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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Ward v South Yorkshire Pensions Authority & Anor [2005] EWHC 2711 (Ch) (29 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/2711.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2711 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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MICHAEL WARD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SOUTH YORKSHIRE PENSIONS AUTHORITY NATIONAL PROBATION SERVICE (SOUTH YORKSHIRE) |
Respondents |
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Mr. W B Phillips (instructed by (1) South Yorkshire Pensions Authority and (2) National Probation Service Solicitors) for the Respondents.
Hearing dates: 4th November 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hart:
"resulted in me being subjected to an unacceptable level of stress, anxiety and depression which in turn has created a medical condition identified as 'Ischemic Heart Disease' for which I am still being prescribed appropriate medication and certified as unable to seek alternative employment… "
"[1] Mr Bick has referred your file to me with your letter of 21 March, and I have now reviewed the background very carefully.
[2] That review led me precisely the point which Mr Bick highlighted in his letter to you of 11 March. Your position is that you would not have decided to take early retirement on the basis of the retirement benefits actually payable, despite these being higher than the amounts which had first been indicated, I often determine cases where the decision to retire has been based on the quotation of a higher pension than proves to be payable. You are seeking to make the same argument but on facts which do not carry the same weight.
[3] Up to the time of your redundancy, you were never guaranteed or promised the full benefits based on added years. It had been made clear to you that an award of added years would be discretionary. You were not told that such an award had been approved.
[4] Despite what you say, I am satisfied that your decision – before the possibility of added years was raised – was to accept redundancy and retire, and so I cannot see how you can argue that you would [have] taken a different decision had you known that the benefits on retirement would be higher than you had been led to believe.
[5] The maladministration which is said to have been admitted relates to disregarding of information you supplied about your Army pension. But I do not see that as altering the eventual financial outcome for you.
[6] It is therefore my Determination that your complaint should not be upheld. Copies of my Determination have been sent to South Yorkshire Probation Service and the South Yorkshire Pensions Authority, and the investigation has now been completed." (paragraph numbering added by myself)
Mr Bick was a Senior Complaints Investigator in the Ombudsman's office who had investigated the complaint in correspondence with Mr Ward and the second respondent in the period from August 2004 to 11th March 2005. The reference to the information which Mr Ward had supplied about his army pension is a reference to the fact that Mr Ward had informed the employer about that pension at the date, many years before, when his employment had commenced.
i) that the Ombudsman has not dealt with Mr Ward's claim in respect of non-financial loss;ii) that the Ombudsman has given no reasons for dismissing the claim in respect of non-financial loss;
iii) that the Ombudsman has given inadequate reasons for dismissing the claim in respect of financial loss; and
iv) that the Ombudsman could not reasonably have reached a conclusion on the disputed issues of fact without the benefit of an oral hearing.
The claim in respect of non-financial loss
"If, as the Pensions Ombudsman implicitly found, it consisted in the wrongful reduction in Mr. Haywood's pension, then it might well be appropriate to compensate him, not only for his pecuniary loss, but also for the anxiety which he suffered until be knew that his pension was to be restored to its proper level. But once this analysis is rejected and the maladministration is identified as the failure to warn Mr. Haywood that there was some doubt as to the amount of his pension, or as the promise t pay him more than he could lawfully be paid, then the basis on which the Pensions Ombudsman made the award of £1,000 can no longer be supported. Properly identified, the maladministration caused neither pecuniary loss nor anxiety or distress, but the reverse. The most that can be said is that it inevitably led to disappointed expectations."
"In the latter stages of your letter you make comment about levels of compensation. This gives me the opportunity to advise you what I may be seeking. Bearing in mind that this episode of maladministration and ill-advice has resulted in me making a decision to end my employment with the national Probation Service. These are:
a. Compensatory adjustment for the difference in Benefit quotations on which I made my decision to end my employment with the National Probation Service – i.e. the reduction of approx £!700.00 for as many years as I continue to draw my Pension or an agreed commutation of such figures.
or
b. Compensatory adjustment between the salary I would have continued to receive minus the Pension that I am currently receiving up to my retirement age of 65."
The claim for financial loss
i) The National Probation Directorate stated their intention to outsource relevant functions in the Autumn of 2001. Mr Ward was employed as a bursar by the South Yorkshire Area of the Service with responsibility, inter alia, for those functions. The outsourcing was scheduled to take place on 1st October 2002. The question arose in early 2002 whether Mr Ward's employment would be subject to a TUPE transfer to the new contractor. If not, the possibilities were either that he would be made redundant or, if he wished, be redeployed within the South Yorkshire area of the Service.ii) In March 2002 Mr Ward was advised that in the event of his being made redundant he would receive a redundancy payment in the region of £12,700 and appears to have been advised that he would then receive an estimated £4,197.53 p.a. pension and a lump sum of £15,710.63.
iii) By late April 2000 the exercise to establish whether his employment would be subject to a TUPE transfer had been completed, the upshot being that only 39% of his functions were to be the subject of the transfer with the result that his employment was not contemplated as being transferable to the new contractor under TUPE. Mr Ward seems to have co-operated in this exercise and in no way disputed its conclusions.
iv) By that stage (early May 2002) the options available to Mr Ward were either to explore with the employer the possibilities of suitable alternative employment within the Service or to secure the agreement of his employer to the severance package which had been indicated to him in March 2002 as the consequence of his redundancy. The employer could not agree to that package until it had obtained the agreement of the National Probation Directorate (the "NPD") to be responsible for funding it. It is clear that at this stage both Mr Ward and his employer were co-operating in the process of obtaining the NPD's agreement to fund the package. No enquiry was made by Mr Ward of the possibility of his obtaining suitable alternative employment within the Service. On 26th May the employer (by Mr Keith Griffiths) sent him fresh estimates of the contents of the proposed severance package (Annual Pension £5,900 p.a., Lump Sum £17,700 and redundancy payment £12,600), noting that the pension and lump sum did not include added years.
v) Mr Ward did not understand what was meant by "added years". He e-mailed Mr Griffiths with the query:
"…What does the option of 'added years' do to the bid? Judging by the way the Service seems to be heading I don't envisage myself returning on Relief basis or any other basis related to the same Pension Fund (partners ill health may have a lot to do with it too), just checking on the financial situation relating to this option."vi) Mr Griffiths answered the query by saying:
"The effect of granting added years, which is a discretion available to the Board under the Pension Regs would be to increase your benefits as set out below:Redundancy pay £12,600Annual Pension £7,709Lump Sum £23,127If you would like me to make out a case for payment of those added years, please advise."vii) Mr Ward replied on 28th May 2002 saying:
"Try for that option without putting the original one at risk."viii) The extent to which the NPD was prepared to fund redundancies arising as a result of the outsourcing decision, and in particular to fund awards of added years, was not clear until after 30th July 2002 when the NPD released its criteria for such funding. Those criteria were satisfied in Mr Ward's case if he fell within the rubric:
"Where less than 50% of work transfers under any individual contract, and suitable alternative employment or additional duties cannot be found…"ix) The case being advanced by the employer to the NPD in respect of Mr Ward's potential redundancy was, as put in an e-mail from Mr Griffiths to Simon Stone at the Home Office dated 24th July 2002:
"Any news on Mick Ward's situation? From this end, having looked at all alternatives (there aren't any) all we can say is that on 1 October 2002, he'll definitely be out of a job."x) It appears that Mr Ward was not told that his redundancy had been agreed by NPD, and that he would have an award of added years, until Friday 9th August 2002. On 11th August 2002 Mr Griffiths e-mailed him with calculations indicating his estimate of the redundancy benefits assuming that the employment terminated on 30th September 2002. Those estimates were Redundancy Pay £13,048, Annual Pension £7,843 and Pension Lump Sum £23,531. Those figures were subsequently confirmed in the attachment to the letter sent to him on 29th August 2002 terminating his employment, by virtue of redundancy, on 30th September 2002.
"Mr Ward could have asked to be considered for a transfer to suitable alternative employment with this Service at any time up until termination of his employment. Mr Ward never once asked for a transfer. Had he done so this would have been given priority consideration…"