DECISION
OF THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(ADMINISTRATIVE
APPEALS CHAMBER)
Before
Upper Tribunal Judge Brunner QC
This
appeal has lapsed, and so there is no decision on this appeal.
The decision
of 3 March 2014 under s16 of the Tax Credits Act 2002 has lapsed, having been
replaced by a decision under section 18 of the Tax Credits Act 2002, and so the
appeal against the decision of 3 March 2014 to both the First-tier Tribunal and
this tribunal has lapsed.
REASONS
- This is an
appeal brought by the claimant against the decision of the First-tier
tribunal (‘FTT’) given on 24 September 2015 relating to tax credits. HMRC
notified a decision to the claimant on 3 March 2014, which was a decision
under section 16(1) of the Tax Credits Act 2002 (‘s16’). She appealed to
the FTT which heard her case on 26 August 2015 and dismissed the appeal,
finding that the claimant was not in genuine remunerative employment at
the material time. The claimant appealed to the Upper Tribunal.
- Leave to
appeal was given by Judge Mitchell on 30 March 2016 on the sole ground
that the FTT failed to take into account the absence of relevant evidence
which should have been supplied to it by HMRC in making a finding as to
the claimant’s husband’s credibility. Judge Mitchell was not made aware by
HMRC that a decision under section 18 of the Tax Credits Act 2002 (‘s18’)
had been made in January 2016 and so the jurisdiction issue which arises
was not considered at the permission stage.
Error
of Law
- The
Commissioners of HMRC agree that the FTT erred in law.
- The FTT
found that the claimant’s husband had either fabricated a letter which he
said was dated 16th January 2014 or had not sent such a letter.
The FTT made that finding based on an analysis of the evidence, including
analysis of a telephone call on 24 January 2014, which the FTT found was
inconsistent with the suggestion that a letter had been sent on 16th
January 2014. However, the FTT did not have before it some significant
documents, namely inquiry letters from 2013 , and records of what was
received from the claimant’s husband on 20th January 2014. The
FTT should have been alive to the existence of both of those sets of
documents from the material before it. The FTT should have either asked
for those documents, or taken account of the absence of those documents
when drawing inferences from the evidence. The failure to do that was an
error of law.
- Despite
that error, HMRC submits that this appeal can be dismissed as a subsequent
decision by HMRC under s18 of the Tax Credits Act 2002 relating to the
same period as the period under appeal. has made this case redundant.
- The
claimant seeks a decision and remission of the case to the FTT for redetermination
of the appeal.
Chronology
- The
chronology of decisions, and their legal basis, is less than clear from
HMRC’s paperwork. It is of note that there is no clear summary of which
statutory powers HMRC was relying on, nor what legal test was being
applied, either in HMRC’s submissions to the FTT (p556) or the FTT’s
Statement of Reasons (p594). I am not the first Upper Tribunal judge to
comment that it is entirely unacceptable that HMRC failed to assist the
FTT by clearly setting out the basic framework of their case.
- A
simplistic summary of the tax credit regime is as follows (all references
are to the Tax Credits Act 2002): an initial award of tax credit is made
under s14 . HMRC may then amend or terminate the initial award under s16
if they have reasonable grounds to believe that that tax credit has been
awarded at the wrong rate or that there is no entitlement to tax credit. .A
final decision as to entitlement to tax credit is made under s18 after the
end of the tax year in question. The s18 has the effect of replacing both
the initial decision made under s14 and any amendment to that initial
decision made under s16.
- Mr Eland’s
submissions to this tribunal are, in contrast to submissions made by HMRC
to the FTT, a model of clarity. It appears that the chronology in this
case was as follows.
(1)
HMRC made an
initial decision under s14 and awarded tax credits for the 2013-14 year.
(2)
HMRC then amended
that decision on 3 March 2014 under s16, having requested information in
October 2013 and January 2014 (p622). That amended decision was to the effect
that no tax credit was awarded (explained in a letter dated 30 June 2014 at
p16).
(3)
On 26 August 2015
the FTT upheld the s16 decision
(4)
On 27 January 2016
HMRC made a decision under s18 of the Tax Credits Act 2002 for the same period.
At
the time of the FTT hearing, therefore, the s16 decision was in force but there
had been no final s18 determination.
Jurisdiction:
general
- The issue
for this tribunal is whether the section 16 appeal (this appeal) has
lapsed. It is worth re-visiting the central case law to see how the
principle of lapsing operates.
- The Court
of Appeal addressed the issue of lapsing in the context of social security
law in Chief Adjudication Officer v Eggleton, reported as
R(IS) 23/95. That was an appeal against a series of decisions by a
Social Security Commissioner that the several claimants’ income support
for the period 11 April 1988 to 8 October 1989 was to be calculated so as
to include severe disability premium. The appellant sought an order that
the case be remitted for decision on the basis that the calculation of
income support should not include SDP for that period.
- An issue
arose as to whether the decisions under appeal, and the appeal itself, had
lapsed. The Court of Appeal summarised that issue as follows:
‘The result of these appeals depends
on whether the Commissioner erred in law in deciding that purported “review
decisions” of the adjudication officer in the summer of 1990, in relation to
income support, superseded, replaced and rendered of no effect decisions made
by him in each case in 1988. Leave to appeal out of time had been granted in
relation to the 1988 decisions but that leave cannot be exercised if the
decisions to be appealed no longer exist. That being a legal point upon the
construction of the legislation, it is not necessary to set out the facts in each
case in detail.’
- Lord
Justice Stuart-Smith expressed the jurisdiction issue for the court in
this way:
‘Is
the effect of a review of the original decision, whatever the outcome, such
that the original decision ceases to have effect or lapses, with the result
that it cannot be appealed out of time?’
His
answer, following a review of the provisions relevant to the appeal, was as
follows:
‘In
my judgment, whether or not an original decision lapses or is superseded when
it is reviewed, depends on the nature and extent of the review. If the whole
of the original decision from the date on which it is made is revised or
varied, there is nothing left of it and it cannot therefore be appealed.
But if it is only varied as to part, or from a particular date or because
revision is precluded after a certain date, in the absence of any express
provision to the contrary, I can see no logical reason why the original
decision should not subsist, save in so far as it has been affected by the
review.’ [my
emphasis]
- It is of
some note that in this analysis it is taken as axiomatic that an appeal
cannot be heard in relation to a lapsed decision. For ease I will refer to
the principle articulated in the underlined section above as ‘the lapsing
principle’.
- There was
no consideration of whether there are exceptions to the lapsing principle.
However, given that the finding on the facts of that case was that the
original decisions and therefore appeals were extant because they had not
been entirely revised, there was no need for the Court of Appeal to
consider the lapsing principle in further detail.
- The lapsing
principle has been articulated time and time again by the higher courts (a
recent example being the Court of Appeal in Re X (Court of Protection
Practice) [2015] EWCA Civ 599). It appears plain from authorities that
the lapsing principle does not automatically apply: the courts retain some
discretion as to whether to hear appeals relating to apparently lapsed
decisions, at least in the arena of public law.
- That discretion
was considered by the House of Lords in R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex p
Salem [1999] 1 AC 450. The Court of Appeal had
dismissed the appellant's application that his benefits should not have
been stopped as he had not been informed that his application as an asylum
seeker had been rejected. Following the Court of Appeal decision the
appellant had been granted that status and accordingly would receive
back-payment of benefits. There was no live issue to be determined by the
House of Lords.
- It was
accepted that even where there was no longer a matter to be decided which
would directly affect the rights and obligations of the parties that a
discretion arose to hear an appeal ‘in a cause where there is an issue
involving a public authority as to a question of public law’.
- Lord Slynn
clearly envisaged that the discretion to proceed with a case where the
subject matter has expired should be exercised in very limited situations:
‘ The
discretion to hear disputes, even in the area of public law, must, however, be
exercised with caution and appeals which are academic between the parties
should not be heard unless there is a good reason in the public interest for
doing so, as for example (but only by way of example) when a discrete point
of statutory construction arises which does not involve detailed consideration
of facts and where a large number of similar cases exist or are anticipated so
that the issue will most likely need to be resolved in the near future. [my emphasis]
I
do not consider that this is such a case. In the first place, although a
question of statutory construction does arise, the facts are by no means
straightforward and in other cases the problem of when a determination is made
may depend on the precise factual context of each case…In the second place,..
only in a few cases has this question arisen.’
- In R v Canons Park Mental Health Review Tribunal ex p Andrews [1995] Q.B.60 the Court of Appeal heard an appeal against a Divisional Court’s decision to quash the decision of a Mental Health Tribunal. The issues
had, on their face, become academic: the patient had been returned to
hospital on different grounds to those underpinning her original
detention, and thus there was no effective order which the court could
make. The issue was not referred to in terms of ‘lapsing’, but was
identified as an issue of jurisdiction.
- The
reasons given by the Court of Appeal for hearing the case included
potential future effects on the patient:
‘It is true that if the Divisional
Court's order quashing the Tribunal's decision was held to have been wrongly
made, the decision could not now be revived as a basis for the applicant's
detention. But other consequences might flow from the quashing of the decision
and, if the correct view is that it ought to have stood, declaratory relief
ought to be granted accordingly. Moreover, as Mr Richards pointed out,
‘the
applicant might again be re-classified during her present admission to hospital or, on an application to the tribunal, the tribunal might
find that she was suffering from
a psychopathic
disorder. Thus there is a real possibility that the same issue could arise in respect to the applicant. In all the
circumstances, the issues raised are neither hypothetical
nor academic and there is no impediment in my judgment, to our hearing and
disposing of the appeal.’
- The
Court of Appeal proceeded to decide issues relating to treatability, and
how to construe section 72(1) and (2) of the Mental Health Act 1983. The
determination of those issues was plainly in the public interest: indeed,
the case is often cited with a head note saying ‘Guidelines on the
treatability test’. Although the court placed weight on the possibility of
the applicant benefitting from the continuance of the appeal, it is clear
from the full judgement that the benefit envisaged was from a swift
resolution of legal issues, which would then be applied by any future
tribunal hearing the applicant’s case. It is a moot point whether this
case should be read as any authority for widening the discretion to hear
an appeal about a non-effective decision beyond Lord Slynn’s consideration
of ‘good reason in the public interest’.
Jurisdiction: s16/18
- It is
implicit in the wording of the Tax Credits Act that once a decision under
section 18 has been given, HMRC’s decision under section 16 is no longer
of any effect: the section 18 decision entirely replaces the section 16
decision, dealing with the same entitlement for the same period of time.
- In CTC/3981/2005
Commissioner Jacobs (as he then was) analysed what happened to a s16
appeal once a decision is given under s18 in this way:
42.If
a claimant’s appeal against a section 16 decision has not been decided before a
decision is given under section 18, the former is redundant and of no possible
benefit to the claimant. The sensible thing to do is to withdraw the appeal,
but claimants may not understand this. Ideally, the legislation would provide
for the appeal to lapse in these circumstances, but it does not do so. On
general principle, a decision lapses if the decision ceases to be of any force
or effect in respect of any period. See the analysis of Stuart-Smith LJ in Chief Adjudication Officer v
Eggleton, reported
as R(IS) 23/95.
And if the decision has lapsed, there can be no appeal against it and any
appeal that has been made must lapse also. The Tax Credits Act 2002 makes no
provision for the effect of a section 16 decision after a section 18 decision
has been made. However, section 18(11) provides that the decision under that
section is conclusive, which carries with it the implication that the section
16 decision is no longer of any force or effect. That is lapsing in all but
name. The disadvantage of this approach is that it is automatic. In most cases
that would not matter, but there may be cases in which it would be appropriate
to proceed with the appeal despite the fact that it had been overtaken by the
section 18 decision.
43.Another
analysis is that the tribunal should treat the appeal as raising only
hypothetical issues. Courts decline to deal with such issues in public law
cases. The appeal tribunal could do the same, simply declaring that the only
issues raised are hypothetical and declining to decide them. The advantage of
this approach over the lapsing of a decision or an appeal is that it gives the
tribunal a discretion. The courts are prepared to decide hypothetical issues in
public law cases if ‘there is a good reason in the public interest for doing
so’, as Lord Slynn explained in R
v Secretary of State for the Home Department, ex parte Salem [1999] 1 AC 450 at 457. This
would allow a tribunal to proceed with an appeal against a decision under
section 16 (or for that matter under section 14 or 15) if, for example, it
raised an issue of general importance, such as the scope of an appeal
under that section.
- Judge
Jacobs therefore left two analyses on the table. Firstly, a finding that
the s16 decision had lapsed and thus the appeal had automatically lapsed.
Secondly, a finding that the tribunal had a discretion to hear the appeal.
- In two
cases which followed, the first of the approaches suggested by Judge
Jacobs, that a s18 decision means that a s16 decision automatically lapses
and therefore cannot be the subject of appeal, was adopted.
- In CTC/2103/2006
appeals against both a s16 and a s18 decision were purportedly before the
Upper Tribunal. Commisioner White said ‘the effect of the finalisation
decision of 15 March 2006 is to lapse the earlier section 16 decision..so
the only decision which will be before the new tribunal is [the section 18
decision]’. In that case the Commissioner made no decision about the
appeal against the s16 award, and only dealt with the s18 award.
- In CSTC/840/2014,
Judge May QC also adopted the approach that a s16 appeal lapses when a s18
decision is made. Judge May said this about Judge Jacob’s conclusion: ‘He
indicates that the effect of section 18(11) is that the decision
under that section is conclusive with the implication that the section 16
decision is no longer of any force or effect. I accept his view on that.
The Commissioner permits himself the observation that there may be many [sic]
cases in which it would be appropriate to proceed with the appeal despite
the fact that it had been overtaken by the section 18 decision..I do not
accept that proposition… It is quite clear..that neither the FTT, if I
was disposed to remit the case to them, nor myself could give any
effective remedy to the claimant if her position on the merits was
accepted’.
- In that
case the s18 decision had been taken before the FTT purported to make a
decision as to the s16 award. Judge May QC proceeded to decide the appeal
at the Upper Tribunal, allowing the appeal on the basis that the FTT erred
in law, as the appeal against the s16 decision had lapsed before the FTT heard
the case. Judge May QC then re-made the FTT decision in these terms : ‘the
appeal against [the s16 award] has lapsed’.
- In both of
the above cases the Upper Tribunal applied the lapsing principle automatically.
Neither case allows for any exception to the lapsing principle, although
it is plain from both of those cases that there was no argued or arguable
public interest in the appeal continuing.
- A different
approach was taken in the very recent case CTC/1343/2015 where Upper
Tribunal Gray addressed the relationship between s16 and s18. In that
case, and in contrast to the two cases above, the only existing appeal was
against the s16 decision: there was no appeal against the section 18
decision. Judge Gray said:
‘I
am not persuaded that the section 18 decision will automatically lapse the
section 16 decision, leaving a tribunal seized simply of the section 16 appeal
without jurisdiction. It is not axiomatic that an apparently purposeless appeal
must lapse. In Anghel
Judicial Authority of France [2015] EWHC 493 (Admin) Mitting J considered
whether an extradition appeal would lapse where the individual had already been
extradited. He said : ‘as a matter or principle the fact of his extradition
does not mean that his appeal automatically lapses or is to be treated as
having been withdrawn or abandoned’.
- At
paragraph 50 Judge Gray opines that:
‘the
conclusive nature of a section 18 decision does not mean that the section 16
decision raises merely academic questions. There will be circumstances in which
such a decision can yet be of some effect’.
- The
potential effects of a continuing section 16 appeal were said to include
the revision of a section 18 decision on the basis of official error, or
the use of the FTT judgment as a defence to a money claim by HMRC.
- Judge
Gray’s conclusion ( at paragraph 64) was that:
‘without
a statutory lapsing provision the proper protection for an individual is the
continuation of rights in relation to an appeal currently in progress’.
- The case of
Anghel v Judicial Authority of France [2015] EWHC 493 (Admin) to
which Judge Gray referred is one of a line of extradition cases, beginning
with Pilecki v Poland [2008] UKHL 7 in which an extradition appeal
was heard despite the claimant having been extradited, because it raised a
matter of public importance. I do not read the case of Anghel as
contrary to the principle of lapsing. The court dealt with the question of
whether the appellant wanted the appeal to continue as a preliminary issue
and, having answered that in the negative, did not need to articulate any
further the test which it would have applied if he had wished to proceed.
Decision
and Directions
- A section
18 decision entirely replaces a section 16 decision, such that there is no
operative part left of the section 16 decision. Where a section 18
decision has been made, the section 16 decision falls into the category of
decisions identified in Chief Adjudication Officer v Eggleton, reported
as R(IS) 23/95 where the starting point is: ‘there is nothing left
of it and it cannot therefore be appealed’.
- The absence
of a statutory lapsing provision in the Tax Credits Act does not, in my
view, displace the lapsing principle, which is not a creature of statute.
It is a principle which, on the analysis of case law above, binds the
higher courts hearing appeals from tribunals. In my view, it binds
tribunals as well.
- Although
the lapsing principle is the starting point, it is not necessarily the end
point. I agree with Judge Gray in CTC/1343/2015 that a section 18
decision does not automatically lapse the section 16 appeal. So far
as CTC/2103/2006 and CSTC/840/2014 asserted that lapsing was
automatic, I disagree with that analysis.
- There
remains discretion to hear an appeal against a lapsed decision, but that
is a discretion which should only, in my view, be exercised in very
limited circumstances. Those limited circumstances include good reason in
the public interest to hear the appeal as stated in R v Secretary of State for the
Home Department, ex p Salem [1999] 1 AC 450. It is doubtful, in my view,
whether those limited circumstances can ever extend beyond the test of ‘good
reason in the public interest’. Whatever the precise boundaries of the
discretion, it should be a very rare event for either the FTT or this
tribunal to hear an appeal against a s16 decision when a s18 decision has
been made.
- I am
doubtful whether the sort of reasons which Judge Gray relied on in CTC/1343/2015
to remit the case could ever be circumstances which allow an otherwise
lapsed appeal to continue. Such reasons do not in my view make the s16
appeal anything other than academic, and do not disclose any public
interest in continuance. It seems to me that the potential disadvantages
to a claimant caused by lapsing an appeal can be dealt with by observations
from a tribunal, such as those I have made in this case. Remitting cases
to the FTT on the basis of speculative future advantage to a claimant will
not, to my mind, usually meet the requirements of the overriding objective
to deal with cases in ways which are proportionate to the complexity of
the issues, the anticipated costs and the resources of the parties.
- In this
case, my findings are as follows: the s16 decision has been lapsed by the
s18 decision. This appeal is academic, there is no public interest here in
the s16 appeal continuing, and this appeal has thus also lapsed.
- As the appeal
has lapsed this tribunal has no jurisdiction and I make no decision and do
not remit (following the approach taken in Dorset Healthcare NHS
Trust v MH [2009] UKUT 4 (AAC). I make observations about the findings
of the FTT as set out at paragraphs 3,4,5 above.
- I
understand that the claimant has asked for mandatory reconsideration of
the s18 decision (if she has not, and if she disagrees with the decision
then she should do so, and HMRC have indicated that they will treat a late
request for reconsideration as if it was made in time). The claimant
should understand that if she disagrees with the result of the mandatory
reconsideration of the s18 decision she must appeal that decision to the
First-tier Tribunal.
- There
should be no reliance by HMRC or any future tribunal on the adverse
findings of the FTT on 26 August 2015. This decision, and HMRC’s
submissions to this tribunal, should be considered by the HMRC decision
maker(s) considering the s18 mandatory reconsideration and any response to
a s18 appeal.
- Any FTT
which hears the s18 appeal or any future appeal brought by this claimant
or her husband should be a differently constituted panel to the panel which
sat on 26 August 2015.
Upper Tribunal Judge Kate Brunner QC
Signed on the original on 9 September
2016