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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2002] NISSCSC A1/02-03(IVB) (26 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NISSCSC/2002/A1_02-03(IVB).html Cite as: [2002] NISSCSC A1/02-03(IVB), [2002] NISSCSC A1/2-3(IVB) |
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[2002] NISSCSC A1/02-03(IVB) (26 March 2003)
Decision No: A1/02-03(IVB)
An adjudication officer made the original decision in this case on 5 March 1995 disallowing Invalidity Benefit from and including 3 March 1995. Invalidity Benefit was replaced by Incapacity Benefit from and including 17 April 1995 by reason of changes in the relevant statutory scheme. The claimant then appealed this decision. Her appeal was heard and disallowed by a Social Security Appeal Tribunal on 10 August 1995. This Tribunal was constituted under the provisions of Section 38 and 39 of the Social Security Administration (Northern Ireland) Act 1992 but ceased to exist, accept for certain transitional purposes, with effect from 29 November 1999 due to further statutory changes. The decision of the Tribunal was issued to all the parties on 26 September 1995. The claimant did not apply for leave to appeal to a Commissioner until 14 March 2002 by a letter dated 25 February 2002. By this time entirely new arrangements for the constitution of Appeal Tribunals had been put in place by the provisions of the Social Security (Northern Ireland) Order 1998. In these circumstances the application was put before a chairman of the Appeal Tribunal on 13 April 2002. This was the same person who had been the chairman of the Social Security Appeal Tribunal at the original appeal hearing. The chairman then rejected the application because it had not been made within the time limit set by regulation 58(5) of the Social Security (Decision and Appeals) Regulations 1999. These are the appropriate regulations presently governing the time limits for making appeals to a Commissioner.
"(5) Where there has been a failure to apply for leave to appeal within the period of time specified in paragraph (1)(a) but an application is made within one year of the last date for making an application within that period, a legally qualified panel member may, if for special reasons he thinks fit, accept and proceed to consider and determine the application."
Regulation 58 (1)(a) is in the following terms:
"58.-(1) An application for leave to appeal to a Commissioner from a decision of an appeal tribunal under Article 15 of the Recovery of Benefits Order or under Article 13 or 14 shall –
(a) be sent to the clerk to the appeal tribunal within the period of one month of the date of the applicant being sent a written statement of the reasons for the decision against which leave to appeal is sought; and …"
"Where paragraph (25) applies, any application for leave to appeal which is made for the purposes of Article 15(10)(a) of the Order shall be made no later than three months from the date on which a copy of the statement of the decision of the social security appeal tribunal or, as the case may be, the medical appeal tribunal was given or sent to the applicant."
Article 18(25) is in the following terms:
"Subject to paragraph (26), any decision of a social security appeal tribunal or a medical appeal tribunal in relation to a relevant benefit shall be treated as a decision of an appeal tribunal."
[This legislation is identical to that set out in the equivalent legislation in Great Britain where it can be found in paragraph 1(1) and (2) of Schedule 14 of the Social Security Act 1998 (Commencement No.9, and Savings and Consequential and Transitional Provisions) Order 1999].
The reference to Article 15(10)(a) is a reference to Article 15(10)(a) of the Social Security (1998) Order which states that no appeal lies to a Commissioner without the leave of the Chairman, while Article 15(10)(b) of the same Order refers to the granting of leave by a Commissioner.
"An application to a Commissioner for leave to appeal against the decision of an appeal tribunal may be made only where the applicant has sought to obtain leave from the chairman and leave has been refused or the application has been rejected."
Therefore to make an application for leave to appeal to a Commissioner, an applicant must first seek leave from the Chairman, who is the legally qualified member. If the Chairman refuses or rejects the application, regulation 9 sets out the time limits for a further application to a Commissioner. The rest of regulation 9 is in the following terms:
"(2) Subject to paragraph (3), an application to a Commissioner shall be made within one month of notice of the refusal or rejection being sent to the applicant by the appeal tribunal.
(3) A Commissioner may for special reasons accept a late application or an application where the applicant failed to seek leave from the Chairman within the specified time, but did so on or before the final date.
(4) In paragraph (3) the final date means the end of a period of 13 months from the date on which the decision of the appeal tribunal or, if later, any separate statement of the reasons for it, was sent to the applicant by the appeal tribunal."
"Transitional provisions
3. – (1) Subject to paragraphs (2) and (3), these Regulations shall apply to all proceedings before the Commissioners on or after 7th June 1999.
(2) In relation to any appeal or application for leave to appeal from any social security, disability or medical appeal tribunal constituted under Part II of the Administration Act these Regulations shall have effect with the modifications that –
(a) "appeal tribunal" includes a reference to any such tribunal;(b) "chairman" includes a reference to a person authorised to deal with applications for leave to appeal under the Social Security (Adjudication) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1995(c) "Department" includes a reference to an adjudication officer;(d) "Article 15(7) of the Order" includes a reference to sections 21(6A) and 46(4A) of the Administration Act as modified by paragraph 4 of Schedule 5 to the Order.(e) "42 days" shall be substituted for "one month" in regulations 9(2) and 13(1); and(f) under regulation 9 a Commissioner may for special reasons accept an application for leave to appeal even though the applicant has not sought to obtain leave to appeal from the Chairman.
(3) Any transitional question under any application, appeal or reference in consequence of the coming into operation of these Regulations shall be determined by a Commissioner who may for this purpose give such directions as he may think just, including modifying the normal requirements of these Regulations in relation to the application, appeal or reference."
Prima facie as the original Social Security Appeal Tribunal was constituted under Sections 38 and 39 of the Social Security Administration (Northern Ireland) Act 1992, which were contained in part II of the Act, the modifying provisions contained in sub-paragraphs (2) and (3) are potentially relevant.
9(2)) and the discretion to accept special reasons was restricted to a specific time scale of a further 12 months, creating a maximum time limit of 13 months (regulation (3) and (4)). Transitional protection is offered by regulation 3 of the 1999 regulations, regulation 3(2)(e) modifying the new specific time limit of one month by maintaining the old 42 day limit for transitional cases.
(Signed): JOHN A H MARTIN QC
CHIEF COMMISSIONER
26 MARCH 2003