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Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [1997] NISSCSC C24/97(IB) (17 August 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NISSCSC/1997/C24_97(IB).html Cite as: [1997] NISSCSC C24/97(IB) |
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[1997] NISSCSC C24/97(IB) (17 August 1999)
Decision No: C24/97(IB)
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION (NORTHERN IRELAND) ACT 1992
SOCIAL SECURITY CONTRIBUTIONS AND BENEFITS
(NORTHERN IRELAND) ACT 1992
SOCIAL SECURITY (CONSEQUENTIAL PROVISIONS)
(NORTHERN IRELAND) ACT 1992
SOCIAL SECURITY (NORTHERN IRELAND) ORDER 1998
INCAPACITY BENEFIT
Appeal to the Social Security Commissioner
on a question of law from a Tribunal's decision
dated 6 February 1997
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"Regulation 27 of the Social Security (Incapacity For Work)(General) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1995 as it stood
prior to 6 January 1997 provided for a person who did not
satisfy the all work test to be treated as incapable of work,
if in the opinion of a doctor approved by the Department, one
of the exceptional circumstances applied to him.
The tribunal heard this appeal on 6 February 1997 and decided
that the all work test was not satisfied from 18 December 1996.
However, the tribunal also decided that from 18 December 1996
Mr D... satisfied regulation 27(c) which provided as follows -
"27. A person who does not satisfy the all work testshall be treated as incapable of work if in the opinion
of a doctor approved by the Department
(a) ..........
(b) ..........
(c) he suffers from a severe uncontrolled or uncontrollable
disease; or
(d) .........."
In the reasons for decision it is recorded -
"While the claimant on his own evidence, does not score 15or more points under the All Work Test, the Tribunal concluded
that he is suffering from a severe uncontrolled disease
(Sarcoidosis), and therefore he falls within Regulation 27(c)
of the Social Security (Incapacity for Work) (General)
Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1995 (before amendment).
The Tribunal did not consider it appropriate to apply the
amended Regulation 27 (which came into effect on 6 January
1997) because this claim was made and the decision made on
it under the "old" Regulation"
The amendment referred to by the tribunal took effect from 6 January
1997 by virtue of the Social Security (Incapacity for Work and
Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations (NI) 1996. The substituted regulation 27 provides -
"27.-(1) A person who does not satisfy the all work testshall be treated as incapable of work if any of the
circumstances set out in paragraph (2) apply to him.
(2) The circumstances are that -
(a) he is suffering from a severe life threatening diseasein relation to which-
(i) there is medical evidence that the disease isuncontrollable, or uncontrolled, by a recognised
therapeutic procedure, and
(ii) in the case of a disease which is uncontrolled,
there is a reasonable cause for it not to be controlled
by a recognised therapeutic procedure;
(b) he suffers from a previously undiagnosed potentially life threatening condition which has been discovered during the
course of a medical examination carried out for the purposes
of the all work test by a doctor approved by the Department;
(c) there exists medical evidence that he requires a major
surgical operation or other major therapeutic procedure and
it is likely that that operation or procedure will be carried
out within three months of the date of a medical examination
carried out for the purposes of the all work test."
Incapacity Benefit is a day to day benefit for which entitlement
must be considered for each day covered by a claim. The basic
entitlement condition of being "incapable of work", in this instance
by satisfying the All Work Test either in fact or through being so
treated under Regulation 27, must therefore be considered afresh in
relation to each day. From and including 6 January 1997 the
substituted provisions of the revised Regulation 27 created a new
entitlement condition applying to Mr D...'s claim. I submit that
since the tribunal failed to apply the substituted provisions to the
period from 6 January 1997, they erred in law. [Section 29(2)(d) of
the Interpretation Act (NI) 1954 refers to the effect of substituted provisions.]."
"Where an enactment repeals or revokes a transferred provision,the repeal or revocation shall not, save as in this section
otherwise provided -
...
(c) affect any right, privilege, obligation or liability acquired,
accrued or incurred under the transferred provisions so repealed
or revoked"
In order therefore to proceed, consideration must be given as to whether
the claimant had acquired or accrued a right under the statutory provision
relating to Incapacity Benefit prior to 6 January 1997 which can be
retained after regulation 27 was amended.
"ACCRUED RIGHT7. As stated in my letter of application and expanded upon at paras 1 - 4 above, incapacity benefit is a day to day benefit
and as such the accrual of rights argument is of no assistance
to [claimant].
8. Consideration was given by a Tribunal of Commissioners in GB in decision R(U)1/91 as to whether, in UB cases, any "right" could be an accrued right. At paragraph 14 the Tribunal recorded:
"It is settled law that it is a daily benefit whichaccrues on a daily basis and the right only arises
where there has come into existence a day which
properly may be treated as a day of unemployment".
The tribunal of Commissioners, in distinguishing UB (a daily benefit)
and widows benefit (a long term benefit), continued at the same
paragraph:
"We have considered R(G)2/89. We do not doubt the correctnessof that decision, but it seems to us that there is an essential
difference between it and the case before us. Widow's pension
does not accrue on a daily basis."
The tribunal went on to say that any right existing prior to the
crucial change could not be an accrued right because the claimant
had no right as far as the future was concerned. Since IB like UB
is also a daily benefit I would submit that the above case law has
direct application to [claimant's] case, that she has not accrued a
right under regulation 27 prior to amendment, and therefore she
cannot gain assistance from Section 28(2)(c) of the Interpretation
Act (NI).
ACQUIRED RIGHT
9. Consideration was also given by the Tribunal of Commissioners as to whether the claimant had an acquired right to UB. They decided that it was not possible to acquire a right until entitlement is established.
I would therefore submit that based on the above argument
[claimant] cannot acquire a right under the "old" Regulation 27.
CONTRARY INTENTION
10. If the claimant cannot establish an accrued/acquired right the following argument on "contrary intention" is academic. Nevertheless for completeness and in the event that the Commissioner may decide that [claimant] has a accrued/acquired right I would submit the following:
Section 2(1) of the Interpretation Act (NI) 1954 provides as
follows-
"Every provision of this Act shall extend and applyto every enactment, whether passed or made before or
after passing of this Act, unless a contrary intention
appears in this Act or in the enactment".
As was pointed out in the Notes on Clauses ... relating to that
section at the Bill stage, when it was being introduced, "it is
important to discover whether the Bill or any enactment shows a "contrary intention", in which case the provisions of the Bill
will not apply". The Notes also stated that "the general
reference in this sub-section renders unnecessary its constant
repetition in this Bill".
I submit therefore that what has to be considered is whether
regulation 27 shows a contrary to the application of the accrued
right provision in s28(2)(c).
11. Regulation 27 was submitted and the provision referring to "Risk to self or others" was removed from 6/1/97.
The Commissioner at paragraph 7 of R(G)2/89, while referring
to contrary intention, stated;
It is a long established principle that a statute is not
to be taken as depriving a person of a right or benefit he
had before the passing of the statute unless there are
express words or plainest implication to that effect: see
eg Lauri V Renaud 1892 Ch 402 and Kenshall V Porter 1923 2 KB 193."
12. Relying on the above decision I submit that the omission of the relevant words in regulation 27, plainly implies that Parliament intended the amended legislation to apply to all cases from 6/1/97. If this was not so, a savings or transitional provision could have been introduced to protect existing cases from the effects of the amended legislation or alternatively the wording of regulation 27(b) could have been repeated in the new amending legislation."
"14. ... I accept that as a matter of practice an appeal tribunalmay start, as indicated in paragraph 47(2) of appendix to
CSIS/137/1994, by asking whether it has been shown to its
satisfaction that the all work test is not satisfied at the date
of the Adjudication Officer's assessment. However, in considering
whether that has been shown, the appeal tribunal must consider and
give proper weight to the evidence on which the previous decision
was based....
15. Some cases will be straightforward. The new examining medical
officer's report or other evidence may clearly point to particular
improvements in the claimant's abilities and the reasons for the
improvements. Other cases will not be so straightforward. The new examining medical officer's report may paint a very different
clinical picture from the previous report, with the implication that
the previous report over-emphasised the claimant's problems at the
time. The appeal tribunal would have to consider, in the light of
all the other evidence, whether it was satisfied (the burden of proof
being on the adjudication officer) that the new report accurately
described the claimant's condition. Or there may be cases where the
clinical picture painted in the two reports is substantially the same,
but there are differences in the opinions of the examining medical
officers about particular descriptors. For instance, there might be
similar clinical findings on limitations on the claimant's walking
ability, and similar statements by the claimant about actual walking,
yet the first examining officer has ticked the box for "cannot walk
more than 200 metres without stopping or severe discomfort" and the
second has ticked the box for "cannot walk more than 400 metres"...
In such circumstances an appeal tribunal (and an adjudication officer)
should think very carefully before concluding that the points to go
into new all work test assessment are 3 and not 7 and being satisfied
that the All Work Test is not met. Such circumstances (which I do
not attempt to define with any precision at all) may well point to
the proper starting point being consideration of whether it has been
proved that there has been a change in the claimant's condition or a
mistake by the first adjudication officer as to some material fact.
Then, the principle (approved in CSIS/137/1994) comes into play that
the expression of a new medical opinion is not itself a relevant
change of circumstances, but may be evidence of an actual change of circumstances or a mistake of fact."
(Signed): C C G McNally
COMMISSIONER
17 August 1999