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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 >> The PNPF Trust Company Ltd v Taylor & Ors [2010] EWHC 1573 (Ch) (28 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1573.html Cite as: [2010] Pens LR 261, [2010] EWHC 1573 (Ch), [2010] PLR 261 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE PNPF TRUST COMPANY LTD (AS TRUSTEE OF THE PILOTS NATIONALPENSION FUND) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) GEOFF TAYLOR (2) TERRY CLARK (3) MILFORD HAVEN PORT AUTHORITY (4) PORT OF LONDON AUTHORITY (5) SHOREHAM PORT AUTHORITY (6) PORT OF TYNE AUTHORITY (7) FIRST CORPORATE SHIPPING LIMITED (trading as "THE BRISTOL PORT COMPANY") (8) PD TEESPORT LIMITED |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Christopher Nugee QC and Mr Jonathan Evans (instructed by Linklaters LLP) for the 1st Defendant
Mr Andrew Spink QC and Mr Nicolas Stallworthy (instructed by CMS Cameron McKenna LLP) for the 2nd Defendant
Mr Paul Newman QC and Mr James Walmsley (instructed by Morgan Cole LLP) for the 3rd Defendant
Mr Brian Green QC and Mr Andrew Mold (instructed by Sacker and Partners LLP) for the 4th Defendant
Mr Robert Ham QC and Mr Richard Hitchcock (instructed by Nabarro LLP) for the 5th Defendant
Miss Sarah Asplin QC and Mr Fenner Moeran (instructed by Eversheds LLP) for the 6th Defendant
Mr Michael Furness QC and Miss Emily McKechnie (instructed by Lawrence Graham LLP) for the 7th Defendant
Mr John Martin QC and Mr John Stephens (instructed by Dickinson Dees LLP) for the 8th Defendant
Hearing dates: 20th, 21st, 22nd, 25th, 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th of January 2010 and 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 8th, February 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Heading | Paragraph |
Introduction | 1 to 5 |
An outline of the Scheme | 6 to 8 |
The categories of persons involved in the PNPF | 9 to 17 |
The questions on the claim form, the Issues for determination and representation | 18 to 19 |
Representation | 20 to 25 |
The History of Pilotage and the PNPF | 26 to 28 |
Pilotage prior to the Pilotage Act 1987 (the "1987 Act") | 29 to 32 |
The Pilotage Act 1913 ("the 1913 Act") | 29 to 32 |
The Merchant Shipping Act 1979 ("the 1979 Act") | 33 to 34 |
The Pilotage Act 1983 ("the 1983 Act") | 35 to 36 |
Pilots' pension arrangements prior to the 1987 Act | |
(i) Regional pilots' benefit funds | 37 to 39 |
(ii) The establishment of a national pension scheme | 40 |
(iii) The governing provisions of the national scheme | 41 to 42 |
(iv) The management of the national scheme | 43 to 45 |
(v) Participation of pilotage authorities in the national scheme | 46 to 49 |
(vi) Benefits under the new national scheme | 50 |
(vii) Contribution obligations under the national scheme | 51 to 52 |
(viii) Amending the contribution provisions | 53 to 54 |
(ix) Cessation of participation | 55 |
(x) Provisions of the Pilotage Act 1983 relating to the national Scheme |
56 |
(xi) New Byelaws - September 1983 | 57 |
The background to the Pilotage Act 1987 | 58 to 61 |
(i) The Samuel Montagu report on Early Retirement | 62 to 64 |
(ii) The British Ports Association's Commitment | 65 to 68 |
(iii) Legislative proposals | 69 to 71 |
The impact of the Pilotage Act 1987 on the provision of pilotage services | 72 to 75 |
(i) The transfer of assets and liabilities from Pilotage Authorities to CHAs |
76 |
(ii) The employment of pilots | 77 |
(iii) The early retirement scheme under the 1987 Act | 78 |
The impact of the Pilotage Act 1987 on the Scheme | |
(i) Provisions of the 1987 Act relating to the Scheme | 79 to 82 |
(ii) The 1987 Order | 83 |
The introduction of the 1988 Rules of the Scheme | 84 to 85 |
(i) The role of the Trustee under the 1988 Rules | 86 |
(ii) CHAs as Participating Bodies | 87 to 88 |
(iii) The power of amendment under the 1988 Rules | 89 to 90 |
(iv) Ceasing to be a member of the Scheme | 91 |
(v) Contribution rules | 92 to 97 |
(vi) Benefits | 98 |
(vii) Transfers in | 99 |
(viii) Cessation of participation | 100 |
(ix) Participating Bodies' Influence in decision making | 101 to 107 |
(x) The Deeds of Accession | 108 to 112 |
Changes to the Scheme's governing provisions since 1989 | |
(i) Amendments to the contribution obligations of CHAs | 113 to 115 |
(ii) The removal of Article 72 | 116 to 117 |
(iii) Other amendments | 118 to 120 |
Scheme's funding position and contribution levels over time | 121 to 124 |
QUESTION 1 | 125 to 126 |
The Law | |
A. Construction | 127 to 129 |
B. Implication | 130 to 135 |
C. Hole v Garnsey | 136 to 145 |
A general point on interpretation of the Scheme | 146 to 147 |
The Deeds of Accession | 148 to 202 |
Discussion | 203 to 234 |
Rule 9(1)(a) | 235 to 273 |
Active ECHAs | |
Issue 1 | 274 to 277 |
Issue 2 | 278 to 280 |
Issue 3 and 4 | 281 to 287 |
Formerly Active ECHAs | |
Issue 5 | 288 to 291 |
Issues 6, 7 and 8 | 292 |
Active SCHAs | 293 to 295 |
Issue 9 | 296 to 302 |
Issues 10, 11 and 12 | 303 |
Issue 13 | 304 |
Issues 14, 15 and 16 | 305 |
Formerly Active SCHAs | |
Issues 17 and 18 | 306 |
Issues 19 and 20 | 307 |
QUESTIONS 2, 3 AND 3A | |
QUESTION 2 | 308 to 310 |
QUESTIONS 3 AND 3A | 311 to 312 |
Issue 20A | 313 to 318 |
Issue 21 | 319 to 320 |
QUESTIONS 6 AND 7 | 321 to 423 |
QUESTION 5 | 424 to 435 |
QUESTION 4 | 436 to 476 |
The Explanatory Note | 477 to 482 |
The wording | 483 to 485 |
Practical and purposive construction | 486 to 492 |
An unfunded gap between SSF and ECE | 493 to 496 |
The legislative origins of the key phrase | 497 to 519 |
Guidance of tPR | 520 to 565 |
QUESTION 4A | 566 to 568 |
Hearn v Dobson | 569 to 604 |
QUESTION 8 | 605 to 628 |
QUESTION 9 | 629 to 635 |
British Vita | 636 |
The MFR regime | 637 to 641 |
The SSF regime | 642 to 649 |
Valuations under the SSF regime | 650 |
Schedule of contributions and recovery plans | 651 to 662 |
Regulation 16 Scheme Funding Regulations | 663 to 729 |
QUESTION 10 | 730 to 764 |
ANNEX | ANNEX |
Mr Justice Warren :
Introduction
a) amending the Scheme to seek deficit repair contributions from those who have adhered to the Scheme. This raises issues as to the scope of the power of amendment; and
b) applying the statutory provisions designed to remedy deficits in occupational pension schemes, namely Section 75 ("Section 75") of the Pensions Act 1995 ("PA 1995") (which provides for lump sum payments from "employers" in certain events) and, on an ongoing basis, the scheme specific funding ("SSF") regime found in Part 3 of the Pensions Act 2004 ("PA 2004").
a) the unusual nature of the Scheme;
b) the terms of the standard form deeds of accession executed by the entities participating in the Scheme; and
c) the complex history of the Scheme.
An outline of the Scheme
The categories of person involved in the PNPF
a) the entities described in Rule 10 of the 1988 Rules as "Participating Bodies". These are the Competent Harbour Authorities ("CHAs") for an Area in which Pilots are self-employed, and;
b) any person or body which is an employer of Pilots in any Area and;
c) the Members.
a) some ECHAs currently employ pilots accruing benefits under the PNPF ("Active ECHAs") while others no longer have such pilots in their employ ("Formerly Active ECHAs").
b) Similarly, some SCHAs still authorise pilots accruing benefits under the PNPF ("Active SCHAs") while others no longer authorise such pilots ("Formerly Active SCHAs").
a) some "E" Members currently accrue benefits under the PNPF ("Active "E" Members") but others, namely deferred and pensioner Members, do not ("Formerly Active "E" Members"); and
b) the same is true of S Members ("Active "S" Members" and "Formerly Active "S" Members" respectively).
a) the proportion of the Scheme's total liabilities attributable to pre-October 1988 pensionable service is 58% (this pensionable service was exclusively self-employed pensionable service);
b) the proportion of the Scheme's total liabilities attributable to post-October 1988 pensionable service is 42%, and this is made up of 13% for employed pensionable service and 29% for self-employed pensionable service;
c) therefore, the total proportion of the Scheme's liabilities that are referable to the pensionable service of self-employed Members (whether pre- or post-October 1988) is 87%.
The Questions on the claim form, the Issues for determination and representation
a) The scope of the Trustee's ability, taking into account the terms of the Deeds of Accession, to amend the 1988 Rules so as to broaden the Trustee's powers to demand contributions (Question 1).
b) Tied to the first point, the validity of two contribution rules that have recently been introduced in order to deal with specific situations (Questions 3 and 3A) and the construction of those two rules (Questions 2 and 8).
c) The application of the statutory employer debt regime contained in Section 75 and associated provisions in relation to the Scheme and the application of the SSF regime (Questions 4, 4A, 5, 6 and 7).
d) The extent to which the SSF regime either gives the Trustee wider powers to demand contributions than those contained in the Rules (Question 9) or narrows its powers to demand contributions by restricting its ability to use its contribution powers under the Rules (Question 10).
Representation
a) the first Defendant: Geoff Taylor ("Mr Taylor"), is a Formerly Active Self-Employed Member;
b) the second Defendant: Terry Clark ("Mr Clark"), is a Formerly Active Employed Member;
c) the third Defendant: Milford Haven Port Authority ("Milford Haven"), is an Active Employer CHA;
d) the fourth Defendant: Port of London Authority ("the PLA"), is a Formerly Active Employer CHA which ceased to employ Active Members after 2 September 2005, but before 6 April 2008. It is one of four Formerly Active ECHAs in this category (known as "Cessation CHAs"). These are CHAs which ceased to employ Active Members in the period between 2 September 2005 and 5 April 2008. [The significance of 2 September 2005 is that, from this date, deficits for the purpose of Section 75 were assessed on a buy-out basis. On this basis there was, from 2 September 2005 onwards, a large deficit in the Scheme to which employers might in certain circumstances be liable to contribute under Section 75. The significance of 6 April 2008 is that, on that date, significant changes to the Occupational Pension Schemes (Employer Debt) Regulations 2005 (the "Employer Debt Regulations") were brought into force];
e) the fifth Defendant: Shoreham Port Authority ("Shoreham"), like the PLA, is a Formerly Active ECHA, but it ceased to employ active Members prior to 2005 at a time when there was no deficit on the relevant statutory basis (namely, the minimum funding requirement ("MFR") basis which applied prior to 2 September 2005) for assessing liability under the Employer Debt Regulations;
f) the sixth Defendant: Port of Tyne Authority ("Tyne"), is a Formerly Active SCHA;
g) the seventh Defendant: Bristol, is an Active SCHA;
h) the eighth Defendant: Teesport, is, like Bristol, an Active SCHA.
The History of Pilotage and the PNPF
a) Pilotage prior to the 1987 Act.
b) Pension arrangements for pilots prior to the 1987 Act.
i) Regional pilots' benefit funds;
ii) The establishment of the national scheme.
c) The background to the 1987 Act.
d) The impact of the 1987 Act on pilotage services.
e) The impact of the 1987 Act on the Scheme.
f) The new governing provisions of the Scheme following the 1987 Act (ie the 1988 Rules).
g) Changes in the Scheme's governing provisions since 1988.
h) The Scheme's funding position and contribution levels over time.
Pilotage prior to the Pilotage Act 1987 (the "1987 Act")
The Pilotage Act 1913 ("the 1913 Act")
The Merchant Shipping Act 1979 ("the 1979 Act")
The Pilotage Act 1983 ("the 1983 Act")
Pilots' pension arrangements prior to the 1987 Act
(i) Regional pilots' benefits funds
"[to] provide for a deduction being made from any sums received by pilots of any sums required for meeting the administrative expenses of the authority, or any contributions required for any fund established for the payment of pensions or any other benefits to pilots, their widows or children (in this Act referred to as a pilots' benefit fund)".
(ii) The establishment of a national pension scheme
(iii) The governing provisions of the national scheme
(iv) The management of the national scheme
a) amend the rules;
b) set contribution rates within the limits prescribed in byelaw 11;
c) increase benefits; and
d) appoint and remove the trustee.
(v) Participation of pilotage authorities in the national scheme
"1. The Forth Pilotage Authority shall on and from [1st January 1972] be a Participating Authority for the purposes of the Pilots' National Pension Fund Bye-laws 1971 and accordingly those Bye-laws are hereby adopted and as on and from [1st January 1972] the Pilots Benefit Fund established by Bye-laws made on 17th July, 1951 by the Forth Pilotage Authority and confirmed by the Minister of Transport on 1st August, 1951 (hereinafter called "the Old Fund") shall form part of the Pilots' National Pension Fund and shall be subject to the provisions of the Pilots' National Pension Fund Bye-laws 1971. (emphasis added)
2. On [1st January 1972] the Old Fund shall be transferred to the Trustee of the Pilots' National Pension Fund."
(vi) Benefits under the new national scheme
a) B members' entitlements under their regional pilots' benefit fund were replaced with a right to an identical pension from the national scheme; and
b) A members received a pension based on 1/60ths of a sum (being the highest average annual net earnings of pilots in the member's district for any three consecutive calendar years in the last 10 complete years before they reached age 60) for each year of Pensionable Service. This Pensionable Service would include a component to reflect service accrued prior to 1 April 1971 (or such later date as the relevant pilots' benefit fund transferred its assets into the national scheme), referred to as "Pre-membership Service".
(vii) Contribution obligations under the national scheme
(viii) Amending the contribution provisions
(ix) Cessation of participation
(x) Provisions of the Pilotage Act 1983 relating to the national scheme
"(h) provide for a deduction to be made from any sums received by pilots of any contributions required for any fund established for the payment of pensions or other benefits to pilots, their widows or children (in this Act referred to as a pilots' benefit fund);
(i) establish, either alone or in conjunction with any other pilotage authority, pilots' benefit funds, and provide for the direct payment to any such fund of any contributions by pilots towards the fund, of any part of the ordinary receipts of the pilotage authority, and also for the administration of any such fund and for the conditions of participation in any such fund;"
(xi) New Byelaws – September 1983
The background to the Pilotage Act 1987
(i) The Samuel Montagu report on Early Retirement
(ii) The British Ports Association's Commitment
"…the BPA's main policy making committee have considered the matter of benefit maintenance for the PNPF and, subject to the caveats early [sic] expressed on financial stability, we would be prepared to give a commitment that the current pension benefits as outlined in the Rules, including the early retirement scheme set out in Mr Davidson's letter dated 19th March 1986 to…the UKPA, will not be reduced." [the UKPA is the United Kingdom Pilots' Association.]
(iii) Legislative proposals
The impact of the Pilotage Act 1987 on the provision of pilotage services
a) had statutory powers in relation to the regulation of shipping movements and the safety of navigation within its harbour; and
b) whose harbour fell wholly or partly within the district of a pilotage authority.
a) power to authorise persons to act as pilots and to determine their qualifications;
b) power to withdraw authorisation in a broader range of circumstances than previously. This was an important change from the previous situation where once authorised, a pilot's authorisation could be withdrawn only in limited circumstances. This change was made because it was considered that, in order to provide a more efficient service, the CHAs needed to be able to withdraw authorisation if, for example, the demand for pilotage services dropped, something that pilotage authorities had not had the freedom to do.
(i) The transfer of assets and liabilities from Pilotage Authorities to CHAs
(iii) The employment of pilots
(iv) The early retirement scheme under the 1987 Act
The impact of the Pilotage Act 1987 on the Scheme
(i) Provisions of the 1987 Act relating to the Scheme
"A competent harbour authority may pay into any pilots' benefit fund established under paragraph (i) of section 15(1) of the Pilotage Act 1983 such contributions as may be required by the rules governing that fund in respect of any authorised pilot providing his services under such arrangements as mentioned in subsection (1) above."
"(1) Any pilots' benefit fund established under paragraph (i) of section 15(1) of the Pilotage Act 1983 shall continue in existence notwithstanding the repeal of that section by this Act and the Secretary of State may by order make such provision as he considers appropriate as to—
(a) the operation after the repeal of that section of the byelaws under which any such fund was established;
(b) the appointment of the managers of any such fund and any powers to be exercisable as respects the management of the fund by the persons who are to appoint those managers; and
(c) the powers of any such managers to amend or revoke the byelaws or any other provision governing the fund.
(2) Before making an order under sub-paragraph (1) above in respect of any fund the Secretary of State shall consult such persons or organisations as appear to him to be representative of competent harbour authorities and such persons or organisations as appear to him to be representative of the persons who may benefit from the fund."
(ii) The 1987 Order
a) the bye-laws governing the national scheme were to continue to operate;
b) all functions of the BoM under the national scheme were transferred to the Trustee (article 3); and
c) by article 5 ("Article 5"):
"[the] PNPF Trust Company Limited [the Trustee] shall have the power to revoke or amend the Byelaws or any other provision governing the Pilots' National Pension Fund by a resolution of the board of directors of PNPF Trust Company Limited."
The introduction of the 1988 Rules of the Scheme
(i) The role of the Trustee under the 1988 Rules
(ii) CHAs as Participating Bodies
"10. (1) With the agreement of the Trust Company, any of the following may become Participating Bodies:-
(a) the Competent Harbour Authority for an Area in which Pilots are self-employed, or
(b) any person or body which is an employer of Pilots in any Area or Areas.
(2) Where a Competent Harbour Authority which is a Participating Body has delegated any of its functions to any person or body, the Trust Company and that Competent Harbour Authority may agree that such person or body shall discharge all or any of the Competent Harbour Authority's powers or duties in relation to the Fund. In particular, this shall apply to entering into an Agreement to participate in the Fund, to the payment of contributions and to supplying information needed to administer the Fund."
(iii) The power of amendment under the 1988 Rules
"9. (1) The Trust Company shall have the following powers:-
(a) after consultation with the Actuary, to alter cancel or add to any of the provisions of the Rules or to adopt an additional set or sets of Rules provided that no such alteration, cancellation, addition or adoption shall be made which would prejudice Approval"
"after consultation with the Actuary, to provide benefits to or in respect of any Member or to make increases in some or all of the benefits payable under the Rules but so that all such benefits or increased benefits are within the limits prescribed by Rule 16"
(iv) Ceasing to be a member of the Scheme
(v) Contribution rules
"13. (1) Each Participating Body shall collect contributions to the Fund, out of the Gross Contribution Earnings of each "S" Member in its Area, equal to 10 per cent of such Gross Contribution Earnings.
(2) Each Participating Body shall collect, out of the Gross Contribution Earnings of each "S" Member in its Area, such additional contributions to the Fund as the Trust Company, after consultation with the Actuary, shall determine to be necessary to secure the benefits to be provided under the Fund but such additional contributions shall not exceed 8 per cent of such Gross Contributions Earnings or such greater amount as shall be agreed with the Board of the Inland Revenue.
[Following amendment, the limit of 8% etc is replaced by "100 per cent of his net earnings (or of the Earnings Cap, if less)."]
(3) Each Participating Body shall pay to the Trust Company, on a date in each calendar month from time to time selected by the Trust Company, the amounts collected under (1) and (2) above in the previous month."
This is not exactly its original form, but is the appropriate starting point for the issues which I need to decide.
"14 (1) Each "E" Member shall, whilst he is a Pilot, pay contributions to the Fund equal to a percentage of his Pensionable Earnings (not exceeding the maximum that would not prejudice Approval) determined by the Trust Company.
[Following amendment, the words after "Pensionable Earnings" are replaced with "determined by the Trust Company but these contributions shall not exceed 100 per cent of his Pensionable Earnings (or of the Earnings Cap, if less)."]
(2) Each Participating Body shall pay contributions to the Fund equal to 1.5 times the contributions under (1) above of each "E" Member in its employment.
(3) Each Participating Body shall arrange for the collection of contributions under (1) above from the Members' pay and shall pay to the Trust Company, on a day in each calendar month from time to time selected by the Trust Company, the amounts due under (1) and (2) above in the previous month."
"The Trust Company may receive lump sum payments or annual contributions to the Fund from the Pilotage Commission, Her Majesty's Government or any other source (other than direct contributions to the Fund out of the Gross Contribution Earnings or Pensionable Earnings of Pilots) in order to enable the Trust Company to provide or to increase the benefits from the Fund pursuant to Rule 9(1)(a) or (b)."
(vi) Benefits
(vii) Transfers in
(viii) Cessation of participation
(ix) Participating Bodies' Influence in decision making
a) Article 43: under this Article of the trustee's Articles of Association, half of the Trustee's directors were appointed by Associated British Ports ("ABP") and the British Ports Federation ("the BPF"), the other half being appointed by the United Kingdom Piltos Association ("the UKPA"). The role of ABP and the BPF in relation to the Scheme was taken over, in 1992, by another body known as the Association of Participating Bodies in the PNPF.
b) Article 72: this Article ("Article 72") provided that it was the intention of ABP, BPF and UKPA that any alterations to either (1) the provisions of the PNPF relating to benefits or contributions under the Scheme or (2) the rate of contributions payable to the PNPF by a Member or his employer should be made only after the alterations had been agreed by "a negotiating forum on pension matters made up of representatives of the Pilots and the Ports". The trustee was not to make any such alteration which had not been agreed at the negotiating forum unless it was necessary to comply with legislation, to retain the tax approved status of the PNPF or to retain the contracted-out status of the employment of its members.
c) As of 1988, ABP was a listed company. Originally a nationalised company (the British Transport Docks Board) it was privatised under and was known as "Associated British Ports" and became listed in 1983. It became a Participating Body in the Scheme and itself owned a some ports and CHAs. It was not, unlike the BPF (and later the BPA) a trade organisation.
d) The BNPF represented the interests of ports generally and of port terminal operators. The UKPA was and remains the representative body for pilots in the UK.
"It is not intended that the Trustee Directors should decide questions of policy concerning PNPF, e.g. contribution levels, alterations in the benefit structure, disposal of any surplus disclosed by an actuarial valuation, etc. These questions would be decided in a negotiating forum composed of representatives of the Ports and of the Pilots. The Trustee Directors would be expected to comply with and to implement decisions taken in this negotiating forum. There would therefore be a list of "reserved matters" set out in an agreed exchange of letters between UKPA (Marine), BPA and ABP on which decisions would be taken in the negotiating forum and not by the Trustee Directors. The decisions of the negotiating forum would not, of course, be binding on the Trustee Directors if compliance with them would involve the Trustee Directors in a breach of trust or of any legislation or would prejudice the tax approval of the PNPF."
"It is not considered necessary for the Order to provide that PNPF Trust Company Limited should need to seek the consent of UKPA (Marine) and/or the BPA/ABP before exercising the power of amendment or any other power conferred on the company by the Order or the PNPF Bye-laws or Rules. (These bodies will have adequate control over PNPF Trust Company Limited because its Memorandum and Articles of Association will provide that these bodies between them appoint all the directors of the company)."
(x) The Deeds of Accession
"We hereby covenant with the Trustees of the Pilots' National Pension Fund that with effect from we will comply with all the provisions of the Bye-laws and Rules of the Fund from time to time in force insofar as they relate to Members of the Fund who are:
(1) employed by us
(2) authorised by us to act as a pilot in any part of the area in relation to which we are the competent harbour authority."
Changes to the Scheme's governing provisions since 1989
(i) Amendments to the contribution obligations of CHAs
"13…(4) Where a Participating Body that authorises "S" Members ceases on or after 26 January 2009 to authorise "S" Members, the Participating Body shall, if the Trustee Company consents, cease to be a Participating Body on the date it ceased to authorise any "S" Members and shall make such contributions (including lump sum contributions), if any, as the Trust Company, having regard to the advice of the Actuary, shall determine.
[...]
14…(4) Where a Participating Body which is on or after 8 June 2005 an employer of "E" Members in any Area ceases on or after 8 June 2005 to employ Pilots for that Area or (at the discretion of the Trust Company) to employ "E" Members for that Area, the Participating Body shall, if the Trust Company consents, cease to be a Participating Body in relation to the Area on the date it ceased to be such an employer and shall make such contributions (including lump sum contributions), if any, as the Trust Company, having regard to the advice of the Actuary shall determine. In determining such contributions, the Trust Company and the Actuary shall take into account, to the extent that they consider it appropriate:
(i) the proportion of the amount of the deficiency or potential deficiency which the Fund's liabilities attributable to employment with the Participating Body in that Area bear to the total amount of the Fund's liabilities attributable to employment with all of the Participating Bodies which employ Pilots;
(ii) any lump sums or other contributions paid, payable or prospectively payable by any Participating Body for the purpose of reducing or eliminating a deficiency or potential deficiency, whether under this Rule 14(4), section 75 of the 1995 Act or otherwise, and
(iii) any debt which, in the opinion of the Trust Company, is unlikely to be recovered.
Such contributions shall be inclusive of (and therefore not less than) any amount currently or prospectively due to the Fund under section 75 of the 1995 Act from the Participating Body as the Participating Body in relation to that Area. After paying such contributions (and any other contributions to the Fund due from it in relation to the Area) the Participating Body shall have no further liability to the Fund as the Participating Body in relation to that Area."
(ii) The removal of Article 72
(iii) Other amendments
"9. (1) The Trust Company shall have the following powers:
(a) after consultation with the Actuary, to alter cancel or add to any of the provisions of the Rules or to adopt an additional set or sets of Rules provided that no such alteration, cancellation, addition or adoption shall be made which would prejudice Registration and that the requirements of section 67 of the [PA 1995] shall be satisfied in relation to any such alteration, cancellation, addition or adoption."
"…..the Trust Company may agree with any Participating Body on such terms as the Trust Company considers appropriate that there shall be additional contributions to the Fund, arranged in such a way that Participating Bodies of "S" Members are liable for the collection of those contributions and Participating Bodies of "E" Members are liable for the payment of those contributions in respect of their contributing Members, as notified by the Trust Company."
Scheme's funding position and contribution levels over time
QUESTION 1
The Law
A. Construction
"There is no dispute that the principles on which a contract (or any other instrument or utterance) should be interpreted are those summarised by the House of Lords in Investors' Compensation Scheme Ltd. v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896, 912-913….. It is agreed that the question is what a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would have been available to the parties would have understood them to be using the language in the contract to mean".
"26. There have been several reported cases about the interpretation of provisions of pension schemes in recent years. There are no special rules of construction but pension schemes have certain characteristics which tend to differentiate them from other analogous instruments. I mention some of those characteristics in the following paragraphs.
27. First, members of a scheme are not volunteers: the benefits which they receive under the scheme are part of the remuneration for their services and this is so whether the scheme is contributory or non-contributory. This means that they are in a different position in some respects from beneficiaries of a private trust. Moreover, the relationship of members to the employer must be seen as running in parallel with their employment relationship. This factor, too, can in appropriate circumstances have an effect on the interpretation of the scheme.
28. Second, a pension scheme should be construed so to give a reasonable and practical effect to the scheme. The administration of a pension fund is a complex matter and it seems to me that it would be crying for the moon to expect the draftsman to have legislated exhaustively for every eventuality. As Millett J said in Re Courage Group's Pension Schemes [1987] 1 WLR 495 at 505:
"[its] provisions should wherever possible be construed so as to give reasonable and practical effect to the scheme, bearing in mind that it has to be operated against a constantly changing commercial background. It is important to avoid unduly fettering the power to amend the provisions of the scheme, thereby preventing the parties from making those changes which may be required by the exigencies of commercial life."
In other words, it is necessary to test competing permissible constructions of a pension scheme against the consequences they produce in practice. Technicality is to be avoided. If the consequences are impractical or over-restrictive or technical in practice, that is an indication that some other interpretation is the appropriate one……
29. Third, in pension schemes, difficulties can arise where different provisions have been amended at different points in time. The effect is that the version of the scheme in issue may represent a "patchwork" of provisions: see per Robert Walker J in the National Grid case. Pension schemes are often subject to considerable amendment over time. The general principle is that each new provision should be considered against the circumstances prevailing at the date when it was adopted rather than as at the date of the original trust deed: see per Millett J in Re Courage Group's Pension Schemes, above, at 505–506. Likewise, the meaning of a clause in the scheme must be ascertained by examining the deed as it stood at the time the clause was first introduced…..
30. Fourth, as with any other instrument, a provision of a trust deed must be interpreted in the light of the factual situation at the time it was created….[This] may include common practice among practitioners in the field as evidenced by the works of practitioners at that time…..
31. Fifth, at the end of the day, however, the function of the court is to construe the document without any predisposition as to the correct philosophical approach……As Brooke LJ, giving the judgment of this Court (Nourse, Schiemann, Brooke LJJ), said in the National Grid case [2000] ICR 174, 193
"The solution to the [problem of construction in that case] lies within the terms of the scheme itself, and not within a world populated by competing philosophies as to the true nature and ownership of an actuarial surplus."
In the same case, in the House of Lords, the beneficiaries of the scheme argued that the surplus represented their contributions or their deferred remuneration. Lord Hoffmann rejected this approach. He expressed the view that, once it was established that the employer could exercise powers conferred by a scheme in its own interests: "I do not see the relevance of the way in which the surplus was funded" (page 869G)….
32. Sixth, a pension scheme should be interpreted as a whole. The meaning of a particular clause should be considered in conjunction with other relevant clauses. To borrow John Donne's famous phrase, no clause "is an Island entire of itself.""
B. Implication
"There is only one question: is that what the instrument, read as a whole against the relevant background, would reasonably be understood to mean?"
"The danger lies, however, in detaching the phrase "necessary to give business efficacy" from the basic process of construction of the instrument. It is frequently the case that a contract may work perfectly well in the sense that both parties can perform their express obligations, but the consequences would contradict what a reasonable person would understand the contract to mean. Lord Steyn made this point in the Equitable Life case, at p 459, when he said that in that case an implication was necessary "to give effect to the reasonable expectations of the parties"."
"…..Such a term may be imputed to parties: it is not critically dependent on proof of an actual intention of the parties. The process "is one of construction of the agreement as a whole in its commercial setting": Banque Bruxelles Lambert SA v Eagle Star Insurance Co Ltd [1997] AC 191, 212E, per Lord Hoffmann. This principle is sparingly and cautiously used and may never be employed to imply a term in conflict with the express terms of the text. The legal test for the implication of such a term is a standard of strict necessity……. The inquiry is entirely constructional in nature…."
He then went on to identify a number of factors which led him to result concluding as follows:
"In my judgment an implication precluding the use of the directors' discretion in this way is strictly necessary. The implication is essential to give effect to the reasonable expectations of the parties. The stringent test applicable to the implication of terms is satisfied."
"….this list is best regarded, not as series of independent tests which must each be surmounted, but rather as a collection of different ways in which judges have tried to express the central idea that the proposed implied term must spell out what the contract actually means, or in which they have explained why they did not think that it did so."
C. Hole v Garnsey
"Does a power enabling a majority to amend the rules justify as against a dissenting member any alteration whatever, where, as here, neither by the statute nor by the rules themselves is any one rule expressed to be more fundamental and unalterable than any other?
The answer in my judgment must be in the negative. In construing such a power as this, it must, I think, be confined to such amendments as can reasonably be considered to have been within the contemplation of the parties when the contract was made, having regard to the nature and circumstances of the contract. I do not base this conclusion upon any narrow construction of the word "amend" in Rule 64, but upon a broad general principle applicable to all such powers."
"In a careful argument counsel for the representative underwriter emphasised that the power of amendment was contained in a trust deed. He submitted that when a party to a trust deed containing a general power of amendment agrees that certain of his assets shall be subject to a trust it cannot be within the reasonable contemplation of the parties that the trust may be altered to extend to other assets. He argued that such a power of amendment must be confined to alterations to procedural rights and obligations. Moreover, counsel for the representative underwriter emphasised that the amendments were far reaching in their effect. In some contexts such arguments may be decisive. But the focus must be on the particular features of the present case.
The general propositions put forward by counsel must be qualified. First, it is true that clause 2(a)(i) uses the device of trust. But it is hardly a traditional trust created by the bounty of a settlor. It is a means of creating a form of security in favour of policyholders. It provides a guarantee that a Name will be able to meet his liabilities and it provides a mechanism for the payment of such liabilities. This is the context in which the amendments brought litigation recoveries within the scope of the trust. Secondly, it is true that there is a well established line of authority which holds that a power of amendment reserved in a trust must be exercised for the purpose for which it was granted: see Hole v Garnsey [1930] AC 472... This principle is closely linked with the general proposition that the power must not be exercised beyond the reasonable contemplation of the parties on which Nourse LJ founded his judgment. All this is hornbook law. But it is going too far to say that such a power of amendment may never be exercised to alter rights, or, specifically, to bring a new class of property within the scope of a trust."
"The 1995 amendments do not impose any new liability on Names. They do not require Names to pay more than they were already obliged to pay. They simply provide for additional security for pre-existing obligations. The amendments are therefore within the commercial purpose of the P.T.D. trust fund. Moreover, the amendments were required by an unprecedented crisis affecting Lloyd's. From the 1980s the Lloyd's market was beset by serious structural problems. There was a spiral of losses. Lloyd's names apparently suffered losses of £8bn. in respect of the 1988 to 1992 underwriting years of account. By March 1995 when the amendments were introduced the unwillingness and inability of names to settle their underwriting liabilities confronted Lloyd's with a crisis which imperilled its standing as an insurance market. Hobhouse LJ [dissenting in the Court of Appeal] observed [1997] LRLR 1, 17-18:
"In the present case the purpose of the trust deed is to impose obligations upon the Name and provide mechanisms for the purpose of facilitating the conduct of the Name's activities at Lloyd's including the discharge of his obligations within the market. In the exceptional situation which had arisen and the exceptional way in which the Names were having to enforce and obtain from their agents the financial consequences to which they were entitled arising out of their becoming names and participating in the market, it is both consistent and proper that the Council of Lloyd's should have sought to amend clause 2 of the deed so as to bring the relevant litigation receipts within its scope and require the Name to pay such sums into the trust fund in so far as it is necessary to do so to enable his liabilities to be paid out of that fund. The situation which has arisen is exceptional. But the contemplation of the deed and the relationship between the parties to it is that the fund will be provided with sums of money which are sufficient to enable the Names' liabilities to be met by payments out of that fund, using the mechanisms provided for in the deed."
I am in complete agreement with this reasoning."
"These authorities confirm that the purpose for which the power has been granted must be observed. But, provided that it is, the power can be exercised so as to alter the rights, including the vested rights, of the relevant parties. In Hole v Garnsey the amendment was considered not only to lead to absurd and fundamentally unacceptable conclusions but also to be at variance with the essential nature of the transaction and the relationship between the parties. By contrast, in Allen v Gold Reefs the taking of a right of lien was not inconsistent with the structure of the relationship between the parties and the amendment furthered that purpose rather than derogated from it. In my judgment, the Council acted within the scope of the decided cases. The amendments do not lead to unacceptable conclusions; they do not conflict with the essential nature of the transaction or the relationship between the relevant parties. The amendments are designed to further the fundamental purpose of the deed to assure and assist the discharge of the Names' liabilities to those they have undertaken to insure." .
A general point on interpretation of the Scheme
"……..one of the major defects in UK pension law and practice identified by the Goode committee was the absence of any obligation to back the "pensions promise" with sufficient funding to perform that promise. Hence the minimum solvency requirement the committee recommended, which ultimately became the MFR, inadequate though that proved to be. At the time when there were first employed pilots this was not the approach…..".
The Deeds of Accession
a. Rule 20(5): The current Rule (introduced by amendment to the 1988 Rules as originally promulgated) requires a Participating Body to obtain reports from appropriate medical practitioners to enable the Trustee to decide whether a Member is ceasing to be a pilot through inability to undertake paid work. If the CHA's covenant under the Deed of Accession applies only to active Members, this obligation would only be binding on a CHA so long as the pilot remained in employment or authorised and would then fall away. But it is obvious that the Trustee might not have made a decision by that date and might wish (and need) to require the CHA to obtain medical reports after that date. It seems to me highly unlikely that it was outside the powers of the Trustee to introduce this Rule and yet that would be the consequence of excluding Members who were, but are no longer, employed or authorised from the scope of the covenant.
b. Rule 25: This provided an early retirement scheme for pilots who became surplus to requirements or could not fulfil the qualifications imposed by his CHAs. In order to prevent abuse of the scheme, a CHA could be made liable for contributions in certain circumstances under Rule 25(6). This liability, of its nature, would arise only after the Member had ceased to be employed or authorised by the CHA concerned. But if the covenant extended only to employed or authorised Members, recovery could not be made under it. It must surely have been intended by all concerned that the covenant in the Deed of Accession would cover this obligation.
a. the Deed of Accession was intended to restrict the ECHAs' liabilities, which is to be expected given the "industry-wide" nature of the Scheme, where CHAs are to a degree in competition with each other, and as such are not intending to assume liability for other CHAs' Members; and
b. the scope of the ECHAs' liability to comply with a rule is not to be determined simply by asking whether the particular rule in question "relates to" the Members employed by the ECHAs: the ECHAs have not agreed to comply with the Rules "if" they relate to such Members; the use of the word "insofar" contemplates that, if the rule in question "relates to" both the Members employed by the ECHAs and to other Members of the Scheme, the rule is only enforceable to the extent that it relates to the Members employed by the ECHAs.
a. the consequences of that construction are startling. Since the Scheme is not sectionalised, contributions paid under any contribution rule would affect the funding position in relation to the benefits of Members employed by a given CHA. The upshot of Mr Nugee's analysis would be that the Deed of Accession imposes no practical restriction at all on the scope of the acceding ECHAs' contribution obligations. The relevant wording of the Deed of Accession is rendered otiose; and
b. the fatal flaw in Mr Nugee's reasoning is that it assumes that the ECHAs' obligation to comply with a contribution rule is satisfied by answering "yes" to the question: "does it relate to Members of the Fund employed by us?". But that is an irrelevant question. Any contribution rule is enforceable against the ECHA in question only insofar as it relates to such Members, and cannot be enforced to the extent that it relates to other Members of the Scheme. In other words, the Deed of Accession envisages the possibility of an ECHA's contractual obligations being wholly satisfied by partial compliance with the contribution rule.
"a person who puts forward the wording of a proposed agreement may be assumed to have looked after his own interests, so that if words leave room for doubt about whether he is to have a particular benefit there is reason to suppose that he is not."
a. It can be enforced insofar, but no further, as it relates to Members currently employed or authorised by the CHA but only in respect of Pensionable Service with the CHA.
b. It can be enforced insofar, but no further, as it relates to Members currently employed or authorised by the CHA and thus in respect of their entire Pensionable Service with all employers.
c. It can be enforced insofar, but no further, as it relates to Members currently and formerly employed or authorised by the CHA, but only in respect of Pensionable Service with the CHA.
d. It can be enforced insofar, but no further, as it relates to Members currently and formerly employed or authorised by the CHA and thus in respect of their entire Pensionable Service with all employers.
"The Trustee naturally wants concrete guidance on as many relevant issues from the Court as possible, but the Trustee is not persuaded that these individual defences can fairly be dealt with at this stage:
a. Bristol has (despite repeated opportunities) never raised before the suggestion that the individual defences of these specific SCHAs be adjudicated upon at the January hearing or that these specific SCHAs be exempted from declarations, and therefore
b. correspondingly none of the other parties, including particularly the non-SCHA defendants, D1-D4, has had a proper opportunity to investigate the factual position of these specific SCHAs, or seek further information about it."
Discussion
a) The Scheme continued under paragraph 4 of Schedule 1 to the 1987 Act notwithstanding the repeal of section 15 of the 1983 Act. Although paragraph 4 came into force (with section 32(3)) on 1 September 1987, the repeal of section 15 did not take place until 1 October 1988. The reference in paragraph 4 to section 15 is explained this way: although originally established under the 1913 Act, by the time of the 1987 Act it was governed by the 1983 Rules made under section 15 and was thus a scheme established under section 15.
b) The Secretary of State was given power to make such provision as he considered appropriate for the matters set out in paragraph 4. As to that, it will be recalled that the matters referred to included:
i) The operation of the byelaws after repeal of section 15.
ii) The appointment of the managers (in the case of the Scheme, this was the Trustee in place of the BoM).
iii) The powers of the managers to amend or revoke the byelaws.
c) The Secretary of State exercised that power by making the 1987 Order.
a) Article 2 reflects paragraph 4(1)(a) and read with Article 4, disapplies those byelaws which are inapposite in the new structure without effecting any other significant change.
b) Article 3 reflects paragraph 4(1)(b) and effects a straightforward transfer of functions to the Trustee.
c) Article 5 reflects paragraph 4(1)(c). For reasons already given, I consider that the enabling power in that paragraph is wide in its extent. Pursuant to that power (to make provision for the "managers to amend or revoke the byelaws or any other provision governing the fund") the Secretary of State has provided that the Trustee (ie "the managers" referred to in paragraph 4(1)(c)) "shall have the power to revoke or amend the byelaws or any other provisions governing" the Scheme. The natural reading is that the Secretary of State has conferred on the Trustee all of the powers to amend and revoke that he is authorised by paragraph 4(1)(c) to confer. I do not suggest that it necessarily follows that the scope of the power is not limited simply because of this point any more than the natural meaning of words cannot be displaced by the context (whether in cases of construction, implication or pursuant to the principle in Hole v Garnsey). But it is an important pointer in that direction.
Rule 9(1)(a)
"which will reconstitute the Pilots National Pension Fund to take account of the new relationship between CHAs and pilots. It is intended that the new arrangements will be brought into force well before the appointed day, during the autumn of 1987. New contribution arrangements, under which contributions in respect of pilots they have authorised will be made by CHAs, will however not come into force until the appointed day."
"The BPA has undertaken, subject to the provisions contained in the letter at Annex B of 1 October 1986 from Mr N H Finney of the British Ports Association, that benefits under the rules of the Pilots' National Pension Fund will be maintained at levels no less favourable than those which applied at that date…..The levels of contributions needed in future will be for the bodies representing CHAs and pilots to decide".
That passage appeared in the final version of the guidelines sent by the Department to Mrs Lemon on 10 December 1987, the day on which the 1987 Order was made. It lends some support to the suggestion made by Mr Nugee that the CHAs were aware of the possibility of the need for further contributions including contributions from the CHAs themselves. Of course there was no legal obligation: the level of contributions was for CHAs and pilots to decide. But it is fair to observe that a commitment not to decrease benefits is somewhat empty if the funding to provide the benefits is not available. It is a factor against the conclusion that it was not in the reasonable contemplation of the CHAs that they might have to make contributions in addition to those already provided in the Rules and in accordance with a different contribution structure.
a) Employer/pilot negotiation:
i) Retirement ages
ii) Contributions
iii) Benefits
iv) Uses of actuarial surplus
b) To be dealt with by the Trustee:
i) Investment management policy
ii) Administration
iii) Collection of contributions
iv) Arrangements for dealing with defaulters
v) Rule changes resulting from negotiations.
"(b) The post-reorganisation benefits of the national fund are to be negotiated nationally - We understand from the negotiations to date that present benefit scales are to be continued subject to the finances of the Fund being regarded as satisfactory.
(c) The comments under heading (b) suggest that after reorganisation:
(i) The Fund is to continue to be a defined benefit scheme. …
(ii) There is to be a single benefit scale covering all participating Districts.
(iii) The Fund will be financed by the payment of whatever contributions are required from time to time to provide the defined benefits. For employed pilots presumably the pilots will contribute at a specified rate whilst the employer will meet the balance of cost whatever that may be."
"The new management board for the Fund will consist of equal representation of the CHAs and the pilots. The future arrangements for management of the PNPF would be discussed with representatives of the PNPF's present Board of Management."
Active ECHAs
Issue 1
Issue 2
Issues 3 and 4
Formerly Active ECHAs
Issue 5
Issues 6, 7 and 8
Active SCHAs
Issue 9
"……The source of Teesport's obligations in relation to the Fund is the Deed of Accession it signed. That Deed obliges it to comply with all the provisions of the bye-laws and Rules of the Fund from time to time in force insofar as they relate to members of the Fund who are authorised by it to act as pilots in any part of the area in relation to which it is the competent harbour authority. Although the Deed does not in terms say so, it is obvious that the underlying basis of Teesport's acceptance of obligations under the bye-laws and Rules was that the Trustee – the counterparty to the Deed - was itself to comply with the provisions of the bye-laws and Rules. As trustee, the Trustee could not properly do otherwise. It follows that both parties to the Deed had a reasonable expectation that each would comply with the material provisions of the Rules. One such provision is rule 13(2). The effect of that rule is to require the payment by self-employed members of such additional contributions as the Trustee, after consultation with the actuary, determines to be "necessary to secure" the benefits to be provided. The presence of this provision explains the absence of any contribution obligation on the SCHAs: none can be necessary. It is demonstrable on the evidence filed by the Trustee that the Trustee and the previous scheme Actuary have failed to comply with rule 13(2). That failure is the cause of the deficit relating to self-employed members. Because it was outside the contemplation of the parties to the Deed of Accession that the Trustee would fail to comply with rule 13(2) and that a deficit would result, it was equally outside the contemplation of the parties that the amending power (whatever its apparent scope) could be used to make good a deficit resulting from the Trustee's failure to comply with that or any other provision of the Rules. The amending power is accordingly subject to an implied limitation preventing it from being used in that way."
Issues 10, 11 and 12
Issue 13
Issues 14, 15 and 16
Formerly Active SCHAs
Issues 17 and 18
Issues 19 and 20
QUESTIONS 2, 3 and 3A
Question 2
a) the total deficit under the Scheme or;
b) only that part of the deficit under the Scheme attributable to employment with any Employer or;
c) the deficit (on either of the above bases) estimated on the basis of the cost of securing the liabilities under the Scheme by the bulk purchase of annuities from an Insurance Company; or
d) on some other and, if so, what basis?
a) the Trustee is entitled to demand from an ECHA contributions calculated by reference to the total deficit under the Scheme; and
b) the Trustee can estimate the deficit on the basis of the cost of securing the liabilities under the Scheme by the bulk purchase of annuities from an Insurance Company, or such other basis as it wishes.
Questions 3 and 3A
Issue 20A
Issue 21
QUESTIONS 6 and 7
"any scheme or arrangement which is comprised in one or more instruments or agreements and which has, or is capable of having, effect in relation to one or more descriptions or categories of employments so as to provide benefits, in the form of pensions or otherwise, payable on termination of service, or on death or retirement, to or in respect of earners with qualifying service in an employment of any such description or category."
"either -
(a) in pensionable service under the scheme; or
(b) in service in employment which was contracted-out by reference to the scheme; or
(c) in linked qualifying service under another scheme."
"(2) In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires, "pensionable service", in relation to a scheme and a member of it, means, subject to subsection (3), service in relevant employment which qualifies the member (on the assumption that it continues for the appropriate period) for long service benefit under the scheme."
a. " "employee" :
means a person gainfully employed under a contract of service or in an office with emoluments chargeable to income tax under Schedule E.
[It does not, therefore, include a self-employed individual who provides services under a contract for services and who is chargeable to income tax under Schedule D. That distinction remains although the reference to Schedule E is no longer apposite and should be read as employment income within ITEPA.(defined at paragraph 355) ]
b. "employer":
"means -
(a) in the case of an employed earner employed under a contract of service, his employer;
(b) in the case of an employed earner employed in an office with emoluments-
(i) such person as may be prescribed in relation to that office; or
(ii) if no person is prescribed, the government department, public authority or body of persons responsible for paying the emoluments of the office;"
[An employed earner has the same meaning as in section 2 of the Social Security Act 1992 and thus excludes the self-employed, who, although "earners" are not "employed earners".]
c. "employment" includes any trade, business, profession, office or vocation and "employed" shall be construed accordingly except in the expression "employed earner"; these are the same definitions as were to be found in the Social Security Act 1975.
"References to employers in the provisions of this Act (other than section 123 to 127, 157, 160 and section 137 [in part] ("the excluded provisions")) are to be treated, in relation to persons within the application of an occupational pension scheme and qualifying or prospectively qualifying for its benefits, as including references to persons who in relation to them and their employment are treated by regulations as being employers for the purposes of those provisions".
"the employer of persons of the description or category of employment to which the scheme relates".
[Comparing the old and the new definition, the word "of" replaces "in" before the words "the description" but it reverted to its original wording in section 124(1) PA 1995. Nothing turns on these changes.]
A similar definition of "employer" was found in section 112 PSA 1993 (restriction on employer-related investments).
"(3) In this section –
"the employer" means
in the case of an employed earner of [in] the description or category of employment to which the scheme relates employed under a contract of service, his employer…"
with similar adjustments being made for office holders.
""employer", in relation to an occupational pension scheme, means the employer of persons in the description or category of employment to which the scheme in question relates (but see section 125(3))"
"in relation to a member of an occupational pension scheme, [it] means service in any description or category of employment to which the scheme relates which qualifies the member (on the assumption that it continues for the appropriate period) for pension or other benefits under the scheme."
"(1)….occupational pension scheme" means a pension scheme–
(a) that–
(i) for the purpose of providing benefits to, or in respect of, people with service in employments of a description, or
(ii) for that purpose and also for the purpose of providing benefits to, or in respect of, other people,
is established by, or by persons who include, a person to whom subsection (2) applies when the scheme is established or (as the case may be) to whom that subsection would have applied when the scheme was established had that subsection then been in force, and
(b) that has its main administration in the United Kingdom or outside the EEA states,
or a pension scheme that is prescribed or is of a prescribed description…..
(2) This subsection applies–
(a) where people in employments of the description concerned are employed by someone, to a person who employs such people,
(b) to a person in an employment of that description, and
(c) to a person representing interests of a description framed so as to include–
(i) interests of persons who employ people in employments of the description mentioned in paragraph (a), or
(ii) interests of people in employments of that description."
"is in an employment of the description concerned by reason of holding an office…..and is entitled to remuneration for holding it, the person responsible for paying the remuneration shall be taken to employ the office-holder."
"(1) Regulations may modify any provision of pensions legislation for the purpose of ensuring that it, or another provision of pensions legislation, does not purport to refer to the employer of a self-employed person.
(2) Where a provision of pensions legislation contains a reference to an employer in connection with an occupational pension scheme, regulations may modify the provision, or another provision of pensions legislation, for the purpose of excluding from the reference an employer who is a person–
(a) who does not participate in the scheme as regards people employed by him, or
(b) who, as regards people employed by him, participates in the scheme only to a limited extent.
(3) For the purposes of this section–
(a) "pensions legislation" means any enactment contained in or made by virtue of–
(i) the Pension Schemes Act 1993 (c. 48),
(ii) Part 1 of the Pensions Act 1995 (c. 26), other than sections 62 to 66A of that Act (equal treatment),
(iii) Part 1 of the Welfare Reform and Pensions Act 1999 (c. 30), or
(iv) this Act;
(b) a person is "self-employed" if he is in an employment but is not employed in it by someone else;
(c) a person who holds an office (including an elective office), and is entitled to remuneration for holding it, shall be taken to be employed by the person responsible for paying the remuneration.
(4) In subsection (3)(b) "employment" includes any trade, business, profession, office or vocation".
""employer" – (b) in relation to a personal pension scheme, where direct payment arrangements exists in respect of one or more members of the scheme who are employees, means an employer with whom those arrangements exist."
"(a) in relation to an occupational pension scheme, means any contribution payable by or on behalf of the employer towards the scheme in accordance with a schedule of contributions under section 227 of this Act or a payment schedule under section 87 of the Pensions Act 1995 (c. 26) (schedules of payments to money purchase schemes) whether-
(i) on the employer's own account (but in respect of one or more employees), or
(ii) on behalf of an employee out of deductions from the employee's earnings …"
"Where—
(a) on making a payment of any earnings in respect of any employment there is deducted any amount corresponding to any contribution payable on behalf of an active member of an occupational pension scheme, and
(b) the amount deducted is not, within a prescribed period, paid to the trustees or managers of the scheme and there is no reasonable excuse for the failure to do so,
the employer is guilty of an offence……"
The subsection has been amended by section 10(1) Welfare Reform and Pensions Act 1999, but the changes are not material for present purposes.
a. The word "employment" is found in the definition.
b. The definition shows that the employer must stand in a relationship with persons in a description or category of employment, with emphasis on the word employment.
c. "employment" is not specifically defined so that section 124(5) PA 1995 requires one to look at the definition in section 181 PSA 1993.
d. "employment" includes any trade, profession or vocation and "employed" is construed accordingly.
e. Drawing these together, employer is wide enough to encompass the concept of employing someone who is self-employed.
a. In relation to true employees under a contract of service, it is the employer in the ordinary sense ("his employer").
b. In relation to an office holder, it is the prescribed person or, in default, the person responsible for paying the office-holder.
c. In relation to anybody else, such as a self-employed active member of the scheme, there is no employer.
a. The first is if the definition in section 181 is transposed across insofar as it is capable of application so that, at least in relation to employees and office-holders, the employer is identified.
b. The second is that the definition under section 181 is altogether irrelevant. Under this scenario, the draftsman is to be seen as providing in section 124(1) (and to have done so too in section 144(3)) a self-contained definition of employee.
"The new definition of occupational pension scheme introduced by section 239, which amends section 1 of the Pension Schemes Act 1993, includes schemes which are not sponsored by a person who employs the scheme members. Certain references in pensions legislation to the 'employer' may not be appropriate for such schemes.
Subsection (1) is a regulation-making power to modify any provision of pensions legislation (as defined in subsection (3)) for the purpose of ensuring, in the light of the fact that self-employed people do not have employers (but only clients etc), that the legislation does not inappropriately refer to the employer of a self-employed person."
a. it was recognised that the existing definition of "employer" in the pensions legislation could extend to "employers" of self-employed persons; and
b. oddly, this seems to have been attributed to the adoption of the new definition of occupational pension scheme which was inserted by section 239 of the PA 2004 into section 1 of the PSA 1993. While this new definition was undoubtedly capable of including schemes for self employed persons, so was the existing definition because (so far as material) it used exactly the same language as the new definition (in particular the same wide definition of "employment").
a. Fundamental duty under s.2 of the 1987 Act. By virtue of s.2 of the 1987 Act, all CHAs are responsible for providing such pilotage services as they consider necessary so as to ensure the safety of ships navigating in and around the approaches to their harbours. This is the fundamental duty imposed upon all CHAs without distinction (be they ECHAs, SCHAs or Mixed CHAs). The relationship between all CHAs and their pilots arises as a result of all CHAs discharging the same statutory duty under section 2.
b. The grant of authorisation. Authorisation is the bedrock of the relationship between a pilot and its CHA. It provides the ultimate mechanism by which all CHAs control both individual pilots and the body of pilots within its area. Each CHA will determine what qualifications "in respect of age, physical fitness, time of service, local knowledge, skill, character and otherwise" (section 3(2) of the 1987 Act) it considers necessary in order to retain sufficient control over its pilots and so as to ensure that its statutory duties are met.
c. An SCHA is just as capable of imposing conditions on the grant of authorisation as an ECHA is. What precise conditions a CHA considers necessary to attach to a grant of authorisation will depend upon the local circumstances of the CHA but it does not depend on whether the CHA in question is an ECHA or a SCHA or a Mixed CHA.
d. Safety and working procedures. In order to fulfil their statutory duty "to secure the safety of ships navigating in or in the approaches to [a CHA's] harbour" (section 2(1)(a) of the 1987 Act), all CHAs must ensure that appropriate procedures are put in place and adhered to by pilots authorised by them. Both ECHAs and SCHAs will be able to draw up detailed safety and working procedures for their pilots.
e. Pilotage charges. All CHAs are entitled to make reasonable charges in respect of the pilotage services provided by it (section 10(1) of the 1987 Act). What determines earnings in relation to a given set of pilots in a given port is the level of activity in the port, and the pilotage dues set by the CHA in both the SCHA and ECHA cases. It is immaterial that SCHAs may not always 'control' the pensionable remuneration of individual pilots (although sometimes they have quite a high level of control by, for instance, guaranteeing earnings or payment of retainers).
f. Discipline and revocation of authorisation. All CHAs maintain ultimate control of the conduct of a pilot within its area by the power to suspend or revoke the authorisation which it has granted (section 3(5) of the 1987 Act). Both ECHAs and SCHAs are likely to have their own disciplinary codes.
"…an individual who works, or normally works or seeks to work –
(a) under a contract of employment, or
(b) under any other contract whereby he undertakes to do or perform personally any work or services for another party to the contract who is not a professional client of his".
a. How would such a third-party body (or trustees) determine whether it was an employer?
b. How would such a third-party body know that any associated self-employed individuals had become members of a scheme and thereby opened it up to statutory liabilities?
c. Where a third party body somehow associated with self-employed members of an occupational pension scheme was proposing to enter into commercial transactions or divest itself of assets, should it seek clearance notices from the Pensions Regulator in relation to contribution notices under PA 2004 sections 38-42? Thus Miss Asplin submits that the reality is that a conclusion that a self-employed person could have an "employer" for these purposes would result in such consequences as to clearly render it irrational to the point of absurdity.
a. Issue 22: an SCHA is not an "employer" for the purposes of PA 1995.
b. Issue 23: an SCHA is not an "employer" for the purposes of PA 2004.
c. Issue 24: an S Member is not an "employer" for the purposes of PA 1995.
QUESTION 5
a. L1 = liabilities attributable to employment with the employer in question
b. L(all) = liabilities attributable to employment with all employers and
c. D = the difference between the value of the assets and liabilities of the scheme
[This is the effect of Regulation 6(2) of the Employer Debt Regulations together with the definitions of 'liability proportion' and 'liability share' in Regulation 2(1) as from 6 April 2008].
a. In prescribing the application of Section 75, subsection (1) prescribes no exception, exclusion or carve-out of any assets & liabilities from a pension scheme. The Scheme is not sectionalised for the purposes of Regulation 8 of the Employer Debt Regulations.
b. The valuation methodology prescribed pursuant to subSection 75(5) at all times prior to 6 April 2008 provides for all assets and liabilities to be taken into account, Prior to that date (when it was amended), Regulation 5 cross-referred to the Guidance Notes, GN27 & GN19, issued by the Faculty and Institute of Actuaries.
i. GN19 explicitly stated "In multi-employer schemes which are not sectionalised, as defined in 1996 Winding Up Regulation 12(1), the overall deficiency in respect of the entire scheme must initially be calculated".
ii. It was the overall deficiency in respect of the entire scheme which was the starting point.
iii. There is no indication that the amendments to Regulation 5 introduced with effect from 6 April 2008 altered this feature of the Section 75 regime.
c. Regulations 6(4)(c) and 6(5)(a) of the Employer Debt Regulations require liabilities which cannot otherwise be attributed to an employer (these are the "orphan liabilities") to be attributed by the trustees amongst the employers so as not to go unfunded.
d. Despite the fact that the prescribed manner for determining, calculating and verifying the assets and liabilities to be taken into account makes provision for certain assets (see Regulation 5(1)(c) (and now Regulation 5(9)) Employer Debt Regulations and its cross-references) to be disregarded or excluded, no disregard or exclusion applies for assets and liabilities in respect of self-employed members.
QUESTION 4
1. which applies to earners in employments under different employers;
2. of which there are no members who are in pensionable service under the scheme.
"(a) if the scheme is being wound up before a relevant insolvency event occurs in relation to the employer, any time when it is being wound up before such an event occurs; and
(b) otherwise, immediately before the relevant insolvency event occurs."
A "relevant insolvency event" occurs in relation to a company when it goes into liquidation.
"(i) in relation only to any employer who ceases to be a person employing persons in the description or category of employment to which the scheme relates at a time when at least one other person continues to employ such person, immediately before he so ceases, and
(ii) in relation only to any employer in relation to whom a relevant insolvency event occurs, immediately before that event occurs."
"every person who employed persons in the description or category of employment to which the scheme relates immediately before the occurrence of the event after which the scheme ceased to have any active members".
"any person who has ceased, on or after 6 April 1997 and before the applicable time, to be a person employing persons in the description or category of employment to which the scheme relates" unless-
a. when he so ceased the scheme was not being wound up and continued to have active members and
b. one of the conditions in paragraph (3) is met".
a. that no debt was treated as becoming due from him under Section 75(1) by virtue of his so ceasing;
b. that such a debt was treated as becoming due and has been paid before the applicable time;
c. a rather more complicated provision which I do not need to go into.
"occurs in relation to an employer if he ceases to be an employer employing persons in the description of employment to which the scheme relates at a time when at least one other person continues to employ such persons"
" 9 (1) In the application of section 75 of the 1995 Act and these Regulations to a scheme which has no active members, references to employers include every person who employed persons in the description of employment to which the scheme relates immediately before the occurrence of the event after which the scheme ceased to have any active members."
a. employed individuals who might join the scheme with trustee consent;
b. employed a person who was an Officer and a deferred member (Mr Blair); and
c. intended to employ in the near future a person who was an Officer and an active member of the MNOPF scheme (Mr Hunter).
a. Regulation 6(4) does not use the phrase "active members", despite this being a defined term in PA 1995 and being used elsewhere in the Act and Employer Debt Regulations. Regulation 6(4) does not address an ECE occurring on a change in membership status; rather it addresses the employees' status as employees of Cemex and not their status as regards their membership of the MNOPF.
b. He considered that this conclusion was reinforced by two points which he addressed (see paragraphs 34 to 36 of the judgment):
(i) As set out above, section 124(1) PA 1995 defines "active member" as a person in pensionable service under the scheme, and "pensionable service" is in turn defined as "service in any description or category of employment to which the scheme relates which qualifies the member…for pension or other benefits under the scheme" (emphasis added). The words which I have emphasised show that "service in…employment to which the scheme relates" is not enough and it is necessary to provide that such service also has to be such as to qualify the member for benefits. However, Regulation 6(4) of the Employer Debt Regulations refers to an employer employing persons "in the description of employment to which the scheme relates", the same phrase as appears in the definition of pensionable service. It would be very surprising to my mind if the use of that phrase in the Regulations was intended to be a reference to active members. One is left wondering, as Peter Smith J clearly wondered, why those words would restrict the relevant employees to active members in Regulation 6(4) when they clearly did not do so in the case of the definition of "pensionable service".
(ii) The second matter which influenced the Judge was the impact of the contrary view on Regulation 9 of the Employer Debt Regulations (which extends the definition of "employer" to former employers in certain circumstances). It uses the phrases "persons in the description of employment to which the scheme relates" and "active members" separately, suggesting they mean different things.
a. employs active, deferred or pensioner members (whether or not those deferred or pensioner members could ever become active members again, even with trustee consent); or
b. employs individuals who are either eligible as of right to become active members or who can join with trustee consent.
a. the Explanatory Note with which the Employer Debt Regulations were issued explicitly and unequivocally says so;
b. this makes sense of the wording;
c. this is the only practical and purposive and administratively workable construction;
d. this avoids an unfunded 'gap' between the SSF and the ECE;
e. this fits with the legislative origins of the phrase and its established meaning in predecessor legislative provisions; and
f. this accords with Guidance issued by the Pensions Regulator ("tPR") as the body tasked with supervising and enforcing this legislation, which is of persuasive authority as to the meaning of the Regulations.
The Explanatory Note
"Regulation 6 provides that a debt only arises under section 75(2) while a multi-employer scheme is being wound up if a deficit in the scheme assets occurs before a relevant event has occurred in relation to all the employers, and all the employers are then responsible for a share of the debt. But whether a debt arises under section 75(4) is judged by reference to each of the employers separately and debts under that section are also taken to arise as respects an employer if he ceases to have any employees in pensionable service to which the scheme applies. The debt on each employer under section 75(4) is his share of the deficit in the assets."
The wording
Practical and purposive construction
An unfunded gap between SSF and ECE
The legislative origins of the key phrase
a. First, PA 1995 must be construed as it stands. If its terms are clear, applying ordinary canons of construction, it is not right to look at earlier legislation in order to produce an ambiguity which can then be resolved by reference to the same earlier legislation. This is the position in relation to a consolidating Act; still more is it so with Acts which, although covering the same or similar territory, are not consolidating Acts. In this context, PA 1995 is not a consolidating Act, nor can the provisions concerning employer debts (Section 75) simply be viewed as consolidation of the pre-existing provisions of PSA 1993.
b. Even if Mr Spink's suggestion about why the draftsman adopted the language he did is correct, what it shows is that the draftsman must have had real doubts about the meaning of the pre-existing legislation. If he was confident that the old legislation meant what Mr Spink says it means, he would have had no reason not to adopt the clear and unambiguous meaning which would have resulted from drafting Regulation 6(4) by reference to "active members" rather than using what is on any view the imperfect language which he did.
a. section 21(8)(a)(i) (Member Nominated Trustees);
b. section 49(8)(a) (failure to remit member contributions);
c. section 58(1)(a), 59(1) & 87(2)(a) (schedules of contributions / payments); and
d. (in Part II of the PA 1995, but referring back to the definition in Part I) section 172(1)(a) (eligibility under the Superannuation Act 1972).
"are to clarify the existing definition i.e. the express reference to ceasing to employ any person who is an active member of the scheme".
Being no more than a clarification (not a substantive alteration), no question for consultation arose in relation to that change in wording: see question 10-12 on p.22.
"(3) Paragraph (4) shall apply where before the commencement date –
(a) a person ceased to employ at least one active member in relation to a scheme at a time when at least one other person continued to employ persons in the description of employment to which the scheme related, and
(b) that event was not an employment-cessation event, under regulation 6(4) of the old Regulations, in relation to the scheme."
Guidance of tPR
"[17] It is, of course, for the courts and not the executive to interpret legislation. However, in general, official statements by government departments administering an Act, or by any other authority concerned with an Act, may be taken into account as persuasive authority on the legal meaning of its provisions. That is the principle stated by Bennion -, Statutory Interpretation-, 4th ed (2002), section 232. In the present case we are concerned with guidance published by the Home Office, which is the government department which had responsibility for the enactment and operation of the legislation in question. In any given case, it may be helpful for a court to refer to the guidance in the interpretation of the legislation. It may be of some persuasive authority. However, to my mind that is the limit of its influence. It does not differ in that regard from a statement by an academic author in a textbook or an article. It does not enjoy any particular legal status. There seems to me to be no satisfactory basis for the submission that it gives rise to a presumption that the views it contains are correct and should be rejected only for good reason.
a. a person eligible to become a Member as of right;
b. a person who requires the consent of the Trustee to be a Member;
c. a deferred Member;
d. a pensioner Member;
e. a person whom the employer is intending to employ and who will, upon employment, be eligible to join the Scheme.
a. The key phrase focuses on the nature of the employment rather than just the identity of the employer. This, he says, might be thought to connote at the very least a requirement that the employee in question be eligible to join the scheme, so that (for example) employment once the scheme has closed to future accrual would not count and would no longer be "employment to which the scheme relates", any more than employment with the same employer before the scheme was set up would be. He is probably right to say what he does about a scheme which is closed to further accrual. But it is not because there is no longer any employment to which the scheme relates (which is true but not relevant); rather it is because there is no longer any description of employment to which the scheme relates.
[This reflects the importance which Mr Spink correctly attaches to the use of "relates" in the present tense].
b. The rejection of the active member test by reason of the provisions that appear to distinguish active membership from "employment to which the scheme relates" does not of itself ground a conclusion that no ECE occurs where an employer continues to employ any person who in the past has accrued benefits under a scheme such as a deferred or even a pensioner member. A test based on eligibility would be equally consistent with such reasoning.
[I agree with that observation, and note that that test would not have prevented an ECE occurring when Mr Blair became a deferred Member].
"I cannot accept that Mr Blair's attaining 61 would have had that effect [ie of preventing Cemex from saying that there had been no ECE.] It seems to me that Mr Blair's continuation in employment as a deferred then pensioner member meant that his continued employment prevented an ECE occurring for the reasons I have set out above. It was equally satisfied by issue 2 (a) in relation to the other potential members. Obviously a person who attains the normal retirement age cannot after that time become a member because it is not open to them but that does not seem to me to be the point."
[The significance of age 61 is that that is the age at which an Officer ceased to be eligible to join the Scheme and the age at which Mr Blair ceased to be able to continue as an active member.]
a. the employer in relation to such persons has acceded to the scheme, so that (subject to satisfying any membership conditions) such persons may become members of the scheme; and
b. such persons carry out the type of work identified under the rules of the scheme (ie under the PNPF, work as Pilots and, under the MNOPF, as Officers).
a. There has been no ECE in relation to the PLA or Sunderland since each of them has at all material times since 31 May 2007 (when each of them ceased to employ any Active Members) employed at least one employee eligible with the consent of the Trustee to be a Member of the Scheme.
b. There has been no ECE in relation to Peterhead since it has at all material times since 6 April 2006 (when it ceased to employ any Active Members) employed at least one employee eligible with the consent of the Trustee to be a Member of the Scheme.
c. An ECE occurred in relation to Seaham when it ceased to employ any persons eligible to join the Scheme (with or without the consent of the Trustee) on 29 January 2008 (having at that time no employees who were Active Members). It makes no difference to this conclusion that it subsequently, on 9 June 2008, employed a person eligible, with the Trustee's consent, to join the Scheme.
QUESTION 4A
a) In Cemex Peter Smith J decided that an employer in a multi-employer scheme did not suffer an ECE, and so did not trigger a Section 75 debt, simply on ceasing to employ any active members: so long as the employer continued to employ other persons within the relevant description of employment (in that case "Officers" as defined in the MNOPF Rules) there was no ECE. I have dealt in detail with that case already. As I have said, it was a necessary part of this decision that an employer which continued to employ persons in the relevant description of employment did not cease to be an employer as defined in section 124(1) PA 1995. It is, in any case, clear, as I have also already stated, from the Employer Debt Regulations themselves that that is so.
b) By contrast, in Hearn v Dobson [2008] EWHC 1620 (Ch), Morgan J had to consider the meaning of "employer" in the Scheme Funding Regulations. He held that (at least in the context with which he was concerned) an employer meant a person employing active members.
c) The practical effect of these two decisions together can be illustrated by the case of an employer in a multi-employer scheme who ceases to employ active members before 6 April 2008 but continues to employ other persons in the relevant description of employment. Under Hearn v Dobson (on at least one view of what Morgan J decided), such a person ceases to be an employer for SSF purposes, and is therefore not subject to the SSF regime. Under Cemex however, such a person has not suffered an ECE and so no Section 75 debt is due from it. This means that so long as it continues to employ at least one person in the relevant description of employment it will have no statutory obligation to fund the scheme, either under the SSF or under Section 75.
d) If that is the true interpretation of the two decisions, it leaves the Trustee with a most unfortunate "funding gap". Take for example the PLA. It ceased to employ active members on 31 May 2007; if Hearn v Dobson is interpreted in the way which I have indicated, the SSF provisions do not apply. But if I am right in my answer to Question 4, no ECE has arisen either. This will continue to be the case for the foreseeable future.
Hearn v Dobson
"in relation to which there is more than one employer…..". (see paragraph 1(1)(a)).
"(1) In the application of Part 3 [PA 2004] and these Regulations to a scheme which has no active members, references to the employer have effect as if they were references to the person who was the employer immediately before the occurrence of the event after which the scheme ceased to have any active members ("the freezing event").
(2) A person shall cease to be treated as an employer under paragraph (1) if after the freezing event he ceases to be treated as a former employer under regulation 9 of the [Employer Debt Regulations]."
a. Section 11 Interpretation Act 1978 provides:
"Where an Act confers power to make subordinate legislation, expressions used in that legislation have, unless the contrary intention appears, the meaning which they bear in the Act."
b. Whatever the meaning of section 124 PA 1995, the word "employer" did not, therefore, necessarily have the same meaning in the Regulations. I note that, although Morgan J did not decide the issue in the context of section 124, he did indicate that he had considerable doubt about the submission that "employer" in that section went further than employer of active members.
c. Paragraph 3 of Schedule 2 shows that the draftsman of the Regulations plainly thought that one ceased to be an employer when one ceased to have active members.
d. This provides a context which requires the word "employer" to have that meaning in paragraph 1.
a. Under section 233, Part 3 PA 2004 is to be construed as one with Part 1 of PA 1995 (which contains Section 75). As he says, the debt on the employer under that section and ongoing funding, previously governed by the MFR and now by the scheme specific funding regime under Part 3 PA 2004, deal with the most closely related subject matter.
b. As the law now stands, an employer who ceases to employ active members will suffer an ECE and may thereby incur a Section 75 debt as a result of the substituted definition of ECE inserted by the 2008 Regulations. It would be strange if, contrary to Hearn v Dobson, it would nevertheless continue to be an employer for the purposes of Part 3 PA 2004 for the following reasons.
c. Depending on the answer to Question 9 the formerly active employer might be exposed to a further liability imposed by the statute despite the fact that it has incurred an ECE. Why should it be, once it has incurred a Section 75 debt?
d. If, on the other hand, the answer to Question 9 is that a formerly active employer is not exposed to potential liability under the SSF regime over and above its contractual obligations (if any) its consent would on the face of it be required in the statutory SSF process. If it has no continuing exposure to liability, why should it be?
a. That test is clear and easily operable. The trustees will know whether members are still in pensionable service. Contrast this with the test adopted in the Cemex case. Trustees may not know – and may have no means of finding out – the employment status of deferreds or pensioners, or whether a putative employer has persons eligible for membership in its employment. I have dealt with and rejected this argument raised by Mr Spink in the context of Section 75.
b. The active member test gives effect to the reasonable expectations of those concerned, as illustrated by the position of Shoreham itself. It ceased to employ members of the Scheme as long ago as 1992 – before even the 1995 Act – and not unreasonably all concerned have in the meantime proceeded on the footing that it was out of the Scheme. But that argument, too, applies to liability under Section 75. I would have thought the argument cut the other way: if employers are not restricted to employers of active members (as I consider to be the case), why should they not equally be subject to the SSF regime?
c. Pension schemes are long-term institutions. To depart from Hearn v Dobson could lead to the conclusion that eg a subsidiary sold to a competitor decades ago is still an "employer" and brought back into the process. The clearest language would be needed to require such an inconvenient conclusion. There is no such language here. I disagree. This perhaps unexpected result is a consequence of the language used. It is only one of many situations which can arise. This hard case could not be allowed to distort the coherent and rational scheme which arises on the alternative approach. This factor is not enough to displace that approach.
"(1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires –
"employer" –
(a) in relation to an occupational pension scheme, means the employer of persons in the description of employment to which the scheme in question relates (but see subsection (4)) …"
a. Under section 227, it is the duty of trustees to prepare and from time to time review and if necessary revise a schedule of contributions. This is a statement showing the rates of contributions payable by the employer and active members of the scheme. If the amount shown in the schedule is not paid, the unpaid amount (whether payable by the employer or any other person) is treated as a debt due from the employer to the trustees under section 228(3).
b. Under section 229, the trustees or managers must obtain the consent of "the employer" to a number of things, including any matter to be included in the schedule of contributions. If matters cannot be agreed, the failure must be reported to tPR. One of the powers given to tPR by section 231(2) is then to impose a schedule of contributions which can specify the rates or contribution "payable towards the scheme by or on behalf of the employer and the active members".
a. The first is to say that Cemex is wrong and that "the employer" in section 124 PA 1995 and in Part 3 PA 2004 includes only employers of active members.
b. The second is to eliminate the incoherence by finding that Part 3 itself has been modified by the Scheme Funding Regulations so as to treat references in Part 3 to "the employer" as references only to employers of active members.
a. First, section 125(3) PA 1995 provides that Regulations may extend the meaning of "employer" to include former employers. It does not provide for the narrowing of the definition.
b. Secondly, in contrast, section 124(3) provides for both the extension and restriction of the meaning of "member".
a. First, a comparison with the 2005 Employer Debt Regulations (which had been in force since 6 April 2005) is instructive. I have set out Regulation 9(1) of those Regulations as they stood on 30 December 2005 when the Scheme Funding Regulations come into force at paragraph 463 above. The similarity is, as Mr Nugee argues, striking but whereas the draftsman of the Employer Debt Regulations has reproduced the phrase "every person who employed persons in the description or category of employment to which the scheme relates" in full, the draftsman of the Scheme Funding Regulations has shortened this by referring to "the person who was the employer". However, on one view, this has, by virtue of section 124(1) PA 1995, precisely the same meaning.
b. As to that argument, the similarity of wording is something which I can take into account. But it is only an aid to construction and I must be careful, as I have said in the context of construing other provisions, not to read too much into the use of similar language. Reference to the Employer Debt Regulations is, however, helpful to show that it was at least possible that the draftsman intended "the employer" to have its normal meaning; indeed, if one were to read the key phrase into paragraph 3, it would be difficult to say, I consider, that "the employer" did not have the meaning given to it by section 124 in that paragraph. And yet it could not possibly be suggested, in my view, that paragraph 3 would not then make perfectly good sense. Quite the reverse would be the case, in my view.
c. Secondly, the explanation for the wording may be (as Morgan J thought) that the draftsman equated ceasing to be an employer employing persons in the description of employment with ceasing to employ actives. Even if the draftsman had considered that the wider, actual, meaning of "employer" was correct, he might well have made the provision which he did. Clearly the occasion on which a scheme ceases to have any active members is an important occasion. Typically, it may occur when the employer (in a single employer scheme) or all of the employers (in a multi-employer scheme) cease to participate in the scheme. That would be the occasion on which the scheme ceased to have any active members. The draftsman could reasonably focus on that as the paradigm case which he needed to cover, drafting the provision accordingly. Further, he (or rather the Secretary of State) might reasonably consider that all employers at the time when the scheme ceases to have active members should remain exposed to ongoing contribution obligations, considering, as a matter of policy, that it would be unsatisfactory to leave the future ongoing funding as the responsibility of an employer who happens to employ an eligible member.
d. Thirdly, even if Morgan J is right and the draftsman did think that ceasing to employ actives was synonymous with ceasing to be an employer, this cannot be determinative: in that case he was wrong in his understanding of what section 124 PA 1995 meant by "employer" and his error cannot require a different meaning to be given to the word in the Regulations alone (where to do so would mean they did not fit with the statutory provisions); nor can it require the meaning of the word in the Act itself to be changed where on this view the draftsman had no intention of doing so.
QUESTION 8
a. If Rule 14(4) was validly introduced, and on satisfaction of either of the conditions set out in the first four lines of Rule 14(4), is the Trustee entitled to demand contributions (or further contributions) from any and if so which of the Cessation CHAs? (Issue 32)
b. If the said Cessation CHA is also liable under Section 75, is the Trustee entitled to demand further contributions under Rule 14(4)? (Issue 33)
a. As to Issue 32, Mr Green accepts that, if Rule 14(4) was validly introduced, then the Trustee is entitled to demand contributions under Rule 14(4) from each of the Cessation CHAs subject to satisfaction of one or other of the conditions.
b. As to Issue 33, Mr Green accepts that if a Cessation CHA is liable under Section 75, the Trustee is entitled to demand contributions under Rule 14(4) in excess of the debt due under Section 75 (subject to the power under Rule 14(4) being properly exercised in accordance with the principles explained in Edge v Pensions Ombudsman [2000] Ch 602 (by Chadwick LJ at [23] to [24])), a result with which Mr Spink of course concurs.
a. ceases to employ Pilots for its Area; or
b. ceases (at the discretion of the Trustee) to employ "E" Members for that Area.
"(4) Where a Participating Body which is on or after 8 June 2005 an employer of "E" Members in any Area ceases on or after 8 June 2005 to employ Pilots for that Area or (at the discretion of the Trust Company) to employ "E" Members for that Area, the Participating Body shall, if the Trust Company consents, cease to be a Participating Body in relation to the Area on the date it ceased to be such an employer and shall make such contributions (including lump sum contributions), if any, as the Trust Company, having regard to the advice of the Actuary shall determine".
a) The PLA employed an active "E" Member until 31 May 2007, and thereafter up to the present has at all times employed a deferred Member and a pensioner Member;
b) Peterhead employed an active "E" Member until 6 April 2006 and thereafter up to the present has at all times employed either a deferred "E" Member or a pensioner "E" Member;
c) Seaham employed an active "E" Member until 1 January 2007 and thereafter up to the present has at all times employed a pensioner "E" Member; and
d) Sunderland ceased to employ any "E" Members on 31 May 2007.
QUESTION 9
a. Issue 34: this raises the question whether the Trustee is entitled or required to prepare a Recovery Plan or Schedule of Contributions that requires the employers to make different or greater contributions than they could otherwise be required to make under the governing provisions of the Scheme (whether as those provisions currently stand or as amended consistently with the answer to Question 1 on the Claim Form) if the Trustee considers that this is the appropriate manner in which to try to meet the statutory funding objective.
b. Issue 35: this raises the question whether, if the answer to Issue 34 is yes, in order for such Recovery Plan and Schedule of Contributions to become binding on the employer:
i. it is necessary that the employers (or any representative under paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 to the Scheme Funding Regulations) agree to such Recovery Plan and Schedule of Contributions; or
ii. it is merely necessary that the Trustee consult with the employers (or any representative) on the basis that (as the governing provisions currently stand, or as amended consistently with the answer to Question 1 on the Claim Form) the Scheme does or would satisfy the two conditions in paragraph 9(1) of Schedule 2 to the Scheme Funding Regulations, namely:
1. the rates of contributions payable by the employers are determined by the trustee without the agreement of the employers, and
2. no person other than the Trustee is permitted to reduce those rates or to suspend payment of contributions.
British Vita
The MFR regime
a. Under section 56(1) PA 1995:
"Every occupational pension scheme to which this section applies is subject to a requirement (referred to in this Part as "the minimum funding requirement") that the value of the assets of the scheme is not less than the amount of the liabilities of the scheme."
b. This requirement was given specific effect to by individual requirements to commission periodic actuarial valuations to determine whether the scheme was fully funded on the MFR basis (and therefore the MFR met), and if it was not, to prepare a schedule of contributions that was to be certified by the actuary as sufficient to bring the scheme back to full MFR funding.
c. Unless the actuary certified that the MFR was met, or would be met by the end of the schedule period, then the trustees were placed under an obligation to commission a fresh actuarial valuation within 6 months unless the actuary also considered that the scheme was funded to at least 90% of MFR and the schedule of contributions was revised (sections 57(2) to (4) PA 1995).
d. Finally, where a valuation showed that the scheme was less than 90% funded on the MFR basis (referred to in the Act as "serious underprovision"), the employers (within the statutory meaning of such term) had to make payments sufficient to bring the scheme up to at least the 90% threshold within 3 years, or put in place other prescribed methods of redressing the issue within 12 weeks (section 60 PA 1995; regulations 20 and 22 of, and Schedule 4 to, the MFR Regulations).
a. Section 58(4) PA 1995 provided that:
"The matters shown in a schedule of contributions for a scheme-
(a) must be matters previously agreed by the trustees or managers and the employer, or
(b) if no such agreement has been made as to all the matters shown in the schedule, must be-
(i) rates of contributions determined by the trustees or managers, being such rates as in their opinion are adequate for the purpose of securing that the minimum funding requirement will continue to be met throughout the prescribed period or, if it appears to them that it is not met, will be met by the end of that period, and
(ii) other matters determined by the trustees or managers;"
b. Therefore, it was for the employers and trustees to try to agree a schedule of contributions, but if they were unable to do so, the trustees could impose a schedule of contributions sufficient to ensure that the scheme met the MFR. The effect of the schedule was that any amount not paid on the date that it was meant to be paid under the schedule became, if it would not otherwise be, a debt due from the employer to the trustees, and this applied whether or not the amount in question should have been paid by the employer or the active member (section 59(2) PA 1995).
"Where any provision mentioned in subsection (2) [which included sections 56 to 61] conflicts with the provisions of an occupational pension scheme-
(a) the provision mentioned in subsection (2), to the extent that it conflicts, overrides the provisions of the scheme, and
(b) the scheme has effect with such modifications as may be required in consequence of paragraph (a)."
a. The purpose of the regime was to create a statutory baseline for ongoing funding in order to protect members of schemes (paragraph [27])
b. If the contribution rules under a scheme placed the ability to determine the level of contributions under the rules in the hands of an employer, and that employer determined to pay contributions at a level inadequate to meet the MFR, the trustees could impose a statutory schedule of contributions upon the employer sufficient to meet the MFR, and contributions under this schedule, if unpaid, would constitute debts recoverable by the trustees. So the MFR regime gave the trustees rights over and above those set out in the scheme rules (paragraphs [23] and [24]).
c. But if the funding necessary to meet the MFR was less than the level of funding which the trustees regarded as adequate properly to fund the scheme, the MFR did not override the rules: a conventional contribution rule in an ordinary balance of cost defined benefit scheme is not overridden by the MFR.
The SSF regime
"(a) Recital (4): this stresses as an urgent priority the need to draw up a Directive on the prudential supervision of "institutions for occupational retirement provision", a phrase which includes United Kingdom occupational pension schemes. The key role of such institutions, as major financial players, is recognised but it is observed that they are not subject to a coherent Community legislative framework allowing them to benefit fully from the advantages of the internal market.
(b) Recital (7): the prudential rules laid down in the IORP Directive are intended "both to guarantee a high degree of security for future pensioners through the imposition of stringent supervisory standards, and to clear the way for the efficient management of occupational pension schemes".
(c) Recital (26): a prudent calculation of "technical provisions" (ie the amount required to make provision for a scheme's liabilities) is essential to ensure that obligations can be met. Technical provisions should be calculated on the basis of recognised actuarial methods and certified by qualified persons. The minimum amount of technical provisions should be both sufficient for benefits already in payment and to reflect commitment arising out of members' accrued pension rights.
(d) Recital (28): sufficient and appropriate assets to cover the technical provisions protect the interests of members and beneficiaries in the case of employer insolvency. Cross-border activity leads to a requirement that the technical provisions be "fully funded at all times".
(e) Article 15(1): this provides for each Member State to ensure that an occupational pension scheme should "establish....an adequate amount of liabilities corresponding to the financial commitments which arise out of their portfolio of existing pension contracts"; in other words, the scheme's obligations must be valued in an appropriate manner.
"(f) Article 15(4): this provides, at paragraph (a), that the minimum amount of the technical provisions shall be calculated by a sufficiently prudent actuarial valuation. It must be sufficient both for pensions and benefits already in payment and to reflect accrued rights."
(g) Article 16: this deals with asset cover. It requires each Member State to require every institution [ie including occupational pension schemes in the United Kingdom] to have at all times sufficient and appropriate assets to cover its technical provisions."
"The thrust of the IORP Directive context of a UK pension scheme is, it can be seen, that the scheme should value its liabilities to pensioners and other beneficiaries adopting "a sufficiently prudent actuarial valuation", the underlying economic and actuarial assumptions for the valuation of liabilities also being chosen prudently. The scheme is then to have "sufficient and appropriate" assets to cover its liabilities as thus ascertained. It is to be noted that Article 15(4) talks of a minimum amount of the technical provisions and that Article 16(1) requires the scheme to have enough assets to cover those technical provisions. There is nothing in the IORP Directive which prevents the technical provisions being calculated on a more generous basis than by reference to a "sufficiently prudent actuarial valuation" or which precludes a scheme holding more than "sufficient and appropriate assets" to cover the technical provisions on whatever basis those are established. There is nothing, therefore, which would have prevented the UK, when implementing the IORP Directive, from providing expressly that a scheme contribution rule, which resulted in higher technical provisions or greater asset cover than the IORP Directive required, could continue to have effect."
"Every scheme is subject to a requirement ("the statutory funding objective") that it must have sufficient and appropriate assets to cover its technical provisions."
"the amount required, on an actuarial calculation, to make provision for the scheme's liabilities."
Valuations under the SSF regime
Schedule of contributions and recovery plans
"a statement showing
(a) the rates of contributions payable towards the scheme by or on behalf of the employer and the active members of the scheme, and
(b) the dates on or before which such contributions are to be paid."
"must set out
(a) the steps to be taken to meet the statutory funding objective, and
(b) the period within which that is to be achieved."
"Schemes under which the rates of contributions are determined by the trustees or managers or by the actuary
9(1) In the case of a scheme under which:
(a) the rates of contributions payable by the employer are determined by the trustees or managers without the agreement of the employer, and
(b) no person other than the trustees or managers is permitted to reduce those rates or to suspend payment of contributions,
section 229 of the 2004 Act and regulation 13 shall apply as if they were subject to the modifications set out in sub-paragraphs (2) and (3), and the reference to section 229 in paragraph 8(2) above shall be read as a reference to that section as modified by sub-paragraph (2)."
"Where the power of the trustees or managers to determine the rates of contributions payable by the employer without the employer's agreement is subject to conditions, the modifications provided for in sub-paragraphs (2) and (3) have effect only in circumstances where the conditions are satisfied".
"impose a schedule of contributions specifying-
(i) the rates of contributions payable towards the scheme by or on behalf of the employer and the active members of the scheme, and
(ii) the dates on or before which such contributions are to be paid."
Regulation 16 Scheme Funding Regulations
a. the level of benefits expected to be provided is defined;
b. contributions are payable by the employer and by the active members in specified proportions; and
c. if it seems that the assets will or are likely to fall short of the technical provisions, the rates of contributions payable by the active members and the employer may be increased in specified proportions.
"with a view to making such provision that, where any additional contributions are required to give effect to a recovery plan, those contributions are payable by the employer and the members in the appropriate proportions, unless the employer and the trustees or managers agree –
(a) that the additional contributions should be payable by the employer alone, or
(b) that he should pay a greater proportion than would otherwise fall to be paid by him."
"(1) Where any provision mentioned in subsection (2) conflicts with the provisions of an occupational … pension scheme –
(a) the provision mentioned in subsection (2), to the extent that it conflicts, overrides the provisions of the scheme, and
(b) the scheme has effect with such modifications as may be required in consequence of paragraph (a)."
One of those provisions is paragraph (h) of subsection (2): "Part 3 and any subordinate legislation made under that Part."
"As I have mentioned, Mr Green says that the scheme of the legislation is to provide an exclusive code for the level of contributions to an ordinary defined benefit scheme with a conventional employer contribution rule. I am not sure if he says that it is part of that scheme that the target for funding must always be the statutory funding objective so that tPR could not impose a rate of contributions targeted at a better funding level or one which would reflect the scheme's own contribution rule. But whatever the general scheme of the legislation, it seems to me that the real question is whether there is a conflict, within the meaning of section 306, between the provisions of Part 3 and the Scheme Funding Regulations on the one hand and the rules of the schemes on the other.
82 If there is such a conflict, the rules are overridden to the extent of the conflict. But if there is no conflict, then I do not consider that the appeal which Mr Green makes to the overall scheme of Part 3 as providing a complete code has any force. I would take that view even in the absence of section 306. If a person's contractual or other rights are to be overridden or somehow qualified by legislation, that requires the use of clear words which, either expressly or by necessary implication, produce that result. Part 3 and the Regulations, in the absence of any conflict within section 306, do not, I consider, use such clear language. An examination of section 306 itself reinforces that conclusion. The section provides expressly that, in a case of conflict, the scheme rule is overridden: this suggests strongly to me that, in the absence of conflict, the scheme rule should continue to apply. For these reasons I reject any broad submission based on the proposition that Part 3 and the Scheme Funding Regulations provide a complete code for the making of contributions to a scheme. The search must be for a conflict if Mr Green's approach is to be upheld."
"The contractual provisions of an occupational pension scheme were not displaced by the statutory provisions which underlie the minimum funding requirement:[1] save where the provisions were in conflict."
"The Court of Justice has held that the national court's obligation is to interpret domestic legislation, so far as possible, in the light of the wording and the purpose of a directive in order to achieve the result pursued by the directive and thereby comply with Community obligations….. It is sometimes also referred to as the principle of conforming interpretation."
a. first, where there is an existing deficit in the scheme and the statutory funding objective is not satisfied (in which case, contributions over and above those needed to meet accruing benefits will be needed); and
b. secondly, where there is no deficit and the statutory funding objective is satisfied, but the employer is unwilling to agree a further contribution rate sufficient to meet the cost of future accruals. In that case, the actuary would be unable to certify that the statutory funding objective would be satisfied at the end of the relevant period under section 227(6)(b)(ii).
a. unless there is a conflict between the SSF regime and the shared cost rules of the Scheme, the shared cost structure should continue to apply, and not be overridden by the SSF regime; and, as a corollary,
b. unless there is such a conflict, a recovery plan and schedule of contributions must respect the shared cost structure of the Scheme.
"The trustees of a shared cost scheme to which section 56 applies may by resolution modify the scheme with a view to making such provision that, if there is a serious shortfall valuation for the scheme, then the cost of any payments which the employer is obliged to make under section 60 as a result of that valuation is borne by the employer and the members in the appropriate proportions (in the case of the members, either by provision for them to make payments or for their rights to benefits under the scheme to be modified or both), unless the employer and the trustees or managers agree
(a) that the cost of the payments resulting from that valuation is to be borne by the employer alone; or
(b) that he should bear a greater proportion of it than would otherwise fall to be borne by him."
"(a) the rates of contributions payable by the employer are determined by the trustees or managers without the agreement of the employer, and
(b) no person other than the trustees or managers is permitted to reduce those rates or to suspend payment of contributions."
"Although the interlinking provisions of Part 3 and the Scheme Funding Regulations are quite complex, I have been able to resolve the point of construction……applying ordinary canons of construction. I do not find there to be an ambiguity, rather than a difficulty, which justifies reference to Hansard to resolve it. On the contrary, I think this is a case where the effect of reading Hansard is to create an ambiguity when none was otherwise present."
"Although in many scheme rules contributions are set by agreement between the employer and the trustees …, under some they are set by the trustees alone …. Rules in this form are potentially favourable to the members of the scheme because funding rates can be set without regard to a veto from the employer. When it came to making the 2005 Regulations, Parliament evidently felt that it was unacceptable that the statutory regime, as set out in the 2004 Act, should give the employer a greater say in the terms on which the scheme should be funded than the employer would have had under the scheme rules unmodified by statute. Hence paragraph 9 of schedule 2 to the 2005 Regulations, headed 'Schemes under which the rates of contributions are determined by the trustees or managers or by the actuary'."
QUESTI0N 10
a) Issue 36: would the coming into force of a schedule of contributions under regulation 9(1) prevent the Trustee from relying on its contribution powers under the Rules in respect of persons who do not constitute employers for the purposes of Part 3 of the PA 2004 (as defined in the light of the answer to Issue 23 above)?
b) Issue 37: would the fact that a schedule of contributions had become due under regulation 9(1) of the Scheme Funding Regulations prevent the Trustee from relying on its contribution powers under the Rules in respect of persons who do not constitute employers for the purposes of Part 3 of the PA 2004 (as defined in the light of the answer to Issue 23 above)?
c) Issue 38: would the coming into force of a schedule of contributions under regulation 9(1) prevent the Trustee from relying on its contribution powers under the Rules in respect of employers for the purposes of Part 3 of the PA 2004 so as to prevent the Trustee from claiming contributions different to those set out in the schedule of contributions, if those contributions otherwise became payable under the Rules?
a. The provision makes it abundantly clear that the SSF regime overrides the contractual contribution obligations. Those provisions would make no sense at all if powers to set contributions under the scheme rules outside the process laid down by the SSF survived.
b. It is a necessary implication that the powers to demand contributions under the scheme are overridden by the SSF regime.
c. This is the clearest indication that the SSF process as a whole conflicts with the continued existence of a unilateral power for trustees to demand contributions fixed other than in accordance with the statutory process once that process comes into operation.
a. The former is not dependent on the amount due under the rules being shown in the schedule of contributions although section 227(1) and Regulation 10(1) have the result that the contractual amounts must be shown within the total payable. In other words, the schedule is not the source of the payment, the rule is the source. The legislation requires the amount derived from that source to be shown in the schedule but the fact that it may not be (eg pending a revision of the schedule under section 227(1)) does not disapply or even suspend the operation of the scheme rule.
b. The latter, of course, can only arise if the payment is required by the schedule of contributions. If it is not shown in the schedule, there can be no unpaid amount to which section 228(3) will apply.
a. Consider a scheme where the contribution rate is set by the actuary. Paragraph 9(5) modifies section 227(6) by altering the nature of the certificate required by that sub-section. Paragraph 9 does not dispense with the need for the employer's agreement under section 229. Suppose that the employer is not prepared to agree the rate of contributions set by the actuary. The matter passes to tPR who imposes a schedule.
b. It is unclear whether (i) tPR has to include contributions at least the level which the actuary requires on the footing that those are contributions which the rules require; so that, assuming Regulation 10(1) applies, tPR would be failing to observe Regulation 10(1) if a lesser rate of contribution were required; or (ii) alternatively, that tPR can fix the level of contributions which it considers appropriate to meet the statutory funding objective which contributions then become "all" contributions payable for the purposes of Regulation 10(1).
c. However, if the answer is in sense (ii), then the imposed schedule of contributions sets the limits of the employer's obligations. If that is the right answer where tPR imposes a schedule of contributions, there is a great deal to be said for the view that the same should apply where the schedule of contributions has been prepared by the trustees and agreed by the employer.
d. The second example is where a schedule of contributions has been imposed by tPR at a time when paragraph 9 did not apply at all. That could happen in the present case although it is unlikely given my answer to Question 1. The rules are then amended to give the trustees power to impose different, and larger, contributions. The question then arises whether tPR can, or must, revise the schedule of contributions to reflect any increase which the trustees seek to impose under the amended rule. The question is similar to that raised by the first example. It is not clear whether (i) the contributions are payable so that the schedule must be amended to comply with Regulation 10 or (ii) it is the schedule which defines what is due so that it is only if tPR chooses to revise the schedule that different contributions will be recoverable.
e. Again, if the answer is in sense (ii), I repeat paragraph c above.
QUESTION 1 ON THE CLAIM FORM
Liability of Active Employer CHAs
1. Does the Trustee have the power under Rule 9(l)(a) of the Rules to amend the Rules to require Active Employer CHAs to make contributions more than 1.5 times the contributions made by Active Employed Members? Yes
2. If the answer to issue 1 is "yes", is the power under Rule 9(l)(a) to amend the Rules to seek further contributions from Active Employer CHAs limited to requiring such CHAs to make contributions to meet that part of the deficit attributable to the Pensionable Service:
a. of Members that are or have been employed by the CHA in question,
b. accrued while such Members were (or are) in the Pensionable Service of the Active Employer CHA in question?
No to both a and b.
3. Does the Trustee have a statutory power under Article 5 to amend the Rules to impose greater contribution obligations on Active Employer CHAs? Not answered
4. Is the Trustee's power under Article 5 subject to the same limits (if any) as the power under Rule 9(l)(a)? Not limited (assuming answer to Issue 3 is Yes).
Liability of Formerly Active Employer CHAs
5. Does the Trustee have the power under Rule 9(l)(a) of the Rules to amend the Rules to impose greater contribution obligations on Formerly Active Employer CHAs? Yes
6. If the answer to issue 5 is "yes", is the power under Rule 9(l)(a) to amend the Rules to seek further contributions from Formerly Active Employer CHAs limited to requiring such CHAs to make contributions to meet that part of the deficit attributable to the Pensionable Service of current or former employees, and is this limited to Pensionable Service accrued while such Members are or were employed by such CHA? No
7. Does the Trustee have a statutory power under Article 5 to amend the Rules to impose greater contribution obligations on Former Employer CHAs? Not answered
8. Is the Trustee's power under Article 5 subject to the same limits (if any) as the power under Rule 9(l)(a)? Not limited (assuming answer to Issue 7 is Yes)
Liability of Active Self-Employed CHAs
9. Does the Trustee have the power under Rule 9(l)(a) of the Rules to amend the Rules to impose contribution obligations on Active Self-Employed CHAs? Yes
10. If the answer to issue 9 is "yes", is the power under Rule 9(l)(a) to amend the Rules to seek further contributions from Active Self-Employed CHAs limited to requiring such CHAs to make contributions to meet that part of the deficit attributable to Pensionable Service of Members who are currently authorised by the CHA in question:
a. while authorised by such CHA? or
b. whether or not accrued while authorised by such CHAs?
No to both a and b.
11. Does the Trustee have a statutory power under Article 5 to amend the Rules to impose contribution obligations on Active Self-Employed CHAs? Not answered
12. Is the Trustee's power under Article 5 subject to the same limits (if any) as the power under Rule 9(l)(a)? Not limited (assuming answer to Issue 11 is Yes)
13. If the answer to issues 9 or 11 is "yes", does the Trustee have the power under Rule 9(l)(a) and/or Article 5 to amend the Rules to seek contributions from Active Self-Employed CHAs in respect of that part of the deficit referable to Pensionable Service that is credited to a Member on transferring into the Scheme? Yes (but see paragraph 304 above).
14. If the answer to issue 9 is "yes", is the power of amendment under Rule 9(l)(a) limited by an implied term that it cannot be used to impose a liability on Self- Employed CHAs to make contributions in respect of a deficit arising in circumstances falling outside the scope of the reasonable expectations of the parties to the deeds of accession? Not limited.
15. If the answer to issue 11 is "yes", is the power of amendment under Article 5 limited by an implied term that it cannot be used to impose a liability on Self- Employed CHAs to make contributions in respect of a deficit arising in circumstances falling outside the scope of the reasonable expectations of the parties to the deeds of accession? Not limited.
16. If the answer to issues 9 or 11 is "yes" and the answer to issues 14 or 15 is "yes", do such reasonable expectations:
a. prevent an amendment of the Rules by the Trustee to impose an obligation on Self-Employed CHAs to make contributions in respect of deficit occasioned or contributed to by the Trustee acting in breach of trust, or
b. prevent an amendment of the Rules by the Trustee to impose an obligation on Self-Employed CHAs to make contributions in respect of deficit occasioned or contributed to by the Trustee acting in a way contrary to or in disregard of professional advice received?
Does not arise
Liability of Formerly Active Self-Employed CHAs
17. Does the Trustee have the power under Rule 9(l)(a) of the Rules to amend the Rules to impose contribution obligations on Formerly Active Self-Employed CHAs? Yes
18. If the answer to issue 17 is "yes", is the power under Rule 9(l)(a) to amend the Scheme to seek further contributions from Formerly Active Self-Employed CHAs limited to requiring such CHAs to make contributions to meet that part of the deficit attributable to the Pensionable Service of Members that were authorised by the CHA in question and only that part of the Pensionable Service of such Members which accrued whilst the Member was authorised by the CHA? No
19. Does the Trustee have a statutory power under Article 5 to amend the Rules to impose contribution obligations on Formerly Active Self-Employed CHAs? Not answered
20. Is the Trustee's power under Article 5 subject to the same limits (if any) as the power under Rule 9(1)(a)? Not limited (assuming answer to Issue 9 is Yes)
QUESTION 2 ON THE CLAIM FORM
Assuming that Rule 14(4) is valid (which depends on the answer to question 1 on the Claim Form), it is not contested that on the construction of 14(4)
a. the Trustee is entitled to demand from an Employer CHA contributions calculated by reference to the total deficit under the Scheme; and
b. the Trustee can estimate the deficit on the basis of the cost of securing the liabilities under the Scheme by the bulk purchase of annuities from an Insurance Company, or such other basis as it wishes.
It has been agreed by the parties that questions 3 (and 3A) are to be decided without prejudice to the argument that Article 72 of the Articles of Association of the Trustee company (which required certain types of amendments to be agreed at a negotiating forum between representatives of pilots and ports) had not validly been removed by the date of the exercise of the power of amendment. By agreeing to this, the Trustee is not to be taken as accepting that the parties to these proceedings have locus standi to raise arguments in relation to Aricle 72. The Trustee's position would be that any issue that did arise would be between its shareholders and could not therefore be resolved in the current proceedings.
QUESTION 3 ON THE CLAIM FORM
Question 3 asks, in the light of the answers to Questions 1 and 2, and in the events which have occurred, whether and if so to what extent the amendment of the Scheme which introduced rule 14(4) of the Rules was valid. The answer is that the amendments were within the scope of the power.
QUESTION 3A ON THE CLAIM FORM
Question 3 asks, in the light of the answers to Questions 1 and 2, and in the events which have occurred, whether and if so to what extent the amendment of the Scheme which introduced rule 13(4) of the Rules was valid. The answer is that it was within the scope of the power of amendment under Rule 9(1)(a) to introduce Rule 13(4). In addition:
20A. If the answer to issue 9 and/or 11 is "yes", was the power of amendment properly exercised in introducing rule 13(4)? Yes
D8 contends that if it is correct that the power of amendment is limited by an implied term that it cannot be used to impose a liability on Self-Employed CHAs in circumstances falling outside the scope of the reasonable expectations of the parties to the deeds of accession question 3A cannot be answered in these proceedings. Therefore:
21. If the answers to issue 14 and 15 are "yes",
a. Was the insertion of rule 13(4) within the reasonable expectations of the parties bearing in mind the answer to issue 16; or
b. Is it not possible to answer this issue in these proceedings?
Does not arise
QUESTION 6 ON THE CLAIM FORM
22. Does a Self-Employed CHA constitute an "employer" for the purpose of section 75 of the Pensions Act 1995? No
23. Does a Self-Employed CHA constitute an "employer" for the purpose of Part 3 of the Pensions Act 2004? No
QUESTION 7 ON THE CLAIM FORM
24. Does a Self-Employed Member constitute an "employer" for the purpose of section 75 of the Pensions Act 1995? No
QUESTION 5 ON THE CLAIM FORM
25. For the purposes of section 75(2) and 75(4)(a) of the Pensions Act 1995, does "the value of the assets of [a] scheme is less than the amount at that time of the liabilities of the scheme" refer to all the assets and liabilities of the Scheme or only those attributable to employment with Employer CHAs? The former
QUESTION 4 ON THE CLAIM FORM
26. Did ceasing to employ any Active Members prior to 6 April 2008 trigger an Employment Cessation Event if the Employer CHA in question still employed or might in the future employ (as the case may be) at least one:
a. person eligible to become a Member without requiring the consent of the Trustee under rule 11 (2) of the Rules?
b. person eligible to become a Member with the consent of the Trustee under rule 11 (2) of the Rules?
c. deferred Member?
d. pensioner Member?
For full answers, see text of judgment. "Employer" includes an employer employing an employee who is eligible to join the scheme but not a deferred or pensioner member (unless also eligible to rejoin).
27. In the light of the answers to Issues 26 (a)-(d), (and subject to the OPS Issue: see paragraph 561 above) have Employment Cessation Events triggering a section 75 debt occurred in relation to any, and if so which, of the Cessation CHAs? For details see judgment.
28. On what dates did each of the Employment Cessation Events occur? For details see judgment.
29. If the answer to issue 22 is "yes", can a Self Employed CHA ever undergo an Employment Cessation Event (before or after 6 April 2008)? Does not arise.
30. If the answer to issue 29 is "yes", does a Self Employed CHA only undergo an Employment Cessation Event (before or after 6 April 2008) when it ceases to adhere to the Scheme (i.e. ceases to be bound by a Deed of Accession by agreement)? Does not arise.
31. If the answer to issue 30 is "no", does a Self Employed CHA undergo an Employment Cessation Event, before or after 6 April 2008, when it ceases to authorise at least one:
a. Active Member?
b. person eligible to become a Member without requiring the consent of the Trustee under rule 11(2) of the Rules?
c. person eligible to become a Member with the consent of the Trustee under rule 1 l(2) of the Rules?deferred Member?
d. pensioner Member?
Does not arise.
QUESTION 4A ON THE CLAIM FORM
31A. When does an "employer" for the purposes of Part 3 Pensions Act 2004 and Regulations made thereunder….cease to be such an employer? When it ceases to employ an employee who is either an active member or a person eligible to join the Scheme.
QUESTION 8 ON THE CLAIM FORM
32. If rule 14(4) was validly introduced, and on satisfaction of either of the conditions set out in the first four lines of rule 14(4), is the Trustee entitled to demand contributions (or further contributions) from any and if so which of the Cessation CHAs? No except perhaps from Sunderland but the facts are not sufficiently clear to answer.
33. If the said Cessation CHA is also liable under section 75, is the Trustee entitled to demand further contributions under rule 14(4)? Yes
QUESTION 9 ON THE CLAM FORM
34. Is the Trustee entitled or required to prepare a Recovery Plan or Schedule of Contributions that requires the "employers" (as defined in the light of the answer to Issue 23 above) to make different or greater contributions than they could otherwise be required to make under the governing provisions of the Scheme (whether as those provisions currently stand or as amended consistently with the answer to question 1 on the Claim Form) if the Trustee considers that this is the appropriate manner in which to try to meet the statutory funding objective?
35. If the answer to issue 34 is yes, in order for such Recovery Plan and Schedule of Contributions to become binding on the employer:
a. is it necessary that the employers (or any representative under paragraph 2 of Schedule 2 to the Scheme Funding Regulations) agree to such Recovery Plan and Schedule of Contributions; or
b. is it merely necessary that the Trustee consult with the employers (or any representative) on the basis that (as the governing provisions currently stand, or as amended consistently with the answer to question 1 on the Claim Form) the Scheme does or would satisfy the two conditions in paragraph 9(1) of Schedule 2 to the Scheme Funding Regulations, namely:
i. the rates of contributions payable by the employer are determined by the trustees or managers without the agreement of the employer; and
ii. no person other than the trustees or managers is permitted to reduce those rates or to suspend payment of contributions?
For details see judgment.
QUESTION 10 ON THE CLAIM FORM
36. Would the coming into force of a Schedule of Contributions under regulation 9(1) prevent the Trustee from relying on its contribution powers under the Rules in respect of persons who do not constitute employers for the purposes of Part 3 of the Pensions Act 2004 (as defined in the light of the answer to issue 23 above)? No
37. Would the fact that a Schedule of Contributions had become due under regulation 9(1) of the Scheme Funding Regulations prevent the Trustee from relying on its contribution powers under the Rules in respect of persons who do not constitute employers for the purposes of Part 3 of the Pensions Act 2004 (as defined in the light of the answer to issue 23 above)? No
38. Would the coming into force of a Schedule of Contributions under regulation 9(1) prevent the Trustee from relying on its contribution powers under the Rules in respect of employers for the purposes of Part 3 of the Pensions Act 2004 (as defined in the light of the answer to issue 31 above) so as to prevent the Trustee from claiming contributions different to those set out in the schedule of contributions, if those contributions otherwise became payable under the rules? Not answered.
Note 1 The point applies equally with respect to the SSF regime. S.117(1) PA 95 is the predecessor of s.306(1) PA 04 and is in identical terms. [Back]