can an administrative court send a case back to the Swedish Social Insurance Agency for new processing when the agency has neglected the investigation? In a new ruling (case no. 5108-24), the Supreme Administrative Court (HFD) has ruled that a lack of investigation in recovery cases does not constitute grounds for referral. Instead, the authority must stand its ground when the evidence is not sufficient
Background: Dispute about care allowance
The case concerned a parent who had been granted three-quarters of a childcare allowance for his child. When the child later moved to a LSS home, the Swedish Social Insurance Agency decided on a recovery of approximately SEK 15,000. The agency argued that the parent should have realized that the allowance was too high, as the child's needs were partly met by the home.
The parent objected that the child was still living in the parental home to a large extent, something she had informed Försäkringskassan about. Administrative Court considered that the Social Insurance Agency had not investigated the matter sufficiently and decided to refer the case back for new processing - a "do over, do right" principle. However, the Administrative Court of Appeal made a different assessment and overturned the remand, which led to Försäkringskassan appealing to the Supreme Administrative Court.
Legal question: Should investigation deficiencies lead to referral back?
The Supreme Administrative Court had to decide whether a court should remit a case for repayment of a social insurance benefit when the authority has failed in its duty to investigate, or whether the case should be decided on the merits as it stands.
The Supreme Court took as its starting point the division of responsibilities between the authority and the court. Important principles highlighted were:
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Försäkringskassan's responsibility: In recovery cases, which are burdensome for the individual, the authority has a far-reaching investigative responsibility and bears the burden of proof that the conditions for repayment are met.
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The court's responsibility: Although the court has an obligation to investigate under the Administrative Procedure Act, the court's own investigative responsibility is very limited in cases where the authority acts as a counterparty with a sanction-like claim.
The Supreme Administrative Court's assessment
The Supreme Administrative Court found that the Swedish Social Insurance Agency had failed to clarify the extent to which the child's needs were actually met by the accommodation. Despite this deficiency, the court arrived at the following principle:
The fact that the Swedish Social Insurance Agency has failed in its duty to investigate does not mean that the investigation in court is so deficient that the merits of the case are prevented. Instead, the case must be decided on the basis of the burden of proof.
The court ruled that there is no room to refer a recovery case back to the Swedish Social Insurance Agency solely because the agency failed to investigate circumstances for which they themselves have the burden of proof. The Supreme Court thus upheld the decision of the Administrative Court of Appeal: the case should not be referred back.
Analysis: What does this mean in practice?
The ruling is important in principle and marks a clear boundary for how the court process may be used by authorities.
Strengthened legal certainty for the individual The ruling makes it clear that the court should not act as a "repair body" for the authority. In practice, recovery cases are similar to sanction proceedings where the authority makes a financial claim against a private individual. The fact that the court refuses to give the authority a "second chance" to correct its evidence by remanding the case is a victory for the individual's legal certainty.
**For the Swedish Social Insurance Agency, this means that the investigation must be robust before a decision on recovery is made. If the investigation is deficient when the case is tried in court, the deficiency will fall back on the authority by losing the case due to the burden of proof, rather than getting a new chance to process.
Scope of the judgment It is important to note that the principle is unlikely to be universal for all types of administrative cases.
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**In cases which, in terms of the protection interest, are similar to recovery cases (e.g. penalties) where the authority has an enhanced investigative responsibility and the burden of proof, the judgment is likely to have precedential effect.
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Favorable decisions: In cases where the individual seeks a benefit or a permit (where the individual has the burden of proof), the court still has a more active investigative responsibility, and there may still be a referral back to avoid the individual suffering a loss of justice.

