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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber) >> MC [2009] UKUT 173 (AAC) (09 September 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/AAC/2009/173.html Cite as: [2009] UKUT 173 (AAC), [2010] AACR 20 |
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MC [2009] UKUT 173 (AAC) (09 September 2009)
War pensions and armed forces compensation
Other
CAF/3558/2008
DECISION OF THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS CHAMBER)
Decision and Hearing
Background and Procedure
Entitlement to CAA
8(1) where …
(a) a member of the armed forces is in receipt of … a pension in respect of disablement the degree of which is not less than 80%; and
(b) it is shown to the satisfaction of the Secretary of State that constant attendance on the member is necessary on account of the disablement the member shall be awarded an allowance in accordance with the following paragraphs of this article.
(2)
(3) Where the necessary attendance consists of –
(a) frequent or regular attendance for periods during the daytime which total not less than eight and not more than sixteen hours per day; or
(b) frequent or regular attendance for periods during the daytime which total less than eight hours per day and attendance on two or more occasions per night the rate of the allowance shall be the full day rate
(4) Where the necessary attendance consists of –
(a) frequent or regular attendance for periods during the daytime which total not less than eight hours per day and attendance on two or more occasions per night; or
(b) frequent or regular attendance for periods at night and which total not less than eight hours and during the daytime for periods which total not less than four hours per day the rate of the allowance shall be the intermediate rate
(5) Where the necessary attendance consists of continual attendance throughout the day and night, the rate of the allowance shall be the exceptional rate …
The Right of Appeal
5A (1) Where, in the case of a claim to which this section applies, the [Secretary of State] makes a specified decision –
(a) he shall notify the claimant of the decision, specifying the ground on which it is made, and
(b) thereupon an appeal against the decision shall lie to the Tribunal on the issue whether the decision was rightly made on that ground
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) a "specified decision" is a decision … which is of a kind specified by the [Secretary of State} in regulations.
The Nature of the Appeal
"12. … the legislation does not expressly specify the powers – any powers – of the appeal tribunal in relation to the decision under appeal … [it] does not even expressly specify that an appeal tribunal may allow or disallow an appeal, or vary or confirm the decision under appeal. Therefore all the powers of an appeal tribunal – including even the most basic – must be implied. They must be derived from the fact that the statute gives a right of appeal, and from the nature of such an appeal in the context of the statutory scheme.
" .. the task of the appellate immigration authority, on an appeal on a Convention ground against a decision of the primary official decision-maker refusing leave to enter or remain in this country, is to decide whether the challenged decision is unlawful as incompatible with a Convention right or compatible and so lawful. It is not a secondary, reviewing, function dependent on establishing that the primary decision-maker misdirected himself or acted irrationally or was guilty of procedural impropriety. The appellate immigration authority must decide for itself whether the impugned decision is lawful …".
The Effect of the DLA Decision
72(1)
(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 continual supervision throughout the day in order to avoid substantial danger to himself or others
[and]
(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; 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.or
The Meaning of Necessary Constant Attendance
"On the question of principle I reject the contention that the relevant attention must be essential or necessary for life and that attention must not be taken into account if it is merely desirable. The test in my view is whether the attention is reasonably required to enable the severely disabled person as far as is reasonably possible to live a normal life".
The Secretary of State for Defence's Guidelines
"constant
13205 For the purposes of a claim to CA the Secretary of State interprets the term "constant" as meaning "continually occurring or recurring" (ie the dictionary definition).
"attendance on him"
13206 He interprets "attendance on him" as the help required from another person in connection with the personal functions a fit person would normally perform for himself such as dressing, eating, drinking, bathing or going to the toilet. Such help may also be needed where, for instance, bedclothes are continually soiled through incontinence, or the person has bed-sores, or is bedfast and cannot move without assistance. "Attendance on him" may also mean "supervision" ie someone to keep an eye on the person to prevent him injuring himself or others. It does not include help of a purely domestic nature (eg shopping, housekeeping, getting meals etc). CAA is designed to give extra financial help where the pensioner is so severely handicapped by the nature of his pensioned disablement that he requires someone to assist him with the ordinary and personal requirements of everyday living – the necessities of life.
"necessary on account of the disablement"
13207 For CAA to be awarded the law requires the attendance to be "necessary" on account of the (war pensioned) disablement. The Secretary of State interprets this as meaning the effects of the pensioned disablement must be such that there is a medical need to a greater or lesser extent for "attendance on him" from a third party. It must be clear that the attention is needed because of the (war pensioned) disablement, and not because of some other disablement, or simply old age.
13208 Disabled individuals and their families vary in their response to disablement. Many with great impairment remain highly independent, while others more readily assume an invalid role. In assessing requirements for attendance or supervision the Secretary of State should be concerned only with the medical need for the attendance or supervision.
13209 The advice of a medical adviser should be sought in the more difficult cases. This may be where there is doubt regarding the pensioner's account of the need for attendance. For example, claimants often emphasis nocturnal visits to the lavatory; as such visits are normal practice for many males, medical advice may be necessary in order to establish whether the visits really are as a result of the war pensioned disablement. Another common claim is that attendance is required due to the side effects of therapeutic drugs for the war pensioned disablement; generally modern therapeutics should make tolerance of side effects such as dizziness or disorientation etc unnecessary and a matter of good therapeutic management. Again the medical adviser should be consulted."
The Factual Disagreement
"His mental problems and his physical problems are not so serious as to warrant 24 hour care. Such is necessary and warranted in extreme cases – that is not [his] situation. In reality there are substantial periods of time during the day and night when [he] does not need any attendance. If a carer was sitting by his side for the whole 24 hours, [his] quality of life would not be any better in the view of the Tribunal" (pages 309-310).
Conclusions
(a) The tribunal stands in the shoes of the Secretary of State and it would be an error of law for the tribunal not to make its own findings on any disputed or unclear matter. To decide otherwise would be to undermine the right of appeal to the tribunal (paragraph 10 to 16).
(b) I reject any proposition that the highest rate care component of DLA is any kind of passport to an award of exceptional rate CAA. Any evidence in relation to one might be helpful in relation to the other, as might a tribunal statement of reasons and findings, and if they are available they should be taken into account, but I would put it no higher than that (paragraphs 18to 22).
(c) "Constant" for the purposes of CAA does not mean non-stop or uninterrupted. It is not an independent condition or concept to be satisfied but is a reference to the more detailed provisions in the conditions of entitlement to each of the various rates of CAA (paragraph 23).
(d) for the purposes of CAA "attendance" can in appropriate case include what in the DLA scheme is referred to as "supervision", and can include supervision which is either precautionary or anticipatory, and what I have referred to as emotional support (paragraphs 26 to 30).
(e) "continual" for the purposes of CAA does not mean literally non-stop or uninterrupted (paragraph 28).
(f) The relevant paragraphs of the Secretary of State's guidelines are not necessarily accurate statements of the law and are capable of leading to decisions being made in error of law (paragraphs 32 to 37).
(g) The deficiencies in the tribunal's reasoning were not, on the particular facts of this case, serious enough to amount to an error of law (paragraph 44).
H. Levenson
Judge of the Upper Tribunal
9th September 2009