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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 >> Trustee Solutions Ltd & Ors v Dubery & Anor [2006] EWHC 1426 (Ch) (21 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/1426.html Cite as: [2006] Pens LR 177, [2006] PLR 177, [2006] EWHC 1426 (Ch), [2007] 1 All ER 308, [2007] ICR 412 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) TRUSTEE SOLUTIONS LIMITED (2) STEPHEN PATRICK COMAR (3) KEITH JAMES EDWARDS |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) LESLIE DUBERY (2) JULIA CRIPPS |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Paul Newman (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP) for the First Defendant
Miss Barbara Rich (instructed by Eversheds ) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 13th 14th June 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewison:
Introduction | 1 |
Barber | 3 |
The issues | 6 |
The rules of the scheme | 8 |
Were the rules validly altered? | 9 |
The documents relied on | 9 |
The scope of the amendment | 15 |
Approach to construction | 16 |
Writing under hand | 21 |
Adequacy of the documents | 37 |
Estoppel | 38 |
Introduction | 39 |
The facts relied on | 39 |
The estoppel contended for | 48 |
The principle | 49 |
Group estoppels | 50 |
Conclusions on estoppel | 53 |
Priorities | 58 |
Introduction
Barber
i) For pensionable service prior to 17 May 1990 (the date of the Barber judgment) it was not unlawful for male and female pension benefits to be provided at different retirement ages;ii) A scheme could be amended so as to equalise benefits for men and women, if the rules of the scheme permitted such amendment. The nature of the amendment could either reduce the normal male retirement age, or increase the normal female retirement age, or both; provided that both sexes were treated equally;
iii) For pensionable service between 17 May 1990 and the operative date of any valid amendment male members of a pension scheme were entitled to be treated as if their normal retirement age was the same age as that applicable to female members (usually 60). This period is known, in the jargon, as "the Barber window".
The issues
The rules of the scheme
i) The definition of "Normal Retirement Date" which is 65 in the case of a male member and 60 in the case of a female member;ii) The definition of "Pensionable Service" which is limited to service between the date on which a person became a member and Normal Retirement Date;
iii) Rule 11 (A) which deals with members' contributions. These cease to be payable after the last day of a scheme year which is or next precedes that member's Normal Retirement Date;
iv) Rule 12 (A) which provides that a member who is in service on the Normal Retirement Date is entitled to a pension commencing on the following day. However, a member who is entitled to a pension has the right to postpone commencement of the pension until the day after he retires from service. This option must be exercised by "notice in writing" given by the member to the trustees within a time scale contained in the rules;
v) Rule 38, which contains the power of amendment, and which I must quote:
"… the Trustees may from time to time and at any time with the consent of the Principal Company by way of formal variation of these Rules adopted by any deed or deeds executed by the Trustees and the Principal Company or by any writing effected under hand by the Trustees and the Principal Company alter or modify all or any provisions of the Scheme Provided that no such alteration or modification as aforesaid shall be made which would have the effect of varying or affecting any benefits … applicable to Pensionable Service completed before the alteration or modification …without the consent of any Member affected thereby and Provided further that no such alteration or modification as aforesaid shall be permissible if it would result in any payment refund or transfer to the Employers or any of them.Notice in writing of any such alteration or modification as aforesaid shall before the same takes effect be given to every Member who will be affected thereby."
Were the rules validly altered?
The documents relied on
i) a memorandum dated 15 May 1992 taken in conjunction withii) an announcement to female members dated July 1992.
"We now believe that no changes will apply before May 1990 but since that date pension benefits will be based upon retirement at the same age for both men and women."
i) Both men and women to retire at age 60;ii) Women to retire at age 65;
iii) Retirement at some mid-point between 60 and 65.
"The Board of Colour Processing Laboratories Limited wish to inform you that as a result of a decision of the European Court of Justice, it has become necessary to equalise the retirement ages under the Scheme for both male and female Members. The Board after careful consideration have therefore decided to revise the normal retiring age under the Scheme for female Members.
With effect from 1st October 1991 your Normal Retiring Date will be the day before your 65th birthday. This effectively means that you will continue to contribute to the Scheme, and accrue additional pension benefits until age 65 or the earlier date of leaving Pensionable Service. Furthermore you will continue to be covered for death in service benefits until this date (see section 13 of your booklet).
The pension payable to you, at age 65 (your new Normal Retiring Date), will be calculated as follows:
(i) that part of your pension representing Pensionable Service completed on or after 1st May 1990 will be calculated as described in section 7 of your booklet, but will be based on your Final Pensionable Salary at age 65 (your new Normal Retiring Date) and
(ii) that part of your pension representing Pensionable Service completed before 1st May 1990 will also be calculated as described in section 7 of your booklet, but will be based on your Final Pensionable Salary as if you were retiring at age 60 and not age 65. This pension will then be increased by the appropriate amount to take into account the period of deferment to age 65.
If you retire before age 60, the whole of your pension will be reduced accordingly. If, however, you retire before your Normal Retiring Date but after 60, only that part of your pension earned on or after 1st May 1990 will be reduced.
If you have any queries please contact:
Michael Curle, Financial Director, Edenbridge."
The scope of the amendment
Approach to construction
"I bear in mind that a pension scheme is likely to continue for a substantial period of time and that those most affected by them and entitled to protection from the trustees, the employer and indeed the Court, will be people who are comparatively poor, who will not have easy access to expert legal advice, and who will not know what has been going on in relation to the management of the Scheme. In those circumstances, it seems to me that protection of the beneficiaries requires the Court to be very careful before it permits a departure from the plain wording and plain requirements of the trust deed. Further, it is not as if this was a case where at the date of the trust deed there was a difference of identity between the trustees and the employer: they were the same person even then. Accordingly, I think the Court should be particularly careful before effectively overriding the requirement that there is some sort of written record which can be said to amount to an authority within the meaning of clause 16 of the definitive deed."
"I refer back to the point to which I have already made reference, namely, that bearing in mind that this is a trust, and bearing in mind the likely long life of this trust and the ignorance as to what has been going on on the part of the beneficiaries, it seems to me that the Court should not be too ready to waive a requirement of written documentation when the Scheme, and the trust deed under which it is set up, specifically require it. Of course, in this sort of case one often finds oneself treading the somewhat blurred line between requiring the terms of a particular deed to be complied with, while not being too pedantic and exacting in one's requirements."
Writing under hand
"According to the normal acceptation of the words, a document "under my hand" means a document signed (i.e., subscribed) by me; and an informal document "under my hand" means a document signed by me which is defective either in form or expression, or in solemnities of authentication, or in both. For the purpose of determining whether a document is "under the hand" of the granter, the signature is more than a mere formality or solemnity, and its unique significance as the recognised and indispensable token of deliberate authorisation of a written document, whether formal or informal, has long been accepted by common usage. In this context the word "hand" is a synonym for "signature," as in the once familiar phrases of the older testing clause "As witness my hand," or "I have hereto set my hand," and the term is still found in modern statutory phraseology in the references in the Stamp Acts to instruments and agreements "under hand only." It is, of course, possible for a testator to make it plain that he is using this, or any other, expression in a special sense, and in such a case the settlement will provide its own vocabulary, and the special sense will prevail. But in the ordinary case the words used must receive their ordinary significance."
"To be under his hand means, I take it, that it must bear his signature."
"An assignment is only a legal assignment if it complies with s.136 of the 1925 Act. What that section requires is that there should be an "absolute assignment by writing under the hand of the assignor (not purporting to be by way of charge only) of any debt or other legal thing in action." As I have said above, none of the assignments executed before November 2003 was signed by Mr James personally; instead they were all signed in his name by his wife with his authority. Were those assignments "under the hand of the assignor"? In my judgement, they were not. In my opinion, these words should be given their plain and ordinary meaning, and so construed, they require that the assignor himself should sign the assignment. They do not admit of the possibility of someone other than the assignor signing in the assignor's name."
"any agreement, or any minute or memorandum of an agreement, made in England, under hand only, or made in Scotland, without any clause of registration"
"One argument that has been urged on the part of the plaintiff is that no document can require a stamp unless it be signed, the words of the stamp act imposing a duty upon "any agreement, or any memorandum of an agreement, made in England, under hand only." It appears to me, however, that that is not the meaning of the statute, but that the legislature, in using that expression, merely intended to denote instruments under hand only – that is, not under seal, - in opposition to instruments under seal. The words that follow, "or made in Scotland, without any clause of registration" shew this to be the true construction – an instrument with a clause of registration, in that country, having the same force as an instrument under seal with us."
"An instrument under hand only is a document in writing which either creates or affects legal or equitable rights or liabilities, and which is authenticated by the signature of the author, but is not executed by him as a deed."
i) as a means of definitively authenticating documents amending the rules;ii) as a means of preserving evidence of amendments long after trustees have ceased to hold office;
iii) as a means of reminding signatories of the importance of the decisions they are making;
iv) as a means of ensuring that the trustees act and are seen to act unanimously;
v) as a means of protecting the beneficiaries under the trust.
Adequacy of the documents
Estoppel
Introduction
The facts relied on
"Change in Normal Retiring Date for female Members to the day before your 65th birthday. For female Members who joined the Scheme before 1st May 1990 certain provisions are made on the calculation of your retirement benefits and you should refer to the announcement dated July 1992 for further information."
"This booklet gives a brief outline of the pension and other benefits available to you as a Member of the Scheme. It replaces the 1987 Edition of the Booklet and incorporates all amendments to the Scheme made to date. The full provisions of the Scheme are set out in the formal documents constituting the Scheme and in the event of doubt the provisions of the latter will prevail."
"You can find the full provisions in the formal documents constituting the Scheme… if there are any differences between this booklet and the formal documents, the provisions in the formal documents will override those in this booklet."
"Notwithstanding the fact that the current Rules have not been amended, the Scheme has been administered as if benefits (other than guaranteed minimum benefits) had been equalised with effect from October 1991. In particular benefits have been calculated and paid and the Scheme has been funded as though benefits (other than guaranteed minimum benefits) had been equalised with effect from that date."
The estoppel contended for
The principle
"If parties to a contract, by their course of dealing, put a particular interpretation on the terms of it -- on the faith of which each of them -- to the knowledge of the other -- acts and conducts their mutual affairs -- they are bound by that interpretation just as much as if they had written it down as being a variation of the contract. There is no need to inquire whether their particular interpretation is correct or not -- or whether they were mistaken or not -- or whether they had in mind the original terms or not. Suffice it that they have, by their course of dealing, put their own interpretation on their contract, and cannot be allowed to go back on it."
Group estoppels
i) The pension scheme embodies not only the terms of a contract between individual members and the trustees but also a trust applicable to the fund comprising the contributions of members and surpluses derived from the past in which present and future members may be interested. Such trusts cannot be altered by estoppel because there can be no such estoppel binding future members.ii) It is necessary to show that the principle is applicable to all existing members. It is not necessary for that purpose to call evidence relating to each and every member's intention. But that will not absolve a claimant from adducing evidence to show that the principle must be applicable to the general body of members as such.
iii) What must be proved is that each and every member has by his "course of dealing put a particular interpretation on the terms of" the Rules or "acted upon the agreed assumption that a given state of facts is to be accepted between them as true". This involves more than merely passive acceptance. The administration of a pension scheme on a particular assumption as to the yardstick by which contributions or benefits are to be calculated may well give rise to a relevant assumption on the part of the trustees. It requires clear evidence of intention or positive conduct to bind the general body of members to such an assumption. Receipt of the benefit or payment of the contribution, without more, is unlikely to be enough.
i) In the present case the estoppel is said to have bound former employees who had left the Scheme before any of the events which are said to have created the erroneous assumption. Such a person cannot realistically be said to have shared the assumption.ii) Estoppels against (or in favour of) individual members which relate to retirement ages may, if upheld in relation to some but not all members, result in unequal treatment of some members as compared with others. This may, potentially, put the trustees in conflict with the equal treatment rule enshrined in section 62 of the Pensions Act 1995. In general the court will not uphold an estoppel in conflict with statute or public policy.
iii) Since none of the documents relied on informed male members about their entitlement to pension accrued during a Barber window period of pensionable service, there is a possible conflict between the assumption relied on as constituting the convention, and European law; unless the assumption is modified to take account of the effects of the Barber judgment. But if it is so modified, how can it be said that the members (or, for that matter, the trustees) had that modified assumption?
iv) If the shared assumption is anything other than that which was expressly stated to members of the scheme (i.e. any retrospective element is stripped out of it), it is unrealistic to suggest that the members shared the altered assumption, unless they are to be endowed with unusual knowledge of pensions law and/or the detailed contents of the rules. Ex hypothesi they do not have the latter; since if they did there would be no estoppel at all.
Conclusions on estoppel
Priorities
"(a) any liability for pensions or other benefits which, in the opinion of the trustees, are derived from the payment by any member of the scheme of voluntary contributions,
(aa) where—
(i) the trustees or managers of the scheme are entitled to benefits under a contract of insurance which was entered into before 6th April 1997 with a view to securing the whole or part of the scheme's liability for any pension or other benefit payable in respect of one particular person whose entitlement to payment of a pension or other benefit has arisen and for any benefit which will be payable in respect of that person on his death, and(ii) either that contract may not be surrendered or the amount payable on surrender does not exceed the liability secured by the contract (but excluding liability for increases to pensions),
the liability so secured,
(b) in a case not falling within paragraph (aa), where a person's entitlement to payment of pension or other benefit has arisen, liability for that pension or benefit and for any pension or other benefit which will be payable in respect of that person on his death (but excluding increases to pensions),
(c) …
(d) any liability for increases to pensions referred to in paragraphs (aa) and (b),
(e) any liability for increases to pensions referred to in paragraph (c)
(f) so far as not included in paragraph (c) or (e) any liability for –
(i) pensions or other benefits which have accrued to or in respect of any members of the scheme (including increases to pensions) or(ii) future pensions, or other future benefits, attributable (directly or indirectly) to pensions credits (including increases to pensions)."