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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Gjini, R (on the application of) v London Borough of Islington [2003] EWCA Civ 558 (15 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/558.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 558 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
(ADMINISTRATIVE COURT AND DIVISIONAL COURT)
MR. JUSTICE OWEN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CLARKE
and
LORD JUSTICE KAY
____________________
R | ||
V | ||
EX PARTE MARIA GJINI | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
LONDON BOROUGH OF ISLINGTON | Respondent |
____________________
Mr. Kelvin Rutledge instructed by London Borough of Islington) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 2nd April 2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Vice-Chancellor :
"Families including children: £3 per person per day
Single Adults: £5 per day"
The letter stated:
"The starting point, insofar as meeting your client's essential 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 regulation 6.1 of the 1999 Regulations).
Ms Gjini receives this in part as a cash payment (or, more specifically, as a cheque which she can then convert to cash) and in part as other benefits, which include clothing grants and various benefits for families with school-going children, such as children's transport to and from school, and lunches. In addition, she, like other asylum seekers, is not responsible for gas or electricity payments, whereas persons receiving income support in the usual sense would be making such payments. This support package is set out at the bottom of page 1 of the 1996 policy in the section reading 'Children/Families...School Uniform'. Your client is aware of all this information.
In summary, Ms Gjini is entitled to receive from this authority as a cash payment, 72% of the current income support rates less the child benefit payable less the value of the other above-mentioned benefits."
"...no explanation has ever been given of the origin of the policy or why the figure of 72% of income support levels is arrived at."
In paragraph 13 it was submitted that it was unreasonable of the Council not to provide a copy of the origin of its policy, that the subsistence provided to Mrs Gjini was insufficient to meet her essential needs so that it should reinstate the £15 per week it had deducted and review the amount of subsistence it provided "on the basis that a single person over 26 would receive the same amount as Mrs Gjini and Mario and that the circumstances of Mrs Gjini and Mario were exceptional. In paragraph 15 details were given concerning a medical condition from which Mario suffered.
"16. It is submitted that in failing to provide details of the origin of the policy upon which it states to rely in assessing the subsistence it provides the Applicant, the Borough of Islington has acted unreasonably in the Wednesbury sense. It is further submitted that there is nothing within the relevant legislation setting out that asylum claimants should receive 72% of the level of income support and that as a result the Respondent has acted unlawfully in deciding upon such a percentage and figure. It is further submitted that if the Respondent maintains that its policy is to pay £3 per day to asylum claimants who form part of a family group then such a policy is irrational in particular given that a single adult over the age of 26 receives £6 per day and that in any event such amounts do not amount to 72% of the current level of income support. It is further submitted that if the policy that asylum seekers should receive 72% of the current income support levels is lawful then the Respondent has and continues to act unreasonably as it is not following its own policy in respect of the Applicant.
17. It is respectfully submitted that the Applicant should be granted a quashing order quashing the decision of the Borough of Islington dated 17th May 2000 reducing the amount of subsistence paid to the Applicant by £15, a mandatory order requiring the Borough of Islington to review and assess the Applicant's needs properly, and a mandatory order requiring the Borough of Islington to provide the Applicant with details of the origin of the policy upon which the Borough relies and whereby the Borough provides a subsistence of £3 per person per day. It is further submitted that the Applicant should be granted a Declaration that the policy of the Borough of Islington is ultra vires or alternatively irrational or that in the event that the policy is found to be lawful and rational a mandatory order that the Applicant receives 72% of the current level of income support for her and her dependant son and any other order or relief that the Court thinks fit."
Though further witness statements on behalf of Mrs Gjini had been made by the Assistant Solicitor and a friend, Mr Edward Snajli, in July 2001 none was made expressly to explain or support the amended grounds.
"23. The policy of paying 72% of income support level is not peculiar to Islington. To my knowledge it is a policy which is used by many other London authorities. The rational behind this policy is that whereas income support levels provide a helpful guide to average subsistence levels a deduction has to be made to reflect the number of fringe benefits which asylum-seekers enjoy but which are not available to those on income support e.g. the payment of all their utility bills. If the authority did not make such a deduction it would mean that destitute asylum-seekers would receive more than those on income support.
24. At any rate should the Claimant subsequently be granted leave to remain she may claim back from the Department of Health the difference between income support rates and the amount received in cash from the local
25. 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 payment of the utility bills. These bills will obviously increase with the onset of winter. In my respectful view of 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."
"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."
38. I have already made reference to the letters of 30th May 2000 and 13th June 2000 on which the basis of the assessment was set out without reference to any such policy. As to the letter of 2nd August 2001, I have already referred to the fundamental inconsistency between it and the evidence of Ms Dudley. In those circumstances I am unable to place reliance upon it. It confirms that the defendants are in a hopeless state of confusion as to the policy and, in my judgment, there is simply no reliable evidence upon which to find that it was applied in the claimant's case. It follows that the claimants secondary argument with regard to this policy, namely that in any event the defendants failed properly to apply it, falls away."
Accordingly, the judge never dealt with point (3) in Mrs Dudley's summary.
"It is however submitted that the Judge erred in his assessment of the Defendant's policy in other respects. The learned Judge stated that there was no rational basis for the policy of the Defendant providing the claimant with 72% of income support levels and further that if had been so satisfied he would have set aside the amount. However, the learned judge then went on to state that as a result the contention that the Defendant failed to apply the policy falls away. With respect to the Judge it was the Defendant's case that paying the Claimant 72% of income support was its policy. Part of the Claimant's case was that the policy was unreasonable and irrational but also that if the policy was found to be lawful then the Claimant should receive 72% of income support levels. It is submitted that if the policy was unlawful the Claimant should have been granted a Declaration to that effect and that if the policy was lawful the defendant should have been ordered to comply with its own policy."
Lord Justice Clarke:
Lord Justice Kay