The Advice and Assistance and Civil Legal Aid (Financial Conditions and Contributions) (Scotland) Regulations 2011
In accordance with section 37(2) of that Act, a draft of this instrument has been laid before and approved by resolution of the Scottish Parliament.
Citation, commencement and interpretation
1.
These Regulations may be cited as the Advice and Assistance and Civil Legal Aid (Financial Conditions and Contributions) (Scotland) Regulations 2011 and come into force on 11th April 2011.
2.
In these Regulations “the Act” means the Legal Aid (Scotland) Act 1986.
Application
3.
(1)
Paragraphs (2) to (4) of regulation 4 and regulations 6, 7 and 8 apply only in relation to any case where an application for advice and assistance is made on or after 11th April 2011.
(2)
Paragraphs (5) to (8) of regulation 4 and regulation 5 apply only in relation to any case where an application for civil legal aid is made on or after 11th April 2011.
Amendment of the Act
4.
(1)
(2)
In section 8(a) (which specifies the weekly disposable income limit for advice and assistance), for “£238” substitute “£245”.
(3)
In section 8 (which specifies the disposable capital limit for advice and assistance), for “£1,664” substitute “£1,716”.
(4)
In section 11(2)(a) (which specifies the weekly disposable income threshold for payment in respect of advice and assistance), for “£102” substitute “£105”.
(5)
In section 15(1) (which specifies the annual disposable income limit for civil legal aid), for “£25,450” substitute “£26,239”.
(6)
In section 15(2)(a) (which specifies the disposable capital limit for civil legal aid), for “£12,626” substitute “£13,017”.
(7)
In section 17(2)(a) (which, amongst other things, specifies the annual disposable income threshold for contributions in respect of civil legal aid), for “£3,415” substitute “£3,521”.
(8)
In section 17(2)(b) (which specifies the disposable capital threshold for contributions in respect of civil legal aid), for “£7,617” substitute “£7,853”.
Liability to contribute to the Fund under section 17(2)(a) of the Act
5.
Liability to pay fees or outlays under section 11(2) of the Act
6.
Weekly disposable income | Maximum contribution |
|---|---|
Exceeding £105 but not exceeding £112 a week | £7 |
Exceeding £112 but not exceeding £119 a week | £14 |
Exceeding £119 but not exceeding £126 a week | £21 |
Exceeding £126 but not exceeding £133 a week | £28 |
Exceeding £133 but not exceeding £140 a week | £35 |
Exceeding £140 but not exceeding £147 a week | £42 |
Exceeding £147 but not exceeding £154 a week | £49 |
Exceeding £154 but not exceeding £161 a week | £56 |
Exceeding £161 but not exceeding £168 a week | £63 |
Exceeding £168 but not exceeding £175 a week | £70 |
Exceeding £175 but not exceeding £182 a week | £77 |
Exceeding £182 but not exceeding £189 a week | £84 |
Exceeding £189 but not exceeding £196 a week | £91 |
Exceeding £196 but not exceeding £203 a week | £98 |
Exceeding £203 but not exceeding £210 a week | £105 |
Exceeding £210 but not exceeding £217 a week | £112 |
Exceeding £217 but not exceeding £224 a week | £119 |
Exceeding £224 but not exceeding £231 a week | £126 |
Exceeding £231 but not exceeding £245 a week | £135 |
Exceeding £245 a week | £142 |
7.
(1)
Subject to paragraph (2), this regulation applies where a solicitor has approved and proceeded to provide advice and assistance by way of a diagnostic interview and the work undertaken is made up solely of a diagnostic interview.
(2)
This regulation does not apply where, pursuant to the solicitor’s application, the Board determines that the subject matter of the diagnostic interview should be treated as if it were a distinct matter.
(3)
(4)
Where this regulation applies, the maximum amount of fees or outlays which a client is liable to pay under section 11(2) of the Act, where that client’s weekly disposable income falls within a range specified in the first column of the following table, is the corresponding amount specified in the second column:—
Weekly disposable income | Maximum contribution |
|---|---|
Exceeding £105 but not exceeding £134 a week | £7 |
Exceeding £134 but not exceeding £163 a week | £14 |
Exceeding £163 but not exceeding £193 a week | £21 |
Exceeding £193 but not exceeding £222 a week | £28 |
Exceeding £222 but not exceeding £245 a week | £35 |
Criminal advice and assistance: automatic availability in certain circumstances
8.
Revocation
9.
(1)
(2)
Despite paragraph (1), those Regulations continue to apply in relation to advice and assistance, or as the case may be civil legal aid, for which the relative application was made before 11th April 2011.
St Andrew’s House,
Edinburgh
These Regulations—
amend the Legal Aid (Scotland) Act 1986 (“the Act”) to increase the financial limits of eligibility for advice and assistance and civil legal aid;
amend the Act to increase the financial thresholds beyond which a person may be required to make payments in respect of advice and assistance and contributions in respect of civil legal aid;
prescribe the maximum amount of those payments and, in respect of income, contributions; and
allow advice and assistance to be made available in certain circumstances without reference to the financial limits of eligibility.
In particular, the increases in relation to advice and assistance are as follows—
The disposable income limit for eligibility is increased from £238 a week to £245 a week and the disposable capital limit is increased from £1,664 to £1,716. The disposable income threshold, above which a person is liable to pay fees or outlays in respect of advice and assistance received, is increased from £102 a week to £105 a week (paragraphs (2) to (4) of regulation 4).
The maximum liability of a person for fees and outlays in respect of advice and assistance, having regard to his or her disposable income, is prescribed by regulations 6 and 7. Regulation 7 applies where the advice and assistance provided in a civil matter is limited to a diagnostic interview and the Board have not made a determination under regulation 8B(3) of the Advice and Assistance (Scotland) Regulations 1996 that the subject matter of that diagnostic interview should be treated as if it were a distinct matter. The scale prescribed in regulation 6 applies in any other case.
The increases in relation to civil legal aid are as follows—
The disposable income limit is increased from £25,450 a year to £26,239 and the disposable capital limit from £12,626 to £13,017. The disposable income threshold, above which a person may be required to contribute to the Scottish Legal Aid Fund (“the Fund”) in respect of income, is increased from £3,415 a year to £3,521 a year. The disposable capital threshold, above which a person may be required to contribute to the Fund in respect of capital, is increased from £7,617 to £7,853 (paragraphs (5) to (8) of regulation 4).
Regulation 5 prescribes the maximum proportion of the excess of annual disposable income which a person may be required to contribute to the Fund in respect of civil legal aid. The excess is the amount by which a person’s annual disposable income exceeds the threshold specified in section 17(2)(a) of the Act (increased by regulation 4(7) to £3,521). The maximum contributable proportion of income prescribed remains 67.1%, as it has been since the Advice and Assistance and Civil Legal Aid (Financial Conditions and Contributions) (Scotland) Regulations 2009 (S.S.I. 2009/143).
The increases described in relation to advice and assistance and civil legal aid only apply in relation to advice and assistance and civil legal aid applied for on or after 11th April 2011 (regulation 3).
The Advice and Assistance and Civil Legal Aid (Financial Conditions and Contributions) (Scotland) Regulations 2010, which dealt with the foregoing matters in relation to cases where advice and assistance, or as the case may be civil legal aid, was applied for on or after 12th April 2010, are revoked. That revocation does not have effect in relation to advice and assistance and civil legal aid applied for before 11th April 2011 (regulation 9).
Regulation 8 provides for advice and assistance to be available to any person to whom section 15A of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 applies regardless of that person’s financial circumstances. Section 15A applies to any person suspected of committing an offence who (i) attends a police station or other place on a voluntary basis for questioning, (ii) any person detained within the meaning of section 14 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 and (iii) any person arrested but not charged who is being detained for the purposes of questioning. Regulation 8 has effect in relation to advice and assistance applied for on or after 11th April 2011.