Freeman on the Land and challenges to the legality of Council Tax

The Freeman on the Land movement and similar groups commonly believe that people are only bound by the contracts and laws they have consented to.

But contract law and alleged rights under common law are not the same as legislation relating to the administration and collection of Council Tax.

Liability for Council Tax

You do not have a choice as to whether you are liable for Council Tax and being a ‘Freeman’ does not exempt anyone from paying Council Tax.

In the UK, liability for Council Tax is determined by the Local Government Finance Act 1992. This statute, created by a democratically elected Parliament of the United Kingdom which has received the assent of the Crown and subsequent statutory regulations, sets out a local authority’s rights to demand Council Tax to fund services and who is liable to pay.

Council Tax pays for the services in your area. Without this, we could not provide essential services or help those in need.

Further details can be found on our About your Council Tax webpage.

For information about how the Council uses your information for the purposes of administering Council Tax, including setting up your account for billing purposes, processing discounts, exemptions etc. please see our privacy notice.

Your liability for Council Tax is not dependent on, and does not need, your consent or the existence of a contractual relationship with the Council. Any such assertion to the contrary is incorrect and there is no legal basis upon which to make this argument.

The following references also have no legal basis:

  • a person not having consented to pay Council Tax
  • there not being a contractual relationship between the Council and the resident
  • lawful rebellion
  • Article 61 of the Magna Carta
  • the Coronation Oath Act 1688
  • the ‘People’s peace’
  • legal fictions, ‘straw men’ and ‘I, X of the family Y’
  • Common Law Court of Great Britain and International
  • maritime or admiralty law
  • uniform commercial code

Withholding payments of Council Tax

Anyone who withholds payment will have recovery action taken against them.

In extreme cases, this could even lead to committal proceedings, or even a prison sentence, as in the Manchester Magistrates’ court vs McKenzie (2015) case, where an individual who attempted to use similar ‘Freeman on the Land’ defences in court ended up in prison for 40 days.

If you have any concerns over the charging of Council Tax, please seek proper legal advice, rather than relying on internet sources or forum statements which may be incorrect or misleading.

Challenge or appeal your Council Tax liability

There is a separate and legal process to challenge or appeal your Council Tax liability. 

The Council will consider your appeal based on legislation. If you remain dissatisfied, you have a further right of appeal to an independent Valuation Tribunal.

If you think your valuation is wrong, you can challenge your band. You must continue to pay your Council Tax until the result of the appeal is decided.

Further information on making an appeal can be found on our Council Tax appeals webpage.

Making an appeal does not allow you to withhold payment of your Council Tax.

Legislation

The legislation that covers Council Tax is freely available from the government website, legislation.gov.uk, including:

Some residents have asked whether acts and statutes are an obligation on them, and about the difference between a Statute and Law and other similar questions regarding legal matters.

Acts of Parliament are statutes which set out the law. If you have questions regarding other Acts of Parliament or laws, these should be directed to a legal professional, not the Council.

Very occasionally, we get people who are convinced that using an archaic law means they don’t have to pay Council Tax and there are many misleading articles and templates on the internet regarding the legality of Council Tax. Anyone drawing on these for advice should exercise caution and seek proper legal advice before using them as a defence against Council Tax liability based on contract, consent and common law.

While we do our best to answer all relevant enquiries about Council Tax, we reserve the right to refuse to respond to lengthy spurious enquiries that focus on hypothetical arguments that have no basis in statute and which use our resources at the expense of other taxpayers. This includes letters and notices served on the Council’s Chief Executive and Chief Legal Officer with the same misleading reasoning.

If we receive correspondence alleging that you are not liable for Council Tax because you are a Freeman of the Land, you are not contractually bound to pay Council Tax or any similar reasons which have no legal basis you can expect the following:

  1. You will receive a response from the Revenues and Benefits Service. The Revenues and Benefits Service issues Council Tax bills and handles the collection of Council Tax.
  2. The Council’s Legal Services will review the correspondence. No further responses will be issued to any correspondence which has no legal basis.
  3. If you send correspondence to any other department or officer within the Council, your correspondence will be sent to the correct department. You will not receive a response from the Chief Executive, the Chief Legal Officer or any other officer, despite requesting the same. These requests will be ignored. You will only receive a response from the right Council department as explained above.

Common ‘Freeman’ questions

The Council has a responsibility to bill and collect Council Tax, but this does not mean it introduces a fiduciary relationship.

Some common questions received:

Provide an autographed lawful contract with you, with both of our autographs.

Some residents consider that Council Tax is a contract and requires a legal contract and signatures indicating an agreement.

As already explained, Council Tax is a creature of statute, and a contract is not required. Therefore, any reference to the Companies Act, Contracts Act, Bills of Exchange Act or other acts regarding companies or contracts, is irrelevant.

A variation of this question is ‘please provide evidence that I’ve agreed with you that you can lawfully collect an alleged debt from me.’

Again, this is inconsequential, as there hasn’t been an exchange of contracts or agreement. Neither is required for the levy and recovery of Council Tax.

Provide evidence that I am lawfully obliged to pay Council Tax.

The hierarchy of who is considered to be the liable party is contained in the Local Government Finance Act 1992 c14 Part 1, Chapter 1, Sections 6 -9. Individual agreement of this is not necessary.

Provide evidence that you have the lawful and contractual authority to use the legal fictional name of “XXX” for the purposes of making money.

Whether a name is legal or fictional is irrelevant for the purposes of Council Tax.
Council Tax is charged and is payable by whoever the liable party is, which is determined by reference to the Local Government Finance Act 1992 and Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) Regulations 1992.

Provide confirmation the debt exists lawfully.

The issue of a Council Tax Demand Notice (the bill) creates the debt. A signature or agreement from a resident is not necessary for Council Tax, it is a tax, not a contract.

Provide documents containing a wet ink signature.

As covered above, a signature is not necessary for the billing of Council Tax and no wet ink signature is mandatory on a court summons either.

Summonses no longer require a signature of any sort, including electronic ones.

I’m a Freeman of the Land and am not liable.

Being a Freeman of the Land does not mean someone can choose which laws they adhere to and which to ignore.

Please send us your VAT details/provide a VAT invoice.

It should be noted, Council Tax is deemed outside the scope of VAT, and we are unable to provide a VAT invoice. 

Please state whether you are a company or a corporation.

Wakefield Council is a local authority within the Public Sector and does not have a company number.

Freedom of Information requests

A Freedom of Information request (FOI) is about data the council holds. Questions asking if we are bound by Acts, Statutes, etc does not constitute an FOI. Further information about FOI's can be found on our How to make a Freedom of Information Act request webpage.

Help us improve wakefield.gov.uk

Select how useful the page is
Back to top