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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber) >> KB v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2009] UKUT 124 (AAC) (02 July 2009) (02 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/AAC/2009/124.html Cite as: [2009] UKUT 124 (AAC) |
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KB v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2009] UKUT 124 (AAC) (02 July 2009)
Residence and presence conditions
temporary absence from Great Britain
DECISION OF THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS CHAMBER
The claimant's appeal to the Upper Tribunal is allowed. The decision of the Weymouth appeal tribunal dated 13 April 2007 involved an error on a point of law and is set aside. It is appropriate for the Upper Tribunal to re-make the decision on the claimant's appeal against the Secretary of State's decision dated 15 March 2006 (Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007, section 12(2)(b)(ii) and (4)(a)). That decision is that the appeal is allowed and that the decision dated 1 February 2006 awarding the claimant the higher rate of the mobility component of disability living allowance and the middle rate of the care component for the period from 31 October 2005 to 20 October 2008 does not fall to be superseded on the ground of an anticipated relevant change of circumstances from and including 29 September 2006.
REASONS FOR DECISION
"I am writing to you in connection with my telephone call with one of your advisors. In the middle to end of March I am leaving to go and live in Haraki, Rhodes, Greece. I cannot live here no more has my health is suffering with the cold, giving me discomfort in my chest with angina and in my knees, with arthritis. I am hoping that the temperature and conditions over there will improve my health. I am going to try for a period of 12 months and if my health have improved then I will stay. I have check out the internet about medical treatment, and with Greece being in the EU, then medical treatment is free. I would however have to pay partial amounts towards the cost of medicines. I have enclosed a list of the medication that I am on at present.
I really hope that you can help in any way because feeling the way I do now is so upsetting. I want to get better and return to work, but no one will set me on in the condition I am now."
"As you will be aware I left the UK to try to improve my health in the sunny temps of Rhodes, Greece. Well I was wrong and my condition has got so bad that it resulted in me being admitted to Rhodes hospital and the Nimkis hospital in Athens and so now we would like to return to the UK and back to our family. We gave it nearly 6 months and it has been a disaster. I have applied to the North Dorset council for a house to rent hopefully which can be adapted to me. Can you tell me that my claim for DLA and my wife's carer allowance is still OK and that we would not have to fill out the forms again and wait...."
An officer replied that the claimant's DLA had been ended as he had told them that he was going abroad permanently, but that if he returned to the UK within 26 weeks the decision-maker might be able to change that decision as having been made under a mistake of fact. If not, he would have to reapply on his return. When the claimant asked if the 26-week deadline could be extended, because he would not be fit to travel after a recent operation for three or four weeks, he was told that that would have to be decided by a decision-maker when he returned and made a claim.
"At the time his intentions were to try spending a period of time in Greece to see if his health improved. He had been to Greece the previous year for two weeks' holiday and had felt a lot better. Therefore he hoped that a longer period of time would further improve his condition.
[The claimant] had to sell his house in the UK to support himself and his wife while away because he had been told by the DWP that he would not be entitled to any subsistence benefits. However, he was subsequently awarded Incapacity Benefit three months after leaving the UK. [The claimant] also wanted to clear some debts that had arisen and used some of the capital from the sale of his home to do so. He lent his furniture to members of his family because they were setting up their own homes. This was on the understanding that it would be returned when they came back to the UK."
"3. The appellant in fact left Great Britain to live in Rhodes on 27th March 2006. The Tribunal finds, in accordance with his evidence, that his purpose in doing so was to benefit his health, and that if the move had done so he would not have returned. There was some discussion at the hearing whether, as the Appellant insisted, his partnership contract was in fact for a temporary period of twelve months or whether it was intended to be on a more permanent basis as the offer document and the Note from [the senior partner] both imply. However, the Tribunal makes no finding on this because we are satisfied that it is irrelevant since, as the Appellant said in evidence, he did not go for employment but for his health, and had his health improved and the partnership had ended he would have looked for another job in Rhodes.
4. Regrettably living on Rhodes did not improve the Appellant's health; he had thought that with reduced angina and pain from arthritis he would be more active and would lose weight, but he found that the intense heat precluded this, he put on weight, had further heart problems and found that his medication was very expensive. He was admitted to hospital in June 2006, but agreed to give up his bed in favour of an emergency victim of a serious accident which had taken place, and there was then a misunderstanding which meant that he was not admitted for his angiogram and treatment in Athens until September. ..."
"4. It is contended that the Appellant's `intentions were to try spending a period of time in Greece to see if his health improved'; Mrs Jones submitted that he went for an initial temporary period of six months to see if his health improved. However, the question for the Tribunal is not whether he went for a temporary period or an initial temporary period but whether he went for a temporary purpose. His purpose was not to investigate whether a change of climate could benefit his health: he had already discovered that it could on his holiday the previous year. His purpose was in his words `to benefit my health'. This was not, in the Tribunal's view, a temporary purpose; he wanted to benefit his health permanently - or at least as permanently as life will allow. He was aware that his purpose might not be fulfilled, and that in spite of the apparent benefits he found the previous year, living in Greece might not in practice improve his health, and he sensibly resolved to review his decision in six months. However, the possibility that his purpose might not in practice be fulfilled does not make it a temporary purpose. His clear evidence was that had his health improved he would not have returned to Great Britain; he said that in those circumstances `I would have been daft to come back'. The Tribunal appreciates that there may have been financial pressures which led the Appellant to dispose of his home in Great Britain, that there may have been uncertainty about how long he could rely on the estate agency partnership and that it was difficult for him to be precise in predicting to the DBU [Disability Benefits Unit] how long he would in practice be abroad. However, none of these factors is sufficient to change the nature of his purpose in leaving Great Britain, which was, for the reasons given a permanent and not a temporary purpose."
"(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(a)(ii) and (iii), notwithstanding that on any day a person is absent from Great Britain, he shall be treated as though he were present in Great Britain if his absence is by reason only of the fact that on that day--
(a) - (c) [not relevant];
(d) his absence from Great Britain is, and when it began was, for a temporary purpose and has not lasted for a continuous period exceeding 26 weeks; or
(e) [temporary absence for specific purpose of treatment]."
"5. The evidence is all consistent. Plainly [the claimant] wanted to benefit his health but the reason for his absence was, even on the Tribunal's own factual findings, to see whether the short term improvement in health he had enjoyed during his holiday the previous year was sustained over a longer period: see [paragraph 4 of the findings of fact]. His purpose was to test out whether a longer period in Greece had the desired effect. If it did, the temporary purpose - testing it out - would no longer apply and he would live there permanently. If the temporary purpose - testing it out - showed it did not have the desired effect he would return.
6. The Tribunal made a leap of logic which is wrong. The underlying logic was that because: (1) he knew Greece had worked last year; and (2) he admitted his purpose was to improve his health, therefore the `purpose' was not temporary. But this ignores the basic point that he did not know whether Greece would work longer term - would benefit his health - an he therefore needed to test it out - to see whether the short term benefit translated into a longer term gain."
It would not be sufficient for the claimant to prove that her husband returned to Uganda for the purpose of taking some employment of short duration, if he intended after that to take further employment in Uganda. His purpose in this case was in my judgment to live and earn his living in Uganda, his home country, in some branch of the law, making use of his legal studies and the legal training which he had received [in Great Britain]. In my judgment it is quite impossible to say that his purpose was a temporary purpose. Even assuming that he intended to return for a temporary period of six months in England or from time to time to visit his children [left at a prep school in England], nevertheless his absence from Great Britain was for a purpose other than a temporary purpose."
That seems to me to give the right flavour as far as I need to explore the meaning of the phrase. It is clear that temporary does not mean "not permanent" and that a purpose which it is recognised may not be fulfilled is not for that reason alone made temporary. On the other hand, it must be the case in my judgment that if a person goes abroad on a genuine trial basis that is for a temporary purpose unless the contemplated period of the trial is too long to allow that conclusion.
"I am leaving as my health is suffering under the weather conditions here. My wife and carer has been offered a partnership in an estate agents, and I cannot manage without her. I will be checking emails for her but will receive no money as our accommodation is rent free. There is no way that I can work but hopefully my condition will improve. We are going on holiday first before my wife starts work on the 2nd May 2006. With me helping my wife, and for legal reasons, I have also been offered a partnership, but I will receive no income for 12 months. There is no way that I will be helping out more than 14 hours a week, and after October, no more than 4 a week."
Even if that new evidence had not been produced, whoever decided the claimant's appeal after the setting aside of the decision of appeal tribunal of 13 April 2007 would be able to re-evaluate all the existing documentary evidence. There is therefore an argument for remitting the case to a new tribunal for a rehearing where the claimant and his wife would have the opportunity to attend to give evidence and answer questions in person, to provide a more detailed picture.
(Signed on original): J Mesher
Judge of the Upper Tribunal
Date: 2 July 2009