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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Ghassemian v Borough of Kensington & Chelsea [2009] EWCA Civ 743 (08 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/743.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 743 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE WEST LONDON COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE BEHAR)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
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GHASSEMIAN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BOROUGH OF KENSINGTON & CHELSEA |
Respondent |
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Mr C Jones (instructed by Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden:
"(2) On 14/10/04 the Respondent issued a decision that the Appellant was no longer entitled to HB from 24/11/03 onwards. Further, that he had not been entitled from 05/06/00 to 23/11/03. As a result of the new decision on entitlement an alleged overpayment of £46,209.78 of HB had occurred, and a decision had been made that this was recoverable from the Appellant.
"(3) On 12/11/04, the Appellant's previous solicitors (Duncan Lewis) wrote to the Respondent appealing all aspects of the decision, including both the issue of whether the Appellant was entitled to HB during the material period and, if he was not entitled, the issue of whether the resulting overpayment was recoverable from him.
"(4) On 17/05/05 the matter was heard by a Tribunal consisting of a Mr G Singh (deceased) who was the Regional Chair for the South East Region. The matter was only part-heard …
"(6) On the recoverability issue, the Appellant submitted that the alleged overpayment was not recoverable as the Respondent was aware of the material fact that his mother was the landlord and so any overpayment would have been due to an official error and he could not be expected to realise he was being overpaid during the material period …
"(9) On 06/02/06, Chairman Singh issued a decision notice. The Tribunal decided the entitlement issue against the Appellant but did not contain any reference to the overpayment being recoverable from him (emphasis added): 'On balance, my decision is that he is not entitled to Housing Benefit from 05/06/2000 because by virtue of regulation 6(1)(a) of the Housing Benefit (General) Regulations 1987 he did not have a legally enforceable liability to pay rent.'
"(10) On 17/02/06, the Respondent invoiced the Appellant for an overpayment of HB in the sum of £46,174.78 for the period from 05/06/00 to 23/11/03.
"(11) In 2007, the Respondent issued enforcement proceedings in West London County Court under CRR 70.5. On 09/05/06 the Court approved the order that the Respondent was entitled to enforce recovery of the overpaid HB.
"(12) The Appellant applied to set the order aside on the basis that the Tribunal had not made a determination that the paid HB was recoverable from him.
"(13) The Respondent opposed the application, submitting that the court below was entitled to infer from the terms of the decision notice that the Tribunal had made a determination that the overpayment was recoverable from the Appellant.
"(14) HHJ Behar sitting on 27/06/08 accepted the Respondent's submission and refused to set the enforcement order aside."
"1. In addition to the bundle of documentary evidence, I had the advantage of written submissions from the representatives for which I am grateful.
2. In arriving at my decision I gave full consideration to several points made by the Local Authority. I do not accept that the Appellant "is a man who cannot be trusted" or that there was an elaborate sham by him or that he is dishonest. The opinions expressed by the Local Authority on these matters are in my judgement unfounded and I reject them. I found naivety and disorganisation arising from an innocent omission to make relevant enquiries.
3. On balance, my decision is that he is not entitled to Housing benefit from 05/06/2000 because by virtue of Regulation 6(1)(a) of the Housing Benefit (General) Regulations 1987 he did not have a legally enforceable liability to pay rent."
"Can the council do away with Mr Singh's decision and hold me liable for payment nonetheless? Has Mr Singh found me liable to them?"
"I had to refer your file to the Chairman who heard your appeal and who stated the tribunal has not held you liable for making housing benefit overpayment repayments."
The housing authority was not itself a party to that email exchange.
"I understand your letter to say that the Chairman decided you were not liable to repay an overpayment. My interpretation of the first paragraph of the email to you from Richard Dearnley [that is the administrative assistant] is that the Chairman is confirming the Tribunal has made no decision about the repayment of an overpayment.
"In effect the Tribunal decided you were not entitled to Housing Benefit from 5 June 2000 but has not gone on to decide whether any resulting overpayment is recoverable from you."
That letter is at page 74 of the bundle.
"17. I am unable to accept Mr Stagg's submissions for the following reasons:
(i) The Tribunal ruled on the issue before it which was whether there was a legal liability to pay rent. It followed inexorably from the finding that Mr Ghassemian was not entitled to housing benefit, that the overpayment was recoverable from him. It was unnecessary for the Tribunal at the stage, when brief reasons were given, to state expressly that the overpayment was recoverable.
(ii) The appeal has been determined. The Tribunal has treated it as closed and has destroyed the file. No issues were reserved or adjourned. There is no suggestion that Mr Ghassemian has done anything to pursue an extant appeal since the decision of 6th February 2006 which was given more than two years ago.
(iii) There is no evidence that the Regulation 99 (2) point was taken before the Tribunal. Counsel for the respondent recalled that it had not been. He must be right about that. If the point had been taken it would surely have been addressed in the written closing submissions. It is common ground that it is not there addressed. Mr Stagg suggested that the point was raised in the letter of 12th November 2004, although he accepted that there was no express reference to Regulation 99(2). I am satisfied that the point is not raised in that letter.
18. As I have earlier recorded, Mr Ghassemian failed to ask the Tribunal for detailed reasons. He failed to exercise his right of appeal to a Social Security Commissioner. He was content to wait until the Council sent him an invoice for the overpayment. He then took what, in my judgment, was a thoroughly bad point. Unfortunately, a letter dated 25th May 2006 from an administrative assistant employed by the Appeals Service, Nottingham appears to give some fortification to Mr Ghassemian's point and may have misled him. I suspect that the letter was written in haste. It betrays signs of careless drafting. In any case, it cannot affect the validity of the earlier decisions, nor was it argued on Mr Ghassemian's behalf that it could do so."
"Except where regulations otherwise provide, any amount of housing benefit [determined in accordance with regulations to have been] paid in excess of entitlement may be recovered either by the Secretary of State or by the authority which paid the benefit."
"Unless provided otherwise by the regulations any matter required to be determined under these regulations shall be determined in the first instance by the relevant authority."
"… any amount which has been paid by way of housing benefit and to which there was no entitlement under these Regulations …"
I need not read any further. And then under regulation 99:
"Any overpayment [is stated to be recoverable] except one to which paragraph (2) applies …"
Paragraph 2 applies in essence where an overpayment was caused by an official error where the claimant or any person acting on his behalf or any other person to whom the payment is made could not at the time of receipt reasonably have been expected to realise that there was an overpayment.
"Subject to sub paragraph (2) [which is not relevant], [paragraph 6] applies to any relevant decision (whether as originally made or as revised under paragraph (3) of a relevant authority which – (a) is made on a claim for, or on an award of, housing benefit or council tax benefits…".
Sub-paragraph (6) provides that:
"Where any amount of housing benefit or council tax benefit is determined to be recoverable under or by virtue of Section 75 or 76 of the [1992] Act any person from whom it has been determined that it is so recoverable shall have a right of appeal to an appeal tribunal."
Sub-paragraph (9) provides:
"In deciding an appeal under this paragraph, an appeal tribunal – (a) need not consider any issue that is not raised by the appeal…"
"This rule applies subject to sub-paragraph (2) where an enactment provides that …"
Then I go straight to paragraph (a):
"A decision of a court tribunal body or person other than the High Court or County Court …"
[I omit (b)]
"may be enforced as if it were a court order or that any sum of money payable under that decision a compromise may be recoverable as if payable under a court order."
"Where any amount recoverable under this section is to be recovered otherwise than by deduction from prescribed benefits then if the person from whom it is recoverable resides in England and Wales and the County Court so orders it is recoverable by execution issued from the County Court or otherwise as if it were payable under an order of that court."
"Such actual recovery or enforcement is the second stage to which the authority could only proceed once the specific legal liability to support it has been properly established and any dispute as to that legal liability resolved through the statutory appeal process by the tribunal."
"The tribunal is under a duty to consider and determine these issues [that is, the issues raised in the appeal] insofar as necessary to dispose of the appeal."
And he goes on to say:
"The insofar as necessary qualification covers issues that are rendered unnecessary by the determination of another issue."
"It is not in our judgment open to doubt that, as an appeal tribunal under the Social Security Act 1998 hearing the claimant's appeal against the departmental determination revoking her entitlement to benefit, Mr Warren was sitting as an "inquisitorial" tribunal. By that we mean his function was to carry out a complete reconsideration and redetermination for himself of the facts and merits of the decision under appeal, the purpose being to ascertain and determine the true amount of social security benefit to which the claimant was properly entitled: see R v Deputy Industrial Injuries Commissioner ex parte Moore 1 QB 456 and R v Medical Appeal Tribunal ex parte Hubble 2 QB 228 referred to above; the Commissioners' case R(S) 4/82 (especially paragraph 25) and the recent decision of a Tribunal of Commissioners in CIB/4751/2002 [reported as R(IB) 2/04] (especially paragraph 32); and the further recent reaffirmation of the principle in Kerr v Department for Social Development (Northern Ireland) UKHL 23 [R 1/04 (SF) (especially at paragraph 14 per Lord Hope, and paragraph 61 per Lady Hale). In our judgment this is and remains a principle of general application to all proceedings in such tribunals."
But the inquisitorial nature of the jurisdiction does not assist in this case when a matter has not been pursued before the tribunal or where it is implicitly withdrawn because the rules are quite specific that the tribunal does not have to deal with the matter in those circumstances. The tribunal does not have to go out and find facts and investigate them and uncover acts which are not placed before it by the tribunal.
Lord Justice Moses:
Lord Justice Sullivan:
Order: Application refused