BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2004] UKSSCSC CDLA_492_2004 (30 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2004/CDLA_492_2004.html Cite as: [2004] UKSSCSC CDLA_492_2004 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
[2004] UKSSCSC CDLA_492_2004 (30 June 2004)
CDLA/5465/2002 and CDLA/492/2004
In Case No CDLA/5465/2002, the claimant's appeal is formally allowed, and the decision of the East Ham Appeal Tribunal dated 15 August 2002 set aside. However, the following decision, to the same effect, is substituted, namely that the Secretary of State's decision of 21 March 2002 be confirmed. The claimant is therefore entitled to the lower rate mobility component and lowest rate (but not the middle rate) care component of her Disability Living Allowance for the period 30 April 2002 to 29 April 2005.
In Case No CDLA/492/2004, the claimant's appeal is formally allowed, and the decision of the Harrow Appeal Tribunal dated 14 October 2003 set aside. However, the following decision, to the same effect, is substituted, namely that the Secretary of State's decision of 25 February 2003 be confirmed. The claimant is therefore entitled to the lower rate mobility component and middle rate (but not the highest rate) care component of his Disability Living Allowance for the period 7 June 2003 to 6 June 2005.
Introduction
Statutory Criteria for DLA
"… a person shall be entitled to the care component of a disability living allowance for any period throughout which
(a) he is so severely disabled physically or mentally that
(i) he requires in connection with his bodily functions attention from another person for a significant portion of the day (whether during a single period or a number of periods); or
(ii) he cannot prepare a cooked main meal for himself if he has the ingredients; or
(b) he is so severely disabled physically or mentally that, by day, he requires from another person
(i) frequent attention throughout the day in connection with his bodily functions; or
(ii) continual supervision throughout the day in order to avoid substantial danger to himself or others; or
(c) he is so severely disabled physically or mentally, that, at night,
(i) he requires from another person prolonged or repeated attention in connection with his bodily functions; or(ii) in order to avoid substantial danger to himself or others he requires another person to be awake for a prolonged period or at frequent intervals for the purpose of watching over him."
The Proper Approach to the Section 72(1) Requirements
"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 [i.e. from three months before the effective date of the decision to six months after that date: see Paragraph 4 above] 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 making a judgment. The standard of motor abilities required by the cooking test is not so precise as to allow calibration by arithmetical formula. In the present case, I think that the Court of Appeal attached too much weight to the fact that in her claim form Mrs Moyna had ticked the box "one to three days" for the event to which she needed help with heavy pans, cutting vegetables and so forth. In answering the generalised question of whether Mrs Moyna could fairly be described as a person unable to cook, it may be relevant to consider not only the number of occasions on which she says she would need assistance but also the reasons why it would be needed. The tribunal went into the matter in some detail. It observed that she could cook for herself using lighter pans and cutting up smaller vegetables. In addition, it had the opinion of the examining doctor and his record of Mrs Moyna's own description of herself as a person who could cook a meal - a description which is, as I have said, not inconsistent with her not being able to do so all the time. These are all items of evidence which go into the decision-making process.
20. In any case in which a tribunal has to apply a standard with a greater or lesser degree of imprecision and to take a number of factors into account, there are bound to be cases in which it will be impossible for a reviewing court to say that the tribunal must have erred in law in deciding the case either way: see George Mitchell (Chesterhall) Ltd v Finney Lock Seeds Ltd [1983] 2 AC 803, 815-816. I respectfully think that it was unrealistic of Kay LJ to think that he was able to sharpen the test to produce only one right answer. In my opinion the Commissioner was right to say that whether or not he would have arrived at the same conclusion, the decision of the tribunal disclosed no error of law."
"I think the delegate should take a broad view of the matter, asking himself some such question as whether in the whole circumstances the words in the statute do or do not as a matter of ordinary usage of the English language cover or apply to the facts."
This has been regularly reiterated by Commissioners. For example, in CSA/8/1996 (Paragraph 17), Mr Commissioner May QC said of the question raised by Section 72(1)(b)(i):
"… [It] is essentially a jury one relating to facts. It is to be approached broadly. If properly approached and recorded it will not be disturbed on appeal."
(i) As I indicate above, a determination as to whether a criterion has been satisfied cannot be made by reference to an inflexible benchmark. Therefore, for example, in relation to whether the night-time criteria of Section 72(1)(c)(ii) are satisfied, although no doubt the number of nights upon which a claimant requires "prolonged or repeated attention" is a relevant factor which a decision-maker must take into account, a claimant does not automatically fail to satisfy that condition merely because (e.g.) he does not satisfy the criteria for at least a majority of the nights of the week. Similarly, a person may satisfy the requirements of a provision "throughout" a period, even if he does not satisfy the statutory criteria for a majority of the days of the week. By way of further example, although "prolonged" may "seem to be accepted by decision-makers to mean 20 minutes or more" (Social Security Legislation 2003 Vol 1 Paragraph 1.205), "prolonged attention" cannot be expressed in a given number of minutes (e.g. 20 minutes), beyond which attention is invariably "prolonged" and within which it is invariably not "prolonged".
(ii) However, although the discretion of the decision-maker or tribunal must be actively exercised in each case, this does not mean that they cannot have cognisance of any sort of guideline. For example, although it cannot be said that attention of less than X minutes cannot in any circumstances be "prolonged", it is difficult to conceive of circumstances in which, say, 3 minutes attention could properly be considered "prolonged" (see R(A) 2/74, Paragraph 35): and a guideline that attention of anything less than 20 minutes is unlikely to be "prolonged" may be at least a reasonable starting point (see CDLA/4024/2003, Paragraph 5)). It is not wrong for decision-makers to have starting point guidance in mind when considering such determinations, so long as they consider each case on its own facts and look for factors which may lead to the guidance being inappropriate in that case (e.g. circumstances that may render attention of less than 20 minutes "prolonged" for the purposes of Section 72(1)(b)(i)).
(iii) As identified by Lord Hoffman, the subsections of Section 72(1) require consideration of a "composite question", and it is unhelpful to regard the test as comprising a number of stages. For example, with regard to Section 72(1)(b)(i), the Secretary of State submitted in his observations to me in Case No CDLA/5465/2002 that this provided for a two-stage test or a test involving two discrete questions, i.e. (i) is the attention required frequently and, if so, (ii) is it required throughout the day. However, this approach is not helpful and may lead to error. The real question is the composite one of whether, throughout the relevant period, the claimant was so severely disabled that, by day, he or she required from another person frequent attention throughout the day in connection with his or her bodily functions.
The need to consider the requirements of Section 72(1) in a composite way is well established in long-standing Commissioners' jurisprudence. Considering provisions of the National Insurance Act 1972 substantively similar to those of Section 72(1)(c), in words resonant with those of Lord Hoffman, Mr Commissioner Shewan said in CSA/2/1973 (Paragraph 8):
"… [T]he statutory condition could not, in my view, be held to be satisfied by evidence that on one solitary occasion the disabled person required prolonged or repeated attention during the night: not, in my view, is it necessary, for the satisfaction of the condition, to show that on every night he requires such attention. The test must be somewhere between these two extremes. I respectfully agree with the statement, in Decision CA 2/73 (Paragraph 13), that "in order to determine whether a condition is satisfied, or is likely to be satisfied, regard must be paid to evidence of the claimant's requirements over a period of time…"."
This composite approach was expressly approved by the Chief Commissioner in R(A) 2/74, to which I have already referred.
(iv) In Lord Hoffman's words, "it is seldom helpful to make additions or substitutions in the actual language he [the author] has actually used". Earlier cases - of both the Commissioners and the courts - which seek to make such additions or substitutions need to be considered with very great caution. It is likely that the propositions for which they have been cited in the past are no longer good. For example, in relation to Section 72(1)(b)(i), with respect I disagree with Mrs Commissioner Parker (in CSDLA/590/2000, Paragraph 43) that the words "frequent… throughout the day" necessarily mean (and could usefully be replaced by) "very often over the course of the whole day". As Lord Hoffman indicated, such attempts at clarification by manipulating the actual words used are unlikely to be helpful, and may lead to error.
Again, if I might venture to say so, this is well established from earlier Commissioners' cases. In R(I) 2/74, the Chief Commissioner Sir Robert Micklethwait QC, having said that there can be no objection to discussion of the component parts of benefits conditions, went on:
"When however the adjudicating authority comes to the point of actual decision of a statutory question, it is then essential for it to decide that question and not some other one. This makes it dangerous for either an adjudicating authority or the forms supplied for its use to use, at the decision stage, language different from that of the statute, which may lead to doubt whether the authority has decided the correct question."
(v) Nor, in relation to the definitions of "frequent", "prolonged" or "repeated" in Section 72(1), do I consider the oft quoted words of the Master of the Rolls in R v National Insurance Commissioner ex parte The Secretary of State for Social Services [1981] 1 WLR 1017 reported as Appendix to R(A) 2/80 to be of any substantial assistance. In that case, Lord Denning MR said:
""Frequently" connotes several times - not once or twice. "Prolonged" means some little time. "Repeated" means more than once at any rate."
In addition to Commissioners' decisions, the learned authors of standard texts refer to these as definitions with apparent support (see, for example, Social Security Legislation 2003 Vol 1 Paragraph 1.205 and The Law of Social Security, 5th Edition, Wikely Ogus & Barendt, page 698). However, although the case provides important authority upon the question of whether "cooking" comes within the words "attention in connection with her bodily needs" (which was the matter in issue), any comments on the meaning of "frequent" or these other words were obiter. More importantly - because obiter dicta of the Court of Appeal are in any event persuasive – in my view, Lord Denning was not purporting to lay down definitions but only identify some obvious characteristics of these words as conventionally used. To say that "repeated" connotes something occurring "more than once" is not only self-evident (as Lord Denning himself clearly appreciated from his addition of the words "at any rate"), but in most cases will not be particularly helpful. "Frequent" clearly does require there to be several occurrences, but the characteristic of frequency is not simply the number of times something occurs, but the rate at which it occurs. "Frequency" is a product of the number of times something occurs over a period of time. "Frequent" does not mean "several", either in conventional usage or in the specific context of Section 72(1).
In my view, with regard to Section 72(1), the words of Lord Denning MR quoted above have attracted a definitional authority neither intended nor warranted. The Master of the Rolls merely made some general and uncontentious comments in respect of the conventional usage of these words. Whilst one can only have respect for the words of Lord Denning - who always used the tools of his trade carefully and skilfully - it is important that his every comment is not clothed with something akin to statutory force. His comments in R v National Insurance Commissioner should not be treated as comprehensively defining these terms in the context of Section 72(1).
(v) Phrases in Section 72(1) such as "frequent… throughout the day" consist of ordinary words not used in any unusual sense (see CA/147/1984). Although context is of course important - and I will return to it - the starting point in the construction of such phrases is the ordinary meaning of the words in conventional usage.
Therefore, by way of example, as I have indicated, "frequent" requires consideration of, not just the number of occasions something occurs, but the time over which they occur: the word having the characteristic of recurrence at intervals which are not long. Whether intervals between occurrences are or are not "long" - and therefore whether occurrences can properly be said to be "frequent" - therefore depends upon a number of factors, particularly the number and pattern of those occurrences over time. The nature of the occurrences themselves is also relevant. For example, "frequent" ice ages properly so-called would be very different in number and pattern from a "frequent" train service properly so-called. Indeed, because the nature of the occurrences is something relevant to the question of whether those occurrences are "frequent", I do not quite agree with Mrs Commissioner Parker (in CSDLA/590/2000) that the proper approach to frequency can take no account of duration of the relevant occurrence (except to exclude instances of attention that are de minimis as she accepts). Although it is often not illuminating to see how words are used in entirely different contexts, in common usage consideration of the frequency of a train service is affected by the length of the journey involved. An hourly service from London to Birmingham may be spoken of as "frequent", but an hourly short local service may not. However, although in my view duration of individual occurrences is not necessarily irrelevant, in relation to periods of attention under Section 72(1)(b)(i) the number and pattern of occurrences will usually be the most relevant - indeed, the overriding - factors in relation to the issue of "frequency".
(vii) However, as well as the conventional usage of the words used, in construing the requirements of the various subsections of Section 72 it is important also to take into account the context of the relevant provisions. The subsections set out sets of criteria for each of three levels of the care component of DLA. Because the tests for the different rates are separate and not logically progressive, there is no strict hierarchy whereby a claimant who does not satisfy the lowest rate criteria (of Section 72(1)(a)) could not logically satisfy the requirements of one of the middle rate tests (see, e.g., CDLA/12150/1996 (Paragraph 12)). It would also be simplistic to suggest that those with disabilities can easily be "graded" for DLA purposes, if only because it is difficult to compare the functional effects of dissimilar disabilities. However, even with these caveats in mind, in construing the provisions of Section 72(1)(b) or (c), it is proper to bear in mind that a person who satisfies those criteria is entitled to over twice the weekly benefit of someone who satisfies only the criteria of Section 72(1)(a). DLA is a benefit which is specifically designed to give different levels of financial assistance in response to different levels of functional disability. It cannot have been Parliament's intention that less disabled people should generally be awarded higher levels of DLA than those who are more disabled. Similarly, although the requirements are clearly different in nature, in construing the requirement of Section 72(1)(b)(i) ("frequent attention throughout the day in connection with his bodily functions"), it is proper to take into account that the same level of benefit is attached to this requirement as the requirement for "continual supervision throughout the day in order to avoid substantial danger to himself or others" (Section 72(1)(b)(ii)).
Therefore, the construction of each set of criteria within Section 72(1) is to an extent informed by not only the DLA scheme as a whole, but also where it falls within the particular scheme of Section 72(1).
CDLA/5465/2002
"7. [The claimant] lives at home with her parents. Undoubtedly they help her in many aspects of her life, however the aim is to make her as independent as she can be…
8. [The claimant] can dress herself. She needs someone to check that all her clothes are the right way around and buttoned correctly before she goes out, as she sometimes has problems with these things. This would take two or three minutes each morning.
9. [The claimant] can bath herself. She needs help washing her hair, in particular to check that she has rinsed out all the shampoo. This is unlikely to be a daily activity. It is likely to occupy no more than five minutes four or five times a week.
10. [The claimant] requires some prompting from another person in relation to her personal care and to eat properly. This is not due to reluctance or recalcitrance and the prompting is routine and quick. It does not amount to a great deal more than the normal exchanges that take place in a household, although the tribunal accept that the prompting is necessary on a daily basis. It may occupy two or three minutes in the morning and in the evening. Her parents are understandably concerned about her diet since she previously was treated for a growth disorder …"
(i) Although the claimant was capable of dressing herself, she required 2-3 minutes attention each morning to ensure she had dressed herself correctly.
(ii) Although the claimant could bathe herself, she required up to 5 minutes attention when she washed her hair to ensure she had rinsed out all the shampoo. She washed her hair 4-5 times per week, either in the morning or evening.
(iii) She required prompting from another person in relation to her personal care and to eat properly. This occupied 2-3 minutes every morning and evening, and a further 2-3 minutes every lunchtime she was at home (about 270 days per year - on about 90 days per year she was at college).
These findings were made by the tribunal, save for that relating to her lunchtime attention requirements, made by me following hearing evidence from the claimant's father.
CDLA/492/2004
"… [A] person shall be entitled to the care component of [DLA] for any period throughout which… he is so severely disabled physically or mentally that, at night… he requires from another person prolonged or repeated attention in connection with his bodily functions…"
(i) He fitted at night once or twice a week.
(ii) This regularity of fitting did not change in the period from the start of 2003 to June 2003.
(iii) He did not fit more than once per night.
(iv) Each fit lasted 15-20 minutes.
(v) Each fit reasonably required attention during the whole time the fit lasted.
His Honour Judge Gary Hickinbottom
Chief Commissioner
30 June 2004
(Signed on original)