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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [1996] UKSSCSC CIB_11293_1995 (01 October 1996) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1996/CIB_11293_1995.html Cite as: [1996] UKSSCSC CIB_11293_1995 |
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MJG/SH/1W/DC
Commissioner's File: CIS/11293/1995
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION ACT 1992
SOCIAL SECURITY CONTRIBUTIONS AND BENEFITS ACT 1992
APPEAL FROM DECISION OF SOCIAL SECURITY APPEAL TRIBUNAL ON A QUESTION OF LAW
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"[The claimant] is aged 29 and has been in receipt of Income Support for herself and her 2 sons aged 7 and 5 years since 25 February 1994. Her only other income is Child Benefit. At the start of her claim [the claimant] lived in her own home at 23 HHC, owned jointly with her ex-husband. [The claimant and her husband] were jointly liable for the mortgage of £18,000 which was secured on the property taken out with the Halifax Building Society." [A letter from the Halifax Building Society confirms that that the liability on the mortgage was joint and several]. "As [the husband] has liability for 50% of the mortgage payments, the Adjudication Officer allowed [the claimant] as a housing cost included in her applicable amount, interest on £9,000. ... On 21 December 1994 it came to the benefit officer's attention that the marital home at 23 HHC had been sold and [the claimant] had moved to a house which she had purchased, in her own name, at 33 C Street. Further enquiries revealed that [the claimant] had moved as her ex-husband wanted his share of the proceeds from the sale of the house ... [the claimant's] new home at 33 C Street cost £43,800 and had been purchased with the aid of a mortgage from the Halifax Building Society of £18,000. The new mortgage had been advanced on 20 December 1994. ... The adjudication officer considered whether housing costs in respect of this new mortgage could be allowed, i.e. interest on the amount of £18,000 borrowed to purchase 33C Street. The adjudication officer decided" [taking into account paragraph 5A of Schedule 3 to the Income Support (General) Regulations 1987 - see below] "that as the new loan had been taken out for the reasons specified and at a time [the claimant] was entitled to income support, then the amount of housing costs payable to her could not include interest on the difference between the old liability and the new liability, i.e. [the claimant] had been receiving interest of £9,000 (the old liability) and could only now receive interest on £9,000 of the new liability (the new liability being £18,000 in total)."
"The question in this case is what is the liability of [the claimant] for her mortgage at 23 HHC and her mortgage at 33C Street. At 23 HHC, she was on a mortgage with Halifax Building Society with her husband in the sum of £18,000 and it is clear that this was a joint and several liability with the Halifax. In other words, [the claimant] had a legal liability with the Halifax to repay £18,000. It follows, therefore that the mortgage on 33C Street in the sum of £18,000 is not an increase on her legal liability on her previous house. In fact the figures are exactly the same, namely the sum of £18,000. The tribunal review [sic] therefore that [the claimant] is entitled to the payment of housing costs at 33C Street, based on a mortgage of £18,000. Paragraph 3 of Schedule 3 of the General Regulations applied paragraph 5A(3) of Schedule 3 applied."
Other Housing Costs which are not met
5A. - (1) Subject to the following provisions of this paragraph, the housing costs [in relation to e.g. mortgage interest] shall not be met during the relevant period where those costs were incurred -
(a) after 2nd May 1994; and
(b) during that same relevant period.
(2) The 'relevant period' is any period during which the person who incurred the cost is either -
(a) entitled to income support; or
(b) ..........
(3) Where in the relevant period, before the housing costs referred to in sub-paragraph (1) were incurred ('the new liability'), housing costs of a kind [such as mortgage interest] were applicable in the case of the claimant or a member of his family ('the former liability') then, in sub-paragraph (1), the housing costs which are not to be met are such costs ...
(a) ... as are equal to an amount (if any) by which the new liability exceeds the former liability; and
(b) .........."
"I accept that the word used is 'applicable' rather than 'met' but it seems to me that 'applicable' must, in the circumstances, have the meaning [of being actually met] as otherwise the comparison could be between one hypothetical amount and another to see whether there was any excess; it would be necessary to determine what entitlement there might have been in respect of the old mortgage compared with what entitlement there could be, but for sub-paragraph (1), [of paragraph 5A] under the new mortgage. That seems to me not to make sense, given the presumed intention of the provision."
Although the facts of that decision were different, the reasoning of course is equally applicable to the present case. However I must respectfully decline to apply it to the present case, I must either distinguish the decision on its facts or alternatively decline to follow it.
(Signed) M. J. Goodman
Commissioner
(Date) 1 October 1996