CIS_3101_2007
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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 >> [2008] UKSSCSC CIS_3101_2007 (03 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2008/CIS_3101_2007.html Cite as: [2008] UKSSCSC CIS_3101_2007 |
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[2008] UKSSCSC CIS_3101_2007 (03 April 2008)
I SET ASIDE the decisions of the Fox Court appeal tribunal, held on 18 October 2006 under references U/42/242/2006/05556-05559, because they are erroneous in point of law.
I give the decisions that the appeal tribunal should have given, without making fresh or further findings of fact.
My DECISIONS are to remit the decisions under appeal to the Secretary of State to be redecided in accordance with these directions:
- the money in the claimant's Nationwide account was held on trust and did not form part of her income or capital;
- payments of the claimant's fostering Fee and Boarding Out Allowance initially formed part of her income and then became capital in accordance with R(IS) 3/93;
- payments made in advance did not become income until the week to which they related;
- the diminishing capital rule must be applied (regulation 14 of the Social Security (Payments on account, Overpayments and Recovery) Regulations 1988.
Any dispute about the implementation of these directions may be referred to me or to another Commissioner.
The oral hearing
How the issue arises
'5. … Foster carers provide an immensely important service by providing homes for children. Such children are almost always vulnerable, often very young and frequently damaged in one way or another. Good foster carers are probably in short supply.'
'The payments made to a foster carer in this Authority are made up of 2 elements the Boarding Out Allowance for the child and a Fee to the foster carer:
a) The Boarding Out Allowance is paid to meet the costs of caring for a child e.g. clothing, food, travel, pocket money and there is a clear expectation that it is spent on the child etc.
b) A Fee paid to the carer for the tasks they do e.g. the physical acts of caring for a child such as cooking, feeding and other tasks such as attending social work meetings etc.'
Fostering payments
'Provision of accommodation and maintenance by local authority for children whom they are looking after
23.-(1) It shall be the duty of any local authority looking after a child-
(a) when he is in their care, to provide accommodation for him; and
(b) to maintain him in other respects apart from providing accommodation for him.
(2) A local authority shall provide accommodation and maintenance for any child whom they are looking after by-
(a) placing him (subject to subsection (5) and any regulations made by the Secretary of State) with-
(i) a family;
(ii) a relative of his; or
(iii) any other suitable person,
on such terms as to payment by the authority and otherwise as the authority may determine (subject to section 49 of the Children Act 2004)'.
The trust issue
'3. If the carer did not spend all of the Boarding Out Allowance in one week then the carer would generally be expected to save the money for a child and to use it at other times when it was needed. There is no general agreement of exact amounts that will be saved. In this way money might accrue on the child's behalf. Though we give some guidance as to how the allowance should be spent there is flexibility in the system to suit the fostered child's needs and the situation of individual foster carer's households. We do not monitor every pound given or how it was spent. In this Authority the foster carers are not generally required to produce receipts to account for how the Boarding Allowance was spent or not.
4. I cannot share your contention that the Authority retains a legal right to the Boarding Out Allowance once paid to the foster carer and that the carer only holds the allowance in "trust". In my view, once the allowance is paid to the foster carer the money belongs to the foster carer. However, the basis of the payment is that the Boarding Out Allowance will be spent on the foster child. Should a foster carer not spend the money on a foster child then we could ask for the money back but as indicated above, I doubt my Authority's legal right to demand it. Of course should a carer do this, then as previously stated, the Authority would almost certainly cease payments and seek to de-register the foster carer because they were not conforming to the expectations of the care provided to the foster child for which the money is paid.'
The income and capital issue
The legislation
The case law
'How should the decisions be taken
32 As with all complicated issues, it is best to start with basic principles. First, we are looking at actual capital. That means the whole of the capital and any income treated as capital: Income support (General) Regulations 1987. But that does not mean that every £1 put into a building society account in the name of the individual is automatically converted into capital, as the person who drew up the schedule to the decision of 30 03 2005 appears to have assumed.
33 There are a series of fundamental mistakes in the way that the schedules have been drawn up. One is that they have treated every credit as becoming capital when paid into an account, regardless of the source of the payment in or the nature of the account. This is inconsistent with the approach on which the tribunal was told that the schedule was drawn up.
34 I must also consider if the approach of the schedule, or that of the submission, is good law. The secretary of state's representative recited regulations 29 and 32 of the Income Support (General) Regulations 1987 and paragraph 7(1) of Schedule 10 to those Regulations as authority for the approach to be taken to the payments in of benefit. The relevance of Regulation 29 is limited to the signposting in regulation 29(5). Regulation 31 states, so far as relevant, when benefits are treated as paid. Regulation 32 adds to the rules about the weekly amount of income. There is nothing in those regulations dealing with the time at which past income becomes capital. Schedule 10 lists exclusions from the general rule in regulation 46 that all capital is to be included. Neither define capital. Nor would I expect them to. Paragraph 7(1) provides that arrears or concessionary payments of benefit are excluded from capital for 52 weeks from receipt. In other words, lump sum payments of benefit fall to be treated as capital if the claimant still has them 52 weeks later. There is no other express guidance in the Regulations relevant to the approach taken by the secretary of state's representative to the conversion of unspent benefit from income to capital. The regulations cited do not support the proposition in the submission to the tribunal.
35 How is saved benefit to be identified as capital? The standard way of approaching a similar question in a business or tax context is by looking, as all proper commercial accounts do, at the "balance sheet" at the end of each year or other period. It is the difference between one year and the next that is to be treated as capital. (That is, indirectly, the approach of paragraph 7(1)). In this case, it could be approached by asking what the actual capital held is at the end, say, of each calendar year or tax year. If this discloses totals that are clearly above the capital limits, then that would be clear evidence of excess capital. If not, then a closer look may be needed.
36 Test it this way. A claimant has her pension or benefit paid into a building society account monthly, as the government now encourages. She is in credit in her account by a small amount, but one rather larger than her monthly benefit income. She withdraws or transfers out various sums for her living expenditure over the course of the month. She is good at keeping her expenditure broadly within her income. So at the end of the average month she has about the same sum in credit at the end of the month as at the beginning of the month. How much capital does she have: the day to day floating balance, the sums left over at the end of each month, or the amount in her account when it is checked, say, at the end of each tax year?
37 The answer is clearly not the day to day floating balance. Her benefit cannot become capital on the day it is paid into the account, unless it is clear that the account is one for long term savings (such as an ISA account). That is not true of most of the accounts relevant to this case. In the ordinary way, the money she receives and then spends within the month cannot be regarded as capital.
38 I also reject the proposition that if she holds over some benefit from one month to another (perhaps saving for a holiday two months ahead) that those short term savings left over at the end of each month become capital. A longer view must be taken than that. A good practical rule may be the 52 weeks allowed in paragraph 7(1). Or the matter may be looked at by identifying total capital from time to time as suggested above, with a view to identifying increases in sums held from one date to another for which there is no clear explanation. So if the sums are paid into accounts such that they cannot be withdrawn without a penalty in the short term (such as fixed term or tax privileged savings) then they may become capital on payment in. If the sums accumulate in an account over a period, but for a specific reason (such as saving over a longer period to afford an overseas trip to see relatives) and the expenditure is made for that purpose, then that would not be capital. But if sums accumulate from one year to the next, and the claimant has no specific plans to spend them in the short term, then they will at some point become capital. When precisely that point occurs is a question of fact.
39 It follows equally that payments from an account are not payments away of capital just because they are withdrawals from such an account. The example above shows this. And the broader look indicated in the previous paragraph would avoid that fallacy also. Alternatively, a close look could be taken at a few specific periods, and the position generalised from them.
40 I test this by reference to the schedules in the decisions in this case by taking a random example: May and June 1999. (I emphasise that I took this example from the middle of the period without any view about the out turn: I merely did a random short audit of the information to test its reliability).
41 At the beginning of May, according to the schedule to the decision of 30 03 2005, Mrs S's capital was £29,532.08. During the two months, she paid in £350. She paid out £500. The capital at the end of the two months is taken as £29,712.08. That was the formal decision of the Secretary of State. In other words, despite spending £150 more than she paid in, her capital went up by £350. On what did she live during those two months? The decision maker's answer (in the submission to the tribunal) was that Mrs S's benefits were paid into a named specific account, and that payments into and withdrawals from that account were both ignored. I find (to my surprise) that this is just not correct in fact. Each of the entries for May and June 1999 in the schedule to the decision of 30 03 2005 is drawn directly from the very building society account that the Secretary of State's submission to the tribunal said was ignored in order to take account of living expenses. (Compare document 50 with document 259). The evidence simply does not support the schedule when read with the submission. The terms of the decision of the Secretary of State converted the whole of her payments into her accounts in those two months into capital as they were paid in, and no deductions were allowed for any payments out. As Mrs S's representative strongly contended, the effect was that she was not allowed any living expenses at all for those two months. She was in effect treated as saving the lot simply because she used a building society account to handle her affairs. There was no assistance for her in the decision of 14 06 2005. Later, she was able to find one receipt for a telephone bill paid on 1 June 1999 of £79.99. That was allowed, so her capital went down by that sum, but only that sum. Nothing else was allowed.'
Precedent
'4. … where there are two conflicting decisions of equal status and the earlier decision was fully considered in the later decision, the later decision should be followed unless the judge was convinced that the later decision was wrong …'
'46. … to make his decision on the merits of the submissions put before him, giving appropriate weight but no more to authorities which may be persuasive but which, by law, are not binding. The point is of particular importance where the issue of law is one of jurisdiction. … It is in the exercise of discretion, not rulings on "black-letter law" that consistency at first instance has a particular inherent value.'
The Employment Appeal Tribunal had already taken this approach in Digital Equipment Co Ltd v Clements (No 2) [1997] ICR 237.
Which decision should I follow?
The tribunal's reasoning
How the tribunal went wrong in law
Signed on original on 03 April 2008 |
Edward Jacobs Commissioner |