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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Wandsworth LBC v Winder (No 1) [1984] UKHL 2 (29 November 1984) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1984/2.html Cite as: [1985] AC 461, [1984] UKHL 2 | ||
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/18/244
Mayor and Burgesses of the
London Borough of Wandsworth
(Appellants)
v.
Winder (A.P.) (Respondent)
JUDGMENT
Die Jovis 29° Novembris 1984
Upon Report from the Appellate Committee to
whom was
referred the Cause Mayor and Burgesses of the London Borough
of
Wandsworth against Winder (A.P.), That the Committee had
heard Counsel on
Tuesday the 30th and Wednesday the 31st days
of October last and Thursday
the 1st day of this instant
November upon the Petition and Appeal of the
Mayor and
Burgesses of the London Borough of Wandsworth, The Town
Hall,
Wandsworth High Street, London SW18 2PU praying that the
matter of
the Order set forth in the Schedule thereto, namely
an Order of Her
Majesty's Court of Appeal of the 29th day of
March 1984, might be reviewed
before Her Majesty the Queen in
Her Court of Parliament and that the said
Order might be
reversed, varied or altered or that the Petitioners
might
have such other relief in the premises as to Her Majesty the
Queen
in Her Court of Parliament might seem meet; as also
upon the Case of Paul
Winder lodged in answer to the said
Appeal; and due consideration had this
day of what was
offered on either side in this Cause:
It is Ordered and Adjudged, by
the Lords Spiritual and
Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her Majesty
the Queen
assembled, That the said Order of Her Majesty's Court
of
Appeal of the 29th day of March 1984 complained of in the
said Appeal
be, and the same is hereby, Affirmed and that the
said Petition and Appeal
be, and the same is hereby,
dismissed this House: And it is further
Ordered, That the
Appellants do pay or cause to be paid to the said
Respondent
the Costs incurred by him in respect of the said Appeal,
the
amount thereof to be certified by the Clerk of the
Parliaments; and
that the Costs of the Respondent be taxed
in accordance with Schedule 2 to
the Legal Aid Act 1974.
Cler: Parliamentor:
HOUSE OF LORDS
MAYOR AND BURGESSES OF THE
LONDON BOROUGH OF
WANDSWORTH (APPELLANTS)
v.
WINDER
(A.P.)
(RESPONDENT)
Lord Eraser of
Tullybelton
Lord Scarman
Lord Keith of Kinkel
Lord Roskill
Lord
Brandon of Oakbrook
LORD FRASER OF TULLYBELTON
My Lords,
The
question is this appeal is whether it is an abuse of
process for an
individual, who claims that his existing rights under
a contract have been
infringed by a decision of a public authority,
to challenge the decision in
defence to an action at the instance
of the public authority for payment,
instead of by judicial review
under R.S.C. Ord.53. The appeal is a sequel
to the decisions of
this House in O'Reilly v. Mackman [1983] 2 A.C. 237,
and Cocks
v. Thanet District Council[1983] 2 A.C.
286.
Immediately before 6 April 1981, the respondent was, and
had been
for some time, the tenant of a flat at Tangley Grove in
Wandsworth on a
weekly tenancy at a weekly rent of £12.06. He
had a secure tenancy in the
sense of section 28 of the Housing
Act 1980. The landlords were the London
Borough of Wandsworth,
the appellants. On 2 March 1981, the appellants gave
notice to
the respondent under section 40(1), (4) of the Act of 1980
that,
with effect from 6 April 1981, the rent would be increased
to
£16.56 per week. The respondent regarded the increase as
unreasonable
and he so informed the appellants. He refused to
pay the increased rent;
instead he paid the old rent of £12.06 and
an increase of 8 per cent which
he regarded as reasonable. The
following year in March, the appellants gave
notice of a further
increase in the rent to £18.53 with effect from 5 April
1982. The
respondent again refused to pay the increased rent and paid
only
such rent as he considered reasonable.
On 16
August 1982, the appellants took proceedings against
the respondent in
Wandsworth County Court claiming arrears of
rent, and also claiming
possession of the premises on the ground
that the rent lawfully due had not
been paid. Non-payment of
rent is ground 1 for recovery of possession under
Schedule 4 to
the Act of 1980. The respondent defended the action on
the
ground that the appellants' decisions to make the increases, and
the
increases themselves, were ultra vires and void as being
unreasonable. He
also counterclaimed for a declaration that the
notices of increase of rent
were ultra vires and void and of no
effect, and for a declaration that the
rent payable under his
tenancy was £12.06 per week.
The
action has caused a considerable divergence of judicial
opinion so far. The
appellants applied to strike out the paragraphs
- 1 -
of the
defence and counterclaim which asserted that the decisions
and notices were
void. Mr. Registrar Price dismissed the
application to strike out. His
Honour Judge White allowed the
appellants' appeal against the registrar's
order, and stayed the
proceedings to allow the respondent to apply for
leave to apply for
judicial review out of time. The respondent did apply
for such
leave but his application was refused. He then appealed to
the
Court of Appeal and that court, by a majority (Robert Goff
and
Parker L.JJ., with Ackner L.J. dissenting) allowed his
appeal
against the order of Judge White.
Until 6
April 1981, the respondent had a contractual right
to occupy the flat,
provided he paid the rent of £12.06 and
complied with the other terms of
the tenancy. That was an
ordinary private law right under a contract. But
by section 40 of
the Act of 1980, the appellants were entitled to vary the
terms of
the tenancy unilaterally by a notice of variation, subject to
certain
conditions not here material. In addition to complying with
the
express statutory conditions, the appellants when they
exercised
their power under section 40(4) were also bound to act
reasonably
in the Wednesbury sense - see Associated Provincial
Picture Houses
Ltd, v. Wednesbury Corporation [1948] 1 K.B.
223. That is made
clear beyond doubt by the Housing Act 1957, section
111(1), which
provides as follows:
"111(1)
The general management, regulation and control of
houses provided by a
local authority under this Part of this
Act shall be vested in and
exercised by the authority, and
the authority may make such reasonable
charges for the
tenancy or occupation of the houses as they
may
determine." (Emphasis added).
In
Luby v. Newcastle-under-Lyme Corporation [1964] 2 Q.B. 64,
72,
Diplock L.J. (as my noble and learned friend then was) referring
to
this provision, said:
'"Reasonable' in the context in which it appears in
section 111(1)
of the Housing Act 1957, is in my view to be
construed as the converse of
'unreasonable' in the sense in
which it is used by Lord Greene M.R. [in the
Wednesbury
Corporation case [1948] 1 K.B.
223, 229] ... The court's
control over the exercise by a local
authority of a
discretion conferred upon it by Parliament is limited
to
ensuring that the local authority had acted within the
powers
conferred. It is not for the court to substitute its
own view of what is a
desirable policy in relation to the
subject matter of the discretion so
conferred. It is only if
it is exercised in a manner which no reasonable
man could
consider justifiable that the court is entitled to
interfere."
The
respondent seeks to show in the course of his defence
in these proceedings
that the appellants' decisions to increase the
rent were such as no
reasonable man could consider justifiable.
But your Lordships are not
concerned in this appeal to decide
whether that contention is right or
wrong. The only issue at this
stage is whether the respondent is entitled
to put forward the
contention as a defence in the present proceedings.
The
appellants' say that he is not because the only procedure by
which
their decision could have been challenged was by judicial
review
- 2 -
under
R.S.C., Ord. 53. The respondent was refused leave to apply
for judicial
review out of time and (say the appellants) he has lost
the opportunity to
challenge the decisions. The appellants rely on
the decisions of this House
in O'Reilly v. Mackman [1983] 2 A.C.
237 and Cocks v. Thanet
District Council [1983] 2 A.C. 286.
The
respondent accepts that judicial review would have been
an
appropriate procedure for the purpose, but he maintains that it
is
not the only procedure open to him, and that he was entitled to
wait
until he was sued by the appellants and then to defend the
proceedings, as
he has done.
In
order to deal with these contentions, it is necessary to
consider what was
decided by the House in those two cases. The
question raised in O'Reilly [1983] 2 A.C. 237
was the same as that
in the present case, although of course, the
circumstances were
different. In O'Reilly, at p. 274, Lord Diplock
said:
"All
that is at issue in the instant appeal is the procedure
by which such
relief ought to be sought. Put in a single
sentence the question for your
Lordships is: whether in 1980
after R.S.C., Ord. 53 in its new form,
adopted in 1977, had
come into operation it was an abuse of the process of
the
court to apply for such declarations [sc. that a decision of
a
public authority was void] by using the procedure laid down
in the
Rules for proceedings begun by writ or by originating
summons instead of
using the procedure laid down by Ord.
53 for an application for judicial
review . . . ."
In that
case four prisoners in Hull prison had started proceedings,
in three cases
by writ and in one case by originating summons,
each seeking to establish
that a disciplinary award of forfeiture of
remission of sentence made by
the Board of Visitors of Hull Prison
was void because the Board had failed
to observe the rules of
natural justice. This House held that the
proceedings were an
abuse of the process of the court, and that the only
proper
remedy open to the prisoners was by way of judicial review
under
Ord. 53. There are two important differences between the facts
in
O'Reilly and those in the present case. First, the plaintiffs
in
O'Reilly had not suffered any infringement of their rights
in
private law; their complaint was that they had been ordered
to
forfeit part of their remission of sentence but they had no right
in
private law to such a remission, which was granted only as a
matter
of indulgence. Consequently, even if the Board of Visitors
had acted
contrary to the rules of natural justice when making the
award, the members
of the Board would not have been liable in
damages to the prisoners. In the
present case what the respondent
complains of is the infringement of a
contractual right in private
law. Secondly, in O'Reilly the
prisoners had initiated the
proceedings, and Lord Diplock, throughout in
his speech, treated
the question only as one affecting a claim for
infringing a right of
the plaintiff while in the present case the
respondent is the
defendant. The decision on O'Reilly is therefore
not directly in
point in the present case, but the appellants rely
particularly on a
passage in a speech of Lord Diplock, with whose speech
the other
members of the Appellate Committee agreed, at p. 285D to
the
following effect:
"Now
that those disadvantages to applicants [for judicial
review] have been
removed and all remedies for
- 3 -
infringements of rights protected by public law can be
obtained on
an application for judicial review, as can also
remedies for infringements
of rights under private law if
such infringements should also be involved,
it would in my
view as a general rule be contrary to public policy, and
as
such an abuse of the process of the court, to permit a
person seeking
to establish that a decision of a public
authority infringed rights to
which he was entitled to
protection under public law to proceed by way of
an
ordinary action and by this means to evade the provisions of
Ord. 53
for the protection of such authorities.
"My
Lords, I have described this as a general rule; for
though it may normally
be appropriate to apply it by the
summary process of striking out the
action, there may be
exceptions, particularly where the invalidity of the
decision
arises as a collateral issue in a claim for infringement of
a
right of the plaintiff arising under private law, or where
none of the
parties objects to the adoption of the procedure
by writ or originating
summons. Whether there should be
other exceptions should, in my view, at
this stage in the
development of procedural public law, be left to be
decided
on a case to case basis - a process that your Lordships will
be
continuing in the next case in which judgment is to be
delivered today
[Cocks v. Thanet District Council [1983] 2
A.C. 2861."
The
last paragraph in that quotation shows that Lord Diplock was
careful to
emphasise that the general rule which he had stated in
the previous
paragraph might well be subject to exceptions. The
question for your
Lordships is whether the instant appeal is an
exception to the general
rule. It might be possible to treat this
case as failing within one of the
exceptions suggested by Lord
Diplock, if the question of the invalidity of
the appellants' decision
had arisen as a collateral issue in a claim by the
respondent(as
defendant) for infringement of his right arising under
private law
to continue to occupy the flat. But I do not consider that
the
question of invalidity is truly collateral to the issue between
the
parties. Although it is not mentioned in the appellants'
statement
of claim, it is the whole basis of the respondent's defence and
it
is the central issue which has to be decided. The case does
not
therefore fail within any of the exceptions specifically suggested
in
O'Reilly v. Mackman [1983] 2 A.C.
237.
Immediately after the decision in Q'Reilly, the House
applied
the general rule in the case of Cocks [1983] 2 A.C. 286.
The
proceedings in O'Reilly had begun before the Supreme Court
Act 1981
(especially section 31) was passed. The proceedings in
Cocks were
begun after that Act was passed, but for the present
purpose nothing turns
on that distinction. Cocks was an action by
a homeless person
claiming that the local housing authority had a
duty to provide permanent
accommodation for him. The council
resolved that the plaintiff had become
homeless "intentionally" in
the sense of the Housing (Homeless Persons) Act
1977.
Consequently the plaintiff had no right in private law to
be
provided with permanent housing accommodation by the authority.
The
plaintiff raised an action in the county court claiming, inter
alia, a
declaration that the council were in breach of their duty to
him in not
having provided him with permanent accommodation.
- 4 -
In
order to proceed in his action he had to show as a condition
precedent that
the council's decision was invalid. This House held
that the plaintiff was
not entitled to impugn the council's decision
in public law otherwise than
by judicial review, notwithstanding
that the effect of the decision was to
prevent him from
"establishing a necessary condition precedent to the
statutory
private law right which he [was seeking] to enforce." See per
my
noble and learned friend, Lord Bridge of Harwich, at p. 294E.
The
essential difference between that case and the present is that
the
impugned decision of the local authority did not deprive
the
plaintiff of a pre-existing private law right; it prevented him
from
establishing a new private law right. There is also the
same
distinction as in O'Reilly [1983] 2 A.C. 237,
namely, that the party
complaining of the decision was the
plaintiff.
Although neither O'Reilly nor Cocks [1983] 2 A.C. 286
is an
authority which directly applies to the facts of the instant
appeal,
it is said on behalf of the appellants that the principle
underlying
those decisions applies here, and that, if the respondent
is
successful, he will be evading that principle. My Lords, I
cannot
agree. The principle underlying those decisions, as Lord
Diplock
explained in O'Reilly [1983] 2 A.C. 237,
284, is that there is a
"need, in the interest of good administration and
of third parties
who may be indirectly affected by the decision, for
speedy
certainty as to whether it has the effect of a decision that
is
valid in public law." The main argument urged on behalf of
the
appellants was that this is a typical case where there is a need
for
speedy certainty in the public interest. I accept, of course,
that the
decision in this appeal will indirectly affect many third
parties including
many of the appellants' tenants, and perhaps most
if not all of their
ratepayers because if the appellants' impugned
decisions are held to be
invalid, the basis of their financial
administration since 1981 will be
upset. That would be highly
inconvenient from the point of view of the
appellants, and of their
ratepayers, and it would be a great advantage to
them if persons
such as the respondent who seek to challenge their decision
were
limited to doing so by procedure under Ord. 53. Such procedure
is
speedy and avoids prolonged uncertainty about the validity
of
decisions. An intending applicant for judicial review under Ord.
53
has to obtain leave to apply, so that unmeritorious applications
can
be dismissed in limine and an application must normally be
made
within a limited period of three months after the decision
which
has impugned, unless the court allows an extension of time in
any
particular case. Procedure under Ord. 53 also affords protection
to
public authorities in other ways, which are explained in
O'Reilly
and which I need not elaborate here. It may well be that
such
protection to public authorities tends to promote
good
administration. But there may be other ways of obtaining
speedy
decisions; for example in some cases it may be possible for
a
public authority itself to initiate proceedings for judicial
review.
In any event, the arguments for protecting public
authorities
against unmeritorious or dilatory challenges to their decisions
have
to be set against the arguments for preserving the ordinary
rights
of private citizens to defend themselves against unfounded
claims.
It
would in my opinion be a very strange use of language to
describe the
respondent's behaviour in relation to this litigation as
an abuse or misuse
by him of the process of the court. He did
not select the procedure to be
adopted. He is merely seeking to
- 5 -
defend
proceedings brought against him by the appellants. In so
doing he is
seeking only to exercise the ordinary right of any
individual to defend an
action against him on the ground that he is
not liable for the whole sum
claimed by the plaintiff. Moreover
he puts forward his defence as a matter
of right, whereas in an
application for judicial review, success would
require an exercise
of the court's discretion in his favour. Apart from the
provisions
of Ord. 53 and section 31 of the Supreme Court Act 1981,
he
would certainly be entitled to defend the action on the ground
that
the plaintiff's claim arises from a resolution which (on his
view) is
invalid - see for example Cannock Chase District Council
v. Kelly
[1978] 1 W.L.R. 1, which was decided in July 1977, a few
months before Ord.
53 came into force (as it did in December
1977). I find it impossible to
accept that the right to challenge
the decision of a local authority in
course of defending an action
for payment can have been swept away by Ord.
53, which was
directed to introducing a procedural reform. As my noble
and
learned friend Lord Scarman said in Regina v. Inland
Revenue
Commissioners, Ex parte Federation of Self Employed [1982]
A.C.
617, 6^7G "The new R.S.C., Ord. 53 is a procedural reform
of
great importance in the field of public law, but it does not
-
indeed, cannot - either extend or diminish the substantive law.
Its
function is limited to ensuring 'ubi jus, ibi remedium.'"
Lord
Wilberforce spoke to the same effect at p. 631 A. Nor, in
my
opinion, did section 31 of the Supreme Court Act 1981 which
refers
only to "an application" for judicial review have the effect
of limiting
the rights of a defendant sub silentio. I would adopt
the words of Viscount
Simonds in Pyx Granite Co.Ltd. v. Ministry
of Housing and Local
Government [I960] A.C. 260, 286 as follows:-
"It is
a principle not by any means to be whittled down that
the subject's
recourse to Her Majesty's courts for the
determination of his rights is not
to be excluded except by
clear words."
The
argument of the appellants in the present case would be
directly in
conflict with that observation.
If the
public interest requires that persons should not be
entitled to defend
actions brought against them by public
authorities, where the defence rests
on a challenge to a decision
by the public authority, then it is for
Parliament to change the
law.
I would dismiss the appeal.
LORD SCARMAN
My Lords,
I agree
with the speech delivered by my noble and learned
friend, Lord Fraser of
Tullybelton. For the reasons he gives I
would dismiss the
appeal.
- 6 -
LORD KEITH OF KINKEL
My Lords,
I agree with the speech of
my noble and learned friend Lord
Fraser of Tullybelton, which I have had
the opportunity of reading
in draft, and for the reasons he gives I too
would dismiss the
appeal.
LORD ROSKILL
My
Lords,
I have
had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
delivered by my noble and
learned friend. Lord Fraser of
Tullybelton. I agree with it, and for the
reasons which he gives I
would dismiss this appeal.
LORD BRANDON OF OAKBROOK
My Lords,
I have
had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
prepared by my noble and
learned friend, Lord Fraser of
Tullybelton. I agree with it, and for the
reasons which he gives I
would dismiss the appeal.
- 7 -