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22 March 2013 / Nicholas Dobson
Issue: 7553 / Categories: Features , Property
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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

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Slater Heelis—Charlotte Beck

Slater Heelis—Charlotte Beck

Partner and Manchester office lead appointed head of family

Civil Justice Council—Nigel Teasdale

Civil Justice Council—Nigel Teasdale

DWF insurance services director appointed to Civil Justice Council

R3—Jodie Wildridge

R3—Jodie Wildridge

Kings Chambers barrister appointed chair of R3 Yorkshire

NEWS

The abolition of assured shorthold tenancies and section 21 evictions marks the beginning of a ‘brave new world’ for England’s rental sector, writes Daniel Bacon of Seddons GSC

Stephen Gold’s latest Civil Way column rounds up a flurry of procedural and regulatory changes reshaping housing, alternative dispute resolution (ADR) and personal injury litigation
Patients are being systematically failed by an NHS complaints regime that is opaque, poorly enforced and often stacked against them, argues Charles Davey of The Barrister Group
A wealthy Russian divorce battle has produced a sharp warning about trying to challenge foreign nuptial agreements in the wrong English court. Writing in NLJ this week, Vanessa Friend and Robert Jackson of Hodge Jones & Allen examine Timokhin v Timokhina, where the High Court enforced Russian judgments arising from a prenuptial agreement despite arguments based on the landmark Radmacher decision
An obscure Victorian tort may be heading for an unexpected revival after a significant Privy Council ruling that could reshape liability for dangerous escapes, according to Richard Buckley, barrister and emeritus professor of law at the University of Reading
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