2006 No. 370
The Selective Licensing of Houses (Specified Exemptions) (England) Order 2006
Made
Laid before Parliament
Coming into force
The Secretary of State, in exercise of the powers conferred by section 79(4) of the Housing Act 20041, makes the following Order:
Citation, commencement and application1
1
This Order may be cited as The Selective Licensing of Houses (Specified Exemptions) (England) Order 2006 and shall come into force on 6th April 2006.
2
This Order applies to houses2 in England only.
Exempt tenancies or licences for the purposes of Part 3 of the Housing Act 20042
1
A tenancy or licence of a house or a dwelling contained in a house is an exempt tenancy or licence for the purposes of Part 3 of the Housing Act 2004 (“the Act”) if it falls within any of the following descriptions—
a
a tenancy or licence of a house or dwelling that is subject to a prohibition order made under section 20 of the Act whose operation has not been suspended in accordance with section 23 of the Act;
b
a tenancy described in any of the following provisions of Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Housing Act 19883, which cannot be an assured tenancy by virtue of section 1(2) of that Act—
i
paragraph 4 (business tenancies);
ii
paragraph 5 (licensed premises) 4;
iii
paragraph 6 (tenancies of agricultural land); or
iv
paragraph 7 (tenancies of agricultural holdings etc) 5;
c
a tenancy or licence of a house or a dwelling that is managed or controlled by —
i
a local housing authority;
ii
a police authority established under section 3 of the Police Act 19966;
iii
the Metropolitan Police Authority established under section 5B of the Police Act 1996;
iv
a fire and rescue authority under the Fire and Rescue Services Act 20047; or
v
a health service body within the meaning of section 4 of the National Health Service and Community Care Act 19908;
d
a tenancy or licence of a house which is not a house in multiple occupation for any purposes of the Act (except Part 1) by virtue of—
i
paragraph 3 of Schedule 14 to the Act (buildings regulated otherwise than under the Act); or
ii
paragraph 4(1) of that Schedule (buildings occupied by students)9;
e
a tenancy of a house or a dwelling where—
i
the full term of the tenancy is more than 21 years;
ii
the lease does not contain a provision enabling the landlord to determine the tenancy, other than by forfeiture, earlier than at end of the term; and
iii
the house or dwelling is occupied by a person to whom the tenancy was granted or his successor in title or any members of such person’s family;
f
a tenancy or licence of a house or a dwelling granted by a person to a person who is a member of his family where—
i
the person to whom the tenancy or licence is granted occupies the house or dwelling as his only or main residence;
ii
the person granting the tenancy or licence is the freeholder or the holder of a lease of the house or dwelling the full term of which is more than 21 years; and
iii
the lease referred to in sub-paragraph (ii) does not contain a provision enabling the landlord to determine the tenancy, other than by forfeiture, earlier than at end of the term;
g
a tenancy or licence that is granted to a person in relation to his occupancy of a house or a dwelling as a holiday home; or
h
a tenancy or licence under the terms of which the occupier shares any accommodation with the landlord or licensor or a member of the landlord’s or licensor’s family.
2
For the purposes of this article—
a
a person is a member of the same family as another person if—
i
those persons live as a couple;
ii
one of them is the relative of the other; or
iii
one of them is, or is a relative of, one member of a couple and the other is a relative of the other member of the couple;
b
“couple” means two persons who are married to each other or live together as husband and wife (or in an equivalent relationship in the case of persons of the same sex);
c
“relative” means parent, grandparent, child, grandchild, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, nephew, niece or cousin;
d
a relationship of the half-blood is to be treated as a relationship of the whole blood;
e
a stepchild of a person is to be treated as his child;
f
an occupier shares accommodation with another person if he has the use of an amenity in common with that person (whether or not also in common with others); and
g
“amenity” includes a toilet, personal washing facilities, a kitchen or a living room but excludes any area used for storage, a staircase , corridor or other means of access.
Signed by authority of the First Secretary of State
(This note is not part of the Order)