skeleton argument draft

Upload: lgocomplaint

Post on 16-Feb-2018

218 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    1/28

    IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE

    QUEENS BENCH DIVISION

    ADMINISTRATIVE COURT

    CO Ref: CO/ /2013

    BETWEEN:

    XXXX XXXX

    Appellant

    and

    NORTH EAST LINCOLNSHIRE COUNCIL

    Respondent

    APPELLANTS SKELETON ARGUMENT

    [DRAFT]

    INTRODUCTION

    1. This is an appeal by way of case stated by the Appellant from the decision of the

    Grimsby Justices dated 2.11.12 to make on the application of the Respondent, North

    East Lincolnshire Council (the Council) a liability order against the Appellant for the

    payment of outstanding costs in respect of instituting a council tax summons.

    2. A reference to GoA10 is to paragraph 10 of the Appellants Grounds of Appeal, a

    reference to CO-A10-12 is to Consent Order (Annex A) paragraphs 10-12.

    BACKGROUND

    3. On 22.11.12, an application to the Magistrates court to state a case for an appeal to the

    high court was served on the relevant parties. Events leading up to the appeal and the

    protracted events following until present are set out in detail in CO-B. It would be

    convenient at this stage to provide in summary the contributing factors that have

    prevented matters raised in these proceedings (as of August 2015) from reaching

    conclusion for over two and a half years.

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    2/28

    4. The appeal was postponed without communication when the person initially dealing

    with it (Deputy Justices' Clerk) left Her Majestys Courts and Tribunals Service

    (HMCTS). A further setback arose after the person subsequently assigned

    responsibility (Justices Clerk for Humber & South Yorkshire) conditioned the

    production of the draft case upon agreeing recognizance set at a level effectively

    denying the Appellant access to justice.

    5. Six months on from the application being served (subsequent to pre-action letters),

    permission was sought to bring judicial review proceedings for a mandatory order

    requiring the Justices to state a case, as a consequence of numerous contacts going

    unanswered that queried the recognizance and which proposed alternative remedies.

    6.

    The judicial review claim succeeded in prompting a response where contact with theMagistrates court had failed and delivery of a draft case was taken eight months after

    the date that the initial application to state a case was served. Representations upon the

    content of the draft case were served in accordance with the relevant court rules;

    however, the final case stated was not served in the required time limits (and in fact

    never served).

    7. Around seventeen months on from the application, it was speculated that the Court had

    not produced the final case because it would not proceed further until recognizance had

    been entered into and so contact was made for its arrangement. The case never did

    progress further though it was communicated that within two days of the courts

    notification that the position regarding the case would be set out in writing.

    8. An enquiry was made into whether HMCTS had any arrangements in place to restrict

    the appellants contact with the court, as a consequence of a further letter being sent

    requesting the production of a Certificate of refusal to state a case which was never

    replied to. At that point around twenty months had elapsed since the application and

    after a couple of months from then a judicial complaint was submitted to the relevant

    Advisory Committee which has not been acknowledged over a period of eleven

    months as of August 2015.

    Evidence materialising of significant relevance whilst appeal held in abeyance

    R (on the application of Reverend Nicolson) v Tottenham Magistrates

    9. Whilst the present case has been ongoing, another with significant relevance to matters

    raised here has been determined. In R (Nicolson) v Tottenham Magistrates [2015]

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    3/28

    EWHC 1252 (Admin) (Nicolson v Tottenham Magistrates) the claimant sought

    judicial review of the decision of justices to make an award of costs in favour of the

    Interested Party, London Borough of Haringey (LBH) following the granting of a

    council tax liability order concerning unpaid council tax. It was adjudged that an order

    for a council tax summons was unlawful because the court had insufficient information

    to determine the reasonableness of costs claimed, then failed to inquire further into how

    the sum was calculated (and elements it comprised of) and because the applicant was

    denied a fair opportunity to challenge the lawfulness of the order before it was made.

    Policy to review court costs and produce annual breakdown

    10. Since instituting these proceedings, pressure from various quarters has been the trigger

    for the Council to keep under review its level of court costs and to produce a breakdownannually supporting them. The first published set of accounts [Ex1] appeared on the

    Councils website, based on activity in 2012/13 informing the standard costs charged

    during 2013/14.

    11. A Cabinet report dated 17.2.14 reviewing council tax court costs provided the legal

    framework supporting the Councils decision to reduce its standard summons costs from

    70 to 60 which its subsequent years breakdown (2014/15) reflected.

    POINTS OF LAW

    12. The issues in this appeal arise from the provisions of the Council Tax (Administration

    and Enforcement) Regulations 1992 (the Regulations") and is set out in detail in the

    Appellants GoA. Part VI of the Regulations deals with the enforcement of persons

    liable to pay Council Tax to billing authorities such as the Council.

    13. The matters central to these proceedings arise from the provision of regulation 34 of the

    Regulations. The provision enables a billing authority to recover its costs by recharging

    an amount reasonably incurred to the defendant in relation to an application to the

    Magistrates Court to obtain a Liability Order. Regulation 34 makes provision for

    applying costs in three distinct circumstances which are set out in paragraphs (5), (7)

    and (8).

    14. Under paragraph (5), expenditure which the Council may lawfully claim in respect of

    instituting the summons is described as costs reasonably incurred. Therefore the

    billing authority is under a legal duty, before levying the sum, to have properly

    accounted for each element in arriving at the figure and ensuring that each element it

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    4/28

    claims is in fact incurred in connection with the issue of the summons. The Council

    applies these costs to the debtors account on making the complaint, therefore they may

    only include the Councils expenditure up until that point (see below para 42).

    15. Costs described under paragraph (5) are distinct from those under paragraphs (7) and (8)

    in that there are no court proceedings (the latter two require the case be brought before

    Magistrates). Paragraph (5) provides that if, after a summons has been issued but before

    the application is heard, there is paid or tendered to the authority the aggregate of the

    sum outstanding, and costs reasonably incurred by the authority in connection with the

    application up to the time of the payment or tender, the authority shall accept the

    amount and the application shall not be proceeded with.

    16.

    Consequently, a defendant settling in the circumstances described under paragraph (5)will not be subject to any costs awarded by the court. This conflicts with the general rule

    that costs follow the event and the understanding of the way a party to court

    proceedings is normally awarded costs. It is for this, and examining the primary

    legislation, that it is viewed that the Regulations, which provide that the parties may

    agree costs prior to the case being heard, are ultra vires the enabling Act. The

    incompatibility of bringing the argument into one contesting the defendant parties

    compliance with the Regulations makes it inappropriate to expand on here; nevertheless,

    the rationale for asserting that the Regulations are ultra vires the enabling Act is

    provided separately [CO-C]

    17. Paragraph (7) provides that if after a summons has been issued and the sum has not been

    paid, an order shall be made in respect of an amount equal to the aggregate of the sum

    payable, and a sum of an amount equal to the costs reasonably incurred by the applicant

    in obtaining the order. Paragraph (8) provides that the court shall, subject to an

    application by the billing authority, grant an order solely in respect of costs, if after theissue of a summons but before the liability order has been made by the court a debtor

    settles only the sum outstanding.

    18. Pursuant to regulation 35, liability orders may be dealt with individually, or, where the

    court thinks fit may be dealt with collectively. The impracticality of magistrates hearing

    a thousand or so defendants all summonsed to the same court at the time and on the

    same day means that debtors are steered away from appearing. It is those defendants not

    attending who will generally by default have admitted liability and be the ones whose

    cases will be considered appropriate to be aggregated. It does not mean that because the

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    5/28

    established practice is to include all cases in a bulk application, the Council has any less

    legal duty to properly account for the costs individually where a defendant seeks to

    make representations, nor ensuring that costs it claims are properly referable to the

    relevant enforcement process in respect of an individual's circumstances.

    SUBMISSIONS

    Questions for the High Court

    19. The questions of law on which the opinion of the High Court is sought were presented

    to the Magistrates court on 22.11.12 in accordance with the relevant Criminal

    Procedure Rules, in the following terms:

    The questions focus on two principle points of law with regards regulation 34 of

    the Council Tax regulations (SI 1992/613).

    Those points being, whether

    i) costs being disputed as unreasonable should have been awarded by

    the court without evidence from the council to support them.

    ii) costs specifically incurred by the council for obtaining the liability

    order should have been charged at the summons issuing stage.

    20. InNicolson v Tottenham Magistratesit was held unlawful for the court to award costs

    without having sufficient relevant information from the billing authority to support

    them. Consequently the first question of law in the present case appears to be resolved

    in the judgment at paragraph 61 which states as follows:

    This application for judicial review of the decision taken by the Magistrates must

    therefore succeed. I was told that since the hearing the order for costs against theClaimant has been withdrawn, but that does not render the proceedings academic;

    as I have said, it raises issues of wider public importance. Had the order not been

    withdrawn, I would have quashed it. Since it has been withdrawn, I will declare

    that the order was unlawful, because:

    i) the Magistrates did not have sufficient relevant information before them

    to reach a proper judicial determination of whether the costs claimed

    represented costs reasonably incurred by the Council in obtaining the

    liability order;

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    6/28

    ii) the Magistrates erred in law by failing to make further inquiries into

    how the 125 was computed and what elements it comprised; and

    iii) the Claimant was denied a fair opportunity to challenge the lawfulness

    of the order before it was made, by reason of the failure to answer his

    requests for the provision of information as to how the sum of 125 was

    arrived at.

    21. Put in context of the present case it is evident that the Council merely informed the

    Magistrates' Court of the standard sum it had decided it would impose as costs and

    provided no evidence as to how they were arrived at, and what costs they represented

    (see below paras 45-46).

    22. Though the court enquired into how the costs were justified at the hearing on 2.11.12,

    the Council simply offered that it was not required to justify costs to the court and had

    never submitted a breakdown. It was however stated generally that they covered

    Council Tax collection and recovery, IT systems, employment of staff and HMCTS for

    the use of their facilities.

    23. The Appellant enquired into the Council's letter (GoA 26) advising the court that it had

    taken the decision to increase the summons costs to 70 (120% increase) and effectively

    front loading the liability order costs by no longer charging for them separately. TheCouncil defended the decision on the grounds that the overall increase was 23%, as the

    summons had previously been 32 and liability order (not applied in all cases) 25 and

    compared the level with the national average for unitary authorities, which according to

    the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy (CIPFA) was 78.

    24. The court queried why costs varied from one authority to another and asked why 70

    was charged rather than 50 or 125 (like other places). The Council stated there are no

    prescribed costs for issuing a summons, but that they were simply agreed with the court,

    adding that 70 was the national average and that other regions might charge over a

    100 the 125 sum charged by LBH for issuing a summons was an example quoted.

    In concluding, it was stated that there was no requirement to justify the amount; the

    costs previously itemised were reiterated with the addition of postage costs to which the

    court responded rhetorically, so the cost is reasonable.

    25. The Appellant had written to the court prior to the hearing (GoA 14) referring to a

    government publication from 1993 (Council Tax Practice Note 9: Recovery and

    Enforcement) produced by the Department of the Environment (the DoE). It was

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    7/28

    requested, in accordance with the document, that the court question the reasonableness

    of [the Councils] claims and require that the council provide evidence to support the

    amount claimed by way of costs is no more than it reasonably incurs. Paragraph 3.81 of

    the DoE document states, so far as is relevant, as follows:

    3.18 ....The order will include the costs reasonably incurred by the authority in

    securing the order. Whilst it is likely that authorities will have discussed a scale of

    fees with the Clerk to Justices it should be recognised that the Court may wish to

    be satisfied that the amount claimed by way of costs in any individual case is no

    more than that reasonably incurred by the authority.

    26. It would be helpful at this point to consider the matter in the context of Nicolson v

    Tottenham Magistrates. It should be explained that a good practice guide, produced

    since by the Government (June 2013) is referred to, not the DoE Practice Note.

    However, the above is largely reiterated in the guide, to which is appended in paragraph

    3.4 a reminder that Local Authorities are only permitted to charge reasonable costs for

    the court summons and liability order and that a breakdown showing how the costs are

    calculated should be provided on request.

    27. Paragraph 3.4 is reproduced in Nicolson v Tottenham Magistrates (56) where it is

    affirmed thereafter that the information was asked for in that case and was not

    forthcoming. Paragraph 57 which states as follows:

    The Claimant asked for that information and it was not forthcoming. The

    Magistrates did not have that information before them either. It was not good

    enough for them to be told in general terms that the costs had something to do

    with administrative time and the number of people who were involved in the

    process for making the application. Nor was it good enough for them to be told

    that some arrangement or agreement had been reached in 2010 between the

    Council and the clerk to the justices about the level of the costs without carrying

    out any investigation of what the agreement was and the basis for it. Looking to

    see whether the costs were broadly in line with costs being charged by other local

    authorities was all well and good, but it was not enough to discharge the courts

    obligations.

    It was also found unsatisfactory in Nicolson v Tottenham Magistrates (29) that the

    Magistrates accepted LBHs justification that the costs claimed were reasonably

    incurred on the basis that they were no more than the standard amount claimed in every

    case. Paragraph 29 states so far as is relevant, as follows:

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    8/28

    The Magistrates sought to rely on the fact that the 125 claimed was no more

    than the standard amount claimed in every case; but the fact that a standard sum is

    attributed to costs recoverable in every case where a summons has been issued

    was one of the matters that gave rise to the Claimants concerns. That is why the

    Claimant was seeking to find out how it was computed and what was the

    Councils justification for claiming it across the board. For all he knew, theremight well have been a plausible justification, but in the absence of further

    information he was in no position to tell and neither were the Magistrates.

    28. It is also in the present case broadly the same criteria that satisfied Magistrates that the

    costs were reasonably incurred. The Councils representations are recorded in the

    draft statement of the case (the Draft Case) produced on 22.7.13 in sub-paragraphs

    (a) to (d) of paragraph 3 which are summarised as follows:

    The costs were the same level as were sought in all similar proceedings arising in

    cases on or after 1.4.11 which was a sum previously notified to the Court on

    4.3.11. They did not exceed the prescribed amount described in regulation 34(8) of

    the Regulations and were within the range sought by other local authorities in

    similar proceedings. The level sought had been calculated to reflect both

    administrative and legal costs in bringing the proceedings to court, including the

    court fees.

    29. The courts findings are recorded in sub-paragraphs (a) to (g) of paragraph 7 of the

    Draft Case which are summarised as follows:

    We recognise that in all cases where costs are claimed we have discretion whether

    to order them and in what sum, so the fact that the Council asked for the normal

    amount did not prevent us from reducing the sum or refusing to order any costs.

    The Council has taken a broad approach to the question of costs and has sought a

    similar amount to all others in the same court list. This is normally appropriate,

    though we accept we must look at each case individually, so in principle, the

    respondent could have sought a greater amount in an individual case where more

    costs were incurred, subject to any limitations set by regulations, had it chosen to

    do so.

    The amount requested in all cases before us was a sum advised to the court over a

    year before these proceedings commenced and the court in the intervening period

    has considered it appropriate by making orders in favour of the respondent in that

    sum. That fact of course did not prevent us from considering the amount requested

    here. A court fee payable in respect of each application as well as other

    administrative and legal costs of bringing the proceedings satisfied us that 70 was

    an amount reasonably incurred by the respondent in making the application beforethe court and obtaining the liability order.

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    9/28

    On the basis of the information presented to us by both parties, the contention that

    the amount claimed by the Council was in the nature of general revenue raising

    did not succeed and we were satisfied that it was instead an amount to cover the

    cost of bringing council tax enforcement proceedings to court. This case had no

    features to distinguish it significantly from other cases in our list to suggest a

    different level of costs. The appellant should pay the full amount of the costssought. We could not see that it was just to order the appellant to pay less or we

    would have so ordered. We ordered that the costs requested by the respondent

    should be paid by the appellant in the proceedings and made a liability order

    against him to enable that sum to be recovered.

    30. There is nothing left to question or take apart any further from the accounts. The

    Magistrates in the present case clearly sought to rely on the same criteria that satisfied

    Magistrates in Nicolson v Tottenham Magistrates which had in that case all been

    considered unsatisfactory. There is however a need to focus on the declarations which

    raise issues beyond simply whether or not they were considered satisfactory.

    31. The court expressed in the Draft Case (7(f)) that the case had no features to distinguish

    it significantly from other cases in its list to suggest that a different level of costs should

    be considered. It is understood that the data provided on the complaint list relating to

    each case simply consists of the defendants personal details, liability period, summons

    notice value, costs and the total, therefore unrealistic to expect that this information

    would enable the court to go through a judicial exercise of distinguishing different

    levels of costs from one case to another.

    32. The Council declared under representations in the Draft Case (3(b)) that the level of

    costs sought did not exceed the prescribed amount described in regulation 34(8) of the

    Regulations which is an incorrect reference to costs (GoA15-24). Regulation 34(8)

    describes the expenditure incurred in bringing the case before the court and obtaining

    the liability order whilst the costs contended were those of instituting the complaint inregulation 34(5). This was similarly misconceived by the court as evidenced by the fact

    that in its findings in the Draft Case (7(d)) it stated that they considered 70 was an

    amount reasonably incurred by the Council in making the application before the court

    and obtaining the liability order.

    33. Apart from there being an incorrect reference in the present case, it is implied that the

    70 costs (the same whether a case proceeds to court or payment renders a hearing

    unnecessary) includes an element of front loaded expenditure in applications which are

    not proceeded with.

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    10/28

    34. It is also stated in the Draft Case (3(d)) that the level of costs sought had been

    calculated to reflect both administrative and legal costs in bringing the proceedings to

    court, despite the Councils fervent denial of the existence of a calculation in two

    Freedom of Information (FOI) requests. In each case, the opinion of the Information

    Commissioner and subsequently the Information Rights Tribunal was sought who

    agreed unanimously with the Council that on the balance of probabilities such a

    calculation was not held and with whom it also agreed there was nothing legally

    obliging it to support its costs. The first of the FOI requests (see below paras 45-46) was

    submitted on learning that the Council had increased the summons costs by 120%, but

    before the Magistrates court and these proceedings commenced; the second submitted

    subsequent to both.

    35.

    The second FOI request focussed solely on the Councils incurred expenditure to issue a

    summons (the matter central to these proceedings) which escalated to an appeal to the

    First-tier (Information Rights) Tribunal (FtT), 'Gilliatt v Information Commissioner'

    (Appeal No: EA/2013/0285). The appeal relied in part on the Council being legally

    obliged to demonstrate how it came by the figure in order to persuade the FtT that it

    would in fact know this cost and enable its disclosure.

    36. The Response to the FtT appeal (4.2.14) supported the Commissioners findings in the

    Decision Notice (the DN) reference FS50505226, which were reiterated to the extent

    necessary to respond to the appeal grounds. In the matter of a legal requirement, and

    with reference to the Governments good practice guide, it records in paragraph 27(1)

    of the Commissioners Response that the documentation is merely guidance and does

    not entail a legal obligation to hold the information requested (DN, para. 16). In the

    same matter, but with reference to regulation 34(5) of the Regulations, it records in

    paragraph 27(2) of the Response, as follows:

    The legislative provisions referred to by the Appellant, specifically regulation

    34(5) of the [Regulations], provide that public authorities shall not proceed with

    summonses for unpaid council tax if there is paid/tendered to the authority both

    the outstanding sum and a sum equal to the costs reasonably incurred by the

    authority in connection with the application up to the time of the payment or

    tender [of the outstanding council tax payment]. However, neither this provision,

    nor any other statutory provisions, provides any obligation on local councils to

    hold information enabling them to provide a breakdown of those reasonable

    costs (DN, paras. 17, 19).

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    11/28

    In Judge Farrers Final Decision dated 22.5.14 dismissing the appeal it is evident that

    the FtT had been persuaded that a local authority is under no legal obligation to be able

    to support the incurred costs it recharges to those debtors against whom complaint is

    made. Under heading The Tribunals Decision (paras 7 and 8) it is held, so far as is

    relevant, as follows (emphasis added):

    7 Regulation 34(5) of the [Regulations] does not oblige a council to hold the

    requested information. It reads -

    (5) If, after a summons has been issued in accordance with

    paragraph (2) but before the application is heard, there is paid or

    tendered to the authority an amount equal to the aggregate of

    (a) ......

    (b) a sum of an amount equal to the costs reasonably incurred by

    the authority in connection with the application up to the time of

    the payment or tender,

    the authority shall accept the amount and the application shall not be

    proceeded with.

    8 The obligations imposed are those set out in the last line, no more. A council

    may use a standard estimate of the costs that it reasonably incurs but, as the

    Guidance says, a court may question it so keeping the relevant data is goodpractice. This basis for rejecting the Councils denial therefore fails. Even had

    there been such an obligation, that would not have demonstrated that the

    Council must have complied with it.

    37. The Appellant applied for permission to appeal to the Upper Tribunal contending that

    the judge was wrong in law to have considered that the Council was under no duty to

    hold the requested information by virtue of regulation 34(5) of the Regulations. The

    grounds of challenge to the FtT determination in paragraphs 7 and 8 are set out in theapplication for permission to appeal (3-5). The appellant attempts to persuade the FtT

    (para 5) that the issue involves the interpretation of regulation 34(5) because the judge

    held that a legal obligation for a council to show how the sum it claims in costs is

    arrived at does not exist explicitly in the statutory language. The Appellants

    interpretation is summarised as follows:

    After a summons has been issued but before the case is heard, Magistrates have no

    jurisdiction over costs until the case is brought before the court where they thenmay fall under scrutiny. There is no prescribed amount and the court can not, in a

    legal context, agree a standard sum, so is open to the council to accept payment,

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    12/28

    mindful that the amount may vary from case to case. Proceedings are not yet

    before the court, so if on payment or tender, the authority fails to agree the sum,

    then it must, by virtue of regulation 34(5)(b) be obliged to support its claim in

    order to justify the sum is no more than costs reasonably incurred. To proceed

    once an amount has been paid or tendered would be unlawful, as it clearly states:

    the authority shall accept the amount and the application shall not be proceededwith

    38. Permission to appeal was refused by the FtT in a Decision promulgated on 4.7.14

    (DRP). The FtT declined to review the decision because it was not satisfied that any

    arguable issue of law arose from its decision to dismiss the appeal, which states at

    paragraph 5, so far as is relevant, as follows:

    Its response remains the same as in its Decision; Reg. 34(5) does not impose the

    asserted duty and, if it did, the Tribunal was entitled to find as a matter of fact that

    NELC did not comply with it by holding the requested information.

    39. The FtT was concerned in determining whether on the balance of probabilities the

    Council had any demonstrable way of supporting its costs, so the mere existence of a

    legal duty would not in itself be evidence. It was nevertheless something that the FtT

    had a duty to assess, which in the context of Nicolson v Tottenham Magistrates (61)

    had done erroneously. Having no way of verifying its costs, the Council is left unable toprovide Magistrates with sufficient relevant information...to reach a proper judicial

    determination of whether the costs claimed represented costs reasonably incurred.

    40. Though the matter was FOI and concerned information the Council held rather than

    what it should hold, there may be merits in considering the FtTs reasons for declining

    to review its decision to better understand how it fits within the context of the present

    case and as a point of comparison in Nicolson v Tottenham Magistrates. Paragraph 6 of

    the DRP states, so far as is relevant, as follows:

    As to the supposed duty, it is evidently based on the claim that the duty under

    Reg. 34(5) to accept the paid or tendered amount can only be discharged if, in

    every case, the taxing authority is able to specify precisely the ...amount equal to

    the costs reasonably incurred by the authority in connection with the application

    up to the time of the payment or tender, (Reg. 34(5)(b))

    There is nothing in that wording to preclude the application of a standard charge,

    provided it represents a reasonable estimate of the average cost of the applicationat the prescribed time.

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    13/28

    41. Nicolson v Tottenham Magistratesagrees (46) in so much as it considers in principle,

    provided that due consideration is given to the dangers of artificially inflating costs, it

    may be a legitimate approach to provide an average figure which could be levied across

    the board in "standard" cases. It does however go further and add that such costs could

    be amplified in circumstances where there was justification for incurring additional

    legal and/or administrative costs.

    42. This approach would require the average figure being derived from the aggregate

    recoverable costs, which (i) excluded any expenditure that was not common to every

    application, and (ii) be properly referable to the summons/liability order. That is to say

    in broad terms the exclusion of those elements which are referred to later (see below

    paras 63-78). It would then be open to the council in cases where it incurred additional

    administrative costs (where they were lawful and there was justification to do so) to

    amplify the standard costs, but again subject to them always being properly referable to

    the enforcement process. There is however another factor arising due to the fact that the

    standard summons costs is added to the taxpayers account routinely at the point when

    the processing software triggers the summons issue. In doing this the Council has

    imposed upon itself a greater restriction in the amount of expenditure it may lawfully

    claim than otherwise regulation 34(5) entitles. This could be viewed as a policy which

    backfires but for the fact that there has thus far been a free rein given by the

    Magistrates court for the Council to set its own costs and apply them in a way without

    regard for the Statutory Instrument that governs them.

    43. It is open to those against whom the council proceeds, to challenge the application, and

    where representation is made about costs, Magistrates must look at the case on an

    individual basis but need not involve the onerous task of calculating the level of costs

    incurred in each individual case. In seeking to standardise costs, the very least

    requirement would be to have a standard sum for the summons and another for the

    liability order; then only where costs are challenged or an amount tendered, as per the

    Regulations, would they need individually assessing to ensure that the debtors are

    treated lawfully.

    44. The DoE Practice Note states that the Court may wish to be satisfied that the amount

    claimed by way of costs in any individual case is no more than that reasonably incurred

    by the authority because the Regulations provide for individual costs. Moreover, the

    court would not require satisfying on an individual basis for any arbitrary reason, but

    because an individual sought to challenge the costs, which is why regulation 35(1) of

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    14/28

    the Regulations provides that a single liability order may deal with one person and one

    amount. Regulation 35, so far as is relevant, is as follows:

    Liability orders: further provision

    35.(1) A single liability order may deal with one person and one such amount

    (or aggregate amount) as is mentioned in regulation 34(7) and (8), or, if the court

    thinks fit, may deal with more than one person and more than one such amount.

    Beyond reasonable doubt that there was no evidence to support the costs

    45. A copy of a breakdown was asked for via FOI that was assumed would be supplied by

    the Council to the Magistrate's Court in support of a near 120% increase of its standard

    council tax summons costs. The Councils 2011/12 budget setting revealed it aimed to

    achieve savings by generating 188,000 additional each year in court costs income and

    was what brought about the request.

    46. The FtT in whose hands the matter had been placed) took the decision to strike out the

    appeal on the basis that there was no reasonable prospect of the case, or any part of it,

    succeeding. Though plainly the attempt to obtain a breakdown via the FtT was

    unsuccessful, it has nevertheless provided formal judgment in support of the Magistrates

    not having sufficient relevant information before them to reach a proper judicial

    determination of whether the costs claimed were reasonably incurred by the Council.

    See paragraph 4 of the Appendix to the Order of Judge Taylor dated 27.4.12 striking out

    the appeal in case 'Gilliatt v Information Commissioner' (Appeal No: EA/2012/0050):

    Following a complaint to the Information Commissioner, a Decision Notice was

    issued concluding that the Council had complied with the Freedom of Information

    Act 2000 (the Act), and no further information was held. This was because on

    the balance of probabilities the Council had provided all of the information it heldthat fell within the scope of the information request, and:

    a. The Information Commissioner considered the Council had explained

    why it did not hold more information falling within the scope of the

    request there was no business need for it to hold information in the detail

    and context requested.

    b. Request A: The Council had explained that it had not supplied the

    Magistrates Court with a breakdown of the increased summons costs. It

    had explained that it did not hold a breakdown for the calculation of the70.00 fee, as it was based on comparisons with the fees charged by

    neighbouring authorities (including Hull City Council and East Riding of

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    15/28

    Yorkshire Council) and then compared against national averages, and as

    previously identified checked to ensure that the monies raised from costs

    would not be greater than the cost of the service.

    47. The remaining question to be determined in the present case i.e. whether the costs of

    obtaining an order which have not been incurred are claimed lawfully in respect of

    instituting the complaint has now been established inNicolson v Tottenham Magistrates.

    The judgment focuses on the legislative provisions that sets apart costs which may be

    claimed in respect of obtaining the liability order and those which are limited to a lesser

    amount (by virtue of payment or tender) under the provision of regulation 34(5) of the

    Regulations. It concludes (37-38 & 49-50) that additional costs in obtaining an order

    (which have not been incurred) may not be lawfully claimed in respect of instituting the

    complaint.

    Costs set at same level whether applied at the summons or liability order stage

    and/or including costs arising post liability order

    48. A legislative provision for capping costs in Welsh authorities (GoA 22-24) is set out

    in the Council Tax and Non-Domestic Rating (Amendment) (Wales) Regulations 2011

    (the Amendment). The Amendment and particularly its Explanatory Memorandum

    suggest that the Regulations were formulated, intending to give a person issued a

    summons an incentive to settle liability before the case proceeded to court. Although

    there is no provision for each stage to be capped independently, the language is implicit

    (GoA23) that costs in respect of instituting the complaint, form one distinct part of an

    aggregate amount (capped at 70) in respect of the authoritys total incurred expenditure

    to obtain a liability order.

    49. LBH made representations in Nicolson v Tottenham Magistratesdefending the setting

    of costs at the same figure, regardless of whether payment was made before the case is

    heard. The Explanatory Memorandum provided the rationale behind why the councils

    approach to applying costs was legitimate, which on the face of it, appeared not in

    accordance with the Regulations. The explanation is contained in paragraph 49 of the

    judgment which, in so far as relevant, is reproduced below (emphasis added):

    .....It explains why the limit was not set at 35 for each of the two stages, on the

    basis that during the consultation process "several local authorities pointed out

    that the greatest amount of work is incurred before the initial summons is issued

    and argued that the charge should be higher at this stage.Ms Henderson said

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    16/28

    that this explained why in the case of some local authorities, such as the Council

    in the present case, the costs were set at the same figure regardless of whether

    payment was made after the summons was issued. The costs of obtaining a

    liability order were very small in comparison with the costs incurred in connection

    with the issue of the summons.

    The explanation was accepted in principle but it expressed that in practical terms the

    approach provides no incentive....to pay up after the summons is issued. It concluded

    (in that matter) in paragraph 50, so far as relevant, as follows:

    .....What matters is that the costs that it does decide to claim are properly

    referable to the enforcement process.

    50. Observing legislative restrictions that limit costs to expenditure incurred up to the point

    where an amount has been paid or tendered and that some authorities claim an

    identical sum in cases that proceed to court then those that make no distinction would

    be falling foul of the law if the further cost incurred in obtaining an order were not

    borne by the taxpayer. The same would be true if continuing expenditure incurred by the

    authority after obtaining the order in respect of securing payment etc. was claimed as

    court costs (at either stage). However, in order that the cost of recovery does not fall on

    the taxpayer as a whole, many billing authorities express a view that rechargeable costs

    in respect of applying for a liability order should extend to cover all expenditure which

    is considered attributable to recovery and enforcement (CO-A168-177).

    51. In this respect there is some assistance to be derived from Chiltern District Councils 16

    March 2010 Cabinet report into Court costs (CO-A 69-74), see in particular

    paragraph 4, where the essential point being made is that, the majority of costs it incurs

    arise from the court hearing to obtain the order and the additional work required to

    secure payment thereafter. Paragraph 4 of the report is as follows:

    The level of costs should be realistic but reflect the fact that we do not believe in

    principle that it is fair to pass on the costs of recovery from the few people who

    default on payment of Local Taxes to the vast majority who do not. Most of the

    costs the Council incurs arise from the application for a liability order at Court and

    the additional work required to secure payment once we have the liability order.

    52. Understandably, expenditure varies in proportion to the authoritys size and may be

    affected by economies of scale, but that has no bearing on at what stage in the process it

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    17/28

    is incurred. It is therefore rational that one authority incurs recovery expenditure in

    much the same way as another.

    53. With it established that a billing authoritys priority is to ensure that no cost of recovery

    is borne by the taxpayer, the following line of reasoning must lead to the conclusion that

    billing authorities in general, account for expenditure in their standard court costs which

    falls outside the boundaries defined by law:

    a billing authoritys incurred expenditure in securing a liability order makes

    up only a small element of its overall cost of recovery due to non and late

    payment (CO-A169-170); however

    billing authorities endeavour to ensure that no cost of recovery is borne by the

    council tax payer in general; but

    the law restricts costs that can be recharged, to an amount incurred in

    obtaining a liability order, or limited further to an amount in connection with

    instituting the complaint (in the circumstances described under regulation

    34(5) of the Regulations).

    54. In context of the present case the Council implies that its priority is to safeguard the

    taxpayer from having to bear any element of recovery administration by setting its

    standard court costs at a level which includes expenditure that falls outside the

    boundaries defined by law (CO-A171-177). The Councils Cabinet report,Review of

    Council Tax court costs, dated 17.2.14 briefly outlines the risks of members opting

    either to levy a higher level of court costs than recommended or a lower level. The

    relevance in this context, was the risk outlined which was associated with opting for a

    lower level than recommended, as follows:

    Members may choose to levy a lower level of costs than that recommended,

    however, this would mean that additional costs incurred by the Council due to

    non-payment are borne by those Council Tax payers who pay on time in

    accordance with their instalment plan.

    55. Responses by the Council to FOI requests asking for breakdowns of its costs underpin

    this. For example, as a final safeguard in a series of checks to be satisfied its costs are

    claimed lawfully, the Council consistently refers to ensuring that the monies raised

    from costs do not exceed the cost of the service (see above para 46).

    56.

    If the law made provision for the cost of the service to be recharged to the taxpayer, it

    might be good enough, but that reference has been confirmed to relate to the costs

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    18/28

    reasonably incurred for Council Tax collection and recovery. The cost of the service

    must include expenditure attributable to the court application but only as an element of

    the aggregate amount and so the idea of ensuring income is kept within this budget is

    misconceived as a measure of what might be lawful.

    57.

    The Council implies that because court costs income is within its annual budget (1.1

    million) for all activity associated with recovery of Council Tax etc., it considers that its

    claim is lawful. The DN (ref: FS50400874) records this in para 6:

    ...The [Regulations] do not require the Council to justify the amount charged to

    each individual, only that the costs have been reasonably incurred by the authority

    in connection with the application up to the time of payment or tender.The annual

    budget for all activity associated with recovery of Council Tax and Business rates

    amounts to approximately 1.1 million.

    It is reinforced further at paragraph 15 of the DN that the Council sets it costs, not at a

    level to cover the court application but for recovering Council Tax, ultimately in a bid to

    safeguard the taxpayer from having to bear any element of recovery administration:

    ...The monies raised from costs are not greater than the cost of the service .The

    increase in summons costs does not represent income generation but a saving

    that can be made in the cost of the delivery of the service, that would otherwise

    ultimately be passed on to the Council Tax payers of North East Lincolnshire...

    As stated the costs raised from the increased Summons costs are to cover the

    cost of recovering Council Tax, and do not represent income generation but a

    saving that can be made in the cost of the delivery of the service for the benefit of

    all Council Tax payers of North East Lincolnshire

    58. The view held by perhaps all billing authorities that costs claimed in an application for a

    liability order should encompass all recovery and enforcement administration, appears

    to be endorsed by the Ministry of Justice (the MoJ). In a response to a FOI request on

    related matters (FOI-87328) the MoJ stated that the level of costs applied for is

    calculated by reference to the actual expenditure incurred in recovering council tax

    debts...

    Policy to review court costs and produce annual breakdown

    59. The calculation produced by the Council [Ex1], subsequent to these proceedings

    commencing, attributed the vast majority of expenditure to instituting the complaint (the

    summons). Only 5% of what was accounted for as the Gross Recoverable costs was

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    19/28

    estimated as being attributed to further work in obtaining a liability order. The

    breakdown shows, in apparent compliance with the law, that the estimated 5% was

    deducted from the gross figure before dividing that sum by the number of summonses

    issued to arrive at the average cost per summons.

    60.

    In accounting terms therefore, the relatively small cost attributed to additional work in

    obtaining a liability order after a summons has been issued is absorbed by the taxpayer.

    In this matter it is agreed in Nicolson v Tottenham Magistrates(50) that In principle

    there is no reason why a local authority should not decide to limit the costs it claims to

    the costs in connection with issuing the summons.

    61. The breakdown allowed the Council to demonstrate, in theory at least (or to an

    acquiescent body willing to endorse the figures), that the requirements of theRegulations were met. Under proper scrutiny however, validation would require further

    proof that the expenditure was reasonably incurred and the gross recoverable costs

    were in fact lawfully recoverable. The very minimum that would be expected from the

    court to be satisfied of this would be that:

    a) estimated further work attributed to obtaining the liability order was not

    determined as negligible, merely to justify charging all costs up front,

    b) average costs do not include subsidy for bad debt arising from waived or

    unrecoverable costs,

    c) costs do not include subsidy for administration expenditure arising from

    setting up payment plans, dealing with queries etc, (CO-A128)

    d) costs claimed do not include any element attributable to the expenditure of

    enforcing the order after it is obtained

    a) Further work to obtain liability order determined as negligible

    62. The calculation would have to be dismissed on the basis that it provides nothing at all

    that could satisfy the court that the expenditure attributed to obtaining the liability order

    only represented 5% of the gross recoverable costs, based as it appeared to be on an

    arbitrary estimate (GoA 69-70). In any event, the Councils claim to incur the vast

    majority of expenditure in respect of instituting the complaint conflicts entirely with

    Chiltern District Councils view (see above paragraph 51) as to where most of the costs

    arise which would reinforce justification for the court to require evidence.

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    20/28

    b) Subsidising bad debt arising from waived or unrecoverable costs (GoA71-76)

    63. The calculation would have to be dismissed similarly because it could not be established

    whether the standard costs included a subsidy for bad debt. It is clear from subsequent

    breakdowns relating to 2013/14 and 2014/15 that the standard sum recharged to

    customers in respect of summons costs include a significant element of bad debt brought

    about by defendants, who for example, may have no means to pay. Those debtors are

    then being subsidised by those from whom payment is more easily recovered. The

    Councils Cabinet report, Review of Council Tax court costs, dated 17.2.14 confirms

    this, as follows:

    The Council recognises the difficulties some residents have encountered in

    paying Council Tax as a result of Welfare Reform changes, and as a result has

    been more flexible with instalment arrangements. In cases where residents owe a

    modest amount, and have subsequently made an arrangement which clears the

    balance within the financial year, costs have not been applied. It is anticipated that

    such action will continue into 2014/15.

    64. It is estimated from the Councils breakdown (and number of summonses issued in

    2013/14) that at least 42% of taxpayers against whom complaint was made were

    summonsed without costs applied (GoA72). Put in context, at least 25 was added to

    the standard sum for the remaining debtors, which is conservatively estimated because

    no element of bad debt has been factored in to account for unrecoverable costs in those

    cases where they were applied.

    c) Subsidising administration cost for customer contact (GoA77-105)

    65. The calculation would be impermissible because it includes a disproportionate amount

    of staff time attributable to customer contact under the budget category, Council Tax.

    This expenditure arises from dealing with queries/calls etc. as a consequence of issuing

    summonses. A second category, Debt Recovery, also includes a disproportionate

    amount of staff time that accounts for expenditure in negotiating, setting up and

    monitoring payment arrangements etc. The vast majority of this expenditure will not

    have been incurred by the Council in a proportion of cases, for example where the

    application does not proceed (by virtue of payment or tender) or where it does proceed it

    does simply without staff contact.

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    21/28

    66. The gross recoverable costs under the Council Tax budget is 260,912. Based on the

    Councils computing method, this adds 25 to the cost per summons, though an element

    of this would arguably be legitimate only in cases where the debtor had taken up

    resources by engaging staff in matters connected with the summons, as this is the basis

    upon which the expenditure is justified.

    67. The breakdown explicitly sets out that its recoverable costs (after deducting 30% for

    routine billing activity from the Council Tax budget) is in the ratio of calls arising

    from summonses to calls arising from reminders that do not result in a summons. The

    final recoverable costs for those proceeding to summons is a sum estimated as 50%

    (260,912) with the other half attributed to what the Council categorises as those

    paying on time.

    68. None of the expenditure could have lawfully been incurred by the Council in respect of

    the Appellants summons simply because the assumptions on which the calculation was

    based were that each person against whom complaint is made would take up resources

    by engaging with staff in one way or another in matters connected with the summons.

    69. Gross recoverable costs under the Debt Recovery budget are 327,806 and add 31 to

    the cost per summons. A 3 fixed cost is budgeted for in this category and payable on

    making complaint to the justices for each application. This element is therefore justly

    claimed in respect of every summons issued and so in the present case can have been

    considered reasonably incurred by the Council.

    70. With the account having been settled on receipt of the summons, none of the other

    expenditure could have been incurred by the Council in respect of the Appellants

    summons because there was no outstanding liability. No resources were therefore called

    upon to negotiate, re-schedule or monitor any payment plan and the whole element of

    costs relevant to the Debt Recovery budget, except 3 court application fee would be

    impermissible.

    71. In broader terms, the majority, if not all (GoA93-96) of the costs appear questionable

    even in those cases where resources are required to re-schedule and set up payment

    plans etc.

    72. Additional to the statutory Regulations instalment scheme, regulation 21(5) provides

    for an agreement to be made between the billing authority and the liable person either

    before or after the annual bill is issued. In such cases, a debtor may, if the agreement is

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    22/28

    kept, avoid incurring summons costs. However, this is enabled by, and at the cost of the

    Council re-scheduling and monitoring the plan which must exceed any that would have

    been incurred from simply allowing the pre-set parameters in its council tax processing

    system trigger the appropriate action uninterrupted by recovery staff.

    73.

    Additional administration costs incurred by the Council due to the interruption of the

    automated process cannot lawfully be included in the recoverable costs from which the

    average summons is computed because the extra recovery work caused is unrelated to

    those cases that result in a summons. Neither can the cost be recovered from customers,

    for whom the re-scheduled payments are made (CO-A101), because the measure is

    taken to prevent (or instead of) taking recovery action.

    74.

    This expenditure must therefore be absorbed by the Council in a way consistent withother administrative functions processing benefit claims for example. The line of

    reasoning that follows removes any ambiguity that the Regulations might allow for this

    administration cost to be subsidised by those against whom complaint is made to the

    Magistrates court:

    in order for a billing authority to recharge costs to the debtor, it is required

    first to make complaint to the Magistrates court; but

    where applications to the court are not made (by virtue of flexible payment

    plans being arranged), potential rechargeable administrative costs in those

    cases are rendered unrecoverable from those for whom the concessions are

    made

    expenditure can therefore only be met by inflating the standard sum or

    alternatively having the cost borne by the taxpayer; however

    where complaint is made, the amount claimed must not exceed what is

    reasonably incurred by the authority in an individual case. Clearly no

    expenditure attributable to assisting the debtor avoid recovery is incurred by

    the Council which is referable to those debtors summonsed because none of

    those for whom concessions are made are proceeded against;

    to that end, it would have to be treated as an unavoidable cost in

    administering council tax as it would be unlawful to have this element of

    expenditure subsidised by inflating the standard costs.

    75. Notwithstanding that there is no legislative provision to recover this cost, the sheer size

    of the estimated recoverable component, indicates that it must be funding far more

    resource intensive functions than merely an automated process, upon which instituting

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    23/28

    the summons relies. Engaging with customers for example, would far outweigh the

    demand on resources and it likely that even expenditure in respect of work done after

    securing the order is included, as almost a third of a million pounds annually is

    accounted for.

    76.

    Even before the Welfare Reform changes the Council has implied through various

    documents, reports etc., that its standard costs include subsidy for bad debt and/or for

    administration expenditure attributable to assisting the debtor avoid recovery. Further

    details set out in the Appeal Grounds with rationale for why expenditure, even in cases

    were payment plans are re-scheduled (pre or post enforcement commencing) can not, if

    properly referable to the Regulations, be included in the standard summons costs (GoA

    88-96). In that case, it must follow that gross recoverable costs (143,215) under the

    Control & Monitoring budget that add 14 to the cost per summons are impermissible

    (GoA97-105).

    d) Administration cost of enforcing the order after it is obtained (GoA106-109)

    77. The judgment in Nicolson v Tottenham Magistratesgoes a step further than clarifying

    the position regarding recharging expenditure for obtaining the liability order in respect

    of the costs which are applied in connection with serving the summons (the second

    question of law on which opinion is sought). Paragraph 35 of the judgment states as

    follows (emphasis added):

    It is clear that there must be a sufficient link between the costs in question and

    the process of obtaining the liability order. It would obviously be impermissible

    (for example) to include in the costs claimed any element referable to the costs of

    executing the order after it was obtained, or to the overall administration of

    council tax in the area concerned.

    78. At around 0.3m, the Debt Recovery budget which adds 31 to each summons has

    been shown to be disproportionate for processes that are largely automated. The most

    feasible explanation would be that expenditure in respect of work done after securing

    the order is included (GoA107-109). This would give credence to Chiltern Councils

    claim (see above paragraph 51) that the work to secure payment once having obtained

    the liability order is one of the stages from which most costs arise.

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    24/28

    Unreasonable steps taken to enforce costs

    79. A three stage test is set out in Nicolson v Tottenham Magistrates (34) to establish

    whether the costs order made by magistrates was lawful. For a proper judicial decision

    to be made it is established that the Magistrates must be satisfied: (i) that the local

    authority has actually incurred those costs; (ii) that the costs in question were incurred

    in obtaining the liability order; and (iii) that it was reasonable for the local authority to

    incur them. The judgment considers (51) whether the costs claimed have been

    "reasonably" incurred, after it is established to the satisfaction of the court that the costs

    were incurred and properly referable to the enforcement process. It offers the below

    examples to clarify the kind of challenge that it might be the courts duty to consider

    (emphasis added):

    .....there may be individual cases in which it would be open to the respondent to

    argue that the costs were not reasonably incurred, for example, if it was not

    reasonable for the local authority to take steps to enforce payment, or if the costs

    which were incurred were excessive e.g. if the local authority sent a QC along to

    argue a simple point of law in the Magistrates' Court.

    80. In the present case, there was little to convince Magistrates that the Council was

    reasonable in its actions, particularly in view of the process relied on to institute the

    complaint being entirely automated and the Appellants case required no call on

    resources to correspond on matters relating to the debt. It is contended therefore that the

    Councils motivation to proceed once the debt had been settled and an amount in excess

    of the costs paid, was punitive (see below para 83) and/or to generate additional revenue

    and by granting the order, Magistrates erred in law.

    Costs set at levels for improper purposes

    81. Evidence has been discovered confirming that the Council has historically manipulated

    costs in order to generate income to meet a number of different objectives.

    Encouraging behaviour (deterrent /penalty)

    82. It is documented in relation to a review of costs in 2001/02 that prompt payment of

    Business Rates could be encouraged as well as generating additional income by

    charging in those cases (which had before the review been identical) three times the cost

    of a Council Tax summons (GoA 32-34).

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    25/28

    83. It is well established that costs should be awarded as compensation, not as punishment.

    In R v Highgate Justices ex parte Petrou [1954] 1 ALL ER 406 it was held that costs

    should not exceed the proper costs incurred and should not be a penalty. In that case the

    Appellant owned premises which were let to another party for use as a club. The other

    party was charged with offences relating to the supply of alcohol and the appellant was

    joined to show cause why the club should not be struck off the register. The justices

    convicted and fined the other party and ordered him to pay 20 guineas of the

    prosecution costs of 21 guineas and also ordered the Appellant to pay 100 costs. On a

    motion for an order of certiorari it was held that since the other party had already been

    ordered to pay all but one guinea of the prosecution costs, the order against the appellant

    was a penalty in the guise of costs.

    84.

    In the present case the decision by authorities to set the level of costs disproportionately

    high was made on the basis that the level of costs (the penalty) might be considered so

    small in comparison to the amount owed in Business Rates.

    Resolve issues caused by IT system failures

    85. A Cabinet report in 2002/03 identified ways of funding additional resources to ensure a

    backlog of work that had arisen due to changes in the IT system were addressed (GoA

    35-38). The summons costs were increased by 50% in order to raise additional

    revenue to meet funding to pay for additional staff.

    86. In 2013 the High Court ruled against Barnet Borough Council budgeting for a surplus of

    income from residential parking schemes to be used to meet other transport expenditure.

    In Attfield v the London Borough of Barnet[2013] EWHC 2089 (Admin), it was held

    that a local authority must not attempt to raise revenue where there is no clear statutory

    power to do so. In the present case, the statutory power expressly limits costs that may

    be claimed to the expenditure incurred by the Council in connection with instituting the

    complaint.

    87. The decision to increase summons costs did not arise because of an increase in the cost

    of instituting the complaint, rather for the clear intention of funding additional resources

    to overcome the backlog of work that had arisen in the administration of Council Tax,

    Business Rates and Housing Benefit due to delays in implementing a new IT system.

    The Council had therefore acted for an improper purpose namely to raise revenue as it

    clearly intended to use the surplus to defray other administration expenditure and reduce

    the need to meet the cost, by for example increasing council tax, using reserves or

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    26/28

    cutting down on waste. This purpose was not authorised under the Regulations and

    therefore the decision was unlawful.

    Budget savings and alternative to charging for non statutory services

    88.

    The Council forecasted that it could raise an additional 0.752 million in costs incomeover a four year period by increasing the overall court costs and front loading all the

    charge in respect of instituting the complaint (see above para 23). This was proposed as

    one of a number of possible ways it could save or increase income to meet its 29.7

    million target set out in the Councils 2011/12 draft budget and medium term financial

    plan for the period 2011-2015. Increasing summons costs was the preferred measure

    in response to public consultation over alternative proposals to introduce a charge for

    replacement bins or garden waste collections.

    89. Clearly increasing costs in order to plug a gap in its finances had no legal basis, just like

    there was no statutory power to set them disproportionately high for the purposes of

    offsetting expenditure for waste services. The public were able to influence the level of

    court costs, and probably elected the increase to avoid paying additional for services

    (CO-A 120-131). The Council had acted for an improper purpose by increasing

    summons costs on account of the majority of respondents preferring to raise additional

    money this way over introducing charges for waste services.

    90. It was wrong in law to increase costs based on criteria other than by reference to an

    increase in the Councils incurred expenditure. Though indicative of the Council

    functioning democratically, the publics preference was not, in the context of the law, a

    relevant factor to be considered. The statutory power which provides for reasonably

    incurred costs, by definition, renders the determining of them by a democratic process

    unlawful.

    Set targets for court costs income

    91. The Council has a budgeted income stream for court costs which is evident from

    published reports showing outturn variances for this income. A report of the Audit

    Committee (Final Accounts 2004/05) compares the outturn with the budget to show

    major variations. A surplus of 0.125 million to its summons costs income target is

    recorded at Appendix 2 of the report of 28.7.05 (page 15) as follows (emphasis added):

    Finance Restructure resulted in vacancy savings (597K), additional benefit

    subsidy income arising from changes in subsidy rules and grant received on

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    27/28

    benefits overpayments (1,004K) Revenues and Benefits also exceeded their

    income target in respect of Council Tax and NNDR summons income (125K)

    and housing benefit overpayments (116K)

    92. The provision of a budgeted income stream has presented a means for the Council to

    influence its financial position. That is evident with Revenues & Benefits exceeding its

    summons income target, leaving a 125k surplus, for example to off-set overspending in

    other areas or transfer to reserves. The system is clearly open to abuse with income

    targets unquestionably creating a perverse incentive to summons.

    93. Costs were set at a level such that a significant surplus was achievable, which in

    2004/05 amounted to 125k. The Council had therefore raised revenue for an improper

    purpose, namely to prop up other budgets, and in doing so acted unlawfully (see above

    paras 86-87).

    CONCLUSION

    94. The Magistrates had no information before them with which to reach a proper judicial

    determination of whether the costs claimed represented costs reasonably incurred by the

    Council to obtain the liability order. The ruling in Nicolson v Tottenham Magistratesis

    unambiguous that the decision to grant an order for costs in those circumstances isunlawful. It is therefore inconceivable what line of defence could be mounted against an

    appeal asserting that the order for costs had been unlawful in the present case.

    95. It follows with the Councils inability to provide relevant information to support the

    costs claimed to obtain a liability order, it would be unable to verify that the costs

    claimed were properly referable to the enforcement process. That is to say it would be

    unable to verify that the sum, which it claims identically to obtain the order, represents

    exclusively the expenditure incurred by the Council in connection with instituting the

    complaint.

    96. It is nevertheless contested that enforcement should have never proceeded to the stage

    where the Council applied for a liability order as to do so once an amount has been paid

    or tendered would be in breach of the law which states that the authority shall accept

    the amount and the application shall not be proceeded with. However, the fact that the

    Council did proceed does not render the appeal invalid as the Magistrates actions and

    the Councils approach to supporting its costs raises matters of general public

    importance.

  • 7/23/2019 Skeleton Argument Draft

    28/28

    Case for impermissible costs (GoA113-120)

    97. It is established that the Council sets its standard costs at a level to ensure that no cost of

    recovery is borne by the taxpayer in priority to complying with the Regulations that

    restrict the amount that can be recharged in costs to the court application. It is therefore

    contended that an element of the standard 70 costs can not be compliant with the

    Regulations, based as they are on the premise that any expenditure considered

    attributable to recovery and enforcement activity (however tenuously linked) is

    recoverable by recharging it to the defendants through costs claimed in an application

    for a Liability Order.

    98. The breakdown of costs which the Council has undertaken to keep under review

    provides evidence that in the circumstances relating to this case the vast majority ofexpenditure it claimed was not incurred so contended that the Magistrates granted costs

    in a sum outside that which the law provides. Moreover it is contended that under any

    circumstances where the Council makes use of the court (whether to obtain an order, or

    merely institute the process) the costs detailed in its breakdown are not properly

    referable to regulation 34 of the Regulations.

    99. For the reasons set out above the Court is respectfully invited to reverse the decision of

    the magistrates' court and quash the liability order.

    Dated this day of 2013