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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> RD & Anor, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Work & Pensions [2008] EWHC 2635 (Admin) (31 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/2635.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 2635 (Admin), [2008] MHLR 352 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Queen on the application of RD (1) PM (2) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS |
Defendant |
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Martin Chamberlain (instructed by the Office of the Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 17 September 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Burnett :
Introduction.
The Claimants
The Applications for Income Support
"Patients
A Claimant who is detained, or liable to be detained, under-
(a) Section 45A of the Mental Health Act 1983 (hospital and limitation directions) or Section 59A of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 (hospital direction); or
(b) Section 47 of the Mental Health Act 1983 (removal to hospital of persons serving sentences of imprisonment, etc.) or Section 136 of the Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003 (transfer of prisoners for treatment of mental disorder),
but not if his detention continues after the date which the Secretary of State certifies or Scottish Ministers certify would have been the earliest date on which he could have been released in respect of, or from, the prison sentence, if he had not been detained in hospital."
"what would have been the earliest date on which each prisoner could have been released from prison?"
The answer to that, submit the Claimants, must be the expiry of the tariff because on that day each could have been released if the Parole Board had so resolved. The fact that the Parole Board did not make that decision or that it decided that is was unsafe to release a prisoner is, submit the Claimants, irrelevant in the face of clear statutory language.
"The clear policy intention of the income support legislation is that persons serving a life sentence will not receive benefit until they are actually released from hospital and not returned to prisons."
Welfare Benefits for those in prison and hospital
" (4) where as respects a person … a certificate given by or on behalf of the Secretary of State [or Scottish Ministers] shows the earliest date on which that person would have been expected to be discharged from detention pursuant to the said sentence or order if he had not been transferred to a hospital or similar institution, the said conditions shall be deemed not to be satisfied in relation to that person as from the day next following that date."
Background to the changes made in 2006
"Aligning the rules for prisoners
6. The current benefit rules for people transferred from prison to a mental hospital are inconsistent. For the contributory benefits, the General Benefit Regulations disqualify such a person from receipt of benefit for the minimum duration of the sentence. However, no similar provision currently exists for the income-related benefits which can lead to the anomalous situation whereby a transferred prisoner is disqualified for State Pension purposes but remains eligible for Pension Credit. The removal of 52 week hospital downrating puts this disparity in sharp relief. In order to remove the anomaly the Secretary of State proposes to align the rules across all benefits so as to provide that no benefit is payable for the minimum duration of the prison sentence regardless of the fact that the person has been transferred to a mental hospital. It is also proposed that this rule will apply in the case of people who are sentenced to a term of imprisonment but go straight to a mental hospital."
"18. There are only about 4 or 5 cases under section 45A each year, but in principle we believe that, for benefit purposes, they should have the status of prisoners whilst undergoing hospital treatment and should not receive benefit. We would stress that this is entirely different from what are termed hospital orders. These are made under Section 37 of the Mental Health Act. This is where the court finds a person guilty of a criminal offence but issues an order directing them to receive treatment in hospital. Such an order is an effective outcome as far as court proceedings are concerned. It is not possible to disqualify such an individual for a notional period for which they could have been imprisoned, because what the court would have done had they not determined that a hospital order was appropriate, will forever be unknowable. A court has many non-custodial options available to it which it could have chosen in these circumstances. The policy is only to apply the disqualification rule where there is a definite prison sentence against which to measure it.
19. I would draw the Committee's attention to paragraph (4) of the regulation 2 of the General Benefit Regulations. What it does is to provide a yardstick for the period of time for the disqualification to last. It is more generous than the actual length of the sentence and requires an officer acting for the Home Secretary (and the respective counterparts in Scotland and Northern Ireland) to provide a certificate indicating the earliest date the individual concerned would have been expected to have been discharged had he not been transferred to hospital. There are no changes to this principle which applies to both exceptions in regulation 2(3)."
"Regulation 4
20. Regulation 4 amends provisions in the Income Support (General) Regulations 1987 which adjust the applicable amount of income support if the beneficiary or a member of the beneficiary's household are hospital in-patients receiving NHS treatment.
21. Paragraph (2) abolishes the rule that absences from hospital of 28 days are ignored when calculating a 52 week period as an inpatient; but paragraph (4) maintains this rule for stopping non-dependant deductions when the non-dependant has been a hospital in-patient for 52 weeks.
22. Paragraph (5)(a) abolishes, for most cases, the adjustment of income support when a claimant has been receiving free medical treatment as a hospital in-patient for 52 weeks. But if the claimant is entitled to a disability or enhanced disability premium, paragraph (5)(c) removes entitlement to the premium after 52 weeks for such an in-patient.
23. Paragraph (5)(b) provides for a nil applicable amount of income support for the same people referred to in connection with the exceptions in regulation 2(3) General Benefit Regulations who are subject to a prison sentence and are then detained in hospital under the Mental Health Act 1983 or the Mental Health (Care and Treatment)(Scotland) Act 2003"
7.3 The current rules around what benefits are available to people who have been sentenced to a term of imprisonment but are transferred to a mental hospital at some point during their sentence are complex and misaligned. The amendments seek to remove anomalies by aligning the rules across all benefits. The intention is that where a person is sentenced to a term of imprisonment they are treated in the same way for all benefit purposes irrespective of whether they are serving a term of imprisonment in a prison or being detained for treatment in hospital.
…
7.5 Regulation 3 makes supplementary amendments to regulation 2 of the Social Security (General Benefit) Regulations 1982 which prescribes certain exemptions from the rule by which those who are undergoing imprisonment or detention in legal custody are disqualified for receipt of certain contributory and non-contributory benefits. Although there is a general exemption from the disqualification rule for imprisonment for those who are liable to be detained in a hospital or similar institution in Great Britain as a person suffering from mental disorder, the exemption does not apply if the patient is detained or liable to be detained under section 47 of the Mental Health Act 1983 or section 136 of the Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003. This applies to patients who are transferred from prison to hospital for treatment for mental illness.
7.6 The amendment updates existing references to mental health legislation but additionally provides that the exemption will not apply in respect of persons who are detained or liable to detention under sections 45A of the Mental Health Act 1983 or section 59A of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995. These are the relevant sections which make provision for those who are sentenced to a term of imprisonment by a criminal court but are sent to mental hospital for treatment.
7.7 Regulations 4 and 8 made equivalent amendments for Income Support and State Pension Credit removing benefit entitlement for prisoners subsequently detained in hospital. Regulations 4, 5 and 8 remove the rule linking periods in hospital for the purposes of Income Support, Jobseeker's Allowance and State Pension Credit entitlement but the rule is retained for non-dependant deductions. Regulations 4 and 6 remove disability related premiums from Income Support and Jobseeker's Allowance beneficiaries after they have received free NHS treatment as a hospital in-patient for more than 52 weeks."
"18. The policy with respect to "the earliest date" on which the patient in question "would have been expected to be discharged" has not changed since 1960. It has never applied in the context of the tariff where a prisoner has been given a life sentence. The change in income support and other income-related benefits legislation affecting patients detained under sections 45A and 47 of the Mental Health Act in April 2006 did not signal a change in policy."
The Transfer Provisions
"(1) Where a transfer direction and a restriction direction have been given in respect of a person serving a sentence of imprisonment and before his release date the Secretary of State is notified by the responsible medical officer, any other registered medical practitioner or a Mental Health Review Tribunal that that person no longer requires treatment in hospital for mental disorder or that no effective treatment for his disorder can be given in the hospital to which he has been removed, the Secretary of State may—
(a) by warrant direct that he be remitted to any prison or other institution in which he might have been detained if he had not been removed to hospital, there to be dealt with as if he had not been so removed; or(b) exercise any power of releasing him on licence or discharging him under supervision which could have been exercisable if he had been remitted to such a prison or institution as aforesaid,
and on his arrival in the prison or other institution or, as the case may be, his release or discharge as aforesaid, the transfer direction and the restriction direction shall cease to have effect.
(2) A restriction direction in the case of a person serving a sentence of imprisonment shall cease to have effect, if it has not previously done so, on his release date.
(3) In this section, references to a person's release date are to the day (if any) on which he would be entitled to be released (whether unconditionally or on licence) from any prison or other institution in which he might have been detained if the transfer direction had not been given; and in determining that day there shall be disregarded—
(a) any powers that would be exercisable by the Parole Board if he were detained in such a prison or other institution, and(b) any practice of the Secretary of State in relation to the early release under discretionary powers of persons detained in such a prison or other institution."
The Claimants' Submissions
The Secretary of State's submissions
(i) The language of Paragraph 2A is not as clear as the Claimants suggest it is. It admits of a number of interpretations even at first blush. It is only if one assumes all points in favour of delivering the result the Claimants wish to achieve that their interpretation prevails.(ii) The purpose of Paragraph 2A of Schedule 7 to the 1987 General Regulations is to identify the point at which an individual switches for benefit purposes from being a prisoner to a patient. That is the same purpose as found in Regulation 2(4) of the 1982 General Benefit Regulations and section 50 of the 1983 Act.
(iii) Whether the provision is clear falls to be decided by looking at its context which includes the extrinsic material.
(iv) When looked at in context with the admissible extrinsic aids, the conclusion is that the different language of Paragraph 2A of the 1987 General Regulations and Paragraph 2(4) of the 1982 General Benefit Regulations is not designed to deliver different results.
(v) The first date on which a person 'could have been released' is the first date on which he is entitled to be released. .
Discussion
"15 The use that courts may make of explanatory notes as an aid to construction was explained by Lord Steyn in R (Westminster City Council) v National Asylum Support Service [2002] I WLR 2956, paras 2-6; see also R (S) v Chief Constable of the South Yorkshire Police [2004] I WLR 2196, para 4. As Lord Steyn says in the National Asylum Support Service case, explanatory notes accompany a Bill on introduction and are updated in the light of changes to the Bill made in the parliamentary process. They are prepared by the government department responsible for the legislation. They do not form part of the Bill, are not endorsed by parliament and cannot be amended by Parliament. They are intended to be neutral in political tone; they aim to explain the effect of the text and not to justify it.
16 The text of an Act does not have to be ambiguous before a court may be permitted to take into account explanatory notes in order to understand the contextual scene in which the Act is set: see the National Asylum Support Service case, para 5. In so far as this material casts light on the objective setting or contextual scene of the statute, and the mischief to which it is aimed, it is always an admissible aid to construction. Lord Steyn, however, ended his exposition of the value of explanatory notes as an aid to construction by saying [2002] I WLR 2956, para 6:
'What is impermissible is to treat the wishes and desires of the Government about the scope of the statutory language as reflecting the will of Parliament. The aims of the Government in respect of the meaning of clauses as revealed in explanatory notes cannot be attributed to Parliament. The object is to see what is the intention expressed by the words enacted'."