BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber) >> AH v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2013] UKUT 118 (AAC) (05 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/AAC/2013/118.html Cite as: [2013] AACR 32, [2013] UKUT 118 (AAC) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
Decision
of the Upper Tribunal
(Administrative Appeals Chamber)
As the decision of the First-tier Tribunal (made on 19 March 2012 at Weymouth under reference SC192/12/00033) involved the making of an error in point of law, it is SET ASIDE under section 12(2)(a) and (b)(i) of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 and the case is REMITTED to the tribunal for rehearing by a differently constituted panel.
DIRECTIONS:
A. The tribunal must undertake a complete reconsideration of the issues that are raised by the appeal and, subject to the tribunal’s discretion under section 12(8)(a) of the Social Security Act 1998, any other issues that merit consideration.
B. In particular, the tribunal must investigate and decide whether the claimant should be put into the support group for employment and support allowance from and including 22 September 2011.
C. In doing so, the tribunal must not take account of circumstances that were not obtaining at that time: see section 12(8)(b) of the Social Security Act 1998. Later evidence is admissible, provided that it relates to the time of the decision: R(DLA) 2 and 3/01.
Reasons for Decision
· How should tribunals deal with words like ‘repeatedly’ and ‘timescale’?
· How should the tribunal deal with regulation 35(2)?
I have very limited mobility due to severe pain and fatigue. I am unable to walk outside reliably or regularly. The pains set in straight away. I am in pain even at rest. Both of my legs start with pins and needles, then they go numb, then there is a deep pain in my bones. I have pain in my coccyx. When I walk, I need to stop every few yards to ease the discomfort. I only walk for essential purposes, such as to go to the bank.
His GP completed a report and identified problems with mobilising and coping with change or social engagement. The report ends:
Mr H… has adapted well, in my opinion, & undertaken limited voluntary work to[?] aid his overall mental state. I believe formal paid work will prove very difficult for him.
Mr H was then interviewed and examined by a health care professional, who identified problems with mobilising for more than 100 metres, which carried 9 points, and remaining at a work station for more than an hour, which carried 6 points.
At the time of the medical assessment on 17/08/11 and at the appeal hearing the Appellant was living alone in a bungalow with one step. He had a female friend (his registered carer) who stayed overnight sometimes and who did the housework and cooked. The Appellant would go shopping with his friend who would drive him by car. They would park as close as possible to the shop entrance when the Appellant would accompany his friend while shopping. He would make use of a shopping trolley and the shopping would take at least 15 minutes. He would walk slowly and would need to stop and rest several times and would visit a café where he would rest. These short shopping trips were not for the main bulk shop, which his friend would do herself. He was able to attend the local Weymouth disabled club and play bingo. He had a wheelchair in which he could be pushed on trips out with the club, but which he did not propel himself. He had stopped these trips some time before the Tribunal hearing.
On these findings:
The tribunal is of the opinion from all the evidence that at the time of the decision on 31/08/11 that the Appellant would have been able to mobilise more than 50 metres on level ground without stopping in order to avoid significant discomfort or exhaustion, or repeatedly mobilise 50 metres within a reasonable timescale because of significant discomfort or exhaustion. It is accepted that the Appellant has restricted mobility, but it is not accepted that when he stops he is at the absolute limit of his capacity, as after a period of rest and recovery, he is able to continue walking without significant discomfort, whether that be during his shopping trips, visits to banks or elsewhere.
8. The tribunal did not deal with Mrs Mitchell’s argument on regulation 35.
· the tribunal had misapplied Activity 1 of Schedule 3;
· as Mr H has chronic fatigue syndrome, he should have satisfied regulation 35(2) of those Regulations. This second ground was in paragraph 7, which is mentioned in the grant of permission and set out below.
10. A district tribunal judge gave Mr H permission to appeal. He identified these issues:
The Upper Tribunal is asked to give guidance as to the interpretation of the words ‘repeatedly … within a reasonable timescale’ for the purposes of Descriptor 1 of Schedule 3 to the Employment and Support Allowance Regulations 2008. Do they mean the same in Schedules 2 and 3, notwithstanding that Schedule 3 descriptors are the test of whether a claimant has limited capability for work-related activities and not merely limited capability for work?
Whilst it is anticipated that the First-tier Tribunal’s failure to address regulation 35 may be fatal to its decision, it would be helpful to have the observations of the Upper Tribunal on paragraph 7 of the application for permission to appeal.
Activity |
Descriptors |
1. Mobilising unaided by another person with or without a walking stick, manual wheelchair or other aid if such aid can reasonably be used. |
Cannot either: (a) mobilise more than 50 metres on level ground without stopping in order to avoid significant discomfort or exhaustion; or (b) repeatedly mobilise 50 metres within a reasonable timescale because of significant discomfort or exhaustion. |
This is in identical terms to descriptor (a) of Activity 1 in Schedule 2, where it carries 15 points, which alone are sufficient to show that a claimant has limited capability for work.
15. Regulation 34(2) is also relevant:
(2) A descriptor applies to a claimant if that descriptor applies to the claimant for the majority of the time or, as the case may be, on the majority of occasions on which the claimant undertakes or attempts to undertake the activity described by that descriptor.
It is highly dangerous, if not impossible, to attempt to place an accurate definition upon a word in common use; you can look up examples of its many uses if you want to in the Oxford Dictionary but that does not help on definition; in fact it probably only shows that the word normally defies definition. The task of the court in construing statutory language such as that which is before your Lordships is to look at the mischief at which the Act is directed and then, in that light, to consider whether as a matter of common sense and every day usage the known, proved or admitted or properly inferred facts of the particular case bring the case within the ordinary meaning of the words used by Parliament.
(2) A person who does not have limited capability for work-related activity as determined in accordance with regulation 34(1) is to be treated as having limited capability for work-related activity if-
(a) the claimant suffers from some specific disease or bodily or mental disablement; and
(b) by reasons of such disease or disablement, there would be a substantial risk to the mental or physical health of any person if the claimant were found not to have limited capability for work-related activity.
This paragraph applies to the effect of work-related activity. It is similar to regulation 29(2), which applies to the effect of work. And that paragraph was equivalent to regulation 27(b) of the Social Security (Incapacity for Work) (General) Regulations 1995.
4. … the question of interpretation remains relevant to the regulations made under the new scheme introduced by the Welfare Reform Act 2007.
In other words, it remained relevant to employment and support allowance. It is directly relevant to regulation 29(2), which differs from regulation 27(b) only in the change of terminology appropriate to employment and support allowance. But to what extent, if at all, is it relevant to regulation 35(2)? In order to answer that, it is necessary to see what the Court decided.
26. The Court then explained how to identify the type of work that had to be taken into account:
45. … The decision-maker must assess the range or type of work which a claimant is capable of performing sufficiently to assess the risk to health either to himself or to others.
Obviously, that is not directly applicable to regulation 35(2), which does not envisage the claimant working. However, the Court’s reasoning can be applied by analogy to the work-related activity. Translating the language of the judgment into terms of work-related activity comes to this:
The decision-maker must assess the range or type of work-related activity which a claimant is capable of performing and might be expected to undertake sufficiently to assess the risk to health either to himself or to others.
The purpose of being in the Work Related Activity Group is to take the first steps into looking at the barriers to future work and seeing if there are any ways to overcome these, including any reasonable adjustments that would need to be made to any work place, work station or job role. Mr H… would receive support throughout this from the Health and Disability Employment Advisor and it is not considered that this would cause a substantial risk to his mental or physical health. In form ESA113, [his GP] suggests voluntary work would actually aid Mr H…’s mental state.
We consider that Mr H… satisfies Regulation 35 because of the nature of one of his medical conditions, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS/ME). Mr H… is unable to undertake any kind of activity without becoming depleted of energy, so exhausted that he needs to sleep for 18 hours a day. He is rarely able to leave his house, and, when he goes out, he is driven by his carer, and most walking is just transferring to and from the car. If he is required to undertake work-related activity, such as attend an interview at the Jobcentre, he needs to plan in advance, banking energy by resting more than usual, and requires assistance to get to the appointment. Bearing in mind that Lord Freud has stated publicly that any such activity must be capable of being carried out reliably, repeatedly and safely, we contend that Mr H… is unable to carry out work-related activity predictably or with consistency. If he pushes himself to become active above his usual limitations, he becomes excessively exhausted, with increased levels of pain; if he were to do this repeatedly, there would be a serious deterioration in his medical condition of CFS/ME.
33. For this reason also, the tribunal’s decision involved an error of law.
Signed on original |
Edward Jacobs |