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UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2001] UKSSCSC CCS_3616_2000 (18 June 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2001/CCS_3616_2000.html Cite as: [2001] UKSSCSC CCS_3616_2000 |
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R(CS) 3/03
Mr. C. Turnbull CCS/3616/2000
18.6.01
Departure direction – debts incurred before becoming an absent parent – whether loan made by "employer" – meaning of regulation 16(4) of the Child Support Departure Direction and Consequential Amendments Regulations 1996
The absent parent, Mr. M, was a partner in a business ("W & M"), which for a number of years completed 75% of its work for a company "W. P. & Sons Ltd". In July 1996 Mr. M borrowed £10,000 from W. P & Sons Ltd to pay a debt for which both he and Mrs. M were liable. Subsequently, in October 1996, Mr. and Mrs. M separated. In 1997, Mr. M applied for a departure direction in respect of "special expenses" ie sums expended in repaying the loan from W. P. & Sons Ltd, which he contended was a debt qualifying under regulation 16(1) of the Child Support Departure Direction (etc.) Regulations 1996. Regulation 16(2)(k) excludes from regulation 16(1) sums paid by way of repayment of " a loan obtained by the applicant, other than a loan obtained from the qualifying lender or the applicant's current or former employer." The Secretary of State rejected the application on the grounds that the loan had not been made by a "qualifying lender" or by the applicant's "current or former employer". Mr. M appealed. The tribunal dismissed his appeal, finding that although the term "employer" in regulation 16(2)(k) could be interpreted to include a person who engaged another as an independent contractor, in this case it was not Mr. M who had been employed by W. P. & Sons Ltd but the partnership, so that the loan had not been made by Mr. M's employer. Mr. M appealed to the Commissioner, before whom he argued, inter alia, that the loan from W. P. & Sons Ltd was actually made to the partnership W & M, who then paid it onto him, Mr. M, personally. Mr. M had then to repay the loan to W & M and, accordingly, the loan was from his direct employer and thus eligible as a special expense. Furthermore, the Commissioner also considered the application of regulation 16(4) to the facts of the case.
Held, allowing the appeal, but giving a decision to the same effect, that:
- the word "employer" in regulation 16(2)(k) of the 1996 regulations bears its normal meaning of a person who employs another under a contract of service and did not cover employment under a contract for services. W. P. & Sons Ltd was therefore not Mr. M's employer (paragraph 8);
- Mr. M's contention that the loan to him was from W & M, which was his employer, was incorrect because he could not be employed by the partnership in which he was a partner and because, on the facts, the loan was made by W. P. & Sons Ltd direct to him (paragraph 11);
- regulation 16(4) enables a debt incurred entirely (as well as partly) for the purposes of paying off a debt which would have qualified under regulation 16(1) to qualify, but the exclusion in respect of loans in regulation 16(2)(k) applies just as much to that second debt as to the original debt. The fact that the loan from W. P. & Sons Ltd had been used to pay a debt which would have qualified under regulation 16(1) therefore did not assist Mr. M (paragraphs 16 to 20).
The Commissioner found the tribunal's decision erroneous in point of law, set it aside and gave a decision confirming the Secretary of State's refusal to make a departure direction.
DECISION OF THE CHILD SUPPORT COMMISSIONER
(1) At all material times Mr. M carried on in partnership with one other person the business of a building contractor under a name which I shall abbreviate as "W & M".
(2) Between about 1990 and 1996 or 1997 about 75% of that firm's work was done for a company which I will call "WP & Sons Ltd."
(3) The absent parent and his then wife ("Mrs. M") were involved in some legal proceedings with their neighbours, as a result of which an order for costs was made against them in favour of their neighbours. Those costs were taxed at £9,715.73, and in May 1996 statutory demands were served on both Mr. and Mrs. M in respect of the taxed costs.
(4) In July 1996 Mr. M. borrowed £10,000 from WP & Sons Ltd. on the terms of a letter dated 12 July 1996 which provided for repayment by 36 equal monthly instalments, which were calculated on the basis of interest on the outstanding balance at 5% per annum. The £10,000 so borrowed was used by Mr. M to pay the taxed costs.
(5) Mr. and Mrs. M separated in October 1996.
"a loan obtained by the applicant, other than a loan obtained from a qualifying lender or the applicant's current or former employer."
"The word "employer" is not defined in the Departure Directions Regulations. In the Child Support (Collection and Enforcement) Regulations 1992 "employer" is, for the purposes of deduction from earnings orders, defined (see regulation 8) carefully to confine it to an employer-employee relationship under a contract of service. That definition would clearly exclude someone who was employing an independent contractor under a contract for services.
With some hesitation, I deduce from the manner in which "employer" is defined in the 1992 Regulations that where the child support legislation intends "employer" not to include someone who employs an independent contractor under a contract for services, it defines that word so as to exclude such a person or organisation and that, where the word "employer" is used without further elaboration, it includes someone who employs an independent contractor."
"The loan from [WP & Sons Ltd.] was made to W & M of which I am a partner. The loan was then paid to me by W & M and I was to repay W & M for the sum borrowed. I have proof of my re-payment in the company accounts plus proof of the payment made to myself by W & M. By my understanding, this would make the loan from my direct employer and therefore eligible under the Appeal's legislation."
(a) the loan by WP & Sons Ltd. was used by Mr. M to repay a debt (i.e. the debt to the neighbours for costs) which, had it not been repaid, would have fallen within regulation 16(1) of the 1996 Regulations;
(b) repayment of the loan to WP & Sons Ltd. therefore qualified as a special expense by virtue of regulation 16(4) of the 1996 Regulations.
Regulation 16(1) provides:
"Subject to paragraphs (2) to (4), repayment of debts incurred –
(a) for the joint benefit of the applicant and the non-applicant parent;
(b) for the benefit of the non-applicant parent where the applicant remained legally liable to repay the whole or part of that debt;
(c) for the benefit of any person who at the time the debt was incurred –
(i) was a child;
(ii) lived with the applicant and the non-applicant parent; and
(iii) of whom the applicant or the non-applicant parent is the parent, or both are the parents; or
(d) for the benefit of any child with respect to whom the current assessment was made,
shall constitute expenses for the purposes of paragraph 2(2) of Schedule 4B to the Act where those debts were incurred before the absent parent became an absent parent in relation to a child with respect to whom the current assessment was made and at a time when the applicant and the non-applicant parent were a married or unmarried couple who were living together."
Paragraph 2(2) of Schedule 4B provides for a departure direction in relation to "special expenses."
"Where an applicant has incurred a debt partly to repay a debt or debts repayment of which would have fallen within paragraph (1), the repayment of that part of the debt incurred which is referable to the debts repayment of which would have fallen within that paragraph shall constitute expenses for the purposes of paragraph 2(2) of Schedule 4B to the Act."
18 June 2001 | (signed) Charles Turnbull Commissioner |