CIS_270_1991
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [1992] UKSSCSC CIS_270_1991 (28 May 1992) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1992/CIS_270_1991.html Cite as: [1992] UKSSCSC CIS_270_1991 |
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[1992] UKSSCSC CIS_270_1991 (28 May 1992)
R(IS) 1/93
Mr. M. H. Johnson CIS/270/1991
28.5.92 Commissioner case no. Date
Remunerative work - freelance writer - whether work done "in expectation of payment"
After completing a year's Enterprise Allowance scheme as a free-lance writer earning £2,500 to £3,000 and continuing to write and submit articles for publication, the claimant was refused income support on the grounds that she was engaged in remunerative work within the meaning of regulation 5(1) of the Income Support (General) Regulations 1987. On appeal, the tribunal confirmed the decision. The claimant appealed to a social security Commissioner.
Held that:
- whether or not a claimant is engaged in remunerative work is a question of fact. However, it must be determined in accordance with the specific terms of the regulation. The tribunal erred in law by adopting as a definition of "in expectation of payment" the words of the Commissioner in R(FIS) 1/83 "work carried out with the desire, hope and intention of claiming a reward or profit". The Commissioner was there defining, for the purposes of family income supplement legislation, the phrase "remunerative work" (which was not defined in that legislation) and not "in expectation of payment" (paras. 7 and 8);
- desire and hope form no part of the definition in regulation 5(l), which clearly provides that such work must be carried out either for payment or in the expectation of payment. Expectation is not the same as desire, intention or hope (para. 9);
- work carried out in expectation of payment means in realistic expectation of such payment (para. 11);
- this claimant hoped to have work accepted and paid for, but was in fact working "on spec" which is in hope, not expectation of payment (para. 13);
The appeal was allowed.
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
(a) the unanimous decision of the Scarborough social security appeal tribunal given on 4 December 1990 is erroneous in point of law and is accordingly set aside;
(b) the claimant is entitled to income support from 28 May 1990.
"I'd hoped to establish myself as a writer during my year on the Enterprise Allowance, and I'm sorry to have to ask for more help."
Mrs. Peach was visited by an officer of the Department on 22 June 1990 when:
"... it was established and confirmed by the claimant, that she was writing on average 35 hours per week and this did not include weekends."
"(3) A person in Great Britain is entitled to income support if -
(a) he is of or over the age of 18 ...;
(b) he has no income or his income does not exceed the applicable amount;
(c) he is not engaged in remunerative work …;
(d) ...
(i) he is available for and actively seeking employment;"
and in regulation 5 of the Income Support (General) Regulations 1987 [SI 1987 No. 1967] ("the General Regulations"), which provides that:
"Persons treated as engaged in remunerative work
- -(1) Subject to the following provisions of this regulation, for the purposes of section 20(3)(a) of the Act (condition of entitlement to income support), remunerative work is work in which a person is engaged, or, where his hours of work fluctuate, he is engaged on average, for not less than 24 hours a week being work for which payment is made or which is done in expectation of payment.
(2) The number of hours for which a person is engaged in work shall be determined -
(a) where no recognisable cycle has been established in respect of a person's work, by reference to the number of hours or, where those hours are likely to fluctuate, the average of the hours, which he is expected to work in a week;
(b) where the number of hours for which he is engaged fluctuate, by reference to the average of hours worked over-
(i) if there is a recognisable cycle of work, the period of one complete cycle (including where the cycle involves periods in which the person does no work, those periods but disregarding any other absences);
(ii) in any other case, the period of five weeks immediately before the date of claim or the date of review, or such other length of time as may, in the particular case, enable the person's average hours of work to be determined more accurately."
(Paragraphs (3) to (7) have no application to the present case.)
"(a) had not reduced the hours which she devoted to writing to less than 24 hours per week;
(b) continued to write and submit for publication in the expectation of payment and indeed had received payments for articles published;
(c) had only claimed income support because of the cessation of Enterprise Allowance."
and that she therefore did not satisfy the condition of entitlement to income support, namely that she was not engaged in remunerative work. Mrs. Peach appealed and on 4 December 1990 the tribunal made various findings of fact, including that:
"3. .. she was continuing to write, spending at least the same amount of time as during the previous year in writing … The writing was done in expectation that a publisher could be found and she would be paid for it.
- .. she had a novel with a publisher, a TV play with Channel 4, a non-fiction book and about a dozen articles with various magazines and papers.
- Although she has no regular income from her writing she is drawing £30 weekly from her bank account."
In their reasons for their decision the tribunal relied on the definition of "work done 'in expectation of payment"' in R(FIS) 1/83 as "work carried [out] with the desire and intention of claiming a reward or profit", and they held that, as Mrs. Peach was:
"... working more than 24 hours with the desire and hope that in due course she would receive payment for her labour she is in remunerative work as defined by regulation 5(1) ... and therefore precluded from income support ..."
"... work in which a person is engaged ... on average, for not less than 24 hours a week being work for which payment is made or which is done in expectation of payment."
"... was working more than 24 hours with the desire and hope that in due course she would receive payment ..." (my emphasis).
Desire and hope form no part of the statutory definition, which clearly provides that such work must be carried out either for payment or in the expectation of payment. Expectation is defined by the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary as inter alia:
"1. The action or state of waiting, or waiting for (something) ...
- The action of mentally looking for something to take place; anticipation ...
- Expectancy.
- Ground or warrant for expecting ..."
On any footing expectation is not the same as desire, intention or hope. For the above reasons the tribunal plainly misdirected themselves in law, their decision is consequently erroneous in law and I set it aside.
Date: 28 May 1992 (signed) Mr. M. H. Johnson
Commissioner