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Jersey Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG -v- Such [2012] JRC 155 (24 August 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2012/2012_155.html Cite as: [2012] JRC 155 |
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Before : |
W. J. Bailhache, Q.C., Deputy Bailiff, and Jurats Morgan and Olsen. |
The Attorney General
-v-
Natalie Jayne Such
Sentencing by the Inferior Number of the Royal Court, following guilty pleas to the following charges:
2 counts of: |
Failing to notify a change of circumstances to the Social Security Department, contrary to Article 6(c) of the Income Support (Jersey) Law 2007 (Counts 1 and 2). |
Age: 28.
Plea: Guilty.
Details of Offence:
The defendant's elderly grandmother owned a house and adjacent flat worth a total of over £500,000. In June 2009, the grandmother gifted the property to the defendant and the defendant's sister, in equal shares, subject only to the grandmother's life-enjoyment.
On the grandmother's death in January 2010, the defendant therefore became absolutely entitled to a half-share in the property. The defendant also received £8,795 from her grandmother's personal estate.
In late 2009 the defendant had signed an official form stating her "ownership or part-ownership of property" as "NONE". Despite several subsequent written reminders to declare any changes in her circumstances, including capital assets, the defendant never declared either her share in the property (Count 1), or the cash gift (Count 2) to the Social Security Department.
During cautioned interview in August 2011, she claimed that she did not know the meaning of the words "capital" or "asset". When further questioned she admitted to inheriting some money, and refused to answer further questions.
In September 2011, the defendant was interviewed again. She admitted to part owning the property, which was being refurbished by her sister who received all of the rental income. She admitted that she expected to receive half of the proceeds of any sale.
The income attributed to the property by Schedule 2 to the Income Support (General Provisions)(Jersey) Order 2008 was such that the defendant was not entitled to any income support benefits whatsoever during the relevant period. In fact she received the total sum of £27,254.47.
No repayments were made. She told the author of the social enquiry report that she did not consider herself to be a benefit thief because she had not lied about her circumstances, merely withheld information because she misunderstood the requirements.
Details of Mitigation:
Good education record (including eight GCSEs and a GNVQ in business studies); carer of child aged six; no actual income had been received from the property; social enquiry report referred to difficult family background and recent difficult domestic circumstances; had distanced herself from previous drug-taking, letter of support from potential employer; letter of remorse; assessed as being at low risk of reoffending.
Previous Convictions:
2004/2005: serious motoring infractions followed by breach of probation and community service by shoplifting.
Conclusions:
Count 1: |
210 hours' Community Service Order |
Count 2: |
120 hours' Community Service Order, concurrent. |
Total: 210 hours' Community Service Order, equivalent to 15 months' imprisonment.
Compensation Order sought in the sum of £27,254.47.
Sentence and Observations of Court:
Two principles applied: the defendant should repay the public without undue delay; and there should be a penalty.
Count 1: |
15 months' imprisonment, suspended for a period of 2 years, plus a 9 month Probation Order. |
Count 2: |
3 months' imprisonment, concurrent, suspended for a period of 2 years. |
Total: 15 months' imprisonment, suspended for a period of 2 years, plus a 9 month Probation Order.
Compensation Order made in the sum of £27,254.47 to be paid within 9 months, or 12 months' imprisonment in default of payment.
D. J. Hopwood, Esq., Crown Advocate.
Advocate E. B. Drummond for the Defendant.
JUDGMENT
THE DEPUTY BAILIFF:
1. You are here to be sentenced on an Indictment which charges you with two offences of failing to notify a change of circumstances to the Social Security Department. The first was that you did not tell the Department that you had become entitled to a half share in a house and flat at 54 Clos des Sables, and the second is that you did not tell the Department that you had become entitled to a half share in the residual estate of your late grandmother.
2. You were given every opportunity of telling the Department of this change of circumstances. By way of example, you had a letter in January 2010 from the Department advising you of an adjustment to income support awards and it concluded with the reminder "You must notify the Department immediately of any change in family or financial circumstances as this may affect your claim. See attached document with examples of changes that must be reported." One of those examples was "You purchase or inherit a property in Jersey or anywhere else in the world". You had similar advice on other occasions including in May 2011 and you did not tell the Department of the change of circumstances.
3. The background report tells us that you do not consider yourself a benefit thief, as you claim that you withheld information rather than told lies intentionally about your circumstances. In the case of AG-v-Turner [2012] JRC 147, which was before this Court on 3rd August, the Court said this in circumstances where the defendant was guilty of similar offending:-
The legislature provides a maximum sentence and imprisonment of 7 years or a fine and that shows the degree of seriousness which the legislature accords to benefit fraud and that is why we have been looking at the circumstances of this case with such care.
4. Now it is proposed that some Compensation Order should be made and your Counsel suggest that you cannot afford £200 per month but you could afford £150 a month. I say that because there are two principles which this Court must bear in mind at this stage; the first is that the public should be repaid, within a reasonable delay, the monies which you have improperly claimed from them, and secondly, there should be a penalty for the conduct. The Court does not accept at all the contention reported in the social enquiry report that you are somehow not guilty of stealing money from the public because you did not tell a deliberate lie. In effect, every time a payment of income support is made, the original application is made again and that is why the rule about disclosure of any change of circumstances is so important. The Court does not accept the view that you did not think the house was a capital asset; you had a good education, your educational accomplishments are such that we do not think that you can possibly have contemplated that a house worth £250,000 to you, but worth £500,000 in all, could not count as a capital asset.
5. In so far as I describe it as a theft of money, the Court also does not think that anyone would consider that income support should be available for those who inherit capital assets in excess of £250,000. Income support is for those who are in genuine need, not for those who inherit capital assets in that sum.
6. In the circumstances we are not going to go with the conclusions of the Crown. We consider that this offending is serious and that it is important, taking the views expressed by the Bailiff recently in the case of AG-v-Whelan [2011] JRC 159A, to send out a message that those who defraud the community by obtaining income support or other benefits by telling lies are at risk of a prison sentence. Although that case involved the telling of lies, your case of not disclosing a change of circumstances when you were given every opportunity to do so is not very dramatically different.
7. We think the right sentence is a sentence of 15 months' imprisonment on Count 1 and 3 months' imprisonment, concurrent, on Count 2. We have taken into account the mitigation which you have, the references, we have noted the personal letter which you have sent into the Court and we have also noted your guilty plea and the other matters of mitigation which your Counsel has raised. However, we are not going to order that this sentence of imprisonment should take effect immediately; it will be suspended for a period of 2 years. If you do not offend during that period the prison sentence will not come into force. If you do offend during that period, if you commit any offence which carries a custodial sentence then the sentence we now impose will come into effect and you will serve that prison sentence. Keep out of trouble and you will not be serving that sentence. The reasons that we are going for the suspended sentence in this case are two-fold, first of all it is important to mark the seriousness of the offence with a custodial order and secondly, we have suspended it having regard to the fact that you have a six year old child.
8. We are going to attach to the suspended prison sentence a Supervision Order of 9 months. We think that it is necessary in the circumstances of the Compensation Order which we are about to make, that you should have the support of the Probation Service and that is the purpose of the Supervision Order. We acknowledge what is said in the social enquiry report that you do not carry a substantial risk of further offending so that is not the reason for the Order. The reason for the Order is to allow the Probation Service to give you support over the next 9 months because of the Compensation Order which we are now about to make. As I said, there is a principle that the public should be repaid within a reasonable delay and a proposition that repayment should be made at the rate of £150 per month would require some 14 or 15 years before the public was repaid in full and we do not think that is reasonable.
9. In the circumstances we are going to make a Compensation Order in favour of the Social Security Minister in the sum of £27,254.47. That is money which you have wrongly had from the Minster and which you must repay. You must repay it within 9 months and in default of paying it back within 9 months then you will go to prison for 12 months.
10. We recognise that the effect of the Compensation Order is the probability that the house will have to be sold. Of course the probability is that had you made proper disclosure at the right time you would never have had the money but you would have had to sell the house anyway. And so that seems to us to be a perfectly fair outcome. You will, as a result of the sale of the property ,which we anticipate, have a substantial capital sum. You will also, although subject to the suspended prison sentence, you will also have your liberty. It gives you the opportunity of starting again with a clean slate having repaid the debt to the community which you owe as a result of the conduct which you have committed.