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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2007] UKSSCSC CJSA_3960_2006 (16 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2007/CJSA_3960_2006.html Cite as: [2007] UKSSCSC CJSA_3960_2006 |
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[2007] UKSSCSC CJSA_3960_2006 (16 March 2007)
DECISION
The appeal is allowed.
The decision of the Secretary of State issued on 26 February 2006 is set aside.
The time limit for the appellant to claim jobseeker's allowance for the period from 4 February 2006 to 12 February 2006 (both dates included) is extended to 13 February 2006.
REASONS
Introduction
The facts
(a) Before the events that led to this appeal, the appellant was unemployed but had been living on his savings rather than claim JSA. His girlfriend, N, with whom he did not then live, was receiving income support ("IS") as the lone parent of H, her 11 year-old daughter.
(b) On Saturday 4 February 2006, the appellant moved in with N and H. The consequence for benefit purposes was that the appellant and N became an "unmarried couple" and N ceased to be a lone parent. As N did not fall into any of the other prescribed categories of people who can claim IS, she ceased to be entitled to that benefit.
(c) On 1 February 2006 (i.e., before the appellant moved in with N) both members of the couple wrote to the local office dealing with N's IS claim in order to report the change in their circumstances that was shortly to occur.
(d) On Friday 3 February 2006, the local office wrote to N. So far as is relevant, the letter stated:
"About your income support
I am writing to tell you that your income support will change.
This means from 4 February 2006 you are not entitled. This is because your circumstances do not meet the conditions of entitlement."
(e) For whatever reason (and it may have been because the address was not absolutely complete), that letter was not delivered to N until the afternoon of Friday 10 February 2006.
(f) On the next working day, Monday 13 February 2006, the Appellant contacted the Jobcentre and notified his intention to claim JSA.
(g) Although benefit has now been awarded and paid from 13 February 2006, the Secretary of State has refused to extend time for the appellant to claim JSA so that it can be paid from 4 February 2006, the first day on which N was not entitled to IS.
The law
'(6) In the case of a claim for … jobseeker's allowance, … where the claim is not made within the time specified for that benefit in Schedule 4, the prescribed time for claiming the benefit shall be extended, subject to a maximum extension of one month, to the date on which the claim is made, where—
(a) any one or more of the circumstances specified in paragraph (7) applies or has applied to the claimant; and
(b) as a result of that circumstance or those circumstances the claimant could not reasonably have been expected to make the claim earlier.
(7) The circumstances referred to in paragraph (6) are—
(a)-(b) …
(c) there were adverse postal conditions;
(d) the claimant (or, in the case of income support or jobseeker's allowance, the claimant or his partner) was previously in receipt of another benefit, and notification of expiry of entitlement to that benefit was not sent to the claimant or his partner, as the case may be, before the date that his entitlement expired;
(e)-(h) …" (my emphasis).
The tribunal's decision
'10. A question arose as to the situation of [N] so far as her previous award of Income Support was concerned. She effectively became [the appellant's] partner from 04 02 06. At that time she was in receipt of Income Support. She (together with the appellant) had written to the Secretary of State to explain the change of circumstances with the two of them beginning to live together. The result was that the Secretary of State wrote to [N] on 03 February to say that her Income Support was terminating on 04 February, the end of that week. The Secretary of State had therefore written that letter prior to the expiry of entitlement to that benefit.
11. Of course, it was most unfortunate that, for reasons unknown, the letter did not arrive promptly to [N] but no evidence was placed before the tribunal to support any possible proposition that the delay in the arrival of the letter was the fault of the Secretary of State.
12. Consequently, the relevant notification under Regulation 19(7) had been sent to [N] prior to the Income Support payment date.'
The last two words of the quoted passage must be a typographical error for "expiry date".
Reasons for the Commissioner's decision
i) its approach to the late delivery of the letter dated 3 February 2006 introduced a requirement that the delay should be "the fault of the Secretary of State" when no such requirement appears in the legislation; and
ii) it incorrectly identified the date on which N's entitlement to IS expired for the purposes of regulation 19(7)(d).
As both of those errors were material to the tribunal's decision, I must set that decision aside.
(a) Adverse postal conditions
'No doubt [regulation 19(7)(c)] 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.' (see paragraph 12).
'… if the phrase "adverse postal conditions " is indeed a broad one, it can properly be taken to cover any factor that operated substantially to delay the delivery of an item of post relevant to the timing of the claim beyond the date when the mail service in question would normally expect to deliver it. Moreover, I submit that the fact that an item of post was so delayed is itself evidence that logically suggests the existence of such adverse postal conditions as the cause of the delay. It does not matter that the precise shape of the adverse postal conditions is not known, provided there is reason to believe that something of that nature affected the process of delivery."
(a) the letter dated 3 February 2006 had to travel from a distance of approximately 14 miles across London.
(b) in the normal course of the post, that letter would have been delivered by Wednesday 8 February 2006, the third working day after it was posted, at the latest.
There is no evidence as to whether the letter was sent by first or second class mail. The Secretary of State's submission assumes that it would have been sent first class. Even if it had been sent second class, the Royal Mail would normally have expected to deliver it by date I have specified.
(c) the letter was in fact delivered during the afternoon of Friday 10 February 2006.
The Secretary of State's representative expresses surprise that the post should not have arrived until the afternoon. I surmise from this that—unlike N—he does not live in north London. I can see no reason to doubt the evidence on this point. On the contrary, the evidence shows that the appellant and N have a proper and conscientious approach to their obligations to the Department. Moreover, it would have been important for them to ensure that they did not lose benefit at a time when they were trying to establish a new life together as a family. If the letter had arrived at any earlier time, it is probable that the appellant would have claimed sooner than he did.
(d) The delay of two working days in the delivery of the letter—two thirds as long again as the maximum time it should have taken—establishes that there were adverse postal conditions for the purposes of regulation 19(7)(c).
(b) When did entitlement to income support expire?
"Expiry of entitlement"
Date of expiry
i) N's last day of entitlement to IS was Friday 3 February 2006; and
ii) her first day of non-entitlement was Saturday 4 February 2006.
a) because it follows from the normal English usage of the word "expire"; and
b) by analogy with the decision of the Goulding J in Re Crowhurst Park; Sims-Hilditch v Simmons [1974] 1 All ER 991(Ch.D), a case about the date on which a tenancy "came to an end by effluxion of time" for the purposes of section 25(4) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954.
(c) Reasonableness
(a) as a result of the adverse postal conditions; or
(b) as a result of the fact that notice of the expiry of N's IS was not sent to her before the date on which it expired; or
(c) as a result of a combination of those circumstances,
the appellant could reasonably have been expected to claim JSA earlier than he did.
'[N] had put her changed circumstances to the Department and it was reasonable for her and the claimant to await the advice of the Department before taking any further steps in relation to their benefit income"
Having received that advice on the afternoon of Friday 10 February 2006, the appellant then made his claim on the next day that the Jobcentre was open. I do not see how he could reasonably have done so any sooner.
(Signed on the original) Richard Poynter
Deputy Commissioner
16 March 2007