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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Cotton v Secretary of State for Works and Pensions [2009] EWCA Civ 1333 (14 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1333.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1333, [2010] AACR 17 |
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IH THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
Upper Tribunal Judge Jacobs
CG/1239/2008
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
and
LORD JUSTICE GOLDRING
____________________
DAVID WILLIAM COTTON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORKS AND PENSIONS |
Respondent |
____________________
David Forsdick (instructed by DWP Legal Services) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 15 October 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Goldring :
The legislation
The Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992
"(1) A person shall be entitled to [a carer's allowance] for any day on which he is engaged in caring for a severely disabled person if—
…(b) he is not gainfully employed …
(8) Regulations may prescribe the circumstances in which a person is or is not to be treated for the purposes of this section … as gainfully employed …"
"For the purposes of this… Act…—
(a) the amount of a person's earnings for any period; or
(b) the amount of his earnings to be treated as comprised in any payment made to him or for his benefit,
shall be calculated or estimated in such manner and on such basis as may be prescribed …"
The Social Security (Invalid Care Allowance) Regulations 1976 ("the 1976 Regulations")
"For the purposes of section 70(1)(b) of the Contributions and Benefits Act (condition of a person being entitled to a carer's allowance for any day that he is not gainfully employed) a person shall not be treated as gainfully employed on any day in a week unless his earnings in the immediately preceding week have exceeded [£84, the prescribed level in 2006/2007; as of 1 October 2007 the level is £95] and, subject to paragraph (2) of this regulation, shall be treated as gainfully employed on every day in a week if his earnings in the immediately preceding week have exceeded [£84]."
The 1996 Regulations
"(1) For the purposes of Parts II to V…of the [1992 Act] and of any regulations made thereunder which relate to benefit under those Parts of that Act or regulations, the earnings of a claimant shall be calculated by determining in accordance with these Regulations the weekly amount of his earnings..."
"(1) Earnings derived from employment as an employed earner shall be calculated or estimated over a period determined in accordance with the following paragraphs and at a weekly amount determined in accordance with regulation 8 (calculation of weekly amount of earnings).
(2) Subject to paragraphs (3) and (5) to (8), the period over which a payment is to be taken into account—
(a) in a case where it is payable in respect of a period, shall be a period equal to a benefit week or such number of benefit weeks as comprise the period commencing on the date on which earnings are treated as paid under regulation 7 (date on which earnings are treated as paid) and ending on the day before the date on which earnings of the same kind (excluding earnings of the kind mentioned at regulation 9(1)(a) to (j)) and from the same source would, or would if the employment was continuing, next be treated as paid under that regulation;
(b) in any other case, shall be a period equal to such number of weeks as is equal to the number (less any fraction of a whole number) calculated in accordance with the formula—
P divided by (Q + R)
where—
P is the net earnings;
Q is the amount of the relevant earnings limit plus one penny; and
R is the total of the sums which would fall to be disregarded or deducted as appropriate under regulation 10(2) or (3) (calculation of net earnings of employed earners),
and that period shall begin on the date on which the payment is treated as paid under regulation 7 (date on which earnings are treated as paid).
(3) Where earnings not of the same kind are derived from the same source and the periods in respect of which those earnings would, but for this paragraph, fall to be taken into account overlap, wholly or partly, those earnings shall be taken into account over a period —
(a) equal to the aggregate length of those periods, and
(b) beginning with the earliest date on which any part of those earnings would otherwise be treated as paid under regulation 7 (date on which earnings are treated as paid).
(4) In a case to which paragraph (3) applies, earnings under regulation 9 (earnings of employed earners) shall be taken into account in the following order of priority—
(a) earnings normally derived from the employment;
(b) any payment to which paragraph (1)(b) or (c) of that regulation applies;
(c) any payment to which paragraph (1)(i) of that regulation applies;
(d) any payment to which paragraph (1)(d) of that regulation applies…"
"Earnings to which regulation 6…applies shall be treated as paid…-
…(b)…'on the first day of the benefit week in which the payment is due to be paid'.
"For the purposes of regulation 6 (calculation of earnings of employed earners)…where the period in respect of which a payment is made-
(a) does not exceed a week, the weekly amount shall be the amount of that payment;
(b) exceeds a week, the weekly amount shall be determined…"
"(1) …"earnings", in the case of employment as an employed earner, means any remuneration or profit derived from that employment and includes—
(a) any bonus or commission;
(b) any payment in lieu of remuneration except any periodic sum paid to a claimant on account of the termination of his employment by reason of redundancy;
(c) any payment in lieu of notice;
(d) any holiday pay except any payable more than four weeks after the termination or interruption of employment…".
The facts
The decision of the Upper Tribunal
"…I have decided that was too ambitious a task. The way those provisions operate is not entirely clear and they would benefit from being reconsidered, if not redrafted."
(1) Holiday pay was a payment "payable in respect of a period" under regulation 6(2)(a). Regulation 6(2)(b) did not apply. Both appellant and respondent submit that is right. For reasons which will become apparent, I too have come to that view.
(2) As the words of regulation 6(2)(a) make clear, it was necessary to identify the period over which a payment was to be taken into account. The start date of that period was the first day of the benefit week in which the payment was due to be made: see regulation 7(b).
(3) "Considerably more difficulty" arose with the end date and the words, "earnings of the same kind (excluding earnings of the kind mentioned at regulation 9(1)(a) to (j)) and from the same source would, or would if the employment was continuing, next be treated as paid under that regulation." "Earnings of the same kind" could not be restricted to holiday pay. As holiday pay was only paid once, there would be no end date. It was only possible to identify an end date if ordinary salary was treated as "earnings of the same kind" as holiday pay. In other words, the end date would be the day before the ordinary salary was next payable.
(4) The commissioner identified a problem with that analysis. As he put it:
"The problem presented…by Regs 6(3) and (4) is that it is plain that, for the purpose of those provisions, holiday pay is treated as being not "of the same kind" as earnings normally derived from employment."
(5) He finally concluded that there was no alternative but to construe the phrase "earnings of the same kind" as having a different meaning in regulation 6(2)(a) from that which it has in 6(3) and (4).
"There are three principles of interpretation that are relevant: (i) legislation must be interpreted as a whole; (ii) the same words should, if possible, be given the same meaning wherever they appear; (iii) words are not used for no purpose.
Applying those principles produced this result. As it was impossible to identify any end date for a period of accrued holiday pay, it was impossible to fix a 'number of benefit weeks' for regulation 6(2)(a). Accordingly, the proper course was to attribute them to 'a benefit week."
Payment in respect of a period
"Earnings and other income shall be calculated on a weekly basis and…payments shall be attributable as follows:
(a)…a payment of income shall be taken into account-
(i) where it is payable in respect of a period, for a period equal to the length of that period…"
"…each of the payments in this case was in respect of a period, i.e. 14 days [pay in arrears], one day's holiday pay and seven weeks [pay] in lieu of notice…"
"The payment which he received was…clearly "in respect of a period," that is to say, a period of nine weeks and one day which can…be broken down into two weeks…one day (the holiday pay) and the seven weeks…"
The argument and my conclusion
"…the period over which a payment [of any of the earnings derived from employment as an employed earner in regulation 9] is to be taken into account:
(a) in a case where [the payment of those earnings] is payable in respect of a period, shall be a period equal to a benefit week[s]…as comprise the period commencing [on the first day of the benefit week in which the payment is due to be paid] under regulation 7… and ending on the day before the date on which earnings of the same kind [namely those payable in respect of a period] (excluding earnings of the kind mentioned at regulation 9(1)(a) to (j) [namely all periodic earnings apart from ordinary pay] and from the same source would, or would if the employment was continuing, next be treated as paid under…regulation [7],[ namely the next ordinary pay day])"
Lord Justice Wilson:
Laws LJ.