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Government loses supreme court fight over bedroom tax.

14 replies

HelenaDove · 13/11/2019 22:00

www.theguardian.com/society/2019/nov/13/uk-government-loses-supreme-court-fight-over-bedroom-tax

UK government loses supreme court fight over bedroom tax
Judgment will restore full housing benefit to at least 155 partners of disabled people

The supreme court has ruled against the UK government’s attempts to force the bedroom tax on 155 partners of people with severe disabilities, in a decision that will hamper ministerial attempts to water down human rights legislation.

A unanimous judgment delivered by the court’s president, Lady Hale, ruled that applying a 14% housing benefit reduction to a man, referred only as RR, was a breach of his right to home under the Human Rights Act.

RR’s partner is severely disabled so “it is accepted” that the couple need an extra bedroom for her medical equipment, Hale said.

The ruling will restore full housing benefit to RR, and at least 155 partners of disabled people who were also subjected to the bedroom tax before rules changed in 2017.

Hale referred to 130 “lookalike cases” in England and Wales and there are known to be 25 similar cases in Scotland. There are also potentially dozens more cases that have not have not been taken to tribunal.

The case has potentially wider implications by bolstering the primacy of the Human Rights Act against any attempt to enforce secondary legislation, like the bedroom tax and potentially other welfare changes, where it can be shown that to do so would breach human rights.

Reading out her judgment, Hale said: “The Human Rights Act is an act of the United Kingdom parliament and takes precedence over subordinate legislation such as the regulation in question … This means that incompatible subordinate legislation must simply be ignored.”

RR in effect took up the case of Jayson Carmichael and his wife Jacqueline, who suffered from spina bifida, after they decided, due to personal circumstances, against appealing against a court of appeal ruling against them in 2018.

Earlier this year, RR was granted a so-called leapfrog certificate to skip the court of appeal and appeal directly to the supreme court against the secretary of state for work and pensions.

Hale said: “This court rules unanimously in RR’s favour. The local authority in deciding claims for housing benefit, the first tier tribunal and the upper tier tribunal in deciding appeals from the local authority, and the courts in deciding appeals from the tribunal, all have a duty under the Human Rights Act not to act in a way which is incompatible with the convention rights.”

A spokesman for the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) said: “We are carefully considering this ruling.”

Lucy Cadd, a solicitor at law firm Leigh Day who represented RR, said: “This ruling is of great significance because it not only allows for the case of our client and that of the 130 couples whose cases were stayed behind it to be resolved with the social security tribunals disapplying the bedroom tax to ensure none of those individuals suffer a human rights breach, but also because it paves the way for decision-makers to avoid human rights breaches in other areas.”

Carolin Ott, part of the human rights team at Leigh Day, said: “The judgment has potentially wide-reaching effects because it reaffirms the supreme court’s position that subordinate legislation can be disapplied by public bodies and courts where applying that subordinate legislation would lead to a breach of human rights.”

Rosie Brighouse, a lawyer at the human rights campaign Liberty, which was also involved in the case, said: “This decision makes clear what people can expect from their courts and their public bodies when it comes to their duties under human rights law.

The Human Rights Act exists to enable all of us to uphold our rights, which makes this a major victory for access to justice for everyone in the UK.”

Carla Clarke, the head of strategic litigation at the Child Poverty Action Group, said the ruling meant that households with a medical need for an additional bedroom who had appealed against the application of the bedroom tax to them before the DWP amended the legislation following a successful legal challenge could now have tribunals decide their appeals “in a way which avoids a breach of their right to non-discrimination - in other words, to not apply the bedroom tax to them”

OP posts:
HelenaDove · 13/11/2019 22:01

The link contains a video.

OP posts:
HelenaDove · 14/11/2019 15:55

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OP posts:
DGRossetti · 14/11/2019 16:43

No mention of any form of restitution or compensation for the people affected before this ruling. Who may have lost houses, money, jobs ...

Interested in this thread?

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HelenaDove · 14/11/2019 17:32

I was wondering the same thing.

OP posts:
Xenia · 14/11/2019 17:37

I wonder how far it goes. If your husband has that sleep ap. thing is that a disability that entitles to another room. Or if you are occasionally incontinent at night and what disabilities mean you need a separate room. Presumably if you have one leg only probably not you can still sleep with your husband.

Xenia · 14/11/2019 17:38

I think it is a bit political for judges to write "otherwise known as the bed room tax". How can writing that be politically neutral (never mind that it is inaccurate)?

Xenia · 14/11/2019 17:40

Finding a few more details in the judgment

"Mrs Carmichael could not share a bedroom with her husband because of her disabilities, but whereas the regulation catered for children who could not share a bedroom for that reason, it did not cater for a couple who could not do so. Mr and Mrs Rutherford cared for their grandson who needed an overnight carer because of his disabilities, but whereas the regulation catered for adults who needed an overnight carer, it did not cater for children who did so"

DGRossetti · 14/11/2019 17:40

I wonder how far it goes.

The internet is thataway ---->

Xenia · 14/11/2019 17:51

yes I just looked at the judgment but it does not seem to define what is a sufficient reason to mean the right to 2 rooms arises. It does mention that one lady had equipment in the bed room that meant her husband could not sleep there.

My concern was all people will now need to say is my wife snores and write that up into a disability and then get a second bed room which tax payers then fund. In other words is it dead easy to make this up or will people need a written doctor's report saying no one with this disability should share a room.

longwayoff · 14/11/2019 18:15

Excellent result Helena. I'm amazed there's only one whinger on here, I expect the rest will be along shortly though.

TheresWaldo · 14/11/2019 18:19

Honestly Xenia - you REALLY begrudge people having 2 bedrooms?

TheresWaldo · 14/11/2019 18:22

My grandad lived in sheltered accommodation for his last years and the flats all had 2 bedrooms. He paid for his himself but others would have had HB. I am all for the idea that people should downsize and free up much needed family housing but jeez, I really don't think this is the best way of going about it.

JanMeyer · 14/11/2019 18:51

My concern was all people will now need to say is my wife snores and write that up into a disability and then get a second bed room which tax payers then fund. In other words is it dead easy to make this up or will people need a written doctor's report saying no one with this disability should share a room.

Why don't you look up the legal definition of a disability and see if that answers your question?
Honestly, for fucks sake snoring isn't a disability and your suggestion that your little scenario could happen is pure goadery.
The ruling is about disabled people who need an extra bedroom because of the equipment they require. They'll probably be getting DLA, the equipment would have been provided by the local authorities. And that would require an assessment, which would require medical evidence. If there's one thing disabled people don't lack, it's papework.
So no, a person can't blag their way into a free extra bedroom by getting a doctor to "write up something into a disability" just because they fancy having an extra room.

CoolCarrie · 14/11/2019 18:56

Xenia fuck off !

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