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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 CIS_3338_2001 (15 April 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2002/CIS_3338_2001.html Cite as: [2002] UKSSCSC CIS_3338_2001 |
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[2002] UKSSCSC CIS_3338_2001 (15 April 2002)
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
Commissioner's File No.: CIS 3338 2001
at Sheffield on 10 May 2001 is wrong in law and so must be set aside. It is not possible for me to determine the claimant's appeal on its merits as further findings of fact need to be made. Therefore this matter must now be reheard by a new appeal tribunal. The fact that the claimant's appeal to the Commissioner has succeeded should not be taken as any indication as to the outcome of the rehearing before the new tribunal. The new tribunal will consider all the relevant evidence afresh. It follows that ultimately it may arrive at the same conclusion as the first tribunal or it may reach a different outcome.
[Claimant]: "I don't know what happened. I didn't [fill] the form [in] myself. Two or three people came to my house. They said from Benefits Agency. They asked me questions and I gave the answers. At the end they didn't give me forms to read over. I didn't read over the form. I signed it without reading it over. I signed that the officer had not read back the form."
[Claimant's sister]: "Three weeks before the forms were completed correctly. Now the form was completed incorrectly. Why wasn't it spotted."
"[The claimant] made a misrepresentation on her application form to benefit dated 8/7/99. As a result of that income support in the sum of £1710.13 from 15.7.97 to 25.1.99 was overpaid to her and that sum is recoverable. In putting her signature in the two boxes on the last page of the claim form [the claimant] adopted all the representations contained in it even if they represented an incorrect record of the answers she gave to the questions asked."
"Being as the BA Social Security have stolen my income support of which is NI in which case you have committed fraud I've had no choice but to report it to the police…"
It is also headed "replied from a person of whom has severe illness". There are similarly confused comments annotated by the claimant on correspondence from the Department. Thirdly, the standard form Appeals Service enquiry document, completed by the claimant prior to the appeal, listed a local solicitor as her representative. In addition, in response to the inquiry about special needs, the claimant had written "being as I've sever illness I have to take things a bit slow". The case file also includes a letter from the claimant's named solicitor representative received before the hearing and stating that they were no longer instructed by her. The combination of factors referred to above in my view was such that the tribunal should, in fairness to the claimant, have actively canvassed the possibility of an adjournment to enable her to obtain representation.
"I do of course accept that it is not every refusal of a request for postponement that can give rise to a breach of natural justice, and the procedure for a tribunal to adopt is generally for it to determine. However if the right of appeal to a tribunal against departmental decisions is to mean anything at all there must not only be, but also be seen to be, a fair and proper opportunity for the claimant's case, for whatever it is worth, to be put before the tribunal on his or her behalf in a way that enables the material points to be raised adequately. The normal right to have this done through the means of a representative of the claimant's choice is of particular importance where the claimant is a disadvantaged or illiterate person as in this case. It seems to me that in such circumstances a tribunal should be particularly hesitant in going ahead on its own despite a request made on reasonable grounds by a responsible representative so that proper advice and representation can be provided" (para. 9).
Although in the present case there had been no explicit prior request for a postponement, in my view the same principle applies.
(Signed) N J Wikeley
Deputy Commissioner
(Date) 17 April 2002