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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2003] UKSSCSC CIS_2607_2003 (28 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2003/CIS_2607_2003.html Cite as: [2003] UKSSCSC CIS_2607_2003 |
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[2003] UKSSCSC CIS_2607_2003 (28 November 2003)
CIS/2651/2003
CIS/2607/2003
(2) My decision on the appeal on file CIS/2607/2003 is that the decision of the Income Support Appeal Tribunal dated 7 March 2003 on Case No. U/42/043/2002/00557 is not erroneous in law.
(2) On file CIS/2607/2003 the claimant appeals, with the leave of a legally qualified panel member of the Appeals Service, against the tribunal's decision that the claimant is entitled to a funeral payment of £810 made up of cremation fees of £190, the necessary cost of £20 of a return journey to London and £600 in terms of regulation 7A(2)(g) of the Social Fund Maternity Funeral Expenses (General) Regulations 1987 in respect of funeral expenses not otherwise specified in that regulation.
"(1) Subject to paragraphs (4) and (5), regulation 8 and Part IV of these Regulations, the amount of the funeral payment shall be an amount sufficient to meet any of the costs which fall to be met or have been met by the claimant or his partner on a person acting on their behalf and which are specified in paragraph (2), inclusive of any available discount on those costs allowed by the funeral director or by any other person who arranges the funeral.(2) The costs which may be met for the purposes of paragraph (1) are –
(a) except where sub-paragraph (b) applies, in the case of a burial –(i) the necessary costs of purchasing a new burial plot for the deceased, together with an exclusive right of burial in that plot;(ii) the fees levied in respect of a burial by the authority or person responsible for the provision and maintenance of cemeteries for the area where the burial takes place insofar as it is necessary to incur those fees;
(b) in the case of a cremation –
(i) the fees levied in respect of the cremation by the authority or person responsible for the provision and maintenance of crematoria for the area where the cremation takes place insofar as it is necessary to incur those fees;(ia) the cost of any medical references;(ii) the cost of any necessary registered medical practitioner's certificate;
(iii) the fee payable for the removal of any device as defined for the purposes of the Active Implantable Medical Devices Regulations 1992 save that where that removal is carried out by a person who is not a registered medical practitioner, no more than £20 shall be met in respect of that fee; …
……….
(g) any other funeral expenses which shall not exceed £600 in any case.
……… .".
" 4. The total funeral account was made up of doctor's fees for cremation forms of £91, Crematorium fees of £295, Minister's fees of £77 and Funeral Director's fees (including coffin and transport) of £905.5. …[The claimant's representative] argued that the cost of the coffin should have been allowed under [regulation 7A(2)(b)], as the crematorium required the deceased to be transported in a coffin. She advised the Tribunal that the Funeral Director's had advised her that the cost of [the deceased's] coffin was £300 (the cheapest available was £250)." and
" 9. The Tribunal did not accept that an additional amount should have been included in respect of the cost of the coffin under Regulation 7A(2)(b)(i). This regulation specifically refers to fees being levied by the authority or person responsible for the provision and maintenance of crematoria for the area where the cremation takes place. The cost of the coffin is levied by the funeral director and is not therefore covered by this Regulation. Instead this cost falls within Regulation 7A(2)(g) – any other funeral expenses which are subject to a limit of £600.".
"The nub of this appeal concerns the interpretation of regulation 7A(2)(b)(i). [The claimant's representative] submitted that the fees levied in respect of the cremation by the authority should include the cost of a coffin in which to transport the deceased into the crematorium. [The claimant's representative] had confirmed with the local authority that it would not permit cremation of a body unless it was contained in a coffin. The Tribunal had sympathy with this ground of appeal, but cannot expand the meaning of "fees" to include the cost of a coffin. Fees are financial charges levied for the provision of a service. The service provided by the local authority is the cremation of the body. If the local authority had provided a coffin as part of its service of cremation, then the Tribunal could possibly have considered the cost of a coffin. This is not the case. The coffin was provided by the funeral director. The Tribunal therefore does not allow this part of the appeal as its interpretation of fees does not include the cost of a coffin provided by the funeral director.".
"We are requesting leave to appeal, as the interpretation of the law has led to a perverse and discriminatory conclusion.The Tribunal's interpretation of regulation 7A(2)(b)(i) fails to further its purpose, as it disallows recovery of an item that is necessarily incurred in order to cremate a deceased person and which is not subject to the choice or discretion of the person responsible for incurring the costs of the funeral.
The regulations are discriminatory against those who are responsible for the cremation of the deceased, as opposed to their burial: the cost of a coffin is necessary for both a cremation and a burial, but is only recoverable in respect of the latter, by virtue of regulation 7A(2)(a)(i). It is also discriminatory because those who live in an area where the local authority provide coffins will recover the cost, whereas those who live in an area where it does not will not be able to recover the cost.".
" (b) In the case of a cremation –(i) the necessary costs of the cremation, including medical references".
On that previous wording there would have been some force in the claimant's representative's argument but not on the current wording. The claimant's representative's argument that the cost of a coffin is "necessarily incurred and is not subject to the choice of discretion of the person responsible for incurring the costs of the funeral" is not correct. The cost of the coffin may be included in the funeral payment but the authorising provision is in sub-paragraph (g) of paragraph (2).
(Signed) R J C Angus
Commissioner
(Date) 28 November 2003