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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> London Borough Of Islington v Gjini [2002] EWCA Civ 945 (20 June 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/945.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 945 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(Mr Justice Owen)
Strand London WC2 Thursday, 20th June 2002 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE POTTER
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THE LONDON BOROUGH OF ISLINGTON | ||
Respondent | ||
- v - | ||
MARIA GJINI | ||
Applicant |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent did not appear and was unrepresented.
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Crown Copyright ©
Thursday, 20th June 2002
"2) A mandatory order that [Islington] properly review the amount of subsistence payable to the Claimant.
3) A mandatory order that [Islington] provide details of the origin of the policy which they state they are following in assessing the level of subsistence and in coming to the decision to reduce the Claimant's financial support.
4)A declaration that the policy of [Islington] is ultra vires alternatively a declaration that the policy is irrational and unreasonable.
5) If the policy is found to be unlawful a mandatory order that the Claimant receive 72% of the current level of income support."
(1)An attack upon the confusion which appeared to exist within Islington as to what its' policies were, whether as applied generally or in the applicant's case. There appeared to be two versions of the policy advanced by the Council, both of which were attacked as irrational and unreasonable.
(2)It was said that, in any event, Islington had failed to give proper consideration to the applicant's case and that, had it done so, it would have been satisfied that there were "exceptional circumstances" operative in the applicant's case which justified a higher payment under Regulation 5(4). Those exceptional circumstances were said to arise from a condition or illness of the applicant's son which required expenditure on trips to hospital as well as extra expenditure to meet his enhanced dietary needs.
"The rates calculated are as follows:
Families including children: £3 per person per day
Single Adults: £5 per day"
"The starting point, insofar as meeting your client's essential living needs is concerned, is that the support to which your client is entitled in accordance with our policy, equates to 72% of the rates of current income support, (which is considered to be sufficient for subsistence), less any income received in respect of child benefits (see reg 6.1 of the 1999 regulations)."
"I turn then to the £3 per day policy to which very different considerations apply. It is clear of course that it was applied in the claimant's case. The question is therefore whether it was Wednesbury unreasonable or irrational. On the face of it, it seems surprising that a single adult is provided with subsistence of £5 a day, whereas a member of a family living together receives £3 per day each, so that the claimant and her son receive only £1 a day more than a single person. But the policy has to be viewed in the context of the whole package of support and benefits provided for families which include accommodation and certain facilities, allowance for clothing for the child, preschool meals and travel costs. Miss Dudley's evidence is that the authority believes that such benefits justify the differential. The defendant has submitted a comparative table setting out the payments made to in-county asylum seekers by a total of ten London local authorities including the defendant. Their approaches differ, but Mr Rutledge argues that the table demonstrates that the defendant's approach cannot be so said to be outside the four corners of its discretion. I agree and have come to the conclusion, albeit with some hesitation, that the policy cannot be said to be unreasonable or irrational; and that its application does not have the consequence that the defendant has failed to discharge the obligation to provide for the essential living needs of the claimant and her son. It follows that this limb of the application fails."
"In the absence of any satisfactory explanation for the 72 per cent policy, I am driven to the conclusion that there was no rational basis for it. Had I been satisfied that it had been applied to the assessment of the claimant's entitlement under the Regulations, I would have set aside that assessment, but I am not satisfied that it was."
"...in a hopeless state of confusion about the policy and, in my judgment, there is no reliable evidence upon which to find that it was applied in the claimant's case".
"I do not accept that the package Islington is providing does not equate to at least 72% of the relevant income support rate. As I say the Claimant is receiving a range of fringe benefits the most expensive of which (from Islington's point of view) being the payment of the utility bills. These bills will obviously increase with the onset of winter. In my respectful view these, combined with clothing and other benefits to which I have referred make up at least 72% of what the Claimant would receive had she been eligible for income support."
"1. The judge was entitled to find that the Council's policy was to pay £3 per person per day, rather than to pay 72% of income support. Given that finding, Ground 3 of the Ground of Appeal is unsustainable.
2. He was also entitled to conclude that payment of £6 per day to a mother & son was not irrational. Free school meals and the clothes allowance were relevant to the differential between this payment and one of £5 to a single person. There is no real prospect of a successful appeal."