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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Flintshire County Council v Reynolds [2006] EWHC 195 (Admin) (20 January 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2006/195.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 195 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE NEWMAN
____________________
FLINTSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
MRS ANNE REYNOLDS | (DEFENDANT) |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The DEFENDANT did not appear and was not represented
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"(1) If a person for the purpose of obtaining any benefit or other payment under the relevant social security legislation whether for himself or some other person, or for any other purpose connected with that legislation -
(a) Makes a statement or representation which he knows to be false or;
(b) Produces or furnishes or knowingly causes, or knowingly allows to be produced or furnished any document or information which he knows to be false in a material particular, he shall be guilty of an offence."
"(a) The respondent and her husband signed the claim form dated 21st January 2004, the respondent's husband signed the form as the person claiming and the respondent countersigned the form as partner's signature.
(b) The respondent was working when she signed the claim form on 21st January 2004 at Tescos Store, Broughton.
(c) Respondent has been employed by Tescos for 5 years.
(d) The respondent made no financial gain.
(e) The respondent is of previous good character."
The case stated contains some summary of the evidence given, from which it appears that the respondent said that her husband had completed all the particulars given in the form and she had signed it without reading it; she had not even read the declaration below which she signed. She said that she and her husband had been told by someone from a benefit office that, if she worked for less than 16-hours a week, her entitlement to benefit would not be affected.
"Even if someone else has filled in this form for you, you must sign this declaration if you can.
If you have a partner, it would be helpful if they sign below to confirm all the details about them are correct. But they do not have to sign.
Please read this declaration carefully before you sign and date it.
I understand the following:... "
There are then five bullet points, against which the text is in ordinary type of the same size of font, which again I estimate at 10 or 11. The bullet points are as follows:
"• If I give information that is incorrect or incomplete, you may take action against me. This may include court action.
• You will use the information I have provided to process my claim for Housing Benefit or Council Tax Benefit or both. You may check some of the information with other sources as allowed by the law.
• You may use any information I have provided in connection with this and any other claim for social security benefit that I have made or may make. You may give some information to other organisations, such as government departments, local authorities and private sector companies such as banks and organisations that may lend me money if the law allows this."
• I know I must let the council know about any change in my circumstances which might affect my claim.
• I declare the information I have given on this form is correct and complete."
Below that (in bold):
"Signature of person claiming".
There is a box to the right for the signature to appear. Below that, there is a box for the date. Below that are the words a 'Partner's signature' and there is a box to the right for the signature. Below that, there is a space for the date. There are then some instructions about what should happen if someone other than the claimant has completed the form.
"The prosecution contended that, in signing the form, Mrs Reynolds had knowingly made a false representation to obtain benefit by failing to declare that she was working at Tescos. For the respondent, it was contended that she had not made a false representation for the purpose of obtaining benefit as she did not complete the form herself, and when she signed it she was unaware of its contents."
"We were of the opinion that the appellant failed to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the respondent knowingly made false representations to obtain benefit. Our decision had been made on the following findings -
(a) As a result of being married for 22 years, it has become Mr Reynolds role in the household to deal with the form filling and when the respondent was asked to sign the form she did so without question and on this basis we find she did not knowingly provide false information.
(b) We find the respondent to be a person of good character who we felt gave a truthful account and we consider that her actions on this occasion did not amount to a criminal offence under the Social Security Administration Act. Although in giving our reasons we said the respondent was reckless in signing the form - we would refer to the dictionary definition of the word reckless which includes careless, negligent, irresponsible and we are of the firm view that this is how we perceive the respondent."
The case stated then poses the question for this court in the following way:
"'Were we wrong to acquit the respondent having found on the evidence her actions were reckless i.e. careless, negligent, irresponsible'"?
"It seems to me to be very important in cases of this sort that lay justices, who are not necessarily very skilled in the handling of evidence and in the drawing of distinctions which the law requires to be drawn, should have explained to them by the prosecution, where the burden is on the prosecution, exactly what sort of knowledge the prosecution desires to be found. There are, I think, three degrees of knowledge which it may be relevant to consider in cases of this sort. The first is actual knowledge, and that the justices may infer from the nature of the act that was done, for no man can prove the state of another man's mind, and they may find it, of course, even if the defendant gives evidence to the contrary. They may say: 'We do not believe him. We think that was his state of mind.' They may feel that the evidence falls short of that, and, if they do, they have then to consider what might be described as knowledge of the second degree. They have then to consider whether what the defendant was doing was, as it has been called, shutting his eyes to an obvious means of knowledge. Various expressions have been used to describe that state of mind. I do not think it is necessary to describe it further, certainly not in cases of this type, than by the phrase that was used by Lord Hewart CJ, in a case under this section, Evans v Dell (1). What the Lord Chief Justice said was: 'The respondent deliberately refrained from making inquiries, the results of which he might not care to have.'
"The third sort of knowledge is what is generally known in law as constructive knowledge. It is what is encompassed by the words 'ought to have known' in the phrase 'knew or ought to have known.' It does not mean actual knowledge at all, it means that the defendant had in effect the means of knowledge. When, therefore, the case of the prosecution is that the defendant failed to make what they think were reasonable inquiries it is, I think, incumbent on the prosecutor to make it quite plain what they are alleging. There is a vast distinction between a state of mind which consists of deliberately refraining from making inquiries, the result of which the person does not care to have, and a state of mind which is merely neglecting to make such inquiries as a reasonable and prudent person would make. If that distinction is kept well in mind, I think justices will have less difficulty in determining what is the true position. The case of shutting the eyes is actual knowledge in the eyes of the law; the case of merely neglecting to make inquiries is not actual knowledge at all, but comes within the legal conception of constructive knowledge, which is not a conception which, generally speaking, has any place in the criminal law."