Suitability without Preconditions: The Section 189A Clarification in Norton v London Borough of Haringey

Suitability without Preconditions: The Section 189A Clarification in Norton v London Borough of Haringey

1. Introduction

In Norton v London Borough of Haringey ([2025] EWCA Civ 746) the Court of Appeal (Civil Division) confronted a technical but practically significant question in homelessness law: must a local housing authority complete a lawful “section 189A assessment” and prepare the associated Personalised Housing Plan (PHP) before it can lawfully determine whether offered accommodation is “suitable” for an applicant? The appellant, Mr Norton, argued that the assessment was a condition precedent; Haringey contended that, though important, the assessment’s absence does not nullify an otherwise sound suitability decision.

By dismissing Mr Norton’s appeal, the Court of Appeal has clarified the interaction between the statutory duties in Part 7 of the Housing Act 1996 and the modern doctrine (derived from R v Soneji) on the consequences of non-compliance with imperative statutory requirements. The judgment provides authoritative guidance on when a procedural omission will (or will not) invalidate subsequent substantive decisions in the homelessness context.

2. Summary of the Judgment

The Court of Appeal (Lewison and Warby LJJ and Jeremy Baker LJ) held that:

  • Section 189A of the Housing Act 1996 undoubtedly creates an imperative duty to assess an applicant’s circumstances, housing needs and required support, and to record the outcome in writing.
  • However, Parliament did not intend that failure to complete that assessment should automatically invalidate later decisions on the suitability of accommodation under sections 188, 193 or 206.
  • Applying the Soneji line of authority, the Court asked whether Parliament must be taken to have intended “total invalidity”. Examining the statutory structure and practical consequences, the answer was no.
  • Therefore, a lawful assessment of suitability can be made even where no (or a defective) section 189A assessment exists, provided the decision-maker nevertheless has adequate information and undertakes a proper inquiry.
  • In Mr Norton’s case, the reviewing officer’s suitability decision was untainted by any deficiency in the earlier assessment and thus stood.

3. Detailed Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence

a) The Immediate Homelessness Cases

  • XY v Haringey LBC [2019] EWHC 2276 (Admin)
  • R (YR) v Lambeth LBC [2022] EWHC 2813 (Admin)
  • UO v Redbridge LBC [2023] EWHC 1355 & [2024] EWHC 1989

These cases involved flawed section 189A assessments that directly informed the accommodation decisions. Courts quashed the suitability findings because the faulty assessments infected the later reasoning. None, however, considered whether the absence of an assessment altogether must necessarily vitiate a suitability decision — the point raised in Norton.

b) The “Imperative Requirement” Authorities

  • R v Soneji [2005] UKHL 49
  • A1 Properties (Sunderland) Ltd v Tudor Studios RTM Co Ltd [2024] UKSC 27
  • R v Layden [2025] UKSC 12

These Supreme Court decisions articulate the modern test:

“The correct approach is to ask whether it was a purpose of the legislature that an act done in breach of the requirement should be invalid” – Lords Briggs & Sales in A1 Properties at [58].

Key facets extracted by the Court of Appeal in Norton:

  • Analyse the statute as a whole.
  • Ask whether invalidating the later act would promote or frustrate legislative purpose.
  • Consider the practical prejudice caused by the breach.

3.2 The Court’s Legal Reasoning

  1. Statutory Structure Examination
    Sections 189B, 190 and 195 expressly require decision-makers to “have regard to” a section 189A assessment. By contrast, sections 206 and 210, which govern suitability, contain no such cross-reference. The omission is interpreted as a deliberate legislative choice: Parliament did not make the assessment a legal gateway to suitability decisions.
  2. Functionality and Timing
    The interim duty under section 188 (to secure accommodation pending enquiries) arises before an assessment is prepared, yet the accommodation provided must still be “suitable”. Suitability therefore cannot logically depend on prior completion of the assessment.
  3. Lack of Prejudice
    Mr Norton contested only the procedural point; his substantive challenges to suitability had been rejected. On the Soneji analysis he “lost nothing of value” from the absence of an updated assessment.
  4. Avoiding Administrative Paralysis
    Accepting Mr Norton’s argument would paralyse authorities: no offers, assistance or prevention activity under sections 189B, 190, 193 or 195 could lawfully occur until assessments/PHPs were perfect. The Court considered such consequences “stark” and “unlikely to reflect Parliament’s intention”.

3.3 Impact of the Judgment

The decision has several practical and doctrinal consequences:

  • Operational Flexibility: Housing authorities may lawfully discharge their duties and make suitability decisions even if the section 189A paperwork is outstanding, provided they possess sufficient information and conduct a proper inquiry.
  • Ligation Strategy: Claimants can no longer succeed merely by pointing to a missing or out-of-date assessment; they must show a substantive flaw in the suitability decision itself or a causal link between any assessment defect and the decision.
  • Emphasis Shift: The focus in judicial review and statutory appeals moves from procedural ticks to substantive prejudice.
  • Persuasive Authority: Although arising in England and Wales, the reasoning (particularly the application of Soneji) may influence tribunals in other jurisdictions confronted with analogous “condition precedent” arguments.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

  • Section 189A Assessment: A statutory evaluation by the housing authority of why the applicant is (or may be) homeless, what accommodation would suit them (and household members), and what support they need to obtain and keep that accommodation.
  • Personalised Housing Plan (PHP): A written plan, agreed (or recorded) after the assessment, listing the steps the authority and applicant will take to prevent or relieve homelessness.
  • Suitability of Accommodation: A composite standard, drawn from sections 206 and 210 and related regulations, requiring that offered housing meets health, safety, space and location criteria appropriate to the applicant’s needs.
  • Condition Precedent: A legal requirement that must be fulfilled before another duty can validly be carried out. The Court of Appeal held section 189A is not such a requirement for decisions on suitability.
  • Soneji Principle: A modern interpretative approach that asks whether Parliament intended that non-compliance with an imperative requirement leads to automatic invalidity, focusing on purpose and prejudice rather than rigid “mandatory/directory” labels.

5. Conclusion

Norton v London Borough of Haringey cements an important clarification: while section 189A assessments remain a vital part of the statutory framework, their absence does not nullify an otherwise lawful decision on the suitability of accommodation. Rooted in the Soneji doctrine, the Court of Appeal’s reasoning prioritises substance over form and prevents procedural omissions from paralysing homelessness relief. Future challenges must therefore demonstrate a substantive flaw or prejudice, rather than relying on technical non-compliance alone. The judgment realigns the balance between procedural rigour and practical effectiveness in the delivery of housing duties, and will guide both local authorities and courts when navigating the intricate obligations of the Housing Act 1996.

© 2024 – Commentary prepared for educational purposes by AI Legal Analyst.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division)

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