CDLA_2699_2005
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2005] UKSSCSC CDLA_2699_2005 (07 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2005/CDLA_2699_2005.html Cite as: [2005] UKSSCSC CDLA_2699_2005 |
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[2005] UKSSCSC CDLA_2699_2005 (07 November 2005)
CDLA 2699 2005
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
A The rehearing will be at an oral hearing.
B The new tribunal should not involve any member who has previously been a member of a tribunal involved in this appeal.
C The appointee is reminded that the tribunal can only deal with the appeal as at the date of the original decision under appeal.
D If the appointee has any further written evidence to put before the tribunal, this should be sent to the tribunal within one month of the issue of this decision.
These directions are subject to any later direction by a district chairman.
REASONS FOR THE DECISION
"Section 72 of the SSCBA provides for the award of disability living allowance for persons who are severely disabled physically or mentally. These words have been the subject of judicial explanation. The claimant's condition must arise from some disordered mental condition and not just a defect of character. There must be a diagnosable disease or medical condition and problems which are behavioural in origin do not amount to mental disability. The authorities are set out at page 138 of Volume 1 of Bonner, Hooker and White.
Having considered the medical evidence in this case we have reached the conclusion that L suffers from behavioural problems but she has not been diagnosed as suffering from a recognisable medical condition. In particular we reject the claim in the submission by [the solicitors] that she suffers from attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Because we are unable to accept that L suffers from a severe physical or mental disability we reject the appeal for disability living allowance."
Disability living allowance and young children
"For the relevant provisions to apply, the claimant must be disabled, i.e. have some functional incapacity or impairment. She must lack the physical or mental power to perform or control the relevant function … It will be apparent from what we have said that, in our judgment, behaviour cannot itself be a disability – but it may be a manifestation of a disability, namely an inability to control oneself within the accepted norms of behaviour. Therefore, in our view, in R(A) 2/92 the correct approach was not to have sought a specific diagnosis of a serious mental illness but to have asked whether it was in the claimant's power to avoid behaving as he did. If it was not in his power to avoid that behaviour, he would be "disabled" within the terms of sections 72 and 73(1)(d) …" (paragraphs 39, 40).
"Does the claimant have a disability, i.e. does he have a functional deficiency, physical or mental?"
If the answer is "yes" then the next question (or, rather, series of questions) is whether any specific statutory test for the award of disability living allowance is met. The Tribunal emphasises that the test of "severely" is not part of the test of "physically or mentally disabled". It is instead part of each specific statutory test for the levels of disablement that lead to entitlement to specific levels of allowance.
In putting the first question in this way, the Tribunal expressly avoided putting it in terms of the requirement of a "medical condition". It positively affirmed (in paragraph 35) that:
"'Disability' is conceptually distinct from 'medical condition'. …
Conceptually and in ordinary language usage, 'disability' cannot be equated with 'medical condition'."
Did the tribunal apply the correct tests to the evidence about L?
Guidance to the tribunal
(1) The decision is for the whole tribunal, drawing on the combined insights of all its members, including their personal knowledge of the abilities of young children. It is an exercise in "drawing the line" which the tribunal, with three members drawn from differing backgrounds, is uniquely qualified to perform.
(2) The tribunal's first concern is to consider if the young child has a physical or mental disablement. As the Commissioner stated in R(DLA) 1/05, a young child's inability to perform functions due to immaturity is not disablement. Where there is evidence that a young child has disruptive behaviour, the tribunal must consider whether the child's behaviour evidences some underlying physical or mental disablement – some functional physical or mental impairment or incapacity. If, on the balance of probabilities, there is no impairment or incapacity, then the claim must fail. In practice, this question may overlap with the question of a young claimant's needs as compared with those of other children of the same age. The tribunal may need to look at all the issues and evidence before returning to decide whether this fundamental requirement for a claim is met.
(3) The issue of disablement is one of fact to be decided in the light of all the evidence. It should take into account any medical diagnosis or evidence that a specific disability is not present. But it is not limited to that. It should also take into account evidence of parents or others responsible for the child (noting any comparative insights that they can offer about the claimant and other children). And there may be evidence about incapacity or impairment available from a social worker, or the staff of a nursery or nursery school, or a childminder with care of the claimant. Evidence from those sources is also valuable when the tribunal has to decide on the needs of the claimant as against needs of other children of the same age.
(4) If there is disablement present (and also where the matter is one of doubt), the tribunal must consider whether any of the specific tests for the allowance are met. This will need separate consideration of care needs and of supervision needs if both are in issue. (Mobility is not usually in issue for children under 5, and never for children under 3). The tribunal must decide if the evidence shows that the disablement (or alleged disablement) is so severe that it meets one of the relevant criteria for payment of the care component.
(5) The tribunal must also consider whether the child "has requirements … substantially in excess of the normal requirements of persons of his or her age". Is the attention or supervision needed "outside the whole range of attention [or supervision] that would normally be required by the average child": R(DLA) 1/05 and CSDLA 829 2004. Although this is put as a separate test, it will in many cases overlap with deciding about the specific statutory tests and in some cases also with the question of the presence of disability. In difficult cases where there is no clear diagnosis or there are other doubts that the statutory requirements are met, it may be useful to deal with the evidential issues by (a) identifying the actual (as against claimed) needs of the child claimant for personal care and supervision, (b) considering if those needs are substantially in excess of those to be expected for a child of that age, (c) considering whether the excess is evidence of an underlying disablement and, if so, (d) considering whether those needs meet one or more of the statutory tests. But the tribunal must address the statutory questions in making its decision.
(6) The tribunal must take a broad view of the application of the tests as emphasised by the House of Lords in Moyna v Secretary of State, R(DLA) 7/03, and applied to all decisions on disability living allowance by R(DLA) 5/05.
David Williams
Commissioner
07 November 2005
[Signed on the original on the date shown]