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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [1996] UKSSCSC CIS_166_1994 (11 January 1996) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1996/CIS_166_1994.html Cite as: [1996] UKSSCSC CIS_166_1994 |
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[1996] UKSSCSC CIS_166_1994 (11 January 1996)
MJG/LB/6
commissioner's File: CIS/166/94
SOCIAL SECURITY ACT 1986
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION ACT 1992.
APPEAL FROM DECISION OF SOCIAL SECURITY APPEAL TRIBUNAL ON A
QUESTION OF LAW
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"Earnings from self-employment fall to be taken into account at the weekly rate of £86.52 in the calculation of Income Support from 24.11.92. As this figure exceeds the weekly applicable amount [the claimant] is not entitled to Income Support."
"[The claimant] is aged 61. He lives alone in owner occupied accommodation and claimed Income Support on 24.11.92. having last worked on 7.11.92. as a self-employed builder. [The claimant] has not ceased trading and has provided details of all the work done since 31.10.88. ... [The claimant] is not entitled to Unemployment Benefit and has no other income. He has savings of less than £2,500. [The claimant] appeals on the ground that he has not worked since October 1992 and has not earned any money."
"[Claimant] came to England in 1953 from Ireland into the building trade. From 1957 onwards he worked as self employed builder until 1988 ... on sub-contract basis. In 1988 and 1989 appellant went self employed entirely on his own. Has not claimed unemployment benefit since 1963. ... The documents establish more or less regular employment - short periods of unemployment only. Clearly, his periods of unemployment were during the winter months. The appellant has always had some work in the pipeline, even if there was a break of weeks - he knew there was something else coming up. By November 1992 work had run dry. Document 25 lists jobs undertaken from 1 June 1992 to 2 November 1992. Since he re-started on 1 February 1993 he is now in full-time self-employment again."
"124(1) A person in Great Britain is entitled to income support if -(a) he is of or over the age of eighteen....(b) he has no income or his income does not exceed the applicable amount;(c) he is not engaged in remunerative work and, if he is a member of a married or unmarried couple, the other member is not so engaged; and(d) except in such circumstances as may be prescribed(i) he is available for, and actively seeking, employment;(ii) he is not receiving relevant education.."
"Persons treated as engaged in remunerative work.5(1) Subject to the following provisions of this regulation, for the purposes of [Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act section 124(1)(c)] (conditions of entitlement to income support), remunerative
work is work in which a person in engaged, or, where his hours of work fluctuate, he is engaged on average, for not less than 16 hours a week, being work for which payment is made or which is done in expectation of payment".
"30(1) ... where a claimant's income consists of earnings from employment as a self-employed earner the weekly amount of his earnings shall be determined by reference to his average weekly earnings from that employment -
(a) over a period of 52 weeks; or(b) where the claimant has recently become engaged in that employment or there has been a change which is likely to affect the normal pattern of business, over such other period of weeks as may, in any particular case, enable the weekly amount of his earnings to be determined more accurately."
"2 (1) In this Part of this Act and Parts II to V below(a)
(b)..'self-employed . earner' means a person who is gainfully employed in Great Britain otherwise than in employed earner's employment (whether or not he is also employed in such employment)".
"Whether a claimant is so employed will depend on that person's current and prospective activities and his intentions. That being so, I would further submit that the facts upon which the tribunal in the instant case should have made findings includes the following -
(i) whether new orders were foreseeable;
(ii) whether the business was a going concern and regarded as such by the claimant, his bankers, creditors and others;
(iii) whether the claimant was genuinely available for actively seeking alternative work;
(iv) whether the claimant hoped or intended to resume work in his business when economic conditions improved;
(v) whether the claimant was undertaking activities in connection with the business hitherto pursued;
(vi) whether there was work in the pipeline;
(vii) whether the claimant was regarded as self-employed by the Secretary of State and the Inland Revenue;
(viii) whether the claimant held himself out as being anxious to become employed for purpose of gain (for example by advertising or otherwise soliciting new trade); and
(ix) whether the interruption in question was part of the normal pattern of either the claimant's particular work or the general occupation being pursued."
I accept those detailed factual tests as being correct. The new tribunal will need to have regard to them and make their findings of fact accordingly in order to determine whether the claimant can be said to have been "gainfully employed" during the period between 24 November 1992 to 8 February 1993.
"Hence, if with the benefit of hindsight they (i.e. the tribunal] could see that the interruption in work that prompted the claimant's claim was in point of fact a change which was likely to affect the normal pattern of business, it would, in my submission, be incumbent upon the tribunal to apply regulation 30(1)(b). Furthermore, if the change had produced, or was likely to produce, a substantial reduction in the claimant's income for a considerable time, then because the purpose of regulation 30(1)(b) is clearly to facilitate the most accurate possible calculation of the claimant's earnings, it would, in my submission, be appropriate for the tribunal to begin the period of assessment with the date on which the change occurred; in which case it may well transpire no earnings would fall to be taken into account."
"38(10) Notwithstanding regulation 30 (calculation of earnings of self-employed earners) ... an adjudication officer may assess any item of the claimant's income or expenditure over a period other than that determined under regulation 30% as may, in the particular case, enable the weekly amount of that item of income or expenditure to be determined more accurately."
M.J. Goodman
Commissioner
11 January 1996