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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2004] UKSSCSC CDLA_2915_2003 (18 May 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2004/CDLA_2915_2003.html Cite as: [2004] UKSSCSC CDLA_2915_2003 |
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[2004] UKSSCSC CDLA_2915_2003 (18 May 2004)
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"It is noted that the EMP estimates a walking distance of 200M but fails to record the walking surface. It is submitted that this is relevant since the tribunal is required to `envisage the kind of pavement or road which one would normally expect to find in the course of walking out of doors' (R(M) 1/91) including as it would a normally occurring level of incline or decline.
It is understood that, though the EMP assessed his chest function at rest, she undertook no walking test so is unlikely to have been as better placed than the consultant cardiologist ... who notes that he gets `chest discomfort and breathlessness on relatively mild exertion'.
The tribunal is urged to consider whether the GP's assessment of 20-30 yards [is] more likely to adequately describe the claimant's walking ability."
The claimant attended the hearing without a representative, but accompanied by a friend.
"The opinion of Dr Kibirige in that regard [the estimate of 200 metres] was criticised in the submission made on behalf of [the claimant] because she had not specified the walking surface. However, on the relevant form there is in fact no specific provision for this information and Dr Kibirige, as with any Examining Medical Practitioner, will have been trained in these matters and in the view of the Tribunal could be assumed to understand the requirement as set out in R(M) 1/91 quoted in the submission."
"I do not accept that it is reasonable to infer that the Appellant's stated ability to walk without the help of another person applied equally to unfamiliar routes and to familiar ones. There is no dispute but that the Appellant could walk outside without the help of another person. The unanswered question was whether he could do so on unfamiliar routes. I do not see that the word `help' is sufficiently specific to enable a safe inference to be drawn on the essential point to which I have referred."
I find the general approach of the Court of Appeal helpful and one which can be applied in the present case.
"It is clear from the wording of regulation 3(1)(b) [of the Mobility Allowance Regulations 1975, in identical terms to regulation 12(1)(b) of the Social Security (Disability Living Allowance) Regulations 1991] that a claimant's `ability to walk' is to be assessed by reference to `his ability to walk out of doors'. The significance of this is that the test should not proceed on the basis that his ability should be adjudged by reference to a surface as level as a billiard table. It is well known that surfaces indoors tend to be smoother and more even than those out of doors. Hence the specific statutory requirement that the ability to walk be tested by reference to the natural irregularities that have to be negotiated by anyone walking out of doors. However, in applying that test only reasonable conditions should be in contemplation. The test should obviously not be as to whether the claimant could walk on unploughed land or over unmade-up roads or over pavements under repair by the Council. Many people who would on no basis regard themselves as being incapable of walking would be unable to negotiate those particular conditions. The test should be to select or envisage the kind of pavement or road which one would normally expect to find in the normal course of walking out of doors. The criterion is the type of surface which anyone walking out of doors would normally expect to encounter, any unusual hazards being disregarded. ...
9. As regards the question of a claimant's ability to negotiate `inclines', it cannot be over-stressed that the criterion is whether or not is unable or virtually unable to walk; the question is not whether he is unable or virtually unable to climb. The ability or otherwise to surmount hills or mountains has no relevance, in my judgment, to the question of whether or not a claimant is unable or virtually unable to walk. Of course, no pavement or road is absolutely flat. Some degree of `incline', or for that matter `decline' must be contemplated. But once again the tribunal must envisage a reasonable outdoor track which will not be entirely level."
Mr Robinson also drew attention to the decision in CSDLA/44/2002 that kerbs were part of the type of surface normally expected to be encountered when walking out of doors, and were not unusual hazards.
(Signed) J Mesher
Commissioner
Date: 18 May 2004