CFC_15_1990
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [1992] UKSSCSC CFC_15_1990 (16 March 1992) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1992/CFC_15_1990.html Cite as: [1992] UKSSCSC CFC_15_1990 |
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[1992] UKSSCSC CFC_15_1990 (16 March 1992)
R(FC) 2/92
Mr. M. J. Goodman CFC/15/1990
16.3.92
Capital – house occupied by a tenant – whether value of the house to be disregarded as being an asset of a "business"
The claimant, who lived elsewhere, owned a house occupied by a protected tenant. The District Valuer valued the tenanted house at £9,500. The adjudication officer disallowed the claim on the grounds that the claimant had in excess of the capital limit. On appeal, the claimant's representative argued that the capital value of the tenanted house should be disregarded as it constituted a business under paragraph 6 of Schedule 3. The tribunal rejected this argument and upheld the adjudication officer's decision. The claimant appealed to the social security Commissioner.
Held that:
- a certificate of exemption (under section 7(6) of the Social Security Act 1975) from paying Class II contributions did not conclusively determine, for benefit purposes, that the claimant was to be treated as a "self-employed earner" under section 2(1)(b) of the Social Security Act 1975;
- the ownership of a single tenanted house, with the collection of rent and the execution of repairs and the carrying out of other landlord's duties all performed by an individual, did not constitute a business.
The appeal was dismissed.
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"No person shall be entitled to an income-related benefit [which family credit is, 1986 Act, s. 20(1)] if his capital or a prescribed part of it exceeds the prescribed amount."
Regulation 28 of the Family Credit (General) Regulations 1987, SI 1987 No. 1973 (the "General Regulations") provides:
"For the purposes of section 22(6) of the Act as it applies to family credit (no entitlement to benefit if capital exceeds prescribed amount) the prescribed amount is £6,000 [raised to £8,000 by SI 1990 No. 691 as from 9 April 1990]."
"Schedule 3
CAPITAL TO BE DISREGARDED
1-5 .….….………….
- The assets of any business owned in whole or in part by the claimant and for the purposes of which he is engaged as a self-employed earner or, if he has ceased to be so engaged, for such a period as may be reasonable in the circumstances to allow for disposal of any such asset."
[An identical rule is prescribed for income support by paragraph 6(1) of Schedule 10 to the Income Support (General) Regulations 1987, SI 1987 No. 1967].
"[The dwelling house] should be disregarded under Schedule 3, paragraph 6 of General Regulations. [The claimant] is a self employed earner. She looks after the property. Goes up every week. Checks the tenant. Regulated tenancy. Cannot increase rent. Has a certificate of exemption from Class II National Insurance and also a letter of exemption from tax from the [Inspector of Taxes]. Section 4, Social Security Act 1975. Self-employed. Actually checks the tenant. Tried to sell but no-one wanted to buy with sitting tenant at fixed rent"
"[The claimant] owns a house with a capital value of £8,550 [i.e. £9,500 less the 10% deduction under regulation 32(a)(i) of the General Regulations] for the purpose of the regulations. The house is tenanted and she collects the rent from the tenant every week and checks that the property is in repair. The last time repairs were needed was 18 months ago."
"[The claimant] cannot be treated as a self-employed earner on the strength of merely collecting the rent from a tenanted house. The house is not a business, it is an investment and as such its value falls to be included as a capital asset for family credit purposes."
"Clearly, it is possible for property to be an asset of a business. There would be no dispute that a person owning several blocks of flats which are rented to tenants was engaged as a self-employed earner running a business, the flats being assets of this business. It is also possible, I submit, that a person who owns a single property and receives rent from a tenant of this property is engaged as a self-employed earner; equally it is possible that this person is not a self-employed earner. It is my submission that it is a question of fact as to whether, in any particular circumstances, a business is being run. "
"There are many things which in common colloquial English would not be called a business, even when carried on by a single person, which would be so-called when carried on by a number of persons … for instance, a man who is the owner of offices, that is, of a house divided into several floors and used for commercial purposes, would not be said to carry on a business because he let the offices as such; but suppose a company was formed for the purposes of buying a building, or leasing a house, to be divided into offices, and to be let out, should not we say, if that was the object of the company, that the company was carrying on business for the purpose of letting offices, or was an office-letting company, trying it by the use of ordinary colloquial language? The same observation may be made as regards a single individual buying or selling land with this addition, that he may make it a business, and then it is a question of continuity. A man occasionally buys himself land, as many landowners do, and nobody would say he was a land-jobber or dealer in land. But if a man made it his particular business to buy and sell land to obtain profit, he would be designated as a land-jobber or dealer in land. …so in the ordinary case of investments, a man who has money to invest, invests his money and he may occasionally sell the investments and buy others, but he is not carrying on a business."
The actual decision on the facts of the case by Jessel MR was overruled by the Court of Appeal (1880) 15 Ch. D. 268 et seq. but without in any way impugning the definition of business given by Jessel MR.
Date: 16 March 1992 (signed) Mr. M. J. Goodman
Commissioner