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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Secretary of State for Work & Pensions v Deane [2010] EWCA Civ 699 (23 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/699.html Cite as: [2010] AACR 42, [2010] EWCA Civ 699, [2011] WLR 743, [2010] ELR 662, [2011] 1 WLR 743, [2011] PTSR 289 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM UPPER TRIBUNAL
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEAL CHAMBER
HHJ MESHER
CG/449/2008
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE HALLETT
and
LORD JUSTICE HUGHES
____________________
Secretary of State For Work and Pensions |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Amanda Deane |
Respondent |
____________________
Paul Draycott (instructed by Merseyside Welfare Rights Advice Centre) for the respondent
Hearing date: 14th January 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ward:
The legislative provisions
"70. – Carer's allowance
(1) A person shall be entitled to a carer's allowance for any day on which he is engaged in caring for a severely disabled person if—
(a) he is regularly and substantially engaged in caring for that person;
(b) he is not gainfully employed; and
(c) the severely disabled person is either such a relative of his as may be prescribed or a person of any such other description as may be prescribed.
….
(2) In this section, "severely disabled person" means a person in respect of whom there is payable either an attendance allowance or a disability living allowance by virtue of entitlement to the care component at the highest or middle rate or such other payment out of public funds on account of his need for attendance as may be prescribed.
(3) A person shall not be entitled to an allowance under this section if he is under the age of 16 or receiving full-time education.
…
(8) Regulations may prescribe the circumstances in which a person is or is not to be treated for the purposes of this section as engaged, or regularly and substantially engaged, in caring for a severely disabled person, as gainfully employed or as receiving full-time education.
(9) A carer's allowance shall be payable at the weekly rate specified in Schedule 4, Part III, paragraph 4."
"5. Circumstances in which persons are to be regarded as receiving full-time education
(1) For the purposes of section 70(3) of the Contribution and Benefits Act, a person shall be treated as receiving full-time education for any period during which he attends a course of education at a university, college, school or other educational establishment for 21 hours a week or more.
(2) In calculating the hours of attendance under paragraph (1) of this Regulation –
(a) there shall be included the time spent receiving instruction or tuition, undertaking supervised study, examination or practical work or taking part in any exercise, experiment or project for which provision is made in the curriculum of the course; and
(b) there shall be excluded any time occupied by meal breaks or spent on unsupervised study, whether undertaken on or off the premises of the educational establishment.
(3) In determining the duration of a period of full-time education under paragraph (1) of this Regulation a person who has started on a course of education shall be treated as attending it for the usual number of hours per week throughout any vacation or any temporary interruption of his attendance until the end of the course or such earlier date as he abandons it or is dismissed from it."
The factual background
"How many hours a week is [the respondent] expected to spend on work that is included on the curriculum of the course at school, college or university? (By work, we mean supervised study at school, college, university or similar educational establishment and includes time spent on work done at home or elsewhere set by a tutor and is part of the course.)"
The reply was 1,080 hours per annum which averages out at 27.69 hours a week over the 39 weeks of the academic year. The answer to the question whether the institution regarded the claimant as being in full-time education was yes.
"Given that [the respondent] felt that she had covered a lot of the background reading for the literature she calculated that she would be able to complete her study – not to an ideal standard but to an adequate one – by an additional 8 hours a week, giving a total of 20 hours per week. In fact, this caused problems with her course. Her caring responsibilities meant that she did not manage all of the reading for the course and would at best have just managed to pass. In the event, a crisis [the death of a close friend of her daughter] arose in April which added to her caring responsibilities. [The respondent] was unable to sit her examinations. She tried to use the summer vacation to catch up on the study she should have done during the term and will resit this month.
In R(G) 2-02 paragraph 22 it is suggested that for a student who attends for less than 21 hours a week 'his successful completion of the course may be imperilled'. In fact this is exactly what has happened as a result of [the respondent's] caring responsibilities."
"The course was undoubtedly a full-time course as accepted by the appellant.
Based upon the information provided by the university this course could not be considered part-time.
The Tribunal concluded that the work done whilst actually attending university could not be taken in isolation as clearly with regard to this course, a period [of] home study is required which forms part of the course and although done at home falls into the category of supervised work."
Ms Deane was granted leave to appeal primarily on the ground that the Appeal Tribunal had treated the evidence from the university as conclusive, contrary to authoritative case-law.
The Appeal to Judge Mesher
"12. If I were able to approach Regulation 5(1) and section 70(3) of the Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992 free from the burden of the authorities that I discuss below, I would take the following very simple view. Section 70(8) allows regulations to prescribe circumstances in which a person is or is not to be treated as receiving full-time education for the purposes of section 70(3). Regulation 5(1) merely prescribes circumstances in which a person is to be treated as receiving full-time education, not circumstances in which a person is not to be so treated. Therefore, the 21-hour rule provides a convenient means for determining entitlement to CA in some cases, but a person may still be found to be receiving full-time education although not attending a course for 21 hours or more. Finally, and crucially, a person attending a conventional 3-year undergraduate degree course that is regarded as a full-time course by the institution concerned is receiving full-time education regardless of how many regulation 5(2) hours are expected to be or actually are devoted to the course. That appears to have been the view taken by the appeal tribunal of 9th October 2007, as it appears also to have been the view of the Chief Commissioner for Northern Ireland, Judge Martin, at an early stage of Wright-Turner (see paragraph 12 of C2/97(ICA), Appendix 2 to R1/02(ICA)). In addition, although I am not concerned whether the rule expressed in section 70(3) is sensible or fair in the context of the basic qualification for CA, that view would have the merit that anybody in receipt of CA who started on such a course would be able to know exactly where they stood (see Chadwick LJ in paragraph 38 of Flemming, RG, 2/02).
13. That simple view is one that as a matter of law cannot be adopted at the level of the Upper Tribunal or below. It was expressly rejected by Carswell LCJ in the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal in Wright-Turner Appendix 12 R1/02/ICA):
"Notwithstanding the wording of the regulation which has the appearance of a deeming provision, it appears that this definition was intended to be comprehensive. It was common case that in order to be regarded as being in receipt of full-time education the appellant had to be brought within the definition contained in regulation 5."
Although that particular passage rather than the eight propositions mentioned below, was not expressly approved by the Court of Appeal in Flemming, the whole approach in the latter case was implicitly based on an acceptance of its correctness. There would have been no point to most of the discussion in the judgments there if my simple view had been regarded as correct. That view would have provided a complete answer against Ms Flemming's case without all the doubts about how to take account of the lazy or brilliant student who put in low hours of work. For the same reasons, the grammatically unlikely view that in regulation 5(1) "for 21 hours or more a week" refers to the course and not to the student's attendance of the course cannot be accepted. Social Security Commissioners, and therefore now the Administrative Appeals Chamber of the Upper Tribunal, are bound to follow the approach of the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal as well as that of the English Court of Appeal on questions of legal principle that were necessary to the decision in question (Tribunal of Commissioners Decisions R(SP)1/90 paragraph 15 and R/IB 4/04 paragraphs 29 and 30)."
"The test in regulation 5(1)
32. In my view the most natural reading of the words in regulation 5(1) of the ICA Regulations is that they are directed to attending a course for 21 hours or more, in the sense of time actually spent in the activities specified in paragraph (2). That is the reading in fact supported by the judgments in Wright-Turner and Flemming. Evidence as to the time that the authorities of the educational establishment in question expect or require a student to spend in the specified activities is important and relevant and may, depending on all the circumstances, lead to doubt about the reliability of a particular student's evidence that significantly less time is actually spent, but the fundamental test in law remains the time actually spent by the student. In ICA and CA cases, claimants will often have a ready explanation for having spent significantly less time on study than authorities expect, in the burden imposed by their substantial caring responsibility. That distinguishes such cases from that of a student who simply relies on laziness or an ability to get through work quickly. However, the very readiness of the explanation means that it may need to be tested carefully …"
(1) Regulation 5 is not exhaustive of the circumstances in which a person would be regarded as being in "full-time education" for the purposes of entitlement to Invalid Care Allowance. A person who does not come within Regulation 5 may still be in full-time education if he falls within section 70(3). It was wrong to hold that the Tribunals were bound by Wright-Turner and Flemming because it was a matter of concession in Wright-Turner and was not discussed at all in Flemming. In any event the Court of Appeal in England is not bound by a decision of the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal.
(2) The approach of Commissioner Bano that the issue under Regulation 5 is as to the hours of study which a student is required to undertake, rather than those she actually undertakes from time to time is to be preferred to the approach taken by Judge Mesher (his underlining added).
The troubling authorities
"By supervised study it is not meant that a supervisor is physically present but consists of study by the claimant at a time and place of her choosing and for periods of her choosing of work set by her supervisor."
Mrs Commissioner Brown dismissed an appeal against that decision.
"(1) Was I correct in holding that no error arose in relation to the tribunal's interpretation of 'supervised' and 'unsupervised study' in regulation 5(2) of the Social Security (Invalid Care Allowance) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1976; and (2) did I err in law in not upsetting the said tribunal's finding of fact that the appellant spent an average of over 21 hours per week in study over the academic year?"
"It might be reasonably straightforward in most cases to determine whether a university student is to be regarded as in receipt of full-time education, but that determination is made more difficult by the fact that in pursuance of a power contained in section 70(8) of the 1992 Act the Department of Health and Social Security made regulations prescribing in what circumstances a person is or is not to be treated as receiving full-time education. These were no doubt designed to facilitate the task of adjudication officers in achieving consistency of decision among applicants for invalid care allowance, but they are so framed as to cover persons receiving education in a wide range of schools, colleges of further education and universities. They are not specifically designed for university students or apt for their circumstances, and their effect is to increase rather than reduce the difficulty of determining whether any student comes within the definition. [He then set out Regulation 5.] …
Notwithstanding the wording of the regulation, which has the appearance of a deeming provision, it appears that this definition was intended to be comprehensive. It was common case that in order to be regarded as being in receipt of full-time education the appellant had to be brought within the definition contained in Regulation 5."
"It is undeniable that there are difficulties whichever construction one adopts [for the appellant that supervised study must be carried out on the University premises; and for the respondent that supervised study was that undertaken by a student under the direction of a tutor or supervisor.]
…
It is not easy to discern the policy reasons behind the framing of the exclusions from benefit and it is tempting to suppose that they have simply been copied from other areas of social security law without giving sufficient consideration to the reasons for enacting them in respect of invalid care allowance. … In view, however, of the clear conclusions which we have reached on the construction of Regulation 5 we do not find it necessary to express a definite opinion on the policy behind the exclusions, which does not determine our decision.
We shall express our conclusions in a series of propositions, in as succinct a form as possible, which we hope will provide guidance for tribunals and Commissioners. We shall refrain from giving examples, which, as Mr Commissioner Jacobs observed at paragraph 36 of his decision in CG/5519/1999, are more likely to cause problems in later cases than to assist in understanding how to apply the legislation to the facts of a particular case. These conclusions are as follows:
1. Section 70(3) of the 1992 Act disentitles from receipt of an allowance a person who is receiving full-time education. If Regulation 5 is interpreted in a way which excludes from its ambit the large majority of university students, who on any ordinary classification are regarded as full-time students, then it is unlikely that that interpretation is correct.
2. The words "attends" and "supervised" are ordinary English words, which take their meaning from their context.
3. That context varies, depending on the educational level of the establishment at which the claimant is receiving education.
4. Attending a course of education at a university means engaging in the academic activities required of those who are enrolled in the course.
5. One component of a course of education at a university is study of the subject matter of the course, which may be carried on by the students at times and places of their own choosing.
6. Where that study is in discharge of the requirements of the course, as prescribed by those who conduct it, it constitutes supervised study within the meaning of Regulation 5. It does not have to be carried out on university premises or in the physical presence of a supervisor.
7. Ascertainment of the hours of attendance at a course of education is a question of fact, to be determined by the adjudicating officer or tribunal. In doing so they will have regard to the university's requirements of attendance at the formal contacts specified in Regulation 5(2)(a), any estimate furnished by the university authorities of the supervised study time required to complete the course, the claimant's own testimony and any other source of material evidence.
8. The tribunal of fact should ordinarily focus primarily on the standard amount of time which the university authorities expect students to devote to contact hours and supervised study in order to complete the course. Some students, blessed with the ability to work more quickly than average, will get through the prescribed reading in less than the notionally allotted time, while some, less fortunate or perhaps more thorough and conscientious, will take longer. It is notorious that others will do a minimum of work during the academic year and seek to pass their examinations with a last-minute burst of effort, leaving the average hours worked over the year materially below the level expected by the university authorities.
We also conclude that Mrs Commissioner Brown applied the law correctly … We therefore answer the first question "Yes".
…
We therefore are of the opinion that the Commissioner did not err in law in declining to upset the tribunal's finding of fact, and we answer the second question "No"."
"[5] The only issue the claimant seeks to argue is whether she was "receiving full-time education". On her behalf, the basic submission is that the word "attends" in regulation 5(1) requires physical presence at the premises of the University. Hours spent studying at home should not be taken into account. It is also submitted that private study at home is not "supervised study" within the meaning of regulation 5(2). Supervised study does not include time spent in private study unless that study is under the supervision (direct or indirect) of a tutor at the University.
[6] Both parties seek guidance as to the meaning of the words "attends" and "supervised study" and the test which should be applied when considering whether someone is "receiving full-time education"."
"[26] … The narrow issue raised by this appeal is whether the Commissioner was right to direct the tribunal to approach the task which they had been set on the basis that work set as preparation for discussion in class or for written work would probably count as supervised study without drawing a distinction between preparatory work done on the premises of the educational establishment and work done off those premises. The claimant contends that hours spent in doing work off the premises (with some limited exceptions) cannot be taken into account."
"[14] I do not consider that it is possible to detect an overall statutory purpose which throws significant light on the construction of the words in issue. Each of the criteria to be satisfied to establish an entitlement to invalid care allowance is defined in a specific and detailed way. The statutory purpose is that those who meet the criteria are entitled to the allowance and those who do not meet them are not entitled. I would however approach the expression "full-time education" with some presumption that a conventional three-year undergraduate degree course of education offered by a university comes within that expression.
[15] Regulation 5(1), including as it does the word "treated", is a deeming provision and covers only those who come within the requirement specified. What is required is attendance for 21 hours or more a week and regulation 5(2) provides what hours shall be included for that purpose. …
[17] I would construe the expression "attends a course of education at a university" in the sense of being enrolled upon such a course at the university. …
[18] If, as I would hold, study away from the premises is capable of constituting "hours of attendance" under the regulation, the second question is what constitutes "supervised study" within the meaning of regulation 5(2). …
[19] Study may, however, be supervised without the supervisor necessarily being present at the time of study. The test of what is "supervised study" does not depend on the period of time for which the supervisor is present with the student. The work must be study directed to the course of education and the curriculum of the course involved. … Work done to meet the reasonable requirements of the course can usually be regarded as supervised study. …
[21] It follows from the comments I have ventured to make that I agree with the propositions stated by the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland in Wright-Turner's case … I also agree that ascertainment of the hours of attendance is a question of fact to be determined by the adjudicating officer or tribunal. Evidence from the university authorities as to the amount of time they expect students to undertake to complete the course is likely to be important evidence. …
[22] Evidence from the student himself as to the time he spends to meet the requirements of the course is not excluded. In the latter part of proposition 8, the Court attempted to deal with the question arising from the varying abilities and conscientiousness of students of all generations. Some students on a course of education will spend more time studying than others do. A fact-finding tribunal should, however, scrutinise with care evidence from a student who claims that he attends the course for significantly fewer hours than the university authorities expect of him. Moreover, on many courses of education it may be a foolhardy student, unless a very brilliant one, who genuinely claims that he attends, within the definition, for fewer than 21 hours a week. His successful completion of the course may be imperilled. The more structured the course, with, for example, modules, detailed course work and regular assessment, the easier it is likely to be to make the determination of fact. …
[24] This Court is unaccustomed to giving general guidance when not making a decision on specific facts. As requested, I have endeavoured to do so and the task has been made easier by the fact that I respectfully agree with the approach of Carswell LCJ in Wright-Turner's case …"
"[27] … regulation [5] was made for the purpose of prescribing the circumstances in which a person is or is not to be treated … as receiving full-time education and must be construed in that context. …
[31] … there is no basis for construing the phrase "attends a course of education at" as imposing a requirement of physical attendance at the premises of the educational establishment. …
[33] … Whatever the true extent of the phrase "supervised study" – and whether that phrase be given a liberal or a restricted meaning – it is plain that supervised study is private study which is subject to some form of supervision. No satisfactory reason has been advanced to explain why it should be a relevant consideration, in determining whether a person is to be treated as receiving full-time education, whether private study which would otherwise qualify as supervised study is undertaken on or off the premises of the educational establishment. …
[36] … I would reject the submission that hours spent in supervised study off the premises cannot be taken into account. …
[37] … I agree with Lord Justice Pill that the test of what is "supervised study" does not depend on the period of time for which the supervisor is present with the student …
[38] That is sufficient to answer the narrow question raised by this appeal. But I agree that it would be unsatisfactory to dispose of this appeal without an indication, at least in general terms, whether the approach of the Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland in Wright-Turner v Department for Social Department 11 January 2002 should be followed by appeal tribunals in England and Wales. In my view, that approach is broadly correct and should be adopted. I would draw particular attention to three factors identified in the judgment of Carswell LCJ. First, that study which is in discharge of the requirements of the course, as prescribed by those who conduct it, constitutes supervised study for the purposes of regulation 5. I would add that, in my view, time spent in the private study which is a necessary adjunct to physical attendance at lectures and laboratory work falls within that description. Secondly, ascertainment of the hours for which a person attends a course of education is a question of fact, to be determined by the Secretary of State or a tribunal. Thirdly, the tribunal of fact should have particular regard to the amount of time which those who conduct a course expect a student to devote to contact hours and supervised study in order satisfactorily to complete the course. I recognise that the "average" student is an elusive concept, that the less able but diligent student will take longer than the time expected, and that the more able (or less diligent) student will take (or devote) less than the time expected. But it is plainly desirable that a person with care responsibilities who is contemplating a course of education should know in advance whether, by attending the course, he or she will be treated as receiving full-time education. A tribunal of fact should, I think, be very slow to accept that a person expects or intends to devote – or does, in fact, devote - significantly less time to the course than those who have conduct of the course expect of him; and very slow to hold that a person who is attending a course considered by the educational establishment to be a part-time course is to be treated as receiving full-time education because he devotes significantly more time that that which is expected of him."
The issue raised in ground 1: is Regulation 5 exhaustive of the circumstances in which a person will be treated as being in full-time education?
(1) what did the Northern Ireland Court of Appeal say about it in Wright-Turner?(2) Is this Court bound to follow decisions of the Northern Ireland Court?
(3) Is this Court bound to follow a previous decision if the point was there conceded?
(4) Was the decision of the Northern Ireland Court on this aspect obiter?
(5) Is the question concluded by Flemming?
(6) Is Regulation 5 exhaustive?
The decision in Wright-Turner
The standing of Northern Ireland decisions
"I ask myself, therefore, having expressed such doubts as I have with all respect to the learned judges in Scotland, ought this court now to answer those two questions in a precisely opposite sense? We in this court are not bound to follow the decisions of the Court of Session, but the Income Tax Act and the relevant Finance Act applying differently both north and south of the border, and, if we were to decide those questions in a sense diametrically opposite to the sense which appeal to the Scottish judges, we should lay down a law for England in respect of this not unimportant matter which was completely opposite to the law which was being applied on exactly the same statutory provisions north of the border. I cannot think that that is right. In a case of a revenue statute of this kind, I think it is the duty of this court, unless there are compelling reasons to the contrary, and while expressing such doubts as we feel we ought to, to say that we follow the Scottish decision."
In the House of Lords, as reported at [1961] AC 352, Lord Reid observed at 373:
"In the present case the Court of Appeal, though not bound to do so, very properly followed the decision of the Court of Session … I say very properly because it is undesirable that there should be conflicting decisions on Revenue matters in Scotland and England."
Was the point conceded in Wright-Turner and if so must it be followed?
"In my judgment the authorities clearly established that even where a decision of a point in a particular sense was essential to an earlier decision of a superior court, that that superior court merely assumed the correctness of the law on a particular issue, a judge in a later case is not bound to hold that the law is decided in that sense."
"33. We therefore conclude, not without some hesitation, that there is a principle stated in general terms that a subsequent court is not bound by a proposition of law assumed by an earlier court that was not the subject of argument before or consideration by that court.
…
38. Like all exceptions to, and modifications of, the strict rule of precedent, this rule must only be applied in the most obvious of cases, and limited with great care. The basis of it is that the proposition in question must have been assumed, and not have been the subject of decision. … And there may of course be cases, perhaps many cases, where a point has not been the subject of argument, but scrutiny of the judgment indicates that the court's acceptance of the point went beyond mere assumption. Very little is likely to be required to draw that latter conclusion: because a later court will start from the position, encouraged by judicial comity, that its predecessor did indeed address all the matters essential for its decision."
Was the observation of the Northern Ireland court part of the ratio or obiter?
Is the question concluded by Flemming?
Is Regulation 5 exhaustive?
"A person shall not be entitled to an allowance under this section if he is … receiving full-time education."
It is written in plain English and the ordinary meaning of the words are clear. As I began this judgment one might think one is easily able to recognise that an undergraduate is receiving full-time education if the course on which he is enrolled is a typical degree course offered by the University as, and treated by the general body of students as, a full-time course. An individual on the course should not ordinarily be treated differently from his fellow undergraduates. Lord Carswell was thus surely correct to observe:
"It might be reasonably straightforward in most cases to determine whether a university student is to be regarded as in receipt of full-time education …"
Judge Mesher certainly thought:
"Finally, and crucially, a person attending a conventional three-year undergraduate degree course that is regarded as a full-time course by the institution concerned is receiving full-time education regardless of how many regulation 5(2) hours are expected to be or actually are devoted to the course."
We can all recognise an elephant when we see it. The question then is whether the regulations force us to deny what we are seeing.
"Underlying the concept of delegated legislation is the basic principle that the legislature delegates because it cannot directly exert its will in every detail. All it can in practice do is lay down the outline. This means that the intention of the legislature, as indicated in the outline (that is the enabling Act), must be the prime guide to the meaning of delegated legislation and the extent of the power to make it. …
The delegate is not intended to travel wider than the object of the legislature. The delegate's function is to serve and promote that object, while at all times remaining true to it. That is the rule of primary intention."
In other words, the regulations are subservient to the enabling Act.
"4. Circumstances in which persons are or are not to be treated as engaged or regularly and substantially engaged in caring for severely disabled persons
(1) … A person shall be treated as engaged … in caring … if, and shall not be treated as engaged … in caring … unless, …
5. Circumstances in which persons are to be regarded as receiving full-time education
(1) … A person shall be treated as receiving full-time education …
…
8. Circumstances in which a person is or is not to be treated gainfully employed
(1) … A person shall not be treated as gainfully employed unless … and … shall be treated as gainfully employed … if …"
Conclusions on the first ground of appeal
The issue raised in ground 2: are the hours during which a person attends a course of education at a university to be calculated by reference to the actual hours spent in the activities specified in paragraph 5(2) of the regulations?
(1) On any ordinary classification the students attending this course of study at the Liverpool Hope University would be regarded as full-time students. If, however, on Judge Mesher's interpretation the lazy student spending less than twenty-one hours a week on the specified activities is to be treated as not receiving full-time education, then as Lord Carswell said in his first proposition, that interpretation is unlikely to be correct.
(2) If, quoting Judge Mesher, "the fundamental test in law remains the time actually spent by the student", then the "evidence as to the time that the authorities of the educational establishment in question expect or require a student to spend in the specified activities" will be "important", but then its only importance is to check "the reliability of a particular student's evidence that significantly less time is actually spent" on his or her study. Lord Carswell's seventh proposition goes further than that. He requires the ascertainment of the hours of attendance to be determined having regard to a number of factors of which the claimant's own testimony is but one. This suggests to me that all the other factors are relevant considerations in their own right, not merely tools to test the reliability of the student's own account. Those factors are (i) the university's requirements of attendance at formal contacts specified in Regulation 5(2)(a), (ii) any estimate furnished by the university authorities of the supervised study time required to complete the course, (iii) any other source of material evidence as well as (iv) the claimant's own testimony. If those factors are separate factors to be taken into account, it strongly suggests to me that the ascertainment of the hours of attendance is a composite question, larger than, or certainly not limited to, the actual hours devoted to study etc by the particular student.
(3) If the criterion is actual hours, then there would be little point in directing as per proposition 8 that the tribunal of fact should ordinarily focus primarily on the standard amount of time which the university authorities expect students to devote to contact hours and supervised study in order to complete the course. Judge Mesher by contrast put the focus primarily on actual hours and that seems to me to be looking through the wrong end of the telescope.
"… it is plainly desirable that a person with care responsibilities who is contemplating a course of education should know in advance whether, by attending the course, he or she will be treated as receiving full-time education. A tribunal of fact should, I think, be very slow to accept that a person expects or intends to devote - or does, in fact, devote - significantly less time to the course than those who have conduct of the course expect of him; and very slow to hold that a person who is attending a course considered by the educational establishment to be a part-time course is to be treated as receiving full-time education because he devotes significantly more time that that which is expected of him."
Conclusion
Lady Justice Hallett:
Lord Justice Hughes: