![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
English and Welsh Courts - Miscellaneous |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> English and Welsh Courts - Miscellaneous >> SC v East Riding of Yorkshire Council [2014] EW Misc B46 (VT) (27 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/Misc/2014/B46.html Cite as: [2014] EW Misc B46 (VT) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Appeal Numbers: 1. 2001M113393, 2. 2001M117503
At: Black Lion House, London
On: 27 May 2014
1. S. C. | APPELLANT | |
v. | ||
East Riding of Yorkshire Council | RESPONDENT (Billing Authority) | |
And |
||
2. C. W. |
APPELLANT | |
v. | ||
East Riding of Yorkshire Council | RESPONDENT (Billing Authority); |
Appearances:
Mr Jan Luba QC, instructed by Mr Sarwan Singh of City Law School for Legal Action on the Council Tax, for the appellants.
Mr Thomas Spencer, Solicitor, assisted by Miss Sammi Jude, Adjudication Officer, both of East Riding of Yorkshire Council, for the respondent.
I. Background
"Reductions by billing authority
(1) The amount of council tax which a person is liable to pay in respect of any chargeable dwelling and any day (as determined in accordance with sections 10 to 13) -
(a) in the case of a dwelling situated in the area of a billing authority in England, is to be reduced to the extent, if any, required by the authority's council tax reduction scheme (see subsection (2));
(b) . . .
(c) in any case, may be reduced to such extent (or, if the amount has been reduced under paragraph (a) . . . , such further extent) as the billing authority for the area in which the dwelling is situated thinks fit.
. . .
(6) The power under subsection (1)(c) includes power to reduce an amount to nil.
(7) The power under subsection (1)(c) may be exercised in relation to particular cases or by determining a class of case in which liability is to be reduced to an extent provided by the determination."
(i) discretionary relief is applicable both to those who have been awarded a reduction under a council tax reduction scheme and those who have not ("may be reduced to such extent (or if the amount has been reduced under paragraph
(a) ) . . ., such further extent)": s.13A(1)(c));
(ii) as schemes must stipulate the procedure for applying for a reduction (or further reduction) under section 13A(1)(c), it follows that authorities must consider every such application on its merits; and
(iii) whereas there must be a formal, published scheme for council tax reduction, there is no requirement for a scheme governing discretionary relief, unless there has been a "determination" pursuant to section 13A(7) that a class of case is to be reduced in accordance with that determination.
II. Is there a right of appeal?
(a) any decision of a billing authority that a dwelling is a chargeable dwelling, or that he is liable to pay council tax in respect of such a dwelling; or
(b) any calculation made by such an authority of an amount which he is liable to pay to the authority in respect of council tax."
III. The Tribunal's approach to such appeals
"The Tribunal's powers on such an appeal are to apply judicial review principles to the billing authority's decision (due process, reasonableness, proportionality, legality etc.); it should not normally substitute its own view for that of the authority. Where illegality has been found, the matter should normally be remitted to the billing authority to be reconsidered."
"(1) It is for the appellant to satisfy the Tribunal that the appeal should be allowed.
(2) All parties must satisfy the Tribunal in respect of any argument or evidence they advance or introduce."
(1) The focus of an appeal as opposed to a review is fundamentally different: full appeal reaches further and assesses the actual merits of the decision reached.
(2) Some deference should, however, be paid to the view of the original decision- maker and an effort made to understand how that decision was arrived at, but that cannot prevent the Tribunal from substituting its view for that of the authority provided that the Tribunal can articulate cogently why it is doing so and how it has arrived at its conclusion.
(3) The authority's decision does not have to be unreasonable in the Wednesbury sense before it can be set aside, but the Tribunal should intervene only where there are strong grounds for doing so.
(4) It may not be an exact parallel, but the Court of Appeal will allow an appeal against sentence only where the sentence is wrong in principle. This suggests that some restraint should be exhibited by the Tribunal before disturbing a billing authority's decision.
(5) Procedural defects may recede in importance, or be completely effaced, since the Tribunal will be chiefly concerned with the actual merits of the decision. Earlier defects in process may therefore be cured or superseded by the appeal, and a decision may be adjudged correct despite defects in process.
(6) Although a scheme or policy is not required by statute, it is difficult to see how such an open-ended discretion can be satisfactorily exercised in the absence of one.
(7) Any such policy should be scrutinised by the authority's lawyers before promulgation.
(8) Compliance with a formal published policy or scheme, if there is one, cannot preclude the Tribunal from allowing an appeal.
(9) Any such scheme is not immune from challenge in the Tribunal as, for example, is a council tax reduction scheme (see para. 13 above). It is not the Tribunal's business to impugn any scheme as such but rather that its own powers cannot be inhibited or circumscribed by a scheme.
(10) Failure to comply with a substantive element of a scheme to the detriment of the applicant is likely to lead to the overturning of the decision unless there are good reasons for having departed from it.
(11) However, compliance with a scheme or policy may help in persuading the Tribunal that the original decision was correct.
(12) The Tribunal should be slow to interfere with a decision that properly flows from a determination made under section 13A(7).
(13) An authority cannot as a matter of law fetter its discretion and must therefore consider every application on its merits whatever the policy or scheme says.
(14) Suppose, for example, there is a provision that non-essential expenditure should be disregarded when calculating legitimate outgoings and determining disposable income. The Tribunal could conclude that the item was wrongly so characterised and should be included. Or that on its specific facts it should be included. Thus, mobile phones might normally be treated as a luxury but might become a necessity if the appellant is a carer who might need to be contacted urgently when not at home. Or a subscription to a satellite television service might have to be accepted if the appellant is locked into a contract that pre-dates his financial difficulties.
(15) A factor which cannot have any relevance for the Tribunal is an overall budget created by the authority for the totality of discretionary applications in a given year so that any application will be considered in relation to the available budget and once that sum is exhausted no further applications can be granted. I do not see how in law this can be a cash-limited exercise. The merits of an appeal cannot be affected by the existence of any such budget. A "budget" is in any event a somewhat artificial concept in view of the fact that the authority is forgoing income and not spending existing funds.
(16) Where the Tribunal is minded to allow the appeal and order a recalculation but is unsure of the actual amount to substitute, the appeal may either be adjourned for the parties to supply whatever further information is needed to reach a decision or it may conclude the appeal by quashing the calculation and ordering the authority to recalculate properly. The former is likely to be the better course in most cases.
IV. The Tribunal's powers on such appeals
"After dealing with a section 16 appeal the VTE may by order require -
. . .
(c) the decision of a billing authority to be reversed; or
(d) a calculation (other than an estimate) of an amount to be quashed and the amount to be re-calculated."
"An order under this regulation may require any matter ancillary to its subject matter to be attended to."
V. The two appeals
1. Mr and Mrs C.
"If the circumstances have been long standing or if a discretionary reduction is unlikely to alleviate the hardship, the decision maker may decide that a reduction should not be applied."
"The reality is that the revised Schedule, and the Appellant's instructions upon it, amply show that this is a household existing at the very margins of viability. On the Council's own figures, the operating margin is £8.25pw from an income of £366.09pw i.e. an operating margin of less than 3%. It must be recalled that the household is a disabled woman, her carer and a dependent child with no capital and no prospect of changed circumstances.
Yet the Council's position is that they should meet their remaining council liability of £3.96pw for the full 52 weeks of 2013/14 and pay the £80 costs expended on enforcing that sum."
2. Mr and Mrs W.
"A discretionary council tax reduction can only be granted where the council is satisfied that an exceptional circumstance has caused you distress and/or severe financial hardship."
VI. Acknowledgments
ORDER
The respondent Billing Authority is ordered, pursuant to reg. 38(1)(d) of SI 2009 No 2269, to quash its calculation in respect of the council tax liability of Mrs C. W. for 2013/14 and to recalculate that liability under section 13A(1)(c) of the LGFA 1992 so as to reduce that liability to nil.
Registrar
27 May 2014
President