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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2001] UKSSCSC CDLA_6701_1999 (06 April 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2001/CDLA_6701_1999.html Cite as: [2001] UKSSCSC CDLA_6701_1999 |
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[2001] UKSSCSC CDLA_6701_1999 (06 April 2001)
Commissioner's Case No: CDLA/6701/1999
"A person falls within this subsection if –
(a) he is severely mentally impaired; and
(b) he displays severe behavioural problems; and
(c) he satisfies both the conditions mentioned in section 72(1)(b) and (c) above."
"(5) A person falls within subsection (3)(a) of section 73 of the Act (severely mentally impaired) if he suffers from a state of arrested development or incomplete physical development of the brain, which results in severe impairment of intelligence and social functioning.
(6) A person falls within subsection (3)(b) of section 73 of the Act (severe behavioural problems) if he exhibits disruptive behaviour which –
(a) is extreme,
(b) regularly requires another person to intervene and physically restrain him in order to prevent him causing physical injury to himself or another, or damage to property, and
(c) is so unpredictable that he requires another person to be present and watching over him whenever he is awake."
"Facts
…….. he is able to walk; [he] is hypersensitive to noise; he is not disruptive at school where it is structured and safe; he keeps calling for his mother whenever she leaves the room he tries to hit his mother but not himself; he is demanding and gets physical if he does not get his way or is tired; if obsessed by something he may wish to run off and needs to be persuaded by "bribes"; if he is doing what he wants to do [he] does not need close attention he tends to lash out if there are too many people around as there is too much noise; he does not want his mother's attention to be taken away; he can't understand situations such as traffic on the roads.
Reasons
The Tribunal considered all the evidence; particularly the medical evidence in this appeal …………. The Tribunal were not satisfied that it could be said that the Claimant was severely mentally impaired. It accepts an incomplete physical development of the brain but the evidence does not support severe impairment of intelligence AND social functioning. In any event the Tribunal could not find that the evidence established that [he] displayed severe behavioural problems as defined. All three paragraphs of Regulation 12(6) have to be satisfied and the evidence is just not there to justify a finding that they all apply to [him] and in particular the requirement for another person to be present and watching over him whenever he is awake."
"I feel that most of the questions directed at me during the hearing such as restraining in the home, violent behaviour at home etc. were rather irrelevant, all based round the personal care issue which I receive at the higher rate anyway. …………………………………….
Nearly all the other questions were about his behaviour at home and at school where everything is very structured whereas his outside behaviour is a completely different matter due to unfamiliar factors."
"The word "extreme" is an ordinary English word, connoting behaviour which is wholly out of the ordinary. However, the claim is for the mobility component of disability living allowance and it is the claimant's behaviour when taking advantage of the faculty of mobility, generally outside the home environment, which needs to be considered."
(1) I set aside the Tribunal's decision as erroneous in law;
(2) In exercise of the power in s.14(8)(a)(i) of the Social Security Act 1998 I make the decision which in my judgment the Tribunal ought to have made. That is to replace the adjudication officer's decision of 28 April 1998 with the following decision: the adjudication officer's decision of 22 January 1998 is revised, the revised decision being that the Claimant is entitled to the highest rate of the care component of disability living allowance from 13 April 1997 to 12 April 2001 and to the lower rate of the mobility component of that allowance until 12 April 2001.
(Signed) Charles Turnbull
(Commissioner)
(Date) 6 April 2001