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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 >> RTC_1_04 [2004] UKSSCSC CTC_1106_2002 (20 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2004/CTC_1106_2002.html Cite as: [2004] UKSSCSC CTC_1106_2002 |
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(RTC_1_04) [2004] UKSSCSC CTC_1106_2002 (20 February 2004)
R(TC) 1/04
(Taylor v. Commissioners of the Inland Revenue)
CA (Gibson, Laws and Longmore LJJ) CTC/1106/2002
20.2.04
Disabled person's tax credit – remunerative work – whether bank holidays to be disregarded in calculating average hours worked
The claimant's contract of employment required him to work 16 hours per week. His claim for disabled person's tax credit made on 8.6.01 was refused on the ground that he could not be treated as engaged in remunerative work. This was because under regulation 6(4)(c)(ii) of the Disability Working Allowance (General) Regulations 1991, the average number of hours worked over the 5 and 13 weeks immediately preceding the week of claim was less than 16 hours per week and so for the purposes of regulation 6(1)(a) of those regulations, he was not undertaking work for not less than 16 hours per week. The tribunal dismissed the claimant's appeal. The claimant appealed to the Commissioner on the ground that but for the bank holidays that had occurred in the 5 week period immediately preceding the week of claim, he would have satisfied regulation 6(4)(c)(ii). He also argued that it was perverse that whilst absence from work by reason of bank holidays was not disregarded for the purpose of regulation 6(1)(a), under regulation 6(5)(c) such absence was disregarded in determining whether the claimant had worked not less than 16 hours in the week of claim or either of the two weeks immediately preceding the week of claim, for the purpose of the further condition in regulation 6(1)(c) for being treated as engaged in remunerative work. The Commissioner dismissed the appeal, holding that the focus of regulation 6(1)(a) was on the hours actually worked rather than on the contracted hours of work and applying regulation 6(4)(c)(ii) on that basis. The claimant appealed to the Court of Appeal. He argued that as regulation 6(4)(c)(ii) permitted the use of an alternative length of time to enable the average hours of work to be determined more accurately, the Revenue ought to have adopted instead a period of three weeks in May 2001 when the claimant actually did average 16 hours work per week.
Held, dismissing the appeal, that:
DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEAL
Adam Fullwood Esq (instructed by Thrasher Walker Partnership) for the Appellant
Jason Coppel Esq (instructed by The Solicitor's Office of the Commissioners of Inland Revenue) for the Respondent
Judgment (Reserved)
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE:
"he is engaged and normally engaged in remunerative work".
"6. Remunerative work
(1) For the purposes of Part VII of the Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992 as it applies to disabled person's tax credit and subject to paragraph (3), a person shall be treated as engaged in remunerative work where –
(a) the work he undertakes is for not less than 16 hours per week;
(b) the work is done for payment or in expectation of payment; and
(c) he is employed at the date of claim and satisfies the requirements of paragraph (5)
(2) A person who does not satisfy all the requirements of sub-paragraphs (a) to (c) of paragraph (1) shall not be treated as engaged … in remunerative work.
...
(4) … in determining for the purposes of sub-paragraph (a) of paragraph (1) whether a person has undertaken work of not less than 16 hours per week –
(a) there shall be included in the calculation any time allowed
(i) for meals or refreshments; or
(ii) for visits to a hospital, clinic or other establishment for the purpose only of treating or monitoring the person's disability,
but only where the person is, or expects to be, paid earnings in respect of that time; and
(b) where at the date of claim the claimant has within the previous 5 weeks –
(i) started a new job;
(ii) resumed work after a break of at least 13 weeks; or
(iii) changed his hours,
the hours worked shall be calculated by reference to the number of hours, or where these are expected to fluctuate, the average number of hours, which he is expected to work in a week; or
(c) where none of heads (i) to (iii) of sub-paragraph (b) apply, and
(i) a recognised cycle of working has been established at the date of claim, the hours worked shall be calculated by reference to the average number of hours worked in a week over the period of one complete cycle (including where the cycle involves periods in which the person does not work, those periods, but disregarding any other absences); or
(ii) no recognised cycle of working has been established at that date, the hours worked shall be calculated by reference to the average number of hours worked over the 5 weeks immediately preceding the week in which the claim is made, or such other length of time preceding that week as may, in the particular case, enable the person's weekly average hours of work to be determined more accurately;
…
(5) Subject to paragraph (6), the requirements of this paragraph are that the person –
(a) worked not less than 16 hours in either –
(i) the week of claim; or
(ii) either of the two weeks immediately preceding the week of claim; or
(b) is expected by his employer to work or, where he is a self-employed earner he expects to work, not less than 16 hours in the week next following the week of claim; or
(c) cannot satisfy the requirements of sub-paragraph (a) or (b) above at the date of claim because he is or will be absent from work by reason of a recognised, customary or other holiday but he is expected by his employer to work or, where he is a self-employed earner he expects to work, not less than 16 hours in the week following his return to work, …
…
(6) For the purposes of paragraph (5) –
(a) work which a person does only qualifies if –
(i) it is the work which he normally does, and
(ii) it is likely to last for a period of 5 weeks or more beginning with the week in which the claim is made; and
(b) a person shall be treated as not on a recognised, customary or other holiday on any day on which the person is on maternity leave or is absent from work because he is ill.
(7) Where a person is treated as engaged in remunerative work in accordance with the above paragraphs, he shall also be treated as normally engaged in remunerative work."
"there was no question that he had not worked for 16 hours a week on average through the relevant period."
The "relevant period" was not defined but was presumably either or both of the periods of 5 and 13 weeks before the week in which he made his claim.
"one of the days in the relevant week was a public holiday"
and, therefore, it was arguable that Mr Taylor would have worked 16 hours in that week but for the Whitsun bank holiday in late May.
(1) that if one took the period of 5 weeks before Mr Taylor's claim was submitted there were in fact two bank holidays and (presumably) therefore Mr Taylor, but for the bank holidays, would in fact have worked an average of 16 hours a week for the 5 weeks preceding the submission of his claim;
(2) that it was confusing and, indeed, perverse that for the purposes of regulations (6)(1)(c) and 6(5), bank holidays appeared to be taken into account whereas for the purposes of regulations 6(1)(a) and 6(4) they were not.
"I feel I must leave to others, in front of whom the point may be argued, what precisely it means"
and gave leave to appeal.
Week ending
10 March 2001 sick
17 March 2001 sick
24 March 2001 sick
31 March 2001 sick
7 April 2001 sick
14 April 2001 sick
21 April 2001 sick
28 April 2001 16 hours
5 May 2001 11 hours
12 May 2001 16 hours
19 May 2001 16 hours
26 May 2001 16 hours
2 June 2001 10½ hours
The figures of 11 hours and 10½ hours for the weeks ending 5 May and 2 June 2001 are attributable to the May Day Bank Holiday and the Whitsun Bank Holiday respectively. But for these bank holidays Mr Taylor would have worked an average of 16 hours for the 5 weeks previous to his application. No such problem would, so far as is known, have arisen if he had made an application in mid-July. Since it is not unlikely that employers of disabled persons will arrange to employ them for 16 hours a week so that such persons can then earn the tax credit in addition to the earnings under their contract of employment, the existence of bank holidays which are not hours of work constitutes something of a "trap" for applicants if the Commissioner has reached the correct conclusion.
"such other length of time preceding that week [in which the claim is made] as may, in the particular case, enable the person's weekly average hours of work to be determined more accurately."
That other length of time, Mr Fullwood submitted, was the 3 week period in mid-May when Mr Taylor did, indeed, average 16 hours per week.
"even if one took the 13 week period – or indeed any other period of reasonable length – no decisively better figure is produced or, indeed, can ever be produced if, in any one week of that period, the claimant works less than 16 hours. The practical solution would be for a working week to be slightly in excess of 16 hours so as to be able to take up any slack, …"
That is the gist of the matter. To select a period of 3 weeks just to avoid the bank holiday "trap" would be artificial especially if (as we were told was the case) a claim could be freshly made at an appropriate later date. I do not consider that it can be said that the Inland Revenue reached a perverse decision or that the Commissioner ought to have held that they did.
LORD JUSTICE LAWS:
Lord Justice Peter Gibson:
Order: Appeal dismissed; order as per agreed minute submitted to the court.
(Order does not form part of the approved judgment)