Upper tribunal question
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Mo_
Community member Posts: 4 Connected
Can DWP go against a decision made by Upper Tribunal Court with regards to No assessment before 24 months from the date the letter was dated by the Upper Tribunal Court?
If DWP did do an assessment before 24 months is that legal and binding?
If it is not binding by Legislation Law can the person answering my points actually put in writing what law and what is the wording of that law in Uk Legislation for England.
I would really appreciate it if my questions can be answered.
Thank you
Read more at https://community.scope.org.uk/activity#pLallRRhe35QsqMY.99
If DWP did do an assessment before 24 months is that legal and binding?
If it is not binding by Legislation Law can the person answering my points actually put in writing what law and what is the wording of that law in Uk Legislation for England.
I would really appreciate it if my questions can be answered.
Thank you
Read more at https://community.scope.org.uk/activity#pLallRRhe35QsqMY.99
Comments
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Thank you for your reply. I also went further into investigating the point. It is not binding on DWP. My only point on this is why did the Court put in this recommendation if it is not binding.
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The wording is as follows
The tribunal recommends that the Department does not reassess Mr. """"" within 24 months from today's date.
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Ok thank you so much
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I wonder why the Upper Tribunal takes so long to issue the decision on permission to appeal.
Never allow DWP assertions to define you. They never have evidence of your true circumstances. -
AndrewHall said:I wonder why the Upper Tribunal takes so long to issue the decision on permission to appeal.
This thread is more than 4 years old.
I would appreciate it if members wouldn't tag me please. I have all notifcations turned off and wouldn't want a member thinking i'm being rude by not replying.If i see a question that i know the answer to i will try my best to help. -
poppy123456 said:AndrewHall said:I wonder why the Upper Tribunal takes so long to issue the decision on permission to appeal.
This thread is more than 4 years old.Never allow DWP assertions to define you. They never have evidence of your true circumstances. -
Hi @AndrewHall I think Poppy meant that because the discussion is from a few years ago now, some of the people posting might not be active on the community at the moment, or they might take a while to answer you.
You'd be welcome to start a new discussion of your own if you'd like to, and please let us know if we can help with anything further
AlexOnline Community Coordinator
Scope
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Thanks @Alex_Scope that's exactly what i meant. Far better to start your own thread than ask a question on the end of a thread that's this old.
I would appreciate it if members wouldn't tag me please. I have all notifcations turned off and wouldn't want a member thinking i'm being rude by not replying.If i see a question that i know the answer to i will try my best to help. -
Username_removed said:AndrewHall said:I wonder why the Upper Tribunal takes so long to issue the decision on permission to appeal.1 - get it wrong and there’s a theoretical possibility of being judicially reviewed.
2 - a glut of complex UT and Tax Credit decisions where the lack of paperwork from either organisation is a disgrace really. Been commented upon repeatedly by UT judges.
3 - the slow move to electronic systems.
4 - the pandemic.
Thanks Mike for the response.
I will like to use this opportunity to thank you for your critical response on my other topic. You prompted me to search my record enabling me to resurrect a 'dead' appeal.
Thanks so much.Never allow DWP assertions to define you. They never have evidence of your true circumstances.
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