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Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber) >> DB v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions & Anor [2024] UKUT 343 (AAC) (31 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/AAC/2024/343.html Cite as: [2024] UKUT 343 (AAC) |
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UA-2023-001678-CSM |
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS CHAMBER
On appeal from the First-tier Tribunal (Social Entitlement Chamber)
B e f o r e :
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DB |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS (2) CE |
Respondents |
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Appellant: Mr J. Atkinson (counsel)
1st Respondent: Decision Making and Appeals, Leeds
2nd Respondent: In person
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Crown Copyright ©
The decision of the Upper Tribunal is to dismiss the appeal.
"The PWC's[1] variation request is relevant to the level of income to be determined by the Tribunal and should be considered as she is a party to the NRP's appeal and it would be undesirable for a differently constituted tribunal to make different findings on the same facts in a future appeal."
"make a preliminary consideration of the PWC's variation application… pursuant to section 26B Child Support Act 1991 and determine the application or refer it to the Tribunal under section 28D(1)(b) Child Support Act 1991…"
and that the Secretary of State provide a supplementary submission on that matter.
"In accordance with Section 28B of the Child Support Act 1991 where an application for a variation has been duly made to the Secretary of State the Secretary of State may give it a preliminary consideration. The Secretary of State may on completing such a preliminary consideration, reject the application (and proceed to make decision on the application for a maintenance calculation without any variation) if it appears to the Secretary of State that there are no grounds on which a variation could be agreed to or that the Secretary of State has insufficient information to make a decision on the application for the maintenance calculation.
The Secretary of State has considered the PWC's request for a variation on the ground of diversion of income. However, the PWC has not been able to provide the Secretary of State with sufficient evidence to depict whether the NRP is diverting income and to who or for what purpose income, if any is being diverted.
In this case the Secretary of state has decided to refuse the application for a variation on the ground of diversion of income and this is notification to all parties of the refusal on that ground.
With regard to the issue of the variation refusal, the Tribunal are respectfully requested to consider and decide if the Secretary of State is correct to refuse the variation application and to confirm or replace the decision as they consider appropriate…."
"…Where an application for a variation is made by a party during the proceedings, the Tribunal can use its case management powers in Rule 5(1) to regulate its own procedure, by directing the CMS to consider the application, as it is bound to do anyway, having been served with a copy of it. It is not necessary to require the PWC to bring a separate appeal, as the variation issue was an issue raised in the current appeals, to which she was a party."
"The NRP's suggestion that the appeals should be shorn of the issue of diversion and the PWC left out of time to appeal would deprive her of a remedy or involve additional procedural hurdles of filing an out of time appeal and asking for time to be extended. Neither approach is in the interests of justice."
Legislative framework
The parties' submissions
Discussion and conclusion
"26. … I suggest that in applying this approach in child support two qualifications are appropriate.
27. First qualification: It is appropriate to interpret letters by reference to their substance rather than their form. This is especially so if the writer is not represented and is not familiar with the child support adjudication procedures. However, it is not appropriate simply to treat any point of contact as an application just because that will be advantageous to the person concerned. To do so may operate to the disadvantage of the other party.
28. Second qualification: The approach can only be applied within the limits allowed by the legislation. In the case of an application for a variation, that means that it must be applied consistently with the Variations Regulations…
29. Bearing that in mind, it is possible that the Secretary of State could have treated the letter of appeal as an application for a variation."
"46. …I should record that I am not comfortable, taking into account the proceedings on all three First-tier Tribunal decisions, with the way in which the proceedings were conducted, or to put it another way the dynamics of that process. The tribunal was dealing with an appeal brought by Mrs E yet the papers give the impression that it was Mr E who was being required to make good his case. During the First-tier Tribunal proceedings, Mr E supplied, in response to First-tier Tribunal directions, some 1,000 pages of documentary evidence and submissions. By contrast, Mrs E' s documentary input was limited to no more than 10 pages or so comprising vaguely expressed arguments and assertions, much of which concerned the non-issue of shared care, and a handful of receipts for meals purchased during Mr E' s holiday in West Wales (which Mr E claimed were improperly obtained).
47. Now I am fully aware that the First-tier Tribunal has an inquisitorial function but that does not permit it to transform a respondent into a de facto appellant. I am concerned that this may have happened in this case. At no point did the First-tier Tribunal require Mrs E, nor for that matter the Secretary of State, to set out a case concerning the correct calculation of Mr E' s income for the purposes of his child maintenance calculation."
37. The suggestion that the Tribunal had no jurisdiction other than to deal with the points expressly raised in the Notice of Appeal betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of an appeal to the Social Entitlement Chamber of the First-tier Tribunal.
38. Such an appeal is not a trial of pleadings. Neither is it adversarial. Rather, the Tribunal's jurisdiction is inquisitorial and enabling. The Tribunal's role is to ensure, as far as it can within its rules of procedure, that non-resident parents are assessed as liable to pay the amount of maintenance for which the law provides, neither more nor less (see SC v Child Maintenance and Enforcement Commission and JM (CSM) [2011] UKUT 458 (AAC)).
39. In the exercise of its inquisitorial and enabling jurisdiction, the Tribunal has power to give any decision that the Secretary of State could have given when deciding the matter under appeal. It is not merely entitled, but bound, to consider all the issues that are clearly apparent from the evidence and not just those raised by the parties (see, by analogy, Mongan v Department of Social Development [2005] NICA 16 reported as R3/05 (DLA) and Hooper v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2007] EWCA Civ 495 reported as R(IB) 4/07).
40. Furthermore, a party can raise an issue at any time "at or before the hearing": see the decision of a Tribunal of Commissioners in R(IB) 2/04 at [32] (which was disapproved, but not on the point of timing, in Mongan at [15]).
"If the result of considering the additional mother's grounds was that the maintenance calculation would increase rather than reduce, then that is the decision which the judge, in the exercise of his inquisitorial jurisdiction, should have given even though the Father had appealed and the Mother had not. In Gillies v SSWP [2006] UKHL 2 at [41] (a case concerned with the social security system) Baroness Hale of Richmond observed that "the system is there to ensure, so far as it can, that everyone receives what they are entitled to, neither more nor less". In my judgment, the same principle applies to child support. The Tribunal's role is to decide the issues before it in such a way as to ensure, as far as it can, that non-resident parents are assessed as liable to pay the amount of maintenance for which the law provides, neither more nor less.
Conclusion
Kate Markus KC
Judge of the Upper Tribunal
Authorised for issue on 31 October 2024
Note 1 In this and all other citations from the documentation, I have substituted “the PWC” and “the NRP” for the names of the mother and father respectively. [Back]