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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 >> [2008] UKSSCSC CDLA_3301_2007 (25 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2008/CDLA_3301_2007.html Cite as: [2008] UKSSCSC CDLA_3301_2007 |
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[2008] UKSSCSC CDLA_3301_2007 (25 January 2008)
CDLA/3301/2007
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
(i) The tribunal failed to deal adequately with the supersession question. The Secretary of State made the decision, and therefore the burden of showing it was rightly made rested on the Secretary of State. The ground on which the award was superseded was not identified by the Secretary of State and it was not identified by the tribunal. I think the tribunal was saying that it did not believe that the claimant had ever been accurate in her description of her disablement. If that is the case, then it should have identified that the award superseded was made in mistake of a material fact. It did not do so. There are other grounds on which an award can be superseded. It is for the Secretary of State in the first place to identify the ground on which it is asserted that supersession is made out, and to list the evidence which in his view supports that conclusion.
(ii) The tribunal's decision both on the decision notice and in the statement of reasons for the tribunal's decision disagree with the corrected decision notice which was subsequently issued. This is a fundamental flaw. The decision notice itself, in the standard format – which is very ill-suited to recording accurately decisions made on supersession – simply stated that the claimant was not entitled to either component of DLA from 5 October 2006. The statement of reasons for the tribunal's decision made it clear that it had considered the lowest rate care component and did not accept that the claimant satisfied the conditions for this award. The decision under appeal was the Secretary of State's supersession. It removed the award of middle rate care component and substituted lowest rate care. Therefore the tribunal, in addition to dealing with the supersession question identified above, also needed to identify the grounds for its own supersession. It did not do this. When the DWP raised a query about the decision notice, the tribunal chairman purported to correct it to say that the claimant remained entitled to the lowest rate care component, but only 'because no warning was recorded that she might lose her award'. The facility of correcting a decision notice does not enable the tribunal to change the decision. It allows accidental errors, and slips of the pen to be corrected. It does not enable a completely different decision to be substituted. In changing the decision notice in this way the tribunal chairman was unilaterally replacing the unanimous decision of the tribunal with a decision made by him alone.
(Signed on the Original) Mrs A Ramsay
Deputy Commissioner
Date 25 January 2008