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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2002] UKSSCSC CJSA_1542_2000 (06 March 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2002/CJSA_1542_2000.html Cite as: [2002] UKSSCSC CJSA_1542_2000 |
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[2002] UKSSCSC CJSA_1542_2000 (06 March 2002)
CJSA/1542/2000
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
REASONS
"periodical payments made in relation to a person, under a personal pension scheme or, in connection with the coming to an end of an employment of his, under an occupational pension scheme or a public pension scheme".
The phrase "occupational pension scheme" is defined by reference to the definition in section 1 of the Pensions Schemes Act 1993 and means –
"any scheme or arrangement which is comprised in one or more instruments or agreements and which has, or is capable of having, effect in relation to one or more descriptions of categories of employments so as to provide benefits, in the form of pensions or otherwise, payable on termination of service, or on death or retirement, to or in respect of earners with qualifying service in an employment of any such description or category".
In R(JSA) 1/01, the Commissioner held that, in the light of the decision of the Court of Appeal in Westminster City Council v. Haywood [1998] Ch 377, the definition of "occupational pension scheme" was wide enough to include a scheme for payments on termination of service that was wholly separate from any retirement pension scheme. In CJSA/1051/00, the same Commissioner considered the scheme set up by the London and Manchester Group that applies also to the present claimant. He held that the monthly payments were "pension payments" even thought they were paid out of the employer's own resources, rather than a separate fund, and even though they had additional conditions attached to them. That was because they were nonetheless paid under a "scheme or arrangement which is comprised in one or more instruments or agreements". Given the decision of the Court of Appeal, I respectfully agree.
"15. Finally the alternative argument on the first three months' payment under the drip feed arrangement (that it did not count as a "periodical payment" at all because all three months were paid together in one lump in advance) has also in my judgment to be rejected, since the terms of entitlement at page 11 and the method of calculation at page 13 make it quite clear that this was a monthly entitlement from the start of the drip feed arrangement on the date of redundancy. That is in my judgment sufficient to bring the whole of the drip feed payments into account as periodical payments notwithstanding that the first three of them were paid together in advance. It could not be disputed that if the whole of the drip feed arrangement had been for quarterly payments in advance they would all have counted as "periodical payments" from the outset, and I cannot see that it can make any difference that there should be a switch to a monthly payment interval in the fourth and following months, the first payment in advance being no doubt intended to assist the employee over the immediate aftermath of his redundancy."
In the absence of authority, I am not sure that I would have reached the same conclusion because the fact that a payment is calculated by reference to monthly figures does not necessarily make it a periodical payment and it is quite possible for a lump sum to be followed by periodical payments. However, it would be most unsatisfactory to have differing Commissioners' decisions arising on the interpretation of a single scheme and, as it is a matter of judgment whether a single payment may properly be characterised as an aggregate of a number of periodical payments, I do not consider that I should differ from the approach taken in CJSA/1051/00.
(signed) M. ROWLAND
Commissioner
6 March 2002