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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 >> Wedgwood Pension Plan Trustee Ltd v Salt [2018] EWHC 79 (Ch) (26 January 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2018/79.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 79 (Ch), [2018] Pens LR 9 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (CHD)
The Rolls Building |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
WEDGWOOD PENSION PLAN TRUSTEE LIMITED |
Claimant |
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– and – |
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KEITH SALT (Representative beneficiary of the Wedgwood Group Pension Plan) |
Defendant |
____________________
MR JONATHAN HILLIARD QC (instructed by Sacker & Partners LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 7th to 10th November 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Miss Penelope Reed QC:
Application
Background
"The principal employer of the Plan, Wedgwood Limited ("Wedgwood") has agreed to meet any future contributions in respect of those members and this letter has been signed on behalf of Wedgwood to confirm its agreement to this.
The effect of this notice is that under Rule 5(e) of the Rules, the active members in respect of whom the Company terminates its liability to contribute will become deferred members of the Plan and their pensionable service will end immediately before 1 July 2006.
For the avoidance of doubt the Company is not terminating its liability to contribute to the Plan in respect of any employees or former employees who are already deferred or pensioner members of the Plan."
The Issues
Issue 1
Was rule 62 of the 2001 Rules validly introduced in its entirety such that it allowed future accrual to be terminated by the Employers' Termination Notice in respect of all members with there being no continued salary link? The Trustee's position is that the rule was validly introduced and the Employers' Termination Notice was effective both to terminate future accrual to all members and to break the final salary link. The Representative Beneficiary takes the opposing view.
Issue 2
This issue arises if the answer to issue 1 is answered negatively. It was originally divided into two alternative parts but the Trustee in the end argued only the first limb of the issue, namely: whether future accrual was terminated and the final salary link broken by the Employers' Termination Notice on the basis that the introduction and exercise of the rule 62 power was valid subject to an overriding limitation that brought it in line with the fetter on the amending power. This, the Trustee argues, can be achieved by construing rule 62 so that it provided whatever additional protection was required by rule 48 of the 1995 Rules. The Representative Beneficiary argues to the contrary.
Issue 3
This issue (which arose if the answers to issues 1 and 2 were no) was whether the Employers' Termination Notice was effective to terminate future accrual of benefits for some or all of the members but subject to the final salary link being maintained? This issue was not in fact argued before me because it was agreed between the Trustee and the Representative Beneficiary that if the Court found that the fetter was engaged, that would result in the Plan being closed to future accrual but the final salary link for existing members would not be broken.
Issue 4
This issue also only arises if I am not with the Trustee on issues 1 and 2 and is whether rule 62 was validly introduced in respect of members who joined the Plan on or after 8 October 2001 (that is, after the 2001 Rules came into effect)? The Trustee argues the rule was validly introduced in respect of those members (I shall refer to them as "New Members"); the Representative Beneficiary argues that it was not.
Issue 5
Issue 5 arises if any member is entitled to accrue benefits after 30 June 2006 (in other words the fetter in rule 48 protects future as well as existing rights of members) and subdivides into a number of issues:-
(a) Does the scope of rule 10 (or rule 28A) of the 2001 Rules permit the Claimant (i) to adjust the pensionable service and/or rate of accrual and to make some other actuarial adjustment to the benefits that would otherwise be payable to members who did not pay their contributions for the period from 30 June 2006 up until the Termination Date (which is the earliest date of: the date the member left service with a participating employer; the date the member's participating employer ceased to make contributions following entering administration in accordance with rule 62 of the 2001 Rules or 27 October 2009 the date the trustee of the Plan resolved to wind up the Plan under rule 63 of the 2001 Rules). Both parties agree that rules 10 and 28A do permit this; (ii) permit the Claimant to deduct any outstanding contributions that have not been paid by a member at the time that their pension comes into payment from the benefits that would otherwise be payable to the member at the time of the payment of such benefits. Both parties agree that as a matter of scope rules 10 and 28A enable the Trustee to deduct contributions but subject to section 91 of the Pensions Act 1995 which prevents the Trustee from deducting outstanding contributions from members' pension benefits as this would amount to an impermissible set off.
(b) If the answer to issue 5(a) is yes, the next issue is whether rules 10 and 28A were validly introduced into the 2001 Rules and if not, whether they were validly introduced for New Members? The Trustee argues those rules were validly introduced for New Members; the Representative Beneficiary that they were not validly introduced for any member.
(c) If the answer to 5(b) is yes, the issue arises whether the Trustee can exercise the rule 10 and 28A powers in respect of any members who had not made contributions between 30 June 2006 and the Termination Date and if not, whether they could exercise those powers in respect of New Members? The Trustee says that it can exercise those powers in respect of New Members; the Representative Beneficiary argues the powers cannot be exercised in respect of any members.
(d) If the answer to issue 5(c) is yes, would PPF compensation reflect any of the potential adjustments raised in issue 5(a)? The Trustee says that the compensation would reflect those adjustments in respect of New Members; the Representative Beneficiary says that it would not.
The Relevant Rules
"The Principal Company may at any time and from time to time by instrument under its Common Seal alter or modify all or any of the Rules for the time being in force or make any new Rules to the exclusion of or in addition to all or any of the existing Rules aforesaid and any Rules so made shall be deemed to be Rules of the same validity as if originally embodied herein and shall be subject in like manner to be altered or modified and any alteration modification or addition of or to the Rules which may be effected in exercise of the power contained in this Rule shall be notified to the Members by posting the same in some conspicuous place in all the works and offices of each of the Participating Companies provided always that no alteration modification or addition shall be made which (i) shall prejudice or adversely affect any pension or annuity then payable or the rights of any Member."
[my emphasis]
"A Participating Employer
(a) an stop contributing in respect of all or some of its employees by giving written notice to the Trustees
(b) will stop contributing
(1 )if it stops being a Qualifying Employer, from a date 12 months after it stops being a Qualifying Employer, unless the Board of the Inland Revenue has agreed it can contribute after that date,
(2) if it stops carrying on business because of liquidation or otherwise, or
(3) if it fails to observe and perform all or any of its obligations under the Plan and the Trustees give written notice to the Participating Employer that its participation in the Plan is to end
and, as soon as that happens, Member's Contributions in respect of any Members affected will stop.
If a Participating Employer stops contributing and Rule 63 (Winding Up) does not apply the provisions of Rule 17 (Benefits on leaving the Plan) will apply to each Member then in that Participating Employer's service and for whom contributions have been stopped. If a Member is not a Qualifying Member, the Principal Employer can direct the Trustees to treat him as a Qualifying Member for the purpose...."
"If an Order shall be made or an effective resolution passed for the winding- up (otherwise than for the purpose of reconstruction or amalgamation with any other Participating Company) of any Participating Company other than the Principal Company or if from any cause it shall at any time thereafter be found by any such Company other than the Principal Company to be impracticable or inexpedient for such Company to continue to participate in the Plan or if any Company for the time being participating in the Plan shall cease to be a Subsidiary or Associated Company (as defined in the Rules) such Company shall retire from the Plan and the following provisions shall apply..."
Approach to Construction
(a) Members of a scheme are not volunteers; the benefits they receive under the scheme are part of the remuneration for their services; the relationship of members to the employer is to be seen as running in parallel with their employment relationship;
(b) A pension scheme should be construed so as to give a reasonable and practical effect to the scheme bearing in mind that the scheme has to be operated against a constantly changing commercial background;
(c) As a corollary of that point, it is important to avoid unduly fettering a power to amend the provisions of the scheme as it was important for parties to be able to make those changes which might be required by the exigencies of commercial life;
(d) Technicality in the consequences of a possible interpretation was to be avoided;
(e) The meaning of a clause in the scheme must be ascertained by examining the instrument as it stood when the clause was first introduced;
(f) In the case of an amending provision, the provision is to be construed against the background circumstances at the date when it was adopted;
(g) The relevant background circumstances include the practice and requirements of the Inland Revenue;
(h) The function of the court is to construe the instrument without any predisposition as to the correct philosophical approach;
(i) A pension scheme should be interpreted as a whole.
Issue 1
Part 1 of Issue 1
"I regard it as a fair and natural use of language to describe the scheme under which the promised pension benefits are to be provided as 'securing' the benefits, including both those benefits which at any particular moment can be regarded as earned by past service and also those benefits which at the same moment are in the nature of promised future benefits. Moreover, I not only regard such word as a natural one to use in that context, I regard it as probably the most appropriate one. I have referred above to the benefits being 'promised' by the employer, and it is his promise which provides the essential commercial substratum to pension schemes such as the present one. But despite the fact that an important element in the trust which establishes the scheme is the employer's balance of cost promise. I agree with Mr McDonnell that an English lawyer would ordinarily hesitate before describing the benefits to which a beneficiary is entitled under a trust, even one such as that establishing the Scheme, as being 'promised' by it. 'Provided by the scheme' is an acceptable alternative, but 'secured by the scheme' is in my view even more appropriate. In suggesting this I do not think that I speak with a lone voice."
"To describe the relevant benefits as being those 'secured … under the Scheme' is to use language which I regard as most naturally referring to all the benefits promised by the Scheme, both accrued and future."
"In my view the drafting differences between rules 9(1) and (3) convey an obvious distinction as to the types of interest with which the two sub- paragraphs are respectively concerned. The latter is in terms concerned with 'the pecuniary rights of [deferreds and pensioners]' being interests in the nature of rights which have truly accrued, in the sense that the beneficiaries have become entitled to defined rights. By contrast, the 'pecuniary benefits secured to or in respect of [actives]' in general rule 9(1) are not interests in the nature of accrued rights, either actual or notional, at all. The actives have periods of service to their credit, which will count towards the quantification of their eventual rights, but the determination of those rights is still dependant on future, and uncertain, events and in, for example, the event of an active's premature death in service the rights which will then crystallise may be enjoyed directly by others without even passing though his estate".
"Accrued pensions" is defined in the rules to mean pensions based on salary at the relevant date. There was some dispute whether "benefits already secured by past contributions" means the same thing, or includes the prospective entitlement to pensions based on final salary. In the absence of express definition, I see no reason to exclude any benefit to which a member is prospectively entitled if he continues in the same employment and which has been acquired by past contributions, and no reason to assume that he has retired from such employment on the date of the employer's secession when he has not. The contrary argument places a meaning on "secured" (and "accrued)" which is not justified." (The words "and accrued" do not appear in the All England Reports version of the judgment and it seems likely that is the more accurate report).
"no alteration modification or addition shall be made which i) shall prejudice or adversely affect any pension or annuity then payable or the rights of any member who is then excused from or not liable for contributions"[my emphasis]
Part 2 of Issue 1
(a) Winding up (except for the purposes of amalgamation or reconstruction) of any Participating Company other than the Principal Company; or
(b) "if from any cause it shall at any time thereafter be found by any such Company other than the Principal Company to be impracticable or inexpedient for such Company to continue to participate in the Plan" (Mr. Hilliard's underlining)
(c) Any Company ceasing to be a subsidiary or associated company.
Conclusions on Issue 1
Issue 2(a)
"A Participating Employer can stop contributions in respect of all or some of its employees [e.g. can stop contributions in respect of actives but retain its deficit repair obligations in respect of deferreds and pensioners] by giving written notice to the Trustees as long as it has first from any cause been found by the Participating Employer to be impracticable or inexpedient to continue to participate in the Plan rather than to cease to participate by stopping all deficit repair contributions i.e. deficit repair contributions in respect of actives, deferreds and pensioners."
"To my mind, the correct approach is not one of language – it is one of concept. One is, after all, here concerned with equity. I consider, therefore, that one looks to see what is the valid exercise of the power and what is the invalid exercise. The valid exercise, if there was an exercise of the power, was to effect a variation with effect from 26 April prospectively. The invalid attempted exercise was to effect a variation retrospectively to 6 April 1994. To my mind, conceptually those two components of the single exercise are easily separable one from the other. It seems to me, however, that one must not only ask oneself whether they are easily severable conceptually, but also whether there is anything in the exercise of the power which leads one to believe that, had the trustee been told that it was not entitled to exercise the power retrospectively, it would not have exercised the power as it purported to do prospectively at all, or, in the alternative, in the way that it did. In that connection, it seems to me that that approach is consistent with the approach of the Court of Appeal in Re Hastings-Bass [1975] Ch 25 , to which I shall refer in a little more detail shortly."
"68.The question is raised whether (assuming that the 1993 Amendment is otherwise valid) having regard to the proviso to Rule 23, which invalidates the consent requirement as regards benefits entitlements accrued prior to the 17th November 1993 (the date of the 1993 Deed), the consent requirements under the 1993 Deed are valid as regards benefits accruing thereafter (as the Claimant contends) or whether the consent requirements are incapable of severance and wholly invalid (as the Beneficiaries contend).
69. The Claimant is plainly correct. The 1993 Amendment must be construed as having effect subject to the overriding limitation on the power of amendment contained in the proviso. Questions of severance do not arise, but if they did the principles governing severance in a case such as the present (as the cited authorities establish) lead to the same conclusion. There is no requirement or scope for application of the 'blue pencil' test deleting what is objectionable and leaving standing what is unobjectionable. All that is required is that the distinction between what is and what is not objectionable is clear and that the meaning and application of what is unobjectionable is clear."
"173 As regards the other part of Mr Stallworthy's argument, relying on IBM's intention, which it could not fulfil, to break the final salary link, this is a different kind of situation. It is not really a case of improper purpose at all but, at most, of what is sometimes called excessive execution, that is to say a purported exercise of a power which, for some reason, cannot take effect in full. That is quite unlike the classic cases of improper purpose where the defect lies not in the terms of the execution of the power but in the motive lying behind it. The judge considered this very line of authority earlier in his judgment when addressing the first issue, whether the exclusion power had been validly introduced into the Main Scheme trust deed at all. He referred at B199 and following to several authorities, including Bestrustees v Stuart: [2001] EWHC 649 (Ch), [2001] PLR 283, which Mr Simmonds also showed to us. The judge held that the Exclusion Power was validly introduced, but was subject to an implied limitation such that it could not be used to break the final salary link: B289(i) and (iii).
174 By the same reasoning, it seems to us that there is no reason why the exercise of the Exclusion Power by the notices actually given in this case should not be held valid to the extent permitted by the implicit limitation on the power. If one were to ask whether Holdings would have given the same Notices if it had been aware that it would not be able thereby to break the final salary link, the answer would have to be that it would. The object of terminating DB accrual was the principal reason for using the power. That it could not break the final salary link would perhaps have been seen as a disadvantage, but not at all as a reason for not exercising the power to the full extent available, not least because that feature was also to be dealt with by the NPAs as a separate element of Project Waltz.."
"Buckley LJ's statement of principle in the Hastings-Bass case ...cannot be regarded as clear and definitive guidance, since Buckley LJ was considering a different matter-the validity of a severed part of a disposition, the other part of which was void for perpetuity." [Para 91]
"Where there is an excessive execution, it is plain that such part of the exercise as is not warranted by the terms of the power or infringes some rule of law cannot stand. The principal question which then arises is whether the whole exercise is vitiated or whether it is possible to sever the invalid part from the remainder of the exercise and so allow the latter to take effect. That question will ordinarily arise in connection with dispositive powers. Severance is possible if, as a conceptual matter, it is possible to distinguish the boundary between the valid and the invalid; but in the case of a fiduciary power it is then material to enquire also whether the trustees would not have exercised the power at all, or would have exercised it differently, if they had been properly instructed as to the limits on the power, for otherwise, though the exercise will not be void, the so-called principle in Re Hastings-Bass may make it liable to challenge."
(a) In 2001 the Plan was in surplus and nobody's mind would have turned to the possibility of financial difficulties which the Plan might face in the future; by 2004 the Plan was in deficit.
(b) The amendment exercise in 2001 was regarded as a tidying up exercise;
(c) Nobody was that concerned about the termination provisions or turned their mind to them;
Summary