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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 >> [2004] UKSSCSC CDLA_1670_2004 (24 September 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2004/CDLA_1670_2004.html Cite as: [2004] UKSSCSC CDLA_1670_2004 |
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[2004] UKSSCSC CDLA_1670_2004 (24 September 2004)
CDLA 1670 2004
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
REASONS FOR THIS DECISION
Would you have problems because of your illness or disability if you prepared a cooked main meal for yourself?
We mean cooking proper meals on a traditional cooker, not using a microwave
or convenience foods. Some example might be that you cannot:
- plan the meal
- peel or chop vegetables
- use taps
- use a cooker
- use cooking or kitchen tools
- cope with hot pans
- tell when food is cooked properly.
Claimants are then invited to:
Describe in your own words the problems you would have and the help you would
need if you prepared a cooked main meal for yourself.
This claimant did so at length. I invited a submission from the Secretary of State because the claimant, among her grounds of appeal, challenged the standard wording of the form. The secretary of state's representative did not support any aspect of the appeal.
… a person shall be entitled to the care component of disability living allowance for any period throughout which she is so severely disabled physically or mentally that she cannot prepare a cooked main meal for herself if she has the ingredients.
17. My Lords, there are two points to be made about the "cooking test" in section 72(1)(a)(ii). The first is that its purpose is not to ascertain whether the applicant can survive, or enjoy a reasonable diet, without assistance. It is a notional test, a thought-experiment, to calibrate the severity of the disability. It does not matter whether the applicant actually needs to cook. As the form DLA 1 said, "try to imagine how much help you would need if you tried to do this." No doubt some people (disabled or otherwise) do need to cook or prefer to do so, although home cooking seems to be fighting a losing battle against convenience foods and ready-cooked meals. Not for nothing is the notional meal contemplated by the cooking test described in the authorities as "traditional". It must be remembered that disability living allowance is a non-contributory, non-means tested benefit. A person who cannot cook for himself is entitled to the allowance, now £14.90 a week, whether he solves the eating problem by obtaining help, having a wife, buying television dinners or dining at the Savoy. On the other hand, even if a person needs to cook and has the motor skills to do so, he may still need assistance: to obtain the ingredients which the test assumes him to have, or because he is culinarily incompetent. So in my view the Court of Appeal was wrong to lay such emphasis upon the fact that unless the applicant could cook more or less every day, she would not enjoy a reasonable quality of life.
18. That leads on to the second point, which is that the test says nothing about how often the person should be able to cook. It would have been easy for Parliament to say that a person should be able to cook daily or six times a week or whatever. Instead, the statute approaches the question of frequency in a different way. Section 72(2) contemplates that one should be able to say of someone throughout a nine month period that he is a person whose disability is such that he cannot cook a main meal. What does this mean? One possible construction is that if there was a single occasion during the period when a remission in his disability would have allowed him to cook a meal, it cannot be said that throughout the period he was unable to do so. But the Secretary of State does not contend for this construction and I do not think that it would be right. That is not because one occasion is de minimis but because the test does not in my opinion function at that day to day level. It involves looking at the whole period and saying whether, in a more general sense, the person can fairly be described as a person who is unable to cook a meal. It is an exercise in judgment rather than an arithmetical calculation of frequency.
19. I therefore agree with the commissioner that the question involves taking "a broad view of the matter and reaching a judgment".
David Williams
Commissioner
24 August 2004
[Signed on the original on the date shown]