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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 CDLA_944_2001 (02 January 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2002/CDLA_944_2001.html Cite as: [2002] UKSSCSC CDLA_944_2001 |
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JMH/SH/IW
[Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture]
THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONERS
Commissioner's Case No: CDLA/944/2001
SOCIAL SECURITY ACT 1998
APPEAL FROM DECISION OF AN APPEAL TRIBUNAL
ON A QUESTION OF LAW
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
MR COMMISSIONER J M HENTY
It is not appropriate for me to make any findings on the basis of that opinion, but, in passing, I would note that para 6.1 prima facie is not helpful to the claimant's case. It will be admissible before the new tribunal and I direct it be added to this file.
"It was submitted that [the claimant] is in constant need of supervision. However, we did not accept that these problems arise as a result of a disordered mental condition: it appears that they are simply behavioural. In support of this, we noted that, again, [the claimant] takes no medication for any psychiatric condition, and has never been referred to a psychiatrist or for any hospital treatment for psychiatric problems. There is no diagnosis of any mental condition. All the evidence indicates, as submitted by the Presenting Officer, that as in R(A) 2/92 [the claimant's] problems arise from a defective character rather than a disabling condition."
They concluded that the appeal should be dismissed.
(1) R(A) 2/92. [4.6.91]
When granting leave to appeal, the then Chief Commissioner posed the following question:-
"Is it right under section 35(1) Social Security Act 1975 [now in effect section 72(1)(b)] to reframe the statutory words 'so severely disabled physically or mentally that … he requires …' into a question treated as determinative of whether a person is suffering from a severe mental or physical disability and to sever the language of the subsection?"
The Commissioner answered that question at para 10 as follows:-
" 10. I would answer the question posed at the time leave to appeal was given in the affirmative. Clearly where a person indulges in aggressive or seriously irresponsible conduct the Board has to consider whether that arises from some recognised disordered mental condition or whether it merely arises from a defective character. In my judgment that was what the Board did in the case before me and they are not to be faulted."
That would not appear to admit of any ambiguity .
(2) CDLA/15892/96 [7.10.98]
In para 6 the Commissioner said:-
" 6. At each stage the adjudication officers and the tribunal took the view that the claimant was not suffering from any severe or mental disability giving rise to his need for care. However, the tribunal itself found as a fact that the claimant 'suffers from persistent nocturnal enuresis requiring attendance …'. It seems to me that to suffer from enuresis is to suffer from a disability. Whether it is physical or mental in origin, or whether its origin can or cannot be established, is irrelevant. The parties have referred to the several decisions by Commissioners in relation to the meaning of the words in section 72(1) but in my view it is not necessary to go further in this case than the plain meaning of the words of the section. If the claimant suffers from a disability, the question is whether he is so severely disabled that he reasonably requires the specified attention. The Act does not require that the claimant suffers from a 'severe disability'. It requires that the claimant suffers from a disability which has an effect of a particular severity."
(3) The Common Appendix to CDLA/15467/96 and others [9.2.99]
In para 8 of the Appendix, the same Commissioner said:-
"In order to decide whether a claimant is 'disabled physically or mentally' the tribunal must take into account all relevant medical and other evidence. It would be wrong to reach a conclusion on this without doing so or to treat it as a preliminary issue in the sense of disregarding the evidence as to the effect of the claimed difficulties or problems. A medical report describing or confirming a well established or well known diagnosis (such as 'fractured leg' or 'severe learning difficulties') or a 'clinically well-recognised illness') … might settle this particular issue. However, that does not mean that the absence of such a report, diagnosis or illness must inevitably lead to the conclusion that the words of the statute do not apply. The state of medical knowledge is neither certain nor static. The tribunal should consider the manifestations of a condition and the actions and abilities of the claimant together with any other evidence. The fact that no diagnosis has or has yet to be made, or that no label has been given or has yet been invented for the condition, does not deprive the tribunal of its jurisdiction and responsibility to decide the issue. … in particular, it would be unjust to have different results in two cases, one where the evidence or specific manifestations had been presented to the tribunal without a label, and one where evidence of the same manifestations had been presented together with a label.."
(4) R(DLA) 2/00 [10.8.99]
In para 15 of that decision the Commissioner in that case commented as follows:-
" 15. There are however issues which have not been properly resolved in that regard. The first of these is whether enuresis is a physical or mental disablement. That was an issue which was raised in CSDLA/296/1998 and which was not addressed by the tribunal. It is a crucial issue as a physical or mental disablement is required before entitlement to the allowance can be established. That is clearly set out in R(A) 2/92 where Mr Commissioner Skinner said 'clearly where a person indulges in aggressive or serious irresponsible conduct the Board has to concede whether that arises from some recognised disordered mental condition or whether it arises from a defective character.' There is a recent authority by Mr Commissioner Levenson in the appendix to CDLA/15467/1996 in paragraphs 8 and 10. In particular in paragraph 10 the Commissioner quotes what he said in CDLA/15892/1996, put it this way:-
"It seems to me that to suffer from enuresis is to suffer from a disability. Whether it is physical or mental in origin, or whether its origin can or cannot be established is irrelevant."
I do not accept that as a sound statement of law. It is contrary to the views reached by Mr Commissioner Skinner in R(A) 2/92 which as a reported decision had the assent of the majority of Commissioners. I am satisfied that the establishment of a disability caused by a medically recognised, physical or mental condition is an essential pre-requisite. To hold otherwise would broaden the scope of disability allowance far beyond what is envisaged by the statute."
I would also make the same comment here namely that this is a reported decision.
(5) CDLA/787/1998 [3.11.99]
In that case the Commissioner said:-
"24. It has been held that 'severely disabled physically or mentally' relates to a condition of body or mind that can be defined medically:-- see the decisions of the Commissioners in CA/123/1999, paragraph 4 and R(A) 2/90 to paragraphs 7 and 8. I must follow those decisions as a matter of comity and in the interests of certainty (see the decision of the Tribunal of Commissioners in R(I) 12/75, paragraph 21), unless they (a) are clearly wrong, (b) have been overruled or (c) can be distinguished. None of these conditions is satisfied.
And later on the Commissioner commented:-
" 44.4 Although the claimant's problems might involve the mind, it was not in the same sense as major disorder. Conduct disorders were distinguished from sickness. Sickness involved one or more of these elements: threat, pain, limitation, transmissibility, or implications outside itself (or serious disease). The symptoms of conduct disorders, unlike those of sickness, could be reproduced at will."
(6) Finally there is the decision of a Deputy Commissioner in CDLA/948/2000 [1.6.2001].
In that the Deputy Commissioner said:-
" 24. The representative of the Secretary of State has contended that the establishment of a disability caused by a medically recognised, physical or mental condition is an essential pre-requisite for the award of either component of disability living allowance. It appears to be to follow from the decision cited above that, except to the extent that there must be physical disablement for the purposes of higher rate mobility, the cause of the disability is not decisive. This follows from the decision of Mr Commissioner Levenson … [those cited above] Mr Commissioner Levenson held that the words 'physically' and 'mentally' were ordinary words of the English language to be understood in the ordinary way by members of the tribunal they are to be applied in the way required by law and that the focus of section 72 SSC BA 1992 was on the needs of claimants and their ability to cope without assistance rather than any specified diagnosis."
He then sets out paragraph 8 of the Appendix which I have set out above.
" 25. I agree with that statement of the law and it should be adopted by the new tribunal determining this case."
In paragraph 26, he referred to the passage I have cited from CDLA/15892/1996 and, at paragraph 27, he noted the decision in R(DLA) 2/00. He then continued:-
" 28. I cannot agree that there is any conflict between the decisions of Mr Commissioner Levenson and R(A) 2/92. In R(A) 2/92 the issue was whether the claimant suffered from a mental disability at all, not whether it was necessary to resolve a dispute as to which of the two mental disabilities he suffered from. The use of the word 'recognised' in R(A) 2/92 must be read in this context. Mr Commissioner Skinner was not considering a situation in which there was plainly a disability and the only question was which one, and in my judgment he had meant no more than that the condition in question must be medically recognised as a disability.
29. Nor can I agree with Mr Commissioner May's suggestion that this approach would broaden the scope of disability allowance far beyond what is envisaged by the statute. The statute does not say that the disability must be identified, and I cannot see that a dispute between doctors, or the absence of a precise diagnosis of the disability can possibly have been intended by Parliament to take out of benefit the unfortunate sufferer who would qualify whichever of the possible diagnoses eventually proved to be right. Indeed, this approach is inconsistent with the approach of other Commissioners in later decisions referred to above."
Psychoses
Schizophrenia
Severe depressive disorder
Neuroses
Personality disorders
Disassociative disorders, hysteria and bsomapoform disorders
Factitious disorders.
Finally, there is a caution about malingering, which is stated to be the fraudulent imitation or exaggeration of symptoms.
(Signed) J M Henty
Commissioner
(Date) 2 January 2002