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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 >> Prometric Ltd v Cunliffe [2016] EWCA Civ 191 (23 March 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/191.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 191 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER MERCANTILE COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE STEPHEN DAVIES
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
and
SIR STANLEY BURNTON
____________________
PROMETRIC LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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JOHN CUNLIFFE |
Respondent |
____________________
Philip M D Grundy (instructed by Linder Myers Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 17 March 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
SIR STANLEY BURNTON:
Introduction
The facts
"You will continue on your present corporate and national benefit programs unless otherwise notified. We anticipate reviewing benefits from time to time, in coordination with Thomson, as may be appropriate on a country by country basis."
"5.1 It was expressly agreed that the Claimant's contract should provide a defined benefit pension entitlement in accordance with the Thomson Prometric Pension Scheme and that this was further confirmed by custom and practice, and contributions, from 2001 until September 2007.
5.2 For the avoidance of doubt, at the beginning of March 2000 the Claimant spoke with Nigel Brockmann, International HR Director, who told the Claimant that now he was a member of a much larger corporation (The Thomson Corporation), and given his senior position, he, the Claimant, would be entitled to the benefits of The Thomson Corporation and specifically benefits only offered to all directors and senior members of staff. These benefits included the Defined Benefit Pension Scheme which the Claimant joined as particularised under 3.3 above."
These paragraphs are unchanged in the Amended Particulars of Claim.
"You continue to be entitled to membership of the appropriate Prometric bonus plan, Life Assurance, Healthcare and Pension plan according to scheme rules unless otherwise notified. The benefits offered will continue to be reviewed from time to time, in accordance with Thomson policy and we will announce any new options that are introduced throughout the year."
"Under the new Prometric, we are pleased to announce that there is no change to the pension arrangements that you may already have in place with AXA. If you are already a member of the Group Personal Pension Plan, you will remain eligible for membership with no change to the terms and conditions of your membership. In particular, you can still choose to pay contributions of 3%, 4%, or 5% of your salary (or more), and the employer will continue to pay an equal amount of contributions … up to a maximum of 5% of your salary."
The percentage contributions mentioned in this letter differed from those specified in the Thomson Corporation Pension Guide.
"John Cunliffe is now the only employee that has not been formally informed about the transfer or consulted with about a move from the Thomson Defined Benefits pension which I believe he was on. Given the sensitivities, I would recommend a legal review with our UK lawyers before piling in with the standard communications.…
Hewitt will need to advise an appropriate contribution level to the GPP pension, assuming that he is still eligible."
There is no evidence that Mr Cunliffe was consulted or informed formally of the move from the Thomson pension scheme.
The claim
The defence
The judgment below
"31. The Claimant has an arguable case that what is said in paragraph 5.2 of the Particulars of Claim could amount to a contractually binding entitlement; in which Mr Brockmann made a legally enforceable promise that the Claimant was entitled to membership of the Thomson defined benefit scheme.
32. The second question for me is how to analyse the contract in the circumstances in 2007. What would happen if the Defendant was divested by Thomson, since then the Claimant could not continue in the scheme.
33. Clearly, there is no pleaded case that such circumstances were subject to express agreement. For obvious reasons, it is difficult to say there was an objective intention that, in such circumstances, the Claimant would be obliged to provide a comparable benefit. The proposed amendment in paragraph 6 of the Particulars of Claim cannot be right but it could be capable of implication.
34. The court would have to grapple at trial with what can the parties have intended in such circumstances.
35. Mr Sullivan referred to a volume of authority referred to in Lewison on the Interpretation of Contracts which say that the Court cannot implied term which is inconsistent with an express term, and that principle appears to me to be firmly established. However, the Claimant is arguably entitled to say the March 2000 conversation varied clause 4.1 of the statement of particulars of employment.
36. The Court would need to consider the objective construction or implication of paragraph 8.5 of the amended Particulars of Claim that the Claimant would be obliged to be admitted to a comparable defined benefit scheme or defined contribution scheme with comparable benefits.
37. It is not possible for the Court to conclude to the requisite standard that the Claimant's case had no prospect of success.
38. The Court would need to hear all relevant evidence to determine what realistically could have been expected at the time and I cannot conclude the issue is a short point of construction.
39. The Court cannot say that the claim is so bad it should strike it out."
Discussion
"For obvious reasons, it is difficult to say there was an objective intention that, in such circumstances (i.e., Mr Cunliffe ceasing to be a member of the Thomson pension scheme because his employer was no longer a Thomson company), the Claimant would be obliged to provide a comparable benefit. …"
I agree. But if there was no such objective intention when the conversation took place, to imply a term requiring Prometric to provide a comparable benefit would be to impose a contractual term and to make an agreement that the parties did not themselves make. The search for the implication of a term into a contract does not entitle the Court to make an agreement for the parties that they did not themselves make. But in reality this is what the Judge envisaged.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Floyd
Lord Justice Jackson