A Practical Guide to Personal Injury Trusts - 2nd Edition

Means tested social security benefits normally include a capital rule, under which someone with excess capital is disqualified from the benefits, or the amount payable is reduced. Similarly, someone with capital in excess of a certain amount is disqualified for local authority social care services, or will be required to make a contribution from their capital. Because a windfall, such as a legacy, can thereby deprive the claimant, the rules were amended to allow compensation for personal injury to be treated as exempt from the capital rule if placed in a trust. This in turn awakened interest in the personal injury trust as a method of dealing effectively with compensation for personal injury, and also of ensuring tax efficiency. Personal injury trusts, therefore, have become a basic tool for use by personal injury practitioners and by private client advisers.

This new edition brings together the law on benefits, taxation and social care. It brings up to date both the changes in benefits (particularly with the national roll-out of universal credit) and the changes in tax as they affect personal injury trusts, and also considers the view of the Court of Protection on PI trusts as a method of administering the property of someone without capacity.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alan Robinson qualified as a solicitor in 1972. He has spent the whole of his working life focussing on areas of practice around welfare law (in particular social security and community care) and around the law as it affects charities. He has written and spoken extensively on these topics. He retired from legal practice in 2010 and now works part-time as a consultant and trainer. He is the author of "Introduction to the Law of Community Care in England and Wales" (Law Brief Publishing).

1137027604
A Practical Guide to Personal Injury Trusts - 2nd Edition

Means tested social security benefits normally include a capital rule, under which someone with excess capital is disqualified from the benefits, or the amount payable is reduced. Similarly, someone with capital in excess of a certain amount is disqualified for local authority social care services, or will be required to make a contribution from their capital. Because a windfall, such as a legacy, can thereby deprive the claimant, the rules were amended to allow compensation for personal injury to be treated as exempt from the capital rule if placed in a trust. This in turn awakened interest in the personal injury trust as a method of dealing effectively with compensation for personal injury, and also of ensuring tax efficiency. Personal injury trusts, therefore, have become a basic tool for use by personal injury practitioners and by private client advisers.

This new edition brings together the law on benefits, taxation and social care. It brings up to date both the changes in benefits (particularly with the national roll-out of universal credit) and the changes in tax as they affect personal injury trusts, and also considers the view of the Court of Protection on PI trusts as a method of administering the property of someone without capacity.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alan Robinson qualified as a solicitor in 1972. He has spent the whole of his working life focussing on areas of practice around welfare law (in particular social security and community care) and around the law as it affects charities. He has written and spoken extensively on these topics. He retired from legal practice in 2010 and now works part-time as a consultant and trainer. He is the author of "Introduction to the Law of Community Care in England and Wales" (Law Brief Publishing).

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A Practical Guide to Personal Injury Trusts - 2nd Edition

A Practical Guide to Personal Injury Trusts - 2nd Edition

by Alan Robinson
A Practical Guide to Personal Injury Trusts - 2nd Edition

A Practical Guide to Personal Injury Trusts - 2nd Edition

by Alan Robinson

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$42.99 
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Overview

Means tested social security benefits normally include a capital rule, under which someone with excess capital is disqualified from the benefits, or the amount payable is reduced. Similarly, someone with capital in excess of a certain amount is disqualified for local authority social care services, or will be required to make a contribution from their capital. Because a windfall, such as a legacy, can thereby deprive the claimant, the rules were amended to allow compensation for personal injury to be treated as exempt from the capital rule if placed in a trust. This in turn awakened interest in the personal injury trust as a method of dealing effectively with compensation for personal injury, and also of ensuring tax efficiency. Personal injury trusts, therefore, have become a basic tool for use by personal injury practitioners and by private client advisers.

This new edition brings together the law on benefits, taxation and social care. It brings up to date both the changes in benefits (particularly with the national roll-out of universal credit) and the changes in tax as they affect personal injury trusts, and also considers the view of the Court of Protection on PI trusts as a method of administering the property of someone without capacity.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alan Robinson qualified as a solicitor in 1972. He has spent the whole of his working life focussing on areas of practice around welfare law (in particular social security and community care) and around the law as it affects charities. He has written and spoken extensively on these topics. He retired from legal practice in 2010 and now works part-time as a consultant and trainer. He is the author of "Introduction to the Law of Community Care in England and Wales" (Law Brief Publishing).


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781912687855
Publisher: Law Brief Publishing
Publication date: 05/13/2020
Pages: 178
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.38(d)

Table of Contents

Chapter One – Personal Injury Trusts: Overview and Preliminary Considerations

Chapter Two – Means-Tested Benefits: Principal Rules

Chapter Three – How Personal Injury Compensation Is Dealt With

Chapter Four – Non Contributory Disability Benefits

Chapter Five – Local Authority Services

Chapter Six – Paying for Care

Chapter Seven – NHS Continuing Health Care

Chapter Eight – Types of Personal Injury Trust

Chapter Nine – The Mentally Incapable Client and the Court of Protection

Chapter Ten – Problem Areas for Practitioners

Chapter Eleven – Conclusion and Further Resources

Appendix 1 – Assessment for Personal Independence Payments

Appendix 2 – Employment and Support Allowance

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