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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Ascham Homes Ltd v Auguste [2015] EWHC 3517 (Ch) (04 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3517.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3517 (Ch), [2016] ICR 359, [2015] WLR(D) 519 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM JANE IRVINE
DEPUTY PENSIONS OMBUDSMAN
IN THE MATTER OF THE PENSION SCHEMES ACT 1993
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ASCHAM HOMES LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HASSETT AUGUSTE |
Respondent |
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The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 19 May 2015
Further written submissions: 21 and 27 May 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hildyard :
The question in the appeal
The regulatory framework
"(1) Where
(a) a member is dismissed by reason of redundancy; or
(b) his employing authority has decided that, on grounds of business efficiency, it is in their interests that he should leave their employment; and
(c) in either case, the member has attained the age if 55,
he is entitled to immediate payment of retirement pension without reduction.
(2) In the case of a person who is a member on 31st March 2008, and to whom paragraph (1) applies before 31st March 2010, that paragraph applies as if "the age of 50" were substituted for "the age of 55"."
The nature of the appeal
The Parties
Termination of Mr Auguste's employment and resulting dispute
"SAVE THAT it is agreed that the waiver and settlement of claims shall not apply to any claims that the employee has or may have in relation to personal injury or accrued pension rights relating to his years of pensionable service with the Employer (which commenced on 03 November 2003) on the understanding that the Employee warrants that he is not aware of any circumstances which might give rise to any such claims."
"You were aged 52 when you left Ascham Homes in November 2009. Under the LPGS Regulations you would have been entitled to an immediate pension at this age (i.e. over 50) if you had been dismissed by reason of redundancy or business efficiency (regulation 19…)
The Board has determined that you were not dismissed for reasons of redundancy or business efficiency. The reason for your dismissal was to satisfy the Council's requirements, and to ensure its continued support of Ascham Homes. It was, in effect, a necessity and not a decision by Ascham Homes that "on the grounds of business efficiency, it is in their interests that [you] should leave their employment" as set out in the Regulations. This conclusion is supported by the paper dated 5th November 2009, a copy of which you have provided with your letter. Consequently there is no entitlement to an immediate pension…"
"Everyone knows and accepts that it was performance issues that led to my having to leave the leadership of Ascham Homes…I am astounded that you now claim that this is not the case. I know and accept that almost all of the Board members have changed, but the truth surely still holds. The basis of my having to leave was to improve the performance of Ascham Homes."
Applications to the Pensions Ombudsman
"I was dismissed/required to resign/forced to go…There was no performance issue with my employer. None was raised with me…There was no adverse discussion on performance, leadership or any other aspect of my stewardship from/with my employer…My employer was wholly satisfied with my performance."
The Deputy Pension Ombudsman's Final Determination
"32. I have therefore decided that Ascham's decision was so wholly against the weight of the evidence that it was perverse. Ascham's refusal to grant Mr Auguste an unreduced pension constituted maladministration, causing him injustice.
33. Section 151(2) of the Pensions Act 1993 provides that I can direct a respondent "to take, or refrain from taking, such steps as [I] may specify". Having found as a fact that Mr Auguste's employment ended on business efficiency grounds, Ascham's decision needs to be quashed as perverse. I have considered whether to remit the matter for further consideration by Ascham, but bearing in mind the history of this matter, I have decided that to do so is unlikely to result in a just decision being made."
Approach of the Deputy Pensions Ombudsman
"24. The principal issue – whether Mr Auguste's departure was on the grounds of business efficiency – concerns Ascham's functions under or in relation to the LGPS, and so is a matter for me to decide.
25. The compromise agreement excluded claims related to Mr Auguste's accrued pension rights, "on the understanding that the employee warrants that he is not aware of any circumstances which might give rise to any such claims." Mr L thinks that early retirement was included in the negotiations between Ascham and Mr Auguste, but Ascham says "there was no suggestion that he wished to retire on immediate pension." That being so, the terms of the compromise agreement are not an impediment to Mr Auguste's later application for early payment of an unreduced pension, and his subsequent complaint to me.
26. Ascham's directors disagreed about Mr Auguste's performance as Chief Executive, although it seems that those who had concerns did not raise them with Mr Auguste or the Board. However, the divergence of views amongst Board members did not cause Mr Auguste's resignation. Mr Auguste and Ascham agree that Mr Auguste had to go because the Council had no confidence in him, and was unlikely to continue Ascham's funding if Ascham continued to employ him. It might be said that ending someone's employment is usually linked to business efficiency, but there is a difference between termination due to redundancy and termination on business efficiency grounds. There is also a common sense difference between business efficiency and performance grounds. If it is to function effectively, Regulation 19 cannot be taken to include all cases in which greater efficiency is a consequence of dismissal. Regulation 19 applies where there is no other significant reason than objective efficiency, for example, redundancy or restructuring, where the characteristics of the post holder are irrelevant. It does not automatically apply where the reasons for the gain in efficiency are closely connected to the individual employee – when the dismissal is subjective.
27. Ascham terminated Mr Auguste's employment because the Council required it and Ascham could not survive without Council funding. This was not redundancy or restructuring, as Mr Auguste was immediately replaced by a new Chief Executive. There was no cash saving, indeed Ascham incurred the additional cost of paying Mr Auguste substantial compensation for loss of office.
28. In the absence of a definition in the LGPS Regulations, it fell to Ascham to decide what constituted business efficiency. However, Ascham's decision making power was not absolute; it had to be tempered with common sense, and could not be one that no decision maker, properly directing itself, could reach.
29. I will not usually interfere with the weight given by a decision maker to different factors that it is entitled to take into account. (Edge v Pensions Ombudsman [1999] 4 All ER 456). The exception to this general rule is if the decision was perverse. The test for perversity was set out in Harris v Shuttleworth [1995] OPLR 79 which held that the decision maker must ask itself the correct questions, direct itself correctly in law and adopt a correct construction of the pension scheme's rules, and not arrive at a perverse decision, that is, one which no reasonable body could reach, and must take into account all relevant but no irrelevant factors.
30. Ascham's principal concerns were the cost of providing an unreduced pension, and ensuring continued funding from the Council. These were of course important matters, but Ascham did not ask itself what the cause of Mr Auguste's departure really was, so far as the LGPS Regulations were concerned. Ascham's understandable desire to protect its finances led to Ascham being quite sure from the start that whatever the reason for Mr Auguste's departure might be, it was not going to be business efficiency.
31. The reasons for Mr Auguste's departure were selective in that they were closely connected to his individual characteristics. But the circumstances were unusual and there was an objective element as well – Ascham's survival was at stake. Mr Auguste's employer got rid of him because the company's sole shareholder demanded that it do so. The Board had not raised performance issues with Mr Auguste. This was not an employee being sacked for poor performance. Dispensing with Mr Auguste's services enabled Ascham to get the funding it needed and improve its relationship with the Council. I have no doubt that Ascham's business operated more efficiently as a result, and it follows that the provisions of Regulation 19 were satisfied."
Grounds of Appeal
Ground 1: interpretation
Ground 1.1
Ground 1.2
"195. Although it might be said that dismissals usually take place for reasons of efficiency, there is in fact an essential difference between, for instance, a dismissal for reasons of redundancy and a dismissal for reasons of efficiency. This is why the Regulations distinguish between the two. There is, similarly, an essential common sense difference between a dismissal in the interests of efficiency and a dismissal on grounds of performance. Even though the Guidelines envisage situations where there might be an overlap, such situations must, logically, be the exception and indeed the Guidelines say retirements in the interests of efficiency 'should be rare'.
196. For Professor Parish's complaint to succeed, I would need to find that, on the balance of probabilities, the reasons for the termination of his employment fell so squarely into the category of 'efficiency' so that no reasonable employer could have decided as the Agency did."
Ground 1.3
(1) The requirement to interpret Regulation 19 in context and by reference to the Regulations as a whole is obvious. Ordinary principles of construction require that approach.
(2) In the ordinary course, a member only becomes entitled to receive a pension at age 65, which is the LGPS normal retirement age ("NRA"). Any provisions for earlier pension or enhancements are carefully defined and controlled. That is especially so because the LGPS is a (largely) publicly funded defined benefits scheme in which the risks ultimately fall upon the tax-payer.
(3) An example of such a provision is Regulation 29, which provides the default method for dealing with a member leaving service prior to NRA, providing as it does for a deferred pension. A deferred pension could be paid prior to NRA if the LGPS employer accedes to the request under Regulation 30. However, to reflect the additional cost to the Scheme by Regulation 30(4), that pension must be reduced in accordance with guidance from the Government Actuary.
(4) Regulation 19 is plainly also an exceptional provision, which has the effect of conferring very substantial benefits on individuals who are within 10 years of NRA (or 15 years where Regulation 19(2) is applicable) and who lose their jobs as part of a redundancy process or an efficiency exercise. It should be restrictively construed and applied.
(5) Indeed, set in the context of the Regulations as a whole, it seems to me that Regulation 19 was intended to apply only where the plainly and obviously driving reason for the decision that the member should leave the employing authority's employment is that the extra cost of an immediate unreduced pension is outweighed by perceived business efficiency advantages. If there are other subjective or "performance" reasons such that the member's conduct is in question, other Regulations are likely to be applicable, and not Regulation 19.
Ground 1.4
Ground 2: application
(1) the Deputy Ombudsman erred in law in determining at paragraph 31 of the Final Determination that "Ascham's business operated more efficiently as a result" of Mr Auguste leaving service: the learned Deputy had no evidence before her to support such a determination; further
(2) the Deputy Ombudsman's findings at paragraph 27 of her Final Determination that "Mr Auguste was immediately replaced by a new Chief Executive. There was no cash saving, indeed Ascham incurred the additional cost of paying Mr Auguste substantial compensation for loss office", point inexorably to the opposite conclusion.
"The Board had not raised performance issues with Mr Auguste. This was not an employee being sacked for poor performance."
Ground 3: inconsistency in applying the law to the facts
"The learned Deputy Ombudsman erred in law in finding at paragraph 31 of the determination that: "I have no doubt that Ascham's business operated more efficiently as a result, and it follows that the provisions of Regulation 19 were satisfied" (emphasis added).
Having correctly held at paragraph 26 of the determination that Regulation 19 applies "where there is no other significant reason than objective efficiency…where the characteristics of the post holder are irrelevant" (emphasis added), the Deputy Ombudsman was wrong in law to conclude at paragraph 31 that the Respondent fell within the provisions of Regulation 19 despite the fact that the "reasons for his departure were selective in that they were closely connected to his individual characteristics".
The later qualification in that paragraph that "there was an objective element as well" is not enough to meet the threshold for the application of Regulation 19 (which the learned Deputy correctly identified at paragraph 26) namely that there be no other significant reason than objective efficiency."
Ground 4: no basis for finding at paragraph 30 of the Final Determination
"The learned Deputy Ombudsman's finding at paragraph 30 that "Ascham did not ask itself what the cause of Mr Auguste's departure really was so far as the LGPS Regulations were concerned" was wrong in law, there being no evidence to support such a finding."
"It confirmed its decision that you did not leave service for reasons of redundancy or business efficiency. The reason that you left service was because Ascham Homes and the Council lost confidence in you as Chief Executive. You were replaced immediately and there were no cash efficiencies gained as a result of your departure. In addition, had you been departing for reasons of business efficiency, the Board feels that this would have been reflected expressly in your compromise agreement, but it was not."
"1. Documentation from a meeting on 5 November 2009 (referred to at paragraph 7 of the Determination) shows that the Council did not have confidence in Mr Auguste and that his departure was necessary in order to secure continued funding for Ascham Homes;
2. Mr Auguste left employment at the end of that month and was immediately replaced as Chief Executive. No cash efficiencies were gained as a result of his departure;
3. It is irrelevant what pension terms may have been granted to other senior members of Ascham Homes' staff who have left employment. The decision is one for Ascham Homes to make based on the facts of Mr Auguste's departure;
4. There are no Board papers or other documentation which suggest that Mr Auguste was assured that he would receive a full early retirement pension, or which document that he was leaving on the grounds of business efficiency. The Chairman specifically recalls that there was not an agreement of this nature;
5. The immediate unbudgeted cost if Ascham Homes were to decide that he had retired on the grounds of business efficiency would be £85,612 (assuming no aggregation of pensionable service) or £205,870 (assuming aggregation);
6. The Board may properly take account of its own financial position as one of the relevant factors when considering the exercise of its powers under the LGPS Benefit Regulations."
Ground 5: no basis for Deputy Ombudsman's conclusions in paragraph 31 of the Final Determination
Ground 6
"The learned Deputy correctly recognised the Appellant's duty to act in good faith "the Imperial duty" (by reference to Imperial Group Pension Trust Ltd v Imperial Tobacco Ltd [1991] 1 WLR 589) at paragraph 21 of the determination. However, in paragraph 29 the learned Deputy erred and applied the test for perversity set out in Harris v Lord Shuttleworth [1994] ICR 991 which is applicable to trustees when forming a judgment.
The correct test was whether the Appellant's decision was irrational or perverse to the extent that no reasonable employer could have acted in the manner that the Appellant did: IBM United Kingdom Holdings Ltd v Dalgleish [2014] PLR 335. Had the Deputy Ombudsman applied the correct test she could not have properly made the finding that at paragraph 32 that the Appellant's decision was "so wholly against the weight of evidence that it was perverse".
Alternatively, in the event that the appropriate test was that set out in Harris v Lord Shuttleworth the learned Deputy Ombudsman nonetheless erred in law because the unchallenged evidence of the Appellant concerning the meeting of 20 May 2013 points inexorably to the finding that the Board considered the question as to the Respondent's entitlement under Regulation 19 correctly."
Ground 7
Ground 8
Summary and conclusion
Postscript