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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2003] UKSSCSC CIS_4901_2002 (28 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2003/CIS_4901_2002.html Cite as: [2003] UKSSCSC CIS_4901_2002 |
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[2003] UKSSCSC CIS_4901_2002 (28 November 2003)
CIS/4901/2002
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
The claimant's application for Income Support is to be treated as having been made on 9 May 2002 and his entitlement to that benefit in the period from 10 May 2002 to 13 June 2002 is to be assessed on that basis.
"This was an appeal against refusal to backdate the date for claiming Income Support from 14 June 2002 to 10 May 2002. In fact, the appeal letter states that the claimant should have been paid Income Support from 10 May 2002 and the claim should not have started on 14 June 2002. I therefore treat this appeal as wide enough to include, not only backdating, but also an appeal as to the start date of the claim.
The claimant did not attend the hearing. [The claimant's representative] attended. She said she had spoken to him at the end of August and that he was nervous about attending. He had said he would attend, but he obviously had not attended and she did not have any further information about his non-attendance than this. No application for adjournment was made and I therefore heard [the representative] and decided the case accordingly. There was no Presenting Officer.
Immediately prior to the hearing [the representative] handed up a letter from Capita dated 29 August 2002. That letter, together with the documents submitted in respect of this appeal, established that the claimant submitted by post a claim for Incapacity Benefit. The letter was postmarked 16 May 2002 (page 17). It was returned by the Royal Mail on 26 July 2002 (page 17) as insufficient postage had been paid. A letter from Capita dated 29 August 2002 explains that the Benefits Agency have a surcharge account with the Royal Mail to ensure that all underpaid or unpaid mail was delivered, regardless of underpayment or non-payment and the Royal Mail would then charge the Benefits Agency accordingly. The letter goes on to say that it is unfortunately not possible for Capita definitely to confirm that the procedure was correctly adhered to in the present case. Capita say that 'It would appear that the Post Office may not have followed this set-up and this item slipped through the net.'
It is clear from the evidence that the claimant in fact submitted a claim by letter dated 16 May 2002. He paid insufficient postage and the Royal Mail did not deliver the letter to the Benefits Agency, as it ought to have done, in accordance with the surcharge account set up over 12 months ago. The claimant did not realise that his forms had not been received by the Benefits Agency and began to chase. In his appeal letter (page 8) he says that after many telephone calls, a new set of the forms were sent out weeks latter. He gives no dates. In her submission, [the representative] states that he asked for a new set of forms on 30 May 2002. I did not think it appropriate to rely on specifics such as dates which appeared in submissions but which did not appear in any document signed or otherwise tendered by the claimant. The claimant was not present today to support the date of 30 May 2002 and in the circumstances I do not consider that I can rely upon that as the correct date. I consider that the evidence which comes out from the claimant is that he made a number of telephone calls and eventually a new set of forms were sent out, weeks later.
[The representative] confirmed that this was a case which did not fit within the ordinary backdating role of regulation 19 of the Claims and Payments Regulations. I looked through the provisions of regulation 19 and was unable to identify any of the regulations which would appear to be appropriate to the facts of the present case and I concluded that backdating this appeal was not appropriate. It did not fit within regulation 19.[The representative] also submitted that this is a case where the Benefits Agency wrongly refused to accept the claim as having been made on 10 May 2002. She referred to the authority of CS/48/92 in which the Commissioner decided that the effect of paragraph 6 in the light of section 7 and section 23 of the Interpretation Act 1978 was such that a Social Security Benefit Claim is a document authorised by an Act of Parliament to be served by post and is to be presumed to have been delivered in the ordinary course of post unless this is proved not to have been the case. I decided that this was not an appropriate analogy. There are 2 reasons for this conclusion:1. I do not consider that the claim form in the present case was served in the ordinary course of post. The ordinary course of post cannot include mailing with insufficient postage appended.2. The presumption in this case is, in any event, rebutted. It is clear that the letter, even if sent in the ordinary course of post, was not in fact received.
[The representative] contended that the fault lay, at least in part, with Capita who were a body associated with the Benefits Agency, and that, therefore, the Benefits Agency must be regarded as to blame. I do not accept this is sufficient for two reasons:1. The surcharge account was with the Royal Mail and not with Capita. It is the Royal Mail who failed to follow procedures and not Capita. The Royal Mail is not a subsidiary or body otherwise associated with the Benefits Agency. Nor is Capita.2. The original error lay with the claimant who failed to pay the correct postage. It may have been compounded by the Royal Mail who failed to apply the provisions on the surcharge agreement but nevertheless the error in underpaying postage was initially that of the claimant.In the circumstances, I considered that the claim should not be treated as having been correctly made had the claim originally posted on 16 May 2002 been received.As regards the assertion that the Benefits Agency failed to get to the claimant new claim forms on time, I do not find the evidence in this case of particular relevance. The claimant says on his appeal form that he made many telephone calls. At this stage, he felt that the original claim form had got lost. The claimant was not present and could not, therefore, explain the nature of the telephone calls, whether, they were asking for new claims, or whether they were chasing the Benefits Agency to track down the original claim or for what other purpose. For the reasons given above, I do not consider that I can rely upon the submissions of [the representative] which are, at best, hearsay about which I have no evidence.
In the circumstances, this appeal fails.".
" (c) There were adverse postal conditions;".
No doubt that head is intended to include such things as postal strikes, weather conditions which prevent the delivery of mail and accidents but the wording seems to me to be wide enough to include such things as misdelivery of post and other mistakes on the part of Post Office employees such as the omission to comply with special arrangements for delivery made with an addressee. It is arguable that until the claimant had established that his claim had not been received by the Department due to the failure of the bulk surcharging arrangement and had received replacement forms from the Agency he could not reasonably be expected to submit the claim made on 16 June 2002 earlier than that date. As far as I can see from the papers that argument was not put to the tribunal but the tribunal's own survey of regulation 19 referred to in the statement of reasons should have led the tribunal to consider the relevance of paragraphs (6) and (7).
"But on the whole it seems to me that the right conclusion is that when the County Court directed that mail which would ordinarily be delivered on the Saturday should not be so delivered but should be held by the Post Office until the following Monday, or in this particular case Tuesday, the County Court were constituting the Post Office their bailees of the mail and accordingly it could rightly be said that the tenant's application was made at latest on the Saturday.".
In the same case Sellers, LJ. said at page 315 of the report:-
"In the ordinary course the postal authorities would be the agents of the sender and mere postage of a sum of money or of an application or notice to the court would not normally be equivalent to delivery to the court. But here the circumstances are different. The court has expressly intervened and interfered with the ordinary postal facilities. The mail due to be delivered on Saturdays was withheld from delivery at the express request of the court. It was held at the local Post Office. For whom did the Post Office then hold the mail? Not, I think, for the sender because it was his desire that the delivery should be made in the course of post and he was no party to any postponement of delivery. It seems to me that the Post Office in these particular circumstances were made the agents of the local County Court to hold on its behalf the mail which would normally have been delivered on a Saturday. It would appear that the tenant's application would have reached the court in due time but for the special arrangements which the court made and I see no reason why the tenant should be prejudiced by them.
I would therefore further old that the tenant's application was delivered to the court which was to receive it on April 17, 1965, or was to be treated as so delivered as it was held on that date on behalf of the court. It was therefore in time.".
"… a scheme for determining any or all of the following (so far as not otherwise agreed) –
(a) the charges which are to be imposed in respect of the services concerned,(b) the other terms and conditions which are to be applicable to the services concerned, …".
I think that the bulk surcharging account is an arrangement for a special service which the Post Office will provide to the Department for Work and Pensions in respect of under stamped mail, that the arrangement amounts to something "otherwise agreed" within the meaning of section 89(2) and that, contrary to what is said in the letter from the Royal Mail to the Secretary of State's representative, the arrangement is contractual.
(Signed) R J C Angus
Commissioner
(Date) 24 November 2003