header-logo header-logo

22 March 2013 / Nicholas Dobson
Issue: 7553 / Categories: Features , Property
printer mail-detail

Hard cases make bad law

Nicholas Dobson analyses a Court of Appeal ruling on proportionality in housing possession proceedings

On 6 June 1842, the Court of Exchequer in Winterbottom v Wright (1842) 10 M & W 109 found no extra-contractual liability for personal injury, Rolfe, B asserting that: “Hard cases...are apt to introduce bad law.”

While negligence law has come on since (after some business about a ginger beer snail cocktail), the essential dictum of Rolfe, B survives. And that was the Court of Appeal’s effective conclusion on 8 November 2012 in Thurrock Borough Council v West [2012] EWCA Civ 1435 which upheld the council’s right to possession of its terraced property.

Background

In 2007, Aaron West (the respondent) began occupying the property with his apparent grandparents who had been council tenants since 1967. West was subsequently joined by his son, on his birth, and by his partner. On the grandfather’s death in 2008 the tenancy automatically vested in the grandmother under succession provisions in Pt IV of the Housing Act 1985 (HA 1985). When

If you are not a subscriber, subscribe now to read this content
If you are already a subscriber sign in
...or Register for two weeks' free access to subscriber content

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Thackray Williams—Lucy Zhu

Thackray Williams—Lucy Zhu

Dual-qualified partner joins as head of commercial property department

Morgan Lewis—David A. McManus

Morgan Lewis—David A. McManus

Firm announces appointment of next chair

Burges Salmon—Rebecca Wilsker

Burges Salmon—Rebecca Wilsker

Director joins corporate team from the US

NEWS
What safeguards apply when trust corporations are appointed as deputy by the Court of Protection? 
Disputing parties are expected to take part in alternative dispute resolution (ADR), where this is suitable for their case. At what point, however, does refusing to participate cross the threshold of ‘unreasonable’ and attract adverse costs consequences?
When it comes to free legal advice, demand massively outweighs supply. 'Millions of people are excluded from access to justice as they don’t have anywhere to turn for free advice—or don’t know that they can ask for help,' Bhavini Bhatt, development director at the Access to Justice Foundation, writes in this week's NLJ
When an ex-couple is deciding who gets what in the divorce or civil partnership dissolution, when is it appropriate for a third party to intervene? David Burrows, NLJ columnist and solicitor advocate, considers this thorny issue in this week’s NLJ
NLJ's latest Charities Appeals Supplement has been published in this week’s issue
back-to-top-scroll