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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 >> [2003] UKSSCSC CDLA_4958_2002 (11 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2003/CDLA_4958_2002.html Cite as: [2003] UKSSCSC CDLA_4958_2002 |
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CDLA 4958 2002
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
This is a renewal claim following the expiry of a two year award. I can see no valid reason why the previous award of middle rate of the care component was limited to two years (that her needs might change is not a valid reason), but there was no appeal against that earlier decision and it is now final.
I grant permission because of the view taken by the tribunal about cooking ability. The tribunal concludes that the claimant "would be able to drain vegetables using a slotted spoon which would remove the need to remove pans." This fails to explain how one can cook without using pans. Who puts the pans on the cooker/hob and who takes them off? How does use of a slotted spoon solve that problem? The Secretary of State specifically asked the examining medical practitioner to report on the ability of the claimant to move hot pans, but the examining medical practitioner said she could not lift pans. The remark was not limited to hot pans. References to a slotted spoon appears to have emerged from CDLA 5686 1999 as an example of a device to help prepare a cooked main meal. There was an argument in that case that the tribunal erred in law by suggesting that a claimant could remove food from hot pans by using a slotted spoon. But that only deals with one aspect of preparing a cooked main meal at issue in that case.
As CDLA 5686 1999 makes clear, this has to be seen as part of the overall objective test discussed in R(DLA) 2/95. It is a question of fact. This tribunal seems to have turned it round to infer that the use (or , more correctly in this case, assumed use) of a slotted spoon removes the need to move pans at all. It is not obvious to me how as a matter of fact anyone can be said to be able reasonably to carry out activities of the kind necessary prepare a cooked main meal for himself or herself (R (DLA) 2/95) if, as in this case, he or she must do so without using an oven or otherwise bending, without lifting pans or anything similar, and without preparing vegetables or performing similar acts unless sitting down (the conclusions that follow from the opinions of the examining medical practitioner in broadly similar terms to the evidence of the claimant herself, who added that she could not lift things out of a fridge). If this was the view of the tribunal, it has failed to explain it adequately. Nor, more specifically, do I see any express evidence in this case on which the tribunal could base its comment that the claimant could definitely use a slotted spoon as suggested, as the claimant was not at the hearing, or a specific finding that she could use such a spoon. That appears to have been assumed.
There is a separate issue about whether this decision should await the decision of the House of Lords about consideration of the Moyna case (whether "most of the time" or "regularly" is the right test for disability living allowance). But I do not consider that this appeal need await that decision.
David Williams
Commissioner
27 February 2003
[Signed on the original on the date shown]