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UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions


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Cite as: [1996] UKSSCSC CIS_8475_1995

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    [1996] UKSSCSC CIS_8475_1995 (21 May 1996)

     

    Commissioner's File: CIS 8475/95

    Mr Commissioner Howell QC

    21 May 1996

    SOCIAL SECURITY CONTRIBUTIONS AND BENEFITS ACT 1992

    SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION ACT 1992

    APPEAL FROM DECISION OF APPEAL TRIBUNAL ON A QUESTION OF LAW

    DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER

    Claim for: Income Support

    Appeal Tribunal: Plymouth SSAT

    [ORAL HEARING]

    1. The decision of the social security appeal tribunal given on 3 July 1995 on

    this claim for income support was in my judgment erroneous in point of law,

    because the tribunal omitted to deal with one material issue of fact which

    emerged in the course of the hearing before them. I set their decision aside and

    give the decision I consider appropriate in the light of the facts they found,

    supplemented by my own findings.

    2. The appeal was brought by the adjudication officer against the tribunal

    decision awarding the claimant income support from 6 January 1995 on the ground

    that his capital resources were below the prescribed limit. The main issue is

    whether they were right in holding that a sum of £35,000 attributable to the

    proceeds of sale of his former home and held in a bank deposit at the date of

    his claim, fell to be disregarded under para 3 of schedule 10, Income Support

    (General) Regulations 1987 SI 1967.
    3. I held an oral hearing of the appeal at which Miss Juliet Hartridge of the

    DSS Solicitor's Department appeared for the adjudication officer. The claimant

    appeared and was represented by Mr Vincent Wiltson of Devon Welfare Rights Unit.

    I am grateful to all three of them for their help on the points of law and fact

    discussed at the hearing.

    4. The claimant is now aged 36 and is married with three young children. Until

    June 1994 he and his wife owned their own house, but then sold it as they

    planned to move to Torquay where he was working. Unhappily, in the autumn of

    1994 they were told (after selling the house) that his job in Torquay would not

    be lasting beyond the end of the year. Without employment he could not get a

    mortgage and it quickly became obvious that they could not afford to move there

    at all. He was unable to find other work, and claimed income support in early

    January 1995. He and his family were then living in rented accommodation in the

    same neighbourhood as their old house. As he made clear in the claim form, they

    still had the £35,000 sale money from it on deposit; and planned to use this to

    acquire another home as soon as they could.

    5. It being out of the question to buy a suitable house in Torquay for £35,000,

    the claimant and his wife decided to buy a small plot of land in their old

    neighbourhood and put a bungalow on it. Prices were cheaper there and this

    provided an affordable way of getting a new home without a mortgage. By the date

    of his income support claim, they had found a suitable plot with an old building

    on it and obtained planning permission to take it down and replace it with a

    bungalow. The claimant had also arranged with a local builder to do those parts

    of the work he was unable to manage himself (he is a qualified plumber). In

    response to a supplementary list of questions from the department the claimant

    explained on 5 February 1995 (T32) that he was by then in course of purchasing

    the land, the documents were in the hands of his solicitor and the purchase was

    going through. He had also accepted a quote from the builder for the

    construction of the new property in accordance with detailed estimates which he

    enclosed.

    6. By para 3 of sch 10 to the income support regulations cited above, there is

    to be excluded from the reckoning of a claimant's capital assets under reg.

    46(2):

    "3. Any sum directly attributable to the proceeds of sale of any premises

    formerly occupied by the claimant as his home which is to be used for the

    purchase of other premises intended for such occupation within 26 weeks of

    the date of sale or such longer period as is reasonable in the circumstances

    to enable the claimant to complete the purchase."

    7. The claimant sought to have the £35,000 sale money from his previous house

    disregarded in calculating his capital for income support, on the ground that it

    would all be needed to pay for the new home and he had it earmarked for that

    purpose, so that it fell within the exclusion. The adjudication officer however

    rejected the claim on the ground that the claimant had more than £8,000 of

    capital which could not be disregarded under para 3. His reason was that the

    claimant was not purchasing his new home. In his words (page 41):

    "The crucial word is "purchase". Your circumstances are rather different.

    Instead of purchasing a home (buying a house/bungalow/flat) you are building

    a home. Building a home is not mentioned in our Regulations and therefore

    the monies being used for that purpose cannot be disregarded."

    8. The claimant appealed, on the ground succinctly set on his behalf by his

    Citizens Advice Bureau in their letter at page T43, that if indeed the matter of

    "building" a house was not mentioned in the regulations he was still purchasing

    both the materials and the labour to construct his house, so that what he was

    doing did amount to a "purchase". This approach to the meaning of the regulation

    was accepted and adopted by the tribunal, which on 3 July 1995 allowed the

    claimant's appeal and held that income support was payable to him from 6 January

    1995.
    9. The basis of the tribunal's decision was that "the purchase of other premises

    intended for such occupation" included as a matter of common sense "not only

    premises in all its widest possible meaning, but also land and the property to

    be built on that land. Thus, for example, if the claimant had purchased a

    property which was in the course of erection, or indeed was intended to be

    erected, and had to use the proceeds of sale in that way, plainly this would be

    covered by [paragraph] 3 and that would have been the intention of Parliament.

    It was only by chance that in fact the claimant chose to buy the land separately

    from the premises......the ordinary sense [of the words used] included a

    property or premises, either in existence or in the course of construction, or

    indeed intended to be constructed, as a result of the transaction referred to."

    10. Although not recorded in the tribunal's findings it is common ground, and I

    so find, that the claimant had completed the purchase of the plot of land some

    two months before the tribunal hearing. At that time it had on it an old wooden

    bungalow which had been used for holiday lets but was not suitable for permanent

    occupation, although some drainage and other services existed which could be

    reused. By the date of the tribunal hearing, the claimant had used £23,000 from

    his deposit in purchasing the land with planning permission. He had also bought

    some materials and paid for a digger to clear the site, and had about £10,000 of

    the original sale proceeds still in hand for further materials and labour. Thus

    at the date of the tribunal hearing, over two thirds of the original sale

    proceeds were no longer represented by a "sum" which might qualify under para 3

    but by the site itself or the work in progress on it. However the tribunal based

    their decision solely on the "purchase" issue and did not deal with any

    differences the use of the money might make under sch. 10; partly no doubt

    because these were not drawn to their attention in the adjudication officer's

    written or oral submissions.

    11. In this appeal brought with the leave of the tribunal chairman granted on 22

    August 1995, the adjudication officer says that the tribunal's decision must on

    any footing be wrong. As regards the period from May 1995 when the claimant

    completed the purchase of the land, the value of the land itself could not be

    disregarded under para 3 because it no longer constituted a sum of money. In

    addition the land by itself was not capable of being occupied as the claimant's

    home. Nor could para 3 apply at all to the cash held on deposit either before or

    after the land purchase in May 1995. The various elements of the project could

    not be lumped together and described as a "purchase", and the land by itself was

    not "premises" which means here a dwelling for occupation and not a building

    site. Neither the money nor the assets into which the claimant was converting it

    could therefore qualify for exclusion under sch 10: only when the project was

    completed and the claimant had moved in would he finally have an asset which

    would fall to be disregarded, as a "dwelling occupied as the home" under para 1.

    12. In the course of oral argument Miss Hartridge added a further point which

    had not been taken in front of the tribunal, that the words in para 3 "which is

    to be used" require something more than a mere subjective intention to use the

    sale proceeds of a previous house towards buying another. She suggested that

    para 3 could apply to money held against a new purchase only when this was

    already the subject of a legal obligation or something very close to it, such as

    a firm commitment subject to contract, and drew attention to the difference in

    wording from para 2 where "which he intends to occupy" showed that if the

    draftsman meant a mere intention he said so.

    13. In response the claimant says that the meaning of "purchase" was the only

    point raised by the adjudication officer before the tribunal so that they should

    not be faulted for concentrating on this issue alone. Even had the other issues

    been raised, they should, he says, have made no difference. Not only were the

    tribunal right in giving a broad meaning to the word "purchase", but if a

    distinction had to be made between the sale proceeds when represented by cash

    and when reinvested in the new project, the land or other property so acquired

    could easily qualify as "premises acquired for occupation" under para 2 of

    sch.10, consistently with the decision in case CIS/687/92. In that case the

    Commissioner was concerned with para 7(3) of sch. 3 and mortgage interest for

    housing costs. He held that although a piece of land without any building on it

    could never itself constitute a home, it was quite possible for a person to

    acquire a home in two stages instead of one by first acquiring the land and then

    arranging for a home to be built on it: see para 7 of the decision. In such a

    case all the costs connected with the acquisition of the site and the subsequent

    building work thus counted as money applied for the purpose of acquiring an

    interest in the dwelling occupied as the home. As for the meaning of "is to be

    used", the claimant says whatever these words are to be construed to mean they

    must include a case such as his, where there was not only (1) an intention on

    his part as firm as there could be, but also (2) a specific project already

    under way or all set to begin, and (3) one sole purpose, to provide him with a

    home for occupation by himself and his family as quickly as it could be done.

    14. I accept Miss Hartridge's submission on behalf of the adjudication officer

    that the tribunal erred in law in pronouncing the claimant entitled to income

    support continuously from the date of his claim down to the date of their own

    decision, without making any findings of fact about his having reinvested part

    of the cash in buying the land and starting the work. This emerged in the course

    of the evidence and made it necessary for the tribunal, whether or not given the

    assistance they were entitled to expect from the adjudication officer's

    representative, to consider whether it made any difference to the issues they

    had to decide. For the reasons given by the adjudication officer, it raised

    further material issues. The tribunal therefore erred in law by failing to

    address all relevant questions, make and record adequate findings of fact and

    give adequate reasons for their decision as required by reg 25 Social Security

    (Adjudication) Regulations 1986 SI 2218. For those reasons I set their decision.
    15. I consider it expedient to make the necessary additional findings of fact

    based on the documents before me and what I was told at the appeal hearing. They

    are not in dispute. In addition to the findings recorded in para 10 above, I

    find that the purchase of the land had been under way since the start of 1995

    when planning permission had been obtained and was completed in May 1995 for the

    sum of £23,000. The land itself already had a building on it which had been used

    for occupation, but the claimant's project for which he had full planning

    permission was to demolish and rebuild so as to provide himself with a new

    bungalow for permanent occupation. In May 1995 he had already paid for some

    materials and digging work but still had £10,000 of the original sale proceeds

    in hand for materials and labour which was used as the project went on. No doubt

    more had been used by the date of the tribunal hearing and it has I think all

    been used up as work has proceeded. The claimant told me at the appeal hearing

    that the major part of the work is now complete. He intends to move in as soon

    as his new house is ready for occupation, he estimates in a couple of months.

    16. In calculating his capital for income support, the claimant can only have

    the cash sale proceeds of his previous house, the land he bought in May 1995, or

    anything built or being built on it disregarded if they fit into one or other of

    the express exclusions in schedule 10 to the income support regulations. I bear

    in mind the observations of the Court of Appeal on this schedule in Chief

    Adjudication Officer and Another v. Palfrey and Ors (unrep. CA 8 February 1995)

    where two of their Lordships confessed themselves unable to discern any rational

    purpose in the bits of the schedule they had to construe, so that a purely

    literal construction had to be adopted. For my part however I think that it is

    possible to see a basic intention behind paras 1-4 and 25-28. They are all

    concerned with cases where claimants have or have had, or are in the process of

    acquiring, valuable assets, but these consist of or represent their own homes;

    and for various reasons it is unfair or unrealistic to expect the value to be

    treated in the same way as disposable cash to use for day to day living.

    17. Hence such value is excluded from what is reckonable as capital for income

    support, in various ways depending on the facts. The primary exclusion is the

    "dwelling occupied as the home" (no more than one for each claimant) under para
    1. Paras 2, 27 and 28 deal with situations where a claimant has acquired or is

    acquiring "premises", not yet occupied as the claimant's home but intended to

    be. The value of such "premises" is left out of account in calculating capital

    assets, for six months or longer if reasonable in the circumstances. Paras 3, 25

    and 26 deal with converse situations where a claimant is in the throes of the

    property market or the conveyancing system: disposing or trying to dispose of

    property but not yet having managed to do so, or with cash in hand between

    disposing of one home and acquiring another. In such cases too, six months or

    longer is allowed without the value of the property having to be brought into

    account as capital for income support.

    18. These provisions in my judgment imply recognition of the transitional

    difficulties people experience in changing homes and the often slow processes of

    the property market. They also embody a principle that capital money tied up in

    providing a home or needed for the purpose is different from the ordinary

    savings a person should expect to have to realise and turn into cash before

    being given public assistance. The value of the home needs to be treated

    differently, since there is no advantage to claimants or anyone else in forcing

    them to become homeless or treating as cash an asset they cannot be expected to

    sell. Para 4 extends the same principle to property owned by a claimant but

    occupied in whole or part by an elderly or incapacitated relative, or a former

    partner from whom the claimant is neither estranged nor divorced.

    19. Against this background, I have to consider first whether the tribunal were

    right to read "the purchase of other premises" so as to include acquiring land

    and having a house built on it; second whether "premises" in paras 2-3 can

    include land which at the time of its acquisition does not have on it the

    completed dwelling the claimant intends to occupy as his home; third whether the

    words "which is to be used" in para 3 make it necessary to show more than that

    the claimant intends to use the money in question to provide himself with

    another home; and fourth, if any of this claimant's assets are to be disregarded

    under sch 10, what counts as a "reasonable" period in his circumstances.

    20. I can no reason to restrict the expression "the purchase of other premises"

    in para 3 to cases where the purchase is achieved by a single transaction of

    buying land with a completed house ready for immediate occupation already

    sitting on it. For my part I agree with the view of the tribunal that this

    expression should be construed as a whole and given a reasonably wide meaning,

    to include the outlay of money to acquire a home for occupation by the claimant

    and his family as part of a single plan whether this takes place all at once, or

    separately in two or more stages. Thus land may be acquired with a house already

    built on it; or acquired and a ready made portable home delivered and put up on

    it; or acquired with a house still being put up or about to be put up on it by

    the seller; or acquired and a builder separately engaged by the purchaser to put

    up a house on it for him; or acquired and a house put up on it by the purchaser

    himself, using his own labour and buying in materials or subcontracting separate

    parts of the project.

    21. All of these ways of laying out money to acquire a home are in my judgment

    within the scope of "the purchase of other premises" under para 3. All seem to

    be equally within the basic aim of disregarding the value of capital from one

    home which is temporarily in transit and waiting to be used to provide another.

    Parliament cannot have intended that a person such as the claimant engaged on

    the admirable project of building his own home at modest cost should not qualify

    to have his "house capital" disregarded, while an unemployed futures trader with

    all his money in a lavish home can sell and have the whole sum disregarded while

    he reinvests it in another mansion, just because the mansion is already built

    and the claimant's bungalow is not. Miss Hartridge did not suggest that there

    was any legislative purpose that might be served by such a distinction.

    22. In my judgment therefore, the claimant's project of buying land and putting

    up a house on it with the proceeds of sale of his previous home counts as using

    those proceeds for "the purchase of other premises intended for occupation by

    the claimant as his home" under para 3 of schedule 10. I am happy to find that

    this is consistent with the approach adopted by the Commissioner in case

    CIS/687/92 at para 7. I confirm the decision of the tribunal that the

    adjudication officer was wrong to reject the claim on the ground that claimant's

    project did not amount to a "purchase" within para 3.

    23. However para 3 only applies to sums of money, as the present adjudication

    officer and Miss Hartridge are right in my view to point out. So although the

    money the claimant applied in purchasing the land in May 1995 was and remained

    "directly attributable" to the proceeds of sale of his previous home, it was no

    longer a "sum" within para 3 after the land had been bought. I therefore have to

    go on to consider whether the plot of land itself can qualify for separate

    exclusion after May 1995 under para 2 of sch 10. This provides that the

    calculation of capital is to disregard:

    "2. Any premises acquired for occupation by the claimant which he intends to

    occupy as his home within 26 weeks of the date of acquisition or such longer

    period as is reasonable in the circumstances to enable the claimant to

    obtain possession and commence occupation of the premises."

    The argument here is whether the land can count as "premises" before the house

    on it is built, or finished ready for occupation.

    24. Again in my judgment it would be too narrow a construction to say that where

    a claimant is providing himself with a home by acquiring land and building or

    having a house built on it, the land itself cannot count as "premises acquired

    for occupation" because what the claimant intends to live in is the house, not

    just the land underneath it. As noted by Lord Wilberforce in Maunsell v. Olins

    [1975] AC 373 at 386, the word "premises" is a very general word which has a

    wide range of possible meanings and it has to be looked at in its particular

    context to see what types of property are intended to be included. Unusually, as

    observed by Cross J as he then was in Bracey v. Read [1963] 1 Ch 88, it is a

    word whose strict legal meaning is much wider than its popular one. Legally it

    can (but does not have to) include everything capable of being the subject

    matter of a demise or grant in a lease or conveyance, including not only

    buildings but also all kinds of real property and even incorporeal rights such

    as easements.

    25. I was referred to the Commissioner's decision in case CIS/767/93 where the

    meaning of the word in para 4 of this schedule was considered. I respectfully

    agree with him that in each of the first four paragraphs the word "premises"

    must bear a similar meaning and be restricted to the kind of property which

    someone has occupied or could occupy as their home. As he held in that case,

    this includes by implication not only the habitable rooms in a building but also

    property within the same curtilage such as a garden, garage or outbuildings: cf.

    reg 2 of the income support regulations. It necessarily also includes the land

    on which this all stands. It does not include other property such as farm land

    which is not part of the home or its immediate surroundings and can quite well

    be disposed of separately without affecting the occupation of the home (ibid);

    nor separate unbuilt on land that cannot be used for residential purposes:

    CIS/673/93 para 3.

    26. In my judgment it is entirely consistent with the decisions in those cases

    that "premises acquired for occupation" and "other premises intended for such

    occupation" in paras 2 and 3 include both the land itself and the buildings

    erected or intended to be erected on it, so long as together they add up to what

    the claimant intends to occupy as his home, with the inclusions permitted by reg

    2 or by implication. The plot bought by this claimant can perfectly well be

    described in the popular sense as "premises acquired for occupation" by him,

    given that this was the precise purpose for which he acquired it. His whole

    project consisted of acquiring the land and occupying it, by putting a bungalow

    on it and living in the bungalow as his home. This in my judgment is good enough

    to bring the land within the scope of para 2 from the moment he acquired it and

    for so long as it was still meaningful to regard the land as a separate asset as

    the building work progressed. To hold otherwise would involve the absurdity of

    people buying houses on a new housing development being treated differently

    according to whether their particular house was already finished, only partly

    built or not yet started when they acquired the beneficial ownership of the plot

    they had chosen. Again Miss Hartridge was unable to point to any likely purpose

    in making such irrational distinctions.

    27. I therefore hold that for the period after the claimant acquired the plot in

    May 1995 and while the project continued uncomplete, the land he bought,

    together with the various building materials becoming part of the realty on

    incorporation into his partly completed bungalow, were all "premises acquired

    for occupation by the claimant".

    28. In view of my conclusions on the first two questions, I now have to consider

    whether the £35,000 held on deposit at the date of claim, and the £10,000 (or

    the reducing balance) from May 1995 onwards, satisfied the condition in para 3

    that they were sums "to be used" for what I have held was the purchase of other

    premises intended for occupation by the claimant as his home. In my judgment

    Miss Hartridge was right in pointing to the difference between the wording "to

    be used" in para 3 and the tests of intended occupation in for example paras 2,

    27 and 28. It seems to me that the claimant has to demonstrate something more

    than just a genuine intention on his part to use the money from his old house to

    acquire a new one. Otherwise there would be the absurd result that the out of

    work millionaire could insist on the whole sale proceeds of his lavish home

    being disregarded for at least 6 months by saying that he planned to buy another

    equally lavish one as soon as he found one he liked: even though not in any way

    committed to do so, and easily able to buy a perfectly satisfactory home at once

    for less with the balance released for living expenses to take him off income

    support.

    29. I therefore accept Miss Hartridge's submission that the words "is to be

    used" in para 3 require an element of practical certainty as well as subjective

    intent. It would be unusual for any sum of money to be set aside or earmarked

    sufficiently to be impressed with a trust to use it only for the purchase of

    another home, and para 3 is not in my judgment restricted to cases where there

    is a binding legal obligation. Nevertheless the claimant must in my view be able

    to demonstrate at the time relevant for his claim a practical commitment to a

    purchase that is bound in the normal course of events to involve using the money

    he is keeping aside for the purpose. Such a commitment can be demonstrated for

    example by a binding contract for purchase which is not yet completed, or by a

    firm commitment (e.g. an agreement "subject to contract") in circumstances where

    the tribunal is satisfied the money could not reasonably be expected to be

    withdrawn from the project and used for other purposes such as living expenses

    instead.

    30. In the present case, the tribunal do appear to have been satisfied that the

    sum held on deposit by the claimant at the date of his claim was "to be used" by

    him for the purposes of acquiring his new home and for nothing else. Having

    regard to the fact that he had already obtained planning permission, placed the

    purchase in the hands of his solicitors and accepted a specific builders' quote,

    it seems to me that there was evidence on which they could properly have reached

    this conclusion. I do not therefore think it right to disturb it, especially as

    the adjudication officer at no stage thought it necessary to raise any question

    about it on the facts himself. I emphasise that this depends on the particular

    and somewhat exceptional circumstances of this case and is not to detract from a

    generally strict interpretation of "is to be used" as indicated in the last two

    paragraphs. On this basis, I hold that the original sale proceeds of £35,000

    between the date of claim and May 1995, and the reducing balance of £10,000

    after that date, were sums directly attributable to the proceeds of sale of the

    claimant's former home which were to be used for the purchase of other premises

    intended for occupation as his home. They therefore fell to be disregarded under

    para 3 along with the land itself under para 2, subject only to the final

    question which the tribunal did not consider at all, of how the time limits of

    26 weeks or longer under paras 2-3 should apply to the case.
    31. Because of the way the two paragraphs are worded, the time limits are

    different and may have to be applied separately. They need however to be viewed

    in the context of the general purpose of the first four paragraphs as I have

    sought to identify it, and the other similar time limits of 26 weeks or longer

    under paras 25 to 28. These appear to support the idea of a general intention

    that 26 weeks is a reasonable period to obtain possession of a new dwelling,

    make it fit for occupation and move in, or to take steps to dispose of real

    property or reorganise one's legal affairs following the break-up of a marriage

    or a joint home. Anything longer than 26 weeks has to be justified in the

    circumstances as reasonable for the particular purpose, but it is plainly

    contemplated that there will be circumstances in which a longer period is

    reasonably required; and the decision on what is reasonable in a particular case

    is left to the practical judgment and good sense of the tribunal.

    32. If it is right, as in my judgment it is, that a self-build operation is

    within the proper scope of the provisions of paras 2 and 3 for disregarding

    capital pending occupation of a new home, then it necessarily follows that a

    somewhat longer period may be accepted as reasonable to complete such a project

    than the few months or so it normally takes to arrange and complete the purchase

    of an existing house and move in. Accordingly, in my judgment, in such cases a

    period of something more like 12 months than six, from the purchase of the land

    and the breaking of the ground until occupation can commence at the completion

    of the project, may readily be accepted as reasonable.

    33. So far as the present claimant is concerned, I also take into account that

    some delay may have been imposed on his timetable by the initial rejection of

    his claim, the adjudication officer appealing against the tribunal decision in

    his favour, and the Secretary of State suspending payment of any benefit despite

    the tribunal's decision that he was entitled to it. All this must have added

    considerably to the uncertainties, and made progress with the project more

    difficult.

    34. In those circumstances, I hold that the claimant is entitled to have the

    land itself and the bungalow being built on it for his own occupation

    disregarded under para 2 of sch. 10 from the date of acquisition of the land

    until 6 July 1996. This is 18 months from the date of his original claim and

    something over 12 months from the date he actually bought the land and was ready

    to proceed with the building work. In my view on the basis of what I was told,

    he will then have been allowed a reasonable period in the circumstances to

    complete the project and commence occupation, even if some work such as

    decorations still remains to be finished off.

    35. As regards the cash sums on deposit, para 3 requires that they are to be

    used for the purchase within 26 weeks of the date of sale of his former house or

    such longer period as is reasonable in the circumstances to enable the claimant

    to complete the purchase. It is clear therefore that the period starts to run

    whether the claimant is receiving income support at the time or not, and the

    claimant here had sold his old house in mid-1994, 6 months before he lost his

    job and made his claim. Again I would regard the facts of this case as

    exceptional, but I consider it reasonable not to have committed himself to a new

    purchase before the end of 1994, when his employment came to an end as he had

    been warned in the autumn. By the start of January 1995 when he made his claim,

    he had already put together a feasible project for providing himself and his

    family with a new home in their altered circumstances, obtained planning

    permission, done detailed costings and accepted a quote from the builder.

    36. For similar reasons to those I have given above, it seems to me that a

    period ending 18 months from the date of his claim can in the circumstances be

    accepted as reasonable to complete his family's new home. I emphasise that such

    a long period after the sale of a former home requires quite exceptional

    circumstances to justify it. The sum of £35,000 held on deposit between the

    claim and May 1995, and the reducing sum of £10,000 held from that date onwards,

    are in the circumstances of this case to be disregarded under para 3 of sch. 10

    until the expiry of 18 months from the date of claim, that is until 6 July 1996.

    37. For the reasons I have tried to set out above, the appeal by the

    adjudication officer against the tribunal decision of 3 July 1995 is allowed. I

    exercise the power under s.23(7)(a) Social Security Administration Act 1992 to

    make the findings of fact recorded above and to substitute my own decision,

    which is that the proceeds of sale of the claimant's former home, and the land

    and property into which he has put those proceeds so as to provide himself with

    a new home, are to be disregarded under reg 46 in calculating his capital for

    income support purposes down to 6 July 1996.

    (Signed)

    P L Howell

    Commissioner

    21 May 1996


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1996/CIS_8475_1995.html