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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 CI_3759_2003 (22 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2004/CI_3759_2003.html Cite as: [2004] UKSSCSC CI_3759_2003 |
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[2004] UKSSCSC CI_3759_2003 (22 January 2004)
CI 3758 and 3759 2003
DECISIONS OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER ON THE APPLICATIONS AND APPEALS
I grant permission to the claimant to appeal in both cases and, with the consent of both parties, allow the appeals.
The claimant and appellant is appealing against the decisions of the Swansea appeal tribunal on 22 April 2003 under reference U 03 204 2002 01730 (file no. 3759) and U 03 203 2002 02681 (file no. 3759).
For the reasons below, the decisions of the tribunal are wrong in law. I set them aside. The appeals are to be reheard.
DIRECTIONS FOR REHEARING
A The appeals are referred to a new appeal tribunal for a full rehearing in accordance with the directions given in this decision: Social Security Act 1998, s. 14(8) and (9). They are to be heard concurrently or consecutively as the chairman shall decide.
B The rehearing is to be by a tribunal not including any member of the previous tribunals that considered this case. For reasons of fairness, it should also not include anyone who was a member of the disability appeal tribunal that considered the claimant's disability living allowance appeal, unless the parties consent to that.
C The tribunal will conduct an oral hearing.
D The tribunal should note the guidance on assessment of disablement noted below, and should ignore the approach taken by the previous tribunal to assessment.
REASONS FOR THESE DECISIONS
The tribunal decisions
In connection with the disability living allowance claim, the evidence in the examining medical practitioner's report is of someone whose ability to walk is severely limited by pain. A tribunal found that this was such as to render him virtually unable to walk because of the severe discomfort. Any assessment by this tribunal should have taken that evidence into account, and I do not understand the statement of this tribunal that that evidence "does not affect our decision".
Setting the level of disablement
The Medical Assessment Framework
We are, as indeed examining assessors are, guided by what are called Medical Assessment Frameworks, by statutes such as the War Pensions Act, and by General Benefit Regulations of 1982. All of these documents available to ourselves and indeed to examining medical assessors give guidance with regard to specific injuries.
That is fundamentally wrong. If that is the approach this tribunal took, then it undermines the whole independence of the tribunal. If it was guided by (underlining mine) the Departmental Framework, it was patently in breach of its duty of fairness to both parties under common law and to preserve an equality of arms between the parties as required by Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights. It cannot be emphasised too strongly that the Medical Assessment Framework does not give guidance to tribunals. It states the views of a government department that happens to be one of the parties before the tribunal in this appeal and it may explain those views, but it is no more than that.
If … victims of negligence are to feel that justice has been done, they must be treated consistently. These guidelines assist with that task in that they provide an almost up-to-the-minute distillation of the damages that are being awarded by courts throughout England and Wales. Anyone using this book, and everyone concerned with the assessment of such damages would be wise to use it, will swiftly be able to identify the scale of the damages that are being awarded …
I have included the sums in the annex although they are of indirect relevance to industrial injuries assessment. But the general approach and the views of Lord Phillips are, with respect, as relevant here as in the civil courts. (I defer to my Scottish colleagues with respect to cases in Scotland).
David Williams
Commissioner
22 January 2004
[Signed on the original on the date shown]
ANNEX TO CI 3758 and 3759 2003:
Extract from JSB Guidelines for the Assessment of General Damages in Personal Injuries Cases, 6th edition, Oxford University Press, 2002, chapter 6, Orthopaedic Injuries, pp 31 -32.
Back injuries
Relatively few back injuries which do not give rise to paralysis command awards above about £25,000. In those that do there are special features.
(a) severe
(i) Cases of the most severe injury which do not involve paralysis but where they may be very serious consequences not normally found in cases of back injury, such as impotence or double incontinence. £52,000 to £87,500.
(ii) Cases which have special features taking them outside any lower bracket applicable to orthopaedic injury to the back. Such features include impaired bladder and bowel function, severe sexual difficulties and unsightly scarring and the possibility of future surgery. In the region of £42,500.
(iii) Cases of disc lesions or fractures of discs or of vertebral bodies where, despite treatment, there remain disabilities such as continuing severe pain and discomfort, impaired agility, impaired sexual function, depression, personality change, alcoholism, unemployability and the risk of arthritis. £20,000 to £36,000.
(b) moderate
(i) Cases where any residual disability is of less severity than that in (a)(iii) above. The bracket contains a wide variety of injuries. Examples are a case of crush fracture of the lumbar vertebrae where there is substantial risk of osteoarthritis and constant pain and discomfort with impairment of sexual function; that of a traumatic spondylolisthesis with continuous pain and a probability that spinal fusion will be necessary; or that of a prolapsed intervertebral disc with substantial acceleration of back degeneration. £14,500 to £20,000.
(ii) Many frequently encountered injuries to the back such as disturbance of ligaments and muscles giving rise to backache, soft tissue injuries resulting in exacerbation of an existing back condition or prolapsed discs necessitating laminectomy or resulting in repeated relapses. The precise figure depends upon the severity of the original injury and/or whether there is some permanent or chronic disability. £6,500 to £14,500.
(c) minor
Stains, sprains, disc prolapses and soft tissue injuries from which a full recovery or recovery to "nuisance" level has been made without surgery:
(i) within about 5 years - £4,000 to £7,000;
(ii) within about two years: - up to £4,000.