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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 >> Capita Atl Pension Trustees Ltd v Zurkinskas [2010] EWHC 3365 (Ch) (21 December 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/3365.html Cite as: [2011] Pens LR 99, [2010] EWHC 3365 (Ch), [2011] WLR 1274, [2011] 1 WLR 1274 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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CAPITA ATL PENSION TRUSTEES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ZURKINSKAS |
Defendant |
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MR R HITCHCOCK (instructed by Burges Salmon LLP, Bristol ) for the 1st Defendant
MISS S ASPLIN QC & MR F MOERAN (instructed by Bingham McCutchen (London) LLP) for the 2nd and 3rd Defendants
Hearing dates: 7 &14 December 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor:
(1) A deed of amendment dated 1st March 1993 ("the 1993 Deed") and made between the then trustees and the third defendant, Sea Containers Ltd, purporting to exercise the power of amendment conferred by clause 20 of the Definitive Deed retrospectively to 1st January 1991 by substituting for the definition of normal retirement date in Rule 1 a definition which prescribed as the normal retirement date for those joining the scheme on or after 1st January 1991 the age of 65 for both men and women.
(2) A decision of the second defendant Sea Containers Services Ltd ("the 1994 Decision") to equalise normal retirement dates for both men and women with effect from 1st August 1994 and to alter the accrual rate promulgated by an announcement to members made in July 1994 receipt of which members were asked to acknowledge before Friday 22nd July 1994.
(3) A decision of the board of the second defendant Sea Containers Services Ltd ("the 2002 Decision") that with effect from 1st May 2002 the accrual rate should be reduced from 1/50th for each year of pensionable service to 1/60th except in the case of those who agreed to pay a contribution of 7.5% of pensionable salary as opposed to the existing rate of 5%. The 2002 Decision was promulgated by an announcement to members made on 11th March 2002, to which was attached a form of consent which the member was invited to complete and return, explained in a slide presentation given to a meeting of members on 20th March 2002 and illustrated by some worked examples sent to members on 1st May 2002.
(4) A Replacement Definitive Deed and Rules ("the New Deed and Rules) dated 16th December 2005 and made between the second defendant, Sea Containers Services Ltd, as principal employer and the then trustees of the Scheme exercising the power conferred by Clause 20 of the Definitive Deed but purporting to have effect from 1st July 2004. Normal retiring date is specified as 65 for both men and women. Further provision is made as to rates of accrual and service credits for those paying the former contribution of 5%.
(1) The second defendant, a company incorporated in England and a former principal employer, went into insolvent liquidation.
(2) The third defendant, a company incorporated in Bermuda and a participating employer, was restructured in the US under Chapter 11 of the US Bankruptcy Code.
(3) The fourth Defendant, Sea Containers 2008 Pension Scheme Company Ltd a shell company controlled by the Trustees, was constituted the principal and only participating employer in place of both the second and third defendants so that the Scheme might be, as it is, administered as a closed fund rather than be wound up.
(1) representation orders,
(2) the solvency of the scheme,
(3) the Pension Protection Fund,
(4) the percentage method,
(5) the merits or otherwise of this proposed compromise and
(6) the proper form of order.
I will deal with those issues in that order.
"...appointing a person to represent any other person or persons in the claim where the person or persons to be represented –
(a) are unborn;
(b) cannot be found;
(c) cannot easily be ascertained; or
(d) are a class of persons who have the same interest in a claim and –
(i) one or more members of that class are within sub-paragraphs (a), (b) or (c); or
(ii) to appoint a representative would further the overriding objective."
"in relation to questions 1, 2(a), 3(a), 4(a) and 5(a) to represent all those members in whose interests it may be to argue for a negative answer to each such question..."
Such an order was made by Warren J in PNPF Trustee Ltd v Taylor and others [2010] EWHC 1573 (Ch) at para 23 following a practice identified by him from some recent cases such as HR Trustees Ltd v German [2009] EWHC 2785 (Ch) (see paragraph 2 of the judgment) and Walker Morris Trustees Ltd v Masterson [2009] EWHC 1955 (Ch) (see paragraphs 11 to 12 of the judgment).
"35 (1) In this Schedule, in relation to the scheme, the following expressions have the meaning given by this paragraph–
"admissible rules";
"recent rule changes";
"recent discretionary increase".
(2) The "admissible rules" means the scheme rules disregarding–
(a) in a case where sub-paragraph (3) applies, the recent rule changes, and
(b) in any case, any scheme rule which comes into operation on, or operates by reference, to the winding up of the scheme or any associated event.
(3) This sub-paragraph applies if the combined effect of the recent rule changes and recent discretionary increases is such that, if account were taken of those changes and increases in calculating the protected liabilities in relation to the scheme at the relevant time, those protected liabilities would be greater than they would be if all those changes and increases were disregarded.
(4) In sub-paragraph (3) "the relevant time" means the time immediately before the assessment period which begins on the assessment date.
(5) Subject to sub-paragraph (6), "recent rule changes" means–
(a) changes to the scheme rules which took effect in the period of three years ending with the assessment date, or were made in that period and took effect by reference to an earlier time, and
(b) any scheme rules which come into operation on, or operate by reference to–
(i) an insolvency event in relation to the employer or any associated event, or
(ii) any prescribed event relating to the future of the employer as a going concern.
(6) "Recent rule changes" does not include–
(a) any scheme rules or changes attributable to paragraph 3 of Schedule 5 to the Social Security Act 1989 (c. 24), section 129 of the Pension Schemes Act 1993 (c. 48), section 117 of the Pensions Act 1995 (c. 26), section 31(4) of the Welfare Reform and Pensions Act 1999 (c. 30) or section 306 of this Act (overriding requirements),
(b) any enactment, or any scheme rules or changes which are required or reasonably necessary to comply with an enactment,.."
"Some concern has been expressed as to whether the effect of the compromise will be to increase the liabilities of the Scheme without any equivalent increase in assets. We note that concern but the Board as a statutory corporation has not been given any powers to intervene in schemes which have not started an assessment period; the Board does not operate a pre-approval or clearance process to provide comfort for schemes which have not yet but may in the future commence an assessment period save to the limited extent provided in Regulation 2(3) of the Pension Protection Fund (Entry Rules) Regulations 2005 (referred to in shorthand as a compromise above PPF levels). It is for that reason that as set out in the correspondence (exhibited to the Third Witness Statement of Katherine Helen Dandy, trial bundle Vol D tab 6) the Board's approach to litigation involving schemes not yet in an assessment period is not to participate unless an issue of general application arises, for example such as that which arose in the case of ITS –v- Hope and Ors [2009] 2818 Ch. The Pensions Regulator is of course aware of the Scheme and is no doubt being kept informed of developments."
In those circumstances I am satisfied that the position of the PPF has been sufficiently considered.
"either
(i) Reorganised SCL has agreed...that an equalisation claim exists...and...has obtained approval from...an English court of competent jurisdiction; or
(ii) a final non-appealable judgment in respect of the Equalisation Claim...has been handed down by an English court of competent jurisdiction.
It follows that approval of the compromise will bring forward the time at which a further distribution of shares in SeaCo to the Trustees can be made. In my view that is a tangible benefit in that such shares will be taken account of in the Actuarial valuations as some mitigation of the liability of £17.5m if and insofar as that is more than a crystallisation of an existing liability.