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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Houldsworth & Anor v Bridge Trustees Ltd & Ors [2010] EWCA Civ 179 (04 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/179.html Cite as: [2010] ICR 921, [2010] Pens LR 101, [2010] EWCA Civ 179 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
Miss Sarah Asplin QC (Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
HC06C03676
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
and
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
____________________
(1) MARK HOULDSWORTH (2) JOHN HUNTER |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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BRIDGE TRUSTEES LIMITED (2) JOHN YATES and SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS |
Respondent Intervener |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
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Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR KEITH ROWLEY QC (instructed by Eversheds LLP) for the First Respondent
MR PAUL NEWMAN QC and MISS EMILY CAMPBELL (instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) for the Second Respondent
MR CHRISTOPHER NUGEE QC and MR JONATHAN HILLIARD (instructed by Department for Work and Pensions Legal Group) for the Intervener
Hearing dates : 9th, 10th & 11th June 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY :
This is the judgment of the Court to which all members of the Court have contributed.
A. Overview
"…benefits the rate or amount of which is calculated by reference to a payment or payments made by the member or by any other person in respect of the member and which are not average salary benefits."
"…money purchase benefits which under the provisions of the scheme will only be provided in respect of a member if their value exceeds the value of other benefits in respect of him under the scheme which are not money purchase benefits."
That definition gives rise to problems. How does it work in the case of benefits that have a minimum or guaranteed element?
(a) Members who had elected to convert their accrued final salary benefits into MoneyMatch and to accrue future benefits under MoneyMatch;
(b) Members who retained their accrued benefits in the final salary scheme, but accrued future benefits under MoneyMatch;
(c) Members who both retained their accrued benefits in final salary form and continued to accrue future benefits in final salary form and could accrue VIP benefits, but did not participate in MoneyMatch at all; and
(d) New members joining the Scheme after 22 April 1992 who accrued benefits exclusively by reference to MoneyMatch.
B. Order appealed
C. The parties
(a) will not have a priority order imposed by s73 despite having insufficient assets to meet their liabilities, and
(b) will not have the statutory protection of a number of regimes designed to deal with under-funding of pension benefits, namely s75 of the 1995 Act (liability on employer), ss56-61 of the 1995 Act (minimum funding requirements) which is now replaced by Part 3 of the Pensions Act 2004 (the scheme specific funding regime), and the two statutory pensions lifeboats, FAS and the Pension Protection Fund, because none of these regimes apply to MP schemes.
D.The legislation
I. General
II. The statutory provisions
" (1) This section applies, where a salary related occupational pension scheme to which section 56 applies is being wound up, to determine the order in which the assets of the scheme are to be applied towards satisfying the liabilities in respect of pensions and other benefits (including increases in pensions).
(2) The assets of the scheme must be applied first towards satisfying the amounts of the liabilities mentioned in subsection (3) and, if the assets are insufficient to satisfy those amounts in full, then
(a) the assets must be applied first towards satisfying the amounts of the liabilities mentioned in earlier paragraphs of subsection (3) before the amounts of the liabilities mentioned in the later paragraphs, and
(b) where the amounts of the liabilities mentioned in one of those paragraphs cannot be satisfied in full, those amounts must be satisfied in the same proportions.
(3) The liabilities referred to in subsection (2) are-
(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) [immaterial]
(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 and other benefit which will be payable in respect of that person on his death (but excluding increases to pensions),
(c) any liability-
(i) for equivalent pension benefits (within the meaning of section 57(1) of the National Insurance Act 1965), guaranteed minimum pensions, protected rights, section 9(2B) rights (within the meaning of regulation 1(2) of the Contracting-out (Transfer and Transfer Payment) Regulations 1996), or safeguarded rights (within the meaning of section 68A(1) of the Pension Schemes Act 1993) (but excluding increases to pensions)
or
(ii) [immaterial]
(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 pension credits (including increases to pensions)
and, for the purposes of subsection (2), the amounts of the liabilities mentioned in paragraphs (aa) to (f) are to be taken to be the amounts calculated and verified in the prescribed manner.
…
(7) Regulations may modify subsection (3)"
"(1) In relation to any scheme-
(a) which is not a money purchase scheme, but
(b) where some of the benefits that may be provided are relevant money purchase benefits,
section 73 applies as if-
(i) the liabilities of the scheme did not include liabilities in respect of those benefits, and
(ii) the assets of the scheme did not include the assets by reference to which the rate or amount of those benefits is calculated.
(2) In paragraph (1) "relevant money purchase benefits" means money purchase benefits other than
(a) benefits derived from the payment by any member of voluntary contributions, or
(b) underpin benefits.
(3) In this regulation, "underpin benefits" means money purchase benefits which under the provisions of the scheme will only be provided in respect of a member if their value exceeds the value of other benefits in respect of him under the scheme which are not money purchase benefits."
E.The KPMG case: what did it decide about MP benefits?
(1) there is a mismatch between the members' benefits and the assets held by the scheme to meet them (derived from the members' and employers' contribution payments); and/or
(2) the members' benefits are not the "direct"/"actual" product of those contribution payments; and/or
(3) actuarial assessments are used in the process of calculating the members' benefits and thereby break the direct relationship between the contribution payments and the benefits requisite for an MP scheme. It is submitted that this feature alone is "fatal" to the contention that the members' benefits were "calculated by reference to" contribution payments by or in respect of members.
"30. ….in a typical defined benefit scheme any mismatch from time to time between assets and liabilities is cured by adjusting the assets to match the liabilities: i.e by increasing or, as the case may be, decreasing the level of funding as appropriate in the light of the most recent actuarial valuation. In such a scheme, the level of benefit dictates the level of contribution.
31. Alternatively, an employer setting up an occupational pension scheme may decide to define the level of benefits by reference solely to the contributions made in respect of the member concerned, so that the benefit represents no more and no less than the product of the contributions. Such a scheme is commonly called a 'money purchase scheme.' [I will come to the statutory definition of that term later].
32. Thus in a typical money purchase scheme there can, by definition, be no mismatch between assets and liabilities. Hence there is no need (indeed, no scope) for a 'balance of cost' obligation on the employer, since the level of contribution dictates the level of benefit and no 'balance of cost' can arise."
"151. … in the relationship between contributions and benefits, as that relationship emerges from a consideration of the scheme as a whole, properly construed. So, faced with such a plethora of argument and counter-argument, I think it helpful to start at the beginning and remind myself of the salient features of the scheme in that respect."
"…Thus the quantification of the standard pension depends in part upon actuarial assessments of future anticipated trends." (paragraph 156 of KPMG)
"…So all the pensions for which the scheme provides share the characteristic that the process of calculation includes actuarial factors. This seems to me to be a highly relevant consideration in the context of question 3…[whether the scheme was an MP scheme]" (paragraph 159 of KPMG).
"148. ….if one is looking for common sense badges of a "money purchase scheme", one such badge is the fact that in such a scheme the measure of the benefit is the value of the fund, and hence there is no need for an actuary. He submits that the fact that the tables to be applied in calculating the amount of a member's basic pension under the scheme incorporate actuarial factors is a very strong indication that the scheme is not a "money purchase scheme". There is, he submits, no equivalent under the scheme to the "pot" which is the badge of a "money purchase scheme"."
"…a money purchase benefit arises from and is correlative to a fund, actual or notional, and its investment yield constituted by the contributions paid by the member and his employer" (paragraph 42).
"…had no guaranteed or defined benefit for it depended on the investment yield obtained or attributable to the fund derived actually or notionally from the contributions made by the member and his employer" (paragraph 44).
"…Nevertheless it appears to me to be obvious that Parliament recognised that in a money purchase scheme in all normal circumstances the benefits are matched by equivalent assets. That is to be contrasted with a defined benefit scheme, such as a final salary scheme, when assets and liabilities will not match each other unless the actuarial and other assumptions on which the level of contribution was fixed actually occur." (paragraph 46).
"52. This excursus into the various contexts in which the definitions or concepts of money purchase benefits or schemes appear does show the characteristics such benefits or schemes are expected to have. First, a money purchase benefit cannot be a defined benefit because the investment yield from the underlying fund whether actual or notional cannot be precisely predicted. Second, a money purchase scheme is fully funded in the sense that liability for the benefits is in all normal circumstances exactly matched by available assets. Such schemes or benefits are to be contrasted with salary-related schemes. They provide a benefit defined by reference to the salary of the member whether average or final. The liability for such benefit is unlikely to be exactly matched by available assets."
"54. ….In my judgment the phrase "calculated by reference to" points to the yardstick or measure by which the benefit is to be ascertained or defined in the context of an occupational pension scheme. In a conventional money purchase scheme that will be the payments, actual or notional, into the fund for the ultimate benefit is defined only by what the fund will purchase on retirement. By contrast in a final salary scheme the benefit is ascertained or defined by reference to the final salary whether or not the liability for it has been matched by the contributions.
55. An average earnings-related scheme is likely to have resort to both earnings and contributions/payments in the ascertainment or definition of the benefit. It is necessary to do so in order to take account of both the level of earnings going to make up the average and the time when they arose. This, in my view, is the explanation for the exclusion of average salary benefits at the conclusion of the definition of "money purchase benefits." It was recognised that in the calculation of such benefits account must be taken of contributions paid in order to weight them according to the period in which they were paid. But as the resulting benefit was ultimately defined by reference to average earnings, not contributions, it was not to be regarded as a money purchase benefit."
"167. Looking no further for the moment, therefore, the scheme would appear to lack the basic characteristics of a money purchase scheme (using that expression for the moment in a colloquial as opposed to a statutory sense) as identified in Part 3 of this judgment. In the first place, the requisite direct relationship between contributions and benefits is broken by the introduction of actuarial factors ….As Mr Ham succinctly put it at the conclusion of his submissions ….in the case of a money purchase scheme you do not need an actuary. Secondly, by including the powers in clauses 8.4 and 8.5 the scheme not only recognises but positively caters for a continuing mismatch between assets and liabilities.
168. However, the overall appearance of the scheme (on its true construction) is not necessarily determinative of the question whether it is a "money purchase scheme" in the statutory sense. I therefore turn to the statutory provisions ….
169. As noted earlier ….an occupational pension scheme is a "money purchase scheme" if "all the benefits that may be provided for are money purchase benefits", i.e. "benefits the rate or amount of which is calculated by reference to [contributions] and which are not average salary benefits": see section 181 (1) of the 1993 Act.
170. I turn first to the question whether either of the two elements in the pension benefit as prescribed by rule 7.2 , that is to say the standard pension benefit and any bonuses declared in exercise of the clause 8.4 power are, on analysis, "calculated by reference to" contributions within the meaning of that definition.
171. In my judgment the inclusion in the first stage of the calculation process of the actuarial factors to which I have referred earlier is fatal to such a contention. The expression "calculated by reference to" means, in my judgment, "calculated only by reference to", in the sense that the benefit in question must be the direct product of the contributions (that being the basic characteristic of a money purchase scheme, as that expression is commonly understood; see Part 3 above). Neither the standard pension nor bonuses fall within that category."
F. The Scheme and its benefits
I. General
II. VIP benefits-April 1983
III. MoneyMatch benefits-April 1992
IV. Summary
G. The 7 issues
General
I. Voluntary contribution issue
"AND THIS COURT DECLINES TO APPROVE the resolution of the Claimant dated 10 May 2006 to form the opinion, for the purposes of Section 73(3)(a) of the Pensions Act 1995, that the benefits derived from
(a) Money Match Plus Credits paid under Rule 2.2 of Schedule Three to the 1998 Deed or any Scheme Rule in force prior thereto
(b) VIP Match contributions paid under Rule 3.2 of Schedule Four to the 1998 Deed or any Scheme rule in force prior thereto
are derived from the payment by Members of the Scheme of voluntary contributions."
"177. Despite the wide definition of 'derived from' in the Oxford Dictionary…and its use in the tax legislation, I must construe it in the light of section 73(3)(a) and regulation 13(2), respectively, as a whole. In both those contexts, the phrase used is 'derived from the payment by any member….' I accept Mr Newman's submission that the member's voluntary contribution may be the cause of the employer's matching payment but that the sub-section requires the 'source' of the benefit in question to be payment by the member. Given the clear reference to the payment by the member, in my judgment, it cannot be construed to include benefits arising from a payment by the employer, even if that payment is parasitic on the member's contribution."
II. Are MoneyMatch benefits MP benefits despite the presence of the GIF?
"(1) On the true construction of the 1998 Deed a Member's benefits derived from his
(a) Member's Interest or
(b) VIP Interest
constitute money purchase benefits as defined in section 181(1) of the Pension Schemes Act 1993."
"136. …assertion that the manner in which the investment returns are calculated under the notional Guaranteed Interest Fund means that the benefits arising from the Member's Interest cannot be calculated "only" by reference to the contributions and therefore satisfy the construction placed upon the expression …in paragraph 171…in the KPMG case.
137. Despite the fact that the final rate of return to be applied to the Member's Interest is arrived at by the addition of a bonus percentage to the initial conservatively declared rate, in my judgment, it is merely a rate of return nevertheless. The mechanism by which the rate is arrived at is just that. The fact that one is required to have regard to returns on other funds over a number of years in order to determine the percentage to be applied is merely a product of the fact that the investment is only notional in the first place. In my judgment, its application does not prevent the benefits from being a direct product of the contributions.
138. Furthermore, the application of the bonus percentage in order to arrive at the investment return for the Guaranteed Interest Fund, envisaged in rule 3.1.1(c)(c) of Schedule 3, can be distinguished from the bonus regime under consideration in the KPMG case. In that case, if an actuarial valuation relating to the assets and liabilities of the entire scheme, revealed a surplus, the trustees had power to reduce contributions or increase benefits by the declaration of bonuses. In my judgment this is entirely different from the arrival at a percentage investment return on a notional fund by reference to the performance of a variety of investments."
III. Are pensions granted by way of internal annuities MP benefits?
"135. …in my judgment it should make no difference whether the Trustee secures such benefits by means of "internal annuitisation" or purchases an annuity in the market, whether in its own name or that of the Member. I accept [the] submission [of counsel for the deferred members] that to make such a distinction would create insupportable anomalies and leave the question of whether a benefit was money purchase in nature unanswered until the benefit was actually secured. Such uncertainty cannot have been intended and I reject [counsel for the pensioner's] submission that that very uncertainty renders all such benefits incapable of falling within the definition of money purchase benefits. If that were the case, all such benefits would have to fall outside the definition even if ultimately an annuity was purchased in the market."
IV. GMP issue: Are the MoneyMatch benefits of pre-6 April 1997 joiners MP benefits, despite the presence of GMP?
"141. Next, it is necessary to consider whether the use of the Member's Interest first to satisfy the GMP where applicable and the potential application of the 1983 Guarantee to both the Member's Interest and VIP Interests, is fatal to the characterisation of benefits derived from them as money purchase benefits.
142. Although this is a complex issue to which I shall have to return, at this stage, it is sufficient to state that in my judgment, although it is not in dispute that both the Guaranteed Minimum Pension and the benefits under the "Old Rules" to which the 1983 Guarantee relates are salary related, the mere reference to Contracting-out Requirements in rule 4.1.2 of Schedule 3 and to the 1983 Guarantee cannot as a matter of principle render the benefits arising from the Member's Interest and/or the VIP Interest salary related or, conversely, exclude them from the definition of money purchase benefits."
V. 1983 Guarantee issue: Are the VIP benefits of those members with the benefit of the 1983 Guarantee MP benefits, despite the presence of that guarantee?
VI. The underpin benefits issue: Are the post-5 April 1997 benefits of Money Match members with GMP "underpin benefits"?
"154. Underpin benefits….are money purchase benefits which are only paid if their value exceeds that of "other" benefits which are salary related."
"(3) On the true construction of the 1998 Deed a Member's benefits derived from his Member's Interest constitute underpin benefits within the meaning of the 1996 Winding Up Regulations where that Member is entitled to a GMP as provided for by Schedule Six to the 1998 Deed but not otherwise."
"163. ….Therefore, if the Member's Interest is of sufficient value, the money purchase benefits will be provided in addition to the GMP. It is not necessary for the purposes of 'underpin benefits' that the money purchase benefits are a complete alternative to the 'other benefits.' In my judgment, the regulation is wide enough to encompass the situation in which they are paid in addition, if there is sufficient money available.
164. Therefore, the effect upon those Members not only with Member's Interests but also with service prior to 6 April 1997, who were therefore entitled to GMPs, is that the entirety of their Member's Interest falls within the definition of an 'underpin benefit' and therefore, as a result of regulation 13, is subject to the section 73 regime….."
VII. Protected rights issue: Do protected rights fall within section 73 as modified?
H. Disposal