Council decided couple tried to avoid care fees by helping daughter buy house
South Gloucestershire Council has been asked to apologise to an elderly couple after deciding they deliberately deprived themselves of capital in order to reduce the husband’s care costs.
The Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman has found the council did not take into consideration all the relevant facts when it decided the couple had deliberately deprived themselves of their assets.
An Ombudsman’s investigation found the council did not fully explore the reasons why the couple had transferred money to their daughter and son-in-law, before reaching its decision, and did not provide the couple with the reasons for its decision
The investigation also found the council did not carry out a financial assessment in line with the Care Act, Ombudsman Michael King, said:
“The guidance says people should be treated with dignity and are free to spend their income as they see fit – including, in this case, making a similar gift to one daughter as they have done previously for their other adult children.
“The council’s actions have caused this family additional stress and worry, at a time when the wife was already faced with the emotional trauma of placing her husband into a nursing home.
“South Gloucestershire Council now needs to consider our report and consider what action it will take.”
The husband, who has a number of health conditions including Parkinson’s Disease and dementia, had been living with his wife in their family home. Over the years the family had spent significant sums to adapt the home and garden to ensure he could remain there for as long as possible.
In the 1980s and 1990s the couple gave three of their children help to purchase their houses. Their fourth had been living in tied accommodation to her husband’s job, and so had not needed help to buy until he retired.
The husband’s condition deteriorated at the same time as the couple’s daughter needed help to buy a house.
He was placed in a nursing home and a financial assessment of the couple took into account the money they had recently given to their daughter and son-in-law. This meant they had to pay the full cost of his care, which they said they could not afford.
The Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman’s role is to remedy injustice and share learning from investigations to help improve public, and adult social care, services.
In this case the council should apologise to the family and pay the wife £250 to recognise the distress the situation has caused her. It should also review its decision that the couple deprived themselves of capital to avoid care charges, after first giving the wife the chance to provide further evidence to support her case.
It should give the wife a properly reasoned decision showing the evidence it has considered in accordance with statutory guidance.
The Ombudsman has the power to make recommendations to improve a council’s processes for the wider public. In this case the council should review its current procedures and guidance for staff on how to deal with cases where deprivation of capital may have occurred. It should also ensure financial assessments are carried out at the correct time.
Article date: 25 September 2018