CIS_5034_1995
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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 >> [1996] UKSSCSC CIS_5034_1995 (16 April 1996) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1996/CIS_5034_1995.html Cite as: [1996] UKSSCSC CIS_5034_1995 |
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[1996] UKSSCSC CIS_5034_1995 (16 April 1996)
R(IS) 5/97
Mr. M. Heald QC CIS/5034/1995
16.4.96
Student - bar vocational course - whether a "full-time course"
The claimant, a law graduate, had from October 1993 been attending a bar vocational course. On 10 May 1994 he submitted a claim for income support stating inter alia that he was spending nine to ten hours per week on his studies. Evidence contained in a letter from the Registrar to the Council of Legal Education as to the status of the course included the following: that the bar vocational course is compulsory for those who wish to qualify as a barrister and practice at the Bar of England and Wales; that the school did not formally designate the course as either full or part-time; but that the course required attendance at the Inns of Court School of Law of, on average, 15 hours each week for a total of 30 weeks and in addition it was envisaged that each student would spend approximately 20 hours each week in unsupervised private study. The social security appeal tribunal, accepting the evidence contained in the letter from the registrar, decided that the claimant was a full-time student within the meaning of regulation 61 of the Income Support (General) Regulations 1987 and so not to be treated as available for employment and stated that in doing so it had regard to R(SB) 40/83 where it was said that "it is the course and not the student which is to be full-time" and "the number of hours the student actually attends is irrelevant". R(SB) 25/87, which concerned a qualified barrister who claimed benefit during his pupillage, was distinguished. The claimant appealed to the Commissioner.
Held, dismissing the appeal, that:
in the absence of any contention that the School of Law was not an educational establishment, the course was a "course of study" giving an ordinary meaning to those words, the length of which could be taken to be 35 hours since time required to be spent outside the formal attendance at the School could be taken to be part of the course as a whole. The course was of a definite length with no possibility of any question of spreading it over a longer, or uncertain, period of time. The appeal tribunal were perfectly entitled to reach the conclusion that the claimant was a "student" for the purposes of regulation 61 and in those circumstances there was no obligation for them to go on to consider whether the claimant was available for employment. The case of the pupil barrister was correctly distinguished.
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"The bar vocational course is compulsory for those who wish to qualify as a barrister and practice at the Bar of England and Wales. It is a post-graduate recognised course for the purpose of reduction/exemption for council tax and eligibility at the discretion of each LEA to whom an intending student may apply.
The bar vocational course is as the name implies, the stage whereby the skills and specific knowledge needed by barristers are acquired in the course of one academic year.
The course requires attendance at the Inns of Court School of Law, of on average, 15 hours each week for a total of 30 weeks.
In addition it is envisaged that each student spend approximately 20 hours each week in private study. This is unsupervised. As the participants on this course are postgraduates the assumption is made they have the capacity to determine themselves how, when and where they study."
"It is a condition of entitlement to income support that a claimant is available for employment. A student during the period of study, is not to be treated as available for employment in accordance with reg. 10(1)(h), Income Support (General) Regulations.
The tribunal are satisfied that the claimant falls within the definition of student contained in regulation 61 and that his course was full-time.
In arriving at this conclusion, the tribunal considered carefully the letter dated 31 May 1994 from the Council of Legal Education. It is clear that the School of Law declined to designate itself either full-time or part-time. References to Community Charge Regulations does not assist.
The fact that there are other students on the course who perhaps work part-time or attend other courses at the same time, as referred to in the said letter, is also inconclusive.
It is clear from R(SB) 40/83 that "it is the course and not the student which is to be full-time". Perhaps of equal significance is the statement that "the number of hours the student actually attends is irrelevant"."
The tribunal, on the terms of the letter referred to, held that the total number of hours required to achieve the necessary standard on the course was 35 per week for 30 weeks. The tribunal went on to distinguish the case R(SB) 25/87, in which a qualified barrister claimed income support during his pupilage. That decision held that to constitute a course, there had to be some set form of curriculum, and that a course of study had to be implemented through an organisation whose primary purpose was education. The reasons continue:
"In view of these conclusions, it is not necessary to consider the availability of the claimant for work as if he was on a part-time course or not a student."
"A person ... aged 19 or over but under pensionable age who is attending a full-time course of study at an educational establishment; and for the purposes of this definition-
(a) a person who has started on such a course shall be treated as attending it throughout any period of term or vacation within it, until the last day of the course or such earlier date as he abandons it or is dismissed from it ..."
Date: 16 April 1996 (signed) Mr. M. Heald QC
Commissioner