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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> SB v Secretary of State for Work And Pensions [2007] EWCA Civ 89 (14 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/89.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 89 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
Social Security Commissioner
CDLA/3742/2004
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LADY JUSTICE HALLETT
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
____________________
SB |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Work and Pensions |
Respondent |
____________________
James Maurici (instructed by DWP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 24th January 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller :
Introduction
"5. (1) Subject to regulation 6 (exception from offset of recoverable overpayment), any sum paid in respect of a period covered by a subsequent determination in any of the cases set out in paragraph (2) shall be offset against arrears of entitlement under the subsequent determination and, except to the extent that the sum exceeds the arrears, shall be treated as properly paid on account of them."
"Case 1: Payment pursuant to a decision which is revised or superseded, or overturned on appeal Where a person has been paid a sum by way of benefit pursuant to a decision which is subsequently revised under section 9 of the Social Security Act 1998, superseded under Section 10 of that Act or overturned on appeal."
"10. Mr Stagg argues that the withholding of arrears may occur in a random and capricious way dependent on the timing of the decision-making. He goes on to argue that case 1 of regulation 5 of the 1988 regulations is clearly designed to prevent a claimant being paid benefit twice in respect of the same period. Referring to regulation 5(1) of the 1988 regulations, he argues that the decision-maker was not entitled to treat monies payable in respect of periods arising outside the overpayment period (that is to say periods when the claimant was at home and not in residential care) since the later periods could not properly be said to be "covered by" the determination to supersede the original decision. Also, referring to case 1, he says that the claimant had not been "paid a sum by way of benefit" in respect of the periods covered by the offset. That construction of the regulations is not accepted by the Secretary of State's representative who argues that the effect of regulation 5, case 1, is that DLA paid under the decision of 14 July 2000 for the period starting on 20 September 2001 (that is to say the start of the period covered by the superseding decision of 30 January 2004) must be offset against arrears due under that superseding decision.
11. Ingenious though Mr Stagg's arguments are in relation to the recovery of the offset I do not accept them. Regulation 5(1) of the 1988 regulations provides that: "any sum paid in respect of the period covered by a subsequent determination . . . shall be offset against arrears of entitlement under the subsequent determination . . ." It does not, however, refer to "arrears of entitlement in respect of the same period . . ." No such limiting or qualifying words as those which I have indicated appear in regulation 5.
12. In my judgment one has to consider what is covered by the "subsequent determination" since the arrears of entitlement must necessarily arise under that determination. Regulation 5(2) provides for the cases in which regulations 5(1) applies to the subsequent determination. Case 1 applies where a person has been paid a sum by way of benefit pursuant to a decision which is subsequently . . . superseded under section 10". There was, of course, in the instant appeal such a supersession decision. In my view what is relevant for consideration under regulation 5 is the scope of the "subsequent determination", not the narrower construction of the periods covered by the overpayment of the arrears. I have not forgotten Mr Stagg's point about the capricious effect of the date on which the decision-making takes place. That may be right but it seems to me that the provisions in issue provide a mechanism for automatic recoupment of benefit where there has been an overpayment. The alternative, which would hardly be satisfactory and even more open to criticism on the basis of unfairness, would be the payment of arrears to which a claimant was entitled and then (in most overpayment cases although not this one) separate decision to recover money overpaid.
13. Applying that reasoning in the circumstances of this case the "subsequent determination" is the decision dated 13 October 2003. In substance, in my view, it covers the issue of supersession and entitlement. That it does not deal with overpayment is not determinative since that is not a requirement of a case 1 decision. The decision of 13 October 2003 is expressed to be by way of supersession of the decision dated 14 July 2000. It is not entirely clear what period was covered by the latter decision but the claimant through his appointee) completed a renewal claim pack on 22 May 2003 and the later overpayment decision (document 83) relates to the period from 3 October 2001 to 20 May 2003, that indicating that that was the end date of the period of the July 2000 award. The decision-maker on 13 October 2003 ticked the box to the effect that "any DLA already paid shall be treated as paid on account of the benefit now awarded". The decision then goes on to find entitlement to lower rate mobility and middle rate care from 29 September 2001 to 5 November 2005 but that the care component was not payable for any day after the claimant was in relevant accommodation. There was an award of the care component for a continuous period from the day the claimant entered the accommodation until 5 November 2005, therefore qualifying entitlement giving rise to arrears when the actual periods of home leave had been established. Those arrears could then be offset.
14. In summary, then, for the reasons set out above, I accept the argument advanced on behalf of the Secretary of State in relation to the application of regulation 5 of the 1988 regulations and reject the construction argued for by Mr Stagg. The upshot is that the decision-maker was entitled to offset arrears in the way that he did."
i) As properly paid; or
ii) As paid on account of a payment which it is determined should be or should have been made, and for reducing or withholding any arrears payable by virtue of the subsequent determination…"
Lady Justice Hallett I agree.
Lord Justice Lawrence Collins: I also agree.