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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2005] UKSSCSC CSIS_815_2004 (15 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2005/CSIS_815_2004.html Cite as: [2005] UKSSCSC CSIS_815_2004 |
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[2005] UKSSCSC CSIS_815_2004 (15 March 2005)
THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONERS
Commissioner's Case No: CSIS/815/04
SOCIAL SECURITY ACT 1998
APPEAL FROM THE APPEAL TRIBUNAL UPON A QUESTION OF LAW
COMMISSIONER: L T PARKER
Appellant: Respondent: Secretary of State
Tribunal: Hamilton Tribunal Case No:
DECISION OF SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
Decision
"…whether the claimant was given such information and what he was or was not actually led to believe … are matters of fact that need to be determined by the tribunal on the actual evidence; tested if necessary by cross-examination to resolve any doubt or dispute about what actually took place, or what the claimant afterwards says he believed at the time. Only when those facts have been clearly identified can a tribunal say if the condition in regulation 19(5)(d) has been met, and (if it has) then go on to assess as a matter of objective reasonableness whether the claimant also meets the further condition in regulation 19(4)(b) that he could not reasonably have been expected to make the claim earlier (not even one day earlier) than the date he did."
Background
"(4)…in the case of a claim for income support…the prescribed time for claiming the benefit shall be extended, subject to a maximum extension of three months …where –
(a) any…of the circumstances specified in paragraph (5) applies or has applied to the claimant; and
(b) as a result…the claimant could not reasonably have been expected to make the claim earlier.
(5)…(d) the claimant was given information by an officer of the Department…which led the claimant to believe that a claim for benefit would not succeed;"
The tribunal decision
"2. According to Mr Craig, Paragraph (d) says that the Appellant was given information by an Officer of the Department of Works & Pension (sic) which leads the Appellant to believe that an application for Income Support would not succeed. Mr Craig also stated that there is nothing in the provision which restricts the information to misleading information. Mr Craig stated that there were two pieces of information given by the Department which quite rightly led the appellant to believe that a claim for income support would not succeed. He said that the first was when the Appellant was told in Incapacity Benefit exceeded the Income Support level so naturally that led the Appellant to the correct belief that a claim for Benefit would not succeed. According to Mr Craig the second piece of information was that on two occasions at least the Department told the Appellant that he was not entitled to Disability Living Allowance which was correct information as it was at the time leading the Appellant correctly to believe that a claim for Income Support would still not succeed. … Mr Craig asked me to find that the information given to the Appellant led him to believe throughout the three months before his Income Support claim that a claim for Benefit for Income Support would not succeed at that time.
3. In evidence at the Hearing the Appellant stated that he first claimed Benefits in August 2002 and a local Benefits Office advised him to apply for Income Support and Incapacity Benefit. … He said that he was not awarded Income Support due to the fact that he was eligible for a higher award of benefit of Incapacity Benefit as opposed to Income Support. The Appellant further told the Tribunal that after this claim he made a claim for Disability Living Allowance in November 2002 and made an appeal for this in March 2003 which was rejected. He stated that he appealed (sic) again and was finally awarded Disability Living Allowance in November 2003. At the Hearing the Appellant was asked did he get any advice about his Disability Living Allowance and he stated that between November 2002 and November 2003 approximately he went to the CAB in Motherwell and was told that if he was awarded DLA he could apply for Income Support once more. He stated that he applied for Disability Living Allowance. … The Appellant was asked if he did apply for Income Support once more and he replied he did not do so because he had been recently rejected for Disability Living Allowance and he did not see how he could apply for Income Support.
4. The Tribunal found that the appellant was not entitled to backdated Income Support from 5th March 2003 to 29th November 2003 because he did not satisfy the conditions prescribed in Regulation (19)(5)(d) of [the regulations]. … When he submitted his claim for Income Support on 26th November 2003 the Appellant attached a letter requesting backdated payments of Income Support from 5th March 2003 on the basis that on 28th November 2003 he had been awarded the middle rate of Disability Living Allowance Care Component backdated to 3rd March 2003. The Appellant's reason for being late in claiming Income Support is not one of the reasons listed in the prescribed list of circumstances contained within Regulation 19(5) of [the regulations] including Paragraph (d). The Tribunal accepted that the information given by the Appellant at the Tribunal was accurate. …"
Appeal to the Commissioner
"It is not material whether or not the reasons put forward in the original claim match any of the circumstances in 19(5)".
and secondly that the tribunal gave inadequate reasons for rejecting the submission that regulation 19(5)(d) applies.
"14. ... In my judgment, the words of regulation 19(5)(d) are not to be given any artificially restricted meaning. … [I]t seems to me that when a letter is sent to a claimant by an officer of the Benefits Agency informing him of a benefit decision, information is being given. The question then is whether that information led the claimant to believe that a claim for benefit would not succeed. The test at this stage (providing that the substance of the information given is sufficiently established) is what the claimant in question was led to believe, not what a reasonable claimant would be led to believe. However, there may come a point where what the claimant says he was led to believe is so far-fetched that it cannot be accepted that the belief was linked to the information. I see no reason why the case should be excluded where information about one claim or benefit leads a claimant to believe that another claim, for the same or a different benefit, would not succeed. The crucial test then becomes whether as a result of those circumstances the claimant could not reasonably have been expected to claim earlier than he did (regulation 19(4)(b)). The result will not be to place an unacceptable burden on officers of the Benefits Agency to provide information. The issue is what a claimant is led to believe by the information which is actually given."
"The claimant argues that he did not claim on or around 05/03/2003 because he was told by CAB that he could only qualify for income support if he was successful with his DLA claim. As the claim was refused at the time he did not think that he could apply for income support. He further maintained that when his claim for DLA was refused he was given no information from the DLA unit itself, notably when he appealed the DLA decision".
Reasons
"… the term 'information' must be given a practical, rather than an artificially restricted meaning".
"I take this view because entitlement to income support is a complex matter. Had an application form been supplied, the claimant would have been asked whether he had any claims for benefit pending and his potential entitlement would have been identified. I think that in a benefit system as complex as that of the United Kingdom, the claimant cannot be expected to identify all the circumstances which may open the door to a successful claim. In my view, he received information which led him to believe that a claim for income support would not succeed. He is within sub-paragraph (d)."
"… that the claimant is entitled to income support for the period from 26/08/2003 to 25/11/2003 because he satisfies the conditions prescribed in regulation 19(4)(b) and (5)(d) of the Claims and Payments Regulations".
Summary
(Signed)
L T PARKER
Commissioner
Date: 15 March 2005