Permanent Place of Abode
29 It is appropriate to deal with Mr Harding's appeal first. The primary judge adverted to a tension which he considered seemed to exist between the concepts of "domicile" and that of a "permanent place of abode". On one view, if a person chooses to make her or his permanent place of abode outside of Australia, one might also think that that person had ceased to be domiciled in this country. Some of the criteria for determining a person's domicile may now be found in the Domicile Act 1982 (Cth) (the "Domicile Act"). Section 10 of that Act provides:
The intention that a person must have in order to acquire a domicile of choice in a country is the intention to make his or her home indefinitely in that country.
30 Part of the tension observed by the primary judge may be the product of possible differences between the common law concept of a person's domicile and the consequences of the statutory changes made to that common law by the Domicile Act. In Terrassin v Terrassin (1968) 14 FLR 151, Selby J observed that a person alleging a change of domicile had to prove by "clear and cogent evidence that the change has taken place" (at 154-155). His Honour referred to the decision of Lord Curriehill in Donaldson v M'Clure (1857) 20 D. 307, where his Lordship said:
… it is proper to keep in view what is meant by an animus or intention to abandon one domicile for another. It means something far more than a mere change of residence. It imports an intention not only to relinquish those peculiar rights, privileges, and immunities which the law and constitution of the domicile confer on the denizens of the country, - in their domestic relations … in their purchases and sales and other business transactions … in their political or municipal status, - and in their daily affairs of common life; but also the laws by which the succession to property is regulated after death. The abandonment or change of a domicile is therefore a proceeding of a very serious nature, and an intention to make such an abandonment requires to be proved by satisfactory evidence.
31 That was a statement of the law relating to the test for determining a person's domicile of choice when the present definition of resident was inserted into the Income Tax Assessment Act 1922 (Cth) (the "1922 Act"). Whether it remains the law having regard to the terms of s 10 of the Domicile Act may be questioned, but does not arise for determination in this appeal. Certainly, it would appear to be accepted that the Domicile Act was not a codification of the common law tests concerning where a person is domiciled: Ferrier-Watson v McElrath (2000) 155 FLR 311 at 329 per Holden and Jerrard JJ.
32 There is also a potential overlap between the ordinary concept of where one "resides" and that of a permanent place of abode. In that respect the learned primary judge referred to the judgment of Latham CJ in Commissioner of Taxation v Miller (1946) 73 CLR 93 which, in turn, cited the speech of Viscount Cave LC in Levene v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1928] AC 217. At 222 his Lordship said:
... the word "reside" is a familiar English word and is defined in the Oxford English Dictionary as meaning "to dwell permanently or for a considerable time, to have one's settled or usual abode, to live in or at a particular place." No doubt this definition must for present purposes be taken subject to any modification which may result from the terms of the Income Tax Act and Schedules; but, subject to that observation, it may be accepted as an accurate indication of the meaning of the word "reside." In most cases there is no difficulty in determining where a man has his settled or usual abode, and if that is ascertained he is not the less resident there because from time to time he leaves it for the purpose of business or pleasure.
Whether to "dwell permanently or for a considerable time" or "to have one's settled or usual abode" is qualitatively different from one's permanent place of abode might be doubted. As Northrop J observed in Applegate (1979) at 11:
The phrase [permanent place of abode] is often used as being synonymous with the word "residence" …
33 Legislative history may be of assistance in considering the definition of resident in s 6 of the 1936 Act. Until the amendment made to the 1922 Act by the Income Tax Assessment Act 1930 (Cth) (the "1930 Amending Act"), the federal income tax did not tax the worldwide income of a resident of Australia. Indeed, the 1922 Act contained no definition of a "resident", although it did contain the concept of an "absentee" person. Because the 1930 Amending Act provided for the taxation of Australians in respect of income derived from all sources, whether in Australia or elsewhere (achieved by the insertion of a new definition of "assessable income"), a definition of "resident" was required. The resulting definition introduced by the 1930 Amending Act has relevantly remained unaltered ever since.
34 "Explanatory Notes" to the 1930 Amending Act (the "Notes"), issued under the authority of the then Commonwealth Treasurer, suggest that a purpose of subpara (i) of the definition of "resident" was the taxation, for the first time, of the Australian High Commissioner in London, together with the Agents-General of the states, and their respective staff. Until the 1930 Amending Act, these individuals were not liable to pay income tax under the 1922 Act, nor British income tax. The Notes, which were not before the learned primary judge, state the following about the primary test of where a person resides:
The primary test is actual residence in Australia. If a person is in fact residing in Australia then, irrespective of his nationality, citizenship or domicile, he is to be treated as a resident for the purposes of the Act.
The result will be that the extension of the scope of the Act to income from sources outside Australia will apply not only where such income is derived by an Australian who ordinarily lives in Australia, but also where it is derived by a person of foreign origin who, though he may recognise Australia as his usual place of residence, has not yet abandoned his foreign nationality, citizenship or domicile.
35 The Notes record an explanation for the "second test" in subpara (i), which turns upon the "domicile" of the taxpayer, a term said to be of "strictly legal significance". The Notes state that a person in certain circumstances can be domiciled in a particular country although he or she is not actually residing there and in some cases "although he has abandoned his residence in that country and has no intention of residing there". The Notes then state:
The application of the test of domicile will cause the High Commissioners for Australia and Agents-General for the Australian States, together with the members of their staffs, to be treated as residents of Australia liable to income tax assessment on Australian and extra-Australian income as proposed for other residents.
There is also an explanation for the exception to the second test. The Notes record:
In order that the test may not be applied to persons who have definitely abandoned their Australian residence, a condition is provided that a person whose legal domicile is in Australia is not to be treated as a resident if the Commissioner is satisfied that his permanent place of abode is outside Australia.
36 The third test of residence (in subpara (ii) of the definition) is described in the Notes in the following way:
The third test to be applied is, subject to certain conditions, actual presence in Australia for more than half the financial year in which the income the subject of assessment is derived.
This test is necessary in order to obviate the great difficulties which occasionally arise in establishing to the satisfaction of a Court that a person is resident in any particular country.
In order that there may be no danger of treating as residents persons who are purely visitors, the condition is imposed that this test is not to be applied to treat any person as a resident if the Commissioner is satisfied that that person has his usual place of abode outside Australia and does not intend to take up residence in Australia.
The foregoing suggests that the primary or first test of residence is largely directed at the identification of where physically a person ordinarily lives regardless of citizenship or domicile. The second test (aside from the exception to it), is not directed at a person's physical presence in Australia, but with the identification of her or his domicile in this country, regardless of where she or he lives. It thus extends to the High Commissioner living in London. The exception in subpara (i) then assumes that the person is not physically present in Australia during the year of income, but is nonetheless still domiciled here. Where it can be shown to the Commissioner's satisfaction that that person has "definitely abandoned" their Australian residence, Parliament's intention is that that person should not be subject to federal income tax. A person who ceases permanently to live in Australia, but who nonetheless considers themselves still to be an Australian might fall within this category. Such a person may not have an "intention to make his or her home indefinitely" in another country for the purposes of s 10 of the Domicile Act. That may be because, for example, there is no new country to whom that person now wishes to pledge allegiance; or it may be because, whilst physically living in a foreign country with no plan to return to Australia, there has not been a conscious relinquishment of Australian identity. As Lord Macnaghten observed once in Winans v Attorney-General [1904] AC 287 at 291:
Lord Chelmsford's opinion [in Udny v Udny (1869) LR 1 HL, Sc 455] was that "in a competition between a domicil of origin and an alleged subsequently acquired domicil there may be circumstances to shew that however long a residence may have continued, no intention of acquiring a domicil may have existed at any one moment during the whole of the continuance of such residence. The question in such a case is not whether there is evidence of intention to retain the domicil of origin, but whether it is proved that there was an intention to acquire another domicil."
37 In Terrassin, Selby J said of this passage at 165:
Such an intention [to acquire another domicile], I think, is not to be inferred from an attitude of indifference or disinclination to move increasing with increasing years, least of all from the absence of any manifestation of intention one way or the other. It must be … a "fixed and settle purpose".
38 Earlier, at 163, Selby J approved of the following passage from Cheshire's "Private International Law" (7th ed, Butterworths, 1965) in relation to determining whether there had been an acquisition of a domicile of choice:
Nothing must be neglected that can possibly indicate the bent of the resident's mind. His aspirations, whims, amours, prejudices, health, religion, financial expectations - all are taken into account. As Lord Atkinson observed with respect to Winans v Attorney-General, "the tastes, habits, conduct, actions, ambitions, health, hopes and projects … [are] all considered as keys to his intention to make a home in England": Casdagli v Casdagli [1919] AC 145 at 178.
It follows that there is no incongruity in a person physically living permanently in another country whilst retaining at all times an Australian domicile. For that purpose and critically, what has to be abandoned for the purpose of subpara (i) of the definition, is not "Australia" but "residence" in Australia. The concept of physical abandonment and then living in another country sufficiently directs attention to the functional purpose of the exception. In that respect, the description in the Notes of the exception is also consistent with our earlier conclusion about the role of the Commissioner's state of satisfaction.
39 In contrast to the second test, what is described in the Notes as the third test in subpara (ii) is, initially, concerned with a person who is physically present in Australia for most of a given year of income. The exception to it probably applies to a person who is physically present in Australia for the required number of days but who would not be considered to be an Australian because he or she is only a temporary visitor of this country for a period of time. That period might even extend to a term of years.
40 In the context of the legislative history, in our view, the phrase "place of abode" is not a reference, as one might have thought, only to a person's specific house or flat or other dwelling. If that had been Parliament's intention it would have used the phrase "permanent abode" rather than "permanent place of abode". The word "place" in the context of the phrase "outside Australia" in subpara (i) invites a consideration of the town or country in which a person is physically residing "permanently". So long as the taxpayer has "definitely abandoned" his or her residence in Australia, it does not serve the function or purpose of the exception to subpara (i) to require that the taxpayer be permanently located at a particular house or flat in a particular town within a foreign country. Nor, indeed, does it serve the functional purpose of the exception to require the person to live in one particular town, suburb or village within a given country. In our view, drawing a distinction between someone who buys a singular flat in a foreign country as against someone who lives in a series of temporary flats in that same country does not promote the rationale of the exception in subpara (i). That rationale is that a person domiciled in Australia is not to be made subject to federal income tax when they have abandoned in a permanent way their Australian residence. For the promotion of that rationale, it is unnecessary for the taxpayer to live outside of Australia in any particular way. It follows that the word "place" should accordingly be read as including a reference to a country or state. Having said that, we do not favour the proposition that it does not matter if the taxpayer is not permanently in one country, but moves between foreign countries. In our view, the words "permanent place" require the identification of a country in which the taxpayer is living permanently. We shall return to the concept of permanence.
41 The decision of Sheppard J at first instance in Applegate v Commissioner of Taxation [1978] 1 NSWLR 126 ("Applegate [1978]") supports the foregoing conclusion. In that case a Sydney solicitor was given the task of opening a branch office for his firm in Vila in the New Hebrides. He and his wife gave up the tenancy of their flat in Sydney and moved to Vila in November 1971. When they arrived they lived in a hotel for two weeks and then obtained the lease of a house for a term of one year with a right of renewal for a further like period. That may be contrasted with the long-term lease entered into here in 2009 (for two years). They left no assets in Australia. The solicitor's intention, and that of his firm, was that after an indefinite period of time he would return to the Sydney office. In July 1973, he became ill and on medical advice he returned to Sydney. The issue for determination was whether he had a permanent place of abode outside Australia notwithstanding his intention to return to Australia at some point in time. Sheppard J, then a judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, found for the taxpayer and overturned the decision of the Board of Review. As part of his Honour's reasons, Sheppard J said that the place of abode could refer to the house a person lived in or the country, city or town in which a taxpayer might be found. His Honour said at 134:
The question is whether the taxpayer in a given case has satisfied the Commissioner that he has a permanent place of abode outside Australia. Upon the basis of the Chairman's analysis (that is in Case No. 56) - and with that analysis I do agree - "place of abode"' may mean the house in which a person lives or the country, city or town in which he is for the time being to be found. I am of the view that the latter is the meaning of the expression used in s. 6(1.) of the Act. Thus a person might be correctly said to have a permanent place of abode in, say, Vila, notwithstanding that during a given period he lived in a number of different establishments occupying each for only a relatively short period. His case is no different from one where a person, such as the appellant here, lives, for a substantial period, in the same house. Leaving aside for the moment the effect to be given to the word "permanent", it is correct, in the present case, to say that the appellant's place of abode as from 8th November, 1971, until the end of the income year in question and beyond, was Vila, not overlooking the fact that the first two weeks of this period were spent, not in a house, but in temporary quarters in an hotel. During the whole of that period his place of abode was outside Australia and at Vila in the New Hebrides.
(Emphasis added and footnote omitted.)
The foregoing passage strongly supports the construction of the phrase "permanent place of abode" that we favour. The Commissioner submitted that in this passage Sheppard J did not intend to express any proposition of law, and that instead, he was merely making findings of fact. With respect, we disagree.
42 The case went on appeal to the Full Federal Court: Applegate (1979), supra. The appeal was dismissed. Both senior counsel for the Commissioner and for Mr Harding respectively submitted that the Court on appeal did not need to consider the meaning of the word "place" in the phrase "place of abode". Rather, the focus was on whether the taxpayer's intention to return to Australia at some point meant that he had remained a resident of Australia. We agree with that submission. The Commissioner, however, submitted that it would appear that at least Fisher J was of the view that a "place of abode" was a reference to a house or dwelling. In that respect, the following passages at 16-17 of Applegate (1979) were relied upon:
To my mind it is significant that the word "permanent" is used to qualify the expression "place of abode" i.e. the physical surroundings in which a person lives, and to describe that place.
…
It follows that it is, in my view, proper to pay greater regard to the nature and quality of the use which a taxpayer makes of a particular place of abode for the purpose of determining whether it qualifies as his permanent place of abode.
…
To my mind the proper construction to place upon the phrase "permanent place of abode" is that it is the taxpayer's fixed and habitual place of abode. It is his home, but not his permanent home.
43 The Commissioner submitted that when Fisher J described a permanent place of abode as a person's home, and referred to the nature and quality of the "use" which a taxpayer makes of a particular place of abode, his Honour must have been referring to a specific dwelling. We think that is a fair description of what his Honour meant. But Fisher J's observations have less force because they were not made in the context of the issue before the Court in this appeal. Moreover, they do not appear to have been adopted by either Franki J or Northrop J. Indeed, Franki J observed at 3 as follows:
In the argument before us nothing turned on the meaning of the words "place of abode" and both parties adopted the view that these words were to be given a broad meaning.
His Honour largely otherwise agreed with Sheppard J's judgment.
44 Both sides relied on the following passage in the judgment of Northrop J where his Honour explained why the exception in subpara (i) of the definition of resident did not require an intention to live outside of Australia "indefinitely". His Honour said at 11:
In my opinion that contention should be rejected. The qualification applies to persons who, although domiciled in Australia, do not reside in Australia within the accepted meaning of the word "reside". The qualification is stated in an affirmative form, namely, where the person has his permanent place of abode outside Australia. The qualification is not concerned with whether a person has abandoned his Australian domicile or has acquired a new domicile or not. The qualification is concerned with the [person's] permanent place of abode. The phrase "place of abode" may have many meanings, it can refer to the building or place where a person sleeps and it can refer to the building or place where he is usually found, for instance, "his place of business", see Price v. West London Investment Building Society [(1964) 1 WLR 616, at 621] per Danckwerts L.J. The phrase is often used as being synonymous with the word "residence" see, for example, Levene v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue [[1928] AC 217] and Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Lysaght [[1928] AC 234]. In the present case there can be no doubt that whatever meaning is given to the phrase, during the period in question the taxpayer's "place of abode" was outside Australia. During that period he did not reside in Australia. He had no residence in Australia. He had no home in Australia. He did not carry on business or work in Australia. He received no income from sources within Australia. It follows, therefore, that the real issue is whether, during the period in question, the taxpayer's place of abode outside Australia was permanent or not.
We do not think that the foregoing passage either supports or detracts from the case presented by either side.
45 In his judgment Northrop J also explained the meaning of the word "permanent" in the phrase "permanent place of abode" at 12 as follows:
The word "permanent" as used in par. (a)(i) of the extended definition of "resident", must be construed as having a shade of meaning applicable to the particular year of income under consideration. In this context it is unreal to consider whether a taxpayer has formed the intention to live or reside or to have a place of abode outside of Australia indefinitely, without any definite intention of ever returning to Australia in the foreseeable future. The Act is not concerned with domicile except to the extent necessary to show whether a taxpayer has an Australian domicile. What is of importance is whether the taxpayer has abandoned any residence or place of abode he may have had in Australia. Each year of income must be looked at separately. If in that year a taxpayer does not reside in Australia in the sense in which that word has been interpreted, but has formed the intention to, and in fact has, resided outside Australia, then truly it can be said that his permanent place of abode is outside Australia during that year of income. This is to be contrasted with a temporary or transitory place of abode outside Australia.
(Emphasis added.)
We respectfully agree with these observations of Northrop J.
46 Applegate (1979) was subsequently applied by Sheahan J in Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Jenkins (1982) 59 FLR 467. The Commissioner accepted that this decision did not support the narrower interpretation of the word "place" that he favoured, although, again, that case was not concerned with the issue raised by this appeal.
47 Below, the primary judge did not accept that the word "place" in the definition of "resident" could mean a country. His Honour said at [114]-[115]:
Generally, a "place of abode" refers to a fixed site such that a person who lives in a car which goes from place to place does not have a place of abode: R v Bundy [1977] 1 WLR 914. A person of no fixed place of abode is a person who is itinerant and that is so even if they live in the same city. Although there are many cases that consider the expression "place of abode", those considerations are coloured by the context of particular legislation in which the expression is used. On a broad analysis of the cases, it would appear that where legislation using the expression "place of abode" affects a person's substantive rights, the expression is construed to confining the word to the ordinary meaning, namely the place where a person lives and sleeps, as was the case in R v Hammond (1852) 117 ER 1477. However, where the expression is used in a more procedural sense; namely, where notice is required to be given to a person; a wider meaning is usually adopted; Price v West London Investment Building Society [1964] 1 WLR 616, 621-2; Stylo Shoes Ltd v Prices Tailors Limited [1960] Ch 396; such that the place of a person's business might be regarded as their place of abode. Generally, in the case of a body corporate, its place of business would be its place of abode.
There is little or no authority to the effect that a person can have a "place of abode" in a particular country rather than at a particular residential location there. Whilst it was suggested in Applegate that this was the case, there is much authority to the contrary: R v Webb [1896] 1 QB 487.
48 We generally agree with [114]. We agree that the usual meaning of the phrase "place of abode" is a reference to the dwelling where a person lives. We also accept that the meaning of the expression "place of abode" may be "coloured" by legislative context. However, we respectfully do not agree with [115] if his Honour was intending to suggest that what Sheppard J relevantly said in Applegate [1978] about the word "place" is not good law. In our view, Sheppard J was correct. That is in part because of what was said in the Notes, which the learned primary judge did not have before him. The Notes explain well the rationale to the exception in the "second test", which we have already mentioned. It is also because, understanding that rationale, we cannot accept that Parliament intended that the legal criterion for determining whether a person living overseas, falls either within or outside the federal income tax system, should turn upon whether they do or do not live in a fixed or permanent dwelling. That distinction is unnecessary.
49 The authority cited by the learned primary judge for the proposition that the phrase "place of abode" cannot refer to a country where a person lives - R v Webb [1896] 1 QB 487 - we respectfully do not find to be of assistance. That case was concerned with the effective service of a summons for the purposes of the Bastardy Laws Amendment Act 1872 (UK). The phrase in question was "the summons was duly served on such person, or left at his last place of abode". The conjunction of the phrase "of a person" with the phrase "last place of abode" would support a reading of that later phrase as being a reference to a person's dwelling, as would, obviously enough, the very concept of personal service. In contrast here, the conjunction of the phrase "is outside Australia" with the phrase "permanent place of abode" suggests that the Parliament's concern was whether a person had commenced to live permanently outside of Australia.
50 The Commissioner also relied on a number of other English decisions in support of the proposition that the phrase "place of abode" has a settled meaning of referring to a dwelling. With respect, the cases show that, in a given statutory context, that phrase is capable of referring to a dwelling, a proposition with which we agree. Thus:
(a) R v Hammond (1852) 117 ER 1477 was concerned with a statutory requirement that a voting paper had to contain the names of the candidates "with their respective places of abode";
(b) R v Braithwaite [1918] 2 KB 319 was concerned with s 1 of the Summary Jurisdiction Act 1848 (UK) which required summonses to be served personally or by leaving the summons at the person's last or most usual place of abode;
(c) R v Bundy [1977] 1 WLR 914 was concerned with s 25(1) of the Theft Act 1968 (UK) which provides that a "person shall be guilty of an offence if, when not at his place of abode, he has with him any article for use in the course of or in connection with any burglary, theft or cheat".
51 The statutory context in each of the foregoing cases supported a construction of the phrase "place of abode" as referring to a dwelling. The statutory context here is different.
52 The decision of the House of Lords in Inland Revenue Commissioners v Lysaght [1928] AC 234 is perhaps of more assistance for it was concerned with the meaning of the phrase "ordinarily resident" in the Income Tax Act 1918 (UK). In that case, the taxpayer lived in the "Irish Free State" having previously lived in England. He came to England monthly for directors' meetings and remained on each occasion about a week for business reasons. He usually stayed at a hotel. The Special Commissioners found that he was ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom. On appeal to the House of Lords it was found that the taxpayer's residence was a question of fact and that it was open to the Special Commissioners to arrive at the conclusion they had reached. As Viscount Sumner said in his speech at 245:
My Lords, I think it is the shortness of the aggregate time during which Mr. Lysaght is here, that constitutes the principal, though by no means the only point in his favour, but the question of a longer or a shorter time, like other questions of degree, is one particularly for the Commissioners. I do not say that time might not be so short, or again so long, as to make it right to hold, no matter what other evidence there was, that, as the case might be, there was either no evidence of residence or that the evidence was all one way in favour of it, but these questions are not before us.
(Emphasis added.)
His Lordship's decision was thus narrow in focus.
53 Earlier, in a passage cited by the Commissioner, Viscount Sumner had said "[o]ne thinks of a man's settled and usual place of abode as his residence". His Lordship was not, however, concerned with the meaning of the phrase "place of abode". He was concerned with the phrase "ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom" and for that purpose, in the passages cited, the phrase "place of abode" was being used colloquially in aid of a possible meaning to be given to the words "ordinarily resident". Significantly, his Lordship went on to say that "such meanings are misleading". That was because Viscount Sumner drew a distinction between a person's residence, and the property where he or she may live: a person's residence "indicates a quality of the person charged and is not descriptive of his property, real or personal" (at 244). Ultimately, Viscount Sumner decided in favour of the Revenue because there was "evidence to support, and no rule of law to prevent, a finding, that [the taxpayer] was ordinarily resident … in the United Kingdom" (at 244). In stark contrast, (and perhaps illustrative of the difficulties to be confronted in this area) Viscount Cave LC was of the view that there was "no evidence" which supported the findings of the Special Commissioners (at 241).
54 The unchallenged finding of fact here is that in 2009 Mr Harding left Australia intending to leave it permanently. He has not since returned. In 2011 he was living in Bahrain. It is true that his family remained in Australia and he visited them over 91 days, or about 25% of the time, in that year of income. But the quality and nature of those visits supported the conclusion that the taxpayer had abandoned his residence in Australia. That was the express finding of the learned primary judge at [85]. It was based, at least in part, on the finding at [81] that Mr Harding's visits were solely for the purposes of seeing his family and encouraging his wife to change her mind about her decision not to follow through with the original plan whereby his family would join him in Bahrain. We shall return to that finding for the purposes of considering the Commissioner's Notice of Contention. Having abandoned his residence in Australia, it should be concluded that Mr Harding's permanent place of abode was, from 2009, in Bahrain.
55 Whilst there are fewer findings about Mr Harding's intentions during the 2011 year of income (as distinct from when he left Australia in 2009), the findings we have set out above concerning the year of income in dispute, if anything, strengthen Mr Harding's claims that he had abandoned Australia as a place to live and work and that his principal place of abode was in that year in Bahrain where he lived. With profound respect for the learned primary judge the fact that:
(a) he was living in 2011 in a serviced apartment as distinct from permanent lodging is not determinative of his liability to pay tax under the 1936 Act and the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (Cth); and
(b) the accommodation was "temporary" because he intended to acquire a family home, if anything, buttressed the conclusion concerning Mr Harding's permanent place of abode. It is relatively commonplace for Australians who seek to make their life in another country to rent accommodation on a temporary basis, sometimes for several years, whilst they seek a more permanent home.
56 For these reasons, Mr Harding's appeal should be allowed.