CSCS_06_2008
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2008] UKSSCSC CSCS_06_2008 (12 August 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2008/CSCS_06_2008.html Cite as: [2008] UKSSCSC CSCS_06_2008, [2008] UKSSCSC CSCS_6_2008 |
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[2008] UKSSCSC CSCS_06_2008 (12 August 2008)
DECISION OF CHILD SUPPORT COMMISSIONER
Decision
"My decision is that the decision of the tribunal given at Edinburgh on 1 September 2006 is erroneous upon a point of law. I set it aside. I make the decision I consider is appropriate .... It is that the decision of the Secretary of State … is also erroneous in law, inept and of no effect. It is set aside. The matter is referred to the Secretary of State to consider whether, under and in terms of section 28J of the Child Support Act 1991 and the Child Support (Voluntary Payments) Regulations 2000, the payments by the appellant to the security holder of mortgage payments in respect of the second respondent's home during the period 6 August 2003 until 11 February 2005 were voluntary payments. In doing so, he should consider whether to make an invitation to a relevant person under reference to regulation 2(2) of the Child Support (Voluntary Payments) Regulations 2000 to make representations thereon. In carrying out this exercise, he is directed to make a determination whether he agrees to the payments having been made to the security holder and whether he accepts that such payments , if he reaches the view that they were voluntary, were made under and in terms of s.28J(4) of the Child Support Act 1991. Thereafter, the Secretary of State must make a decision on the appellant's application under section 28G of the Act." [my emphasis]
The legislation
"6. Voluntary payments are provided for in the scheme by s.28J of the Child Support Act 1991. That statutory provision is in the following terms:
"(1) This section applies where-
(a) a person has applied for a maintenance calculation under section 4(1) or 7(1), or is treated as having applied for one by virtue of section 6;
(b) the Secretary of State has neither made a decision under section 11 or 12 on the application, nor decided not to make a maintenance calculation; and
(c) the non-resident parent makes a voluntary payment.
(2) A 'voluntary payment' is a payment- |
(a) on account of child support maintenance which the non-resident parent expects to become liable to pay following the determination of the application (whether or not the amount of the payment is based on any estimate of his potential liability which the Secretary of State has agreed to give); and |
(b) made before the maintenance calculation has been notified to the non-resident parent or (as the case may be) before the Secretary of State has notified the non-resident parent that he has decided not to make a maintenance calculation. (3) In such circumstances and to such extent as may be prescribed- |
(a) the voluntary payment may be set off against arrears of child support maintenance which accrued by virtue of the maintenance calculation taking effect on a date earlier than that on which it was notified to the non-resident parent; |
(b) the amount payable under a maintenance calculation may be adjusted to take account of the voluntary payment. |
(4) A voluntary payment shall be made to the Secretary of State unless he agrees, on such conditions as he may specify, that it may be made to the person with care, or to or through another person. |
(5) The Secretary of State may by regulations make provision as to voluntary payments, and the regulations may in particular- |
(a) prescribe what payments or descriptions of payment are, or are not, to count as 'voluntary payments'; |
(b) prescribe the extent to which and circumstances in which a payment, or a payment of a prescribed description, counts." |
The regulations made under subsection (5), insofar as material, are continued in regulations 2 and 3 of the Child Support (Voluntary Payments) Regulations 2000 and are in the following terms:
"2.-(1) A payment counts as a voluntary payment if it is-
(a) made in accordance with section 28J(2) and (4) of the Act;
(b) of a type to which regulation 3 applies;
(c) made on or after the effective date of the maintenance calculation made, or which would be made but for the Secretary of State's decision not to make one, and for this purpose 'effective date' means the effective date as determined in accordance with the Child Support (Maintenance Calculation Procedure) Regulations 2000; and
(d) a payment in relation to which evidence or verification of a type to which regulation 4 applies is provided, if the Secretary of State so requires.
(2) Where the Secretary of State is considering whether a payment is a voluntary payment, he may invite representations from a relevant person.
Types of payment
3. This regulation applies to a payment made by the non-resident parent-
(a) by any of the following methods-
[No issue arises in respect of the method of payment.]
…
(b) which is, or is in respect of,-
…
(ii) a mortgage or loan taken out on the security of the property which is the qualifying child's home where that mortgage or loan was taken out to facilitate the purchase of, or to pay for essential repairs or improvements to, that property;
…"
Background
"…The reason why I have taken the view that the case requires to be remitted to the Secretary of State rather than a tribunal is that the agreement of the Secretary of State that payments could be made to someone other than himself, could be not given by an appeal tribunal or a Commissioner standing in the shoes of the tribunal, as such agreement is an administrative not a judicial decision which does not fall within the scope of the statutory rights of appeal to a tribunal under the Child Support Act 1991."
"In particular, this Tribunal did not consider that Clause 56 of the Separation Agreement read together with the whole of the Separation Agreement was sufficient to qualify the primary purpose of the mortgage payments such that these payments fell to be treated as voluntary payments in lieu of Child Support Maintenance."
My conclusion and reasons
"I appreciate the difficulties for the Secretary of State. If a decision is taken for other reasons that the payments are not within s. 28J, for example, that such are not made on account of child support maintenance (an appealable decision), then this will presumably have to be preceded by a preliminary administrative determination in the following terms: "If these payments otherwise fall within s. 28J as 'voluntary payments', I agree to them being made to the security holder". Otherwise, there is a vicious circle, and even if there is success in an appeal on the other issues, the case still has to be returned to the Secretary of State, as in CSCS/20/2006, on the basis that the decision under appeal was inevitably inept because the condition precedent of an administrative acceptance by the Secretary of State of payment otherwise than to the Secretary of State had not occurred."
(signed)
L T PARKER
Deputy Commissioner
Date: 12 August 2008