[2023] UKSC 1
On appeal from: [2020] CSIH 51
JUDGMENT
McCue (as guardian for Andrew McCue) (Appellant) v Glasgow City Council (Respondent) (Scotland)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Lloyd-Jones
Lord Sales
Lord Burrows
Lord Stephens
11 January 2023
Heard on 18 October 2022
Appellant
Mike Dailly, Solicitor Advocate
(Instructed by Drummond Miller LLP (Edinburgh))
Respondent
Ruth Crawford KC
Dan Byrne, Advocate
(Instructed by Morton Fraser LLP (Edinburgh))
LORD SALES (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Lloyd-Jones, Lord Burrows and Lord Stephens agree):
This appeal is concerned with the effect of the Equality Act 2010 (“the Equality Act”) in relation to the provision of community care services to disabled persons pursuant to the Social Work (Scotland) Act 1968 (“the 1968 Act”) and the charges made for such provision.
The appellant is Mrs Terri McCue, acting as guardian for her son, Andrew (“Mr McCue”). Mr McCue is now 27 years old. He has Down’s Syndrome and lives with his parents. He is disabled within the meaning of section 6 of the Equality Act. His disability results in him being provided with community care services by the respondent, Glasgow City Council (“the Council”). An issue has arisen regarding the amount, if any, which the Council is entitled to charge Mr McCue for those services.
The appellant contends that, in calculating the charge for the services, the Council has failed to make adequate deductions from Mr McCue’s income which is liable to be brought into the assessment of the charge to be levied. The appellant says that the Council should have made greater deductions from Mr McCue’s assessable income in respect of certain disability related expenditure. This would have had the effect that the charges levied by the Council for the services provided to Mr McCue would have been reduced, leaving him with more of his income to spend as he chooses. The appellant submits that in failing to make greater deductions for disability related expenditure the Council discriminated unlawfully against Mr McCue on grounds of his disability, within the meaning of section 15 of the Equality Act. She also submits that in failing to make such greater deductions the Council acted in breach of its duty under section 20 of the Equality Act, which required it to make reasonable adjustments to take account of Mr McCue’s disability.
The 1968 Act
Section 12 of the 1968 Act, headed “General social welfare duties of local authorities”, as amended, provides so far as relevant as follows:
It shall be the duty of every local authority to promote social welfare by making available advice, guidance and assistance on such a scale as may be appropriate for their area, and in that behalf to make arrangements and to provide or secure the provision of such facilities (including the provision or arranging for the provision of residential and other establishments) as they may consider suitable and adequate, and such assistance may, subject to subsections (3) to (5) of this section, be given in kind or in cash to, or in respect of, any relevant person.
(2) A person is a relevant person for the purposes of this section if, not being less than eighteen years of age, he is in need requiring assistance in kind or, in exceptional circumstances constituting an emergency, in cash, where the giving of assistance in either form would avoid the local authority being caused greater expense in the giving of assistance in another form, or where probable aggravation of the person's need would cause greater expense to the local authority on a later occasion.
…
Assistance given in kind or in cash to, or in respect of, persons under this section may be given unconditionally or subject to such conditions as to the repayment of the assistance, or of its value, whether in whole or in part, as the local authority may consider reasonable having regard to the means of the person receiving the assistance and to the eligibility of the person for assistance from any other statutory body.
…”
Section 12A (as amended) imposes a duty on local authorities to assess needs. So far as relevant, subsection (1) provides:
Subject to the provisions of this section, where it appears to a local authority that any person for whom they are under a duty or have a power to provide, or to secure the provision of, community care services may be in need of any such services, the authority—
(a) shall make an assessment of the needs of that person for those services; and
(b) shall then decide, having regard to the results of that assessment, and taking account—
(i) if an adult carer provides, or intends to provide, care for that person, of the care provided by that carer,
… [and]
(ii) in so far as it is reasonable and practicable to do so, of the views of the person whose needs are being assessed (provided that there is a wish, or as the case may be a capacity, to express a view),
whether the needs of the person being assessed call for the provision of any such services.”
Section 5 of the Social Care (Self-directed Support) (Scotland) Act 2013 gives the person provided with community care services under section 12(1A)(b) of the 1968 Act certain rights to choose the form of support provided, but this does not affect the issues which arise on this appeal.
Section 87 (as amended) gives local authorities power to charge for services which they may provide under the 1968 Act. It provides in relevant part as follows:
… a local authority providing a service under this Act … may recover such charge (if any) for it as they consider reasonable.
(1A) If a person—
(a) avails himself of a service provided under this Act …; and
(b) satisfies the authority providing the service that his means are insufficient for it to be reasonably practicable for him to pay for the service the amount which he would otherwise be obliged to pay for it,
the authority shall not require him to pay more for it than it appears to them that it is practicable for him to pay.
…
The Secretary of State may, with the consent of the Treasury, make regulations for modifying or adjusting the rates at which payments under this section are made, where such a course appears to him to be justified, and any such regulations may provide for the waiving of any such payment in whole or in part in such circumstances as may be specified in the regulations.”
Regulations have been made to specify certain sums which shall not be brought into account when assessing the extent of a person’s income and assets which may be available to pay a charge for services and accommodation under section 87. For present purposes, it is sufficient to note that the regulations specify that a proportion of the care element of the Disability Living Allowance to which Mr McCue is entitled and the whole of the mobility element of that allowance must be disregarded when assessing his available income.
The Equality Act
Section 4 of the Equality Act sets out protected characteristics for the purposes of that Act. These include “disability”. Section 6(1) provides that a person has a disability if (a) he has a physical or mental impairment, and (b) the impairment has a substantial and long-term adverse effect on his ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities. A reference to a disabled person is a reference to a person who has a disability: section 6(2).
Section 29, headed “Provision of services, etc”, provides:
A person (a ‘service-provider’) concerned with the provision of a service to the public or a section of the public (for payment or not) must not discriminate against a person requiring the service by not providing the person with the service.
A service-provider (A) must not, in providing the service, discriminate against a person (B)— (a) as to the terms on which A provides the service to B; (b) by terminating the provision of the service to B; (c) by subjecting B to any other detriment.
…
A duty to make reasonable adjustments applies to— (a) a service-provider …
…”
Section 15 provides:
A person (A) discriminates against a disabled person (B) if— (a) A treats B unfavourably because of something arising in consequence of B's disability, and (b) A cannot show that the treatment is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.
Subsection (1) does not apply if A shows that A did not know, and could not reasonably have been expected to know, that B had the disability.”
Section 20, headed “Duty to make adjustments”, so far as relevant, provides:
Where this Act imposes a duty to make reasonable adjustments on a person, this section, sections 21 and 22 and the applicable Schedule apply; and for those purposes, a person on whom the duty is imposed is referred to as A.
The duty comprises the following three requirements.
The first requirement is a requirement, where a provision, criterion or practice of A's puts a disabled person at a substantial disadvantage in relation to a relevant matter in comparison with persons who are not disabled, to take such steps as it is reasonable to have to take to avoid the disadvantage.
…
A reference in section 21 or 22 or an applicable Schedule to the first, second or third requirement is to be construed in accordance with this section.”
Subsection (13) provides that the applicable Schedule for the relevant part of the Equality Act, relating to services and public functions, is Schedule 2.
Section 21, headed “Failure to comply with duty”, provides:
A failure to comply with the first, second or third requirement is a failure to comply with a duty to make reasonable adjustments.
A discriminates against a disabled person if A fails to comply with that duty in relation to that person.
…”
Schedule 2 is brought into effect by section 31(9). Paragraph 1 of Schedule 2 provides that the schedule applies when a duty to make reasonable adjustments is imposed on A by the relevant Part of the Act. Paragraph 2 provides in relevant part as follows:
A must comply with the first, second and third requirements.
For the purposes of this paragraph, the reference in section 20(3), (4) or (5) to a disabled person is to disabled persons generally.
…
In relation to each requirement, the relevant matter is the provision of the service, or the exercise of the function, by A.
Being placed at a substantial disadvantage in relation to the exercise of a function means—
(a) if a benefit is or may be conferred in the exercise of the function, being placed at a substantial disadvantage in relation to the conferment of the benefit, or
(b) if a person is or may be subjected to a detriment in the exercise of the function, suffering an unreasonably adverse experience when being subjected to the detriment.
…”
The policy framework
The Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (“COSLA”) has issued a National Strategy and Guidance on Charges Applying to Social Care Support for people at home (“the COSLA Guidance”). The argument on the appeal proceeded with reference to the 2022/2023 version of the COSLA Guidance, which it is understood was in substantially similar terms in previous years. The COSLA Guidance recommends a common approach for all Scottish local authorities in setting minimum income thresholds for charging for community care services.
The COSLA Guidance addresses disability related expenditure at paras 6.32-6.35. It refers to section 87 of the 1968 Act and notes that according to that provision charges must be both reasonable and practicable for an individual to pay. The Guidance explains: “Understanding the associated additional daily living costs of living with an illness or an impairment is essential to ensure charging levels meet this test. Failure to take Disability Related Expenditure … into account as part of the financial assessment could result in charging levels which cause financial hardship and undermine the right of people living with an illness or impairment to live independently.” It enjoins local authorities to be proactive in considering disregarding income, when working out an individual’s means available to meet charges (which I will call their “available means”), “where additional expenditure is incurred by a supported person as a result of living as a disabled person” and to ensure that people are encouraged to provide information relating to such expenditure. At para 6.34 a non-exhaustive list of examples is given, including items such as “additional heating requirements”, “specialist clothing” and “additional bedding”. It is pointed out (para 6.35) that costs to be disregarded in this way “will vary on a person by person basis.”
In light of, and with a view to complying with, the COSLA Guidance, the Council has promulgated a document entitled “Social Work Services: Social Care Charging Policy” (“the policy document”). This is updated from time to time, but retains the same basic format. The policy document is concerned with charging for non-residential services. It explains the legislative background to charges levied in relation to the provision of such services and describes the services to which service user contributions apply and minimum income thresholds and taper arrangements.
The policy document follows the approach proposed in the COSLA Guidance and sets out minimum income thresholds for each year. It explains in section 8 that the Council determines the amount of disposable income in excess of those thresholds which will be taken into account when determining the level of the charges it will levy from service users. The level of charges is determined by the application of a taper formula in the policy document, which establishes how the cost of provision of services is to be shared between the individual in receipt of them (to the extent their available income is above the minimum threshold) and the Council.
Section 12 of the policy document is headed “Income to be disregarded”. It explains the principles the Council follows when making an assessment of the income of the recipient of services which is available to be taken into account in setting the charge to be levied for the provision of those services. The only relevant part of this for present purposes is the statement in para 12.2 that “Consideration will be given to representations to take into account other specific costs of living, eg in relation to disability related expenditure.” Accordingly, in line with the COSLA Guidance, persons involved in the charging assessment process, to whom the policy document is provided, are encouraged to provide information about disability related expenditure. It is left to the judgment of the relevant Council officials whether, in applying the test in section 87, any particular item of expenditure which is claimed to be disability related expenditure is of a character and amount as will reduce the available means of an individual subject to assessment so as to affect what is “reasonably practicable for him to pay for the service” (subsection (1A)).
The factual background
Over many years, the Council has assessed Mr McCue as having needs which require the provision of community care services under section 12A of the 1968 Act. The Council has put in place a support plan which provides Mr McCue with non-personal care between 9 am and 3 pm during weekdays at certain locations outside the home. The current version of the support plan includes provision of various activities for Mr McCue to participate in together with support to enable him to do so. It also includes periods of respite care to provide short breaks for carers. The appellant accepts that the support plan is adequate to meet those of Mr McCue’s needs as a disabled person which the Council is under a duty to meet pursuant to sections 12 and 12A of the 1968 Act.
Under section 87 of the 1968 Act the Council has assessed Mr McCue’s means and levied charges for the community care services it provides under the support plan, in the light of information about his disability related expenditure which the appellant has provided. The present appeal is concerned with the calculation of Mr McCue’s means which are available to meet such charges and, consequently, with the amount of those charges.
Mr McCue is in receipt of income by way of various social security payments to which he is entitled. This income is in excess of the minimum income threshold applied by the Council. Mr McCue has accordingly potentially been liable to assessment by the Council that he should be subject to a charge for the community care services provided to him, so that the cost of those services is shared between him and the public purse. However, over several years, starting in 2012, the appellant has made representations to the Council on Mr McCue’s behalf that he has to bear various items of disability related expenditure which ought to be deducted from the amount of his available means to be brought into account by the Council when assessing the amount which he is charged for the provision of the services.
Save to a small extent, the Council has not been persuaded by the appellant’s representations and has not made the deductions from Mr McCue’s available means which the appellant has requested. The effect of this has been that the amount of Mr McCue’s assessed available means is greater, with the result that he has been charged a higher amount for the provision of the community care services to him than would otherwise have been the case. It is the Council’s decision not to accept the appellant’s representations regarding Mr McCue’s disability related expenditure, with the consequence that it has continued to charge him at the higher amount for the provision of the services, which is the subject of the appellant’s complaint on his behalf in these proceedings.
After a lengthy period of debate and disagreement, the present dispute crystallised in relation to the Council’s assessment of the charge due from Mr McCue in the period from 2015. The Council assessed the charge due at £28.07 per week. By a letter dated 6 March 2015 the appellant sought a decision from the Council that certain items of expenditure by Mr McCue should be classed as disability related expenditure and therefore treated as a deduction from Mr McCue’s available means for the purposes of assessment of the charge. The Council decided, however, that the items should not be deducted. By letter dated 1 May 2015 the appellant requested reconsideration of this decision.
The appellant set out her then estimate of the additional costs that Mr McCue faces by reason of his disability: gas and electricity at £45 per 4 week period, for increased heating and lighting because he needs the house heated to a higher temperature than most people and spends more time at home because of his disability; petrol at £60 per 4 week period for his additional transport needs due to his disability, to get to college, clubs, hospital appointments, doctor’s appointments, opticians and supported work placements; laundry of clothes and bedding at £67.98 per 4 week period as an additional cost due to creams being applied to manage a dermatological condition; replacement of clothing and bedding averaged out at £20 per 4 week period as another additional cost due to the effect of the creams; alterations of clothes averaged out at £10 per 4 week period due to off-the-peg clothing not fitting him; additional cost of the replacement of footwear averaged out at £15 per 4 week period due to wear and tear arising from his hypermobility and gait associated with his disability; cost of £80 per 4 week period for attendance at specialised clubs for social activities appropriate for his disability; cost of £25 per 4 week period for a support worker to attend music concerts with Mr McCue, to enable him to engage in this as a social activity; and cost of £40 per 4 week period for repayment of a debt for services incurred due to Mr McCue’s disability. The appellant contended that taking all these additional costs into account had the effect that Mr McCue’s available means would be reduced to such an extent that the Council should not be levying any charge under section 87 of the 1968 Act in respect of the services it provided to him.