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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 >> [2007] UKSSCSC CIB_52_2007 (22 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2007/CIB_52_2007.html Cite as: [2007] UKSSCSC CIB_52_2007 |
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[2007] UKSSCSC CIB_52_2007 (22 May 2007)
PLH Commissioner's Files: CIS 51/07 & CIB 52/07
SOCIAL SECURITY ACTS 1992-1998
APPEAL FROM DECISION OF APPEAL TRIBUNAL
ON A QUESTION OF LAW
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
Claims for: Income Support & Incapacity Benefit
Appeal Tribunal: Manchester
Tribunal Case Ref: U/06/929/2006/01531 & 02530
Tribunal date: 7 September 2006
Reasons issued: 23 October 2006
"Although the Secretary of State has accepted the claim for incapacity benefit received on 10.01.06 as in sufficient manner to be a claim for benefit I am not satisfied that it is a valid claim for benefit. This is because [the claimant] has failed to provide proof of his identity and address."
"This appeal is about whether or not the appellant satisfied the evidence requirements."
What was thus challenged in the appeal was the correctness of the two decisions whose effect was that he got no award of benefit because those requirements were not considered to be satisfied on either claim.
"As I see it, issues in appeal are whether the information which appellant was required to give was reasonably required in relation to appellant's incapacity benefit/income support claims, and whether appellant provided the information and whether a reasonable time was given to appellant to provide it."
"7. (1) … every person who makes a claim for benefit shall furnish such certificates, documents, information and evidence in connection with the claim, or any question arising out of it, as may be required by the Secretary of State … and shall do so within one month of being required to do so or such longer period as the Secretary of State … may consider reasonable."
At the risk of stating the blindingly obvious, this is a provision that applies in relation to claims once they have been made in a procedurally effective manner so that they have got to be processed: it enables the Secretary of State to require any additional or confirmatory information or evidence to ensure that they are processed properly, so that claimants are awarded the benefit to which they are shown to be entitled, and not awarded benefits to which they are not.
"There was genuine doubt about the identity of the claimant, … his address and his national insurance number. The Secretary of State had caused all enquiries to be made which could reasonably be expected to be made in order to resolve the doubts and ambiguities in the claim forms and had given sufficient time for the claimant to respond.
The claim forms were requested on 06/01/06 and lodged on 10/01/06. The first letter was sent to the claimant on 27/01/06 but no response was received. The second letter was sent to him on 22/02/06. No response had been received over a month later. It was reasonable for the Secretary of State to require the additional information requested in those letters. The claimant had been given ample time to provide the information requested but he failed to do so.
The Secretary of State therefore reasonably and properly decided on 29/03/06 that [the claimant] was not entitled to income support and on 31/03/06 that he was not entitled to incapacity benefit on the grounds that he had not provided within the time reasonably allowed the evidence required in connection with his claims."
"The claim forms were therefore defective and the claims for income support and incapacity benefit not validly made."
That additional comment appears to me to fall into the trap of confusing the two things which for the reasons given above I think have to be kept separate, namely whether there is something that can be identified as procedurally effective to constitute a claim requiring the adjudication process to be set in motion, and whether in the course of that process once there is such a claim the information provided by the claimant on or in connection with it establishes that the conditions for entitlement to benefit are met. Plainly from the whole of what she had said in her statement of reasons down to that final sentence, and the way in which she approached and decided the substance of the questions on the appeal in terms of regulation 7 and of entitlement, the chairman had approached the entire case on the basis that this was within the second of those categories and in my judgment she was quite right to do so. In that context I do not think her final sentence can be fairly read as showing that she really misdirected herself as to what the entire case was about, or considered it was to do with some unidentified procedural defect in the claim form: and for practical purposes I think it best simply disregarded as an immaterial though unfortunate confusion of expression, perhaps partly due to the confused procedural history and documents with which she was having to cope.
(Signed)
P L Howell
Commissioner
22 May 2007