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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Secretary of State for Work & Pensions v Menary-Smith [2006] EWCA Civ 1751 (14 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1751.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1751 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSION
MR COMMISSIONER DAVID WILLIAMS
CIS/2455/2004
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
and
LORD JUSTICE GAGE
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GEORGINA MENARY-SMITH |
Respondent |
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Daniel Kolinsky (instructed by Child Poverty Action Group) for the Respondent
____________________
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Lord Justice May:
Introduction
Facts
The Tribunal decision
Legislation
"60C (1) The weekly amount of child support maintenance shall be determined in accordance with the following provisions of this regulation.
(2) Where payments of child support maintenance are made weekly, the weekly amount shall be the amount of that payment.
(3) Where payments of child support maintenance are made monthly, the weekly amount shall be determined by multiplying the amount of the payment by 12 and dividing the product by 52.
(4) Where payments of child support maintenance are made at intervals and those intervals are not a week or a month, the weekly amount shall be determined by dividing that payment by the number equal to the number of weeks (including any part of a week) in that interval.
(5) Where a payment is made and that payment represents a commutation of child support maintenance the weekly amount shall be the weekly amount of the individual child support maintenance payments so commuted as calculated in accordance with paragraphs (2) to (4) as appropriate.
(6) Paragraphs (2), (3) or, as the case may be, (4) shall apply to any payments made at the intervals specified in that paragraph whether or not –
(a) the amount paid is in accordance with the maintenance assessment, and
(b) the intervals at which the payments are made are in accordance with the intervals specified by the Secretary of State under regulation 4 of the Child Support (Collection and Enforcement) Regulations 1992."
It is tolerably clear that this regulation is intended to enable all payments of child support maintenance to be expressed as a weekly amount for the purpose of regulation 60B. Regulation 60D provides for the date on which child support maintenance is to be treated as paid.
The appeal to the Commissioner
Grounds of Appeal
Discussion
"It is well established that this House does not decide hypothetical questions. If the House were to do so, any conclusion, and the accompanying reasons, could in turn constitute no more than obiter dicta, expressed without the assistance of a concrete factual situation, and would not constitute a binding precedent for the future."
He had earlier said at page 119G that the Court of Appeal should not have given leave to appeal in that case because the substantive argument and the appeal raised what was in truth a hypothetical question. The same, in my view, must apply to appeals to this court. The court's business is to decide real issues which arise on facts which have been found or are capable of being determined in this court, or sometimes upon facts which are assumed in favour of a party who asserts them for the purpose of a properly structured preliminary issue. Its business is not to conduct and determine academic seminars.
Decision
Lord Justice Carnwath:
Introduction
The Tribunal proceedings
"The decision maker determined that the payments specified by the CSA as regular maintenance payments should not be treated as payments made to clear the arrears owing. They were therefore allocated on a forward basis for the period they were made in respect of."
In view of the Tribunal's decision on the arrears issue, it was unnecessary for them to consider this calculation or the explanation.
"… it [which I assume to be a computer] will automatically pay off what's outstanding in regular maintenance first, before arrears payments go out."
"Was the discretion of the Secretary for Child Support binding on the decision maker in respect of Income Benefit?"
The presenting officer for the Department does not seem to have come equipped to answer that question. He referred the Tribunal to regulation 60C(5) dealing with commuted payments, but (in the words of the Tribunal) –
"(he) was unable to explain the meaning of that paragraph and the Tribunal was at loss to understand it."
In those difficult circumstances, and in the absence of any help from the standard textbook, the Tribunal with some "considerable hesitation" applied the "normal common law rule" (i.e. "the rule in Clayton's case") that repayment of a debt should be applied to "the earliest debt first"; and accordingly held that the father's payment should be –
"allocated to the arrears and treated as capital in the hands of the Appellant until such time as the arrears had been discharged" (emphasis added).
Appeal to the Commissioner
"… would it not be surprising if the Secretary of State's attribution were not binding on the Secretary of State's decision-maker for social security purposes? What is the alternative?" (para 41)
As I understand it, the claimant does not now argue that the regulation 9 decision, assuming it was validly made, is inapplicable to income support. Secondly, the Commissioner recorded his understanding that there was "no factual dispute", and that it was not therefore necessary to direct a rehearing (para 30). Thirdly, he seems to have accepted that to treat the payments as capital would be contrary to regulation 60B, but he did not think this was the correct reading of the decision (para 37).
The Commissioner's Decision
"That submission is ambiguous on the issue of who decided that the payments were to be treated as regular payments rather than arrears. While the power is that of the Secretary of State, I cannot see the basis for the power under regulation 9 to be exercised by a decision maker in an income support office. And as "regular maintenance" is not a term of either child support law or income support law, it is not clear that the CSA had made that determination either. I do not see where in the submission made to the tribunal the Secretary of State deals properly with the issues raised by regulation 9 of the Arrears Regulations or those of the Collection and Enforcement Regulations. And until it is established when the payments were 'due' for child support purposes, regulation 60D of the Income Support (General) Regulations 1987 cannot be applied." (para 39)
"…clear evidence from the Secretary of State about how, if at all, the various child support powers of the Secretary of State have been exercised with regard to (the father's) payment liability and payments as at the date of the original decision… - and in particular when, as a matter of law, payments made by the (father) were 'due'." (para 42, emphasis added)
As I have said, the latter point would be relevant if 60D(1)(a) or (b) were determinative, but not under 60D(2).
The Appeal to this Court
Lord Justice Gage: I agree generally with both judgments.
Note 1 In the Grounds of Appeal reference was also made to 60C(5), but only as the route to 60C(4). [Back] Note 2 The omission was repeated in the extract of 60D set out Miss Lieven’s skeleton, and this error did not form part of the grounds of appeal. However, there was no dispute before us that 60(2) (introduced by amendment in 1996) was applicable at the time, nor any explanation as to how it came to be overlooked. [Back]