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Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2004] CSC7/03-04(T) (25 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NISSCSC/2004/CSC7_03_04(T).html Cite as: [2004] CSC7/3-4(T), [2004] CSC7/03-04(T) |
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Decision No: CSC7/03-04(T)
(1) that the mother had assets capable of producing higher income;
(2) that the mother's lifestyle was inconsistent with the declared income;
(3) that the mother had unreasonably high housing costs;
(4) that the mother's housing costs could be paid by her present partner.
Had it not been for the legal bar, each of the above were cases which, if proven correct, could have formed the basis of departure directions.
"(3) A case shall not constitute a case under regulations 23 to 29 where the application is made –
(a) …
(b) by an absent parent where, at the date on which any departure direction given in response to that application would take effect, income support, income-based jobseekers allowance, working families' tax credit or disabled persons tax credit is or was in payment to or in respect of the person with care of the child or children in relation to whom the maintenance assessment in question is made;".
"The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any ground such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, association with a national minority, birth or other status."
The legislation in question (regulation 9(3)(b)) relates to all absent parents where the parent with care is in receipt of a relevant benefit. It is not expressly discriminatory and we have no indication that it is so in its effects. We therefore conclude that the legislation is not discriminatory. In any event Article 14 applies only to the rights and freedoms set forth in the Convention. In general terms it contains no free standing prohibition of discrimination but merely requires access to other Convention rights to be equal. As regards access to other Convention rights, not all forms of differentiation will amount to discrimination in Article 14 terms. To amount to such discrimination there must be different treatment of those "placed in analogous situations"(Lithgow –v- United Kingdom (1986) 8 EHRR 329). In this case we can see no discriminatory treatment between those placed in analogous situations. All absent parents where the caring parent is in receipt of a qualifying benefit (the analogous situation) are treated in the same way by the legislation.
"So far as it is possible to do so, primary legislation and subordinate legislation must be read and given effect in a way which is compatible with the Convention rights."
"Every natural or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of international law.
The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other contributions or penalties."
"1. It is clear that so far as payment is concerned the same test is adopted in section 6(1) and 4(1)(b). Where benefit is claimed or paid, whatever this may mean, then (i) the parent with care may not make her own application but (ii) the Secretary of State may require her to authorise him to do so. The two procedures are obviously both mutually exclusive and exhaustive. Every case must fall into one or the other. Either benefit is claimed or paid or it is not. Accordingly if "paid" means "lawfully paid" in section 6, it must do so in section 4(10)(b). But this, in my view, produces a nonsensical result. The parent with care cannot claim or be paid income support on the basis that she is entitled to it, and at the same time decline to authorise the Secretary of State to recover child support maintenance support under section 6 on the basis that she is not. By making a claim to benefit and a fortiori by receiving it, she automatically takes herself out of section 4 and into section 6. It is in my view not insignificant that in section 6 the relevant condition precedent is not attached to the power of the Secretary of State to require the parent with care to confer the necessary authority upon him, it is a condition precedent to the power of the parent with care to authorise the Secretary of State to act. She is the person who must consider whether to apply under section 4 or ask the Secretary of State to apply under section 6. She knows whether she has made a claim or is in receipt of benefit. But (unless she has made a fraudulent claim) she cannot know whether she is entitled to benefit, though if she has acted honestly she will consider that she is.
2. Section 6(1) refers to benefit being claimed by or in respect of the parent of a qualifying child as well as benefit being paid to or in respect of her. This shows that Parliament intended the section 6 procedure to be set in motion before the claimant's entitlement to benefit has been determined. This, to my mind, demonstrates conclusively that the invocation of the section 6 procedure cannot depend upon the validity of the claim. It is true that, as Mr Mostyn pointed out, where the child support officer is required to make the assessment before the claim to benefit has been determined, he cannot rely upon paragraph 5(4) of the first schedule, to disregard the claimant's income, for paragraph 5(4) refers to payment and not to claims. But that to my mind takes the matter no further. The position before the child support officer is no different from that which would obtain if the parent with care had not claimed benefit and was proceeding under section 4.
3. If the respondents' argument is correct, then every step taken under section 6(1) falls if the parent with care is not entitled to the benefit which she has claimed or is being paid. It is not, as the commissioners seem to have thought, merely a case of incorrect assessment having been made under paragraph 5(4). The Secretary of State's authority to take action to recover child support maintenance, which is derived from the parent with care, together with the service of the maintenance inquiry form and his reference to the child support officer, must all be set aside since they are all ultimately subject to the same condition precedent. The result is, if the respondents' argument is correct, that there is no effective date and no liability on the part of the absent parent to pay child support maintenance at all. The parent with care on the other hand will be entitled to make her own application under section 4 and will always have been entitled to do so, but there is no means (at this stage) by which the parent with care can have the section 6 application treated as if it had been made by her under section 4. There is machinery for doing this at a much earlier stage, but that will have been long since past. Accordingly, if the respondents' arguments are correct and on the adjourned hearing the tribunal discovers that payment of income support has been cancelled, then there is no means by which the absent parent can be required to pay child support maintenance until the parent with care makes her own application under section 4 and a new effective date is obtained. Thus the consequence of holding the section 6 application to be invalid is to deprive the qualifying children of maintenance by the absent parent, and to confer upon him an unjustified relief from all liability, which is a result which Parliament cannot to my mind conceivably have intended.
4. Whether the benefit is paid within the meaning of section 6(1) and paragraph 5(4) to the parent with care, is relevant to the amount of maintenance payable by the absent parent, but it is mainly relevant to the question whether the maintenance is to be collected by the Secretary of State in order to recoup the cost of paying benefit to the parent with care. The cost to public funds and the corresponding need for recoupment by the Secretary of State on behalf of the taxpayer is the same whether or not the parent with care is entitled to the benefit which is being paid to her. Thus the statutory purpose behind section 6(1), far from requiring the word "paid" to be construed as being "lawfully or properly paid", in my judgment requires it to be construed as meaning "actually paid"."
(1) We have considered giving the words "in payment" in regulation 9(3)(b) the reading of "actually in payment" as has been done with those or similar words in other legislation. To comply with section 3(1) of the Human Rights Act we must read and give effect to regulation 9(3)(b) in a way which is compatible with the Convention rights. We consider whether the deprivation of property effected by regulation 9(3)(b) is in the public interest only for the purpose of and to the extent of enabling us to decide whether the above reading fulfils our obligation under section 3(1).
(2) We are not convinced that the public interest demands the above reading. We are of the view that if that reading is given there is a real danger that the effect of the regulation will not be compatible with the rights under Article 1 of the First Protocol to the Convention.
(3) Our obligation under section 3(1) is a positive one. As Carswell LCJ, delivering what was in effect the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland, stated in the case of Foyle, Carlingford and Irish Lights Commission -v- McGillion [2002] NI86: -
"It is incumbent upon us by virtue of section 3 of the Human Rights Act 1998 to read and give effect to legislation in a way that is compatible with the Convention rights."
He then proceeded to construe a legislative provision relevant to that as the directory rather than mandatory, describing the construction as: -
"contrary to the previous case-law, whose binding authority is overridden by the 1998 Act."
If it is possible for us to do so, we must read and give effect to the legislation in a way which is compatible with the Convention rights. We conclude that another reading is possible and that the words "in payment" should be read as meaning "not unlawfully in payment", thereby enabling the relevant authorities to investigate whether the conditions of entitlement to the relevant benefit are satisfied.
(4) We consider that this reading would not render the scheme unworkable, would not violate the rights of the father or the mother and would not do violence to the meaning of regulation 9(3)(b). We therefore consider that it is possible for us to give this reading, and proper in all the circumstances for us to do so, as this reading is, in our view, compatible with the Convention rights.
(signed):J A H Martin QC
Chief Commissioner
(signed):M F Brown
Commissioner
(signed):J P P Powell
Deputy Commissioner
25 March 2004