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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 >> BCA Pension Trustees Ltd, Re [2015] EWHC 3492 (Ch) (02 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3492.html Cite as: [2015] WLR(D) 502, [2015] EWHC 3492 (Ch), [2016] Pens LR 17, [2016] 4 WLR 5 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE BCA PENSION PLAN
AND IN THE MATTER OF SECTION 48 OF THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE ACT 1985
7 Rolls Building Fetter Lane London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
BCA PENSION TRUSTEES LIMITED |
Claimant |
____________________
Hearing date: 16 November 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SNOWDEN:
"(1) Where -
(a) any question of construction has arisen out of the terms of a will or a trust; and
(b) an opinion in writing given by a person who has a 10 year High Court qualification, within the meaning of section 71 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 has been obtained on that question by the personal representatives or trustees under the will or trust,
the High Court may, on the application of the personal representatives or trustees and without hearing argument, make an order authorising those persons to take such steps in reliance on the said opinion as are specified in the order.
(2) The High Court shall not make an order under subsection (1) if it appears to the court that a dispute exists which would make it inappropriate for the court to make the order without hearing argument."
Background
"(1) A pension under the Plan … increases on 1st April each year after it starts to be paid. The rate of increase is determined in accordance with sub-rules (2) and (3).
Sub-rule (2) applies to a pension or part of it to which section 51 of the Pensions Act 1995 applies (pension attributable to pensionable service after 5th April, 1997) and sub-rule (3) applies to a pension or part of it attributable to earlier pensionable service to which that section does not apply.
(2) The rate of increase attributable to a pension or part of it to which this sub-rule applies is the percentage increase in the Central Statistical Offices retail prices index over the Reference Period subject to a maximum of 5 per cent for any Reference Period. A Reference Period is determined by comparing the level of retail prices index for the month of February immediately preceding the 1st April on which the increase is made with its level for the month of February of the previous year.
(3) The rate of increase attributable to a pension or part of it to which this sub-rule applies is 3 per cent. on the whole pension including any amount relating to the Member's guaranteed minimum pension."
"The rate of increase attributable to a pension or part of it to which this sub-rule applies is the percentage increase in the Central Statistical Offices retail prices index over the Reference Period subject to a maximum of 2½ per cent for any Reference Period. A Reference Period is determined by comparing the level of retail prices index for the month of February immediately preceding the 1st April on which the increase is made with its level for the month of February of the previous year."
"22 PENSION INCREASES
22.1 A pension under the Plan (except, unless the Principal Company decides otherwise and the Trustees agree, a pension under Clause 14.1.2 of the Trust Deed and a pension derived from a Member's voluntary contributions) increases on 1st April in each year after it starts to be paid as follows.
22.2 The rate of increase attributable to a pension or part of it to which this sub-rule 22.2 applies is the percentage increase in the Office for National Statistics retail prices index over the Reference Period subject to a maximum of 5 per cent (prior to 6 April 2005) and 2.5% (after 5 April 2005) for any Reference Period. A Reference Period is determined by comparing the level of the retail prices index for the month of February immediately preceding the 1st April on which the increase is made with its level for the month of February of the previous year.
22.3 The rate of increase attributable to a pension or part of it to which this Rule 22.3 applies is 3 per cent. on the whole pension including any amount relating to the Member's guaranteed minimum pension."
"22 PENSION INCREASES
22.123(1)A pension under the Plan (except, unless the Principal Company decides otherwise and the Trustees agree, a pension underclause 15(1)(b)Clause 14.1.2 of the Trust Deed and a pension derived from a Member's voluntary contributions) increases on 1st April in each year after it starts to be paid as follows.The rate of increase is determined in accordance with sub-rules (2) and (3).
Sub-rule (2) applies to a pension or part of it to which section 51 of the Pensions Act 1995 applies (pension attributable to pensionable service after 5th April, 1997) and sub-rule (3) applies to a pension or part of it attributable to earlier pensionable service to which that section does not apply
22.223(2)The rate of increase attributable to a pension or part of it to which thissub-ruleRule 22.2 applies is the percentage increase in theCentral Statistical OfficesOffice for National Statistics retail prices index over the Reference Period subject to a maximum of 5 per cent (prior to 6 April 2005) and 2.5% (after 5 April 2005) for any Reference Period. A Reference Period is determined by comparing the level of the retail prices index for the month of February immediately preceding the 1st April on which the increase is made with its level for the month of February of the previous year.
22.323(3)The rate of increase attributable to a pension or part of it to whichthis sub-ruleRule 22.3 applies is 3 per cent. on the whole pension including any amount relating to the Member's guaranteed minimum pension."
i) the second unnumbered sub-paragraph of rule 23(1) in Rule 23 of the Original Rules, which identified the elements of pension to which the different rates of increase in Rules 23(2) and 23(3) were to apply, was omitted;
ii) the Office of National Statistics (ONS) replaced the Central Statistics Office; and
iii) the different pension increase rates in Rule 22.2 reflected the amendment made to Rule 23(2) of the Original Rules by the 2005 Deed of Alteration.
Of these, the most important for present purposes is (i) - the omission of the last sentence of the first sub-paragraph of Rule 23(1) of the Original Rules and the omission of the entirety of the second unnumbered sub-paragraph of that Rule.
The Issue
i) the increase in the ONS retail price index capped at 5 per cent for any Reference Period prior to 6 April 2005, and 2.5 per cent for any Reference Period after 5 April 2005 (as per Rule 22.2); or
ii) a flat 3 per cent (as per Rule 22.3).
Amendment
"(i) any right which at that time has accrued to or in respect of him to future benefits under the scheme rules, or
(ii) any entitlement to the present payment of a pension or other benefit which he has at that time, under the scheme rules …"
The difficulty is that if Rule 22 of the Consolidated Rules does not mean what the Trustee contends it means, then by definition the amendment might affect the entitlements of members of the Plan.
Construction of pension schemes
"22. In East v Pantiles (Plant Hire) Ltd (1981) 263 EG 61 Brightman LJ stated the conditions for what he called "correction of mistakes by construction":
"Two conditions must be satisfied: first, there must be a clear mistake on the face of the instrument; secondly, it must be clear what correction ought to be made in order to cure the mistake. If those conditions are satisfied, then the correction is made as a matter of construction."
23. Subject to two qualifications, both of which are explained by Carnwath LJ in his admirable judgment in KPMG LLP v Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd [2007] Bus LR 1336, I would accept this statement, which is in my opinion no more than an expression of the common sense view that we do not readily accept that people have made mistakes in formal documents. The first qualification is that "correction of mistakes by construction" is not a separate branch of the law, a summary version of an action for rectification. As Carnwath LJ said, at p 1351, para 50:
"Both in the judgment, and in the arguments before us, there was a tendency to deal separately with correction of mistakes and construing the paragraph 'as it stands', as though they were distinct exercises. In my view, they are simply aspects of the single task of interpreting the agreement in its context, in order to get as close as possible to the meaning which the parties intended."
24. The second qualification concerns the words "on the face of the instrument". I agree with Carnwath LJ, paras 44–50, that in deciding whether there is a clear mistake, the court is not confined to reading the document without regard to its background or context. As the exercise is part of the single task of interpretation, the background and context must always be taken into consideration.
25. What is clear from these cases is that there is not, so to speak, a limit to the amount of red ink or verbal rearrangement or correction which the court is allowed. All that is required is that it should be clear that something has gone wrong with the language and that it should be clear what a reasonable person would have understood the parties to have meant."
"101. In KPMG LLP v Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd [2007] Bus LR 1336 this court was concerned with the terms of a break clause in a lease granted in 1985. It followed generally the form of a draft lease attached to a 1974 agreement for lease, pursuant to which the grant took place. However, some words contained in the agreed draft had been omitted from the final version. The form in which the clause appeared in the final version made no sense if read literally. One of the questions was whether the agreement for lease was admissible for the purpose of interpreting the final granted lease. Carnwath LJ said, at para 39:
"Applying this logic, Mr Nugee submits that a lease, unlike an ordinary commercial contract, creates an interest in land, which may last many years and be owned in different forms by many different parties. It is addressed not merely to the original landlord and tenant, but also to their successors in title, their undertenants, their chargees and so on. Accordingly, what matters is the background material reasonably available to this disparate group of people. That, it was suggested, will include such matters as the physical location and layout of the property, and perhaps common form provisions found in a typical lease; but not a prior agreement for a lease 'which is a private arrangement between the original parties and which successors have no right to know about, let alone see'."
102. Carnwath LJ said that he did not accept this argument and added, at para 41:
"Similarly, I see nothing in Mr Nugee's argument that the original agreement may no longer be available to successors. This is an issue of proof, not principle. In disputes about older documents of title it is a commonplace that the court may not have full information about the context in which the agreement was made. This is as true of questions about the physical state of the land, which Mr Nugee accepts as relevant, as it is about background transactions. Where relevant evidence is not available, the court has to do its best on what there is. I cannot see this as a principled reason for excluding such evidence in a case where it is available."
103. He therefore held that the agreement for lease was admissible in interpreting the final version."
"Construction cannot be pushed beyond its proper limits in pursuit of remedying what is perceived to be a flaw in the working of a contract… Judges should not see in Chartbrook an open sesame for reconstructing the parties' contract, but an opportunity to remedy by construction a clear error of language which could not have been intended."
"132. Even the staunchest advocates of the court's ability to consider extrinsic evidence stop short at saying that by the process of interpretation the court can insert whole clauses that the parties have mistakenly failed to include. In his well-known article "My Kingdom for a Horse: The Meaning of Words" (2005) 121 LQR 577, 586 Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead wrote:
"The flexible approach, I add, would not render the remedy of rectification redundant. If by oversight parties omit an agreed clause from their contract, interpretation would not provide a remedy. The words included in the contract could not be interpreted to include the meaning intended to be conveyed by the clause which, accidentally, had been omitted."
133. Likewise Professor Burrows wrote in Construction and Rectification, p 96:
"Say, for example, the parties orally agreed that there should be a time-bar clause in the contract but that this clause was mistakenly omitted from the written contract. The omission of that clause would not be obvious from the document itself. It is hard to see that construction, as opposed to rectification, could cure the problem.""
"… It is one thing to say that the reasonable reader would perceive an obvious mistake in the document (call it "A") and that recourse to the background enables mistake A to be corrected. It is quite another to say that having perceived mistake A, recourse to the background enables the reasonable reader to identify another and unconnected mistake (call it "B") and then use the background to correct both mistake A and mistake B. I do not believe that there is any case that goes that far; and in my judgment it would be an unwarranted extension of the principles approved in Chartbrook. As Lord Hope explained in Melanesian Mission Trust Board v Australian Mutual Provident Society (1996) 74 P & CR 297, 301:
"The intention of the parties is to be discovered from the words used in the document. Where ordinary words have been used they must be taken to have been used according to the ordinary meaning of these words. If their meaning is clear and unambiguous, effect must be given to them because that is what the parties are taken to have agreed to by their contract. Various rules may be invoked to assist interpretation in the event that there is an ambiguity. But it is not the function of the court, when construing a document, to search for an ambiguity. Nor should the rules which exist to resolve ambiguities be invoked in order to create an ambiguity which, according to the ordinary meaning of the words, is not there. So the starting point is to examine the words used in order to see whether they are clear and unambiguous. It is of course legitimate to look at the document as a whole and to examine the context in which these words have been used, as the context may affect the meaning of the words. But unless the context shows that the ordinary meaning cannot be given to them or that there is an ambiguity, the ordinary meaning of the words which have been used in the document must prevail."
Mr. Newman QC's opinion dated 9 February 2015
i) both Rules 22.2 and 22.3 provide different rates of increase to apply to pensions under the Plan and that,
ii) both Rules 22.2 and 22.3 refer to "the rate of increase attributable to a pension or part of it which this [sub] rule apples", without giving an appropriate indicator as to which pension or part of the pension is to be increased.
Mr. Newman's opinion is that this lack of direction makes Rule 22 of the Consolidated Rules unworkable and that the court can accordingly conclude that something has gone wrong with the drafting of the Consolidated Rules.
"The inclusion of the relevant paragraph operates to make sense of what is otherwise a nonsensical provision. Its inclusion does not change the meaning of the document but gives practical effect to the existing meaning: it reflects the fact that a clear mistake has been made and that it is clear what the mistake is and how to correct it."
Analysis
"Rule 22.2 applies to a pension or part of it to which section 51 of the Pensions Act 1995 applies (pension attributable to pensionable service after 5th April, 1997) and Rule 22.3 applies to a pension or part of it attributable to earlier pensionable service to which that section does not apply."
The application and scope Section 48 of the Administration of Justice Act 1985
"Section 48 is not explicit as to the precise effect of an order made under it. Although the section requires a question of construction to have arisen, the wording is merely that the order made authorises the steps specified in it, not that the question of construction is thereby decided. Coupled with the fact that those affected by the decision will not be heard, that wording suggests that the order is equivalent to a Benjamin order; that is, it permits the trustees to act on the construction adopted by the court and protects them against a claim for breach of trust but does not bind the beneficiaries, who will remain free to contend later for a different construction and, if necessary, follow any trust property distributed in reliance on the order."
Notice to Plan Members