Source: https://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/incapacity-benefit/ib-decisions/257-cib45631998
Timestamp: 2019-04-21 07:02:36+00:00

Document:
The claimant did not satisfy the “all work” test, but was entitled to incapacity benefit as suffering “from some specific disease … and by reason of such disease … there would be a substantial risk to [his] mental or physical health…if he was found capable of work” within the exception provided by regulation 27(b) of the Social Security (Incapacity for Work) (General) Regulations 1995 (“the 1995 Regulations”). In 1996 the conditions in regulation 27 were recast and paragraph (b) was removed by the Social Security (Incapacity for Work and Miscellaneous) Regulations 1996 (“the 1996 Regulations”). The claimant did not fall within the exceptions as amended and his entitlement to incapacity benefit was terminated.
Section 172 of the Social Security Administration Act 1992 required the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions to refer proposals for certain regulations to the Social Security Advisory Committee unless … (section 173(1)(b)) “the [Committee] have agreed that they shall not be referred”. Proposed amendments to regulations were referred informally to the Committee for them to decide whether they required a formal reference under section 172 or whether they agreed, under section 173, that the proposals should not be referred. The Committee members were accustomed and expected to rely on the information and assistance of officials of the Department for Work and Pensions as to the detail and intended effects of any proposal put to them. The practice was for each proposed amendment to be described by the departmental officials as “technical”, “neutral”, “adverse” or “beneficial”. In 1996 when the proposal amendment of regulation 27 of the 1995 Regulations was submitted it was described as “neutral”. At a subsequent meeting of the Committee to consider the proposals an official explained, in answer to questions about whether all the amendments were in fact “neutral”, that all claimants who fell within regulation 27(b) of the 1995 Regulations would be covered by other provisions within the “all work test”. Those statements were untrue. In reliance on them, the Committee did not require a formal reference of the proposed recasting of regulation 27 and the 1996 Regulations were made.
Chief Adjudication Officer v. Foster  AC 754, R(IS) 22/93 applied.
3. the 1996 amendment of regulation 27 was accordingly invalid and regulation 27(b) of the 1995 Regulations as modified by the judgment in R v. Secretary of Sate for Social Security, ex parte Moule (12 September 1996, unreported) continued in operation.
Mr Richard Drabble QC (instructed by Child Poverty Action Group) appeared for the Appellant.
Mr Philip Sales and Mr Jason Coppel (instructed by the Office of the Solicitor to the Department for Work and Pensions) appeared for the First Respondent.
Mr John Howell QC and Miss Gemma White (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared for the Second Respondent.
1. Eric Howker appeals from the decision given on 4 May 2001 by a Social Security Commissioner, Mr Patrick Howell QC. Thereby the Commissioner dismissed Mr Howker’s appeal from the decision on 6 June 1997 of a social security appeal tribunal sitting in Sutton, confirming that Mr Howker’s previous entitlement to incapacity benefit had been correctly reviewed and terminated from 5 February 1997. The tribunal rejected Mr Howker’s argument that he should continue to be entitled to benefit by reason of a provision in regulation 27(b) of the Social Security (Incapacity for Work) (General) Regulations 1995 (“the 1995 Regulations”). That provision was repealed and not re-enacted by the Social Security (Incapacity for Work and Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations 1996 (“the 1996 Regulations”), but Mr Howker challenged the validity of the new regulation 27. This appeal is brought with the permission of the Commissioner, who made trenchant criticisms of the conduct of officials in the Department of Social Security (“the Department”) in the course of the making of the 1996 Regulations. The issue raised on this appeal is whether by reason of that conduct the new regulation 27 was not validly made by the Secretary of State with the result that the exemption in regulation 27(b) of the 1995 Regulations continues in force.
2. I must now set out the background facts which I take largely from the unchallenged findings made by the Commissioner in his full and lucid decision.
Paragraph (b) applied to Mr Howker, as was accepted by the Department. However, in an unreported judgment of Collins J. on 12 September 1996 in R v. Secretary of State for Social Security ex parte Moule regulation 27 was held to be invalid as outside the enabling legislation, in that it provided for the question of deemed incapacity to be determined by a doctor approved by the Secretary of State rather than by an adjudication officer as required by the legislation.
4. Consequent on that decision the Department proposed alterations to regulation 27. The proposals were to make the question whether the conditions for exemption were satisfied one for the determination of the adjudication officer and to recast those conditions by, amongst other things, deleting paragraph (b) without replacement. None of the remaining exempting conditions applies to Mr Howker, as he accepts.
6. Under section 6 Social Security (Incapacity for Work) Act 1994 the statutory instrument by which the Secretary of State exercises the power to make regulations “shall not be made unless a draft of the instrument has been laid before Parliament and approved by a resolution of each House”; in other words the making of the regulations is subject to the affirmative resolution procedure.
7. Sections 170 – 174 Social Security Administration Act 1992 (“the 1992 Act”) contained further provisions governing the procedure for making and amending regulations. By section 9 Social Security Act 1980 the Social Security Advisory Committee (“the Committee”) was constituted. This is an independent advisory committee, described by the Commissioner (in paragraph 13 of his decision) as “a body of people of great distinction and experience in public life generally, and in particular on social issues”.
(b) the [Committee has] agreed that they shall not be referred.
(2) Where by virtue only of subsection (1)(a) above the Secretary of State makes regulations without proposals in respect of them having been referred, then, unless the [Committee] agrees that this subsection shall not apply, he shall refer the regulations to [it] as soon as practicable after making them.
(3) Where the Secretary of State has referred proposals to the Committee ... , he may make the proposed regulations before the Committee have made their report ... only if after the reference it appears to him that by reason of the urgency of the matter it is expedient to do so.
“(1) The Committee shall consider any proposals referred to it by the Secretary of State under section 172 above and shall make to the Secretary of State a report containing such recommendations with regard to the subject-matter of the proposals as the Committee thinks appropriate.
12. The Committee’s staff consists only of a small permanent secretariat. The Committee members in practice are accustomed, and expect, to rely on the information and assistance provided by officials of the Department in relation to the detail and intended effects of any proposal the Department puts before them.
14. By letter dated 28 October 1996 an official of the Department, Mr Axton, presented to the Committee the Department’s proposed amendments to the 1995 Regulations. In the letter it was said that the new regulations were “to restore the policy intention” following the decision in ex parte Moule and that the 1995 Regulations were redrafted to allow adjudication officers to consider medical evidence other than that of the Department’s examining doctor. In an Annex to a paper prepared for a meeting of the Committee on 6 November 1996 the Department said that the new provision was “more precisely defined to reflect the fact that it must be interpreted and applied by lay adjudicating authorities”. The indicator given to the proposed amendment to regulation 27 was “neutral”.
15. The meeting on 6 November 1996 was attended in force by officials of the Department. The Committee was not supplied with regulation 27 of the 1995 Regulations and so was not in a position to make a comparison with the proposed regulation 27. Nevertheless, paragraph 3.4 of the minutes records that members of the Committee queried whether the Department’s description of some of the amendments as neutral in effect was correct. In paragraph 3.5 it was recorded that Dr Sawney of the Department explained that those who fell into the category covered by regulation 27(b) of the 1995 Regulations would be covered by other provisions within the all work test.
“(1) A person who does not satisfy the all work test shall be treated as incapable of work if any of the circumstances set out in paragraph (2) apply to him.
18. On 20 December 1996 the Child Poverty Action Group wrote to the Committee to enquire about the basis on which the Committee had agreed to dispense with a formal reference and report on the removal of regulation 27(b). Mr Smith, the Secretary of the Committee, replied on 3 January 1997 that it had questioned officials closely on the changes to regulation 27, that the explanation they gave was consistent with the reply which the Minister gave to the House of Lords and that on this assurance about the reasons for, and intentions of, the proposed amendment the Committee decided not to seek a formal reference.
19. On 28 January 1997 Mr Howker was examined for the purposes of the all work test and failed to attain the required points to qualify for benefit by that route. Under the new regulation 27 he did not qualify for exemption from satisfying that test. His entitlement to benefit was terminated from 5 February 1997. It is accepted by him that the making of the 1996 Regulations was a change of circumstances justifying the review of his benefit.
“(1) The Committee members were materially misled by what they were told by the departmental officials about the proposed amendment of regulation 27. In particular they were misled by the statements made in Mr Axton’s letter of 28 October 1996 and the explanatory memorandum on “Proposal 11: [neutral amendment]”, telling them that the purpose and effect of the amendment was only to cope with the procedural consequences of transferring the decision on exemption from the all work test to an adjudication officer instead of a doctor in the wake of the decision in ex parte Moule, and that the changes were “neutral” in their effect on claimants in that no existing entitlement under the regulation would be taken away.
(2) Those statements were untrue, and obviously so to anyone who looked at the old exempting conditions in conjunction with the new ones. The decision to remove the old regulation 27(b) as a separate head of exemption cannot have been other than deliberate, to take away an existing basis of entitlement actually being awarded on the opinion of the department’s own doctors.
(3) Those statements were made by the departmental officials responsible for them with the intention that the Committee should act on them in deciding whether or not to give their agreement that a reference and report on the proposed amendment was not necessary; and were made with a view to securing such agreement.
(4) The misleading impression given by the written statements was not corrected by any adequate explanation of the substance of the change to regulation 27 in the course of the meeting itself: the reference to the removal of the “substantial risk” exempting condition recorded in the minute at paragraph 3.5 leaving the continuing, and misleading, impression that any person whose entitlement currently arose by reason of that provision would instead continue to be entitled under some other provision of the redrafted regulations, and that all was related to the procedural changes necessary following the High Court decision.
(5) The Committee members with entire propriety and good faith accepted and acted on the misleading statements and assurances made to them, and gave their agreement on that basis.
22. The Commissioner then proceeded to deal with the legal issues. He referred to the fact that the agreement by the Committee to there being no reference in respect of regulation 27 had been induced by material misrepresentation on the part of officials acting on behalf of the Secretary of State. He posed the question whether this meant that the amendment must be held invalid on the basis that the agreement had been based on a material misunderstanding, as was contended by Mr Drabble, or whether it was not for the Commissioner to look behind the apparent agreement of the Committee, as argued by the Secretary of State and the Committee. The Commissioner rejected a submission by counsel then appearing for the Secretary of State that a challenge to the validity of the new regulation 27 could not be entertained by the Commissioner after that regulation had received the express approval of both Houses of Parliament. That argument is not repeated before this court. The Commissioner said that the courts’ function consisted only of saying whether the limited legislative power Parliament had conferred by primary legislation had been exceeded in the particular case or not, and that was solely a question of ascertaining the proper scope of the power. He said that compliance with the requirements of sections 172 – 174 of the 1992 Act was a necessary precondition to any proper exercise of the power in any case where those requirements apply.
26. The Commissioner therefore rejected the submission that there should be implied into section 173(1)(b) a requirement of anything other than the objective fact of an agreement on the part of the Committee of which account would be taken in a court of law on ordinary legal principles, whatever the reasons the Committee had chosen to give it. He therefore dismissed the appeal.
27. The Commissioner directed that copies of his decision be sent to the Parliamentary Joint Scrutiny Committee on Statutory Instruments and to the House of Commons Social Security Select Committee. We are told that neither Committee has considered it necessary to take further steps.
28. On this appeal we have had the benefit of skilful arguments from Mr Drabble for Mr Howker, Mr Sales for the Secretary of State and Mr John Howell QC for the Committee.
(7) the Secretary of State through his officials being responsible for the flaw in observing the prescribed procedure for making the new regulation 27, the new regulation 27 made by him is invalid.
(5) if wrong on these submissions, having regard to the fact that the new regulation 27 has been in operation for many years and that no unhappiness over what occurred has been expressed by the Committee or Parliament, the court should not hold it to be invalid.
(4) the consequence of a procedural failure to obtain a report from the Committee does not necessarily deprive the Secretary of State of the power to make regulations nor does it necessarily deprive the regulations so made of legal effect; it is not contended that the Secretary of State misdirected himself in making the new regulation 27 nor that it was such that no reasonable Secretary of State could have made it; nor did Parliament refuse to deny effect to the new regulation 27 unless a report was received from the Committee; Parliament did not intend that regulations of this character should be treated as invalid merely in order to ensure that it receives a report which it has chosen not to require.
32. It is not, I think, in dispute that the question whether regulation 27 is invalid turns on the true construction of the 1992 Act. It is to the enabling Act that one must look to see if any challenge to subordinate legislation is available (Boddington v. British Transport Police  2 AC 143 at p. 160 per Lord Irvine of Lairg LC). The Lord Chancellor there recognised that there are situations in which Parliament may legislate to preclude a challenge, in the interest, for example, of providing certainty about the legitimacy of administrative acts on which the public may have to rely. He referred to two cases in which such challenges were held to be precluded: R. v. Wicks  AC 92 and Quietlynn Ltd. v. Plymouth City Council  1 QB 114. But he said (at p. 161) that it was an important feature of both cases that they were concerned with administrative acts specifically directed at the defendants, where there had been clear and ample opportunity provided by the scheme of the relevant legislation for those defendants to challenge the legality of those acts before being charged with an offence. He contrasted that with the case of subordinate legislation of a general character (in the sense that it is directed to the world at large) and where the first time an individual may be affected by that legislation is when he was charged with an offence. In the present case Mr Drabble points to the fact that the new regulation 27 is of a general nature affecting all potential claimants and that Mr Howker in effect had no opportunity to challenge by way of judicial review the making of the regulations. When Mr Howker found that his benefit was terminated from a date only one month from the coming into force of the 1996 Regulations, he promptly challenged that decision in the manner permitted by the social security legislation.
33. It is not now in doubt that the question of whether the new regulation 27 was invalid was one which a Commissioner has jurisdiction to determine. That was made plain by the decision of the House of Lords in Chief Adjudication Officer v. Foster  AC 754 [also reported as R(IS) 22/93], which held that a Commissioner could determine, whenever it was necessary to do so, whether a provision in regulations was beyond the scope of the enabling statute, and that it was not necessary to leave that to judicial review proceedings.
34. The question then arises whether the relevant invalidity is limited in some way. As I have noted, Mr Sales relied on the City of Edinburgh case in both the Outer House and the Inner House of the Court of Session as supporting a test of invalidity only if the statutory instrument was patently defective. In my judgment that test cannot stand in the light of Foster and Boddington, however convenient administratively it would be to confine the permissible challenges to the validity of subordinate legislation. In Foster Lord Bridge said that a commissioner’s jurisdiction to determine whether a decision was erroneous in point of law encompassed deciding whether the decision of a social security appeal tribunal gave effect to secondary legislation which is ultra vires in the sense of there being “any errors of law referable to a misuse by the Secretary of State of his regulation-making power” (see p. 762). Lord Bridge said (at p. 765) that if a Commissioner has jurisdiction to question the vires of secondary legislation the scope of that jurisdiction must, at least theoretically, embrace a challenge on the ground of irrationality as well as illegality. In Boddington it was held that distinctions between substantive and procedural invalidities were not justified. In Hoffmann-La Roche v. Secretary of State for Trade and Industry  AC 295 at p. 365 Lord Diplock said that the court had jurisdiction to declare invalid subordinate legislation approved pursuant to the affirmative resolution procedure if the Minister acted outwith the legislative powers conferred on him by the enabling statute and that was so whether the order was ultra vires by reason of its contents or by reason of the procedure followed prior to its being made. Thus despite the practical difficulties for a Commissioner in determining whether a regulation is invalid on any ground which might have allowed a challenge to its validity by way of judicial review, in my judgment he has the jurisdiction to make that determination.
35. I come next to the question whether in the context of the statutory scheme what occurred in the present case rendered the making of regulation 27 by the Secretary of State invalid. Mr Drabble has concentrated attention on the role of the Committee in the statutory scheme and the part played by the Secretary of State through his officials in procuring the Committee’s agreement, thereby enabling the regulation to be made. In my judgment it is clear that notwithstanding the fact that the Committee’s role was, as its name implies, advisory, it was intended by the statutory scheme that the Committee’s advice on the proposed regulations would be received by the Secretary of State and laid before Parliament unless the Committee agreed to no reference to it. This is emphasised by the mandatory requirement in section 172(1) that the Secretary of State “shall” refer the proposals to the Committee and by the requirement, even in a case of urgency when the Secretary of State is empowered to dispense with a reference, to refer the regulations so made to the Committee as soon as practicable after they are made, and the obligation on the Secretary of State to explain to Parliament, if he proposes not to give effect to the Committee’s recommendations, his reasons why not. Plainly in the absence of the Committee’s agreement Parliament was intended to have the benefit of the Committee’s advice so as to be able to assess the new regulations.
37. Where, as in the present case, the Secretary of State through his officials has misled the Committee by information which is obviously incorrect if comparison is made between the old regulation 27 and the new regulation 27, and thereby procured the Committee’s agreement to no reference, and where, as the Commissioner has found, the provision of the correct information would have led to a reference (or the withdrawal of the new regulation 27), and the Secretary of State proceeds to make the new regulation 27, it is manifest, to my mind, that the procedure intended by Parliament for the making of regulations has not been observed. That is so whether or not the officials acted innocently. There is nothing in the statutory provisions to suggest that Parliament would have intended so defective a procedure adopted by the Secretary of State, when matters were entirely under his control, to result in a valid regulation.
38. I am not persuaded that the policy considerations advanced by Mr Sales require some other conclusion. I acknowledge the importance of clear and certain rules in this field, but it is no less important that statutory procedures should be duly observed if regulations are to be changed to deprive members of the public of benefits to which otherwise they were entitled. I accept that it is fundamental that there should be proper governmental and parliamentary control over the allocation of public monies. However, every member of the public adversely affected by a new regulation is entitled to challenge the lawfulness of that regulation on proper grounds. The courts have never shrunk from declaring the invalidity of a defective measure affecting the allocation of public monies. Parliament has already provided by section 27 of the Social Security Act 1998 that the effect of a determination by a Commissioner or court that the decision of an adjudicating authority was erroneous in law should in specified circumstances be limited. Whether that section applies to the present circumstances was not the subject of argument before us, but it shows that Parliament can make provision to limit the effect of a decision it considers adverse. I see the administrative inconvenience if delegated legislation can be challenged outside judicial review proceedings with their narrow time limits; but the recent decisions of the House of Lords have made clear that such challenges are possible.
39. As for the decisions in Frey, Asher and Norwest Holst on which Mr Howell relied, I cannot accept that they show that in the absence of bad faith in relation to the Committee’s agreement there was due compliance with the statutory procedure. They were very different cases and do not go to that point. In Frey what was sought to be impugned was the local authority’s decision to refer certain tenancy agreements to the rent tribunal, and there was nothing to show that the decision, which did not affect the objectors’ rights, was taken improperly. In Asher, the decision of the Secretary of State to direct an extraordinary audit was sought to be challenged, and again this court held that the decision, which merely set machinery in motion, could not be impugned as bad faith was not alleged. In Norwest Holst a decision by the Secretary of State to appoint inspectors of a company was held by this court not to be capable of challenge where the Secretary of State acted in good faith within his powers. In the present case it is not the agreement but the new regulation 27 which is challenged as invalid in circumstances where it is alleged that there has been a failure to comply with the required statutory procedure.
40. Nor can I accept Mr Howell’s assertion that there is no rational basis for distinguishing between a misunderstanding by the Committee in agreeing to no reference as a result of incorrect information provided by the Secretary of State and any other misunderstanding. In my judgment it is plain that the Secretary of State has a crucial role in the statutory scheme; when, in breach of his duty under section 170(4), incorrect information is provided to the Committee with the result that the Secretary of State and Parliament do not receive the Committee’s advice which they would have received if correct information had been provided, that may well have consequences quite different from those where there has been a misunderstanding by the Committee for some other reason. I should make clear that I am not saying that the provision by the Secretary of State of any incorrect information will necessarily result in the invalidity of the consequent regulations. In each case an assessment has to be made of the significance of the failure. In the present case the Commissioner has made clear findings as to the consequences of what the Secretary of State, through his officials, did.
41. As for the attempted comparison between the word “agreed” in section 172(1) and the same word in section 176(2), each must be construed in its own context. There is nothing comparable to section 170(4) in relation to the representative organisations to be consulted under section 176(2).
42. In the light of these conclusions, I cannot see that the factors relied on by Mr Sales (the fact that the new regulation 27 has operated since January 1997 and the Committee’s and Parliament’s acquiescence in what has occurred) should lead this court not to hold that the new regulation 27 is invalid. It is unfortunate that this case has taken so long to reach this court, but that is not the fault of Mr Howker.
43. For these reasons I conclude that Mr Drabble is correct in his submissions that the new regulation 27 is invalid, and I respectfully disagree with the Commissioner’s conclusion. I suspect that the arguments before us have differed in emphasis from those presented to the Commissioner.
44. In Ex parte Moule Collins J. held that the old regulation 27 took effect with the deletion of the offending words “in the opinion of a doctor approved by the Secretary of State.” Mr Sales in his skeleton argument challenged whether a “blue pencil” test could be performed. But before us he conceded that it could. It was not submitted that Mr Drabble was wrong in his submission that if the new regulation 27 was invalid, the old regulation 27(b) in the form modified by ex parte Moule continued in operation, so that Mr Howker continues to be assessed under the old regime.
45. It follows that in my judgment this appeal should be allowed.
46. I agree with the judgments and conclusions of Peter Gibson and Hale LJJ which I have had the advantage of reading in draft.
47. I agree that this appeal should be allowed for the reasons given by Peter Gibson LJ. Mr.Sales has rightly emphasised the important constitutional principle that it is for Parliament to determine how public money should be spent. Parliament has determined that we should have a system of social security benefits for those who are unable to provide for themselves. The broad outlines are laid down in legislation but the scheme is necessarily extremely complicated and requires frequent amendment to take account of social, economic and (as in this case) legal change. The details have to be contained in delegated legislation. But Parliament has also recognised the need for both the Secretary of State and for Parliament to have independent and expert social policy advice before making changes to the scheme. There are complex questions involved, about the definition of need, about equity between different groups, about the right kind of incentives, all in the context of very large numbers of people and very large sums of public money. In the context of a scheme whose fundamental purpose is to relieve “want”, the need for independent and expert advice is particularly clear when a change to the regulations might deprive a large number of existing claimants of their benefit.
48. While the Secretary of State may refer such questions relating to the operation of any of the relevant enactments as he thinks fit to the Committee for their consideration and advice (section 170(3)), he has a positive duty to refer proposals to make regulations under any of the relevant enactments (section 172(1)), and to furnish the Committee with such information as the Committee may reasonably require for the proper discharge of their functions (section 170(4)). The volume of regulation is such that the Committee cannot possibly give detailed scrutiny to it all. Hence proposals for new regulations do not have to be referred if the Committee have agreed that they shall not be referred' (section 173(1)(b)). Once referred, however, the Committee have a positive duty to consider them and make a report to the Secretary of State (section 174(1)) and the Secretary of State has a positive duty to lay that report before Parliament with a copy of the regulations or draft regulations which he proposes to make. In doing so he must explain the extent to which he has given effect to the Committee's recommendations and, if he has not done so, why not (section 174(2)). This is a particularly precise set of obligations. It may be contrasted with the obligation in section 176, principally in relation to increases in housing benefit and council tax benefit, to consult with the relevant local government organisations unless they have agreed that this should not be done. The nature and purpose of consultation under section 176 is obviously rather different from the nature and purpose of consultation with the Social Security Advisory Committee. This is not surprising, as the Committee is a statutory body with a particular function under the Act. The difference is reflected in the lack of any duty on the Secretary of State to provide the local government organisations consulted with information, or upon them to report back to him, or upon him to inform Parliament of their views.
49. The fundamental question in this case is whether it is open to the Secretary of State to lay draft regulations before Parliament when his Department has misrepresented their effect to the Committee with the consequence that there is no report from the Committee to accompany them. There can be little doubt, as the Commissioner found, that had the proposal been properly presented to the Committee they would have required it to be referred to them. There is no need to speculate on what would have happened next, but events would certainly have been different: either the Secretary of State would have withdrawn the proposal to think again, as happened with another proposal submitted to the Committee at the same time; or he would have persisted and the Committee would have considered the matter and made a report; the report might have been favourable but it might well not have been; the Secretary of State would then have thought about it and decided whether to withdraw the proposal or make changes to meet any concerns expressed by the Committee; and any eventual regulation laid before Parliament would have been accompanied by a report and explanation which made the position plain.
50. I understand the concern of the Committee when the argument was focussed so narrowly upon whether their agreement that the proposal should not be referred to them was valid. This raised the spectre of judicial review of the Committee's decisions and actions, which the Committee was anxious to lay to rest. But the Court is not now being asked to declare that the Committee's agreement was a nullity: for one thing, that would take the appellant only part of the way. The Court is being asked to hold that the Secretary of State acted outside his powers in making the regulations when, for reasons within the control of his own department, the statutory procedure for doing so had not been properly followed.
"But in my judgment it was an important feature of both cases [R v. Wicks and Quietlynn Ltd v. Plymouth City Council  1 QB 114] that they were concerned with administrative acts specifically directed at the defendants, where there had been clear and ample opportunity provided by the scheme of the relevant legislation for those defendants to challenge the legality of those acts before being charged with an offence.
By contrast, where subordinate legislation (eg statutory instrument or byelaws) is promulgated which is of general character in the sense that it is directed to the world at large, the first time an individual may be affected by that legislation is when he is charged with an offence under it: ... "
53. The procedural irregularity in the making of this regulation was in my view such as to render it invalid. Parliament laid down a very specific consultation process in sections 170 to 174 of the 1992 Act, the nature and purpose of which is obvious in the context of the social security scheme as a whole. Parliament must have intended that the Secretary of State comply with it, and comply with it properly, before making regulations: see the observations of Glidewell LJ and Sir John Donaldson MR in R v. Secretary of State for Social Services ex parte Cotton; R v. Secretary of State for Social Services ex parte Waite, Court of Appeal, 14 December 1985. In that case, the Secretary of State had consulted the Committee but had not put draft regulations before them. Sir John Donaldson considered that the proposals were not sufficiently precise for this to be a proper consultation and would have held the resulting regulations invalid on that ground. Glidewell and May LJJ held that the Secretary of State had done enough to inform the Committee of what was proposed, although Glidewell LJ was concerned that although he had complied with the letter he had not complied with the spirit of the legislation. All three members of the court approached the case on the basis that a failure to comply with the consultation process could invalidate the regulation.
54. In this case, there was clearly a failure to comply. The Committee had agreed a particular formula with the Department for classifying proposals so that they could decide whether or not to require a reference: this was information which they reasonably required and the Department had agreed to supply to them. The information supplied in writing was seriously inaccurate, as was the explanation given at the meeting where the Committee considered this. The Commissioner left open the question of whether this was deliberate. It was not necessary for him to find that it was. The officials had it within their power to give the Committee the correct information. They and through them the Secretary of State were responsible for the misinformation. The Secretary of State should not have made the regulation without putting it right. This was a material irregularity in the procedure laid down by Parliament and invalidates the regulation which resulted.
55. Far from flying in the face of Parliamentary democracy, this conclusion reinforces it. The procedures laid down by Parliament for exercising the power to make delegated legislation which it has conferred upon ministers must be properly observed, and particularly where it is the purpose of those procedures to enhance the effectiveness of Parliament's scrutiny of that delegated legislation.
Order: Appeal allowed; the decision of the Commissioner, Mr Patrick Howell QC, dated 4 May 2001 be set aside; the decision of the Sutton social security appeal tribunal dated 6 June 1997 be set aside; the adjudication officer’s decision dated 6 June 1997 be set aside; regulation 29 of the Social Security (Incapacity for Work and Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations 1996 is ultra vires and of no effect in so far as it is purported to delete sub-paragraph (b) of regulation 27 of the Social Security (Incapacity for work) (General) Regulations 1995; the first respondent do pay the costs of the appellant, to be assessed if not agreed; there will be no order as to the costs of the second respondent; the appellant’s costs be assessed in accordance with the Community Legal Service Costs Regulations 2000; permission to appeal to the House of Lords refused.

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