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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Novitskaya v London Borough of Brent & Anor [2009] EWCA Civ 1260 (01 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1260.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1260, [2010] AACR 6, [2010] PTSR 972, [2009] NPC 137 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE SOCIAL SECURITY
AND CHILD SUPPORT COMMISSIONERS
Deputy Commissioner Mrs Ramsay
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS
____________________
IRINA NOVITSKAYA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE LONDON BOROUGH OF BRENT SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS |
1stRespondent 2ND Respondent/ Interested Party |
____________________
Mr Donald Broatch (instructed by LB Brent Legal Services) for the 1st Respondent
Mr Tim Buley (instructed by DWP Litigation Division) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing date : 10 November 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden :
BACKGROUND
"DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SECURITY [sic]
STATEMENT HB + Income Support
Notes ….
I, Novitskaya Irina
of 70A King's Road,
London NW10 2BN
state that I would like my benefits income support or whatever else I am intaital [sic] to, to be backdated from the date I became asylum seeker – which by 29.07.88 (because) according to an advice form "welfare benefit and tax credit' hand book" – 2004-05 by Child Poverty Action Group page 665-666. I'm applaing [sic] only now because I've become refugee from 14.05.09. Sincerely hope for your help.
*The above has been read over to me and I agree that it is a true and complete record of what I have said. I declare that the information I have given on this form is correct and complete.
Signature …………………………….. Date 10.06.04
Witnessed by .…………………………"
(signature)
HOUSING BENEFIT (GENERAL) REGULATIONS 1987
"2(1)..
'claim' means a claim for housing benefit;
….
Time and manner in which claims are to be made
72 (1) Every claim shall be in writing and made on a properly completed form approved for the purpose by the relevant authority or in such written form as the relevant authority may accept as sufficient in the circumstances of any particular case of class of cases and be accompanied by or supplemented by such certificates, documents, information and evidence as are required in accordance with regulation 73(1) (evidence and information) [ or paragraph 5 of Schedule A1 (treatment of claims for housing benefit by refugees).
(2) The forms approved for the purpose of claiming shall be provided free of charge by the relevant authority or such persons as they may authorise or appoint for the purpose.
(3) Each relevant authority shall notify the Secretary of State of the address to which claims delivered or sent to the [appropriate DWP office] are to be forwarded.
(4) A claim-
(a) may be sent or delivered to the appropriate DWP office where the claimant or his partner is also claiming income support incapacity benefit or a jobseeker's allowance;……
(5) Subject to paragraphs (11), (16) and (17), and to regulation 72A the date on which a claim is made shall be-
(a) in a case where an award of income support, state pension credit which comprises a guarantee credit or an income-based job seeker's allowance has been made to the claimant or his partner and the claim for housing benefit is made is made within 4 weeks of the date on which the claim for that income support, state pension credit which comprises a guarantee credit or jobseeker's allowance was received at the appropriate DWP office, the first day of entitlement to income support…"
"(6) Where a claim received at the designated office has not been made in the manner described in paragraph (1), that claim is for the purposes of these Regulations defective.
(7) Where a claim is defective because-
(a) it was made on the form approved for the purpose but that form is not accepted by the relevant authority as being in a written form sufficient in the circumstances of the case; or
(b) it was made in writing but not on the form approved for the purpose and the relevant authority, does not accept the claim as being in a written form which is sufficient in the circumstances of the case.
the relevant authority may, in a case to which sub-paragraph (a) applies, refer the defective claim to the claimant or, in a case to which sub-paragraph (b) applies, supply the claimant with the approved form.
(8) The relevant authority shall treat a defective claim as if it had been made in the first instance where the approved form referred or sent to the claimant in accordance with paragraph (7) is received at the designated office properly completed within 4 weeks of it having been referred or sent to him, or such longer period as the relevant authority may consider reasonable."
CASE LAW ON THE MEANING OF "CLAIM"
"I have received a letter about my National Insurance card. My card was lasted stamped by an employer on 4 July. I have not been employed since that date. Owing to illness I now have a small pension – is it necessary for me to stamp the card myself?"
"6. In my view, in order for the statutory authorities to find that a claim for benefit within regulation 2(1) has been made, there must be a document or documents (on the form approved by the Minister or accepted by him as sufficient) which appear on their face to make such a claim. It may be possible, for example, by reading form Med.5 with an accompanying letter to find that together they constitute a claim. But in my view it is not permissible to interpret form Med.5, or any other document, as a claim for benefit within regulation 2(1), merely because it may be possible to infer from the surrounding circumstances that in sending form Med.5, or the other document, the claimant must have been intending to claim benefit. That a claim for benefit is intended to be made must appear on the face of the document or documents which are alleged to amount to a claim. To hold otherwise would, I consider, ignore the requirement of regulation 2(1) that every claim for benefit shall be made in writing."
"15. In my judgment, and this is the crux of the case, the terms of the e-mail sent in September 2001 cannot sensibly be read as making a claim for benefit. The statement that the Claimant [in that email] "would like information on whatever benefits I am entitled to" was in my judgment no more than a request for information as to what benefits the Claimant was entitled to. It does not display an intention to claim benefits generally, still less any particular benefit. (If, for example, there had been some disadvantage to the Claimant in claiming benefits in England, the Claimant would have been perfectly entitled to say that she had not actually done so, but had merely asked for information as to what benefits she was entitled to)." (emphasis added by the Commissioner)
ANALYSIS
"Ever since the decision of the Divisional Court in R v Medical Appeal Tribunal (North Midland Region), ex p Hubble [1958] 2 All ER 374, [1958] 2 QB 228, it has been accepted that the process of benefits adjudication is inquisitorial rather than adversarial. Diplock J as he then was said this of an industrial injury benefit claim:
'A claim by an insured person to benefit under the Act is not truly analogous to a lis inter partes. A claim to benefit is a claim to receive money out of the insurance funds. Any such claim requires investigation to determine whether any, and if so, what amount of benefit is payable out of the fund. In such an investigation, the Minister or the insurance officer is not a party adverse to the claimant. If analogy be sought in the other branches of the law, it is to be found in an inquest rather than in an action.' (See [1958] 2 All ER 374 at 379, [1958] 2 All ER 374 at 240.)"
ORDER
Lord Justice Elias:
Lord Justice Mummery: