The House of Lords Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee has
once again criticised the Government for its intention to press
ahead with raising probate fees from the amount it costs to deliver
that service (a set fee of £215, or £155 if a solicitor is used) to
up to £6,000 for estates worth more than £2 million.
Every year around 270,000 estates apply for
non-contentious probate – that is authorisation to
distribute a deceased person’s finances, property and assets
according to their will.
Under the proposals in the Draft Non-Contentious
Probate Fees Order 2018, from April 2019 the Government is
proposing a sliding scale of probate fees based on the value of
the estate, with seven-bands from zero to £6,000 – even though
the current cost of the administration will drop
slightly.
The Government first proposed a scale of fees rising
to £20,000 for estates worth more than £2 million in 2017. At the
time, the Committee argued that to charge a fee so far above the
actual cost of the service amounted to a “stealth tax” and
therefore a misuse of the fee-levying power. Those original
regulations were not subsequently put forward for debate in the
Lords.
Although, in this new version, the scale of the
individual fees has been reduced, the Committee has not changed
its view on the underlying principle, that is that the fee bears
no relationship to the actual cost of approving the probate
application and has the appearance of a tax.
Alongside the affirmative Order, the Ministry of
Justice has also laid the Non-Contentious Probate (Amendment)
Rules 2018 (SI 2018/1137), a negative instrument which modernises
and improves the efficiency of the probate service and is
welcomed by the Committee.
In its 6th Report published today, the
Secondary Legislation Scrutiny’s Sub-Committee A
said:
“That the draft Ministry of Justice Order seeks to
increase these fees by so much at the same time as laying the
Rules (SI 2018/1137) that will reduce the unit cost of an
application by an average of £9.30, only serves to highlight the
Committee’s concerns about the disproportionate increase in the
fee levels proposed by the affirmative instrument.”
Notes to
Editors
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The original Draft Non-Contentious Probate Fees
Order was brought to the attention of the House in the
Committee’s 28th Report (session 2016-17) in March 2017. Read
the report here.
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The SLSC Committee considers every negative and
affirmative Statutory Instrument (SI) laid before Parliament
with a view to determining whether the special attention of the
House should be drawn to it on grounds including that it is
politically or legally important or gives rise to issues of
public policy likely to be of interest to the
House.
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Secondary, or delegated, legislation is used to add
information or make changes to an existing Act of Parliament
(primary legislation). Normally, this can only happen if the
Act itself states that changes can be made to it in this
way.
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Statutory instruments (SIs) are the most frequently
used type of secondary legislation. They are typically brief
documents drafted by the relevant government department that
contain only the exact textual changes that are made to the
legislation.
Each Statutory Instrument must be published with an explanatory
note that explains in simpler language, what the effect of the
instrument will be. These notes are not primarily intended for
legal experts, but members of the public who may not be
familiar with SIs. To find an SI, the accompanying documents
and what stage it is at in Parliament you may find it helpful
to look at the SI Tracker on the parliamentary website
https://beta.parliament.uk/find-a-statutory-instrument