Feature
posted 1 Mar 2000 in Volume 5 Issue 3
Attendance Allowance, Residential Care
and Retrospective Self Funding
Case 1
Mrs C needs
residential care. She has a house worth £90,000, but little other capital and a
modest income. Her local authority assesses her needs and undertakes to make the
care arrangements for her. It also carries out a financial assessment.
The value of Mrs
C's property is taken into account in the assessment and her actual capital is
therefore in excess of £16,000. She is assessed as liable to pay a full
contribution. Pending sale of the bungalow the local authority places a charge
on the bungalow1.
Mrs C was receiving attendance
allowance before she entered residential care. 28 days after admission benefit
stops. Six months later the bungalow is sold, and Mrs C refunds the outstanding
fees to the local authority.
Case 2
Mrs T has just
entered a nursing home. As in case 1, her local authority has made the
arrangements for her and is covering the full fees, pending sale of Mrs T's
house.
Mrs T's
son, who is her attorney, has taken legal advice, and has decided to top-up his
mother's fees from his own capital. Three months later the house is sold and the
attorney is reimbursed.
Mrs T retains entitlement to attendance allowance throughout this
period.
Case
3
Mr W has been in a nursing home since October 1999. He has substantial
assets, but lacks mental capacity. He has no attorney, and his nephew has just
been appointed his receiver.
The local authority has arranged Mr
W's care and has been paying the fees in full since October. The receiver is
about to make a full refund to the local authority. Attendance allowance has
been disallowed for the period from November 1999.
Background: Entitlement to
Attendance Allowance when in Residential Care
The rules which affect claims made by
older people who are in residential accommodation are complex. In principle,
entitlement is the same whether someone is living in a residential care home; a
nursing home; in sheltered accommodation, or at home in the community. However,
given that entitlement to benefit is based on a need for personal care, and that
the function of a residential placement is to provide such care, wherever local
authorities make arrangements under Part III of the National Assistance Act
1948, the possibility arises of double funding of the same need by different
public agencies. This is considered to be wrong, in principle, and the Social
Security (Attendance Allowance) Regulations 1991 therefore seek to distinguish
between claimants whose accommodation is and is not publicly funded. As a
general rule the first group is not entitled to the attendance allowance,
whereas the second group will receive benefit.
More specifically, the following are
entitled to receive attendance allowance when in residential care:
The following groups are not entitled to receive attendance
allowance:
- Patients in hospital;
- Residents in local authority owned or managed homes, whether or not they
pay a full contribution3;
- Residents in private sector accommodation which is purchased by the local authority under section 26 of the NAA 1948, and where the local authority is providing financial assistance.
In all these cases, where benefit is in payment before the older person
goes into hospital or residential care, it will continue to be paid for the
first 28 days.
Retrospective self funding
Regulation 7(1) of the Social Security
(Attendance Allowance) Regulations 1991 states that attendance allowance is not
payable where the cost of an older person's accommodation is borne out of public
or local funds.
In all the case studies outlined above, residential care arrangements have
been made by a local authority and the resident has been assessed under the charging
regulations as able to pay a full contribution to the costs of his or her
care. In each case the resident has assessable capital assets which are tied up
in a property, or otherwise not immediately available. In each case the local authority
has paid the resident' s full fees under its contract with the home,
recorded the fact that a debt was due from the resident, placed a charge on
property where it has power to do so, and eventually accepted a full refund of
the outstanding fees.
Regulation 8(6) of the Attendance Allowance Regulations states
that regulation 7 shall not apply where 'the whole cost of the accommodation is met -
out of the person's own resources, or partly out of his own resources and partly
with assistance from another person or a charity, or on his behalf by another
person or a charity'.
For some time the Social Security Commissioners in England have been
struggling with the question whether regulation 8(6) applies in the
circumstances previously described, where, following a retrospective payment,
public funds are wholly relieved of the cost of an older person's residential
care. Over the past few years they have handed down mixed messages as to the
legal status of the arrangements which have been described and, more
particularly, as to their effect on entitlement to the attendance allowance. The
'majority' view has been that regulation 8(6) does not apply unless a resident
is currently funding his or her placement, and that attendance allowance is not,
therefore, available for a period in respect of which a refund of fees is paid
once capital has been released. The Commissioners' reasoning has been
inconsistent and, in some instances, has defied common sense. However, given the
difference of opinion, it has always been open to a claimant to seek to
challenge an adverse decision before a tribunal and to seek to exploit the
uncertain state of the law.
Chief Adjudication Officer v
Creighton and others
In December last year the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland handed
down a decision which supports the view that where public have been wholly
relieved of the cost of a claimant's accommodation (even ex post facto), there
is no good reason to refuse payment of attendance allowance.
Five appeals were
heard together. In each case a health board or trust in Northern Ireland had
paid the cost of the claimant's accommodation for a period and subsequently
obtained a refund4 . In all of the cases the
local social security appeals tribunal had upheld the claimant's appeal against
disallowance of benefit. The Chief Social Security Commissioner of Northern
Ireland subsequently upheld the tribunal's decision in each case, following
which the Chief Adjudication Officer appealed to the Court of Appeal.
The English
Commissioners5, on whose decisions the Chief
Adjudication Officer relied, variously decided:
- when a local authority funds a placement pending sale of a property it is making a loan to the resident, and there is not an arrangement under section 26 of the NAA 1948.
- The reference in regulation 8(6) to the whole cost of accommodation being met out of the claimant s own resources means that the provision only applies where the claimant meets a liability which is directly owed to the provider of the accommodation and not where, as in the cases under discussion, there is a statutory responsibility to the local authority to refund care fees.
- The cost of the accommodation in the circumstances under discussion is not met out of the claimant s own resources.
Perhaps it is not surprising that at least one of the
Commissioners conceded that the construction of regulation 8(6) was 'contrary to common sense
and fairness' ! Subsequently the Chief Commissioner in Northern Ireland
suggested that 'if regulation 8(6) cannot apply unless payment is made directly by the
person concerned to the provider of the accommodation it seems to me that it
serves very little purpose'. The conclusion of the Court of Appeal was similar.
It held, in particular, that
(i) A prior arrangement for payment and
subsequent reimbursement of residential care fees is not a loan and does not
take the arrangement outside the scope of section 26 of the NAA 1948.
(ii) The word 'met' in
regulation 8(6) is intended to refer to the person who actually meets the costs,
not the person or body which makes the actual payment of fees to the provider of
the accommodation.
(iii) Consequently where a health board or trust enters into an arrangement
with the provider of accommodation, and pays the costs but is ultimately
reimbursed by or on behalf of the claimant, the latter does not lose her/his
entitlement to attendance allowance.
(iv) It makes no difference whether
reimbursement is agreed in advance, or whether it is subsequently arranged, if
it is in fact made.
Implications of Creighton
This is an important decision. Given
that the legislation governing attendance allowance is identical in England and
Wales and in Northern Ireland it should have general application but it appears
that the Secretary of State has not yet issued guidance and, in practice, there
is as yet no certainty that the decision will be applied by the Benefits Agency
in individual cases. Furthermore there are bound to be problems in situations
where there is no advance agreement between a claimant and the local authority
as regards retrospective self funding, and where there is delay in selling a
property. Adviser may find the following points helpful:
(i) Attendance
allowance claims may not be backdated.
(ii) Where there has been an adverse decision on a claim to
attendance allowance based on retrospective self funding before the decision in
Creighton was handed down, the 'test case rule' prevents any application for review from
being effective in respect of the period before Creighton6 . Where the time limit for an appeal (now 28
days) has expired it can only be extended for 'special' and 'wholly exceptional'
reasons7.
(iii) Clients who fell foul of the old
retrospective self funding rule are unlikely to be able to recover benefit for a
period before 15th December 1999 unless they are now in a position to bring an
appeal to a tribunal.
(iv) Where a client who is in receipt of benefit is admitted to a home, and
funded by the local authority pending sale of a property it will be important to
try to ascertain what the position of the Benefits Agency will be after the
first 28 days. As yet there is no guarantee that Creighton will be followed, so
that residents currently contemplating retrospective self funding will either
have to appeal against adverse decisions or consider an alternative strategy,
such as the one outlined in case 2.
Margaret Richards,
Solicitor and Community Care Adviser (0113) 278 1810
References:
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