CG_5_1991
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [1992] UKSSCSC CG_5_1991 (20 August 1992) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1992/CG_5_1991.html Cite as: [1992] UKSSCSC CG_5_1991 |
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[1992] UKSSCSC CG_5_1991 (20 August 1992)
R(G) 2/93
Mr. D. G. Rice CG/5/1991
20.8.92
Tribunal practice - setting aside a decision - whether a tribunal is entitled to find a setting aside to have been invalid
The deceased, the claimant's partner, died on 8 May. Until that date they had joint title to housing benefit. On 10 May the claimant applied for a funeral payment for burial expenses of the deceased, stating that she was entitled to housing benefit. The adjudication officer rejected the application on the grounds that the claimant's title to housing benefit had ceased upon her husband's death and so she was not entitled on the date of claim.
The tribunal allowed her appeal on the basis that according to local authority records she did have title to housing benefit on the date of claim. Upon receiving confirmation that the claimant's title to housing benefit had ceased with her partner's death, the adjudication officer successfully applied to a second tribunal to have the decision of the first tribunal set aside. A third tribunal then decided that the claimant was not entitled to a funeral payment.
The claimant appealed to the Commissioner against that decision.
Held that:
- the Commissioner does not have the power of judicial review, which is strictly confined to the High Court. Therefore, the Commissioner could not rule on the validity of the decision of the second tribunal to set aside the decision of the first tribunal. Nor could the third tribunal. The decision of the first tribunal had been set aside by the second tribunal and the third tribunal had no power to rule on the validity of that decision of the second tribunal. They were therefore at liberty to consider the matter afresh. R(SB) 4/90 not followed (paras. 10 and 11);
- at the date of claim the claimant was not entitled to housing benefit and therefore was not entitled to a funeral payment (para. 12).
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"7. – (1) Subject to regulations 8 and Parts IV and V of these Regulations, the social fund payment to meet funeral expenses (referred to in these regulations as a 'funeral payment') shall be made only where –
(a) the claimant or his partner has, in respect of the date of claim for a funeral payment, been awarded either income support, family credit, housing benefit or community charge benefits; and [there then follow certain further conditions which it is not in dispute the claimant satisfied]."
The social fund officer decided that the claimant was not in receipt of any of the qualifying benefits at the date of claim, and accordingly decided that the claimant was not entitled to a funeral payment.
"The document enclosed in your letter is a copy of a computer screen which is very much out of date. Rate rebates are granted in advance and, therefore, at the beginning of financial year the computer screen showed a rate rebate for the whole year. Since then the rebate has been withdrawn.
[The claimant] is not currently in receipt of housing benefit and has not been since 9 May 1988."
In the light of that further information the adjudication officer applied to have the decision of the tribunal of 15 November 1988 set aside under regulation 11(1)(c) of the Adjudication Regulations i.e. on the ground that "the interests of justice so require". It may be that the more apposite regulation was regulation 11(1)(a), but be that as it may the adjudication officer relied on regulation 11(l)(c). In the event, the social security appeal tribunal which sat on 23 May 1989 set aside the decision of 15 November 1988. On 2 October 1988 a new tribunal considered the substantive matter afresh, and decided that the claimant was not entitled to a funeral payment.
"15. Nevertheless the provision of regulation 12(3) that there shall be no appeal, although preventing the Commissioner from entertaining a direct appeal from a determination to set aside or not to set aside as the case may be, does not prevent the Commissioner from adjudicating on the validity of a setting aside determination when it is material to an appeal validly before him as is the case here. The ultimate social security appeal tribunal decision (of 17 June 1988) is in fact under appeal to me. To consider whether that tribunal had jurisdiction I have to consider whether the first tribunal decision had been validly removed by a setting aside decision (compare a decision of a tribunal of Commissioners in R(S) 12/81 where the tribunal considered the validity of a setting aside decision as part of their determination of an appeal)."
"16. A helpful authority is the decision of the House of Lords in Anisminic v. Foreign Compensation Commission [1969] 2 AC 147, where a statutory provision that the determination by the Commission .... shall not be called in question in any court of law (Foreign Compensation Act 1950, section 4(4)) was held not to prevent investigation by the Courts in a case where a decision of the Commission was a nullity. Lord Reid said (at p. 171):
'It has sometimes been said that it is only where a tribunal acts with[out] jurisdiction that its decision is a nullity. But in such cases the word "jurisdiction" has been used in a very wide sense and I have come to the conclusion that it is better not to use the term except in the narrow and original sense of the tribunal being entitled to enter on the inquiry in question. But there are many cases where, although the tribunal had jurisdiction to enter on the inquiry, it has done or failed to do something in the course of the inquiry which is of such a nature that its decision is a nullity. It may have given its decision in bad faith. It may have made a decision which it had no power to make. It may have failed in the course of the enquiry to comply with the requirements of natural justice. It may in perfect good faith have misconstrued the provision giving it power to act so that it failed to deal with the question remitted to it and decided some question which was not remitted to it. It may have refused to take into account something which it was required to take into account. Or it may have based its decision on some matter which under the provisions setting it up, it had no right to take into account.'
- The passages I have underlined in that citation apply, in my judgment to the purported setting aside determination of the social security appeal tribunal in this case. The tribunal may have had 'jurisdiction' in the narrow sense but its decision was nevertheless a nullity in accordance with the underlined words. Despite the provision of regulation 12(3) prohibiting appeals, I am empowered to declare that the setting-aside determination was a nullity, just as the House of Lords in the Anisminic case could declare as a nullity the purported determination of the Foreign Compensation Commission, despite the provision in section 4(4) of the 1950 Act that such a determination should 'not be called in question in any court of law'. My having so held does not delegate from the ruling in R(SB) 23/83 that the prohibition of a direct appeal to the Commissioner is not ultra vires."
"I turn next to the question of the availability of judicial review instead of appeal as a means of correcting mistakes of law made by a court of law as distinct from an administrative tribunal or other administrative authority, however described, when it is exercising quasi-judicial functions. In Anisminic [1969] 2 AC 147 this House was concerned only with decisions of administrative tribunals. Nothing I say is intended to detract from the breadth of the scope of application to administrative tribunals of the principles laid down in that case. It is a legal landmark; it has made possible the rapid development in England of a rational and comprehensive system of administrative law on the foundation of the concept of ultra vires. It proceeds on the presumption that where Parliament confers on an administrative tribunal or authority, as distinct from a court of law, power to decide particular questions defined by the Act conferring the power, Parliament intends to confine that power to answering the question as it has been so defined, and if there has been any doubt as to what the question is this is a matter for courts of law to resolve in fulfilment of their constitutional role as interpreters of the written law and expounders of the common law and rules of equity. So, if the administrative tribunal or authority have asked themselves the wrong question and answered that, they have done something that the Act does not empower them to do and their decision is a nullity. Parliament can, of course, if it so desires confer on administrative tribunals or authorities power to decide questions of law as well as questions of fact or of administrative policy; but this requires clear words, for the presumption is that where a decision-making power is conferred on a tribunal or authority that is not a court of law, Parliament did not intend to do so. The break-through made by Anisminic [1969] 2 AC 147 was that, as respects administrative tribunals and authorities, the old distinction between errors of law that went to jurisdiction and errors of law that did not was for practical purposes abolished. Any error of law that could be shown to have been made by them in the course of reaching their decision on matters of fact or of administrative policy would result in their having asked themselves the wrong question with the result that the decision then reached would be a nullity. The Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1971, which requires most administrative tribunals from which there is not a statutory right of appeal to the Supreme Court on questions of law, to give written reasons for their decisions, now supplemented by the provisions for discovery in applications for judicial review under RSC Ord 53, facilitates the detection of errors of law by those tribunals and by administrative authorities generally."
Date: 20 August 1992 (signed) Mr. D. G. Rice
Commissioner