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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Northern Ireland - Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2009] NISSCSC C37_08_09(DLA) (02 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NISSCSC/2009/C37_08_09(DLA).html Cite as: [2009] NISSCSC C37_8_9(DLA), [2009] NISSCSC C37_08_09(DLA) |
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[2009] NISSCSC C37_08_09(DLA) (02 July 2009)
Decision No: C37/08-09(DLA)
Background
'The appeal was received on 30.05.07. This is the third time of listing. I cannot accept that it is reasonable for her now to request a postponement so that she can get some advice almost 11 months after she appealed. Postponement refused.'
'Clerk to the Tribunal
Mrs Keenan returned the AT6 form on 21 April 2008. She wanted another date for the appeal hearing stating that she needed to get advice about her appeal.
A Chairman on 21 April 2008 refused this request on the basis that it had been 11 months since she had lodged her appeal so that she had sufficient opportunity to consult and seek advice.
Notice of this refusal was sent to the [claimant] on 21 April. She did not reply and has not attended. The hearing was listed for 10.30 am.
The Tribunal decided to proceed at 10.45 am.
The Tribunal therefore considered the appeal submission and appendices (including [the claimant's] appeal letter received in May 2007 and several subsequent letters), the medical records and the papers relating to the DLA awards from 2001.'
Proceedings before the Social Security Commissioner
Errors of law
"(i) making perverse or irrational findings on a matter or matters that were material to the outcome ('material matters');
(ii) failing to give reasons or any adequate reasons for findings on material matters;
(iii) failing to take into account and/or resolve conflicts of fact or opinion on material matters;
(iv) giving weight to immaterial matters;
(v) making a material misdirection of law on any material matter;
(vi) committing or permitting a procedural or other irregularity capable of making a material difference to the outcome or the fairness of proceedings; …
Each of these grounds for detecting any error of law contains the word 'material' (or 'immaterial'). Errors of law of which it can be said that they would have made no difference to the outcome do not matter."
The error of law in the present case
Postponement and adjournment
"51. (1) Where a person to whom notice of an oral hearing is given wishes to request a postponement of that hearing, he shall do so in writing to the clerk to the appeal tribunal stating his reasons for the request, and the clerk to the appeal tribunal may grant or refuse the request as he thinks fit or may pass the request to a legally qualified panel member who may grant or refuse the request as he thinks fit.
(2) Where the clerk to the appeal tribunal or, as the case may be, the legally qualified panel member refuses a request to postpone the hearing he shall—
(a) notify in writing the person making the request of the refusal; and
(b) place before the appeal tribunal at the hearing both the request for the postponement and notification of its refusal.
(3) The legally qualified panel member or the clerk to the appeal tribunal may of his own motion at any time before the beginning of the hearing postpone the hearing.
(4) An oral hearing may be adjourned by the appeal tribunal at any time on the application of any party to the proceedings or of its own motion. …"
'3. I appreciate that chairmen and tribunals are under pressure to resist applications for postponements and adjournments because they have financial implications for the Independent Tribunal Service. No doubt there are many such applications that can properly be refused, but the overriding consideration must be the requirements of justice…
4. When the case came before the tribunal, they had to consider whether they should determine the case before them in the absence of the claimant. That is an issue that always arises when a claimant does not appear. It will seldom detain a tribunal for long if the claimant has not asked for a postponement and, indeed, I would not usually regard a tribunal as having erred in law if no mention is made in their decision of any consideration of adjourning because there will not usually be the slightest reason why a tribunal should adjourn a case merely because a claimant has failed to appear. However, different considerations arise where a request for a postponement has been made. The fact that it may have been considered and refused by a chairman does not relieve the tribunal of the responsibility of considering whether to adjourn the proceedings. In effect, a claimant who has failed to attend a hearing following a refusal of a postponement must be taken to have renewed that application to the tribunal. Of course, the fact that a postponement has already been refused is a material fact the tribunal can take into account when considering whether to adjourn the case, as can any comment made by the chairman when refusing the postponement which should have prompted the claimant to attend, but a chairman's refusal will not always be conclusive, particularly if the claimant has had little time to act upon it. The tribunal is faced with the new fact that the claimant has actually failed to attend, whatever the hopes of the chairman might have been, and they are likely to have a greater grasp of the background to the case than a chairman considering the question of a postponement on an interlocutory application. Furthermore, if they proceed, they may have to consider what inferences to draw from the failure of the claimant to attend.
5. Therefore, where there has been an unsuccessful application for a postponement, the question whether the case should be adjourned must be considered afresh by the tribunal …'
'…non-attendance following refusal of a postponement application must be taken as a renewal of that application.'
The appellant's other grounds for appealing to the Social Security Commissioner
Disposal
(Signed): K Mullan
COMMISSIONER
2 July 2009