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UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2007] UKSSCSC CH_2913_2005 (02 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2007/CH_2913_2005.html Cite as: [2007] UKSSCSC CH_2913_2005 |
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[2007] UKSSCSC CH_2913_2005 (02 March 2007)
CH/2913/2005
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"The overpayment of housing benefit of £1,639.70 for the period 31 May 2004 to 10 October 2004 paid to the first respondent is recoverable from the first respondent notwithstanding that, as Agent, it may have accounted to its principal, the landlord, for such sum or part of it."
(i) that the overpayment had occurred in the first instance; and
(ii) that in any case a decision to recover any overpayment of benefit should not be directed to the Agent.
The Agent asserted both that A had signed documentation after 30 August 2004, and that the Benefits Section had written to the Agent confirming the benefit level had been re-set, which would not have happened had the claimant vacated earlier. It gave details of the two cheque payments it had made to the landlord for the rental periods 21 July 2004 to 20 September 2004 inclusive, stating that they had been cashed by the landlord. The decision was reconsidered, an explanatory letter was sent to the Agent (pages 79 to 80); the decision was not revised and the appeal proceeded.
"The overpayment was not recoverable from the appellant because they were at all relevant dates agents for another, to whom they had accounted for the monies received."
12. Section 75 of the 1992 Act as in force from 1 October 2001 provides:
"(1) Except when regulations otherwise provide, any amount of housing benefit determined in accordance with regulations to have been paid in excess of entitlement may be recovered either by the Secretary of State or by the authority which paid the benefit.
(2) Regulations may require such an authority to recover such an amount in such circumstances as may be prescribed.
(3) An amount recoverable under this section shall be recoverable –
(a) except in such circumstances as may be prescribed, from the person to whom it was paid; and
(b) where regulations so provide from such other person (as well as, or instead of, the person to whom it was paid) as may be prescribed.
(4)……….
(5) Where an amount paid to a person on behalf of another person is recoverable under this section, subsections (3) and (4) above authorise its recovery from the person to whom it was paid by deduction –
(a) from prescribed benefits to which he is entitled;
(b) from prescribed benefits paid to him to discharge (in whole or in part) an obligation owed to him by the person on whose behalf the recoverable amount was paid; or
(c) from prescribed benefits paid to him to discharge (in whole or in part) an obligation owed to him by any other person"
Mr Patel submitted that although section 75(3)(a) does not distinguish the persons from whom an overpayment may be recovered where regulations so provide, section 75(3)(b), (not relevant in this particular appeal), does so. In CIS/4022/2004, Mr Commissioner Angus' stated that it is
"a well known canon of statutory construction … that legislation is drafted and enacted in the knowledge of the common law and unless an enactment explicitly or implicitly disapplies the common law there is a presumption that common law principles continue to apply";
In Mr Patel's submission, section 75(3)(a) should not be read as being subject to the law of agency because the overpayment provisions in the legislation disapply the law of agency.
"2. – (1) The benefits prescribed for the purposes of section 75(5) and (7) of the [1992] Act (recovery of overpayments) are those set out in the following paragraphs.
(2) Prescribed benefits within section 75(5)(a) of the Act (benefits to which a landlord or agent is entitled) are –
(a) housing benefit; and
(b) …………….
(3) Housing benefit is prescribed for the purposes of section 75(5)(b) or (c) of the Act (benefits paid to a landlord or agent to discharge an obligation owed by another person)
In his submission this clearly signifies that recovery can be made from an agent and that the rules of agency do not necessarily apply, as recovery could be from either landlord or agent. In his further submission primary legislation may be construed by reference to secondary legislation in force at the relevant time and this secondary legislation makes it quite clear that "person" in section 75(3)(a) of the 1992 Act embraces both landlord and agent by virtue of section 75(5). This is clear from both regulation 2(2) and 2(3) of the Overpayment Regulations and the common law provisions are thus ousted. Section 75(3) is within the same statutory scheme as section 75(5) as is also made clear by the opening words of section 75(5). It follows that recovery could be effected under section 75(3)(a) regardless of whether the person from recovery is sought is agent or principal, so long as it is made from the person to whom the payment was made.
the overpayment arose because of a mistake of fact or in consequence of a wrongful act, which is relevant in considering the law of agency. In the Secretary of State's submission as amplified by Mr Patel at the hearing, it can be argued that the overpayment arose out of a mistake of fact on the part of both the Authority and the Agent, in that both state they were not aware that A was no longer resident in the property. He accepted that the tribunal was broadly correct in its finding that, under agency law as applied by the tribunal, if the Agent had not paid over the rent to his principal, the Authority could then have recovered from the Agent because the benefit had been paid to the Agent under a mistake as to fact.
"before the [Authority] notified the [Agent] … about the overpayment it had accounted in full to its principal for the sums received during the overpayment period, including the whole of the overpaid benefit." [My italics.]
I accept this point, which is corroborated at pages 76 and 77 of the file papers, although in the event nothing will turn on this nor on Mr Patel's view that it could be argued that the Agent acted wrongfully in not informing the Authority, being negligent in not having investigated A's absence.
"Person from whom recovery may be sought
101. - (1) For the purposes of section 75(3)(a) of the Administration Act (prescribed circumstances in which an amount recoverable shall not be recovered from the person to whom it was paid), the prescribed circumstance is -
(a) housing benefit has been paid in accordance with regulation 93 (circumstances in which payment is to be made to the landlord) or regulation 94 (circumstances in which payment may be made to a landlord);
(b) the landlord has notified the relevant authority or the Secretary of State in writing that he suspects that there has been an overpayment;
(c) it appears to the relevant authority that, on the assumption that there has been an overpayment -
(i) there are grounds for instituting proceedings against any person for an offence under section 111A or 112(1) of the Administration Act (dishonest or false representations for obtaining benefit); or
(ii) there has been a deliberate failure to report a relevant change of circumstances contrary to the requirement of regulation 75(1) (duty to notify a change in circumstances) and the overpayment occurred as a result of that deliberate failure; and
(d) the relevant authority is satisfied that the landlord -
(i) has not colluded with the claimant so as to cause the overpayment;
(ii) has not acted, or neglected to act, in such a way so as to contribute to the period, or the amount, of the overpayment.
(2) For the purposes of section 75(3)(b) of the Administration Act (recovery from such other person, as well as or instead of the person to whom the overpayment was made), the prescribed person is -
(a) in a case where the overpayment arose as a consequence of a misrepresentation or failure to disclose a material fact (in either case, whether fraudulently or otherwise) by or on behalf of the claimant or any other person to whom housing benefit has been paid, the person who misrepresented or failed to disclose that material fact;
(b) in a case where a recoverable overpayment is made to a claimant who has one or more partners, the claimant's partner or any of his partners;
(c)
(d) (c) the claimant.
(3) For the purposes of paragraph (1), "landlord" shall have the same meaning as it has for the purposes of regulation 93.
(4) For the purposes of paragraph (2)(b), recovery of the overpayment may be by deduction from any housing benefit payable to a partner provided that the claimant and that partner were members of the same household both at the time of the overpayment and when the deduction is made.".
In turn, regulation 93(1) provides:
93. (1) ……..A payment of rent allowance shall be made to a landlord (and in this regulation the "landlord" includes a person to whom rent is payable by the person entitled to that allowance) –
………………….."
It therefore appears that at least in those parts of the secondary legislation mentioned in this decision, the intention was to include an agent within the definition of landlord, effectively without distinction.
(Signed on the Original) E A Jupp
Commissioner
2 March 2007