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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Department for Works and Pensions v Richards [2005] EWCA Crim 491 (03 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2005/491.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Crim 491 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
SITTING AT WINCHESTER
ON APPEAL FROM
LEWES CROWN COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of Court of Appeal Criminal Division
MR JUSTICE DAVID STEEL
MRS JUSTICE HALLETT
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Department for Works and Pensions |
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- v - |
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Michael Richards |
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Jan Luba QC and Kate Aubrey-Johnson for the Defendant
Hearing date: Monday 14/02/05
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Steel :
"We are writing to you because we have had to look again at your income support. We have decided that you have been paid £22,735.19 too much income support from the 8th October 1999 to the 20th February 2003. This was because you were working and did not tell us. …. You need to pay back this money. …. This does not affect any other action, including proceedings in a criminal court, which may be taken in this case. …. Please pay £22,735.19 as soon as you can."
i) The distinction between tax credit and benefit was irrational.
ii) The policy was penal as regards to the claimant.
iii) The policy led to a windfall to the State.
"26. As to the first point, in my judgment the rationale for treating tax credits and WFTC as a distinct aspect of state support for those on benefit and those on limited incomes cannot be characterised as irrational. It may be, as Mr De Mello submits, that in respect of some people it will operate so as to discourage people moving from the benefit steam to the employment stream. That said, the observation cannot be sufficient to render irrational a policy which places weight upon the concept that there is an advantage in seeking to change the perception of recipients to enable them to see advantages in the longer term, even though they may be suffering financially in the short term, and to see that there is a way forward through employment, as opposed to remaining permanently the recipients of one or other form of benefit. It can be seen that regulation 13 bears out the distinction that if you are a recipient of cash from the state in the form of benefit, then as between those benefits, there will be offsetting. But if you have moved to employment, having been on benefit, twin principles come into play. It should be the responsibility of the individual who moves to employment to disclose that the situation has changed. Secondly, disclosure should be encouraged and the availability of WFTC can act as an incentive to disclosure. I can find no basis for categorising this approach as irrational.
….
29. I turn, therefore, to ground 2; penalising the claimant. The short submission is that there are other penal sanctions which could have been adopted and brought into play, and the course which has been taken, namely determining that the whole amount of overpayment should be recovered, is penal….So far as it goes to hardship, I will come back to it. But I would observe that the momentum for the argument derives from a misconception as to the true legal position. As I have said, the recoverable amount is an overpayment to which this department of state is entitled. A notional entitlement to WFTC does not, as a matter of law, constitute a debt owed by the department to the claimant. At common law it can provide the claimant with no relief or defence at all. It should not be regarded, and it cannot be regarded, as an entitlement. That being its true character, the position falls to be determined in accordance with the discretion given to the Secretary of State to decide how far he considers it is just and fair in the circumstances to pursue its recovery.
30. The third head is windfall for the State. This, again, covers some of the ground I have already covered under the previous heading. The proposition is that, had the claimant made a claim for WFTC, she would have been entitled to receive £2,000 from, as it happens, the Inland Revenue, by way of tax credit. She has not received that sum because she did not claim it, and therefore the Treasury chest has not been reduced by that amount. Against that the Secretary of State is recovering the full amount she has obtained by way of overpayment without regard to the fact that it will be a windfall to the State. It is, in my judgment, turning the law on its head, for the reason I have given in the previous paragraph. Yet again, it really seems to me to be another way of seeking to advance the policy argument, which I have already rejected under the previous part of this judgment. The policy argument can be seen as directing and encouraging full recovery, and it is supported by regulation 13, which specifically envisages that no deduction will be made in respect of those benefits, other than the benefits which are stipulated. Further, one should not lose sight of the fact that government departments exist as independent departments. They have their own responsibilities, obligations and duties to perform, which are subject to accountability, but more than that, are subject to budget. This is common knowledge. In my judgment, it misrepresents the structural position, as well as the law, to describe this as "a windfall to the State"."
"There are no civil proceedings, instituted by a victim of the offences to which these proceedings relate, in respect of loss, injury or damages sustained in connection with the offences to which the defendant has pleaded guilty or is willing to have taken into consideration."
"The Defence submit that the Department of Works and Pensions have commenced civil proceedings which relate to the loss sustained in connection to these offences. Mr Richards has been asked to enter into an agreement to repay the overpayments and commenced repayments in April 2003 which remain ongoing."
"I can confirm that we will not be taking civil action."
"Even, I think, without assistance of the view of Newman J as expressed in R v Larusai, it would have been difficult to have avoided the conclusion that I come to which is that the mere fact that if the defendant had behaved in another more honest fashion he might have been not very much worse off and therefore the State in its overall capacity might as a result of his dishonesty be said to be only minimally worse off; that, it seems to me, is no answer to the question that I have to decide. I am concerned with how much money the defendant dishonestly obtained when it comes to sentence.
When it comes to confiscation proceedings, I am concerned with how much money again he received as a result of his dishonesty. I am not persuaded that the mere fact that if he had acted honestly he might have obtained from another Government department a sum not very much less than that which he dishonestly obtains in any way either mitigates the seriousness of the offence that he committed when one had regard to how much money he actually received, nor with regard to how much under the admittedly Draconian provisions of the confiscation proceedings he may be required to repay. For those reasons I rule against the submission made by Miss Aubrey-Johnson to the effect that I should deal with this both for sentence and confiscation proceedings as though the overall amount involved only some £3,000 odd pounds."
a) that in exercising its power under Section 71 (1B) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 the court ought to have taken into consideration the tax credit in reduction of the sum claimed; or
b) that the court wrongly failed to exercise its discretionary powers under Section 71 (1C) of that Act by way of taking account of the tax credit.
"71.-(1) Where an offender is convicted, in any proceedings before the Crown Court or a magistrates' court, of an offence of a relevant description, it shall be the duty of the court-
(a) if the prosecutor has given written notice to the court that he considers it appropriate for the court to proceed under this section….
to act as follows before sentencing or otherwise dealing with the offender in respect of that offence or any other relevant criminal conduct.
(1A) The court shall first determine whether the offender has benefited from any relevant criminal conduct.
(1B) Subject to subsection (1C) below, if the court determines that the offender has benefited from any relevant criminal conduct, it shall then-
(a) determine in accordance with subsection (6) below the amount to be recovered in his case by virtue of this section, and
(b) make an order under this section ordering the offender to pay that amount.
(1C) If, in a case falling within subsection (1B) above, the court is satisfied that a victim of any relevant criminal conduct has instituted, or intends to institute, civil proceedings against the defendant in respect of loss, injury or damage sustained in connection with that conduct-
(a) the court shall have a power, instead of a duty, to make an order under this section;
(b) subsection (6) below shall not apply for determining the amount to be recovered in that case by virtue of this section; and
(c) where the court makes an order in exercise of that power, the sum required to be paid under that order shall be of such amount, not exceeding the amount which (but for paragraph (b) above) would apply by virtue of subsection (6) below, as the court thinks fit…..
(4) For the purposes of this Part of this Act a person benefits from an offence if he obtains property as a result of or in connection with its commission and his benefit is the value of the property so obtained.
(5) Where a person derives a pecuniary advantage as a result of or in connection with the commission of an offence, he is to be treated for the purposes of this Part of this Act as if he had obtained as a result of or in connection with the commission of the offence a sum of money equal to the value of the pecuniary advantage.
(6) Subject to subsection (1C) above, the sum which an order made by a court under this section requires an offender to pay shall be equal to-
(a) the benefit in respect of which it is made; or
(b) the amount appearing to the court to be the amount that might be realised at the time the order is made,
whichever is the less.
(a) it would have been an entitlement in the absence of fraudulent conduct, and
(b) that such entitlement derived from the State when viewed as one entity, albeit from two arms of it.
"There are many situations in which it can be said that the amount to which a defendant has benefited should be reduced by reference to what might have happened if he had acted in an entirely different way. It could be said of the burglar or the drug dealer that if he had only worked in an honest fashion he would have earned very much less than in fact was the case, but it is not ever said in those circumstances that the extent to which he has dishonestly benefited should be notionally reduced. Why is it different in this case? Because … it is simply that one arm of the State, namely the department of Work and Pensions has lost, whereas another, the Inland Revenue, has notionally gained by not having to pay out or allow by way of credit and additional amount….(p. 4)
"I am not persuaded that the mere fact that if he had acted honestly he might have obtained from another Government department a sum not very much less than that which he dishonestly obtains[ed] in any way mitigates the seriousness of the offences that he committed when one has regard to how much money he actually received, nor with regard to how much under the admittedly Draconian provisions of the confiscation proceedings he may be required to repay": (p. 6).
" These provisions show that, when considering the measure of the benefit obtained by an offender in terms of section 71 (4), the court is concerned simply with the value of the property to him at the time when he obtained it or, if it is greater, at the material time. In particular, where the offender has property representing in his hands the property which he obtained, the value to be considered is the value of the substitute property "but disregarding any charging order". Except therefore, where the actual property obtained by the offender has subsequently increased in value, the court is simply concerned with its value to the offender "when he obtained it". It therefore makes no difference if, after he obtains it, the property is destroyed or damaged in a fire or is seized by customs officers: for confiscation order purposes the relevant value is still the value of the property to the offender when he obtained it. Subsequent events are to be ignored, in just the same way as any charging order is to be ignored under subsection (6). Such a scheme has the merit of simplicity. If in some circumstances it can operate in a penal or even a draconian manner, then that may not be out of place in a scheme for stripping criminals of the benefits of their crimes. That is a matter for the judgment of the legislature which has adopted a similar approach in enacting legislation for the confiscation of the proceeds of drug trafficking. In that context the courts have consistently held that "payments" received in connection with drug trafficking mean gross payments rather than net profit and that the "proceeds" of drug trafficking mean the gross sale proceeds, rather than the net profit after deducting the cost of the drug trafficking operation….": per Lord Rodger at p. 61