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UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2002] UKSSCSC CH_2659_2002 (09 December 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2002/CH_2659_2002.html Cite as: [2002] UKSSCSC CH_2659_2002 |
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Commissioner's file: CH 2659 2002
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
Background to the appeal
The tribunal decision
"I do not accept that the Appellant would not have been aware that £2000 to £3000 in 1979 or 1980 would not be worth considerably more due to inflation in 2001 when she received the latest redundancy payment."
"I am not persuaded by any evidence that I have heard that the deteriorating health of her elderly mother in Jamaica amounted to a sufficient reason for her not to be able to make enquiries into claiming earlier than she did."
Grounds of appeal
Good cause
The phrase "good cause" has often been considered by Social Security Commissioners and in R(S) 2/63 (T) was defined by a Tribunal of Commissioners as:
"... some fact which, having regard to all the circumstances (including the claimant's health and the information which he had received and that which he might have obtained) would probably have caused a reasonable person of his age and experience to act (or fail to act) as the claimant did."
However, it is clear from the recent decision of the Court of Appeal in ...Upton ... that, as long as the authority or Review Board have regard to this legal test, the question whether "good cause" exists is one of fact...
In the light of the Upton case, the guidance [given by the Department to Councils], which closely follows the case law established by decisions of Commissioners, must be seen as illustrative only."
Mr Bennett adopted that in his argument. Save for R(S) 2/63 and similar decisions, the authorities cited by the Law Centre were illustrations of the test. The tribunal had, he submitted, understood the law correctly. Its application was a question of fact and could not be subject to appeal.
The Upton case
"... I do not think we are compelled [by those authorities] to depart from the course which, as I understand it, the Court adopts which is, having found the primary fact, to direct itself as to the appropriate standard in law, and if then it assesses the primary facts to be reasonable within that standard, to treat that holding as a question of fact. Accordingly, I do not think that the submission made by Miss Findlay that this is a question of law is correct."
"A person who can neither read nor write, behaving as a reasonable person of his age and experience, would, it seems to me, ask someone to read to him or explain the documents in which such an important decision was being conveyed to him. It seem to me more than likely in his case that the appellant, who had the advantage of a wife who helped him in completing the forms, as we understand she did, would probably have asked her, and if she was unable to explain it to him, no doubt, he would seek further advice from the officers of the Department who attended him so regularly."
I quote that additional passage because it shows a clear adoption of the test in R(S) 2/63 and its application to a particular aspect of the case. On behalf of the Court, Beldam LJ then dismissed as "unfounded" the criticism of the tribunal and Commissioner for referring to the claimant as "purely passive" because he failed to make any active enquiries over a long period to see whether he might have a claim.
Applying the good cause test
Was the decision of the tribunal adequate?
David Williams
Commissioner
09 December 2002
[Signed on the original on the date shown]