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UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [1993] UKSSCSC CIS_671_1992 (19 March 1993) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1993/CIS_671_1992.html Cite as: [1993] UKSSCSC CIS_671_1992 |
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[1993] UKSSCSC CIS_671_1992 (19 March 1993)
RAS/SH/l
Commissioner's File CIS/671/1992
SOCIAL SEC URITY ACT 1986
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION ACT 1992
APPEAL FROM DECISION OF SOCIAL SEC URITY APPEAL TRIBU NAL ON A
QUESTION O LAW
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
Name:
Social Security Appeal Tribunal:
Case No: C
[ORAL HEARING]
"(5) Where a person claiming an income-related benefit ,s a member of a family, the income and capital j of any member. of Ehat family shall except _n prescribed circumstances, be treated as the income and capital of that person."
' family" is, so far as relevant, defined by section 20 of the Actas "a married or unmarried couple". And "married couple" ' is defined, by the same section as meaning "a man and woman who are married to each other and are members of the same household".
An adjudication. officer turned down Mr 's claim because his capital resources when aggregated with those of his wife exceeded the prescribed maximum by about :.3,000. Mr appealed to the tribunal and won, the tribunal concluding that in the circumstances to which I have referred the Gilfillans were not "members of the same household" and therefore their resources did not fall to be aggregated. The adjudication officer now appeals to the Commissioner. At the hearing of the appeal. he was represented by Mr L Scoon of the Solicitor's Office, Departments of Health and Social Security. The claimant did not appear and was not represented.
"Mr. and Mrs. are both patients in 's Rest Home which caters for the elderly mentally ill. They share a room but have no furniture of their own and there is little or no privacy as in addition to staff other patients wander in and out at will. Also there is no normal basis of a household in terms that neither husband or wife have any control over their accommodation or affairs and neither do they have the relationship of man and wife in the normal conception of that description. They have between them capital of L11,000.00."
And the reasons they gave were -
"Claims have been made for Income Support on behalf of both Mr:. and Mrs. but this appeal relates to the claim of Mr. and its refusal on the grounds that Mr. and Mrs. as a married couple have between. them joint savings of -£11,0000.00 so that if they are members of the same household then they will come with-in the description and effect of Section 20(11) of the Social Security Act 1986. In support of this contention it is accented that the couple occupy the same room in the same Rest Home but that apart ' all other attributes of householders are miss'-::g. They occupy this particular accommodation. because they were placed there by their family, they are both mentally handicapped as a result of illness/age and have little or no control over their affairs, they have no exclusive rights of occupation of their accommodation and they do not run or control their living space. Sadly they do not even recognise each other as man and wife but Simply as another person who is familiar. They are not members of the. same or any other household."
There is no definition of " household" to the legislation and whether or not persons who live in the same place do so as members of a household or the same household is very much a question of fact seeRLSB 4/83, Simons v Pizzey (1997) 2 ALL ER 432 an a London Borough of Hackney v Ezedinma ( 1981 ) 3 All ER 438. I should say that there are reported and unreported decisions on "household" both in relation to supplementary benefit and income support but while they consider whether persons are in their own or in someone else's household they do not, as it seems to me, throw much or any light on the essential meaning of that term. Simmons v. Pizzey (H.R.) does. That case concerned the Chiswick Women's Aid, a charity which provided a house of temporary refuge for battered women and their children. The occupants or the house lived communally, sleeping in dormitories and contributing to a common fund for food and other outgoings. The question, or at any rate one question, was whether the residents formed a ' single household' within the, meaning of section 58(l) of the Housing Act 1969. On that question Lord Hailsham, who gave the fullest speech on the point, said:
"Admittedly the expression 'household' is not given a statutory definition in the Housing Acts. The Oxford Dictionary gives: 'The inmates of a house collectively; an organised family, including- servants or attendants, dwelling in a house; a domestic establishment.' this gives some colour to the appellant's case. The trouble is that the first part of the definition would coyer the inmates of any house and deprive the section of any meaning at all. The Words and Phrases cites the opinions of Branson J and Clausen L J in English v. Western; the Australian Matrimonial Causes Act 1959, and the observations of Rand J in Wawanesa Insurance Co y. Bell and Bell and Calverlv v Gore District Mutual Fire Insurance Co. I do not find any of these references particularly helpful except to make clear to me that I would have supposed in any case that both the expression 'household' and membership of it is a question of fact and degree, there being no certain indicia the presence or absence of any of which is by itself conclusive.'
And he concluded, by reference to three factors in particular, gnat the residents in the Refuge were not a 'single household'. those factors were the size of the group, the fact that the group was ever changing as those seeking refuge came and went, and the fact that the home was a temporary place Of refuge for what lord Hailsham described as 'fortuitous arrivals".
It seems to me from, tine dictionary definition o_ ' "household" referred to in the Pizzey case and indeed as a matter of what might be said to be obvious, that something more than mere presence in a place is necessary before those present can be said to constitute a household; there must be, I should have thought some collectivity some communality, some organization. As was said in Santos v Santos (1972) 2 AIIER247 at 255 "household" is ".... a word which essentially refers to people held together by a particular kind of tie, even if temporarily separated . . . . " . Furthermore, it appears to be of the of essence of "household" that there is something which can be identified as a domestic establishment. In CSS/463/1986 it was said (para 10) "It is a question of fact in each case which turns on the evidence concerning the domestic establishment maintained the test is sociality not structive". So one might have a domestic establishment in for example a hotel or boarding house – but there must be a domestic establishment.
With these points in mind, I would take the view that the tribunal cannot be criticised let alone said to be wrong in law for concluding that the ' mere presence in the same room in the Home in circumstances where they did nothing for themselves, or for each other or collectively, did not turn them into a household of their own. But did all the residents of the home, patients and staff, constitute a household such that it could be said that the were members of that same household? I repeat that that is a question of fact and the tribunal concluded, admittedly without going into the matter in depth, that the were not, in the circumstances, either members of their own or some other household. Now Pizzey made it clear that there maybe circumstances where a group of people living together in a house do not do so as members of a household. There, as I have said, the indicators were said to be the numbers, the fluctuating nature of the 'population' and its impermanence. In the present case all those factors might be said to be present at least to some degree.
(Signed) R A Sanders Commissioner
Dated: 19 March 1993