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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2001] UKSSCSC CSDLA_2_2001 (06 September 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2001/CSDLA_2_2001.html Cite as: [2001] UKSSCSC CSDLA_2_2001 |
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[2001] UKSSCSC CSDLA_2_2001 (06 September 2001)
Commissioner's File: CSDLA/2/01
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION ACT 1992
SOCIAL SECURITY ACT 1998
APPLICATION OUT OF TIME FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL ON A QUESTION OF LAW FROM A DECISION OF AN APPEAL TRIBUNAL
DETERMINATION BY SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
Name:
Appeal Tribunal of: 14 September 2000 at Glasgow
Case No:
ORAL HEARING
_________
"4. Mr Keel told me that the decision notice was handed over by the tribunal on the day of the hearing. On 18 September 2000 Mr Keel asked the tribunal to provide a full statement, which was sent to him and was received on 23 October 2000.
5. Prior to receipt of the full statement, Mr Keel wrote to the claimant in the following terms:-
"With reference to the Appeal Tribunal Hearing we attended at Wellington House on 14 September 2000. I am writing to inform you that I have requested a full statement of fact and reasons for the Tribunal decision of that date.
Once I have received the document referred to above it will be possible for me to establish whether your case can be extended although there is no automatic right of appeal against the Tribunal decision ……..
I will of course contact you as soon as there is any more progress to report in your case."
6. Mr Keel then told me that he had submitted an application for leave to appeal to the Commissioner to the Chairman of the Tribunal. That is recorded at page 89. It is said in that letter:-
"I am authorised by the above named to seek leave to appeal to the Social Security Commissioner in respect of the DAT decision of 14.9.00"
7. Mr Keel said that he received no instructions from the claimant to make the application for leave to appeal. He had no specific instructions to do so. He told me that he did not disclose the terms of the full statement or his proposed grounds of appeal to the claimant before the application. He said there was no record in writing of his having told the claimant about the application, nor any record of notification having been given to the claimant of the action he had taken.
8. It was Mr Keel's submission to me that he did not require a mandate for the purposes of an appeal to the Commissioner from the claimant. It was, he considered, contained in the initial mandate provided by the claimant to the City of Glasgow Council prior to the tribunal hearing.
9. Separately from the actings of Mr Keel, it is apparent from a letter contained at pages 86-88 that Messrs Quinn, Martin & Langan also submitted an application for leave to appeal to the Commissioner on the claimant's behalf. That letter appears to have been signed by he claimant and contains the statement at the end of it:-
"I authorise Quinn, Martin & Langan Solicitors to act on my behalf. Please ensure they are notified of any decision taken as a result of this request."
Mr Keel, although now representing the claimant in the appeal before me, in the circumstances which will become apparent, did not know how it was that Quinn, Martin & Langan came to make the application for leave to appeal. It was his suggestion that when the claimant went to see Quinn, Martin & Langan about making a fresh claim, an application for leave to appeal to the Commissioner against the decision of the tribunal may have arisen.
10. Of the two applications for leave to appeal which were submitted to the tribunal, it is apparent from a letter to the appeal service at page 130 that it was the application from Quinn, Martin & Langan which was dealt with by the Chairman. In a letter at page 130 it is said:-
"On 10/11/2000 I received an application for permission to appeal to the Commissioner against the tribunal's decision made on 14/09/2000.
The Chairman has considered the application and decided to refuse permission to appeal against the tribunal's decision."
Mr Keel's application was made on 11 November 2000. Notwithstanding that, the Appeal Service sent intimation of the refusal to the Glasgow Welfare Rights Office.
11. The refusal of leave to appeal by the Chairman is recorded at pages 92 and 93 of the bundle.
12. Mr Keel then went on to tell me that he thought that it was his application for
leave to appeal which had been refused. In these circumstances it is apparent that he prepared an application for leave to appeal direct to the Commissioner following the refusal by the Chairman. That application is recorded at page 98 of the bundle. It is undated and is signed by the claimant personally. It appears to authorise Mr Keel to act on the claimant's behalf. It was apparently transmitted by fax to the office of the Social Security Commissioners on 5 January 2001. Mr Keel was unable to tell me when the undated letter signed by the claimant, which formed the basis of the application for leave to appeal, was sent to the claimant or when it was returned to him. There is, according to Mr Keel, no supporting correspondence."
The second is that there must be a clear and new mandate given by claimant to representatives, other than solicitors, following upon adverse decisions of tribunals, for the purpose of appeals to the Commissioner.
A general mandate for representation before tribunals must in effect terminate when the tribunal gives its decision. Appeal to the Commissioner is a separate process and the Commissioner has to be satisfied that the representative has authority to act. The assumptions of mandate to act before the Commissioner at the time of the application was clearly misplaced with the wholly unsatisfactory consequences flowing therefrom.
(signed)
D J MAY QC
Commissioner
Date: 6 September 2001