Removal of Section 21 Housing Act 1988

Removal of Section 21 Housing Act 1988

7:22 AM, 7th October 2019, About 5 years ago 43

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The Government consultation on “A new deal for renting: resetting the balance of rights and responsibilities between landlords and tenants” closes on 12th October. I would urge all landlords to make a submission: Click here. You can also email your submission and any comments to TenancyReform@communities.gov.uk Below is an extract from my submission

1. The Government may already have made up its mind on the matter but there are reasons why section 21 should not be abolished for all tenancies. If the concern was having tenancies of 3 to 5 years, removing section 21 throws the baby out with the bathwater. It is proposed tenants can terminate on two months’ notice but landlords cannot terminate without cause. Coming after everything else that has occurred in the past few years this may be the last straw for many landlords.

2. In recent years Private Rental Sector (PRS) landlords have been demoralised by Government actions. In the last four years we have had:

• Restriction of mortgage interest relief so that from 2020 some landlords will pay tax on zero profit – a tax rate of infinity – or on actual losses;
• Removal of 10% wear and tear allowance;
• Right to Rent checks making landlords unpaid immigration officers. Landlords are threatened with up to five years in prison if they rent to an illegal immigrant. It is understood that a total of about 16 illegal immigrants have been caught as a result of the legislation. Given the amount of extra work required of landlords and the disproportionately harsh punishments, the policy should be re-thought. Similar sentences apply to offences under the Terrorism Act. Is that how much the Government wants to work with landlords?
• 3% extra stamp duty which pushed house prices up and which sucks out of the system money that could be spent on maintaining and improving properties.
• The Tenant Fees Act which instead of just capping or abolishing certain fees, has made all payments illegal unless expressly permitted. It will render landlords liable to fines of up to £5000 for a first infraction if they miscalculate interest for late rent payment and charge so much as a penny too much. It will encourage bad tenants to threaten landlords with severe penalties for trivial mistakes. Until the overpaid penny is repaid the tenant can ambush a section 21 application even if they owe thousands of pounds in rent.

3. Without section 21, landlords will become choosier about their tenants. Despite the No to No DSS campaign, how many landlords will take a chance on the “challenging tenant”: the young person coming out of the care system, the person leaving a homeless hostel or a mother with children leaving a domestic violence refuge?

With the best will in the world some people have troubled lives and not all of them make good tenants. If landlords cannot get “problem” tenants out quickly, they will be less likely to take a chance and will choose the middle class employed tenants every time. Start penalising or prosecuting landlords for not taking on the impecunious, troubled tenant and they may withdraw their rental properties.

4. Section 21 prevents a landlord being tied to an unwanted tenant indefinitely. With the abolition of tenant fees the cost of moving into new accommodation will (we are told) come down. With an efficient market and a plentiful supply of housing, tenants can relocate if they have to.

Yes, there are costs in moving and yes people become attached to their home, but plenty of people have to move for work and they manage.

5. Tenant lobby groups such as Shelter and the CAB assert that tenants can be evicted on only 2 months’ notice. That is wrong. Nobody can be compelled to leave that quickly. In practice if tenants refuse to leave it always takes several more months until the tenant is actually required to vacate.

Government might consider longer notice periods for true “no fault” evictions of longer-term tenants. Something like 2 months notice during the first 2 years, 3 months if the tenant has been there between 2 and 5 years and four to six months notice for tenants who have been there for over 5 years?

6. If, notwithstanding the powerful arguments against, s21 is to be abolished Government should also look at “starter tenancies”. Housing Associations use these. They allow the landlord to assess the tenant and get them out after 12 months if they are unsuitable. PRS landlords will be much happier if they can have a starter tenancy for up to 18 months to assess tenants. Appropriate safeguards can be introduced to safeguard tenants from this exemption being abused. It should also be noted that where there is anti-social behaviour, housing associations can demote a tenancy back to an AST.

7. With Section 21, tenants know they will have to leave if the landlord’s paperwork is in order and, despite the Parliamentary draftsman’s attempts to make a missing comma fatal to a landlord’s application, it works better than a section 8 application. Many cases don’t get to court. Section 8 is a slower process and more cumbersome. The landlord has no certainty of getting possession. It is worth the tenant’s while to take his chances. Even if he loses it will still be weeks before he is evicted.

8. Government should look at establishing a specialist housing court with judges who know the law. Unless the court system is overhauled and vastly speeded up BEFORE section 21 is abolished or restricted even more, a bad situation will be made even worse and delays will increase. There will be more section 8 cases, more paperwork for judges to read, more lawyers to be involved and more cost added to the process. Who will pay that cost at the end of the day?

9. British justice generally encourages advance disclosure of evidence. With s21 claims the law positively encourages tenants to take technical points at court such as that a Prescribed Information Form (which the tenant may have never read) was served a day late, it mis-spelled a name or was signed by only one director, not two.

Tenants should be required to raise points in advance and judges must throw out “ambush” defences that are held back until the last moment. If the tenant offers a spurious defence or no defence or does not turn up at court judges should not act as advocate for the defence and delay the process further.

10. What about tenants who won’t ventilate a property properly? A senior housing officer at one council said that in over 90% of cases where mould is found in rented accommodation it is down to tenants’ lifestyles. They won’t open windows, they dry laundry in the living room with the windows closed. When they have a bath it is like a sauna. Without section 21, the landlord could take months even to gather evidence. All the while the fabric of the house is damaged and the landlord will have a bill for thousands of pounds and rental voids while repairs (unnecessary if the tenant had used the property properly) are carried out. Try recovering £5000 out of a £1000 deposit!

A claim under section 8 requires evidence. What of the tenants who complain about the condition of their property but don’t allow access for the landlord to inspect or his tradesmen to carry out repairs? What of the tenant who leaves his dogs alone all day and they bark continuously? The landlord could use section 8 which takes 12 to 18 months. Then, just before the court hearing the tenant allows access and promises to behave or makes arrangements for the dogs.

Does the landlord go to court, pay hundreds or even thousands of pounds for legal representation only to find the judge says: “Well, provided the tenant gives access/ keeps the dogs under control, I won’t order possession”? Or does he wait till next time and start all over again?

11. With selective licensing, some Councils are trying to make landlords responsible for dealing with anti-social behaviour. In some areas they require landlords to issue s21 notices to deal with problem tenants. Landlords must not be placed between a rock and a hard place of being penalised under a Council’s licensing rules but unable to evict an anti-social tenant.

The courts should have a lower bar for anti-social behaviour than the Environmental Health Officer at the Council. If there is credible evidence of anti-social behaviour from two or more witnesses, judges should be prepared to evict.

12. Special consideration is needed for Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs or house share). The following remarks also apply to flats with communal areas where one tenant can seriously upset the neighbours.

13. With four, five, six or more people sharing a house sensible landlords try to pick tenants who will get along together. However, from time to time a house mate is just obnoxious. They pay the rent on time but annoy the other tenants. They play music or the TV loudly or insist on watching offensive programmes in the communal areas. They put the laundry on late at night disturbing others’ sleep. They don’t do their share of chores such as emptying the bins. They never wash up. They “borrow” other people’s milk or coffee and don’t replace it. In all of these cases good tenants may leave or threaten to leave.

Another issue is the personal safety of the landlord and property manager in HMOs. If a tenant threatens the landlord or even is just physically intimidating, it will make life very difficult. It is bad enough where a tenant of the whole property is threatening. With an HMO, the property manager will be visiting the house frequently for check-ins, check-outs, viewings, periodic inspections and general maintenance. Rarely does a month go by without a visit. Without section 21, it could take months to gather sufficient evidence of a tenant’s anti-social behaviour to launch a section 8 claim. Even if the court procedure is vastly speeded up it could still take many more weeks to get to court. If the tenant is meanwhile threatening or intimidating other tenants and the landlord cannot give comfort that action will be taken, tenants will give notice to leave.

Tenants’ circumstances change and loss of a job, relationship breakdown or bereavement may lead to problems with drink or drugs so that the behaviour of a previously respectable tenant becomes unacceptable. If they live on their own or with their own family that is bad enough. In an HMO it is much worse.

Without section 21, how long will it take to get such a tenant out? What about the rights of other tenants, especially women who may feel intimidated by a large drunken male? What about their rights to security and a safe home environment?

14. How are landlords supposed to use section 8 in the circumstances I have described? How do we gather evidence? Can we prove that the awkward tenant borrowed the milk on five occasions, failed to put the bins out and left his messy crockery in the sink? Is that sufficient? How much foul-mouthed swearing in front of others is so offensive a tenant should be evicted? How much hogging the TV remote and watching “Naked Attraction” on TV or late night porn is too much?

Do landlords have to run up substantial legal fees, lose tenants and suffer rental voids because a disobliging tenant won’t change his or her behaviour? Without section 21, that is what HMO landlords are faced with. With section 21 we can tell the other tenants: “Please bear with us. We are evicting the trouble-maker.” Without section 21, it will take too long and the good tenants will be gone before the nuisance tenant is removed.

15. If section 21 is not available, landlords will plead multiple grounds under section 8 to improve their chances of success. The more lurid accusations the better. Tenants will be chased for every last penny of rent. Count Court Judgments will be registered against them. Their dirty linen will be washed in front of the court. Landlords will have to spend more to bring cases and tenants will have to call on Shelter, Citizens Advice etc. to defend them.

It is ironic that just as the Government changes the law of divorce to allow no-fault divorce and avoid claims and counter-claims of bad behaviour it will pit landlords and tenants against each other and encourage landlords to make as many complaints as possible. This will substantially increase the workload for an already over-stretched courts service.

It will also mean that more tenants will find they are treated as intentionally homeless by councils for not paying rent and will be unattractive to private and public sector landlords.

Who will house them?

I predict that abolishing s21 will end up hurting the very people Government is trying to help.


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Mike

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12:44 PM, 10th October 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by The Forever Tenant at 10/10/2019 - 10:10If you or others were a good law abiding tenants, obeying all the rules in your agreement, I am sure you would need not worry unnecessarily of being evicted at a moments notice ( I mean 2 months Notice) using section 21, if you maintain a good friendly relationship with your landlord, things can go on forever, but where tenant ego comes in because of the protection afforded by Housing law, that is where things start to go wrong, where tenants demands are unreasonable, or where tenants do not see what wrong they are doing such as deviating from the rules, where the relationship between LL and a tenant would start to break down, and any landlord would then start thinking of making a move to evict that tenant, like I said before I have never had the need to move out any tenant for no good reason, even when I knew many rules were being ignored, piling up rubbish in the garden, etc,
Through my experience it costs more in the end to just evict a tenant who has ignored some rules, if he is happy with a pile of dog shit in his garden then so be it, despite no animal clause, but end of the day he will probably himself move out, and I will continue to get my rent from him, he cannot ask me to clean up his garden of the mess he created, so overall I do not evict tenants unless rent stops completely for a few months before I contemplate serving a notice, usually a Section 8 in a case of rent arrears, because the idea is he will continue to stay and pay up his rent before the court hearing.
far less losses for a landlord, and no need to spend huge money on cleaning up and redecorating and remarketing and drawing up new tenancies, spending more on setting up fees etc etc. The whole idea of owning a rental property is to rent it with tenants, and not to evict them. Of course that does not mean that any landlord should then not maintain other things breaking down in the house such as heating, cookers, washing machine where it is supplied by a landlord and so on.

Ian Narbeth

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12:54 PM, 10th October 2019, About 5 years ago

Good points JJ. In my original article I did say my comments "also apply to flats with communal areas where one tenant can seriously upset the neighbours." I haven't experienced lockdown as you describe but I imagine it is very inconvenient and frightening for the other tenants and their families.

Ian Narbeth

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12:58 PM, 10th October 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by paul robinson at 10/10/2019 - 10:35
Hi Paul
Yes the consultation document doesn't mention HMOs. There were an estimated 497,000 HMOs in England and Wales at the end of March 2018. http://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/SN00708/SN00708.pdf
so perhaps 2 to 3 million people are living in them.

paul robinson

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13:57 PM, 10th October 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Ian Narbeth at 10/10/2019 - 12:58
Thanks for the link Ian, I will add that when I reply to the ministry of housing email (copy the other parties in) to reinforce my point of the flawed consultation. Do the Ministry really think It’s practical for those qtys of HMO landlords to just use the “other” box and how is such qty of free text easily analysed. I’m assuming however that is their intention and not just playing lip service to a done deal!

Beaver

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14:24 PM, 10th October 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Ian Narbeth at 10/10/2019 - 12:54It isn't just an issue of upsetting the neighbours: Some tenants are a threat.
Talking to the lady I was talking to the reason they are regularly in lockdown is that the police regularly come in and lock them down for their own security. Sure, that part of the problem is a major inconvenience.
But when you come back and some of the tenants or their guests are smoking crack in the stairwells, that's a threat.
The thing is that some tenants aren't just a nuisance, they are also a threat. The police can't always act, they don't have the evidence. The behaviour of some tenants is also intimidating. As a landlord you often can't get evidence. You don't have the powers to watch problem tenants all the time and get evidence - as a landlord, you're not allowed to install surveillance equipment, and even if you did, some tenants would vandalise it.
Without section 21 you can't adequately protect your other tenants: The minority of problem tenants threaten the majority of tenants who do behave themselves. Removal of section 21 removes your ability to act when the police cannot.

Mike

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17:06 PM, 10th October 2019, About 5 years ago

Much of the public has been brainwashed by media and by Government itself that a Section 21 eviction is a "No Fault Eviction" that is the fundamental problem, everyone seems to think Landlords love uprooting tenants and in particularly good law abiding tenants, those are the kind hard to find, most tenants think we owe it to them just because they are paying rent and the home is theirs and they can do what they like, just because they pay rent, does not mean they can do what they like, you purchase a train ticket, does it give you right to put your feet on the seats, does it give you right to stay in it forever? so it these that landlords evict commonly using Section 21.
How many landlords actually uproot decent tenants for the sake of it or for the fun and thrills of it?
Its a total madness, taking away this essential tool to fight rogue tenants, good ones need not even concern or worry they could be evicted through no fault of theirs.
Only fault causing tenants are ever evicted or where landlord wants to totally renovate a property or move in himself.
Age UK is also having the same fit, they too have been brainwashed, and have not checked the reality, no one evicts good old tenants unless they done something very wrong.

Ian Narbeth

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17:15 PM, 10th October 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Mike at 10/10/2019 - 17:06Mike, if only all landlords were as decent and sensible as you and I are!
Unfortunately there are landlords who evict tenants who complain about substandard properties. There were agents who gouged fees from tenants initially and on renewals until the Tenant Fees Act. There are also landlords who don't make it clear that they will want to get the property back for their own occupation and/or mislead the tenants that they can stay long term.. The tenants of such landlords (who are a tiny minority) complain to their MP.s and they then vote for ill-thought out legislation.

Chris @ Possession Friend

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0:06 AM, 11th October 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by The Forever Tenant at 10/10/2019 - 10:10The vast majority 90% of Tenants stay over 4 years and leave of their own accord ! ( EHS ) Its naive of anyone to think that a Landlord ( business person ) would go to the time and trouble of evicting a Tenant ' for No reason ' !
Fact of the matter, is there are a small proportion of tenants who don't comply with their legal contracts.
Difference is, that so much legislation has been bought - disproportionately against landlords. The penalties for so much red-tape ( that's Costing tenants ) has absolutely no parallels with any effective sanctions against bad tenants occupying accommodation that otherwise compliant Tenants could be living in.
... and who have Tenants got to thank for this - ? Tenant support groups and the vote-chasing government .

Old Mrs Landlord

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8:04 AM, 11th October 2019, About 5 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Mike at 10/10/2019 - 17:06
The fact that the form served on tenants for eviction under S.21 is headed in large lettering on the front page "No Fault Eviction" has been as instrumental as the biased media coverage led by tenant action groups in implanting this idea in the minds of tenants and the general public. Look back at the coverage of Fergus Wilson when he needed to sell properties in order to retire - all programmes and publications heaped outraged blame upon him but not one mentioned that there is no other instrument available to a landlord if he needs to sell at market rates to fund retirement. (I am well aware that he did not help his cause with his appearance in a television programme, or by owning so many rental properties in one area, and his general attitude is certainly not representative of most landlords.)

paul robinson

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12:28 PM, 11th October 2019, About 5 years ago

Previously I’d been in correspondence direct with the Ministry of Housing

Feel other HMO landlords should also be questioning why so many HMO’s and landlords have been “overlooked”?

NO RECOGNISITION OF HMO IN S21 CONSULATION DOCUMENT – FLAWED CONSULTATION?

My question on 2nd August:- Can the Q&A support document be updated to encompass shared HMO (licenced in particular), ensuring that this large sector’s feedback can be encouraged to be gathered and also easily analysed on receipt?

Ministry response on 4th September - We are exploring updating the document so to explain how the changes will interplay with joint tenancies, to help landlords understand how this will affect them, including landlords of HMOs.

Extract of my final response to Section 21 consultation:-

- Despite your response on the 4th Sept, as far as I can see no updates have bene undertaken? (nothing listed on the revision page) – so basically HMO and shared rentals have been completely ignored in this consultation?

- In the following government document, there were an estimated 497,000 HMOs in England and Wales at the end of March 2018. http://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/SN00708/SN00708.pdf How is it possible that this ½ a million rentals have not been recognised, or their landlords even encouraged to reply to the consultation?

- When we spoke you suggested that the consultation document had been targeted towards “single household rentals” and HMO landlords could just use the “other” free text boxes.

- Other landlords I have spoken to and I would question the validly of this consultation process when HMO and shared rentals have been excluded and it is very difficult to understand how it will be possible to accurately analyse the “other” free text boxes that HMO landlords have had to use?

- Whist we hope sincerely hope that scrapping S21 is not a foregone conclusion, considering the above, we do question if it has just been rushed out in an incomplete form, somehow looking to win political votes with Generation Rent and supporting charities such a Shelter?

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