The Legal Advice and Assistance (Amendment) (No. 3) Regulations 1999
Citation and commencement
1.
These Regulations may be cited as the Legal Advice and Assistance (Amendment) (No. 3) Regulations 1999 and shall come into force on 5th October 1999.
Interpretation
2.
Transitional provisions
3.
(1)
These Regulations shall apply to applications for advice and assistance under regulation 9 made on or after 5th October 1999.
(2)
Amendments to the Legal Advice and Assistance Regulations 1989
4.
(1)
In regulation 10(1), for “Where” there shall be substituted “Subject to paragraph (5), where”.
(2)
“(5)
A client may authorise another person to attend on the solicitor on his behalf in accordance with paragraph (1) only if, at the time when the authorisation is given, the client is either present in, or resides in, England and Wales.”.
5.
In regulation 13(2), for “income support, income-based jobseeker’s allowance, family credit or disability working allowance” there shall be substituted “ any qualifying benefit”.
6.
“(2A)
The following are qualifying benefits for the purposes of paragraph (2) above:–
(a)
income support;
(b)
working families' tax credit, provided that the amount (if any) to be deducted under section 128(2)(b) of the Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 19924 has been determined at not more than £70 a week;(c)
disabled person’s tax credit, provided that the amount (if any) to be deducted under section 129(5)(b) of the Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992 has been determined at not more than £70 a week; and
(d)
income-based jobseeker’s allowance.”,
7.
(1)
Regulation 17 shall stand as paragraph (1) of regulation 17, and in that paragraph, after “provided that”, there shall be inserted “(subject to paragraph (2))”.
(2)
“(2)
Matters in relation to which the advice or assistance is mediation-related advice or assistance (as defined in regulation 32(1)) shall be treated as separate matters from those in relation to which the advice or assistance is not mediation-related advice or assistance.”.
8.
(1)
Regulation 32 shall stand as paragraph (1) of regulation 32 and there shall be inserted at the end of that paragraph “or in relation to the cost of giving mediation-related advice or assistance”.
(2)
“(2)
In this regulation–
“mediation-related advice or assistance” means advice or assistance where:
- (a)
the advice or assistance is given to a person who is a party to mediation in a dispute relating to family matters;
- (b)
the subject matter of the advice or assistance forms all or part of the subject matter of the mediation; and
- (c)
at the time when the advice or assistance was given, the mediation has not come to an end as regards the subject matter of the advice or assistance, provided that for the purposes of this sub-paragraph mediation, as regards any matter, shall not be taken to have come to an end by reason of the parties having reached agreement, unless and until the terms of that agreement are made binding on the parties, by way of a binding agreement, a consent order, or otherwise;
“family matters” has the meaning given in section 13A(2) of the Act5; “mediation” has the meaning given in section 2(3A) of the Act6.”.
Signed by authority of the Lord Chancellor
We consent
These Regulations amend the Legal Advice and Assistance Regulations 1989, so as to replace references to family credit and disability working allowance with references to working families' tax credit and disabled person’s tax credit, following the changes made by the Tax Credits Act 1999. A recipient of one of these tax credits will be eligible for advice and assistance provided that the amount to be deducted from the weekly maximum allowance does not exceed £70. Those in receipt of family credit or disability working allowance under a decision made before the coming into force of these Regulations will continue to be eligible for advice and assistance.
The Regulations also:
exclude the costs of giving advice and assistance related to mediation in family matters from the charge under section 11(2)(b) of the Legal Aid Act 1988, and provide that such advice and assistance shall be treated as a separate matter from other advice and assistance and
restrict the procedure, under regulation 10 of the 1989 Regulations, whereby a client may authorise another person to attend on the solicitor on his behalf, to clients present or resident in England and Wales.