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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 >> [1999] UKSSCSC CSIB_611_1998 (21 April 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/1999/CSIB_611_1998.html Cite as: [1999] UKSSCSC CSIB_611_1998 |
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[1999] UKSSCSC CSIB_611_1998 (21 April 1999)
DECISION OF SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
"..such information as the Secretary of State may request in the form of a questionnaire relating to a person's ability to perform the activities referred to in the Schedule". (Regulation 6(1)(b).)
Regulation 7 of the same regulations provides as follows:-
"7.-(1) Where a person fails without good cause to comply with a request of the Secretary of State to provide the information referred to in regulation 6(1)(b) (All Work Test questionnaire) he shall, subject to paragraph (2), be treated as capable of work.
(2) A person shall not be treated as capable of work under paragraph (1) unless –
(a) at least 6 weeks have elapsed since the Secretary of State sent that person the first request for that information: and
(b) the Secretary of State has sent that person a further request at least 4 weeks after the first, and at least 2 weeks have elapsed since that further request was sent."
Having regard to the dated upon which the Department claimed to have taken action, the time requirements of the above regulation were fulfilled. Regulation 9 of the same regulations provides for certain matters to be taken into account in determining whether a person has good cause for failing to provide information under regulation 7 or to attend a medical examination under regulation 8. None of the specified matters had any bearing in the present case.
(Signed)
J G Mitchell QC
Commissioner
Date: 21 April 1999
APPENDIX
"20. It is necessary briefly to consider the provisions which operate where a claimant's incapacity for work began before 13 April 1995, under the sickness/invalidity benefit regime, and continued after that date. The Social Security (Incapacity Benefit) (Transitional) Regulations 1995 (the Transitional Regulations), despite their name, contain provisions dealing with the general transition from the old test to the new tests of incapacity. Regulation 30 provides:
"30. A person's continued enjoyment on or after the appointed day [13 April 1995] of severe disablement allowance or any other advantage under any provision for the purposes of which Part XIIA of the 1992 Act [the Contributions and Benefits Act] applies shall, except as provided in regulation 31, be subject to satisfying the tests of incapacity under that Part of the 1992 Act."
Being entitled to have earnings credited or being accepted as incapable of work for the purposes of such entitlement is an advantage to which regulation 30 applies. So, in my judgment, is an entitlement to income support without being required to be available for employment or with the allowance of the disability premium on grounds of incapacity for work.
21. Regulation 31(1), as in force prior to 6 January 1997, provides:
"(1) Where it has been determined that a person is incapable of work for any purpose of the 1992 Act immediately before the appointed day and on or after the appointed day the all work test applies to him, he shall not be required to satisfy or be treated as having satisfied the condition of entitlement that he is incapable of work in accordance with that test until he has been assessed as to incapacity for work in accordance with regulations made under section 171C of the 1992 Act (the all work test) or until it is determined that he falls within one of the cases mentioned in paragraph (5), so long as he satisfies the condition in paragraph (2)."
The condition in regulation 31(2) is of providing evidence of incapacity in respect of each day under the Social Security (Medical Evidence) Regulations 1976. Anyone who comes within one of the categories set out in regulation 31(5) is deemed to be incapable of work under the all work test, in some cases without having to provide medical evidence. None of those categories is relevant in the present case."
"[Regulation 31(1)] .. provides that a person is not required to satisfy the condition of entitlement of being incapable of work until the all work assessment is actually carried out, so long as evidence of incapacity is provided and the person is not [otherwise] deemed to be incapable of work. The effect is that, although regulation 30 requires satisfaction of the test of incapacity for work, regulation 31(1) removes that requirement until the assessment is carried out ..."
"31.-(1) Where it has been determined that a person is incapable of work for any purpose of the 1992 Act immediately before the appointed day and he continues to be incapable of work on or after the appointed day, the all work test shall apply to him, but he shall not be required to satisfy or be treated as having satisfied the condition of entitlement that he is incapable of work in accordance with that test until he has been assessed as to incapacity for work in accordance with regulations made under section 171C of the 1992 Act (the all work test), so long as he satisfies the condition in paragraph (2)."
The amendment makes it more clear that the all work test applies in such a case after the appointed day despite continuing incapacity as vouched under the old regime. The provision that the claimant "shall not .. be treated as having satisfied" the test points to the difference between a transitional case and one coming under the General Regulations where the issue of incapacity first arises after the appointed day. However it is noteworthy that regulation 28 of the General Regulations which treats the all work test as satisfied until assessment makes express reference to the alternative possibility of the person being treated as capable of work under regulations 7 or 8.
"(3) Regulations may provide that where the all work test applies the test shall, if prescribed conditions are met, be treated as satisfied until the person has been assessed or he falls to be treated as capable of work in accordance with regulations under section 171A(2) or (3) above..." (my emphasis)
Section 171A(1) to (3) of the 1992 Act provides as follows:-
"(1) For the purposes of this Act, save as otherwise expressly provided, whether a person is capable or incapable of work shall be determined in accordance with the provisions of this Part of this Act.
(2) Regulations may make provision as to –
(a) the information or evidence required for the purpose of determining whether a person is capable or incapable of work, and
(b) the manner in which that information or evidence is to be provided,
and may provide that if a person without good cause fails to provide that information or evidence, or to do so in the manner required, he shall be treated as capable of work.
(3) Regulations may provide that in any case where a question arises as to whether a person is capable of work –
(a) he may be called to attend for such medical examination as may be required in accordance with regulations, and
(b) if he fails without good cause to attend for or submit himself to such examination, he shall be treated as capable of work."
"(1) the condition under regulation 30 for the continued enjoyment of the advantage of credits is not satisfied;
(2) the specific applicability of the all work test to such a claimant opens the way to enable the operation of regulation 7 (or 8) of the General Regulations in a transitional case, notwithstanding the omission of any direct reference to their possible operation in the latter part of regulation 31(1) as a further possible limitation of the exemption in that paragraph; and accordingly
(3) a decision after the appointed day treating a claimant as capable of work under regulation 7 can competently be made to interrupt the exemption under regulation 31(1) at least for the period in which that decision has effect.