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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 >> Dalriada Trustees Ltd v Woodward & Ors [2012] EWHC 21626 (Ch) (15 June 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2012/21626.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 21626 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Dalriada Trustees Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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John Laurence Woodward Jennifer Doris Ilett Hedge Capital Investments Ltd Hedge Capital Investment Group Plc Hedge Capital Ltd |
Defendants |
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Andrew Spink QC and Fenner Moeran (instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) for the Claimant
Alan Steinfeld QC, John Stephens and Ms Marika Lemos (instructed by DWF LLP) for the 3rd - 5th Defendants
Hearing dates: 29 - 30 May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor :
(1) Members of other occupational or personal pension schemes were to be encouraged to transfer the cash equivalent of their benefits under those schemes to Mr Woodward and Ms Ilett as the trustees of the Pennines or Mendip schemes under s.95 Pension Schemes Act 1993.
(2) The money so received by Mr Woodward and Ms Ilett was to be applied by them in subscribing for preference shares in HCIG yielding 3% per annum payable out of distributable profits and an additional dividend up to half such annual profits at the directors' discretion.
(3) The subscription money received by HCIG was to be lent on to HCIL repayable on demand with interest at 3% above Barclays Bank base rate and secured by a debenture dated 20th October 2011 on all the assets present and future of HCIL.
(4) The proceeds of such loans from HCIG were to be applied by HCIL in (a) making loans to HCL repayable on three months notice with interest at 4% above Barclays Bank base rate as provided by an agreement made between them dated 20th October 2011 and secured by a debenture made the same day on all the property of HCL and (b) investing the balance in, as described by Mr John Davies, "alternative (or unregulated) products" or "appropriate investment opportunities".
(5) The money lent to HCL by HCIL was to be applied in making advances to members of the Pennines or Mendip pension schemes. The amount of such advances was calculated by reference to the lump sum to which the member would be entitled on retirement and carried interest at the rate of 5% payable monthly. The advances were unsecured and repayable at the expiration of a term of between 14 and 27 years.
Thus, the overall effect of this plan was that the sums transferred into the Pennines or Mendip pension scheme funded the loan to the member if he wanted one and the investments held by HCIL.
(1) an application issued by HCIG, HCIL and HCL on 14th May 2012 for summary judgment under CPR Rule 24.2(a)(i) dismissing the claims against each of them on the ground that Dalriada does not have a real prospect of succeeding on any of them;
(2) an application issued by Dalriada on 3rd April 2012 for the continuation of the freezing order granted by Arnold J on 2nd April, and continued by him on 18th April, until trial or further order; and
(3) an application issued by HCIG, HCIL and HCL on 23rd May 2012 for an order that Dalriada provide security for their costs in the sum of £865,000.
HCIG, HCIL and HCL were represented by counsel, Mr Woodward appeared in person on the first day of the hearing but took no part in the proceedings, Ms Ilett did not appear by counsel or in person. I heard full argument on the summary judgment application. It was agreed that both the others should be adjourned to a date after I have given such judgment. Accordingly, in this judgment I deal only with the arguments on the summary judgment application made by HCIG, HCIL and HCL. Much of the voluminous evidence is irrelevant to that issue. Before I consider counsel's submissions I must refer to the relevant terms of the pension schemes, the statutory and taxation context and the allegations made in the particulars of claim.
"A. The Provider has determined to establish the [Pennines/Mendip] RBS ("the Scheme") with effect from this present date for the sole purpose of providing pensions and lump sum benefits under occupational pension arrangements made by individuals and individuals' employers in accordance with the [Pennines/Mendip] RBS Scheme Rules 2010 [sic] ('the Rules') as may be amended from time to time."
[B..
C..]
D. The Provider has determined that T12 Administration shall act as the first Scheme Administrator."
The operative part begins at clause 3. That provides that the Scheme is established under an irrevocable trust. Clause 4 appoints Mr Woodward and Ms Ilett as the first trustees. The Deed continues:
"5. The Provider and the Trustees shall execute such documents, give such undertakings or take whatever other action as may from time to time be required in order to establish and maintain the status of the Scheme as a Registered Scheme under Part 4 of the Finance Act 2004 and, if applicable, registration with the Pensions Regulator.
6. The Rules form an integral part of this Deed. The definitions contained in the Rules apply for the construction of this Deed…
[7,
8]
9...The Scheme Administrator will secure that the Scheme is in all respects managed in accordance with this Deed and in a manner consistent with the Scheme being treated as a Registered Scheme.
[10, 11, 12]
13. The Trustees shall ensure that, in relation to each Arrangement of a Member, all contributions and other amounts paid by or in respect of the Member to the Scheme as permitted by the Rules are applied in accordance with the Arrangement and that, in the case of each and every Arrangement, a separate and clearly designated account is maintained in respect of each Member's Fund under the Scheme.
14. An option conferred on a Member in accordance with an Arrangement under the Scheme may be exercised only by giving notice -
14.1 in writing to the Scheme Administrator at such address as is nominated by the Trustees for that purpose; or
14.2 by such electronic means as may be approved by the Trustees for that purpose.
15. All assets, investments, deposits and money held for the purpose of the Scheme shall be in the legal ownership and under the control of the Trustees. However, the Trustees may, with the written consent of the Provider, place those assets, investments, deposits and monies in the name of or under the control of a body corporate as nominee.
16. The Trustees shall have and be entitled to exercise all powers, rights and privileges necessary or proper to enable the Trustees to carry out all or any transaction, act, deed or matter arising under or in connection with the Scheme but the Trustees shall, subject to the restrictions contained in this Deed and any requirements of the Board of Revenue & Customs at the time, take into account any specific written wishes of a Member (or of any person acting on a Member's behalf with the Member's prior written authorisation) as to the manner in which such Member's Fund is invested.
17. The Trustees may, with the consent of the Provider, engage in any lawful transaction not specifically authorised by the other provisions of this Deed which would, in the opinion of the Trustees, benefit the Scheme or any Arrangements under the Scheme. This is however subject to the status of the Scheme as a Registered Scheme under Part 4 of the Finance Act 2004 not being prejudiced, whether by reason of a breach of the requirements and restrictions concerning permitted investment issued by the Board of Revenue & Customs in respect of pension schemes or otherwise.
[18..]
19. All the expenses of administration management and investment of the Scheme shall be charged to and paid out of the designated account(s) of the Member(s) in respect of whom such costs have been incurred. The Provider shall also have power to levy such further expenses as may be incurred in connection with the Scheme as it may, in its sole discretion, deem necessary.
[20 – 28]"
Clause 29 provides for the Deed to be subject to, and governed by, the laws of England and Wales.
"the aggregate of
- The contributions paid to the scheme by or in respect of the member,
- Any transfer payment accepted by the scheme in respect of the member,
- Any pension credit rights accepted by the scheme in respect of the member, and
- Any income or capital gain arising from the investment of such amounts."
By s.252 Pensions Act 2004 the trustees or managers of the scheme are obliged to secure that no funding is accepted if and so long as there are no rules in force.
"(1) The trustees of a trust scheme must exercise their powers of investment in accordance with regulations and in accordance with subsections (3) and (4), and any fund manager to whom any discretion has been delegated under section 34 must exercise the discretion in accordance with regulations.
(1A) Regulations under subsection (1) may, in particular –
(a) specify criteria to be applied in choosing investments, and
(b) require diversification of investments.
(3) Before investing in any manner (other than in a manner mentioned in Part I of Schedule 1 to the Trustee Investments Act 1961) the trustees must obtain and consider proper advice on the question whether the investment is satisfactory having regard to the requirements of regulations under subsection (1), so far as relating to the suitability of investments and to the principles contained in the statement under section 35."
"4. —(1) The trustees of a trust scheme must exercise their powers of investment, and any fund manager to whom any discretion has been delegated under section 34 of the 1995 Act (power of investment and delegation) must exercise the discretion, in accordance with the following provisions of this regulation.
(2) The assets must be invested—
(a) in the best interests of members and beneficiaries; and
(b) in the case of a potential conflict of interest, in the sole interest of members and beneficiaries.
(3) The powers of investment, or the discretion, must be exercised in a manner calculated to ensure the security, quality, liquidity and profitability of the portfolio as a whole.
(4) Assets held to cover the scheme's technical provisions must also be invested in a manner appropriate to the nature and duration of the expected future retirement benefits payable under the scheme.
(5) The assets of the scheme must consist predominantly of investments admitted to trading on regulated markets.
(6) Investment in assets which are not admitted to trading on such markets must in any event be kept to a prudent level.
(7) The assets of the scheme must be properly diversified in such a way as to avoid excessive reliance on any particular asset, issuer or group of undertakings and so as to avoid accumulations of risk in the portfolio as a whole. Investments in assets issued by the same issuer or by issuers belonging to the same group must not expose the scheme to excessive risk concentration."
"a pension scheme established by an employer or employers and having or capable of having effect so as to provide benefits to or in respect of any or all of the employees of (a) that employer or those employers or (b) any other employer (whether or not it has or is capable of having effect so as to provide benefits to or in respect of other persons."
The definition of 'arrangement' in section 152 also includes definitions of 'money purchase arrangement' and 'money purchase benefits'. For present purposes it is only necessary to note that a money purchase benefit is one
"the rate or amount of which is calculated by reference to an amount available for the provision of benefits to or in respect of the member".
"that the instruments or agreements by which it is constituted do not entitle any person to unauthorised payments (see section 160(5))."
If such a declaration is false in a material particular registration may be withdrawn, s.158(1)(e). S.164(1) sets out a list of payments from a registered pension scheme which are authorised. In summary the only payments to a member which are authorised are pensions and lump sums permitted by the rules and defined by ss. 165 and 166.
"an asset held for the purposes of the pension scheme is used to provide a benefit (other than a payment) to –
(a) the person, or
(b) a member of the person's family or household."
In such a case, as subsection (5) provides,
"the person who receives the benefit is to be treated as having received the unauthorised payment."
The consequence of an unauthorised payment is the imposition on the recipient of the unauthorised payment a tax liability of 40% and a surcharge of 15% under ss.208 and 209. Provision is also made for imposing a scheme chargeable payment in the case of unauthorised payments not exempt therefrom by s.241, but subsection (2) exempts unauthorised payments treated as made by s.173. S.242 provides for a deregistration charge where registration is withdrawn; and if the amount thereof in any period of 12 months exceeds the deregistration threshold the scheme may be deregistered under s.158(1)(a). The rate is 40% and is applied to the value of the scheme assets immediately before deregistration.
"10. Between 16th September 2011 and 28th March 2012:
(i) The Pennines Scheme paid out £8,270,000 to the 3rd Defendant and £3,876,000.00 to the 4th Defendant; and
(ii) The Mendip Scheme paid out £5,940,000 to the 3rd Defendant (together "the Transfers") totalling £18,086,000.
11. In making the Transfers as set out above (whether by way of 'investing' in preference shares or otherwise) the 1st and 2nd Defendants acted in breach of trust in that:
(i) The purpose of the Transfers was not for the sole purpose of the Schemes, namely the provision of pensions and lump sum benefits under occupational pension arrangements. Accordingly the Transfers were outside the scope of the trustees powers and were void.
(ii) The true purpose of the Transfers was to facilitate the making of loans by the 5th Defendant to the members of the Schemes. Accordingly the Transfers were a fraud on the power(s) of the Scheme purportedly exercised in making them and were void.
(iii) The Transfers had the effect of making an unauthorised member payment within the meaning of the Finance Act 2004 part 4, by reason of the Schemes' assets being used to provide a benefit (other than a payment by the Schemes) to the members (i.e. the loans to the members by the 5th Defendant). Accordingly pursuant to Finance Act 2004 s.173 the Schemes were deemed to make unauthorised member payments. In the premises the Transfers prejudiced the status of the Schemes as registered schemes under the Finance Act 2004 part 4, were in breach of trust pursuant to inter alia clauses 5, 9, 16 and 17 of the Schemes' deeds, and were void."
"13. In the premises in making the Transfers the 1st and 2nd Defendants were in breach of their duties as trustees in that to the extent that the Transfers were 'investments' in any sense:
(i) They were not calculated to ensure the security, quality, liquidity or profitability of the portfolio as a whole, in that loans to or investments in the 3rd Defendant, and preference shares in the 4th Defendants, are not secure, liquid or profitable;
(ii) Loans to or investments in the 3rd Defendant, and preference shares in the 4th Defendant, are not investments admitted to trading on regulated markets;
(iii) They were not kept to a prudent level.
(iv) There was no, or no proper, diversification of investment so as to avoid excessive reliance on a particular asset, issue or group of undertakings, and they exposed the Schemes to excessive risk concentration."
"Their Lordships have considered the analysis of the effect of the Rule Against Perpetuities on pension schemes made by the English Law Commission in its recent Report on The Rules Against Perpetuities and Excessive Accumulations (1998) (Law Com. No. 251) at para. 3.53. They regard it as correct, at least in relation to a defined benefit scheme like the present. In their Lordships' view such a scheme can properly be regarded as comprising a series of separate settlements. Every time an employee joins the scheme, a new settlement is created. The settlement comprises the contributions made in respect of the employee whether by him or by the Company. The Rule Against Perpetuities must be applied separately to each individual settlement, and each employee must be treated as a life in being in relation to his own settlement. On this footing, any benefits, whether payable as a lump sum or by way of an annuity, which are payable on the death or earlier retirement of the employee are valid.
Their Lordships do not accept the appellants' submission that this analysis is inappropriate where the trust fund is a common fund to which all Members have contributed. It would fail to save the trusts if it could be said that contributions made by one Member and which were not used to fund his own benefits could be made available to provide benefits to other Members who were not lives in being at the date of his settlement. But the essential feature of a defined benefits pension scheme is that the benefits payable in respect of each Member are fixed at the outset at an amount which is capable of being funded by the contributions payable in respect of the Member without recourse to the contributions of any other Member. Of course, in practice some Members will receive more than they contribute and others will receive less; but this ought not to render the trusts void for perpetuity. The trust fund is only a security for the payment of benefits, and a defined benefits scheme can be regarded for this purpose as a form of mutual insurance. Where each Member's contributions are sufficient to fund his own pension by the purchase of an annuity from an insurance company, there is no perpetuity merely because they are in effect employed in the purchase of the pension from the trust fund. Regarded in this light, the pension payable to a Member who takes out more than he puts in can be said to derive, not from the funds of settlements made by other Members, but from the successful investment of his own settlement funds."
"..this appeal raises a novel point on the liability of a trustee who commits a breach of trust to compensate beneficiaries for such breach. Is the trustee liable to compensate the beneficiary not only for losses caused by the breach but also for losses which the beneficiary would, in any event, have suffered even if there had been no such breach?"
"Before dealing with these two lines of argument, it is desirable to say something about the approach to the principles under discussion. The argument both before the Court of Appeal and your Lordships concentrated on the equitable rules establishing the extent and quantification of the compensation payable by a trustee who is in breach of trust. In my judgment this approach is liable to lead to the wrong conclusions in the present case because it ignores an earlier and crucial question, viz., is the trustee who has committed a breach under any liability at all to the beneficiary complaining of the breach? There can be cases where, although there is an undoubted breach of trust, the trustee is under no liability at all to a beneficiary. For example, if a trustee commits a breach of trust with the acquiescence of one beneficiary, that beneficiary has no right to complain and an action for breach of trust brought by him would fail completely. Again there may be cases where the breach gives rise to no right to compensation. Say, as often occurs, a trustee commits a judicious breach of trust by investing in an unauthorised investment which proves to be very profitable to the trust. A carping beneficiary could insist that the unauthorised investment be sold and the proceeds invested in authorised investments: but the trustee would be under no liability to pay compensation either to the trust fund or to the beneficiary because the breach has caused no loss to the trust fund. Therefore, in each case the first question is to ask what are the rights of the beneficiary: only if some relevant right has been infringed so as to give rise to a loss is it necessary to consider the extent of the trustee's liability to compensate for such loss."
In the event the House of Lords concluded that the solicitors were not liable because the finance company ultimately obtained the requisite security so that although there had been a breach of trust it caused no loss to the finance company.
"I therefore conclude that the MPVA loans were unauthorised member payments as defined by s 160(2) of the Finance Act 2004. Counsel are agreed that if that is the case they were outside the powers of the Schemes' trustees and void in equity, and cannot be validated either retrospectively or prospectively by the amendments recently made to the Schemes. But since this matter may go further, and in deference to the sustained arguments of Mr Stallworthy supported by Mr Clifford, I turn to deal with the issues as to validity which do not derive from the 2004 Act; and do so on the basis, contrary to the ruling I have just given, that the MPVA loans were not unauthorised member payments within the terms of the Act."
As counsel for HCIG, HCIL and HCL pointed out that conclusion was based on a concession. Counsel does not agree with it, particularly in relation to this plan which is a substantially different form of pension liberation.
"The purported exercise of a discretionary power on the part of trustees will be void if what is done is not within the scope of the power. There may be a procedural defect, such as the use of the wrong kind of document, or the failure to obtain a necessary prior consent. There may be a substantive defect, such as an unauthorised delegation or an appointment to someone who is not within the class of objects. Cases of a fraud on the power are similar to the latter, since the true intended beneficiary, who is not an object of the power, is someone other than the nominal appointee. There may also be a defect under the general law, such as the rule against perpetuities, whose impact and significance will depend on the extent of the invalidity."
"By contrast with the types of case to which I have referred at paragraph [96] above, if an exercise by trustees of a discretionary power is within the terms of the power, but the trustees have in some way breached their duties in respect of that exercise, then (unless it is a case of a fraud on the power) the trustees' act is not void but it may be voidable at the instance of a beneficiary who is adversely affected. The interest of a beneficiary in the trust property continues until it is brought to an end by an act of the trustees done in accordance with the terms of the trust (or the general law). This is an incident of the beneficiary's right to have the trust duly administered in accordance with the provisions of the trust instrument and the general law: see Target Holdings v Redfern [1996] AC 421 at 434.
"In principle, cases where an act done by trustees which appears to be within their powers can be held to be void ought in my judgment to be kept to a minimum, just as at common law the cases where a transaction is void, rather than voidable, are few and far between."
"...received the Transfers [defined in paragraph 10] knowing that they had been paid out in breach of trust, alternatively with such knowledge that it renders it unconscionable for them to retain the Transfers and they hold the Transfers and their proceeds as constructive trustees for [Dalriada] as trustee of the Schemes."
"The other trustees, including any judicial or other new trustees, have locus standi to take proceedings against defaulting trustees. They can obtain replacement of lost assets even though they were themselves also guilty of the breach. Usually, where trustees take proceedings against former trustees to have a breach of trust redressed, no issues arise between one beneficiary and another, or as between a beneficiary and the current trustees. The object is to secure the return of the trust property for the benefit of all the beneficiaries according to their respective interests."
The proposition is well established by the authorities cited in the footnotes, not least Young v Murphy [1996] V.R.19. The availability of defences to a claim by an individual beneficiary, as indicated in Target Holdings v Redfern, is irrelevant to such a claim.