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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 >> Phoenix Life Ltd, Re [2022] EWHC 2669 (Ch) (24 October 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/2669.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2669 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF PHOENIX LIFE LIMITED |
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- and - |
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IN THE MATTER OF REASSURE LIFE LIMITED -and- IN THE MATTER OF PHOENIX LIFE ASSURANCE EUROPE DESIGNATED ATCIVITY COMPANY -and- IN THE MATTER OF THE FINANCIAL SERVICES AND MARKETS ACT 2000 |
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Hearing date: 18 October 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Trower:
Introduction
The rationale for the Scheme
The Scheme and its effects
"13. As only a proportion of the policies currently in the Royal Liver Sub-Fund at Royal London are to be transferred, it would ordinarily be necessary to identify and transfer a fair split of the assets in respect of these policies and thereby to split the Royal Liver Sub-Fund. That would involve taking account of the transferring policyholders' interest in the Royal Liver Sub-Fund's inherited estate (the part of the with-profits fund not allocated to policyholders' liabilities). That is a complex process, and the evidence is that it could not be achieved before Brexit on 29 March 2019. Further, the size of the German Bond business currently allocated to Royal London's Main Fund is so small that it is thought that it could not operate economically as a stand-alone with-profits fund.
14. To address these issues, the Scheme provides that RLI's liabilities in relation to the Royal Liver Transferring Policies and the German Bonds will be immediately reinsured back to Royal London under two new reinsurance agreements (together the "New Reinsurance Agreements"). The premiums for that reinsurance will be offset against Royal London's obligation to transfer assets to RLI under the Scheme, with the consequence that RLI will be left with very few cash assets in the respective new funds, and its regulatory capital in that regard will largely comprise its rights against Royal London under the New Reinsurance Agreements. These rights will also be the subject of a security package that is designed to ensure that, in the event of insolvency of Royal London, the transferring policyholders would be in no worse a position than if they had remained at Royal London."
The technical aspects of the application
"(1) This section sets out the conditions which must be satisfied before the court may make an order under this section sanctioning an insurance business transfer scheme,
(2) The Court must be satisfied that-
(a) the appropriate certificates have been obtained (as to which see Parts I and II of Schedule 12);
.
(b) the transferee has the authorisation required (if any) to enable the business, or part, which is to be transferred to be carried on in the place to which it is to be transferred (or will have it before the scheme takes effect).
(3) The Court must consider that, in all the circumstances of the case, it is appropriate to sanction the scheme."
i) As to section 111(2)(a), I am satisfied from the evidence that the appropriate certificates under Schedule 12 have been obtained. The first of these is a from the PRA (which is the appropriate regulator for this purpose, and which gives its certificate having seen the certificate given by the CBI), confirming that PLAE will, taking the proposed transfer into account, possess the necessary margin of solvency. The second of these is a pair of certificates from the PRA under paragraph 3 and 3A of Schedule 12 as to consultation with and consent from EEA regulators.
ii) As to section 111(2)(b), I am satisfied from the evidence that PLAE has the necessary authorisation to carry on the business transferred to it. This is confirmed by a certificate from the CBI dated 26 September 2022.
The correct approach to section 111(3) of FSMA
"The approach to the sanction of applications under Part VII
75. The judge hearing an application for the sanction of an insurance business transfer scheme under Part VII should first, we think, identify the nature of the business being transferred and the underlying circumstances giving rise to the scheme.
76. As we have already indicated, different considerations affect different types of business.
77. The circumstances giving rise to the scheme proposed will also affect the approach of the court. For example, many schemes will reflect commercial transactions between transferor and transferee companies for the benefit of those companies. Other schemes will be occasioned by external events (such as the departure of the UK from the European Union) or the financial or other commercial circumstances of the transferor. Some may take the form of a rescue of the business retained or transferred.
78. The discretion of the court has frequently been said to be unfettered and genuine and not to be exercised by way of a rubber stamp. That is true but, as in the exercise of all discretions, the court must take into account and give proper weight to matters that ought to be considered and ignore matters that ought not properly to be taken into account. The correct identification of which matters fall on which side of the line in particular transfer situations has caused some confusion in this, and perhaps other, cases.
79.
80.
81. The first duty of the court is carefully to scrutinise the reports of the independent expert and the Regulators, and the evidence of any person required to be heard under section 110 including those that allege that they would be adversely affected by the carrying out of the scheme. The court must understand the opinions presented and is entitled to ask questions about them as necessary. It will do so, in particular, with a view to identifying any errors, omissions, or instances of inadequate or defective reasoning.
80. In the absence of such defects, however, the court will always, in exercising its discretion, accord full weight to the opinions of the independent expert and the Regulators. That does not mean that the court can never depart from the recommendations of the expert or the non-objections of the Regulators, but it does mean that full weight must be accorded to them, so that a court would not depart from such recommendations and non-objections without significant and appropriate reasons for doing so. This is particularly so in relation to the financial and actuarial assessments required as regards the security of financial benefits. Whilst the judges hearing Part VII applications have considerable experience of the actuarial and specialist issues reported on by both the expert and the Regulators, the court is not itself an expert and should not substitute its own expertise for that of the entities required or entitled by statute to proffer those opinions.
81. This approach to the exercise of the court's discretion applies to the crucial question of whether the proposed scheme will have any material adverse effect on policyholders, employees or other stakeholders. An adverse effect will only be material to the court's consideration if it is: (i) a possibility that cannot sensibly be ignored having regard to the nature and gravity of the feared harm in the particular case, (ii) a consequence of the scheme, and (iii) material in the sense that there is the prospect of real or significant, as opposed to fanciful or insignificant, risk to the position of the stakeholder concerned. In some cases, it may also be relevant for the court to consider whether there would be such material
82. Even if the court finds that the proposed scheme will have a material adverse effect on some group or groups of policyholders, it may still sanction the scheme in the exercise of its discretion. For example, this might occur if the scheme is in the nature of a rescue of the business. If there are differential effects on the interests of different classes of person affected, the court will need to consider whether the proposed scheme as a whole is fair as between those interests.
83. The court should adopt the same approach to the exercise of its discretion (described at [82] above) when making the more general comparison between the positions that would exist with or without the proposed scheme in respect of (a) the security of the policyholders' benefits, and (b) the standards of service and corporate governance that the policyholders can expect. In many cases, this comparison will entail the court's consideration of the contractual rights and reasonable expectations of policyholders, including the standards of service and governance that can be expected if the scheme is implemented.
84. Once the court has undertaken the evaluations we have mentioned, the court will decide whether or not to sanction the proposed scheme, if, under section 111(3) it is, in all the circumstances of the case, appropriate to do so. It cannot require the applicants to vary or alter the scheme, even though that may sometimes be the effect of the court expressing its concerns. The choices of both the scheme itself and its detailed terms are for the directors of the transferor and transferee concerned. The primary duty of those directors is, of course, to promote the success of their companies."
The independent expert and his report
The position of the objecting policyholders
Effectiveness of the Scheme
Conclusion