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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 >> Earnshaw & Ors v The Prudential Assurance Company Ltd (Rev 1) [2017] EWHC 916 (Ch) (25 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/916.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 916 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) PETER EARNSHAW (2) JOHN STUART EARNSHAW (3) ANTHONY DANIEL EARNSHAW (4) RICHARD REAVLEY WARDMAN (5) SUZANNE MICHELLE ELLIOT (6) JOB EARNSHAW & BROS LIMITED |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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THE PRUDENTIAL ASSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendant/ Applicant |
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Edward Sawyer (instructed by Prudential Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 22 and 23 February 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Chief Master Marsh :
i. Between 14 October 1999 and about 6 October 2012 the Defendant issued quotations to members of the Scheme and caused payments to be made pursuant to the Scheme to pensioners who had retired prior to their Normal Retirement Date ("NRD") without making a deduction for early retirement. The overpayment was estimated by the Claimants up to September 2016 to be £334,335.
ii. The Defendant made errors in respect of the dates on which the benefits of male and female members in the Scheme were equalised as a result of the decision in Barber v Guardian Royal Exchange [1991] 1 QB 344. The Claimants say that the Defendant wrongly thought equalisation had occurred on 7 November 1990 rather than the true date of 31 December 1994. As a consequence, the Defendant wrongly calculated benefits in respect of pensions paid from 1993 onwards resulting in underpayments.
iii. The Defendant made various other computational errors when calculating pensions including mistakes as to the applicable pensionable salary and periods of pensionable service.
i. The court must have regard to evidence that could reasonably be expected to be available at trial which is not available at the hearing of the Part 24 application;
ii. There is a need for caution where there are reasonable grounds for believing that a fuller investigation into the facts of the case would add to or alter the evidence available to a trial judge and so affect the outcome of the case.
The Claim
"a. The maintenance of a record for each member of the Scheme.
b. The recording of details of retained benefits in respect of all new entrants to the Scheme.
c. The maintenance and retention of ongoing details of contributions made by members.
d. The issue of an anniversary and renewal pack to the Trustees.
e. The updating of members' records annually to take account of changes in personal details, salary details, contracted out earnings or protected rights along with appropriate contribution details and investment growth on any money purchase element within the Scheme.
f. The provision of an annual benefit statement reflecting benefits on the anniversary date in respect of each active Scheme member and a schedule of benefits and contributions after each anniversary date.
g. The provision of an annual listing of all members within 5 years of the Scheme's normal retirement age together with the provision of annual benefits statement to members.
h. The provision of an annual statement of account reconciling all payments made to and from the Defendant in respect of the Scheme.
i. The supply to the Scheme's actuary as soon as reasonably practicable of information as instructed by the Trustees as required in order that such actuary might determine the liabilities of the Scheme.
j. The supply of provisional and actual quotations of members' benefits under the Scheme in the event of retirement, death or withdrawal.
k. The supply of quotations to active and deferred members of the Scheme who were approaching the Normal Retirement Age.
l. The payment of benefits on behalf of the Trustees in accordance with any standing or specific instructions of the Trustees.
m. The referral to the Trustees of any case where payment or the issue of a quotation was subject to the Trustees' discretion.
n. The verification, based on information provided by the Trustees, that all benefits and contributions paid by or to the Scheme did not exceed any limits contained in the Scheme rules and, in the event that benefits appeared to exceed appropriate limits, to seek additional information and guidance from the Trustees in order to proceed.
o. The payment of pensions and other benefits in accordance with the Scheme's provision.
p. The periodic carrying out of checks to confirm the legal entitlement of pensioners to continued payment.
q. At the request of the Trustees, the drafting of the rules of the Scheme and any supplements thereto."
"7. As to paragraph 17, and in particular the contention in paragraph 17.7 that it is unclear to the Defendant what the relevance of the 2008 Statement of Services is, the Claimants say:
a. At all material times the Defendant provided a comprehensive service which included administration, documentation, investment and (until November 2002) actuarial services.
b. The 2008 Statement of Services was a document prepared by the Defendant and, by clause 4.1 thereof it was recorded that the purpose of the same was, inter-alia, to outline the services which the Defendant was then providing and to formalise the Defendant's existing appointment.
c and d. [omitted]
e. It is specifically denied, if the same be alleged in paragraph 17.6 that the Defendant bore no responsibility for the correct computation and/or payment of benefits after pensions were first put into payment."
"It is denied that [the] Defendant's breaches of duty were committed, and relevant damage suffered, solely when the pensions were put into payment as alleged. The Defendant further committed repeated breaches of duty thereafter at or about the time of making instalments in respect of unreduced pensions. Further or in the alternative for the avoidance of doubt, the Claimants say that the Defendant was obliged further to advise the Claimants as to early retirement factors following each valuation or as required from time to time, in particular upon the occasion of amendment to the Scheme Rules or the issue of an announcement to members."
The grounds of the Part 24 application
"1 Unreduced ER [early retirement] pensions were payable in accordance with rules of the Scheme, even on the facts alleged by the Claimants. Therefore the basis of the alleged breach in paragraphs 21 – 23 of the Particulars of Claim falls away.
2 The claims in respect of payment of unreduced ER pensions are time-barred because:
2.1 The Claimants cannot show that the "starting date" for the purposes of section 14A of the Limitation Act 1980 was later that November 2008, given their knowledge of the xafinity report dated 7 November 2008.
2.2 Even on the facts alleged by the Claimants, the relevant causes of action accrued when such pensions were first put into payment (the Defendant having no duty subsequently to re-check the correctness of payments). All claims in respect of pensions put into payment before 14 October 2008 are therefore time-barred.
3 Alternatively, on the facts alleged by the Claimants, they have failed to mitigate their loss or they have caused their own loss by continuing to pay unreduced ER pensions despite (on their case) discovering in 2012 (alternatively 2013 or 2014) that reduced pensions should have been paid. Further, these payments were made after the Defendant relinquished responsibility for paying pensions in 2012.
4 The Claimant cannot establish that the Defendant owed them any duty to identify the correct date of effective equalisation, this being a legal matter on which the Defendant had no duty to advise.
5 On the Claimants' case, the Defendant's alleged errors as to the date of equalisation were committed in the early to mid 1990's and any causes of action accrued at that stage. The Defendant had no duty subsequently to re-check the date of equalisation. All claims in respect of equalisation are therefore time-barred."
Ground 1
"So far as the Defendant is aware, in this period [May 1995-October 2008] the Trustees never imposed a reduction for ER pensions for active members taking early retirement from age sixty."
In support of this assertion she relies upon a report prepared for the Scheme dated 7 November 2008 by xafinity consulting. The Defendant's evidence on this point was not challenged until a few days before the hearing when Mr Jordan made a second witness statement which was served without permission from the court. Although the evidence was very late, it should be admitted.
i. Where trustees have a trust power which they fail to exercise at the required time, the power still exists and may be exercised late.
ii. However, the exercise of the trust power cannot be backdated [paragraph 122].
"(b) Would or might result in a reduction in the prevailing rate of any pension in payment under the Scheme rules."
In short, by virtue of the subsisting rights provisions, any attempt to undertake a 'Regulated Modification', which is defined to include a Protected Modification, would be voidable. In AON Trust Corporation v KPMG (a firm) and others [2005] EWCA Civ 1004, the Court of Appeal had no difficulty concluding that the modification of a benefit under the scheme in question in the exercise of an express power was self evidently a modification of the scheme and thus fell within the restrictions imposed by section 67 (2) of the Pensions Act 1995. There is no answer to this point.
"…regarding change of Early Retirement Factors the Company have decided [sic] to adopt a middle course and I attach a letter confirming this.
The factors would of course only apply for retirements earlier than 60 as we have introduced a flexible retirement age."
"The Directors have decided, after very careful consideration, that they can no longer offer members the option to retire between the ages of 60 and 65 without the Company's consent. To continue with the existing arrangements could threaten the continuation of the Scheme. The directors [sic] therefore wish to change the existing provisions of the scheme so that in future, retirement between the ages of 60 and 65 will be with the consent of the Company.
The Company have [sic] every expectation of allowing retirement in future on as favourable terms as set out in the announcement issued in 1991.
With immediate effect you should note that for the purposes of the section headed "Retirement Date" in the above announcement, the option to retire early on more advantageous terms at any time between the ages of 60 and 65 will only be allowed with the Company's consent."
"As we discussed, it is the understanding of both myself and David Oakes that for early retirement cases after the age of 60, the discount factor is not applied. This being the case, the deferred pension given above would also be the early retirement pension at age 62."
"Actives, the scale pension at exit with an equalisation adjustment for relevant service (comparing scale pension at exit in respect of that service with corresponding pension at age 60 with a late retirement factor applied)
Deferreds, the normal early retirement pension (same as a above)."
"Also, in calculating the above, please do not apply the early retirement factor in this case. Future cases will be dealt with separately on an individual basis."
"Following discussion it appeared that the Trustees were under the impression that early retirement penalties were being used though [David Earnshaw] thought that this might not be the case due the Scheme's healthy position in the past and advice from the actuary at that time. [John Earnshaw] to check this, and request more information regarding the figures provided."
"As part of the 2007 actuarial valuation the Employer has requested that all retirements before the age of 65 are now subject to an early retirement factor, previously the early retirement factors only applied to retirements before the age of 60." [my emphasis]
"The need for legal assistance was discussed, and all agreed that this was not required."
Ground 2
Ground 2.1
i. Knowledge for section 14A purposes is knowing facts with sufficient confidence to justify embarking on the preliminaries to the issue of a writ.
ii. Knowledge that damage was attributable to the act or omission of the Defendant alleged to constitute negligence (see section 14A(8)) means knowledge in broad terms of the facts on which the Claimants' complaint is based and of the Defendant's acts/omissions. It must also be known there is a real possibility that those acts/omissions were a cause of the damage.
iii. As to the degree of detail required the Claimants need "broad knowledge" of the matters pointing to the Defendant's acts or omissions, and appreciation "in general terms" and knowledge of the "essence" of the act or omission to which the injury was attributable.
iv. All that is required is sufficient knowledge to realise there is a real possibility of the damage having been caused by some flaw or inadequacy in the Defendant's services; that is enough knowledge to start an investigation into that possibility.
v. Actual knowledge involves knowing enough to make it reasonable for the Claimant to investigate whether or not there is a claim against a particular potential defendant.
vi. It is not necessary that the Claimant should have all the detail of the knowledge required to bring an action or plead a case; the tipping point arises when a Claimant has sufficient knowledge to make it reasonable to begin to investigate whether it has a case.
"For the purposes of this section a person's knowledge includes knowledge which he might reasonably have been expected to acquire –
a from facts observable or ascertainable by him; or
b from facts ascertainable by him with the help of appropriate expert evidence which it is reasonable for him to seek;
but a person shall not be taken by virtue of this sub-section to have knowledge of a fact ascertainable only with the help of expert advice so long as he has taken all reasonable steps to obtain (and, where appropriate, to act on) that advice."
"At all times up to 2008 the claimants believed that unless express instructions had been given to the contrary, then reduced pensions were being paid to those members who retired early."
"It can be seen from that minute that the Trustees were under the impression that early retirement discounts, or "penalties" were being applied. This was my understanding as well. We were of this view because this is what we believed the rules required. The minutes also note that David Earnshaw thought that this might not be the case, and I was to check the point."
"23 The report confirms that as part of the 2007 actuarial valuation the Company had requested that all retirements before the age of 65 were subject to an early retirement factor, and that previously the early retirement factors only applied to retirements before the age of 60. Whilst we did request the early retirement report, it was only requested upon being told that the defendant was not applying a reduction factor for retirements before age 65. Prior to October 2008, we believed that early retirement factors were being applied on all early retirements.
24 Upon discovering this in October 2008, we instructed the Scheme actuary to calculate early retirement factors which would be applied to all early retirements."
i) The Claimants (on their case) had believed that early retirement reductions were being imposed in accordance with the Rules, and (as they must have known) they had not consented to any non-reductions.ii) The xafinity report opined that the Rules only provided for unreduced early retirement pensions if the Employer consented to the non-reduction. The Claimants clearly accepted that analysis, as it formed the basis for their decision that they could henceforward impose an early retirement reduction on retirements at 60-65 without amending the Rules.
iii) The xafinity report also showed that, in fact, unreduced early retirement pensions had been paid to date from age 60.
iv) The Claimants therefore knew (on their own case) in November 2008 that:
a) Under the existing Rules, the Employer's consent was needed for a non-reduction to an early retirement pension.b) The Employer had not consented in the past.c) Unreduced pensions had nevertheless been paid for early retirement from age 60, contrary to what the Claimants believed was required under the Rules.
Ground 2.2
"Ordinarily a competent administrator would not, as a general duty, re-check pensions in payment as a matter of course."
"The obtaining and receiving of advice after a mistake has been made (even if the mistake can be easily rectified) cannot to my mind mean that an obligation to correct one's mistake or negligence continues to accrue and give a fresh cause of action every day after the mistake has been made. As Mustill LJ pointed out in the Bell case [1990] 2 QB 495 it would be unusual for there to be an express term in the average retainer contract (or the average pension adviser contract) requiring the adviser to exercise continuing vigilance to discover any mistakes he may have made and then to busy himself to put them right. Moreover, it cannot be right to imply what he called such "a strange obligation" into an apparently usual form of contract." [my emphasis]
Ground 3
Grounds 3 and 4
The Claimants' revised case
Conclusion