Elliott and others v Southwark London Borough Council
(Before Lord Justice MEGAW, Lord Justice JAMES and Lord Justice GEOFFREY LANE)
Development area–Council’s CPO followed by owners’ applications for rehabilitation orders–Council entitled, in refusing rehabilitation, to say merely that their policy was to demolish existing properties and put up new housing accommodation on the sites–‘More than a mere statement of the council’s conclusion’–‘Did state the salient reason why the houses could not be rehabilitated’
This was an
appeal by Mr Alpheus Elliott and three other owners of houses in the Selborne
Road area of Camberwell, London SE5, against the refusal of Willis J in the
Queen’s Bench Division on February 2 1976 to declare that the respondents,
Southwark London Borough Council, had failed to carry out their statutory duty
under the Housing Act 1974 to consider, determine and give reasons for their
refusal to make rehabilitation orders in respect of the appellants’ houses, all
of which were subject to the Selborne Road (No 1) Compulsory Purchase Order
1973.
Mr P Boydell
QC, Mr D Keane and Mr P Crawford (instructed by Jeffrey Gordon & Co)
appeared for the appellants, and Mr G Moriarty QC and Viscount Culross
(instructed by the London Borough of Southwark) represented the respondents.
Development area–Council’s CPO followed by owners’ applications for rehabilitation orders–Council entitled, in refusing rehabilitation, to say merely that their policy was to demolish existing properties and put up new housing accommodation on the sites–‘More than a mere statement of the council’s conclusion’–‘Did state the salient reason why the houses could not be rehabilitated’
This was an
appeal by Mr Alpheus Elliott and three other owners of houses in the Selborne
Road area of Camberwell, London SE5, against the refusal of Willis J in the
Queen’s Bench Division on February 2 1976 to declare that the respondents,
Southwark London Borough Council, had failed to carry out their statutory duty
under the Housing Act 1974 to consider, determine and give reasons for their
refusal to make rehabilitation orders in respect of the appellants’ houses, all
of which were subject to the Selborne Road (No 1) Compulsory Purchase Order
1973.
Mr P Boydell
QC, Mr D Keane and Mr P Crawford (instructed by Jeffrey Gordon & Co)
appeared for the appellants, and Mr G Moriarty QC and Viscount Culross
(instructed by the London Borough of Southwark) represented the respondents.
Giving the
judgment of the court, JAMES LJ said that the appeal had been expedited by
order of the court, and the judgment of Willis J had been given only on
February 2 1976 on the hearing of an originating summons taken out on January
22 1976. By that summons ten plaintiffs claimed declarations and injunctions
against the London Borough of Southwark, and four of those plaintiffs were the
appellants in the present appeal.
The background
to the case was the introduction by legislation in 1974 of the concept of
rehabilitation of houses as an alternative to demolition, clearance and
redevelopment. The relevant statutory provisions were the Housing Act 1974,
section 114, and the tenth schedule to that Act as amended by the Housing Rents
and Subsidies Act 1975. Section 114 applied to houses that were comprised in a
clearance area under Part III of the Housing Act 1957 and fell into any one of
three categories which were likely to include many houses comprised in
clearance areas. Subsection (2) stated:
Where any
house to which this section applies (a) was included in the clearance area by
reason of its being unfit for human habitation, and (b) in the opinion of the
local authority is capable of being, and ought to be, improved to the full
standard, the local authority may make and submit to the Secretary of State a
rehabilitation order in relation to that house.
Paragraph 3
(2) of schedule 10 read:
Where the
owner of a house to which section 114 . . . applies and which was included in
the clearance area by reason of its being unfit for human habitation requests
the local authority to make a rehabilitation order in respect of the house, and
the local authority refuse to make an order, they shall give him in writing
their reasons for so refusing.
In April 1968
the council declared a development area known as ‘Selborne Road development
area.’ In March 1973 they made a
clearance order under Part III of the Housing Act 1957 in respect of that area,
and in May 1973 they resolved to effect the clearance by exercise of compulsory
purchase powers. On October 12 they submitted a compulsory purchase order to
the Secretary of State for confirmation. At that date there were 157
dwelling-houses in the area, of which 72 had already been purchased by the
council by agreement with the owners. Of the remaining 85 houses, 70 were
included in the proposed order on the ground that they were unfit for human
habitation. The four appellants were owner-occupiers of four of those 70
houses. They and many other owner-occupiers to which the order applied objected
to the making of the order. Some disputed the alleged unfitness of their
houses. Many urged that the defects could be remedied and improvements made so
that the houses would conform to the required standard. Many had done work of
maintenance and repair. None wanted to leave. All wanted to preserve the
existing community. Whatever compensation was payable, many people suffered
considerable distress when their homes were taken from them by compulsory
purchase and they were forced to leave familiar surroundings and start afresh
in a strange and sometimes less convenient area. This was expressly recognised
in the White Paper, Better Homes: The Next Priorities, presented to
Parliament in 1973.
The court felt
great sympathy with persons who found themselves in the position of the
appellants and the other occupiers of houses within the order. However, the
Secretary of State ordered a local public inquiry which was held during two
days in January 1974, and the inspector reported to the Secretary of State on
April 22 1974 recommending that subject to certain modifications the order be
confirmed. The Secretary of State wrote his letter of decision confirming the
order, known as the London Borough of Southwark (Selborne Road) (No 1) Compulsory
Purchase Order 1973, on December 2 1974, the same day that section 114 of the
1974 Act came into effect. On March 17 1975 the council served notices to
treat. On May 8 and 9, many of those who had objected to the making of the
order and who had advanced their objections at the public inquiry wrote to the
council making application for ‘a rehabilitation order to be made in respect of
houses which are the subject of the above-mentioned order,’ in other words, the
order in question in the present appeal. The letters were all in the same
terms, and expressly suggested that the appropriate reply to the application
was ‘either to accept it or to give reasons for refusing it.’ Each letter referred to the property or properties
in which the signatory had the necessary interest as owner. The applications
were considered by a subcommittee of the housing committee, and subsequently by
the housing committee of the council. The recommendation of these committees
was accepted by the council, who resolved on July 16 1975 to refuse the
application. On July 21 the deputy town clerk wrote to each applicant saying
that the application was refused for the reason that the policy of the council
was to demolish the existing properties and erect new housing accommodation on the
sites.
Demolition
began on January 12 1976. Discussions and negotiations had not succeeded in
bringing about any compromise or modification, except that a number of
occupiers had been rehoused. Those who remained were constant in their desire
to save their homes and the existing community, while the council remained
unshaken in the opinion that their duty lay in the implementation of the order
and the clearance of the area by demolition in order to facilitate
redevelopment. So the appellants and six others joined as plaintiffs in the
originating summons seeking declarations that the council had failed to carry
out their statutory duties under the 1974 Act and that their decision refusing
to make rehabilitation orders was invalid, with injunctions ordering the
council to reconsider and determine their requests according to law and
restraining the council from demolishing any of the houses until they had dealt
with the requests for rehabilitation orders according to law. On January 17
they obtained an interim injunction. On February 2 the matter was heard by
Willis J, who refused to grant the relief sought. It was from his judgment that
four of the plaintiffs were appealing. They were said to represent the
interests of all the owners of houses affected by the decision of the learned
judge.
It was
desirable to begin by saying something as to the function of the court in a
case such as the present one. It was not for the court to determine issues
which by statute fell to be decided by a body such as a local housing
authority. Thus, for example, it was no part of the court’s function to arrive
at a view, or a decision, even if it had the material necessary to do so, on
such questions as whether or not a particular house, or the houses in a
particular area, should be rehabilitated or should be demolished in order that
new housing might be built. Its function was not to substitute its own view or
opinion or decision on matters which Parliament had left to the judgment of the
local housing authority without provision for appeal. Its function was, where
such issues were raised in proceedings of this nature, to decide whether the
local authority, in reaching its decision, had acted in accordance with the
statutory provisions by which Parliament had defined the authority’s powers,
duties and procedure. The appellants invited the court to say that the council
did not comply with their statutory duty under section 114 (2) of the 1974 Act
and paragraph 3 (2) of the tenth schedule. They said that the council were
under a duty to consider the applications and to consider them individually,
and having discharged that duty, were under the further duty to give to each
appellant in writing the reasons for refusing. They said that the material
before the court, showed, at least by way of inference, that the council did
not apply their minds to those considerations which were relevant to the
applications, either individually or at all, and that the letter of July 21 did
not give any or any sufficient reasons for the refusal. The council’s case was
a denial of these assertions.
The learned
judge had said little in his judgment upon the question whether the council had
given consideration to the applications. In the state of the evidence, there
was no need for him to say more than he did. There was no evidence of any
impropriety. There was evidence that the application had been first before a
subcommittee of the housing committee and then before the housing committee
itself, and that finally it had been the subject-matter of a resolution of the
council. In those circumstances the learned judge accepted the submission of
counsel that to hold that proper consideration had not been given would be ‘an
outrageous thing for a court to do.’
Upon the question whether the council had properly discharged the duty
to give reasons for the refusal, the judge said that paragraph 3 (2) of
schedule 10 had to be looked at in the context of the legislation; that in the
particular circumstances of the case it must appear to the satisfaction of the
court asked to review the reasons that the recipient should fairly understand
why the housing authority was not able to accede to the request; and that the
question here was whether those reasons did pass the test. He (Willis J)
construed the letter of July 21 as stating ‘for the reasons that the whole of
the area has got to be demolished and the sites used for housing
purposes.’ He thought that that
statement was a sufficiently clear indication by the local authority of reasons
which could not be said to be either inadequate or insufficient in the
circumstances of the case, ‘bearing in mind what had gone before,’ and that the
statement was intelligible to the recipient of the refusal.
The words
‘bearing in mind what had gone before’ were one of a number of references which
the judge made to the fact that the plaintiffs’ contentions had been advanced
at the local public inquiry in January 1974. Mr Boydell, for the appellants,
emphasised the prominence given to this feature in the judgment, and argued
that the judge was in error in his interpretation of what had taken place at
the inquiry. The judge used the expressions, ‘plainly canvassed and dealt with
in evidence on both sides,’ ‘fully ventilated and dealt with in the report by
the inspector,’ and ‘thoroughly thrashed out,’ in relation to the issue of
rehabilitation in so far as it was raised at the inquiry. Their Lordships were
inclined to the view that the words ‘fully ventilated’ and ‘thoroughly thrashed
out’ were something of an overstatement, but this was a matter of minor
criticism of the judgment. Then Mr Boydell advanced a number of other
propositions. Much attention had been devoted to his submission that section
114 not only conveyed a power but imposed a duty upon the local authority to
consider making a rehabilitation order, irrespective of a request to do so made
by an owner of property which qualified for consideration. Mr Moriarty, on
behalf of the council, disputed the proposition and supported his argument by a
detailed analysis of the relevant statutory provisions, but their Lordships
found it unnecessary to come to any conclusion on this issue,5
because it was common ground between the parties that once a request had been
made pursuant to schedule 10, paragraph 3 (2), the local authority were under a
duty to consider the matters relevant to the application and to give reasons
for a refusal.
Mr Boydell’s
next proposition was that in the discharge of the duty, the local authority
should pay regard to relevant and disregard irrelevant matters. Mr Moriarty did
not challenge that. Then Mr Boydell said that if a statute imposing a duty to
consider some matter expressly defined the relevant factors to be considered,
the person on whom the duty lay must consider those factors; if and in so far
as the statute did not define the relevant considerations, on the other hand,
it was for the court to construe the statute and determine what relevant
considerations were to be implied. In relation to a request for the making of a
rehabilitation order, the local authority must consider two initial questions
which were prescribed in the Act: (a) whether the particular house was capable
of being improved to the full standard, and (b) if so, whether it ought to be
so improved. Consideration of whether the house ought to be improved, said
counsel, involved the consideration of other factors which the court should
imply as necessary to proper consideration by the local authority in order to
comply with the spirit and to fulfil the purpose of the Act. He (Mr Boydell)
expressed these compendiously as the matters involved in balancing the
difficulty and expense of improving a particuar home and the alternative of
demolishing that house and redeveloping the site. Again there was no challenge
to Mr Boydell’s proposition that the words of the Act required consideration of
the two initial factors, whether a particular house was capable of being
improved, and if so, whether it ought to be improved. Also, it was common
ground that when considering ‘ought’ the local authority could and should take
into consideration the area in which the house was situated and the
neighbouring properties.
It was clear
that the matters which the local authority should consider when deciding
whether a house, capable of improvement to the full standard, ought to be
improved under the provisions of a rehabilitation order rather than be
demolished, and the weight which should be given to one or another factor,
would vary from case to case. It was not for the court to prescribe a list of
matters which must always be considered or to prescribe which factors should be
given more weight than others. It was worth repeating that the function of the
court, where such issues were raised, was not to substitute its own opinion or
decision on matters which Parliament had left to the judgment of the local
authority, but to decide whether the council in reaching their decision had
acted in accordance with the statutory provisions. The complaint that matters
were wrongly considered rested upon the contention that the council relied upon
the evidence and arguments at the public local inquiry and the findings of the
inspector. The complaint that the council failed to consider relevant matters
was that the council took no account, or not sufficient account, of changes
since January 1974 in respect of the law, housing policy, economic conditions
and costings. In their Lordships’ judgment the council were entitled to take
into consideration what had transpired at the public local inquiry. If they had
chosen to do so, they could have included in the reasons for refusal express
references to the evidence given at the inquiry and to the findings of the
inspector: see Givaudan & Co v Minister of Housing and Local
Government [1966] 3 All ER 696 at 699. Although it was true that the
evidence and arguments adduced and advanced at the inquiry were not, and could
not be, directed to the making of a rehabilitation order, for at that date no
such order could be made, there could be no doubt that the objectors at the
inquiry were contending for the same result which could now be achieved by a
rehabilitation order. It was clear from the inspector’s report that the
arguments ranged round the merits of demolition as against rehabilitation. Thus
there was material fit to be taken into consideration when the requests for
rehabilitation orders were received. Their Lordships could find no evidence
indicating that the local authority had failed to consider what, if any,
changes, had taken place since January 1974. It was suggested that the
inadequacy of the purported reasons for refusal gave rise to the inference of
such failure, but their Lordships shared the view of the judge that in the face
of the evidence of the elaborate committee procedure followed by the council it
was impossible to infer that they did not take the relevant factors into
consideration.
The only other
complaint was of a failure to give reasons or adequate reasons. At one stage,
it was suggested on behalf of the appellants that the giving of reasons had
relevance to the basis upon which compensation for compulsory purchase was
payable. In the end it became clear that the difference, if any, in respect of
the basis of compensation was not a material factor, and the point was not
pressed. On the general issue, Mr Boydell said that where a statute expressed a
duty to give reasons, the court should imply a condition that reasons given in
discharge of that duty should be adequate and intelligible. Lord Parker said in
Mountview Court Properties Ltd v Devlin (1970) 21 P&CR 689
that what reasons were sufficient depended upon the facts of the case. He (Lord
Parker) cited from the judgment of Megaw J in Re Poyser and Mills’s
Arbitration [1964] 2 QB 467 at 478: ‘Parliament provided that reasons shall
be given, and in my view that must be read as meaning that proper, adequate
reasons must be given. The reasons that are set out must be reasons which will
not only be intelligible but which deal with the substantial points that have
been raised.’ Mr Boydell argued that the
reasons given by the council here did not pass that test. He said that if a
body under a statutory duty to give reasons failed to do so, then (a) (which
did not apply in this case) if the relevant statute prescribed the sanction of
quashing the order or decision, the court should quash the order or decision,
and (b) in other cases, if the failure to give reasons was sufficiently serious
in the circumstances of the case, the court should quash the order or decision,
but if the court did not quash the order or decision, the court should make an
order requiring reasons to be given. He (counsel) submitted that the purported
reasons were inadequate and did not convey to those who requested
rehabilitation why the local authority was refusing the requests.
It was argued
for the council, their Lordships thought rightly, that there was no evidence
that the council took into account irrelevant matters or failed to take
relevant matters into account. The duty imposed by the statute was a duty to
act in an administrative, not a judicial, capacity, and it was open to the
council to arrive at a policy decision. It was further submitted for the
council that the purported reason was adequate and intelligible. Against the
background of the inquiry, the inspector’s report and the Secretary of State’s
decision letter, the appellants and those owners of houses to whom similar
letters were sent were fully informed by the terms of the letter that the
request for a rehabilitation order was refused because it could not be granted
consistently with the policy of the housing authority to demolish the existing
and erect new housing accommodation. Their Lordships thought that this
submission was correct. The letter was more than a mere statement of the
council’s conclusion. It did state the salient reason why the houses in
question could not be rehabilitated. Their Lordships did not think it was
necessary to include in the reason given any reference to the cost of
demolition as against the cost of improvement or any reference to the
practicability of the houses being improved to full standard. There was
certainly no need to refer to the various matters of detail which their
Lordships assumed. in the absence of evidence to the contrary, had been taken
into account when considering whether the houses ought to be improved to the
full standard. To those who received the letters, the reason for the refusal
was intelligible and sufficient without the inclusion of these details.
It followed
that the appeals failed, but this decision did not govern what might be different
circumstances in other cases. The wording used for the giving of reasons in
this case passed the test: the same wording in another case might fail to do
so. The duty to give reasons pursuant to statute was a responsible one and
could not be discharged by the use of vague general words which were not
sufficient to bring to the mind of the recipient a clear understanding of why
his request for a rehabilitation was being refused.
The appeal
was dismissed. Nor order was made as to costs. The appellants were refused
leave to appeal to the House of Lords.