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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Langford v The Secretary of State for Defence [2019] EWCA Civ 1271 (17 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1271.html Cite as: [2020] 1 WLR 537, [2020] WLR 537, [2019] WLR(D) 430, [2019] EWCA Civ 1271, [2019] Pens LR 21 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT.
UPPER TRIBUNAL (ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS CHAMBER)
Upper Tribunal Judge E. Mitchell
CAF25652015
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEGGATT
and
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
____________________
JANE LANGFORD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR DEFENCE |
Respondent |
____________________
Tim Buley QC (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 19 June 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McCombe:
(A) Introduction
(B) Background Facts
(C) The Scheme
"29 Description of benefits—death
(1) Benefits payable for the death of a member or a former member ("the deceased") are—
(a) a survivor's guaranteed income payment payable until death to a surviving spouse, civil partner or surviving adult dependant;
(b) a bereavement grant payable to a surviving spouse, civil partner[,] … surviving adult dependant[, or eligible child];
(c) a child's payment payable to or in respect of an eligible child. …
30 Meaning of "surviving adult dependant"
A person is a surviving adult dependant in relation to a deceased member or former member if, at the time of the deceased's death—
(a) the person and the deceased were cohabiting as partners in a substantial and exclusive relationship;
(b) the deceased leaves no surviving spouse or civil partner;
(c) the person and the deceased were not prevented from marrying or forming a civil partnership; and
(d) either the person was financially dependent on the deceased or they were financially interdependent.
SCHEDULE 1 MEANING OF "SUBSTANTIAL AND EXCLUSIVE RELATIONSHIP"
Part 1 Substantial Relationship
1. In deciding whether a relationship of a deceased member ("the deceased") and the claimant is a substantial relationship, the Secretary of State is to have regard to—
(a) any evidence which the claimant considers demonstrates that the relationship is substantial; and
(b) must in particular have regard to the examples of the evidence specified in paragraph 2 which could, either alone or together, indicate that the relationship is substantial.
2. The evidence referred to in paragraph 1(b) is—
(a) evidence of regular financial support of the claimant by the deceased;
(b) evidence of a valid will or life insurance policy, valid at the time of the deceased's death, in which—
(i) the deceased nominates the claimant as principle beneficiary or co-beneficiary with children; or
(ii) the claimant nominates the deceased as the principal beneficiary;
(c) evidence indicating that the deceased and the claimant were purchasing accommodation as joint owners or evidence of joint ownership of other valuable property, such as a car or land;
(d) evidence of a joint savings plan or joint investments of a substantial nature;
(e) evidence that the deceased and the claimant operated a joint account for which they were co-signatories;
(f) evidence of joint financial arrangements such as joint repayment of a loan or payment of each other's debts;
(g) evidence that the deceased or the claimant had given the other a power of attorney;
(h) evidence that the names of both the deceased and the claimant appeared on a lease or rental agreement, if they lived in rented accommodation;
(i) evidence that the deceased and the claimant shared responsibility for children;
(j) evidence of the length of the relationship.
3. A relationship is not an exclusive relationship if—
(a) one or both of the parties to the relationship is married to, or is the civil partner of, someone other than the other party to the relationship; or …
(b) one or both of the parties is a party to another relationship which is, or could be considered to be, a substantial and exclusive relationship having regard to the provisions of this Schedule.
"6. European Convention on Human Rights
6.1 As this Instrument is subject to negative resolution procedure and does not amend primary legislation, no statement is required."
(D) ECHR Provisions
"…shall be secured without discrimination on any ground such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, association with a national minority, property, birth or other status".
"44. Every natural or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of international law.
The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way impair the right of a state to enforce such laws as it deems necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other contributions or penalties."
"6. …
(i) Whether there is different treatment between the Appellant, as an unmarried partner of someone covered by the AFCS, and her chosen comparator, a married partner, on grounds of the status of being an unmarried partner? There is no differential treatment between married and unmarried partners, and certainly none that is in reference to their status as such. The rule that is challenged in these proceedings is that an unmarried partner must not by married to anyone (a third party) other than the AFCS member. Married persons are by definition subject to that very same rule, since a person who is married to a third party can never, for that reason, marry the AFCS member. Since the exclusionary rule applies equally to the Appellant and her comparator, there is no differential treatment and no discrimination."
"6. …(a) it is unnecessary for the purposes of establishing that the non-formalised relationship was substantial and exclusive; (b) replicating a formality of marriage is inconsistent with the scheme's overarching objective of enfranchising those who fail to comply with such legal formalities; and (c) it would be disproportionately harsh to withhold benefits from those who have lost a breadwinner for want of compliance with a technicality."
(E) The Proceedings
(F) The Grounds of Appeal
"1. Upper Tribunal Judge Mitchell failed properly to identify the aim of the impugned exclusionary rule in article 30 of the Armed Forces and Reserve Forces (Compensation Scheme) Order 2011 (which disentitles adult dependants who have not divorced an ex-partner from the benefits of the compensation scheme) in assessing its compatibility with Article 14 (read with Article 1 of the First Protocol) of the European Convention on Human Rights ('Ground 1').
2. The learned UT Judge failed in form or substance to apply the required four-stage domestic proportionality test as required by Supreme Court authority, including Brewster v Northern Ireland Local Government Officers' Superannuation Committee [2017] UKSC 8, [2017] 1 WLR 519 ('Ground 2').
3. The learned UT Judge erred in applying the Court of Appeal's analysis of the proportionality of a previous compensation scheme in Radcliffe v Secretary of State for Defence [2009] EWCA Civ 39 ('Ground 3')."
Ground 4 then states shortly the alleged breach of Article 14, read with A1P1.
"55. …
(i) As explained above, the general intention was to ensure that, where members were prepared to meet the cost, unmarried partners would be able to claim under the AFCS (or other schemes modernised in that way) where they were in a relationship akin to marriage.
(ii) As such, the introduction of an exclusionary rule, by which unmarried partners would be prevented from claiming where they were married to another person, is fundamentally in harmony with this aim. That is because, for reasons given, claimants are automatically excluded from making a claim as married partners if already married to another person other than the scheme member, by simple operation of the rules governing the validity of marriages. So to disallow a claim by an unmarried person in circumstances where they are still married to other persons, far from being discriminatory, is fundamentally in harmony with the intention of allowing claims by persons in a relationship akin to marriage.
(iii) Beyond this, the exclusionary rule is a bright line, workable rule which does not rely overly on the exercise of discretion by officials and creates legitimate limits on the overall costs of the scheme."
(G) The Arguments and my Conclusions
"67. For the reasons earlier given, I consider that the objective of the particular provisions in the 2009 Regulations which are involved here must have been to remove the difference in treatment between a long-standing cohabitant and a married or civil partner of a scheme member. To suggest that, in furtherance of that objective, a requirement that the surviving cohabitant must be nominated by the scheme member justified the limitation of the claimant's article 14 right is, at least, highly questionable. Be that as it may, I consider that there is no rational connection between the objective and the imposition of the nomination requirement and that this also fails to meet the third and fourth standards in Lord Reed JSC's formulation."[1]
"34. It surely must be the case that the Regulations were geared to eliminate unwarranted differences of treatment between married or civil partner survivors on the one hand and, on the other hand, those unmarried long-term partners who were in a stable relationship with the scheme member before death. Given DENI's acceptance that the provision of a survivor benefit engages A1P1 and that the claimant has the requisite status to rely on article 14, unwarranted (ie unjustified) difference of treatment (ie discrimination) would bring it into breach of its Convention obligations if such unequal treatment was not eradicated. In my view, DENI simply cannot be heard to say that elimination of unjustified difference of treatment between, on the one hand, the survivor of a scheme member who establishes that they were in a stable long-term relationship with that member and, on the other, a married or civil partner of a scheme member was not the aim of the inclusion of unmarried partners within the survivors' entitlement. This must have been its objective and, expressed in that way, it is no more than a rephrasing of the judge's formulation of the aim.
35. The error of DENI's submission on this point and, with respect, Higgins LJ's characterisation of the aim of the Regulations on this aspect is to confuse the aim with the means employed to achieve it. Permitting some cohabitants in certain defined circumstances to obtain the same pension provision as married or civil partner survivors is the way in which unjustified discrimination is avoided. It is not an end in itself. The essential question, therefore, is whether imposing a nomination requirement in fact conduces to unwarranted difference of treatment or to its removal."
"5. …Personal characteristics" is not a precise expression and to my mind a binary approach to its meaning is unhelpful. "Personal characteristics" are more like a series of concentric circles. The most personal characteristics are those which are innate, largely immutable, and closely connected with an individual's personality: gender, sexual orientation, pigmentation of skin, hair and eyes, congenital disabilities. Nationality, language, religion and politics may be almost innate (depending on a person's family circumstances at birth) or may be acquired (though some religions do not countenance either apostates or converts); but all are regarded as important to the development of an individual's personality (they reflect, it might be said, important values protected by articles 8, 9 and 10 of the Convention). Other acquired characteristics are further out in the concentric circles; they are more concerned with what people do, or with what happens to them, than with who they are; but they may still come within article 14 (Lord Neuberger instances military status, residence or domicile, and past employment in the KGB). Like him, I would include homelessness as falling within that range, whether or not it is regarded as a matter of choice (it is often the culmination of a series of misfortunes that overwhelm an individual so that he or she can no longer cope). The more peripheral or debateable any suggested personal characteristic is, the less likely it is to come within the most sensitive area where discrimination is particularly difficult to justify."
Thus, Mr Buley argued, the Minister's task in justifying any discrimination in the present case becomes less onerous, because Mrs Langford's status is to be seen as being on the "outer edge of Lord Walker's concentric circles" in the passage just quoted.
55. I am prepared to accept for the purpose of this appeal that the test to be applied is that of "manifestly without reasonable foundation". Whether that test requires adjustment to cater for the situation where the proffered reasons are the result of deliberation after the decision under challenge has been made may call for future debate. Where the state authorities are seen to be applying "their direct knowledge of their society and its needs" on an ex post facto basis, a rather more inquiring eye may need to be cast on the soundness of the decision. Since it does not affect the outcome of this appeal, however, I am content that the "without reasonable foundation" formula should be taken to apply in this instance."
In his conclusion on the test for proportionality, Lord Kerr summed up the matter thus (paragraphs 66):
"66. The test for the proportionality of interference with a Convention right or, as in this case, the claimed justification for a difference in treatment, is now well settled: see the judgments of Lord Wilson JSC in R (Aguilar Quila) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (AIRE Centre intervening) [2012] 1 AC 621, para 45, Lord Sumption JSC in Bank Mellat v HM Treasury (No 2) [2014] AC 700, para 20 and Lord Reed JSC in Bank Mellat, at para 74. As Lord Reed JSC said:
"it is necessary to determine (1) whether the objective of the measure is sufficiently important to justify the limitation of a protected right, (2) whether the measure is rationally connected to the objective, (3) whether a less intrusive measure could have been used without unacceptably compromising the achievement of the objective, and (4) whether, balancing the severity of the measure's effects on the rights of the persons to whom it applies against the importance of the objective, to the extent that the measure will contribute to its achievement, the former outweighs the latter …"
Here, then, while working on the basis of the test being one of MWRF, Lord Kerr returned to the fourfold test stated by Lord Sumption and Lord Reed in Bank Mellat v HM Treasury (No. 2) [2012] 1 AC 700 at paragraphs 20 and 74.
"55. This court has been proceeding down two different paths in its search for the proper test by which to assess the justification under article 14 for an economic measure introduced by the democratically empowered arms of the state. In retrospect this duality has been unhelpful. I regret having contributed to it.
56. The considerations which have informed the mapping of both paths is best explained by two citations. First, from the judgment of Lord Hope of Craighead in In re G (Adoption: Unmarried Couple) [2009] AC 173, para 48:
"Cases about discrimination in an area of social policy … will always be appropriate for judicial scrutiny. The constitutional responsibility in this area of our law resides with the courts. The more contentious the issue is, the greater the risk is that some people will be discriminated against in ways that engage their Convention rights. It is for the courts to see that this does not happen. It is with them that the ultimate safeguard against discrimination rests."
Second, from the judgment of Lord Reed JSC in the first benefit cap case [2015] 1 WLR 1449:
"92. Finally, it has been explained many times that the Human Rights Act 1998 entails some adjustment of the respective constitutional roles of the courts, the executive and the legislature, but does not eliminate the differences between them: differences, for example, in relation to their composition, their expertise, their accountability and their legitimacy. It therefore does not alter the fact that certain matters are by their nature more suitable for determination by Government or Parliament than by the courts. In so far as matters of that nature have to be considered by the courts when deciding whether executive action or legislation is compatible with Convention rights, that is something which the courts can and do properly take into account, by giving weight to the determination of those matters by the primary decision-maker.
"93. That consideration is relevant to these appeals, since the question of proportionality involves controversial issues of social and economic policy, with major implications for public expenditure. The determination of those issues is pre-eminently the function of democratically elected institutions. It is therefore necessary for the court to give due weight to the considered assessment made by those institutions."
57. Lord Reed JSC then completed para 93 by adding "Unless manifestly without reasonable foundation, their assessment should be respected."
"58. The appropriateness of an inquiry into whether the adverse effects of certain measures are manifestly without reasonable foundation is firmly rooted in the jurisprudence of the ECtHR. In James v United Kingdom (1986) 8 EHRR 123, in which it rejected the challenge to the legislation in England and Wales for leasehold enfranchisement, that court, in plenary session, held at para 46 that it should respect the judgment of the national legislature as to what was in the public interest unless it was manifestly without reasonable foundation. And in Stec v United Kingdom (2006) 43 EHRR 47, para 52, which it repeated word for word in Carson v United Kingdom 51 EHRR 13, para 61 the Grand Chamber, addressing complaints of discrimination arising out of the rules for entitlement to social security benefits, held that it should respect the national legislature's determination of where the public interest lay when devising economic or social measures unless it was manifestly without reasonable foundation. It explained that this more benign approach to the establishment of justification for the adverse effects of a rule flowed from the margin of appreciation which was wide in this area of decision-making.
59. I now accept that the weight of authority in our court mandates inquiry into the justification of the adverse effects of rules for entitlement to welfare benefits by reference to whether they are manifestly without reasonable foundation."
"61. …In para 52 he held that the first three stages (which require the establishment of a legitimate aim of the measure, of a rational connection of the measure to the aim and of an inability to achieve it less intrusively) could be addressed by whether the contentions in support of the measure were manifestly without reasonable foundation; but that the fourth stage (which requires the establishment of a fair balance between all the interests in play) fell for decision by the court, although it might pay significant respect to the balance favoured by those responsible for the measure."
However, Lord Wilson went on to note the court's decision in R (MA) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2016] 1 WLR 4550, the "bedroom tax case", and said (at paragraph 63):
"63. Almost two years later the court delivered its judgments in the bedroom tax case [2016] 1 WLR 4550, cited in para 30 above. Two of the three conjoined appeals concerned claims that the effect of rules for the computation of housing benefit was to discriminate against disabled people in the enjoyment of their rights under article 8 and/or A1P1. Giving the main judgment, Lord Toulson JSC recorded in para 28 the primary contention of the claimants in the first appeal as having been that the Court of Appeal had erred in asking whether the treatment of which they complained was manifestly without reasonable foundation. In paras 29–38 he then at length set out reasons in support of his conclusion, in which all the other members of the court concurred, that the Court of Appeal had not erred when, in assessing justification for the effect of the rules on the claimants, it had asked itself that single question."
"65. …I reached too quickly for the observations of Lord Mance JSC in the Wales case. For by then there was—and there still remains—clear authority both in the Humphreys case [2012] 1 WLR 1545 and in the bedroom tax case [2016] 1 WLR 4550 for the proposition that, at any rate in relation to the Government's need to justify what would otherwise be a discriminatory effect of a rule governing entitlement to welfare benefits, the sole question is whether it is manifestly without reasonable foundation. Let there be no future doubt about it."
"66. How does the criterion of whether the adverse treatment was manifestly without reasonable foundation fit together with the burden on the state to establish justification, explained in para 50 above? For the phraseology of the criterion demonstrates that it is something for the complainant, rather than for the state, to establish. The rationalisation has to be that, when the state puts forward its reasons for having countenanced the adverse treatment, it establishes justification for it unless the complainant demonstrates that it was manifestly without reasonable foundation. But reference in this context to any burden, in particular to a burden of proof, is more theoretical than real. The court will proactively examine whether the foundation is reasonable; and it is fanciful to contemplate its concluding that, although the state had failed to persuade the court that it was reasonable, the claim failed because the complainant had failed to persuade the court that it was manifestly unreasonable."
In my judgment, this paragraph gives lower courts (including us on this appeal) a clear practical guide as to how one should approach the MWRF test in any individual case.
"(iii) Test for justification
110. The argument that a less demanding test should be applied than "manifestly without reasonable foundation" (or its hard-to-escape acronym "MWRF") was most fully articulated by Mr Wise for DA. For the reasons given by Lord Wilson JSC (issue 7) I agree with him that this argument must be rejected, and that the application of the MWRF should be regarded as beyond "future doubt"."
"118. Lord Kerr JSC goes further and would hold, in agreement with Mr Wise's submission, that the MWRF test should not be applied to the final stage of the proportionality analysis. Although he does not in terms explain how he feels able to disregard the authority of MA [2016] 1 WLR 4550, he emphasises that the technique applied to that question by the national court is to be distinguished from that applied in Strasbourg at the supra-national level. However, the fact that the Strasbourg court uses the MWRF test when applying the margin of appreciation and that the same margin of appreciation does not necessarily apply at the national level does not entail that domestic courts cannot also use the MWRF test. It is being used as a means of allowing the political branches of the constitution an appropriately generous measure of leeway when assessing the proportionality of measures concerning economic and social policy. The seven-Justice decision in MA surely settled the point for the foreseeable future."
Mr Buttler said that paragraph 118 did not indicate that the "four stage" test, as applied in Brewster, was wrong. With respect to Mr Buttler, I do not think that this can be right; it seems to me that Lord Carnwath was there emphasising his disagreement with Lord Kerr's dissenting judgment in the DA case and re-stating his agreement with Lord Wilson on the point. In Brewster, by contrast, Lord Kerr had merely assumed (without deciding) that the MWRF test applied and approached the case on that basis.
"89. Although it is not immediately obvious how the "manifestly without reasonable foundation" test relates to the assessment of proportionality that the court must undertake, the explanation may be that the court is required to ask whether the difference in treatment is manifestly disproportionate to a legitimate aim. This would accord with the statement of the European Court in Blecic v Croatia (2005) 41 EHRR 13, para 65, that it will accept the judgment of the domestic authorities in socio-economic matters "unless that judgment is manifestly without reasonable foundation, that is, unless the measure employed is manifestly disproportionate to the legitimate aim pursued" (emphasis added). It also reflects how the Supreme Court applied the test in the recent case of In re McLaughlin [2018] UKSC 48; [2018] 1 WLR 4250, at paras 38-39 (Baroness Hale) and para 83 (Lord Hodge)."
This judgment was delivered a few weeks before the Supreme Court's judgments in DA.
"59. …No independent evaluation of the need for this particular procedure was undertaken. It was not present to the mind of the decision-maker that a wider discretion was available because the status of those affected was not "an inherent or immutable personal characteristic". For all these reasons, while this is a factor that should not be left out of account, it does not weigh heavily in the assessment as to whether the discrimination is "justifiable and proportionate to its objective"."
"Change of Policy
Introduction
1. This instruction informs you of a change of policy announced by the Government on 15 Sep 03 and effective from that date, whereby attributable benefits equivalent to those available under the Armed Forces Pension Scheme (AFPS) or Reserve Forces (Attributable Benefits Etc) Regulations (RFAB) may be paid to unmarried partners where there is a substantial relationship. The purpose of this instruction is to announce details of the scheme changes ahead of a further DCI, which will provide more detailed guidance relating to the partnership nomination scheme (see para 11)."
(The nomination scheme mentioned in the final sentence seems to be a nomination requirement of the character which was found to be unjustified in Brewster.)
"Exclusive and Free to Marry – The word "exclusive" is intended to mirror the requirements in UK law that a person who is already married cannot enter into marriage with another person. Just as a person cannot be married to two people at the same time, so a scheme member and/or unmarried partner cannot be in two exclusive relationships at the same time. There would be no entitlement where either partner was in a marriage that had not been legally dissolved (is where there was a legal spouse on either side). Free to marry means that either partner is legally able to marry an individual in law (or would have been able to if you and your partner had not been the same sex). ANNEX B details those relationships which are too close to allow a marriage, or therefore an unmarried partnership. A claim would equally fail where there was a second unmarried relationship that could lay equal claim to satisfying the criteria."
"42. Arguments were also advanced to the effect that administrative costs would increase if the nomination procedure was abandoned and that actuarial predictions were easier with that procedure in place. No evidence to support those claims was presented to the Court of Appeal and the arguments were not pursued before this court. Echoes of them might be found in the printed case of DENI to the effect that "the nomination requirement is a brightline inclusionary rule of general application directed to workability and legal certainty" but again no material to establish the truth of these assertions was proffered."
(H) Outcome
Lord Justice Leggatt:
Lord Justice Baker:
Note 1 As to “Lord Reed JSC’s formulation”: see paragraph 43 of this judgment below. [Back] Note 2 This is the “small qualification” on the “status” point to which I referred in paragraph 12 above. [Back] Note 3 I note in passing, however, this Scheme and the AFPS scheme are schemes perhaps not so much related to “welfare benefits and social policy” but schemes, akin to occupational pension schemes, designed to benefit the dependent relatives of employees of a particular state employer, rather than the population as a whole – c.f. the benefits cap and the “bedroom tax” considered in DA and in MA respectively. [Back]