A retired friend is in arrears and a liability order was granted. Negotiations with the council brought an agreement to accept an amount per week on the basis of their means enquiry form and this has been kept to. It is less than £10 per week but more than the amount which could be sought as a direct pension deduction
The Council are (understandably) trying to encourage them to claim council tax benefit which they are reluctant to do and intends not to claim being
a very private person who has never claimed any benefit and is intending never to even though it means their budget is extremely tight. They wont fill out the form
As I see it the law permits committal to prison by a Magistrates Court if the debtor willfully refuses to pay, or culpably neglects to pay
I would argue neither apply when a negotiated payment is in place and being kept to.
The bit I would like others to give a view on is my belief that a debtors 'actual ' means is all a court should be able to consider rather than 'potential' means in the form of unclaimed council tax benefit. My feeling is that the court ought not be able to coerce a debtor into a benefit claim, though I am quite sure courts do in a benevolent way try and encourage solutions of this kind when a persons finances appear to be lacking potential public assistance
In practice my point probably is rarely encountered. The rules do not seem to explicitly provide for a Council or the Court to provide directions to a debtor to claimed monies as a means of meeting the debt.
I haven't found any case law that distinguishes between actual means available to the debtor and potential means. In the latter a court could be on dangerous ground. Eg, if a council knew a CT debtor was owed money by a third party, could non enforcement of that third party debt be seen
as wilful refusal to pay CT as it was a means of income the person could chase through the courts
+Would really welcome some opinions here
The Council are (understandably) trying to encourage them to claim council tax benefit which they are reluctant to do and intends not to claim being
a very private person who has never claimed any benefit and is intending never to even though it means their budget is extremely tight. They wont fill out the form
As I see it the law permits committal to prison by a Magistrates Court if the debtor willfully refuses to pay, or culpably neglects to pay
I would argue neither apply when a negotiated payment is in place and being kept to.
The bit I would like others to give a view on is my belief that a debtors 'actual ' means is all a court should be able to consider rather than 'potential' means in the form of unclaimed council tax benefit. My feeling is that the court ought not be able to coerce a debtor into a benefit claim, though I am quite sure courts do in a benevolent way try and encourage solutions of this kind when a persons finances appear to be lacking potential public assistance
In practice my point probably is rarely encountered. The rules do not seem to explicitly provide for a Council or the Court to provide directions to a debtor to claimed monies as a means of meeting the debt.
I haven't found any case law that distinguishes between actual means available to the debtor and potential means. In the latter a court could be on dangerous ground. Eg, if a council knew a CT debtor was owed money by a third party, could non enforcement of that third party debt be seen
as wilful refusal to pay CT as it was a means of income the person could chase through the courts
+Would really welcome some opinions here
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