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attending an appeal
- michaelg
13 years 1 month ago - 13 years 1 month ago #75178 by michaelg
Replied by michaelg on topic Re: attending an appeal
Hi Stephano
There should be no inference drawn by the tribunal on you not attending an appeal should you request a paper appeal.
You may wish to give the reason, i.e. agoraphobia in writing to the tribunal, as the reason why you are asking for a paper hearing.
Please read -
How to submit an appeal
and also -
Is there any risk to challenging a decision?
Michael
There should be no inference drawn by the tribunal on you not attending an appeal should you request a paper appeal.
You may wish to give the reason, i.e. agoraphobia in writing to the tribunal, as the reason why you are asking for a paper hearing.
Please read -
How to submit an appeal
and also -
Is there any risk to challenging a decision?
Michael
Last edit: 13 years 1 month ago by michaelg. Reason: clarified
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- stephano
- Topic Author
13 years 1 month ago #75181 by stephano
Replied by stephano on topic Re: attending an appeal
Many thanks.
stephano.
stephano.
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- cdcdi1911
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13 years 1 month ago #75197 by cdcdi1911
Replied by cdcdi1911 on topic Re: attending an appeal
stephano wrote:
When your case is passed to the Tribunals Service you should be sent an Enquiry form asking if you want an oral or paper hearing. See the link below.
www.justice.gov.uk/downloads/global/form...iryFormAppellant.pdf
Whatever you choose, you can change your mind by writing to TS provided that a paper hearing hasn't already taken place.
Bear in mind that if you ask for an oral hearing and do not attend when expected, the judge can either adjourn or proceed with the hearing in your absence.
Good luck
Derek
Hi StephanoThanks,
so that would be a written request from the claimant, or does the claimant have to justify their absence from a tribunal.?
When your case is passed to the Tribunals Service you should be sent an Enquiry form asking if you want an oral or paper hearing. See the link below.
www.justice.gov.uk/downloads/global/form...iryFormAppellant.pdf
Whatever you choose, you can change your mind by writing to TS provided that a paper hearing hasn't already taken place.
Bear in mind that if you ask for an oral hearing and do not attend when expected, the judge can either adjourn or proceed with the hearing in your absence.
Good luck
Derek
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- Jim Allison BSc, Inst LE, MBIM; MA (Consumer Protection & Social Welfare Law)
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13 years 1 month ago #75214 by Jim Allison BSc, Inst LE, MBIM; MA (Consumer Protection & Social Welfare Law)
PLEASE READ THE SPOTLIGHTS AREA OF THE FORUM REGULARLY, OTHERWISE YOU MAY MISS OUT ON IMPORTANT INFORMATION. Nothing on this board constitutes legal advice - always consult a professional about specific problems
Replied by Jim Allison BSc, Inst LE, MBIM; MA (Consumer Protection & Social Welfare Law) on topic Re: attending an appeal
It's also possible if you cannot attend a tribunal venue, to request a 'domiciliary hearing', where the tribunal will sit in your home. Such appeals need strong medical evidence from a health care professional to merit a 'domiciliary hearing'.
For example, I sat as the Disabilty Specialist on DLA Tribunala for just over 10 years,
but only sat on 4 such hearings in all that time.
Thus, 'domiciliary hearings are rare to say the least.
For example, I sat as the Disabilty Specialist on DLA Tribunala for just over 10 years,
but only sat on 4 such hearings in all that time.
Thus, 'domiciliary hearings are rare to say the least.
PLEASE READ THE SPOTLIGHTS AREA OF THE FORUM REGULARLY, OTHERWISE YOU MAY MISS OUT ON IMPORTANT INFORMATION. Nothing on this board constitutes legal advice - always consult a professional about specific problems
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