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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2000] NISSCSC C12/00-01(IB) (7 November 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NISSCSC/2000/C12_00-01(IB).html Cite as: [2000] NISSCSC C12/-1(IB), [2000] NISSCSC C12/00-01(IB) |
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[2000] NISSCSC C12/00-01(IB) (7 November 2000)
Decision No: C12/00-01(IB)
"Vision in normal daylight or bright electric light with glasses or other aid to vision if such aid is normally worn."
"Cannot see well enough to read 16 point print at a distance greater than 20 centimetres."
(1) That the Tribunal imported into the descriptor 12(c) the ability to sustain reading over several paragraphs of 16 point print. This, Mr Fletcher submitted, was an error of law in that the said descriptor did not prescribe that it was the ability to read several paragraphs of text that must be considered and the Tribunal therefore erred in law in applying an incorrect test. In support of this Mr Fletcher cited decision CIB/4998/1997, a decision of Deputy Commissioner Warren in Great Britain. In particular he mentioned paragraph three thereof where the Deputy Commissioner stated "I pause to observe that the descriptor refers to a capacity to see, rather than a capacity to read." Mr Fletcher also mentioned decision CIB/333/1998, a decision of Deputy Commissioner Street in Great Britain where, at paragraph nine, referring to the relevant descriptor the Deputy Commissioner stated "The test is seeing to read, not simply being able to see."
(2) Alternatively Mr Fletcher submitted that if the required reading ability could be achieved by the occasional shaking of the head and the use of a guide to mark his place the claimant could not reasonably be found to satisfy the descriptors. He stated that this behaviour was not so extreme as to make it unreasonable to countenance. This was unlike the situation in C12/96(IB) alluded to by the Tribunal in which the claimant took half an hour to write one or two lines of text. In support of his argument he referred to decision C76/98(IB), a decision of my own. In that decision I expressed the view that with regard to the descriptor 11(c) some reasonable adjustment of position could be included within the descriptor. The descriptor is "Cannot hear well enough to understand someone talking in a normal voice on a busy street".
(3) Mr Fletcher submitted that the gradations of points within each descriptor of the activity of vision reflected the severity of the impairment. He further submitted that the fact that the Tribunal had considered that the claimant could pick out his wife from a crowd of people at a distance of 15 metres (which had he been unable to do this would have afforded him eight points) but yet considered that he satisfied the descriptor 12(c) which would have given him 15 points was further indicative of an incorrect construction being put on the descriptor i.e. that it imported reading for a sustained period of time.
"It is not reasonable to say that a claimant can understand someone talking in a normal voice in a busy street if he can gain that understanding only by making frequent requests for repetition of what has been said."
"We felt that the claimant could reasonably recognise a friend at a distance. We viewed this as an activity performed by 'visual snatches'. We felt the reading descriptor imported more sustained activity. Whilst as has been said the claimant could read a line or look at a number in a phone book by shaking his head and marking his place we felt overall he could not reasonably satisfy the reading descriptor. This activity (c) carries 15 points. In terms of duration we are contemplating several paragraphs rather than chapters as the criteria for performance of the activity."
(Signed): M F BrownC
COMMISSIONER
7 November 2000