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UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2000] UKSSCSC CDLA_1095_1999 (10 November 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2000/CDLA_1095_1999.html Cite as: [2000] UKSSCSC CDLA_1095_1999 |
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[2000] UKSSCSC CDLA_1095_1999 (10 November 2000)
THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONERS
Commissioner's Case No: CSDLA/1095/99
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION ACT 1992
SOCIAL SECURITY ACT 1998
APPEAL FROM THE APPEAL TRIBUNAL UPON A QUESTION OF LAW
COMMISSIONER: D J MAY QC
ORAL HEARING
DECISION OF SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"I would regard these as cases in which, by reason of her disability, i.e. arthritis, she needs attention in connection with her bodily function of urinating, that being a bodily function which a fit person (one who does not suffer from arthritis) can perform without assistance."
At page 848 he went on to say:
"It follows that, in the case of Mrs Cockburn, the question has to be asked whether the service in question is sufficiently personal to constitute part of 'frequent attention throughout the day in connection with [Mrs Cockburn's] bodily functions', on the basis that her disability is arthritis, and her relevant bodily function is urination. In my opinion, in the case of an unfortunate woman who because of her arthritis cannot cope with her incontinence, the services of changing her clothes or her bedlinen and remaking her bed, even (as part of the same operation) rinsing out the soiled clothing removed from her, are sufficiently personal to fall within the section. But taking her laundry away to be washed transcends personal attention of that kind; and it follows that, as I have said, [the claimant's] appeal must be dismissed."
Lord Mustill said at page 849 said:-
"(3) Assume now that the applicant does not manage to get to the lavatory in time and needs help to change his or her clothes and put things straight. I think it quite a small step to say that here the help is given in connection with a bodily malfunction which, as I have said, I would equate with a bodily function. And if this is right the same must be the case with the changing of bedclothes and nightwear and other tasks."
He then went on to say at page 850:-
"There are cases where it is better to concentrate on the words themselves, in the context of the actual dispute. In my opinion this is one. I see here a sufficient continuity between the applicant's incontinence and the presence of the other person to deal with the consequences on the spot to satisfy this section. If the other person had been asked why she spent an hour or so in the flat she would say that she had gone to help out with the applicant's bladder problem."
The effect of these speeches is that there does not have to be a direct connection between the disability and the bodily function impaired.
Lord Hope of Craighead on the other hand took a somewhat different approach. He said at page 867 –
"There are two bodily functions involved in Mrs Cockburn's case. The first is that of urinating. Her disability in regard to that function is her incontinence. But she does not require assistance in the performance of the function or urinating. Her problem is that she cannot cope with the consequences of her incontinence due to her arthritis. The assistance which she requires is in connection with the other bodily function, which is that of moving her limbs".
He then went on to set out in his view the correct analysis –
"She does not require attention in connection with the performance of the bodily function of urinating, but the fact that she is incontinent of urine increases her need for attention in connection with the other bodily functions which I have described."
"So far as the appeal in the case of Mrs Cockburn is concerned I consider that it should be dismissed for the reasons given by my noble and learned friend Lord Hope of Craighead whose speech I have had the opportunity of reading in draft."
It thus appears to me that Lord Clyde was accepting the analysis of Lord Hope.
"Lord Woolf approved the distinction drawn by Nicholls LJ in Moran v Secretary of State for Social Services [1987] CA Transcript 244 that 'attention' denotes a concept of some personal service of an active nature whereas 'supervision' denotes a more passive concept, the person watching and being able to intervene only if necessary. He accepted that guiding was an active role involving personal qualities necessary to constitute 'attention' and said ([1994] 2 All ER 295 at 305, [1994] 1 WLR 630 at 640):
'The only attention which can be given to a person "in connection with" a sight handicap is to provide the assistance to enable that person to do what he could physically do for himself if he had sight.'
Lord Woolf considered that it did not cease to be attention in connection with a bodily function if the disability prevented totally the exercise of that function and added ([1994] 2 All ER 295 at 306, [1994] 1 WLR 630 at 640):
'The attention is in connection with the bodily function if it provides a substitute method of providing what the bodily function would provide if it were not totally or partially impaired.'
The fact that with experience a person learned to cope with his disability so that less attention was required did not change the nature of the disability or the attention. It might affect the question whether the attention was needed frequently during the day. Lord Templeman and Lord Browne-Wilkinson agreed with his reasoning.
Lord Lloyd of Berwick, dissenting, with whom Lord Mustill agreed, considered that walking was the relevant bodily function and that what was required in that case was supervision and not attention; that since Mr Mallinson could move about in familiar surroundings he was limited to claiming in respect of walking about in unfamiliar surroundings (see [1994] 2 All ER 295 at 314-315, [1994] 1 WLR 630 at 648-649). That Lord Lloyd of Berwick found too vague and imprecise to count as a separate bodily function. He rejected the argument that seeing was a bodily function which a person 'performed'.
It is, however, the majority view as to the meaning of 'attention in connection with' which must be accepted. That the attention required must be 'reasonably' required was stated in R v Secretary of State for Social Services, ex p Connolly [1986] 2 All ER 998, [1986] 1 WLR 421 and has not since been questioned.
The issues in Mrs Cockburn's case are thus different. In her case it seems to me that two bodily functions have to be considered. The first one is urination. Her disability is that she does not and cannot urinate in a controlled way. The second bodily function is the movement of the limbs, the legs but more particularly the hands and arms. Her disability in that respect is that she cannot use them for the purposes of adequately cleaning herself, changing and cleaning the clothes she wears and the sheets in which she sleeps. The acts claimed to constitute the attention which is required throughout the day in connection with her bodily functions are the cleaning of her body, the changing and cleaning of her clothes and sheets.
There is no question here as to whether these are essential or desirable. Her daughter's evidence, accepted by the tribunal makes it plain that they are essential. They are in any event required as part of normal life.
It is not in my view arguable, and has not been argued, that the cleaning of the body of a person who is incontinent is not "attention in connection with bodily functions, even if the need for cleaning results from a disability. Apart from helping to put in place incontinence pads in clothing there is no attention more closely connected to this particular bodily function."
Lord Slynn of course dissented from the other members of the House in respect of the principal issue. It is further not clear on my reading of his speech which bodily functions he considers require attention that is to say is it urinating or the use of her limbs or both. Mr Brodie submitted that his approach was consistent with Lords Goff and Mustill which concession I am prepared to accept.
"Mr Mitchell, for the appellant, submitted that the Commissioner had erred in law in his decision on the point now in issue. In particular, the Commissioner sought as the basis for his decision to found on a passage in the speech of Lord Hope of Craighead in the case of Cockburn v Chief Adjudication Officer and another [1997] 1 WLR 799 (H.L.), overlooking the fact that the other four judges in the case adopted a different and wider approach than that of Lord Hope in the passage founded upon by the Commissioner. Furthermore, the Commissioner wrongly attributed as relating to the case of Cockburn a passage in Lord Slynn's speech which related to a deafness case which the House heard at the same time as the case of Cockburn. In the result, Mr Dewar, for the respondent, stated that he could not challenge what Mr Mitchell submitted about the Commissioner misdirecting himself in relation to the case of Cockburn and he conceded that the Commissioner had erred in law and that the appeal should be allowed and the case remitted to the Tribunal for a rehearing of the application. In this situation, our Opinion on the matter can be stated more shortly than would otherwise be appropriate."
The Inner House then went on to quote from passages in Cockburn at pages 177 to 179 of the bundle. It will however be noted that in error part of a speech attributed to Lord Clyde was in fact made by Lord Hope and that on the relevant issue Lord Clyde supported Lord Hope's analysis.
"In our opinion, therefore, the Commissioner was clearly wrong in excluding as irrelevant as a matter of law attention provided following upon completion of the bodily function of urinating simply because the attention did not assist in the actual bodily function of urinating. We agree with the observations of Lord Goff, Lord Mustill, Lord Slynn and Lord Clyde in their speeches in the Cockburn case in the passages which we have quoted. Whether attention provided following completion of the bodily function of urinating will qualify as relevant is any particular case is a matter for consideration of the circumstances of the case under reference to the statutory requirements as a whole. The Cockburn case illustrates this point."
(signed)
D J MAY QC
Commissioner
Date: 10 November 2000