at
the
hostel pursuant to an agreement entitled "Licence to
Occupy"
dated 5 February 1987, addressed to Mr. Clarke and,
so far as
material, in the following terms:-
"Westminster
City Council by this licence which is personal
to you will allow
you to occupy in common with the council
and any other persons to
whom the same right is granted
accommodation at the single persons
hostel at 131-137,
Cambridge Street SW1 in the City of
Westminster. The
terms of the licence under which you agree to
occupy the
accommodation are set out below and the current
conditions
of occupation are set out hereafter . . .
- 3 -
This licence does not give you
and is not intended
to give you any of the rights or to impose
upon you
any of the obligations of a tenant nor 'does it
give
you the right of exclusive occupation of
any
particular accommodation or room which may
be
allotted to you or which you may be allowed to use
nor
does it create the relationship of landlord
and
tenant. The accommodation allotted to you may
be
changed from time to time without notice as
the
council directs and you may be required to share
such
accommodation with any other person as required by
the
council. Any furniture provided or services
of
whatever nature may be changed or withdrawn at any
time.
The licence permits you
only and not any person
invited by you to occupy
accommodation in common
with the council whose
representative may enter the
accommodation at any
time. You may use the
accommodation as living
accommodation only and not
for any other purpose.
The council may terminate the
licence at any time,
by giving you not less than 7 days
notice in writing
and you must leave at the end
of that time except
that if you fail to pay
the charges hereinafter
provided or if you break the
terms of the licence or
the conditions of occupation in
any other way the
licence may be terminated forthwith ....
Undertaking by licensees
I have read and
I agree to observe the above licence
and the conditions of
occupation set out overleaf.
I agree to pay
regularly in advance on Monday of
each week the charge of £16.79
for the
accommodation and for the services provided. I
understand
that this charge is assessed on my present
financial circumstances
and that the charge will be
amended if the council's scale of
charges is amended
or if my circumstances alter.
I understand
that failure to pay the weekly charge or
to observe the terms of
the licence or the conditions
of occupation may result in the
council requiring me
to leave the accommodation.
Conditions of occupation
In the interest
of the council and of other residents
certain conditions have to
be made and these
conditions may be changed from time to time as
the
council considers necessary. You are asked to co-
operate
with the council's staff and in particular you
are required:
- 4 -
(1) Not to
invite any person to share the
accommodation with
you nor allow any person to stay
overnight.
To keep the accommodation
allocated to you in a
clean condition and to take care of
all furniture, bed
linen or other articles provided.
To clean and leave tidy on
each occasion after
use by you the bathroom and toilet
accommodation.
To pay for any damage caused ....
To be in your accommodation by
not later than 11
p.m. and to ensure that visitors
leave by not later
than this time ....
(6) To do
nothing which may cause nuisance,
annoyance or
discomfort to other residents and to be
responsible for the
behaviour of your visitors . . .
(10) To
comply with the directions of the council's
warden or
other staff in charge of the hostel."
Mr. Clarke was
allocated Room E on the first floor of 131
Cambridge Street. On 13
April 1988 the Council gave Mr. Clarke
notice terminating his
licence. The notice was issued because of
complaints by residents
and others that Mr. Clarke had caused
nuisance and annoyance and
noise. On 13 November 1988 the
Council issued the summons in these
proceedings for possession.
Mr. Clarke, by his defence, claimed to
be a "secure tenant"
entitled to the protection of Part
IV of the Act of 1985.
Subsequently Mr. Clarke smashed up Room E
and threw the
Council's furniture and his clothes into the street.
He was taken
away by the Police and subsequently returned. The
incident is an
illustration of the need for the Council to be able
to evict an
occupier at short notice. The trial judge, Mr.
Recorder Langan
Q.C., made an order for possession in favour of
the Council but
his decision was reversed by the Court of Appeal
(Dillon, Balcombe
and Ralph Gibson L.JJ.) who held that Mr. Clarke
was a secure
tenant of Room E and dismissed the Council's claim
for possession.
The Council now appeal.
Part IV of the
Act of 1985 entitled "Secure tenancies and
rights of secure
tenants" begins with section 79 and ends with
section 117. By
section 79:
"(1) A
Tenancy under which a dwelling-house is let as a
separate dwelling
is a secure tenancy at any time when the
conditions described in
sections 80 and 81 as the landlord
condition and the tenant
condition are satisfied.
(2) Subsection (1) has effect subject to -
(a) the
exceptions in Schedule 1 (tenancies which are
not secure
tenancies), . . .
(3) The
provisions of this Part apply in relation to a licence
to occupy
a dwelling-house (whether or not granted for
a
consideration) as they apply in relation to a tenancy."
- 5 -
The landlord
condition prescribed by section 80 is that the
interest of the
landlord belongs to certain authorities or bodies
including a
local authority. In the present case, therefore, the
landlord
condition is satisfied. The tenant condition prescribed by
section
81 is:
"...
that the tenant is an individual and occupies
the
dwelling-house as his only or principal home; ..."
Mr. Clarke
occupies room E as his only home. If room E is
a separate
dwelling-house occupied under a tenancy or licence by
Mr. Clarke
as his only home, then Mr. Clarke is a secure tenant.
The
exceptions set forth in Schedule 1 do not apply.
If Mr. Clarke
is a secure tenant the Council cannot obtain
possession unless
they first serve a notice prescribed by regulations
made under
Section 83 of the Act of 1985 and institute
proceedings within the
time limit prescribed by that section. By
Section 84, as applied
to the present case, the Court will then
only be able to make an
order for possession if Mr. Clarke has
been guilty of conduct
which is a nuisance or annoyance to
neighbours and if the Court
considers that it is reasonable to make
the order. If therefore
Mr. Clarke is a secure tenant, the Council-
may not be able to
obtain possession of Room E and cannot
speedily obtain possession
of any of the hostel rooms. If Mr.
Clarke is not a secure tenant
then he has no defence to the
Council's present action for
possession.
Section 112 of
the Act of 1985 provides that for the
purposes of Part IV a
dwelling-house may be a house or part of a
house. Under the Rent
Acts, in order to create a letting of part
of a house as a
separate dwelling there must be an agreement by
which the occupier
has exclusive possession of essential living
rooms of a separate
dwelling house. Essential living rooms provide
the necessary
facilities for living, sleeping and cooking. Thus a
bed-sitting
room with cooking facilities may be a separate dwelling
house even
though bathroom and lavatory facilities might be
elsewhere and
shared with other people; see Neale v Del Soto
[1945] K.B.
144, Cole v Harris [1945] K.B. 474 and Goodrich v
Paisner
[1957] A.C. 65 at 79. Room E provides facilities for
living,
sleeping and cooking. Room E is occupied by Mr. Clarke as
his only
home. Section 79 (1) of the Act of 1985 employs the
language of
the Rent Acts. Accordingly Mr. Clarke is a secure
tenant of Room E
if he enjoys exclusive possession of Room E. In
order to determine
whether Mr. Clarke enjoys exclusive possession
of Room E, the
rights conferred on Mr. Clarke and the rights
reserved to the
Council by the licence to occupy must be
considered and evaluated.
Mr. Sedley, who
appeared on behalf of Mr. Clarke,
submitted that Mr. Clarke was a
secure tenant even if he was not
granted exclusive possession of
Room E. Section 79 (3), he said,
applies to any licence to occupy
a dwelling house. This submission
would confer security of tenure
on a lodger and on a variety of
licensees and is contrary to the
language of Section 79 (3) which
applies the provisions of Part IV
of the Act to a licence "as they
apply in relation to a
tenancy." Part IV only applies to a tenancy
of a dwelling
house let as a separate dwelling namely with
- 6 -
exclusive
possession. Part IV therefore applies to a licence which
has the
same characteristics. A tenant or licensee can only claim
to be a
secure tenant if he has been granted exclusive possession
of a
separate dwelling house.
The predecessor
of Section 79 (3) of the Act of 1985 was
Section 48 of the Housing
Act 1980 which provided that where
under a licence "the
circumstances are such that, if the licence
were a tenancy, it
would be a secure tenancy then . . . this Part
of this Act applies
to the licence as it applies to a secure
tenancy." The result
of Section 48 of the Act of 1980 was that,
whether the occupier
was a tenant or a licensee, he must be
granted exclusive
possession in order to become a secure tenant.
The Court of Appeal
so held in Family Housing Association v Miah
[1982] 5
H.L.R. 94 and Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea v
Hayden
[1984] 17 H.L.R. 114.
The Rent Acts
do not apply to a licence and Section 48 of
the Act of 1980 was
enacted at the time when some private
landlords were granting
exclusive possession of residential
accommodation at a rent but in
the form of a licence. Section 48
of the Act of 1980 made clear
that such a licence created a
secure tenancy. Subsequently in
Street v Mountford [1985] A.C.
809 this House reaffirmed
the general principle that a grant of
exclusive possession of
residential accommodation at a rent created
a tenancy protected by
the Rent Acts notwithstanding that the
parties intended to grant
and expressed themselves as having
granted a licence and not a
tenancy. The decision of this House
in Street v Mountford
[1985] AC 809 was published on 2 May
1985. The Act of 1985
received the Royal Assent on 30 October
1985. In Family Housing
Association v Jones [1990] 1 W.L.R. 779
Balcombe L.J. held at
p.790 that in these circumstances Section 79
(3) of the Act of
1985 must have been intended to alter the law
and to confer the
status of a secure tenant on a licensee who did
not enjoy
exclusive possession. The Court of Appeal in the instant
case felt
bound to follow its decision in Family Housing
Association v
Jones [1990] 1 W.L.R. 779 though Dillon L.J. doubted
the
soundness of that decision so far as it construed Section 79 (3)
and
Balcombe L.J. to some extent resiled from his earlier views.
In my
opinion Section 79 (3) did not alter the law. The Act of
1985 was
an enactment which consolidated various statutes
including the Act
of 1980 and gave effect to certain
recommendations of the Law
Commission. Those recommendations
did not relate to Section 48 of
the Act of 1980. Therefore
Section 79 (3) was a consolidating
measure and in redrafting
Section 48 of the Act of 1980 in the
form of Section 79 (3) of
the Act of 1985 the draftsman had no
power to alter the law. In
my opinion, on the true construction of
Section 48 of the Act of
1980 and on the true construction of
Section 79 (3) of the Act of
1985, whether those sections be
considered together or separately
a licence can only create a
secure tenancy if it confers exclusive
possession of a dwelling
house.
So the question
is whether the "licence to occupy" followed
by the
allocation of Room E and the payment of rent conferred on
Mr.
Clarke exclusive possession of Room E. In Street v
Mountford
[1985] A.C. S09 the landlord agreed to grant a
licence of
residential accommodation for a weekly fee. The
agreement was
designated a licence and contained a declaration
that the licence
- 7 -
did not create
and was not intended to create a tenancy protected
by the Rent
Acts. Nevertheless the licensee enjoyed exclusive
possession; a
third party could not lawfully interfere with that
possession and
the landlord only reserved limited powers to enter to
protect his
own interests as a landlord. The licence created a
tenancy.
In A.G.
Securities v Vaughan [1990] 1 AC 417 four
separate bedrooms
in a house were occupied by four separate
individuals under four
separate and independent agreements, all
four occupiers being
entitled to share the house in common. But
they did not enjoy
exclusive possession of the house jointly. Each
had exclusive
possession of one bedroom but shared possession of
the other parts
of the house. The bedroom was not a dwelling
house and the house
was shared. In these circumstances each
occupier was a licensee.
In Antoniades v Villiers also reported at
[1990] 1 AC 417
a one bedroomed flat was occupied by a couple
on the terms of
licences which expressly reserved to the owner
the right to share
and permit other persons to share the flat. The
reservation, which
was not and could not reasonably be acted upon,
was a pretence
designed to disguise the fact that the couple were
granted
exclusive possession at a rent and were therefore tenants.
In the
present case no pretence is involved. The question is
whether upon
the true construction of the licence to occupy and in
the
circumstances in which Mr. Clarke was allowed to occupy
Room E,
there was a grant by the Council to Mr. Clarke of
exclusive
possession of Room E.
From the point
of view of the Council the grant of
exclusive possession would be
inconsistent with the purposes for
which the Council provided the
accommodation at Cambridge
Street. It was in the interests of Mr.
Clarke and each of the
occupiers of the hostel that the Council
should retain possession of
each room. If one room became
uninhabitable another room could
be shared between two occupiers.
If one room became unsuitable
for an occupier he could be moved
elsewhere. If the occupier of
one room became a nuisance he could
be compelled to move to
another room where his actions might be
less troublesome to his
neighbours. If the occupier of a room had
exclusive possession he
could prevent the Council from entering
the room save for the
purpose of protecting the Council's
interests and not for the
purpose of supervising and controlling
the conduct of the occupier
in his interests. If the occupier of a
room had exclusive
possession he couid not be obliged to comply
with the terms of
the conditions of occupation. Mr. Clarke could
not, for example,
be obliged to comply with the directions of the
warden or to
exclude visitors or to comply with any of the other
conditions of
occupation which are designed to help Mr. Clarke and
the other
occupiers of the hostel and to enable the hostel to be
conducted
in an efficient and harmonious manner. The only remedy
of the
Council for breaches of the conditions of occupation would
be the
lengthy and uncertain procedure required by the Act of 1985
to be
operated for the purpose of obtaining possession from a
secure
tenant. In the circumstances of the present case I consider
that
the Council legitimately and effectively retained for
themselves
possession of Room E and that Mr. Clarke was only a
licensee
with rights corresponding to the rights of a lodger. In
reaching
this conclusion I take into account the object of the
Council,
namely the provision of temporary accommodation for
vulnerable
- 8 -
homeless
persons, the necessity for the Council to retain possession
of all
the rooms in order to make and administer arrangements for
the
suitable accommodation of all the occupiers and the need for
the
Council to retain possession of every room not only in the
interests
of the Council as the owners of the terrace but also for
the
purpose of providing for the occupier supervision and
assistance.
For many obvious reasons it was highly undesirable for
the Council
to grant to any occupier of a room exclusive
possession which
obstructed the use by the Council of all the
rooms of the hostel
in the interests of every occupier. By the
terms of the licence to
occupy Mr. Clarke was not entitled to any
particular room, he
could be required to share with any other
person as required by
the Council and he was only entitled to
"occupy accommodation
in common with the Council whose
representative may enter the
accommodation at any time." It is
accepted that these
provisions of the licence to occupy were
inserted to enable the
Council to discharge its responsibilities to
the vulnerable
persons accommodated at the Cambridge Street
terrace and were not
inserted for the purposes of enabling the
Council to avoid the
creation of a secure tenancy. The conditions
of occupancy support
the view that Mr. Clarke was not in
exclusive occupation of Room
E. He was expressly limited in his
enjoyment of any accommodation
provided for him. He was
forbidden to entertain visitors without
the approval of the Council
staff and was bound to comply with the
Council's warden or other
staff in charge of the hostel. These
limitations confirmed that
the Council retained possession of all
the rooms of the hostel in
order to supervise and control the
activities of the occupiers,
including Mr. Clarke. Although Mr.
Clarke physically occupied
Room E he did not enjoy possession
exclusively of the Council.
This is a very
special case which depends on the peculiar
nature of the hostel
maintained by the Council, the use of the
hostel by the Council,
the totality immediacy and objectives of the
powers exerciseable
by the Council and the restrictions imposed
on Mr. Clarke. The
decision in this case will not allow a landlord
private or public
to free himself from the Rent Acts or from the
restrictions of a
secure tenancy merely by adopting or adapting
the language of the
licence to occupy. The provisions of the
licence to occupy and the
circumstance in which that licence was
granted and continued lead
to the conclusion that Mr. Clarke has
never enjoyed that exclusive
possession which he claims. I would
therefore allow the appeal and
restore the Order for possession
made by the trial judge.
LORD GRIFFITHS
My Lords,
I have had the
advantage of reading in draft the speech of
my noble and learned
friend. Lord Templeman and, for the reasons
which he gives. I,
too, would allow the appeal and restore the trial
judge's order.
- 9 -
LORD ACKNER
My Lords,
I have had the
advantage of reading in draft the speech of
my noble and learned
friend, Lord Templeman and, for the reasons
which he gives, I,
too, would allow the appeal and restore the trial
judge's order.
LORD LOWRY
My Lords,
I have had the
advantage of reading in draft the speech of
my noble and learned
friend, Lord Templeman and, for the reasons
which he gives, I,
too, would allow the appeal and restore the trial
judge's order.
- 10 -