CIS_119_1994
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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 >> [1994] UKSSCSC CIS_119_1994 (09 November 1994) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1994/CIS_119_1994.html Cite as: [1994] UKSSCSC CIS_119_1994 |
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[1994] UKSSCSC CIS_119_1994 (09 November 1994)
R(IS) 11/95
Mr. J. Mitchell CIS/119/1994
9.11.94
Housing costs - interest on second mortgage taken out to enable claimant to repay interest free loans applied to purchase his home - whether "eligible interest "
The claimant purchased his home with the aid of a mortgage and £23,000 in interest free loans from friends. Later the friends requested re-payment. The claimant paid them by means of a further advance from his building society. He subsequently lost his employment and claimed IS. His housing costs were assessed on the basis of the original mortgage only. The social security appeal tribunal disallowed the claimant's appeal from the decision of the adjudication officer to take account of the further advance of £23,000. The claimant appealed to the Commissioner.
Held that:
the interest on the replacement loan could be met even though the replaced loans were interest free. It was significant that in paragraph 7(3)(b) of Schedule 3 to the Income Support (General) Regulations the word "the" had been omitted between "that" and "interest". It had been submitted on behalf of the claimant that the word "any" was to be read between those words and this created no infelicity. It had never been contended that the eligible interest on a replacement loan must be restricted in percentage terms to the interest which was payable on the replaced loan
The Commissioner allowed the appeal.
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
(1) The aforesaid decision of the appeal tribunal is erroneous in point of law and is set aside.
(2) Without making fresh or further findings of fact, I can give the decision which I consider that the appeal tribunal should have given.
(3) Into the assessment of his income support from 3 December 1991 the claimant is entitled to have carried housing costs reflecting the interest ("eligible interest") on a loan which stood at £59,000 on that date.
(4) The adjudication officer and the claimant/the claimant's representative shall endeavour to agree the arrears of benefit thrown up by this decision. Should such agreement not be reached, either party shall have liberty to apply to the Commissioner for the restoration of this appeal for the final determination of those arrears.
(a) The claimant was born in 1958 and lives with his wife in a house to which I shall refer as "No. 23".
(b) The claimant bought No. 23 in 1986. The purchase price was £67,000. Mortgage Express advanced £35,000 by way of mortgage. Four friends, or relatives, made to the claimant four separate loans to a total of £23,000 and that sum, too, went towards the purchase price. The balance was paid out of the claimant's own funds. None of the four personal loans carried interest and none was the subject of a fixed term. The agreement was that repayment would be made if and when demanded (the claimant is a Muslim and that sort of arrangement is in no way unusual in Muslim society)
(c) Mortgage Express did not have an office in the locality of No. 23. If a postal repayment instalment arrived late, an extra charge of £20 was made. The claimant decided to change his mortgagee. On 24 August 1990 a mortgage was executed whereby the Woolwich Building Society advanced £36,000 on the security of No. 23 and the Mortgage Express mortgage was discharged.
(d) Throughout the foregoing transactions the claimant was in regular employment and able to meet his commitments.
(e) In July/August 1991, due, no doubt, to the recession, the claimant's friends asked for the repayment of the four loans. The claimant was in no way embarrassed by "negative equity". He went back to the Woolwich seeking a further advance of £23,000. He was successful. The letter of offer was dated, or was delivered on, 7 August 1991.
(f) The claimant did not immediately accept that offer. At about that time he went to Pakistan for a short holiday. His employers closed for two weeks in August and knew, I think, that the claimant was going to Pakistan for his holiday. But the claimant's confirmation of his return flight was mishandled in Pakistan. He was a few days late in getting back to England and when he turned up for work, he was dismissed for unauthorised absence.
(g) On 18 September 1991 the claimant accepted the offer of loan by the Woolwich. The further mortgage was executed on 8 November 1991. The whole of the advance of £23,000 was devoted to paying off the four creditors (the papers contain the written acknowledgement of each of the four of them).
(h) But by then the claimant was out of work. He claimed unemployment benefit. That was awarded from 24 November 1991. On 3 December 1991 he made his claim for income support. In part 9 of the claim form he entered £58,000 as the size of "the original mortgage or loan". Various enquiries were made. Income support was awarded as from 3 December 1991, but housing costs were assessed on the basis of a loan of £36,000 (cf. sub-para. (c) above). It is common ground that it was not until 13 May 1993 that the adjudication officer issued a formal decision excluding the £23,000 from the appropriate loan total. That is the decision which lies at the forensic root of these proceedings. And the sole live issue in this appeal is whether that £23,000 was rightly excluded.
"(3) Subject to sub-paragraphs (3A) to (6), in this paragraph 'eligible interest' means the amount of interest on a loan, whether or not secured by way of a mortgage or, in Scotland, under a heritable security, taken out to defray money applied for the purpose of-
(a) acquiring an interest in the dwelling occupied as the home; or
(b) paying off another loan but only to the extent that interest on that other loan would have been eligible interest had the loan not been paid off."
The relatively few words in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b) have given rise to innumerable questions and many decisions of the Commissioner. To me, at least, it seems surprising that the Commissioner has, apparently, not yet pronounced upon the applicability of (b) to cases where "that other loan" was interest free. (For most of their life the Supplementary Benefit (Requirements) Regulations 1983 had no equivalent provision; but virtually identical words featured as regulation 17(1)(b) thereof with effect from 26 January 1987.)
" ... but only to the extent that any interest on that other loan would have been eligible interest ... etc."
The tribunal did not accept that submission; but there and then the chairman granted leave to appeal to the Commissioner. It is only right that I should congratulate the chairman upon the exemplary detail in which was completed the form AT3. The papers in the bundle are relatively sparse. But for the chairman's careful note, I should have had great difficulty in reconstructing the narrative.
"I submit that the provisions of sub-paragraph 7(3)(b) above restrict the amount of eligible interest on the later loan to the interest payable on the first ones, that is, nil."
I do not think that the adjudication officer was there intending to do more than to submit that if no interest was payable on the replaced loan, then no interest could be eligible in respect of the replacement loan. At the hearing before me, Mr. Dunlop readily agreed that if the claimant's friends had lent the money at an annual interest rate of ½%, then there would never have been any query raised about treating as eligible the whole of the interest charged by the Woolwich on the £23,000 (cf. para. 2(g) above). And although I did not press him on the reductio ad quasi absurdum, Mr. Dunlop was inclined to agree that the like would obtain if each lender had stipulated for one peppercorn a year by way of interest. So there has certainly never been behind the legislation any principle to the effect that the liability of the income support fund is not to be increased in consequence of the replacement of one loan by another. And if we get down to one peppercorn, why should we draw the line at nil?
"... but only to the extent that the interest on that other loan would have been ... etc."
In some ways, that is the wording which would spring most readily to mind. I cannot think that the omission of "the" was fortuitous. Certainly its omission accords with what we are told was the intention of the "policy-makers" (see para. 5 above). It is tempting, but, in my view, misleading, to dwell upon the concluding words "had the loan not been paid off". Certainly, if one asks the question, "What would the eligible interest have been had the loan not been paid off?" the answer must be "Nil". But the question is, in the context of the whole of sub-paragraph (b), misplaced. It ignores the omission of the word "the" to which I have just drawn attention, and, in consequence, it begs the issue. It is my confident view that the words "had the loan not been paid off" are there simply to assist in the identifying of the type of loan of which replacement is recognised. For clarity, I repeat the whole of (b):
"(b) paying off another loan but only to the extent that interest on that other loan would have been eligible interest had the loan not been paid off."
The basic type of loan which gives rise to "eligible interest" is covered by sub-paragraph (a) i.e. a loan taken out to defray money applied for the purpose of "acquiring an interest in the dwelling occupied as the home". The draftsman did not repeat those words in (b). He defined the replaced loan as one on which interest would have been eligible interest had that loan not been paid off. As I have indicated, I do not think that the words "had the loan not been paid off" assist, one way or the other, in the determination of the issue before me. To put it another way, those words would create no infelicity were, as Mr. Griffith suggested, the word "any" to be read between "that" and "interest".
Date: 9 November 1994 (signed) Mr. J. Mitchell
Commissioner