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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Upper Tribunal (Administrative Appeals Chamber) >> Secretary of State for Defence v MS (AFCS) [2010] UKUT 14 (AAC) (22 January 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/AAC/2010/14.html Cite as: [2010] UKUT 14 (AAC) |
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1. This appeal by the Secretary of State succeeds. In
accordance with the provisions of section 12(2)(b)(ii) of the Tribunals, Courts
and Enforcement Act 2007 I set aside the decision of the Pensions Appeal
Tribunal sitting at Truro on 17th July 2008 made under reference
SD/00088/2008. I restore the decision of the Secretary of State that the
claimant’s diabetes mellitus is attributable to service from 1st
April 1995.
2. In this decision,
except where the context requires otherwise, I refer to a non-tribunal decision
maker as “the Secretary of State” irrespective of the name or designation of
the person or body actually making the official decision on entitlement.
Legal Provisions
3. So far as is relevant, section 1 of the Pensions Appeal Tribunals
Act 1943 provides as follows:
1(1) Where any claim in respect of the disablement of any person … is rejected by the Minister on the ground that the injury on which the claim is based –
(a) is not attributable to any service …
The Minister shall notify the claimant of his decision, specifying that it is made on that ground, and thereupon an appeal shall lie to a Pensions Appeal Tribunal … on the issue whether the claim was rightly rejected on that ground.
4. Section 5B of the Act was inserted with effect from 1st
January 2001 (by SI 2000/2994) and provides as follows:
5B In deciding any appeal, a Pensions Appeal Tribunal –
(a) need not consider any issue that is not raised by the appellant or the Minister in relation to the appeal; and
(b) shall not take into account any circumstances not obtaining at the time when the decision appealed against was made.
5. As from 29th
August 1970 section 6(2A) of the 1943 Act (inserted by section 23 of the
Chronically Sick and Disabled Persons Act 1970) gave the Secretary of State power
to set aside a tribunal decision.
6. Sections 6(2C) and
6(2D) of the 1943 Act were inserted by section 43(1) of the Social Security and
Housing Benefits Act 1982 with effect from 20th August 1982. Section
6(2C) provided that where a direction for a rehearing had been given, the Secretary
of State could review the original decision within two months of the date of
that direction.
7. Section 6(2D)
provided that:
6(2D) If, on any such review, the Minister is of the opinion that there are grounds for revising the original decision he shall –
(a) notify the [claimant] of his opinion and of the revision which he proposes to make; and
(b) if the [claimant] withdraws his appeal against the original decision, revise it accordingly.
8. Rule 9 of the
Pensions Appeal Tribunals (England and Wales) Rules 1980:
9(1) An appellant may at any time before the hearing give notice to the Pensions Appeal Office that he desires to withdraw his appeal, and thereupon the appeal shall be struck out.
9(2) Where, after a notice of appeal has been given, the Secretary of State decides the issue arising on the appeal in favour of the [claimant] the Secretary of State shall give notice of is decision to the Pensions Appeal Office and to the [claimant], and the appeal shall be struck out.
9(3) In an assessment appeal the making of a new increased assessment for the period under appeal (whether covering additional disabilities or not) shall be deemed to be a decision by the Secretary of State in favour of the appellant and, on notice given in accordance with paragraph (2), the appeal shall be struck out, without prejudice to any appeal against that decision.
9. At the relevant
time these provisions were in The Naval, Military and Air Forces Etc
(Disablement and Death) Service Pensions Order 1983 (“the Order”). I note that
from 10th April 2006 this was replaced by The Naval, Military and
Air Forces Etc (Disablement and Death) Service Pensions Order 2006 but that the
2006 Order does not change the law that applies in the present case but
consolidates it and rearranges the sequence of provisions. However, references
below are to the 1983 Order.
10. The general rule
in article 67(1) of the Order is that any decision accepting or rejecting a
claim for pension, or any assessment of the degree of disablement, or any final
decision that there is no disablement or that it has come to an end may be
reviewed by the Secretary of State “at any time on any ground”.
11. The commencing
date of awards is governed by schedule 3 to the Order. So far as is relevant
paragraph 1(1) of the schedule provides that, subject to other provisions in
the schedule, an award or an adjustment of an award shall have effect from the
date specified in the award, being not earlier than the date specified in
paragraph 1(2). Paragraph 1(2) specifies whichever date is the latest time of
(a) the date following the date of termination of service or death, or (b) the
date of the claim or (c) the date of the last application for review. There are
provisions for backdating where the application is made within 3 months of
notification of a previous decision. These do not apply in the present case.
12. Paragraph 1(6A)
creates an exception to the rule in paragraph 1(1) and, so far as is relevant,
provides that:
1(6A) Where an award is reviewed as the result of a decision (“the original decision”) which arose from an official error, the reviewed decision shall take effect from the date of the original decision and for this purpose “official error” means an error by the Secretary of State or any officer of his … to which no other person materially contributed, including reliance on erroneous medical advice …
13. Literally, this
provision does not apply where no award has been made, but as I explained in
paragraph 26 of CAF/0602/2007, it cannot really mean that.
14. In one sense any
medical advice is always provisional because the state of medical (or any
scientific) knowledge and understanding is always changing and developing but
for the purposes of paragraph 1(6A) medical advice is not erroneous if it is
based on “medical knowledge at the time when the original decision was made”
(Paragraph 18 of CAF 0857/2006 (reported as R(AF) 5/07) decided by Upper
Tribunal Judge Bano, now the President of the relevant chamber of the
First-tier tribunal but then sitting as a Pensions Appeal Commissioner).
15. Paragraph 6 of
the schedule concerns the situation where a claim had been rejected but there
has been a change in medical opinion:
6(1) Where, upon a review of a decision rejecting a claim for pension, the Secretary of State makes an award on the basis that medical opinion has developed since the date of the decision which is the subject of the review, no payment shall be made in respect of any period preceding whichever is the later of –
(a) the date on which the Secretary of State considers that medical opinion had developed to the extent that an award in the claimant’s case was justified; and
(b) the date three years before the date of application for review or, where the review is instigated by the Secretary of State, the date three years before the date of the Secretary of State’s review decision..
16. As I explained in
paragraph 20 of CAF/0602/2007 the relationship between paragraph 1 and
paragraph 6(1) is not obvious from the wording. Paragraph 6(1) makes no
positive provision for a commencing date earlier than that provided by
paragraph 1 – it is a provision limiting the power of the Secretary of State.
However, these provisions only makes sense, especially in the context of the
historical development of the scheme (see eg paragraph 18 of R (AF) 5/07), if
paragraph 6(1) is read as an exception to paragraph 1 and as implicitly authorising
or recognising the authority of the Secretary of State to backdate the payment.
This is how the Secretary of State understands and operates the provision and
it would not be to the claimant’s advantage to take any other approach.
17. Reference has
also been made in the file to paragraph 10 of the schedule. This contains a
further exception to the general rule in paragraph 1(1) where the claimant
would have applied for review on an earlier date but for an act or omission of
the Secretary of State “which wrongly caused him to delay the claim or
application and that act or omission was the dominant cause of the delay”.
However, this is itself subject to an exception in that it does not apply “in a
case to which paragraph 6,7 or 9 applies”. Thus, if paragraph 6 does apply
(because the original claim was rejected but medical opinion has developed)
then the claimant cannot rely on paragraph 10.
Background and Procedure
18. The claimant was
born on 22nd July 1941. From 6th May 1957 to 8th
August 1963 he served in the Royal Navy. On 29th March 1963 he was
admitted to a Royal Navy hospital with various symptoms and a diagnosis was
made of insulin dependent diabetes mellitus of classical onset. On 12th
June 1963 a Medical Board found him to be permanently unfit for further duty.
On 8th July 1963 his claim for disablement pension under the
relevant Service Pensions Order was rejected on the grounds that his condition
was hereditary (as the claimant puts it) or constitutional (more likely) and
not attributable to service. The claimant appealed to the Pensions Appeal
Tribunal which, on 20th May 1964, upheld that decision.
19. I cite the
following from paragraph 7 of my decision in CAF/0602/2007 (given as a Pensions
Appeal Commissioner):
“Meanwhile, in May 1985 the Department of Health and Social Security accepted that there had been a change in the consensus of medical opinion regarding the aetiology of diabetes mellitus and the following year this was brought to the attention of a number of interested organisations and relevant publications … although not specifically or personally to the attention of [individual claimants]. The new view was that insulin dependent diabetes must have a precipitating factor, which could be a viral illness. Thenceforth, when the condition arose soon after service, the Department’s doctors would be considering the possibility of it being due to a viral illness acquired during service. Various dates have been given as to the date from which this change of opinion “became effective”.”
20. In the present case the date given for the effect of the
new opinion on war pensions is 1st December 1985 (see page 16 of the
file).
21. It seems that on
1st April 1998 the claimant asked for the war pensions decision to
be reconsidered, ostensibly on grounds of deterioration, in view of the change
in medical opinion (page 16). There was no power to review the decision made by
the tribunal on 20th May 1964 and the matter proceeded by way of a
joint application by the claimant and the Secretary of State which resulted on
6th October 1998 in the President of the Pensions Appeal Tribunal
setting aside the decision of 20th May 1964 (page 142). This enabled
the Secretary of State to consider afresh the original claim, which in some of
the paperwork (see page 1) is treated as having been made on 1st
April 1995 (three years before the date of the claimant’s letter of 1st
April 1998). I accept the claimant’s point that the Secretary of State had the
discretion but not an obligation to reconsider the matter at this stage.
22. On 23rd
March 1999 the War Pensions Agency sent the claimant a Certificate of
Entitlement/Assessment (page 144) stating that diabetes mellitus was accepted
as being attributable to service and there was an interim assessment of 40%
disablement from 1st April 1995 taking account of all disablement
due to diabetes from the date. This was accompanied by a form (pages 145 to
147) asking the claimant whether he wanted to carry on with his appeal. On 31st
March 1999 the claimant ticked a box on the form stating “I do not want to
carry on with my appeal” and said that this was the appeal made on “1st
April 1998 (a little unsure about the date)”. Under his signature he added the
words “without prejudice”. I discuss below whether this amounted to a
withdrawal of the relevant appeal and the significance of this.
23. On 7th
April 1999 the Secretary of State sent a section 9(2) notice to the PAT (pages
148 to 151) although I observe that it was not fully completed. The PAT office
returned it on 27th May 1999 with a letter asking whether or not a
statement of case had been sent to the PAT (page 152). There seems to have been
no reply to this.
24. Also on 7th
April 1999 the War Pensions Agency informed the claimant that the Secretary of
State had awarded him a pension in respect of diabetes mellitus, taking account
of retinopathy and peripheral neuropathy and that this was accepted as being
attributable to service. There was an interim assessment of 40% disablement. A
payable order for £8934.13 was sent to the claimant in respect of the period 1st
April 1995 to 13th April 1999 (pages 7 to 14). The claimant appealed
against the assessment and on 16th July 1999 the assessment was
increased by the Secretary of State to 50% with effect from 1st
April 1995. The appeal in relation to the assessment then lapsed.
25. On 16th
November 2006 the claimant wrote to the Veterans Agency requesting further
compensation. The reply of 6th December 2006 (pages 16 to 16A)
referred to a “Further condition application received on 4th
September 2006” (which I have not seen) and stated that there would be a
“review of your accepted conditions”. This seems to have resulted in a decision
on 3rd January 2007 (see page 3) accepting Reynauds Disease as
attributable to service, in addition to diabetes mellitus, and atherosclerosis
as aggravated by service, with an overall long term assessment of 70% with
effect from 4th September 2006. The assessment took account of the
effects of retinopathy, peripheral neuropathy, impotence, ischaemic heart
disease, angina and peripheral vascular disease.
26. On 28th
January 2007 (in a form received by the Veterans Agency on 30th
January) the claimant appealed against the decision which had awarded a pension
with effect from 1st April 1995, on the basis that it should have
been further backdated because no effort had been made to inform him medical
opinion had changed in relation to the causes of diabetes mellitus.
27. The Secretary of State (page 23) treated this as an
appeal against “the contents” of the letter of 6th December 2006
(pages 16 to 16A). On the face of it this is difficult to understand because an
appeal lies against a decision, and the letter of 6th December 2006
does not contain a decision (but see below). The Secretary of State also took
the view that the tribunal had no jurisdiction to consider this appeal, but the
matter was referred to the President of the Pensions Appeal Tribunal.
28. On 5th
March 2007 the President directed that the appeal of 28th/30th
January 2007 should be treated as an application to review the decision of 7th
April 1999 not to backdate the award beyond 1st April 1995. The
Service Personnel & Veterans Agency (“SPVA”) asked for clarification of the
power under which this Direction had been given. The President pointed out that
although there was no statutory right of appeal against the commencement date
of an award for a decision notified before 9th April 2001, the
Secretary of State had a duty to deal fairly with claims and applications. The
Secretary of State had a power to review decisions and that was what the
claimant was effectively asking for in his letter of 16th November
2006. Should the Secretary of State “decide to maintain the view that he is
presently taking” the President would list the appeal for an oral hearing. The
Secretary of State did not change his position and the President listed the
matter for a hearing.
29. The tribunal (not
including the President) considered the matter on 5th February 2008
and decided that it had jurisdiction “to entertain this appeal” although it did
not specify the precise decision against which it thought that appeal was being
brought (pages 25 and 157 to 158). It adjourned the substantive hearing to
allow the parties to prepare their cases.
30. The Secretary of
State now accepts for the purposes of the present case that, in order to give
the claimant a right of appeal, the letter of 6th December 2007
embodied a refusal to vary the commencement date and this was a specified
decision carrying a right to appeal. I have no dispute with this approach per
se, and it is intended to be helpful to the claimant because in 1999 there
was no right of appeal against the commencement date, such a right not being
introduced until 9th April 2001 in respect of commencement date
decisions made from that date. The commencement date had been calculated by
reference to the provisions of paragraph 3 of schedule 6 to the 1983 Order.
31. The tribunal
(chaired by the President) considered the matter on 17th July 2008.
It allowed the appeal and decided that the correct commencement date was the
date of medical discharge, 8th August 1963. On 20th
October 2008 the President gave the Secretary of State permission to appeal to
the Pensions Appeal Commissioner against that decision of the tribunal. On 3rd
November 2008 the matter was transferred to the Upper Tribunal. On 19th
November 2008 the appeal was received by the Upper Tribunal. I am aware of the
length of time that it has taken to make this decision, but it is fair to point
out that final written submissions were not received until early November 2009.
The Tribunal Decision of 17th July 2008
32. The tribunal
commented that the relevant SPVA file contained no information as to the
relevant date of the change in medical opinion, and that the statement that the
change “took effect” on 1st December 1985 was ambiguous.
33. The tribunal took
the view that the decision notified to the claimant on 7th April
1999 was a review decision under the provisions of paragraph 6 of schedule 3 to
the Service Pensions Order. Such a review did not, at that time, carry a right
of appeal to the tribunal (which was only introduced with effect from April
2001) and could not result in an award backdated more than three years prior to
the date of the application for review. Thus it was not capable of giving the
claimant all that was at stake in the original decision and “could not have the
effect of superseding the original appeal against rejection of the claim”
(paragraph 8 of the tribunal’s statement of reasons). Had the original appeal
been reheard by a tribunal, instead of the matter being treated as a review of
that kind, there would have been a right of appeal to the High Court and the
paragraph 6 limit on backdating would not have applied.
34. The tribunal stated
that as the tribunal decision of 20th May 1964 had been set aside,
there was an outstanding appeal against the original 1963 decision. This appeal
had not been withdrawn by the claimant and had not been superseded.
35. Further,
according to the tribunal, the Secretary of State failed to consider paragraph
10 of schedule 3. The claimant’s case was that his delay in applying for review
was caused by the omissions of the Secretary of State in failing to bring to
his attention that a change of medical opinion had been accepted. (As I have
explained above, this argument cannot succeed if paragraph 6 applies). The
Secretary of State argued that he did this by informing various organisations
of the change and placing various advertisements. The tribunal was of the
opinion that the steps taken were inadequate, and that the placing of the
advertisements was “strange” (paragraph 14). What was done fell far short of
what could be regarded as taking reasonable steps. The tribunal concluded that
it was these omissions that led the claimant to delay raising the question
again until 1998. These are findings of fact that were open to the tribunal and
I would not interfere with them. The tribunal decided that for the purposes of
paragraph 10 the claimant should be treated as having raised the issue on the
date on which the change of medical opinion was said to have taken effect, 1st
December 1985. Had the tribunal not decided that the correct way to proceed was
as an appeal against the 1963 decision, this would have been its “fall-back”
position.
36. According to the
tribunal, because the Secretary of State had wrongly proceeded by considering a
review under the provisions of paragraph 6, the appeal against the 1963
decision (which had been outstanding since the setting aside decision of 6th
October 1998) had not been heard, and it was appropriate that this be done by
the tribunal.
37. In relation to
the outstanding appeal, the tribunal found that (in accordance with article 4
of the Service Pensions Order) the burden of proof was against the Secretary of
State to establish facts relied on beyond reasonable doubt, that in the present
case the change of medical opinion was in fact declaratory of what should be
taken as the true medical understanding at all times, and that the commencing
date should therefore be the date of medical discharge.
The Submissions
38. There is much
discussion in the submissions of the parties about what would or might have
happened if certain courses of action had or had not been taken, but I do not
find much of that discussion to be particularly helpful and I do not propose to
comment except in so far as is necessary to explain my decision.
39. The Secretary of
State argues that in light of medical knowledge at the time diabetes mellitus
was understood to be organic in origin and not capable of being attributed to
service. Following the decision to set aside the tribunal decision of 20th
May 1964, which was made under the provisions of section 6(2A) of the Pensions
Appeal Tribunals Act 1943, there was to be a new hearing of the 1964
entitlement appeal. However, the Secretary of State treated the form signed by
the claimant on 31st March 1999 (see above) as a withdrawal of the
appeal and, in accordance with sections 6(2)(A), 6(2)(C) and 6(2D) of the 1943
Act revised the original decision and made the award notified to the claimant
on 7th April 1999.
40. As stated above,
rule 9(2) of the Pensions Appeal Tribunals (England and Wales) Rules 1980 provides that if, the Secretary of State decides an issue arising on an appeal in
favour of the claimant, the appeal shall be struck out. I noted above that the
section 9(2) notice sent by the Secretary of State to the PAT on 7th
April 1999 was returned by the PAT office on 27th May 1999 and no
further action seems to have been taken on this.
41. I raised the
question of whether the appeal is automatically struck out by operation of law
or whether the tribunal is under a duty to strike out. The Secretary of State
refers to the decision of the High Court in R (Secretary of State for
Defence v PAT and Corrie and others [2007] EWHC 1451 (Admin) where the
Court held that it is irrelevant that rule 9 does not require independent
judicial consideration of whether to strike out (presumably because rule 9(3) in
part protects the claimant’s position), and argues that the appeal is
automatically struck out and no further order is required. The claimant agrees
with this analysis. I note that this does not seem to deal with the questions
of whether the Secretary of State has in fact decided the issue arising on the
appeal in favour of the appellant, or whether a proper rule 9(2) notice has
been sent. These questions might have to be answered at a subsequent stage.
42. The Secretary of
State then suggests that rule 9(1) and (2) provides the mechanism for the
withdrawal referred to in section 6(2D)(b). The claimant points out that
section 6(2D) deals with any grounds for revising the original decision and
with any revision. Rule 9(2) refers to “the issue arising on the appeal”
and this must mean that rule 9(2) only operates when all the issues arising are
decided in favour of the claimant, that is to say when the revised decision
gives the claimant all that he is asking for. (In the present case it is also
argued that there was, in any event, no effective withdrawal.)
43. It seems to me
that on the basis both of the wording of rule 9(2) and the overall structure of
the scheme, the claimant’s analysis is correct on this point. Otherwise the
Secretary of State could make a very minor revision to the decision, which
could deprive the claimant of rights of appeal.
44. The Secretary of
State suggests that in the present case matters in fact proceeded as though the
appeal had been withdrawn and struck out, there being three manifestations of
this: the Secretary of State paid the pension to the claimant; the claimant
proceeded to appeal against the assessment but did not pursue the entitlement
issue; the tribunal did not list the entitlement appeal for hearing.
45. The claimant
argues that had the Secretary of State not chosen to exercise the above powers,
the matter would have proceeded to a tribunal hearing and the tribunal would
have awarded the claimant a pension on the basis of his diabetes, and this
would have been backdated to the date of his medical discharge and automatic
claim, 8th August 1963. By deciding to exercise the power, which was
limited by the provisions of paragraph 6 of schedule 3, the Secretary of State
denied the claimant of access to the fully backdated award that would otherwise
have been available. However, I agree with the Secretary of State that the
tribunal had no power to “review” the decision of the Secretary of State to
exercise this power. It was a power that the Secretary of State undoubtedly had
and there was no provision for an appeal to the tribunal against its exercise.
What Was the Appeal Against?
46. The essence of
the Secretary of State’s case is that the tribunal wrongly proceeded on the
basis that it was hearing an appeal against the 1963 entitlement decision which
was outstanding following the decision of 6th October 1998 setting
aside the earlier tribunal decision of 20th May 1964. In fact,
argues the Secretary of State, the tribunal was not hearing an entitlement
appeal under section 1 of the Act but should have proceeded on the basis that
it was hearing an appeal against the refusal to review the decision to backdate
the award beyond 1st April 1995. This would have been an appeal
against a specified decision under section 5A of the Act. Section 5B of the Act
did not confer any extra jurisdiction on the tribunal.
47. In support of
this argument the Secretary of State makes the following points. First, that
the review of the 1963 entitlement decision was carried out pursuant to section
6(2C), which clearly empowered him to do this, and that his decision determined
the issue on the entitlement appeal in favour of the claimant. Second, that the
claimant had in fact withdrawn his appeal against the 1963 decision
notwithstanding his confusion about the date and that as an appeal cannot be
withdrawn “without prejudice”, the latter phrase is meaningless in the context.
Had The Appeal Been Withdrawn?
48. The claimant
argues that the form signed on 31st March 1999 was equivocal. It
made no express reference to the 1999 decision and by marking it “without
prejudice” the claimant was indicating that he did not accept the 1999
decision. This was not a genuine withdrawal and in any event the appeal had not
been struck out.
49. It seems to me
that after the tribunal decision of 20th May 1964 had been set aside
on 6th October 1998 the claimant had in fact withdrawn what was now
an outstanding appeal by his actions on 31st March 1999 in ticking
the box stating “I do not want to carry on with my appeal”. His uncertainty
about the date was not really relevant as it is clear that he completed the
form in response to Certificate that had been sent to him on 23rd
March 1999. His addition of the words “without prejudice” cannot with nothing
further be given the meaning now suggested on behalf. They could just as easily
(and probably more likely) have been referring to his entitlement to payment
pursuant to the Certificate sent to him on 23rd March 1999.
50. Even if this
appeal had not been withdrawn, a rehearing could not have changed the
commencement date of the award, as the tribunal did not at that stage have the
jurisdiction to do this.
Had The Appeal Been Struck Out?
51. It seems to me
that on the wording of rule 9(1) the appeal is struck out by operation of law
once the office of the Pensions Appeal Tribunal receives notice that the
claimant wishes to withdraw his appeal. No judicial or administrative act is
necessary. As I understand it, the parties are agreed that this is the case.
52. I am not so sure
about the operation of rule 9(2), which raises questions about what the issue
arising in the appeal is, whether the Secretary of State has in fact decided it
in favour of the claimant, and whether notice has been given in a proper
fashion or at all. I do not need to decide these matters for the purposes of the
present case, as I am satisfied that the appeal was withdrawn in accordance
with rule 9(1).
The Commencement Date
53. The Secretary of
State argues that even if the tribunal correctly treated the appeal as being
against the 1963 decision, it had no jurisdiction to vary the commencement
date, because the 1964 tribunal decision was on an entitlement appeal and a
rehearing of this appeal could not consider the commencement date. The
commencement date was governed by paragraph 6 of schedule 3 to the Order and
paragraph 10 cannot apply where paragraph 6 applies. Further, the Secretary of
State argues that he had done all that was reasonably required for the purposes
of paragraph 10. (I observe that in a relevant case this would be a question of
fact for the tribunal to determine.)
54. The claimant
argues in effect that it is inherent in the determination of an entitlement
appeal that a commencement date will be specified. Further, the Secretary of
State’s terms of reference for the hearing on 17th July 2008
expressly asked the tribunal to determine the commencement date. Also, the
limit imposed by paragraph 6 of schedule 3 is placed on review by the Secretary
of State whereas the 2008 hearing was a de novo appeal against the 1963
decision.
55 It is trite law
that the parties cannot confer by agreement a jurisdiction on a statutory body
that it has not been given by statute or regulations. Neither, do I accept that
within the structure of the war pensions scheme it is inherent in the
determination of an entitlement appeal that a commencement date will be
specified (desirable though such a rule might have been). Otherwise it would
not have been necessary to introduce a right of appeal against commencement dates
from 9th April 2001.
What State of Knowledge Can Be Taken Into Account?
56. The tribunal took
the view that the change in medical opinion about the aetiology of diabetes
should be taken as the state of knowledge in respect of what it regarded as the
rehearing of the 1964 tribunal. The Secretary of State argues that a change
in medical opinion cannot in its very nature be declaratory of the previous
state of medical opinion. He also relies on section 5B of the 1943 Act (see
above).
57. I disagree with
this approach of the Secretary of State in so far as it is intended to apply if
the tribunal was rehearing the 1964 appeal. First, section 5B does not apply
because it was not introduced until 1st January 2001 and does not
apply to appeals lodged before that date so could not impinge on the tribunal’s
decision. Second, it is a question of fact whether the claimant’s diabetes was
attributable to service. If it is, which is agreed, that is a point of fact
which was also true in 1963. Third, the aetiology is indeed a circumstance
obtaining at the time when the decision under appeal. Medical opinion has
changed but in this context that is later evidence (and evidence is not a
circumstance) of what was the case at the relevant time. This is consistent
with approach taken by Upper Tribunal Judge Jacobs (sitting as a Social
Security Commissioner) in R(DLA) 2/01 and R(DLA) 3/01 in respect of similar
wording in social security legislation, which has been approved and applied on
numerous occasions by Commissioners and by the Upper Tribunal.
58. The tribunal decision of 20th May 1964 was
set aside on 6th October 1998. This left an unresolved appeal on the
issue of attribution/entitlement. On 23rd March 1999 and 7th
April 1999 the Secretary of State decided that issue in favour of the claimant.
On 31st March 1999 the claimant withdrew the appeal. That resolved
the matter as far as the appeal that was originally decided on 20th
May 1964.
59. Towards the end of 2006 there was an exchange of
correspondence between the parties which has now been treated (properly so in
my opinion) as an application to backdate the award beyond 1st April
1995, a refusal to do so, and a valid appeal to the tribunal against that
refusal. This was the appeal that was properly before the tribunal of 17th
July 2008.
60. That tribunal should have considered and applied the
provisions of schedule 3 to the Naval, Military and Air Forces Etc (Disablement
and Death) Service Pensions Order 1983, as I have explained above. Paragraph
1(6A) might have authorised backdating back to July 1963 when the original
claim was rejected if this were not a case of a change in medical opinion, but
it is such a case. Therefore, paragraph 6(1) limits backdating to the date
three years before the date of application for review. The Secretary of State
took the date of application for review as 1st April 1998 and
backdated the award to 1st April 1995. I can see nothing in the
papers that demonstrates that anything happened on any earlier date than 1st
April 1995 that could be construed as amounting to an application for review.
This is the decision that the tribunal should have made.
61. I appreciate that the claimant will consider that he has
been unfairly treated because medical opinion was not developed at the time of
his original discharge and claim. However, there was a deliberate policy
decision, endorsed by parliament, to limit backdating in all such cases to the
extent that I have indicated. The Pensions Appeal Tribunal tried to find a way
round this, but I am afraid that in legal terms it just does not work.
62. For the above reasons this appeal by the Secretary of
State succeeds.
H. Levenson
Judge of the Upper Tribunal
22nd January 2010