CPC_3322_2007
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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 >> [2008] UKSSCSC CPC_3322_2007 (17 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2008/CPC_3322_2007.html Cite as: [2008] UKSSCSC CPC_3322_2007 |
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[2008] UKSSCSC CPC_3322_2007 (17 January 2008)
I SET ASIDE the decision of the Sutton appeal tribunal, held on 4 May 2007 under reference 154/06/01548, because it is erroneous in point of law.
I give the decision that the appeal tribunal should have given, without making fresh or further findings of fact.
My DECISION is the housing costs element of the claimant's state pension credit is to be based on a qualifying loan of £40,000 only.
History
The evidence
'When your mortgage started in 1989 you opted for a 20 Year Low Start type loan where the initial payments were reduced. Any interest charged which was not met by your payment would have been placed on a second balance. The account had the potential to increase by up to 50% of the original borrowing.'
'How this mortgage works is under the terms of this product, a proportion of the annual interest is deferred, during the first 10 years of the mortgage, to allow the benefit of lower monthly repayments in the early years. The deferred interest accrued during this period is then repaid during years 10 to 20. Therefore, payments rise progressively each year, on the anniversary of the account, to ensure that the total amount owed will revert to the original amount borrowed, by the end of the 20 year period.'
The legislation
'The appropriate minimum guarantee shall be the total of-
(a) the standard minimum guarantee; and
(b) such prescribed additional amounts as may be applicable.'
'(6) Except in a case to which paragraph (3) applies, an amount additional to that prescribed in paragraph (1) shall be applicable-
…
(c) except where paragraph (7) applies, in accordance with Schedule II (housing costs).
(7) This paragraph applies in the case of a person who has been detained in custody for more than 52 weeks pending trial or sentence following conviction by a court.'
'Loans on residential property
11.-(1) A loan qualifies under this paragraph where the loan was taken out to defray monies applied for any of the following purposes
(a) acquiring an interest in the dwelling occupied as the home; or
(b) paying off another loan to the extent that the other loan would have qualified under head (a) above had the loan not been paid off.
…
(3) Where a loan is applied only in part for the purposes specified in heads (a) and (b) of sub-paragraph (1), only that portion of the loan which is applied for that purpose shall qualify under this paragraph.'
The Secretary of State's grounds of appeal
Analysis
'5. … Mr James at first submitted that the revocation of paragraph 7(6)(c) without replacement showed that it was the intention of the legislature that a claimant should not receive income support in respect of interest paid on deferred interest and that the new paragraph 15(1) should be construed accordingly. However, the new paragraph 15(1) must plainly be construed in the same way as the old paragraph 7(3) and the old paragraph 7(6)(c) cannot be prayed in aid of the construction of the old paragraph 7(3) because the former provision was added by amendment only in 1990 and cannot have altered whatever meaning the old paragraph 7(3) already had.
'11. Thirdly, although I am rejecting the claimant's case I think that it is, as I say above, arguable. Where there is some doubt about the correct interpretation of a Social Security regulation it is the practice of Commissioners to look at the relevant report of the Social Security Advisory Committee, or other relevant background papers, to ascertain the object which the regulation is intended to achieve (R(G) 3/58, R(M) 1/83 etc.).
12. Schedule 3 to the General Regulations was inserted in those regulations by the Social Security (Income Support and Claims and Payments) Amendments Regulations 1995. Those Amendment Regulations were the subject of consultation between the Secretary of State for Social Security and the Social Security Advisory Committee which is recorded in that Committee's report and the Secretary of State's Statement under, respectively, subsection (1) and subsection (2) of section 174 of the Social Security Act 1992 (both published in Command Paper 2905 of June 1995). Appendix 2 to the Command Paper is a memorandum by the Department of Social Security to the Advisory Committee on the new provisions relating to mortgage interest intended to be enacted by the Amendment Regulations.
13. Paragraph 31 of that memorandum is as follows:-
"31. Help with Accumulated Arrears
In the existing scheme, Income Support will help with interest that is charged on arrears of interest that have been claimed during the 16 week period. Additionally, deferred interest mortgage products, where the period of deferment is 2 years or longer, are treated advantageously, in that interest is allowable on the full amount outstanding when the unpaid interest is capitalised at the end of the deferment period.
The Government does not intend to bring these arrangements forward into the new arrangements as such measures are incompatible with a simple scheme based on the principle that private provision will take the main role.".
I think that the word "claimed" in that passage is a misprint for "accumulated".
14. The Secretary of State's statement to the Committee explained that the main object of the amendments to the housing costs provisions of the General Regulations was to introduce a standard rate of interest eligible as housing costs and to move the defrayal of housing costs in the first weeks of a period of claim for Income Support, with certain exceptions, from Income Support to private insurance arrangements. In paragraphs 61 to 63 of its report the Advisory Committee acknowledges those intentions and "in view of the difficulties of recommending protection without introducing a perverse incentive not to insure" made no recommendation for the protection of claimants who could not obtain insurance.
15. It is apparent from those papers that both the Secretary of State and the Advisory Committee were clear that the object of the 1995 amendments to the Income Support (General) Regulations was to exclude interest on capitalised deferred mortgage interest from the eligible housing costs specified in schedule 3 to those regulations. As I say above, schedule 2 to the Jobseeker's Allowance Regulations makes provisions parallel to those of Schedule 3 and falls to be interpreted in the same way.'
The tribunal's interpretation of R(IS) 14/01
'7. What was required under the old paragraph 7(3) was that the loan have been taken out to defray money applied for the purpose of acquiring an interest in the dwelling occupied as a home. In CIS/3774/97, the Commissioner appears to have found that condition satisfied in respect of the secondary loan because the claimant intended to use the money lent to pay the interest on the primary loan. I have some considerable doubts about that approach but, in any event, this is an aspect upon which the present case is distinguishable if it is necessary to distinguish it. In the present case, the sum "lent" to the claimant was not for the purpose of paying interest on the main loan because the amount paid was reduced. It was lent to enable the claimant to buy other things during the first three years of the agreement. In those circumstances, it was not a qualifying loan under the new paragraph 15. I would respectfully suggest that, in fact, the underlying purpose of the secondary loan in CIS/3774/97 was also to enable the claimant to buy other things because the point of lending money to pay interest on the primary loan was to release other funds that would otherwise have been applied for that purpose. In reality in both cases, only the primary loan was used for the purpose of "acquiring an interest in the dwelling occupied as the home". The secondary financing may have had the purpose of enabling the claimant to afford to buy the home, but that is not enough.'
Conclusion and disposal
Signed on original on 17 January 2008 |
Edward Jacobs Commissioner |