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R v Newcastle upon Tyne County Court, ex parte Thompson

Rent Act 1977 — Possession — Application for judicial review — Consent judgment and orders in county court challenged — Case 9 in Schedule 15 to 1977 Act — Rules governing jurisdiction to make a consent order for possession in the case of a tenant protected by the Rent Act — In this case possession was sought by the landlords under Case 9 in Schedule 15 on the ground that the dwelling-house was reasonably required by the landlords as a residence for themselves and their two sons — The order for possession which was now challenged by the tenant was made by the district registrar, it having apparently been agreed by the parties’ representatives that such an order should be made, although it was not expressed to be a consent order — Counsel who acted for the tenant before the registrar had, however, written a letter which the court now accepted as an accurate account of what had happened — No concession had been made on behalf of the tenant that she was not protected by the Act, or that the landlords reasonably required the flat or that they would suffer greater hardship if they were not granted possession — No evidence was produced to the registrar and no admission was made by or on behalf of the tenant that it was reasonable to make the possession order

The judge
considered a number of authorities bearing on the court’s jurisdiction to make
a consent order in Rent Act possession cases — It was clear since Barton v Fincham that the
agreement of the tenant to give up possession was not sufficient to enable a
consent order to be made — ‘Where the legislature has in clear and unmistakable
language restricted the jurisdiction of the court . . . no agreement between
the parties can give the court a jurisdiction which the legislature
has said it is not to exercise’ — In principle the court must be satisfied that
the conditions exist for a possession order to be made — The mandatory nature
of section 98 of the 1977 Act overrules the normal rules as to consent —
However, as is clear from Barton v Fincham and Thorne v Smith, and restated in Syed
Hussain v A M Abdullah Sahib & Co, if the tenant in effect admits that
the landlord’s claim is well founded, the judge has no duty to require the
matter to be further investigated — There must be no doubt about the admission;
a compromise made without admissions will not suffice

Held that
there was nothing in the present case which amounted to an admission, whether
explicit or implicit, of the landlords’ claim — The application for judicial
review was accordingly granted and the registrar’s order for possession quashed
— At the end of his judgment the judge gave some advice to practitioners

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