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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 >> [2007] UKSSCSC CDLA_1256_2007 (17 September 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2007/CDLA_1256_2007.html Cite as: [2007] UKSSCSC CDLA_1256_2007 |
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[2007] UKSSCSC CDLA_1256_2007 (17 September 2007)
CDLA/1256/2007
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"With regard to the main meal test the tribunal decided that the appellant would not be able to carry out the necessary tasks, both physical and mental, in order to prepare a cooked main meal for herself. The tribunal was satisfied that the appellant's nausea prevents her preparing and cooking a main meal for herself. The tribunal were satisfied that the feeling of nausea was an overwhelming problem …………"
"…….the House of Lords in Moyna v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2003] 4 All ER 162 determine the scope of the cooking test. The circumstances in that case were somewhat different to the present and were related to the physical capacity to carry out the tasks involved in cooking a main meal. Lord Hoffmann gave the leading speech, to which the other members of the Judicial Committee agreed. He said in paragraph 17 of the report at page 167 in respect of the condition:-
"….. its purpose is not to ascertain whether the applicant can survive, or enjoy a reasonable diet, without assistance. It is a notional test, a thought experiment to calibrate the severity of the disability."
It is in my view important to give that test a context. The context, in my view, having regard to the approach set out by the House of Lords, is related to the capacity, in the light of the disability found, to carry out the tasks of cooking. It is not the potential or actual effect on the claimant of carrying out these tasks. Thus the effect, if it had been accepted, of the claimant being nauseous when cooking would have been an unpleasant one but that does not affect the capacity to do the tasks. It would not, to use the phrase of Lord Hoffmann, "calibrate the severity of the disability found."
"When one considers the purpose of section 72 of the 1992 Act it is obvious that the legislature intended that a person should qualify under section 72(1)(a)(ii) if he or she could not reasonably be expected to prepare a cooked main meal due to his or her physical or mental disabilities. Words implying reasonableness are to be implied into section 72(1)(a)(ii) just as they are into section 72(1)(a)(i), (b) and (c) (see Mallinson v Secretary of State for Social Security [1994] 1 WLR 630)."
"The Secretary of State argues that the risk of self-harm is outside the scope of Lord Hoffmann's thought-experiment. I reject that argument. The context of Lord Hoffmann's remark was that it does not matter that a claimant does not need to cook or will not cook. The test is a measure of disability, as Lord Hoffmann says. But it is still a measure that is set by the legislation in the context of cooking a main meal. It is a measure of disability relevant to that function. Safety is an aspect of disability and it is relevant to the issue whether a claimant "cannot" prepare a main meal. If considerations of safety render the claimant incapable of preparing a meal, then he cannot do so."
primary submission based on CSDLA/854/03, that (a) there is no evidence that the nausea
which the Claimant experiences at the thought of preparing food is a symptom of her primary
biliary cirrhosis and (b) that as far as the nausea caused by actually preparing food is
concerned, it may be that that could be alleviated "by using the available ventilation in her
kitchen." He therefore submits that the case should be remitted to a new tribunal for further
findings on the question whether the nausea could be overcome by using the available
ventilation.
is in my view implicit in the Tribunal's findings that the Claimant would make full use of
such ventilation as is available to her. In any event, it does not seem to me sufficiently
probable that what the Tribunal described as the "overwhelming problem" of
nausea could be sufficiently alleviated by ventilation to warrant remitting this matter to a new
tribunal.
(signed on the original) Charles Turnbull
Commissioner
17 September 2007