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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 >> Capital Cranfield Trustees Ltd v Beck & Anor [2008] EWHC 3181 (Ch) (19 December 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/3181.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 3181 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
In the matter of
THE A.C. SKELTON PENSION & LIFE ASSURANCE SCHEME
B e f o r e :
____________________
CAPITAL CRANFIELD TRUSTEES LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
BRIAN BECK JANET TABOR |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr David E. Grant (instructed by Dickinson Dees LLP) for the First Defendant
Mr Fenner Moeran (instructed by Dickinson Dees LLP) for the Second Defendant
Hearing date: 14th November 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Morgan :
The Scheme
"(i) (a) in relation to a female Member who joined the Scheme before the 30th day of September 1992 the day next preceding the 60th anniversary of birth and
(b) in relation to any other member the day next preceding the 65th anniversary of birth or
(ii) such day as the Employers shall determine in any particular case and notify in writing to the Member concerned" (emphasis added).
"Subject to section 50 of the Pensions Act and to Rule 3 of Part VII of these Rules and as hereinafter provided 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 of the 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 (whether immediate or prospective but not including the Cash Death Benefit and the Children's Contingent Annuity) applicable to Pensionable Service completed before the alteration or modification (upon the basis that the Member's current Pensionable Salary will remain unchanged until the Normal Retiring Date) without the consent in writing of any Member affected thereby.
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."
"At the request of the Employers and upon the Employers increasing the contributions to be provided by them under Rule 11(B) by such amount (if any) as is in the opinion of the Trustees necessary the Trustees shall provide such additional benefits (including increases to pensions and annuities currently payable) under the Scheme as the Employers shall in their absolute discretion determine … ".
The decisions of the European Court of Justice
"22. In summary, therefore, the following principles emerge from these three decisions of the ECJ:
(i) In relation to pensionable service prior to 17th May 1990, Article 119 has no application with the result that disparate retirement ages remain permissible and consequently the accrued pension rights of women based on a lower NRD of 60 remain unaffected by the application of Article 119 with effect from 17th May 1990;
(ii) As from 17th May 1990, Article 119 has direct effect and ipso facto operates to amend a pension scheme so as to eliminate discriminatory provisions relating to pension entitlement. But the existence of the accrued rights of women (in a case like the present) to retire at 60 and the inability of employers or trustees to backdate subsequent equalisation measures to 17th May 1990 mean that, for the Barber window, the only possible modification of the scheme in relation to retirement dates is the levelling up of retirement ages so as to grant members of the disadvantaged class the same rights as those of the advantaged class who, in most cases, will be women;
(iii) The adverse financial consequences for the employer and/or the pension scheme of the application of Article 119 after 17th May 1990 do not justify any alternative interim regimes such as the levelling down of normal retirement age to 65 for both sexes; and
(iv) The imposition of modifications to a scheme in this form with effect from 17th May 1990 does not preclude the ability of the trustees and the employer to use their powers of amendment under the scheme to bring into effect measures of their own choosing which achieve equal treatment between men and women in relation to their pension based on future pensionable service. These measures can involve levelling down the normal retirement age so long as equality is maintained.
23. The consequence of these decisions is that, for the duration of the Barber window, male employees under the Scheme will have accrued pension entitlement and other rights on the basis of an earlier retirement age than that applied to their pensionable service prior to 17th May 1990. Where the Barber window is subsequently closed by amendments to the scheme which level down the normal retirement ages for both sexes, they will then revert to pensionable service by reference to a retirement age of 65. In terms of accrual rates, the expense to the scheme and consequently to the employer can be mitigated by an early change to the rules. But the other consequence of the application of Article 119 so as to bring the rights of male employees into line with those of women was that they acquired a right to draw at 60 the pension accrued during the Barber window by reference to their 60th birthday as a normal retirement date. This was necessary in order to equalise their position with that of female employees who as the advantaged class, of course, retained their right under the scheme to accrue and take a pension by reference to a retirement age of 60 unaffected by the application of Article 119."
The Announcement
"ANNOUNCEMENT TO MEMBERS OF THE A.C.SKELTON PENSION & LIFE ASSURANCE SCHEME WHO JOINED THE SCHEME BEFORE 30TH SEPTEMBER 1992
As many of you may already know, occupational pensions for men and women are having to be equalised with effect from 17th May 1990 as a result of a ruling by the European Court of Justice in relation to the so-called "Barber" case and some subsequent judgements (sic). This is a difficult problem for a contracted-out final salary scheme such as ours because of the difference in the State Pension Ages themselves and the Company postponed a final decision on implementing equality until the European Court ruled on the subsequent "Coloroll" test case which it finally did on 28th September this year.
In the meantime, the Government announced its intention to raise the State Pension Age for women to 65 (to be phased in over 10 years from the year 2010) and legislation on this is expected later this year.
In the light of these decisions, the Company as sole Trustee has decided to make the following changes to the Scheme with effect from 17th November 1994:-
(1) the Normal Retirement Age will be equalised at age 65 for both men and women,
(2) women will still be able to retire at age 60 without any reduction in the whole of their pension accrued up to 16th November 1994, and
(3) Men will also be able to retire at age 60 without any reduction in their pension accrued between 17th May 1990 and 16th November 1994.
…
A.M.SKELTON
Managing Director
OCTOBER 1994"
Later developments
The questions arising
(a) whether paragraph (ii) of the definition of NRD in Rule 3 of the Rules confers a free-standing power to increase NRD for future pension accrual in respect of existing Members; and
(b) if so, whether the Announcement was an effective exercise of that power.
The parties
Discussion and analysis
The overall result