CS_46_1998
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> Toosey v. Chief Adjudication Officer [1994] UKSSCSC CS_46_1998 (27 January 1994) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1994/CS_46_1998.html Cite as: [1994] UKSSCSC CS_46_1998 |
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Toosey v. Chief Adjudication Officer [1994] UKSSCSC CS_46_1998 (27 January 1994)
R(S) 7/94
(Toosey v. Chief Adjudication Officer (C-287/92))
ECJ (D. A. O. Edward, President of the Chamber, CS/46/1988
R. Joliet and G. C. Rodriguez Iglesias, judges;
Advocate General: C. O. Lenz)
27.1.94
Residence condition - claimant returning to her Member State of origin having become incapable of work in another Member State where she had been employed - whether entitled to receive benefits in her Member State of origin by virtue of Article 71(1)(b)(ii) of Council Regulations (EEC) 1408/71
The claimant, a British national, last worked in the United Kingdom during 1964 -1965. In 1973 she moved to Belgium where she worked until 1982 when she suffered a spastic hemiplegia which confined her to a wheelchair. She returned to the United Kingdom in 1985 and was refused severe disablement allowance following a claim made in 1986. The tribunal dismissed her appeal on the basis that she did not satisfy the residence conditions of regulation 3 of the Social Security (Severe Disablement Allowance) Regulations 1984 since she had not been resident in Great Britain for ten of the 20 years preceding her application for severe disablement allowance. The claimant appealed to a Commissioner arguing that Article 71(1)(b)(ii) of Council Regulation (EEC) 1408/71 entitled her to severe disablement allowance because she was "an employed person, other than a frontier worker, who is wholly unemployed and who makes [her]self available for work to the employment services in the territory of the Member State in which [s]he resides or who returns to that territory". She submitted that she had returned to the Member State in which she resided and hence was entitled to receive benefits in the United Kingdom in accordance with the legislation of the United Kingdom "as if she had been employed there." The Commissioner referred a number of questions to the European Court of Justice.
Held, that:
- the determining factor as to whether Article 71 applies at all is the residence of the person concerned in a Member State other than that to whose legislation he was subject during his last employment;
- it follows that the first sentence of Article 71(1)(b)(ii) does not apply to a worker in the position of the claimant who was resident in the State of employment (Belgium) when the incapacity of work followed by invalidity occurred; and
- under Article 86 of Council Regulation (EEC) 1408/71 and Article 35, Regulation 574/72 the institution of the State of residence is required to forward a claim for invalidity benefit submitted to it to the competent institution of the State of last employment; it is not, on the other hand, required to pay such benefit to the claimant.
DECISION OF THE EUROPEAN COURT OF JUSTICE
Mr. M. Allan, Barrister, instructed by the Disability Law and Advisory Centre, for Mrs. Toosey.
Mr. N. Paines, Barrister, instructed by J. E. Collins of the Treasury Solicitor's Department, agent, for the United Kingdom.
Mr. N. Khan, of its Legal Service, agent for the Commission of the European Communities.
The Opinion of the Advocate General was delivered on 18 November 1993 and is reported at [1994] ECR I-281.
JUDGMENT
"(1) Is the first sentence of Article 71(1)(b)(ii) of Regulation No. 1408/71 to be interpreted as applying to a worker who:
(a) resides and works in Member State A (of which she is a national);
(b) subsequently moves with her family to Member State B where she resides for ten years, works and suffers incapacity for work followed by invalidity;
(c) subsequently moves with her family to Member State C where she resides for two years but does not work (owing to her invalidity), and;
(d) finally takes up residence again in Member State A, where she does not work or register for employment (owing to her invalidity)?
If the answer to question (1) is in the affirmative:
(2) How is a national court or tribunal to determine whether a claim by a worker in the circumstances described in question (1) ("the claimant") for invalidity benefit should be directed to the institution of the Member State designated by Article 39(1) of the Regulation or the institution of the Member State designated by Article 39(5) of the Regulation, read in conjunction with the first sentence of Article 71(1)(b)(ii):
(a) Does Article 39(1) only apply where the claimant has remained within the territory of the Member State in which she was last employed?
(b) In what circumstances can the claimant apply for benefit from the institution of the Member State designated by Article 39(5) of the Regulation?
(c) Can the claimant choose to which institution to address the claim?
(3) Are the words "in accordance with the legislation which it administers" in Article 39(5) to be interpreted as including conditions of entitlement to a non-contributory benefit, based on presence or residence in a Member State, which are contained in such legislation?
(4) If the answer to question (3) is in the affirmative, is Article 38 of Regulation 1408/71 to be interpreted as requiring the competent institution of a Member State whose legislation makes the right to benefit conditional upon the completion of a period of residence, to treat periods of the claimant's residence in other Member States as though they were periods of residence completed in that Member State?
If the answer to question (1) is negative:
(5) Must the competent institution of a Member State, whose legislation makes the right to benefit conditional upon the completion of a period of residence, treat periods of the claimant's residence in other Member States as though they were periods of residence completed in that Member State?
If the answers to questions (1) and (5) are negative and the claimant is obliged to make a claim for benefit under Article 39(1) to Member State B:
(6) Does the competent institution of Member State A have any obligation towards the claimant? In particular, is the competent institution of Member State A obliged:
(a) to pursue a claim submitted by the claimant in accordance with Article 35(1) of Regulation No. 574/72; and/or
(b) to pay benefit to the claimant according to its rules, and to reimburse itself later from such funds as are made available by Member State B?"
The first question
The second, third, fourth and fifth questions
The sixth question
Costs
On those grounds,
THE COURT (First Chamber),
in answer to the questions referred to it by the social security Commissioner by order of 5 July 1992, hereby rules:
1. The first sentence of Article 71(1)(b)(ii) of Council Regulation (EEC) No. 1408/71 of 14 June 1971 on the application of social security schemes to employed persons, to self-employed persons and to members of their families moving within the Community, as amended and updated by Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2201/83 of 2 June 1983, must be interpreted as meaning that it does not apply to a worker who:
(a) resides and works in Member State A (of which he is a national);
(b) subsequently moves with his family to Member State B where he resides for 10 years, works and suffers incapacity for work followed by invalidity;
(c) subsequently moves with his family to Member State C where he resides for two years but does not work (owing to his invalidity) and;
(d) finally takes up residence again in Member State A, where he does not work or register for employment (owing to his invalidity);
2. Under Article 86 of Regulation No. 1408/71 and Article 35 of Regulation (EEC) No. 574/72 of 21 March 1972 laying down the procedure for implementing Regulation No. 1408/71, as amended and updated by Council Regulation (EEC) No. 2001/83 of 2 June 1983, the institution of the State of residence is required to forward a claim for invalidity benefit submitted to it to the competent institution of the State of last employment; it is not, on the other hand, required to pay such benefit to the claimant.