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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Deakin v Secretary of State for Defence [2019] EWCA Civ 571 (04 April 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/571.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 571, [2019] WLR(D) 215, [2019] 4 WLR 61 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS CHAMBER
Upper Tribunal Judge H. Levenson
CAF/1819/2016
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
and
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
____________________
HILDA DEAKIN |
Respondent |
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- and – |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR DEFENCE |
Appellant |
____________________
Mr Nathan Searle (instructed by Hogan Lovells International LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 26 March 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Davis :
Introduction
The Background Facts and the Proceedings Below
The Legislative Scheme
"(1) In determining whether a pension is payable to a person as a widow under any of the enactments mentioned in subsection (3) in respect of any period beginning on or after the commencement of this section, no account may be taken of the fact that the widow has married another if, before the beginning of that period, the marriage has been terminated or the parties have been judicially separated."
The 1983 Order was included in s.168(3). For present purposes, it is sufficient to say that it was agreed before us that as from 19 July 1995 war widows in the position of Mrs Deakin were entitled to a restored war widow's pension following the termination of a subsequent marriage. (I add that, more recently still, the position has been further extended so that remarriage or cohabiting does not cause the withdrawal of a surviving spouse's pension at all: but that is not relevant to the circumstances of this case.)
"(3) A claim for a widow's pension under article 29 is not required if –
(a) the member of the armed forces by reference to whose death the pension would be payable died whilst serving in the armed forces; and
(b) the Secretary of State for Defence has delivered to the Secretary of State copies of that member's medical and service records."
"Under this Part, awards may be made in accordance with this Order in respect of the death of a member of the armed forces which is due to service before 6th April 2005."
Article 23(1) then provides in the relevant respects:
"The surviving spouse or surviving civil partner of a member of the armed forces whose death is due to service may be awarded a pension [at the then specified rates]…"
Thereafter, provision is variously made in the following Articles for awards or allowances, frequently geared to cases of death "due to service".
"(1) Subject to the following provisions of this article, any pension or allowance awarded under this Part of the Order or under Part II of a 1919 to 1921 instrument to a person other than a parent shall cease if that person marries or lives with another person as the spouse of that person or forms a civil partnership or lives with another person as the civil partner of that person.
(2) Where –
(a) in accordance with paragraph (1), an award ceased because the person had another person living with her or, as the case may be, him as a spouse or formed a civil partnership or had another person living with her, or as the case may be, him as a civil partner; and
(b) that person claims an award under this Part in respect of a period which begins after the end of that relationship
the claim shall be determined as though the relationship had never existed.
…
(4) In determining whether a pension is payable to a person as a surviving spouse in respect of any period beginning on or after 19th July 1995, no account may be take of the fact that the widow has married another if, before the beginning of that period, the marriage has been terminated or the parties have been judicially separated.
…
(7)(a) the reference to the termination of a marriage is to the termination of the marriage by death, dissolution or annulment"
"(1) Subject to paragraph (4) and article 35, it shall be a condition precedent to the making of any award of any pension, allowance or supplement mentioned in paragraph (2) (including any such award which follows an earlier award or which follows a period which, had there been an award for that period, would have ended in accordance with article 33(1)) that the person making the claim shall have –
(a) completed and signed a form approved by the Secretary of State for the purpose of claiming that pension, allowance or supplement payable under this Order; and
(b) delivered that form either to an appropriate office of the Secretary of State or to an office of an authorised agent.
(2) The pensions, allowances and supplement to which paragraph (1) applies are –
….
(k) a surviving spouse's or surviving civil partner's pension payable under article 23;"
"(1) A claim for the pensions, allowances and supplements mentioned in the following paragraphs of this article shall not be required if the conditions set out in the relevant paragraph are satisfied.
…
(3) A claim for a surviving spouse's or surviving civil partner's pension under article 23 is not required if –
(a) the member of the armed forces by reference to whose death the pension would be payable died whilst serving in the armed forces; and
(b) copies of that member's medical and service records are delivered to the Veterans Agency."
Thus Article 35(3) in substance replicates the corresponding provision in the now superseded Article 3B of the 1983 Order. It is the true interpretation of Article 35(3) which is central to this present appeal.
" (1) Subject to the following provisions of this Schedule, an award or an adjustment of an award shall have effect from such date as may be specified in the award, being a date not earlier than the date specified in subparagraph (2) which is relevant in the claimant's case.
(2) The date specified in this subparagraph is whichever date is the latest in time of the date –
(a) following the date of termination of service, in a case under Part IV, following the date of death of the member;
(b) of the claim;
(c) of the last application for review; or
(3) Where in a case to which subparagraph (1) applies, the claimant satisfies the requirements of subparagraph (4) the award shall have effect from the date the subparagraph is satisfied.
(4) This paragraph is satisfied where the date of claim or application for review is made within 3 months of –
(a) the date of termination of service, or the date of death where an award is made in respect of a member's death; or
(b) except where paragraph (a) applies, the date of notification of a decision on the claim or review.
…
(10) For the purposes of this paragraph, a claim shall be treated as made for a pension or allowance for which a claim is not required by virtue of article 35 on the date on which the relevant conditions of entitlement to the pension or allowance first became satisfied."
Paragraph 2(1) of Schedule 3 then provides:
"In a case to which section 168 of the Pension Act 1995(1) (war pensions for widows: effect of remarriage) or article 33(2) applies, for paragraph 1(4)(a) of this Schedule substitute "the date of termination of a marriage or civil partnership, the date of judicial separation of the parties to a marriage, the date of a separation order relating to a civil partnership or the date the claimant ceased to live with another as a spouse or as a civil partner"."
There are also, among other things, provisions in this Schedule adjusting the date of commencement in various situations: for example, in cases of incapacity or in cases of act or omission on the part of the Secretary of State causing delay in the submission of a claim. Although, as I have said, such matters featured in the Tribunal proceedings below, they have not featured on this appeal.
"(3A) Paragraph (3) does not apply to restorations of awards referred to in article 33(2)."
I should add that by then the original version of Article 33(2) had been superseded and replaced by a new Article 33(2) as from 6 April 2015.
The arguments
Disposal
(1) First, Mrs Deakin always was entitled to a restored award of her war widow's pension on the death of her second husband. Because she did not know of her rights at the time, she did not notify the Secretary of State at that time. Had she done so promptly, she would have received her restored award from that date. But in the circumstances here arising the Secretary of State has in the intervening years been spared from paying what otherwise would have been payable. This is a point to which the Upper Tribunal judge accorded considerable weight. I agree, however, with Ms Ward that that point is of only limited weight. It is of only limited weight just because it is the general scheme of the 2006 Order that the commencement dates for awards are (ordinarily) geared to the making of a claim. So there certainly will be cases where claimants may receive an award from a commencement date which is later than the date on which the potential entitlement first arose. That said, and although I would not myself accord this point quite the weight that the Upper Tribunal did, it still, in my view, has at least some relevance in considering the sense of the outcome if a literal interpretation of the words is adopted.(2) Second, it very important to note that this exemption from the requirement to make a claim is limited to those who die "while serving". Thus not only must the relevant death be "due to service" (Article 23) but in addition, for the purposes of Article 35(3), it must be during service. That significantly delimits the class of those who are exempt from the requirement to make a claim.
(3) Third, and linked to the second point, it is by no means fanciful to think that a degree of preferential benevolence was designed to be extended to the surviving spouses and civil partners of those whose death was not only due to service but also was while serving. At all events, the general direction of travel of the Services Death and Disablement provisions over the years seems, by and large, to be one towards extension and inclusion rather than restriction and exclusion.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Baker:
Lady Justice Rafferty: