News, events and consultations

Immigration Bill – possession clauses

HLPA have prepared a briefing on issues in the clauses in the Immigration Bill that enable possession by the landlord either by ‘notice’ or a new mandatory ground of possession. The full briefing can be downloaded here and is set out below.

Clause 13
1. Cause 13 creates two new routes by which a landlord can recover possession.

2. The first is new s.33D, being inserted into the Immigration Act 2014. The Secretary of State will serve notice on the landlord, informing him that a person without a “right to rent” lives in the property (new s.33D(2)). The landlord is then given power to terminate the tenancy by giving at least 28 days written notice to the tenants (ss.33D(3)-(4)). The notice will be enforceable “as if it were an order of the High Court” (s.33D(6)). There will be no need to obtain an order for possession (indeed, the Protection from Eviction Act 1977 is expressly amended to make this point – new s.33E(4). The 2015 Act provisions will not apply here because the Bill makes clear that, once the notice is served, the tenancy cannot be an Assured or Assured Shorthold tenancy.).

3. We have the following concerns:
(a) There is no appeal mechanism for either the landlord or the tenant against the service of either notice. What happens if the Secretary of State has made an error? The only remedy that we can see would be for (i) the landlord to seek judicial review of the Secretary of State; or (ii) the tenant to seek an injunction (probably in the High Court) to prevent the landlord acting on his own notice. Both of these are likely to be expensive and, frankly, largely inaccessible to the majority of landlords and tenants.
(b) It is not at all clear what it means for a notice to be enforceable “as if it were an order of the High Court.” In particular, the landlord’s notice to his tenant seems intended to have the effect of terminating the underlying tenancy and removing all security of tenure. That would appear to suggest that the landlord can simply use “self-help” to recover possession, i.e. personally turn up and throw occupiers onto the street. There are clear risks in this, of potential violence and damage to property, for both landlord and tenant. If what the government intends is that a High Court Enforcement Officer must carry out the eviction, then that needs to be made clear.
(i) This second point is particularly important. If a possession order had been obtained and executed, even on an erroneous basis, there could be no question of the landlord having carried out an unlawful eviction or committing a trespass. But this is not a possession order, merely a power to enforce a notice. There is an obvious risk to landlords that, if it turns out either notice was erroneous, they could have committed a crime; a tort; and a breach of contract.
(c) There is no provision for rent repayment, whether as a condition of execution or at all. So, a tenant who has no right to rent could have paid rent in advance (whether monthly, yearly, etc) and, after only a matter of days/weeks, evicted pursuant to these notice provisions. The landlord is under no obligation to refund the rent for the “lost” period. There clearly should be such an obligation, akin to that which the Government has recently imposed on private sector landlords under assured shorthold tenancies in the Deregulation Act 2015.

4. The second is a new mandatory Ground for possession in both the Housing Act 1988 and the Rent Act 1977, again, triggered by a notice to the landlord from the Secretary of State.

5. Whilst we have various objections to mandatory grounds we recognise that if there has to be a new route to recovering possession, it is far preferable that it be through a court than simply as a result of the service of a notice by the landlord. This route would (probably) at least allow for the court to consider whether in fact someone did not have a right to rent and whether the notice from the Secretary of State was valid. However, it still suffers from the absence of any rent repayment mechanism.

6. The creation of a mandatory ground against a Rent Act tenant is remarkable. Save for a tiny number of residual categories, it has not been possible to create new Rent Act tenancies since January 1989. Yet this Bill envisages bringing possession proceedings against such tenants. Given that, in order to be a Rent Act tenant today, one would have to have been occupying the property as your only or principal home since pre-January 1989, there would be an obvious unfairness in recovering possession against someone who had only known that property as home for over 25 years. Indeed, one would have thought that such a person would have a very strong case for being allowed to remain in the UK in any event. Certainly, this was the view of the Residential Landlords Association when giving oral evidence to the Bill Committee: “First, it is generous of you to put in a provision to allow eviction of Rent Act tenants, but it is possibly not entirely necessary, as Rent Act tenants will have lived in the UK for so long that they are almost certainly entitled to stay here anyway, irrespective of how they entered the country.” http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201516/cmpublic/immigration/151020/pm/151020s01.htm

Clause 14
7. This contains the text of the two new mandatory grounds for possession, as to which, see above.

8, It also contains a new power (new s.10A, Housing Act 1988) to allow a court to transfer the tenancy from a person who has no right to rent into the name of someone who does. There are various problems with this proposal:
(a) it only arises if no other ground for possession is made out, so, in practice, it will be relatively easy to circumvent and we would prefer this restriction be removed;
(b) it makes no provision for a range of other landlord and tenant provisions to be similarly changed, e.g. suppose the disqualified tenant has paid a deposit, is that now transferred to the “new” tenant and, if so, how should the landlord and tenancy deposit scheme administrator respond (see Housing Act 2004 for the provisions on tenancy deposits);
(c) why has this provision not been extended to Rent Act tenants, so as to allow qualified occupiers to retain the tenancy in the same way?

Housing Law Practitioners Association
October 2015

Court Closures Consultation

The Ministry of Justice Consultation on the provision of court and tribunal estate in England closes on 8 October 2015. The proposals affect many of the Courts used by HLPA members and the more responses made the better.

HLPA has submitted a response, which will be on the site shortly.

Southwark and Lambeth Law Centre and Cambridge House Law Centre have made a very detailed joint submission on the proposed closure of Lambeth County Court, which can be downloaded here.

September Meeting

Wednesday 16 September 2015 at 6.45 pm – members meeting and EGM

6.45 pm EGM to approve accounts

7. 00 pm Money Claims

Speakers
Rebecca Chan, Barrister, Arden Chambers
Andrew Brookes, Anthony Gold Solicitors

University of Westminster. Exact location to be confirmed.

Meeting July 2015

Wednesday 15 July 2015 at 7 pm – members meeting

Defending Possession Claims

Speakers
Amy Knight, Barrister, Arden Chambers
Thul Khan, Solicitor, Osbornes Solicitors LLP

Portland Hall,
School of Law, Regent Campus, University of Westminster, 4 Little Titchfield
Street, London W1W 7UW.

Meeting 20 May 2015 – homelessness special event

20 May 2015 at 7 pm – Members meeeting

Following the Supreme Court judgment in Johnson, Hotak & Kanu (available here), the meeting will focus on vulnerability and priority need in the light of the judgment. The speakers all acted for an appellant or intervener in the appeals.

Speakers

Jan Luba QC – Garden Court

Matt Hutchings – Cornerstone Chambers

Zia Nabi – Doughty Street Chambers

Note changed venue

The Boardroom
First Floor
University of Westminster Headquarters Building
309 Regent Street
London W1B 2UW

2 hours CPD for solicitors and barristers

 

Consultation responses

Three recent consultation responses by HLPA

Evidence to the Welsh Assembly on the Renting Homes (Wales) Bill. May 2015 (Download)

Enhanced Court Fees consultation. February 2015 (download)

DCLG Review of property conditions in the private rented sector. March 2014. (Download)

 

Guidance on Legal Aid in Anti-Social Behaviour Injunction cases

This paper is intended to provide guidance to HLPA members on the circumstances in which they can continue to represent clients and get paid for Anti-Social Behaviour Injunction work under legal aid following the Anti-Social Behaviour Crime & Policing Act 2014. The changes came into effect on 23 March 2015.

It should however, be noted that at present there are still issues upon which clarification is being sought from the Legal Aid Agency (“LAA”). It is therefore likely that further supplementary guidance will be issued once further information is provided by the LAA.

The Guidance can be downloaded here. [docx format]

Wales – evidence on ‘Renting Homes’

On 20 May 2015, Justin Bates is giving evidence to the Welsh Assembly on the Renting Homes Bill, on behalf of HLPA.

Justin would welcome any member’s views on comments on the Renting Homes Bill, by 3 May 2015. Email justin.bates@ardenchambers.co.uk

Special Event 13 May 2015

The Housing Law Practitioners Association and Shelter Children’s Legal Service present a seminar on

The impact of child welfare duties in housing law

13th May 2015 6.30 – 8.00 pm

Speakers: Martin Westgate QC and Lindsay Johnson, Doughty Street Chambers, Shu Shin Luh, Garden Court Chambers

In two recent cases, SG v DWP and Nzolameso v Westminster CC, the Supreme Court has highlighted the importance of examining the interests of children in the housing or housing related context. In SG v DWP the Court held that the benefit cap violated the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and in Nzolameso v Westminster CC it held that the authority failed to show that it had properly considered its obligation under s. 11 of the Children Act 2004 to safeguard and, more importantly, promote the welfare of children when considering an out of borough placement.

The impact of section 11 and the UNCRC continues to grow and is becoming ever more important. The seminar considers the current state of the law, the relationship between the international and domestic duties, how theycan be deployed in English Courts, and how they can assist those in need of housing.

Venue: Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, 65 Fleet Street, London EC4Y 1HT

To Book: events@doughtystreet.co.uk

Cost: Free