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Birmingham City Council v. Ali & Ors
Factual and Procedural Background
Two unrelated appeals were heard together because both concern the scope of local authorities’ duties toward homeless persons under Part 7 of the Housing Act 1996.
- Appeal 1 (Local Authority A): Six large families (“Applicants”) were accepted as homeless because their existing accommodation was overcrowded or in serious disrepair. Local Authority A acknowledged the full housing duty under section 193(2) but left the families in their present homes—sometimes for years—while placing them on a waiting list for permanent social housing. The Applicants obtained judicial review. The Administrative Court granted mandatory orders and the Court of Appeal upheld those orders. Local Authority A appealed to the House of Lords.
- Appeal 2 (Local Authority B): A mother and her two children (“Appellant”) fled domestic violence and entered a women’s refuge. After a dispute with staff she was evicted. Local Authority B provided interim accommodation but decided she had become intentionally homeless. A county court allowed her statutory appeal; the Court of Appeal reversed, holding the refuge could be “accommodation” she was reasonably expected to occupy. The Appellant appealed to the House of Lords.
Legal Issues Presented
- Whether a local authority may lawfully discharge its duty under section 193(2) by leaving a homeless household in accommodation already held to be unreasonable for long-term occupation, while it seeks permanent housing.
- Whether a women’s refuge is “accommodation” for the purposes of sections 175(3) and 191(1), and if so, how the “reasonable to continue to occupy” test applies.
- Whether Local Authority A’s allocation policy, which gave higher priority to households placed in interim accommodation than to those left in unsuitable homes, was lawful under Part 6 of the Housing Act 1996.
Arguments of the Parties
Applicants’ / Appellant’s Arguments
- Leaving families in overcrowded or defective dwellings cannot satisfy the section 193(2) duty; the duty requires provision of suitable accommodation within a reasonable time.
- A refuge is a short-term crisis haven, not true accommodation; even if it counts as accommodation, it is unreasonable to expect continued occupation beyond a brief period, so an eviction cannot render the resident intentionally homeless.
- The allocation policy unlawfully downgrades homeless households who remain in unsuitable homes, defeating the reasonable-preference requirement in section 167.
Local Authorities’ Arguments
- Section 193(2) permits a pragmatic approach: an authority may first classify a household as homeless but leave it temporarily where it is while searching for housing, given limited stock and budgetary pressures.
- A refuge can constitute accommodation that it is reasonable to continue to occupy; misconduct leading to eviction therefore supports a finding of intentional homelessness.
- The allocation scheme lawfully prioritises those in interim accommodation because they are in greater immediate need.
Table of Precedents Cited
Precedent | Rule or Principle Cited For | Application by the Court |
---|---|---|
Codona v Mid-Bedfordshire DC [2004] EWCA Civ 925 | The duty under section 193(2) is to secure suitable accommodation within a reasonable time, assessed contextually. | Preferred and adopted to justify a pragmatic, time-sensitive approach; used to reject more rigid formulations of the duty. |
R (Aweys) v Birmingham CC [2007] EWHC 52 & [2008] EWCA Civ 48 | High Court view: any delay is unlawful; Court of Appeal view: urgent action always required. | Both positions rejected; House of Lords aligned instead with Codona. |
Puhlhofer v Hillingdon LBC [1986] AC 484 | Meaning of “accommodation” under earlier legislation; led to statutory amendment introducing the reasonableness test. | Discussed to explain legislative history; not determinative of present issue. |
R v Ealing LBC ex p Sidhu (1982) 80 LGR 534 | Refuge not treated as accommodation under the 1977 Act. | Explained that its outcome can now be achieved via section 175(3) without relying on the earlier rationale. |
R v Brent LBC ex p Awua [1996] AC 55 | “Reasonable to continue to occupy” involves a temporal element. | Quoted to support view that suitability is linked to expected duration of occupation. |
R (Ahmad) v Newham LBC [2009] UKHL 14 | Courts should not readily interfere with allocation schemes that comply with Part 6. | Used to assess, but ultimately uphold in part, criticism of Local Authority A’s prioritisation rules. |
R (Alam) v Tower Hamlets LBC [2009] EWHC 44 | Applicant housed under section 188 remains “homeless” for Part 7 purposes. | Cited to illustrate that interim accommodation does not terminate homeless status, supporting the Applicants’ stance. |
Court's Reasoning and Analysis
The House of Lords conducted a textual, purposive and policy-based examination of sections 175(3), 191(1) and 193(2).
- Temporal focus of “continue to occupy”. The words “continue to” and “would be” require a forward-looking assessment; accommodation may be acceptable for a short period yet unreasonable for the foreseeable future.
- Interplay of sections 188 and 193. Interim accommodation must itself be suitable; nevertheless, suitability is elastic and depends on the intended duration. Accordingly, an authority can leave an applicant temporarily in present housing, but only while actively seeking alternative accommodation.
- Refuge accommodation. A women’s refuge can be “accommodation”, but in most cases it will be unreasonable to expect indefinite occupation because of rules, lack of privacy and the purpose of a refuge. Consequently, eviction from a refuge will rarely render a resident intentionally homeless.
- Allocation policy. Part 6 and Part 7 impose distinct duties. Merely placing households on a waiting list does not, of itself, satisfy the section 193 duty. Giving higher priority to those in interim accommodation is lawful only if based on objective need; the evidence failed to justify Local Authority A’s blanket preference.
- Remedial discretion. Courts should be mindful of resource constraints but may intervene where delay becomes intolerable. The threshold is fact- sensitive; no detailed findings were possible on the instant record once the Applicants’ overarching argument fell.
Holding and Implications
APPEALS ALLOWED.
For Local Authority A, the Court declared it lawful to classify a household as homeless yet leave it in current accommodation temporarily, but unlawful to do so indefinitely or to rely solely on the allocation scheme to meet the section 193(2) duty. The portion of the allocation policy that automatically favoured households in interim accommodation over similarly placed households at home was declared unlawful.
For Local Authority B, the finding of intentional homelessness was quashed and replaced with a finding of non-intentional homelessness, removing the adverse record against the Appellant.
The decision clarifies that “reasonable to continue to occupy” involves a time-sensitive analysis, legitimises short-term pragmatic solutions, but insists on eventual provision of suitable accommodation. While no new rule of law was created, the judgment provides authoritative guidance likely to shape local authority homelessness practice across the United Kingdom.
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