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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Secretary of State for Work & Pensions v Perkins & Anor [2004] EWCA Civ 1671 (17 November 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1671.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 1671 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONERS
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
SIR WILLIAM ALDOUS
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
(1) RICHARD LEIGH PERKINS | ||
(2) RYEDALE DISTRICT COUNCIL | Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR. M. CHAMBERLAIN (instructed by the Office of the Solicitor, Department of Works and Pensions) appeared on behalf of the Appellant.
MISS S. ROBERTSON (instructed by Messrs French & Co., Derby) appeared on behalf of the First Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
"The only items of income which can be disregarded are those which are listed in Schedule 4 to the Council Tax Benefit (General) Regulations 1992. There is no provision in that schedule to disregard the payments received by Major Perkins."
The relevant parts of Schedule 4 are as follows. Paragraph 13.1:
"Except where sub-paragraph (2) applies and subject to sub-paragraph (3) and paragraphs 33 and 34, [£20] of any charitable payment or of any voluntary payment made or due to be made at regular intervals.
(2) Subject to subparagraph (3) and paragraph 34, any charitable payment or voluntary payment made or due to be made at regular intervals which is intended and used for an item other than food, household fuel or, subject to paragraph (5), rent or ordinary clothing or footwear, of a single claimant or, as the case may be, of the claimant or any other member of his family or is used for any council tax or water charges for which that claimant or member is liable.
(4) For the purposes of subparagraph (1) where a number of charitable or voluntary payments fall to be taken into account in any one week they shall be treated as though they were one such payment.
(5) In subparagraph (2) -
(a) 'rent' means eligible rent less any deductions in respect of non-dependants which fall to be made under regulation 63 (non-dependant deductions);
(b) the expression 'ordinary clothing or footwear' means clothing or footwear for normal daily use, but does not include school uniforms, or clothing or footwear used solely for sporting activities."
Major Perkins appealed to the Social Security Commission. That appeal came before Mr Commissioner Mark Rowland. Again, Major Perkins appeared in person. The Council were represented by their housing benefits officer and the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions did not appear.
"If one disentangles sub-paragraphs (1) and (2), one can see that only £20 pw of voluntary payments is disregarded where either (a) the payments are intended to be used for food, household fuel, rent or ordinary clothing or footwear or (b) the payments are actually used for food, household fuel, rent or ordinary clothing or footwear, whatever the intention behind the payments. The whole of any payments is disregarded if either (a) the payments are both intended and used for a purpose other than paying for food, household fuel, rent or ordinary clothing or footwear or (b) whatever the intention behind the payments, the payments are actually used for council tax or water charges. This calls for some investigation of the intention behind, and the use of, voluntary payments."
That statement of the task of the tribunal is correct. The Commissioner then went on in paragraph 15 in this way:
"The purpose of paragraph 13(2) and its counterparts therefore becomes clear (although the rationale for treating payments used for water charges and council tax in the way the provisions do is not as clear as it was in the days of community charge when a person in receipt of income support was still liable for a proportion of the community charge). It is to enable charitable or voluntary payments to be made to a claimant for items other than basic essentials and housing costs without there being any effect on entitlement to an income-related benefit payable to meet those basic essentials and housing costs."
The Commissioner then came to apply that construction of the regulations to the facts. He said this:
"16. The problem that arises in cases like the present is that the precise purpose for which the payments are made is not expressed and it is difficult to anticipate how they will be used or to trace how they have been used. However, it does not, in my view, follow that the purpose and use cannot be determined from the surrounding circumstances. It seems to me to be reasonable to make three assumptions in such cases. Firstly, a claimant will give priority to paying for basic essentials and housing costs over less important items. Secondly, the 'applicable amount' (not counting any 'eligible housing costs' in an income support case) is sufficient to meet the basic essentials. Thirdly, a person making a voluntary payment to a claimant intends the payments to supplement other income -- ignoring for this purpose possible entitlement to an income-related benefit -- and that the claimant receives it on that basis and so pays for the basic essentials and housing costs using the other income first and then using the voluntary payment.
17. On that basis, a voluntary payment may be presumed to be used for basic essentials and housing costs to the extent that the 'applicable amount' plus any 'eligible rent' exceeds the amount of other income, unless it can be shown that the voluntary payment was earmarked in some way for another purpose and was used for that other purpose. Equally, however, it seems to me that a voluntary payment must be presumed to be intended, and used, for other purposes to the extent to which it represents income in excess of the 'applicable' amount' plus any 'eligible rent'.
18. In the present case, Mrs Calvert told me, the whole of the claimant's rent has been 'eligible rent'. The amount of his pensions at 1 April 1996 just exceeded his 'applicable amount' plus his rent and, as the pensions and the 'applicable amount' are all index-linked, that is likely to have continued to be the case throughout the relevant period. It seems absurd to hold that the voluntary payments were intended or used to pay for the basic essentials and the rent, in circumstances where the claimant's other resources were sufficient. In my view, during any period when the claimant's pensions exceeded his 'applicable amount' plus his rent, the voluntary payments were intended and used for items other than food, household fuel, rent or ordinary clothing or footwear and so they fell to be disregarded under paragraph 13(2).
19. If the whole of the voluntary payments fell to be disregarded under paragraph 13, there was no overpayment during the relevant period and the claimant's award of housing benefit should not have been terminated. The claimant may have been wrong in assuming that the payments for his son were not 'income', but, by chance in the light of the facts of his particular case, he was substantially right in assuming that they should not affect his entitlement to housing benefit. However, Mrs Calvert very properly says that she wishes to check the figures and so I give my decision set out in paragraph 1 above."
It followed that the Commissioner allowed the appeal and set aside the order of the York Tribunal. The Commissioner gave the Secretary of State, who had not taken part in the dispute so far, permission to appeal.
"My old age pension I have used for day to day expenses, but I would have had no means of coping with such indispensables as telephone, water, heating, RAC cover etc were it not for his [the son's] kindness."
I can see no reason why the Commissioner should not, in the peculiar circumstances of this case, infer that the son intended that his gift of money to his father was to enable him to enjoy items that he could not afford to pay out of his pension income. It is difficult to see why a son, such as Major Perkins' son, intended that the gift should be used to pay for the paragraph 13(2) specified items. As Major Perkins said, the money was intended to be spent on such things as telephone accounts, car and house maintenance, RAC, pet insurance and Yorkshire Water. Why, in circumstances, where his father had sufficient income to pay for such items as heating, light, rent, clothing and council tax and water charges, would the son give £280 per month to pay for such items?
"The payments from the claimant's son were paid into a different account from the one into which his pensions were paid. He explained to me that that was because they replaced his earnings and he had originally had the second account in order to keep his earnings separate from his pensions. His bank statements show direct debits on both accounts. In particular, as his correspondence with the local authority had suggested, his telephone bills, RAC subscription, and water charges were paid out of the account into which his son's payments were made and rent payments were paid out of the other account. There are card purchases on both accounts. No electricity bill was paid during the period to which the statements before me relate but the claimant had said that household fuel was paid using his son's payments."
The fact that a man in his mid-80s used a bank account into which the gifts were paid to pay water charges and household fuel appears at first sight to indicate that the gift of money was used to pay for paragraph 13(2) specified items. But when viewed in the context of the two bank accounts, the way that they were used, the age of Major Perkins and the ability of Major Perkins to pay those items from other bank accounts, it would be wrong for this court to interfere with the conclusion reached by an experienced commissioner. I repeat again that he saw and heard Major Perkins. He was in the best position to come to conclusions of facts. I believe the facts were such that he could have come to the conclusion he did. I would therefore dismiss the appeal.
ORDER: Appeal dismissed.