OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
[2007] CSOH 50
|
A416/04
|
OPINION OF LORD GLENNIE
in the cause
PS INDEPENDENT
TRUSTEES LIMITED and OTHERS
Pursuers;
against
DAVID KERSHAW and
OTHERS
Defenders:
________________
|
Pursuers: Clark; Biggart Baillie,
First & Second Defenders: Cunningham;
CMS Cameron McKenna
Third Defenders: Munro; Brodies, W.S.
Fourth Defender: John MacLennan, Party
Fifth Defender: Thomson; Morton Fraser
9 March 2007
Introduction
[1] The
pursuers are the current trustees of the Blyth & Blyth Pension Scheme ("the
Scheme"). The Scheme was constituted by Trust Deed
dated 30 June 1965, as supplemented or amended by various Trust Deeds and Deeds
of Covenant, certain Resolutions of Blyth & Blyth Holding Company Limited
(now called Blyth & Blyth Limited and referred to in this Opinion as "the
Company") and the Definitive Trust Deed ("the Deed") and Rules ("the Rules")
dated on various dates in May 2000. As a
result of the inability of the Scheme to meet its commitments to its members,
the then trustees took the decision at a meeting of 1 November 2002 to wind up the Scheme.
On 6 December 2002
the first pursuer was appointed a trustee of the Scheme. On 7 January 2003, the Company went into receivership. Since then the first
pursuer has been an independent trustee in terms of section 23 of the Pensions
Act 1995 ("the 1995 Act"). In this
action, the pursuers sue to recover losses to the Scheme caused, so they
contend, by certain acts and omissions of the defenders.
[2] The first defender was the Scheme Actuary appointed in terms
of section 47(7) of the 1995 Act. He is
sued for breach of a duty of care owed to the pursuers both at common law and
by virtue of an implied term of the contract in terms of which he was
appointed. He was employed by the second
defenders. The pursuers seek to make
them vicariously liable for the first defender's breach of duty. I shall refer to the first defender as "the
actuary" and to the first and second defenders collectively as "the actuaries".
[3] The third, fourth and fifth defenders
were, at various times, trustees of the Scheme.
They were also directors (and, in the case of the third defender, chairman)
of the Company. They are each sued for
breach of trust. The periods during
which they held office as trustees of the Scheme are important to the arguments
addressed to me as are, to a lesser extent, the periods in which they served as
directors. The details are as
follows. The third defender was chairman
of the Company until his resignation in May 2002, and chairman of the trustees
until his resignation and removal as trustee on 26 April 2002. The fourth defender was a director of the Company until
his resignation in May 2002, and was a trustee until his resignation in June
2003. The fifth defender was a director of the Company throughout the relevant
period, and was a trustee from 26 April 2002
until his resignation in January 2003.
The action was originally laid also against the sixth defender, a
director of the Company, though not a trustee.
Though his name still appears in the instance, it is right to note that
he was assoilzied from the conclusions of the summons by decree dated 23 March 2005. I shall refer to
the third, fourth and fifth defenders, when it is appropriate to refer to them
collectively, as "the trustees". In some
instances, however, it is necessary to differentiate between them.
[4] The
case came before the court on the Procedure Roll at which certain pleas-in-law
for the trustees were discussed. The
trustees sought dismissal of the action in so far as directed against them;
alternatively deletion of certain of the pursuers' averments. The first and second defenders, although
represented at the hearing, did not seek to advance any argument in support of
their own preliminary pleas.
[5] The case was first appointed to the
Procedure Roll by interlocutor of August 2005.
The trustees lodged Notes of Argument in good time. Soon afterwards the hearing was fixed for 31 October 2006. On 24 October,
only one week before the date fixed for the hearing, the pursuers moved a
substantial Minute of Amendment.
However, rather than move the court to allow the Minute of Amendment to
be received, with a much abbreviated time for Answers and Adjustment
thereafter, Mr. Clark, for the pursuers, invited me to allow the Record to
be opened up and amended in terms of the Minute of Amendment. On that basis, he submitted, there would be
no need to discharge the diet. There was
no unfairness to the defenders, since the Procedure Roll discussion would, in
any case, be about the pursuers' case, not that of the defenders. The defenders could deal later with his
amendments by a separate amendment procedure and they could be protected in
expenses. I adopted this course, despite
opposition from all of the defenders, who wanted first to answer the Minute of
Amendment even at the cost of a discharge.
Mr. Clark's suggested course of action seemed to me to be entirely
sensible. It avoided the need to
discharge the diet. Although the
defenders submitted that were I to follow that course I would be "innovating",
as though that were reason in itself not to do it, subsequent enquiries have
shown that such a course is by no means uncommon. There is no reason why amendment by a pursuer
should automatically lead to a discharge.
The discussion at Procedure Roll proceeded upon the basis of the
pursuers' amended case on Record, and the third, fourth and fifth defenders
helpfully produced revised Notes of Argument before the hearing. At the same time, I pronounced an
interlocutor allowing the defenders to answer such part (if any) of the
pursuers' amended case as survived debate by their own amendment procedure later,
the expenses of which would be treated as though expenses in an amendment
procedure initiated by the pursuer's Minute of Amendment.
The
pursuers' case on Record against the trustees
[6] In Article 3 of Condescendence, the pursuers refer to Clause 18
of the Deed, in terms of which no trustee of the Scheme is personally
responsible or liable as a trustee for anything whatever except breach of trust
knowingly and intentionally committed by him. However, they aver that, this
notwithstanding, the trustees are liable for loss or damage caused by their
gross negligence, which they characterise as a reckless disregard by the
trustees of the consequences of their acts or omissions
[7] The pursuers make four separate claims against the
trustees. Using the terminology deployed
in argument, these are: the contributions claim; the investments claim; the
early retirements claim; and the expenses claim. These claims are set out in detail in
Articles 5 to 24. The averments of loss
are contained in Article 25. The pursuers
claim that the Scheme has suffered a loss of £6,005,168 as a result of the
trustees' breaches of trust as well as the actuary's breaches of contract
and/or duty. The conclusions to the
summons are directed against the trustees and the actuaries jointly and
severally. Each head of claim was the
subject of attack by the trustees in their submissions, as also were the
averments of loss and the joint and several conclusions. Because of the detailed scrutiny given to the
pursuers' case, it is necessary to set out at some length their averments on
Record relating to each claim.
The contributions claim
[8] In Articles 5-8 and 21, the pursuers
claim against the trustees for contributions which, it is alleged, should have
been paid by the Company to the Scheme between April 2001 and November 2002,
but which were not paid.
[9] The relevant statutory background is
laid out in Article 5. In terms of s.
56(1) of the 1995 Act, every occupational pension Scheme to which the section
applies - and this is such a Scheme - is subject to a requirement (referred to
as "the minimum funding requirement" or "MFR") that the value of the assets of
the Scheme is not less than the amount of its liabilities. S.57(1) requires the trustees: (a) to obtain,
within a prescribed period, an actuarial valuation, and afterwards obtain such
a valuation before the end of prescribed intervals; and (b) on prescribed
occasions or within prescribed periods, to obtain a certificate prepared by the
actuary of the Scheme (i) stating whether or not in his opinion the
contributions payable towards the Scheme are adequate for the purpose of
securing that the minimum funding requirement will continue to be met
throughout the prescribed period or, if it appears to him that it is not met,
will be met by the end of that period, and (ii) indicating any relevant changes
that have occurred since the last actuarial valuation was prepared. By s.59(3), if, at the end of the prescribed
period, it appears to the trustees that the minimum funding requirement is not
met, they must, within such further period as may be prescribed, prepare a
report giving the prescribed information about the failure to meet that
requirement. Where an actuarial
valuation shows that, on the effective date of valuation, the value of the
Scheme assets is less than 90% of the amount of the Scheme liabilities, the
employer is required, in terms of s.60(1) and (2), to secure an increase in the
value of the Scheme assets which, taken along with any contributions paid, is
not less than the shortfall. If the
employer fails to secure the required increase in value before the end of the
relevant period, then the trustees are required by s.60(4), except in
prescribed circumstances, within a certain period, to give written notice of
that fact to Occupational Pensions Regulatory Authority ("OPRA") and to the
members of the Scheme. The pursuers also
refer to Clause 28(1)(a) of the Deed, which requires the trustees, at intervals
not exceeding three years, to take Actuarial Advice (i) to determine the
actuarial position of the Scheme and the rate of contribution which should be
made to the Fund, and (ii), with effect from no later than the third
anniversary of the effective date of the last actuarial valuation prepared
prior to 6 April 1997, to ensure that the Minimum Funding Requirement is met.
[10] In Article 6, the pursuers aver that on 12 November 1999 the actuary advised the trustees that the Scheme might
have an MFR deficit at the forthcoming valuation in April 2000. At a trustees' meeting on 16 August 2000, the results of the April 2000 actuarial valuation were
presented, showing a deficit of £2.2m in the MFR and a fourfold increase in the
required contribution by the Company to 27% of pensionable earnings. This was
primarily due to reduced inflation, lower investment returns and improved
mortality. Accordingly, so the pursuers
aver, from at latest about August 2000, the actuary and the third and fourth
defenders all knew that a substantial increase in pension contributions by the
Company was required in order to avoid a substantial MFR deficit. At a trustees' meeting on 13 February 2002, the MFR deficit was noted to be £3.5m. On 19 March 2002 the Government relaxed requirements in respect of the MFR
contribution payment period. On about 1
October 2002, the actuary outlined to the trustees an increase in the MFR
deficit from £3.5m to £6m, despite having used in the calculation the normal
retirement age of 75 (see para.[12] below).
[11] The pursuers aver, in Article 7, that the trustees are required
by s.58 of the 1995 Act to secure that there is prepared, maintained and from
time to time revised a schedule of contributions showing (a) the rates of
contributions payable towards the Scheme by or on behalf of the employer and
the active members of the Scheme, and (b) the dates on or before which such
contributions are to be paid. In terms
of s.58(6), the actuary may not certify the rates of contributions shown in the
schedule of contributions unless he is of the opinion that the rates are adequate
for the purpose of securing that the requirement will be met throughout the
prescribed period or by the end of that period, depending on the precise
circumstances. Except in prescribed
circumstances, where any amounts payable by or on behalf of the employer or the
active members of the Scheme in accordance with the schedule of contributions have not been paid on or before the due date, s.59
requires the trustees to give notice of that fact, within the prescribed
period, to OPRA and to the members of the Scheme; and any such amounts as
remain unpaid after that date are to be treated as a debt due to the trustees.
[12] The main factual averments directed
towards establishing the liability of the trustees are contained in Article
8. The pursuers aver that in January
2001 the actuary submitted a supplementary valuation report to the Company,
which stated that the required contribution from the Company had increased to
31% of pensionable earnings. From May
2001, because of the funding deficit, the trustees reduced the transfer values
of members' funds. The pursuers aver
that the Company did not agree to make, and did not actually make, the required
contribution of 27% of pensionable earnings, and that the actuary and the third
and fourth defenders each knew that.
Nor, as these same defenders also knew, did the Company either agree to
make or actually make the increased required contribution of 31% of pensionable
earnings. The Company's statutory accounts to 31st March 2001, and in particular the figures in those accounts for
turnover, net assets and net loss after taxation, made it clear that the
Company was unable to afford ongoing contributions of that level. The Company also had a significant overdraft. Trading losses continued for the following
year. The Company was accordingly, so
the pursuers aver, in financial difficulties.
The Company's management accounts will also have shown that the Company
was unable to afford ongoing contributions of that level. The actuary's
actuarial valuation report as at April 2000 was not signed off until July
2001. The schedule of contributions
provided for payment of 13% of pensionable earnings monthly, plus a
contribution of £500,000 per annum from the Company payable in arrears from
April 2002. The pursuers aver that this
lump sum contribution due from the Company was not paid; nor, as the third and
fourth defenders were aware, and as the actuary was or ought to have been aware
given the financial situation of the Company by July 2001, was there any
reasonable likelihood that it would be paid.
Nor did the trustees seek to enforce payment. The notes of a meeting on 11 February 2002 between the actuary and the third and fifth defenders
record that the Company was not in a position to pay the £500,000 contribution
due in April 2002. Accordingly, so the
pursuers aver, the actuary and the third and fourth defenders were each aware
that the company had not met contributions at the rates of 27% or 31% of
pensionable earnings, had re-scheduled the contributions to include a lump sum
contribution of £500,000, and had not met the lump sum contribution. The actuary prepared a revised schedule of
contributions, which showed a required contribution from the Company of £1.98m
due in January 2003. This figure was
also plainly in excess of any amount which was realistically affordable by the
Company. The pursuers aver that the
actuary and the third and fourth defenders knew or ought to have known this,
having regard to the Company's financial position as stated in its accounts and
its re-scheduling of, and failure to meet, previous contributions. They say that the third and fourth defenders
had formed the view that were they to have enforced payment by the
Company of the contributions in the amounts set out in the schedules of contributions,
this would have precipitated the collapse of the Company due to
insolvency. Accordingly, they were aware
that continuing payments in the amounts referred to above were unaffordable. On 20 February 2002, the actuary advised the trustees that the MFR deficit
could be reduced by approximately £1.3m if the retirement age of members of the
Scheme was changed from 65 to 70. On 19 March 2002 the Government relaxed requirements in respect of the MFR
contribution payment period. A revised
Schedule of contributions was prepared by the actuary, in the light of this
relaxation, showing a required lump sum contribution by the Company of £1.42m
due in March 2003. This reduced figure was still plainly unaffordable by the
Company; and, it is averred, the actuary and the third and fourth defenders
knew or ought to have known this, having regard to the Company's financial
position as stated in its accounts and the re-scheduling of, and its failure to
meet, previous contributions. In April
2002, the actuary advised the Company's auditors and bankers that, if the
normal retirement age were increased to 75, the MFR requirement would be
reduced and the contributions required by the Company could be reduced to
£230,000 per annum. Although the
increase in normal retirement age only applied to one month's benefit accrual
(with the remaining pension entitlement unaltered), the actuary assumed in his
calculations that the increase applied to each member's total benefit
accrual. This artificial use of a normal
retirement age of 75 was a device whose sole purpose was to reduce the MFR
deficit. It was not done in the
interests of the Scheme or its members, but in the interests of the
Company. The reduction in contributions
was calculated when the actuary knew full well that the financial impact of the
forthcoming early retirements upon the Scheme and upon the MFR deficit would
not warrant such a reduction. The
actuary's calculation did not take into account that financial impact. The trustees, including the third and fourth
defenders, accepted this reduction in contributions by the Company without
questioning it. In May 2002, the Company
secured further funding from its bankers, based on a new business plan which
used the reduced contribution figure of £230,000. On 23 May 2002, a further revised schedule of contributions prepared by
the actuary showed a required lump sum contribution by the Company of £1.514m
due in March 2003. Again, this figure
was - and the pursuers aver that the actuary and the fourth and fifth defenders
were all aware of this - unaffordable by the Company having regard to its
financial position as stated in its accounts and its re-scheduling of, and
failure to meet, previous contributions.
The Company made no contributions to the fund after May 2002. Having regard to its financial position, so
the pursuers aver, the Company would have been in a position to make payment of
some contributions in the period from April 2001 to November 2002. The pursuers reasonably estimate that over
the said period the Company could have made payments of a total of £798,000,
even if the enforcement of such payments would have required the Company to
make reductions in costs, including staffing costs, and even if such
enforcement would in due course have rendered the Company insolvent. The figure of £798,000 is explained in
para.[15] below. The pursuers say that
the trustees should have enforced contributions from the company.
[13] The averments of fault which inform the
contributions claim are picked up in Article 21. The pursuers aver that in terms of Clause
28(2) of the Deed, and in accordance with ss.56-60 of the 1995 Act, it was
trustees' duty to set and collect an appropriate level of contributions from
the Company to the Fund. It was their
duty (in the case of the fifth defender, from the time of his appointment on 26 April 2002) to enforce the
additional annual lump sum payments required from the Company after August
2000. It was their duty to consider
whether the contributions were affordable in view of the Company's cash
flow. They were or ought to have been
aware at all material times that there was no reasonable prospect that the
Company could afford to pay the contribution levels which were being set. In these circumstances, say the pursuers, it
was the trustees' duty to consider, by at latest April 2001, either winding up
the Scheme or, at the least, the cessation of benefit accrual thereunder. It was their duty to use their powers under
Clauses 38(1)(g) and 38(2)(g) of the Deed to require that the Scheme be wound
up, or at least to require that benefit accrual should cease. They allowed the Company to postpone its
contributions on a number of occasions.
They also allowed the minimum contributions payable by the Company to be
artificially reduced by allowing the minimum retirement age to be nominally
increased to 75. By failing, and
continuing to fail, in these respects, the trustees acted knowingly and
wilfully in breach of trust, or in any event with gross negligence consisting
of a reckless disregard for the consequences of their acts or omissions with
regard to contributions.
[14] It is convenient, at this point, to look at that part of the
loss which is said to be attributable to the contributions claim. In Article 25 the pursuers aver that, in the period from April 2001 to November 2002, the loss
suffered by the Scheme attributable to the contribution claim is to be measured
by the amount of contributions which ought to have been paid by the Company
during that period. During that period,
it is averred, the Scheme should have received £798,000 in additional
contributions from the Company. This
figure is explained as follows. To the
extent that the assets of the Scheme were less than 90% of its liabilities (see
para.[9] above), the shortfall was required to be paid off within three years
(in the circumstances condescended upon, by 1 April 2003): see the Occupational
Pension Schemes (Minimum Funding Requirement and Actuarial Valuations)
Regulations 1996, SI 1996/1536. The trustees knew or ought to have known, from
at latest 1 April 2001,
of the amount of the deficit and of the contributions required to pay it
off. It is averred that the amount by
which the assets fell below 90% of the MFR was £844,500, which equates to a
required monthly contribution (having regard to interest rates on the deficit)
of £42,000. In the period from April
2001 to November 2002, the total required contribution would have been £798,000
(being 19 months at £42,000).
The investments claim
[15] In
Articles 9,10 and 22, the pursuers claim against the trustees for their failure
to switch Scheme investments out of equities and into fixed interest
investments at a time when there was a severe downturn in the stock
market. They say that, in consequence of
this failure, the Scheme suffered far greater losses than it would otherwise
have done.
[16] In Article 9, the pursuers aver that in
terms of s.35 of the 1995 Act, the trustees were required to secure that there
was prepared, maintained and, from time to time, revised a written statement of
the principles governing decisions about investments (known as the Statement of
Investment Principles or "SIP") for the purposes of the Scheme. In terms of s.36(1) and (2), the trustees
required to exercise their powers of investment having regard (a) to the need
for diversification of investments, in so far as appropriate to the
circumstances of the Scheme; and (b) to the suitability to the Scheme of
investments of the description of investment proposed and of the investments
proposed as an investment of that description.
In terms of s.36(3), before investing in any manner (other than in a
manner mentioned in Part I of Sch.1 to the Trustee Investments Act 1961), the
trustees required to obtain and consider proper advice on the question whether
the investment was satisfactory, having regard to the matters mentioned above
and the principles contained in the statement under s.35. Trustees retaining any investment were
required, by s.36(4), to determine at what intervals the circumstances and, in
particular, the nature of the investment made it desirable to obtain and
consider such proper advice. S.36(5)
required the trustees to exercise their powers of investment with a view to
giving effect to the principles contained in the SIP, so far as reasonably
practicable.
[17] In Article 10, the pursuers aver that, as
at 12
November 1999, 83.5% of the
Scheme's investments were in equities.
At the beginning of 2000 the FTSE index stood at 6,930 points. The SIP prepared by the trustees in January
2000 and signed on 24 February 2000
stated the aims of having sufficient assets to exceed MFR liabilities by an
adequate margin and of ensuring that the actual distribution of investments was
appropriate in relation to the nature of the Scheme's liabilities. The April 2000 actuarial valuation report,
which revealed a funding deficit, also indicated that the Scheme's assets were
significantly mismatched in relation to the Scheme's liabilities, in that too
high a proportion of the Scheme's investments was in equities. The subsequent investment reports recommended
a reduction in investment risk by switching a proportion of the investments to
fixed interest securities. From about
August 2000, when the April 2000 report was made available to them, the trustees,
including the third, fourth and fifth defenders throughout their respective
terms of office as trustees, knew or ought to have known that the percentage of
the Fund held in equities represented a high investment risk. On 4 October 2000, Mr Walbaum, the trustees' Investment Consultant, advised
the trustees of the danger of a mismatching in the Scheme's investments in
relation to its liabilities. By the
beginning of 2001 the FTSE index had fallen to 6,222 points. In September 2001 the Investment Strategy
Report from Buck Investment Consultants Limited recommended a greater degree of
matching of investments in relation to liabilities. By 31 January 2002, the FTSE index had fallen to 5,165 points. The minutes of the trustees' meeting on 13 February 2002 disclose that 80% of the Scheme's investments were in
equities. At that meeting the investment
consultants advised that serious consideration be given to a greater degree of
matching of investments in relation to liabilities. The trustees agreed to a gradual reduction in
equity exposure, but decided to await a return of the FTSE index to 5,600
points. That would have required a very
substantial improvement in the stock market.
In June 2002, Mr Walbaum described the strategy of awaiting such a
return as having been "daft". On 31 March 2002 the Supplementary Investment Report by Buck Investments
Consultants Limited recommended a reduction in the percentage holding of
equities to 34%. On 22 April 2002, the trustees met and agreed in principle to reduce the
percentage holding of the Scheme's investments in equities to 34%, but took no
action to do so. By 1 August 2002, the FTSE index had fallen to 4,246 points. By the time of the trustees' meeting on 1 August 2002, the reduction in equities agreed in April 2002 had not
been implemented. The trustees decided
once again to continue with the 80% equity weighting despite the very high risk
which this implied. By October 2002, the
FTSE index had fallen to 3,722 points.
Accordingly, in the period from August 2000, the trustees (including,
from the date of his appointment, the fifth defender) failed to accept and act
upon the advice and recommendations described above to reduce the proportion of
the Scheme's fund which was invested in equities. That failure resulted in a substantial
decrease in the value of the investments and a failure to match the Scheme's
assets and liabilities, which match would have resulted from a switch to
government stock and corporate bonds.
[18] The pursuers' averments of fault against
the trustees in respect of the investments claim are set out in Article
22. They say that in terms of Clause 7
of the Deed, and ss.35 and 36 of the 1995 Act, the trustees were responsible,
during their respective periods of trusteeship, for holding and investing the
Scheme's funds. The trustees failed,
until February 2002, to accept the advice of their professional advisers on the
dangers of the mismatching of investments in relation to liabilities. Having accepted the said advice, they failed,
until late 2002, to implement the agreed
changes. It was the duty of the
trustees, including the third and fourth defenders, to consider the investment
mismatch by August 2000, when draft valuation results already showed a
significant deficit. In the circumstances
condescended upon, it was their duty to reduce the percentage held in equities
by instituting a programme to begin switching £6m of equities to fixed interest
investments by, at the latest, April 2001.
It was their duty not to gamble on the possibility of the funding
deficit being resolved by a stock market recovery. In each and all of these duties, it is
alleged, they failed. By so failing, the
third and fourth defenders and, from the time of his appointment, the fifth
defender, acted with gross negligence consisting of a reckless disregard for
the consequences of their acts and omissions with regard to investment.
[19] Picking up the averments of loss attributable to the
investments claim, the pursuers say, in Article 25, that the loss suffered by the Scheme is the loss caused by
failing to institute a programme of switching investments from equities into
fixed interest securities from April 2001.
Had such a programme been instituted, a loss of £2,540,000 would have
been avoided. This is explained in the
following way. Having regard to the
advice tendered to them and to what they knew or ought to have known of the
risk of maintaining investments in equities, the trustees should have switched
from equity investments into fixed interest securities in three tranches on 1
April, 1 July and 1 October 2001. They should have switched a total of £6m in
equity investments on those dates in three tranches of £2m each, with £1m being
put on each occasion into government stock and £1m into corporate bonds. The switch did not occur until about October
2002. In the period between 1 April 2001 and October 2002, each £2m held in equities decreased in
value by £620,000 to £1.38m. In that
period, £1m invested in government stock and £1m invested in corporate bonds
would have grown to £2.28m in total. The
loss from the failure to switch the first tranche of £2m on 1 April 2001 is therefore £900,000.
In the period between 1 July 2001
and October 2002, each £2m held in equities decreased in value by £630,000 to £1.37m. In that period, £1m invested in government
stock and £1m invested in corporate bonds would have grown to £2.35m in
total. The loss from the failure to
switch the second tranche of £2m on 1 July 2001 is therefore £980,000.
In the period between 1 October 2001
and October 2002, each £2m held in equities decreased in value by £620,000 to
£1.58m. In that period, £1m invested in
government stock and £1m invested in corporate bonds would have grown to £2.25m
in total. The loss from failure to
switch the third tranche of £2m on 1 October 2001 is therefore £670,000. The total of these figures is
£2,540,000.
The early retirements claim
[20] In Articles
11, 12 and 23, the pursuers claim in respect of the costs to the Scheme flowing
from the early retirements of the third, fourth and sixth defenders from being
directors of the Company in April and May 2002.
[21] In Article 11, the pursuers aver that Rule
7(1)(a) of the Rules provides that an employed member may, with the consent of
the Company and the trustees, elect to retire on grounds of incapacity at any
time before his normal retirement date, or on grounds other than incapacity at
or after his 50th birthday.
In either event, the member would be entitled to receive an immediate
pension, reduced where retirement is not on grounds of incapacity by such
amount as the trustees on actuarial advice shall determine, having regard to
the period between the date of the member's retirement and his normal
retirement date.
[22] They go on to aver, in Article 12, that,
in terms of the 1995 Act, where a pension Scheme has insufficient funding to
meet its liabilities, priority is given to persons in receipt of pensions over
both deferred and active members. The
consequence of this is that in such circumstances a person who retires will
obtain priority with regard to members who have not yet retired and begun to
receive their pensions. On 7 March 2002, the actuary intimated to the trustees, including the
third and fourth defenders, the early retirement benefits which would be
payable to the third defender on retirement.
At a meeting of the trustees on 31 March 2002, the forthcoming early retirement of the third and fourth
defenders on 3 May 2002 was
noted. The pursuers aver that no record
appears to exist of any discussion or consideration by the Trustees of the
proposal for the said early retirements or of their consent thereto; that no
record appears to exist of any discussion or consideration by the trustees of
the impact upon the MFR deficit of funding the said early retirements; and that
no record appears to exist of any discussion or consideration by the trustees
of the impact which funding the said early retirements would have upon the
funding of the pensions of other deferred and active members. On or about 1 April 2002 the sixth defender retired early with his full benefit
entitlement under the Scheme Rules.
Between about March and 3rd May 2002, the trustees must have decided to permit all of the said
early retirements. On about 25 March
2002 the actuary stated to the fifth defender in a telephone conversation that
there would be a significant reduction in the MFR liability if the third and
fourth defenders delayed their retirement until after 1 May 2002. By the end of
April 2002, the Scheme was in very substantial deficit and the Company was in
financial difficulties having made a loss in the year to 31 March 2001 and
further trading losses in the following year, having failed to meet its
obligations to make contributions and having no reasonable prospect of making
the continuing contributions to the Scheme in the amounts set forth in the
schedules of contributions - this picks up the averments in Article 8 (see
para.[12] above). On 3 May 2002, the
third and fourth defenders took early retirement with their full benefit
entitlement under the Scheme Rules, notwithstanding the Company's financial
difficulties (and its failure to meet its obligations to make contributions and
its inability to make continuing contributions to the Scheme) and those of the
Scheme, as well as the fact that transfer values for other members had been
reduced in May 2001 (and would be likely to have been reduced further to little
or nothing by May 2002). As directors of
the Company, the third, fourth and sixth defenders had been among the most
highly paid of the Company's employees.
Their pension entitlements were therefore substantially in excess of the
average entitlement of members of the Scheme.
The actuary's calculation of the Company's required contributions of
£230,000 per annum, referred to in para.[12] above, took no account of the
effect on the fund of the third and fourth defenders' early retirements.
[23] In Article 23 the pursuers set out their
averments of fault in respect of this claim.
They say that it was the duty of the trustees to administer the fund for
the benefit of all members with an interest therein. It was their duty not to give undue favour to
certain members, or classes of members, over others. In particular it was the duty of the trustees
(including, from the time of his appointment, the fifth defender) not to give
undue favour to the third and fourth defenders, and their fellow director, the
sixth defender over other members. The
third and fourth defenders and (from and after his appointment) the fifth defender
were aware during the early part of 2002 that the Company and the Scheme were
both in financial difficulty. They were
aware that restrictions had been imposed on transfer value payments from the
fund. They were aware that the effect of
third, fourth and sixth defenders' early retirements would be to confer upon
them priority over deferred and active members.
They were or ought to have been aware of the damaging effect which the
said early retirements would have on the capacity of the Scheme fund to meet
its liabilities. They were or ought to
have been aware that that effect would be rendered more damaging by the fact
that the said early retirements were taken on full benefit entitlement under
the Scheme Rules. The third and fourth
defenders had a clear and substantial conflict of interest. In terms of Rule 7(1)(a) of the Rules, the
trustees were empowered to reduce the pension of a member who wished to retire
early by such amount as the trustees on actuarial advice might determine. It was the duty of the trustees (including
from the time of his appointment, the fifth defender) to compare the position
of persons retiring early with that of persons receiving transfer value
payments. It was their duty to ask the
actuary to calculate similarly reduced early retirement benefits or,
alternatively, to calculate the additional contributions necessary to ensure
that directors retiring early were not placed in an advantageous position with
regard to members taking transfer values and other members of the Scheme. In allowing the third and fourth defenders
and the sixth defender to take early retirement on their full benefit
entitlement under the Scheme Rules, the trustees (including, from the time of
his appointment, the fifth defender) acted knowingly and intentionally in
breach of trust. It was their duty not
to do so. If, which is denied, the
third, fourth and fifth defenders did not act knowingly and intentionally in
breach of trust, they acted with gross negligence consisting of a reckless
disregard for the consequences of their acts and omissions with regard to the
said early retirements.
[24] In Article 25 the pursuers say that the
loss suffered by the Scheme is represented by the market cost of purchasing the
early retirement pensions in May 2002 and the loss of income which would
otherwise have been generated by investing the sum in government securities and
corporate bonds. Assuming normal health
for each of the third, fourth and sixth defenders, life expectancy in
accordance with standard actuarial tables, interest at 5% per annum, and life
office profit at 2% of the capital value of the annuities, the open market cost
to the Scheme of the early retirement pension in May 2002 for the third
defender was £1,006,000, for the fourth defender was £678,000, and for the
sixth defender was £498,000. The total
loss as at May 2002 was therefore £2,182,000.
Had the said sum been invested, as it would otherwise have been, in government
securities and corporate bonds, it would have grown to £2,444,000 by October
2002.
The expenses claim
[25] In Articles 13, 14 and 24, the pursuers
deal with the claim against the trustees relating to the repayment of
expenses. Their case is as follows.
[26] Article 13
sets out the terms of Clause 29(2) of the Deed.
This provides that on or after 9 May 1994 the expenses of administration of the Scheme shall be met
by the fund unless inter alia the
Trustees feel that they cannot be met without prejudicing the benefits
provided.
[27] In Article
14, the pursuers aver that in May 2002, the trustees, including the fourth and
fifth defenders (though not the third defender), resolved to repay
administrative expenses to the Company from the fund. The repayment was effected by reducing sums
due by the Company to the Scheme. In the
period between May and November 2002, £223,168 was repaid in this manner. A significant portion of the sum saved by the
Company in this way was used to pay professional fees of the second defenders
as employers of the actuary. Throughout
this period the Scheme was in very substantial deficit. The actuary's calculation of the Company's
required contributions of £230,000 per annum, referred to in para.[12] above,
took no account of the effect on the fund of such repayments.
[28] The
averments of breach are in Article 24.
The pursuers aver that, in terms of Clause 29(2)(a) of the Deed, it was
the duty of the trustees, including the fourth and fifth defenders (but not the
third), when deciding whether to repay administrative expenses to the Company,
to consider whether they could be met without prejudicing the benefits to be
provided under the Scheme. In May 2002,
the fourth and fifth defenders were aware that the fund was in substantial
deficit. The pursuers aver that it was
or ought to have been obvious to them that any reduction of the sum due from
the Company by setting off expenses would prejudice the benefits to be provided
by the Scheme. It was accordingly their duty not to repay any expenses to the
Company. The pursuers say that, in
paying Scheme expenses to the Company from May 2002, the fourth and fifth
defenders acted with gross negligence consisting of a reckless disregard for
the consequences of their acts and omissions.
[29] So far as concerns the averments of loss
in Article 25, the pursuers say simply that the loss suffered by the Scheme is
the amount of £223168 refunded to the Company.
The joint and several conclusion
[30] In view of
the attack on the conclusions to the summons, it is necessary to set them out
here in full. They are in the following
terms:
1.(a) For payment by the first, second, third,
fourth and fifth defenders jointly and severally or severally, to the pursuers
of the sum of THREE MILLION AND FORTY FOUR THOUSAND POUNDS (£3,044,000)
STERLING, together with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent a year
from 1 April 2001, or such other date or dates as to the court shall seem
appropriate, until payment.
(b) For
payment by the first, second, fourth and fifth defenders, jointly and
severally, or severally, to the pursuers of the
sum of FIVE HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN THOUSAND ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY EIGHT POUNDS
(£517,168) STERLING, together with interest thereon at the rate of eight per
cent a year from 1 April 2001, or such other date or dates as to the court
shall seem appropriate, until payment.
(c) For
production and reduction of the resolution of the former Trustees of the Blyth
& Blyth Pension Scheme made in March, April or May 2002 to allow early
retirement on full pension benefits to the third, fourth and sixth defenders.
(d) For
suspension of the resolution of the former Trustees of the Blyth & Blyth
Pension Scheme made in March, April or May 2002 to allow early retirement on
full pension benefits by the third fourth and sixth defenders; and for
suspension ad interim.
(e) For
payment by the third defender to the pursuers of the sum of ONE HUNDRED AND
SIXTY FIVE THOUSAND NINE HUNDRED AND SEVEN POUNDS AND EIGHTY EIGHT PENCE
(£165,907.88) STERLING, together with interest thereon at the rate of eight per
cent a year from 3 May 2002, or such other date or dates as to the court shall
seem appropriate, until payment.
(f) For
payment by the fourth defender to the pursuers of the sum of ONE HUNDRED AND
FORTY FIVE THOUSAND, FOUR HUNDRED AND SEVEN POUNDS AND THIRTY TWO PENCE (£145,407.32)
STERLING, together with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent a year
from 3 May 2002, or such other date or dates as to the court shall seem
appropriate, until payment.
(g) For
payment by the sixth defender to the pursuers of the sum of ONE HUNDRED AND
FOURTEEN THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED AND THIRTY FOUR POUNDS AND FIFTY NINE PENCE
(£114,434.59) STERLING, together with interest thereon at the rate of eight per
cent a year from 29 March 2002, or such other date or dates as to the court shall
seem appropriate, until payment.
2. Alternatively,
(a) For payment by the first,
second, third, fourth and fifth defenders jointly and severally to the pursuers
of the sum of FIVE MILLION FOUR HUNDRED AND EIGHTY EIGHT THOUSAND POUNDS
(£5,488,000) STERLING together with interest thereon at the rate of eight per
cent a year from 1 April 2001, or such other date or dates as to the court
shall seem appropriate, until payment;
(b) For payment by the first,
second, fourth and fifth defenders, jointly and severally, or severally, to the
pursuers of the sum of FIVE HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN THOUSAND ONE HUNDRED AND
SIXTY EIGHT POUNDS (£517,168) STERLING, together with interest thereon at the
rate of eight per cent a year from 1 April 2001, or such other date or dates as
to the court shall seem appropriate, until payment.
The basis
for concluding in these terms is explained in Article 25 in the following
passage (which is to be found immediately after the quantification of loss
resulting from each of the four heads of claim). The third defender ceased to be trustee on
about 26 April 2002. He is accordingly
liable for the loss caused in relation to contributions which should have been
made and enforced to that date (being 12/19 of £798,000, that is £504,000), the
investment losses of £2,540,000 and the early retirement losses of £2,444,000.
The fourth defender was a trustee throughout the material period and the fifth
defender was in position to advise switching from April 2002. The first,
second, third, fourth and fifth defenders, as joint wrongdoers, are jointly and
severally liable for the pursuers' said losses. Esto they are not joint wrongdoers, the first and second defenders'
fault and negligence et separatim the
third, fourth and fifth defenders' breaches of trust each materially
contributed to each of the heads of loss hereinbefore condescended upon and
they are severally liable therefor. In
the event that decree for reduction of the Trustees' decision in breach of trust
to allow the third, fourth and sixth defenders early retirement on full
benefit, and repetition of sums paid in excess of what would have been their
entitlement but for the said breach of trust is granted as concluded for, the
loss to the Scheme will be reduced by £2,444,000 to the sum of £3,563,000. The first and second defenders fault and
negligence et separatim the fourth
and fifth defender's breaches of trust caused or at least materially
contributed to all of the said loss. The
third defender's breaches of trust caused or at least materially contributed to
£3,044,000 of the said loss.
Accordingly, the sum concluded for in conclusion 1(a) is £3,044,000 in
respect of which the first, second, third, fourth and fifth defenders are all
jointly and severally, or severally, liable and the sum concluded for in
conclusion 1(b) is the remaining £517,168, for which all defenders except the
third defender are jointly and severally, or severally, liable, if decree of
reduction and repetition are granted as aforesaid. In the event that decree of reduction and
repetition are not granted, the total loss suffered by the pursuers is
£6,005,168. The third defender's
breaches of trust caused or at least materially contributed to £5,488,000 of
the said loss and that is the sum concluded for in conclusion 2(a). The sum concluded for in conclusion 2(b) is
£517,168, being the difference between £6,005,168 and £5,488,000, and being a
loss caused or materially contributed to by the fault and negligence of the
first and second defenders et separatim the
breaches of trust of the fourth and fifth defenders, and in respect of which
all except the third defender are jointly and severally, or severally, liable
Submissions for the third, fourth and fifth
defenders
[31] Submissions were made by Mrs Munro for the third defender and
by Mr Thomson for the fifth defender.
The fourth defender appeared in person and, not unnaturally, adopted the
submissions made by counsel for the other defenders in so far as they were
applicable to the case against him. Since Mrs Munro spoke first, her
submissions covered many of the points of which Mr Thomson had given
notice. In such a case, Mr Thomson
sensibly adopted Mrs Munro's submissions.
It is inevitable, therefore, that in reciting the submissions made on
behalf of the defenders, I should focus principally on those made by Mrs Munro.
[32] In opening her submissions for the third defender, Mrs Munro
contrasted the basis on which the claim was laid against the trustees with that
on which it was laid against the actuaries.
The case against the actuaries was founded on an averment of breach of a
duty of care owed at common law and/or by an implied term of the contract
pursuant to which they were appointed.
The case against the trustees, on the other hand, was based on
allegations of breach of trust. The
trustees could not be made liable for breach of trust simpliciter. She referred me
to s.3(d) of the Trusts (Scotland)
Act 1921, in terms of which, unless the contrary was expressed in the trust
deed, a trustee was liable only for his own acts and intromissions (not for
those of co-trustees) and was not liable for omissions. Clause 18 of the Deed made it clear that "no
trustee ... shall be personally responsible or liable for anything whatever except
breach of trust knowingly and intentionally committed by him". She accepted, however, at least for the
purpose of this debate, that that clause did not protect her client from
liability for intromissions which were grossly negligent: Lutea Trustees Limited v
Orbis Trustees Guernsey Limited 1997 SC 255. She invited me to proceed on that basis. Gross negligence, however, was quite
different from mere breach of a duty of care.
It consisted here, in terms of the pursuers' averments, of a "reckless
disregard for the consequences of their acts or omissions". To this extent there was no issue, for
present purposes at least, with the formulation used by the pursuers in the
various Articles of condescendence where liability was asserted on the grounds
of gross negligence thus defined.
The joint and several conclusion
[33] Mrs Munro dealt first with the joint and
several conclusions. She pointed out
that by their amended conclusions 1(a) and 2(a), the pursuers sought payment by
the actuaries and trustees jointly and severally, or severally, of single lump
sums said to represent losses to the Scheme arising from various alleged acts
and omissions between April 2001 and April 2002. Such conclusions are only
competent, she submitted, where the pursuers make relevant averments that each
defender is liable for the whole sum so concluded for: see Fleming v Gemmill 1908 SC
340, 345, Grunwald v Hughes 1965 SLT 209, 214, Ellerman Lines Ltd. v Trustees of the Clyde Navigation and
another 1909 SC 690 and Maclaren, Court of Session Practice at p.266. She accepted that a joint and several, or
several, conclusion was competent against two or more defenders who were both
at fault, one in delict and the other in contract; and also where the wrongs
complained of were breaches of separate contracts: see also MacGillivray v Davidson 1993 SLT 693, Belmont
Laundry Company Ltd. v Aberdeen Steam
Laundry Company Ltd. (1898) 1 F 45 and Rose
Street Foundry and Engineering Co. v
Lewis & Sons 1917 SC 341. It was
fundamental, however, that the wrongs should not be disconnected; and that both
defenders, by their respective faults, should have contributed to the same
loss.
[34] Mrs Munro submitted that
the pursuers had failed relevantly to aver any basis upon which the actuaries,
on the one hand, and the trustees, on the other, might competently be held
liable jointly for a single lump sum. The actuaries are convened on the basis
of a common law duty of reasonable care and/or an identical duty imposed upon
them by way of an implied term. These
trustees are convened on the basis of alleged breaches of trust knowingly and
intentionally committed by them and/or consisting of gross negligence or a
reckless disregard of the consequences of their acts or omissions. The alleged
wrongs were thus wholly distinct. They
could properly be described as separate and disconnected. Mrs Munro developed this submission by
arguing that the liability of the trustees and that of the actuaries were in
fact mutually exclusive. As a matter of
causation both could not be liable. If
the trustees acted without regard to the advice given to them by the actuaries,
they might be liable to the pursuers; but on that hypothesis the actuaries'
advice, even if negligent, was not causative of any loss. If, on the other hand, the trustees acted
upon the advice of the actuaries, how could they be said to have been grossly
negligent; and how could it be argued (in such a case) that the trustees'
actings, as opposed to the negligence of the actuaries, caused any loss to the
pursuers. In truth, she submitted, the
liability of the actuaries and trustees was alternative; the wrong of one must
involve the immunity of the other. They
should be sued in the alternative, but they could not be sued jointly and
severally. She sought to derive some
support for this from the case of Rae v Meek, reported at various stages at
(1886) 13 R 1036, (1888) 15 R 1033, at 1042, (1889) 16 R (HL) 31. However, even if it were possible that both
could be liable to the pursuers, it was inappropriate that there should be a
joint and several conclusion. The
degrees of culpability might be very different, yet, if a joint and several
conclusion were competent, the actuaries and trustees might both be found
liable for the whole losses. This was
wrong. Furthermore, there were different
limits of recovery. In the case of the
actuaries, where the alleged liability was for breach of a duty of care, issues
of foreseeability and remoteness arose.
Those issues did not arise in the case of the trustees.
[35] Returning, at the end of
her submissions, to the point that the liability of actuary and trustee in this
case was mutually exclusive, Mrs Munro referred to Armitage v Nurse [1998] Ch 241, a decision of the Court of Appeal in which the meaning of fraud (as
used in the context of an allegation of breach of trust) is discussed. At p.251 Millet LJ, having modified it,
quotes with approval the submission made on behalf of the respondents that
fraud
"connotes at the minimum an intention on the part of the
trustee to pursue a particular course of action, either knowing that it is
contrary to the interests of the beneficiaries or being recklessly indifferent
whether it is contrary to their interests or not".
The recklessness alleged by the pursuers is, she submitted, tantamount to
fraud. In terms of the alleged liability
of the actuaries, it could hardly be said that they should foresee that the
trustees would act fraudulently. Nor
could they reasonably be expected to foresee that the trustees would act
recklessly. If the trustees were liable,
the actuaries could not be, and vice
versa.
[36] The fourth and fifth
defenders both adopted the above submissions as to competency.
[37] Mrs Munro's Note of Argument, in its original form before the
pursuer had amended, had complained of a "temporal" defect in the pursuers'
case against the third defender which was carried through to the
conclusions. This defect was that that
the pursuers' unamended case sought to make the third defender liable for
losses to the Scheme even after he ceased to be a trustee towards the end of
April 2002. The amendment sought to cure
this by separating out the losses arising after April 2002 from those arising
before that date: see para.[30] above.
Mrs Munro accepted that this had been successful in part, but in light
of her temporal criticisms of some other aspects of the pursuers' case (see
below), at the end of her submissions she continued to insist that the pursuers
required to "disaggregate" their claims to deal with those matters.
[38] For the fifth defender, Mr Thomson advanced a like objection
based on the fact that his client only became a trustee from 26 April
2002. By clause 18 of the Deed, and by
section 3(d) of the Trusts (Scotland) Act 1921, a trustee is liable only for
his own acts and intromissions and is not be liable for the acts and
intromissions of co-trustees; nor is he liable for omissions: see Mackenzie
Stuart, The Law of Trusts and Mackenzie's
Executor v Thomson's Trustees
1965 SC 154. He submitted that the
pursuers had failed to aver any basis upon which the fifth defender could be
held liable for losses arising from acts or omissions before 26 April
2002. The action against the fifth
defender was irrelevant so far as it related to such losses; and consequently,
conclusions 1(a) and 2(a), alleging joint and several liability, were
incompetent so far as directed against the fifth defender.
The contributions claim
[39] Mrs Munro submitted that the averments
relating to the contributions claim were irrelevant et separatim lacking in
specification, insofar as directed against the third defender, for a number of
reasons. Her submissions fell under two
broad heads: (a) that the averments did not provide an adequate basis for any
inference of any knowing or intentional breach of trust or of gross negligence
of the type to which the pursuers pinned their case, i.e. "gross negligence
consisting of a reckless disregard for the consequences of their acts or
omissions"; and (b) that there were no relevant averments of loss to the
Scheme.
[40] In a detailed analysis of the pursuers'
averments, Mrs Munro referred to Article 5, which set out the minimum funding
requirement ("MFR") and the inter-relationship between the role of the actuary
and that of the trustees. In Article 6,
reference was made to the April 2000 actuarial valuation showing that it was
necessary to increase the Company's contribution to 27% of pensionable
earnings. The contribution required from
the Company was averred to have been increased later (in January 2001), by reference
to the actuary's supplementary valuation, to 31% of pensionable earnings. However, she submitted, the actuarial
valuation itself was not a document requiring payments by the Company. The payments to be made by the Company are
those which are set out in the schedule of contributions prepared and, from to
time, revised by the actuary. The
trustees, in exercise of their functions under s.58 of the 1995 Act, require to
secure that such a schedule of contributions is prepared, maintained and
revised. The pursuers accept that a
schedule of contributions was made, maintained and, from time to time,
revised. They do not relevantly aver any
failure by the Company to make the payments required by the schedule of
contributions, at least before May 2002 (by which time the third defender had
ceased to be a trustee). Accordingly,
the averment in Article 8 (at p.20A-B) that the trustees did not seek to
"enforce" payment by the Company (which averment appears to proceed upon the
footing that the Company was required to make such payments and that the
trustees were under a duty to enforce them), was irrelevant, in that it
referred to payments which were identified in the actuarial valuation but not
in the schedule of contributions.
Similarly, the averment (at p.21C-D) that "the defenders failed to enforce
contributions from the Company", and the corresponding passages in Article 21
(p.53), were also irrelevant. So also,
in the same Article, the averment (at p.20B) that the trustees were aware that
the Company had not met contributions at the rates of 27% and 31% of
pensionable earnings, and had re-scheduled the contributions to include a lump
sum contribution of £500,000, was also irrelevant because contributions at
those rates were not required of the Company.
The averments in Article 8 (at p.20B-C) concerning the failure to pay
the lump sum of £500,000 were also irrelevant because the schedule of
contributions had been revised before that lump sum fell due. On the pursuer's own averments that lump sum
was not originally due until April 2002; and before it ever became due, the
revised schedule of contributions was superseded by two further revisions which
progressively altered the lump sum to £1.98 million (payable in January 2003)
and then £1.42 million (payable in March 2003).
The schedule of contributions was again revised in May 2002, after the
third defender ceased to be a trustee.
There were therefore no failures by the Company to pay during the time
when the third defender was a trustee.
It is not averred that the revisions to the schedule of contributions
were revisions that the actuary was unable to make, or that in relation to them
the trustees were, in some way, grossly negligent.
[41] Developing her submissions by reference to
her detailed Note of Argument, Mrs Munro drew my attention to the pursuers'
averment that, having regard to the company's statutory accounts for the period
to 31 March 2001, trading losses which continued in the following financial
year, the company's "significant overdraft" and its failure to make the
required contribution to the Scheme at the rate of 27% of pensionable earnings,
the third and fourth defenders knew or ought to have known that the company
could not afford the contributions required in terms of the various schedules
of contributions prepared over the relevant period; and should, by April 2001
at the latest, have considered either winding the Scheme up or ceasing the
accrual of benefits. She submitted that
those averments did not disclose a relevant basis for the inference that the
trustees knew or ought to have known that the company could not continue to
make contributions to the Scheme, far less for the inference that the trustees
intentionally or recklessly breached their trust or were grossly negligent so
as to render them liable to the pursuers. Losses in a given year of account, the
existence of an overdraft facility and the failure to make a contribution
required in terms of a particular schedule of contributions (assuming that
there was such a failure) did not of themselves denote an inability to continue
to fund a pension Scheme. In any event,
on the pursuers' own averments, the company continued to make contributions to
the Scheme until May 2002. Had the
trustees wound up the Scheme or ceased benefits accrual in April 2001, as the
pursuers aver they ought to have done, no further contributions would have been
made to the Scheme after that date.
[42] Mrs Munro pointed to the pursuers'
averments that the various schedules of contribution were prepared by the first
defender in his capacity as the Scheme Actuary. They did not aver that the
third defender, or indeed any of the trustees, had any special skill in
actuarial matters. Accordingly, she
submitted, the third defender (as well as the other trustees) was obliged to
exercise the same care and diligence as would a man of ordinary prudence in the
management of his own affairs. The
pursuers sought to hold the trustees liable jointly and severally with the
actuaries for loss said to have been occasioned by the actuary's negligent
advice; but they did not aver what should have led the trustees, as laymen, to
question the skilled advice of the actuary.
Accordingly, there was no relevant basis in the pursuers' averments for
the inference that the trustees acted knowingly and wilfully in breach of trust,
or with gross negligence or recklessness.
[43] Mrs Munro went on to point out that while
the pursuers averred that the trustees knew, or ought to have known, that the
contributions specified in the various schedules of contributions were
"unaffordable", they also aver that the trustees could and should have required
the company to pay £798,000 into the Scheme over the course of the relevant
period, even at the cost of precipitating the company's insolvency. Had the company been rendered insolvent, no
further contributions would have been made to the Scheme. The Scheme would have been an unsecured
creditor in respect of outstanding contributions, if any, then due to it. Accordingly, the pursuers had failed
relevantly to aver a basis for the inference that, in refraining from enforcing
payment of particular contributions by the company, the trustees acted in
breach of trust.
[44] Finally, under this chapter of her
submissions, Mrs Munro submitted that the averments of loss in Article 25 were
irrelevant and lacking in specification.
On the pursuers' own hypotheses, it was the duty of the trustees either
to enforce contributions payable by the company or to cause the Scheme to be
wound up or at least to cease benefits accrual by April 2001. In any of these events, no further
contributions would have been made to the Scheme after that date. In the event, as the pursuers acknowledged,
contributions continued to be made by the company to the Scheme up to May 2002. In those circumstances, the pursuers had
failed relevantly to aver any basis upon which the Company should have been
obliged by the trustees to make monthly contributions of £42,000 to the Scheme
throughout the relevant period.
[45] The fourth defender adopted these
submissions. For the fifth defender, Mr
Thomson also adopted Mrs Munro's submissions but went on to point out that the
fifth defender only became a trustee on 26 April 2002. He could only be liable for his acts and
omissions after that date. All the
matters of which the pursuers complained preceded his appointment. He pointed in particular to the averments of
breach of duty in Article 21 of Condescendence (at p.54), all of which related
to acts or omissions prior to that date.
The investments claim
[47] Mrs Munro reminded me that the third defender ceased to be a
trustee after 26 April 2002. In so far
as the pursuers' complaints extended in time to acts or omissions after that
date (including the trustees' continuing failure to act upon the advice,
despite having agreed to do so), there was no basis for holding the third
defender liable. Nor were there any
averments showing, as a matter of causation, that the trustees' acts or
omissions before that date caused the losses alleged to have been caused by the
continued fall in the market after his resignation.
[48] Further, and in any event, the pursuers'
averments of loss in Article 25 were irrelevant and/or lacking in
specification. It is averred that the
trustees had a duty to switch £6 million from equities to fixed interest
investments beginning in April 2001. In
particular, it is averred that they should have instituted a programme of
switching from equities into fixed interest investments in three tranches, each
of £2 million, on each of 1 April, 1 July and 1 October 2001. But there are no averments as to why such a
programme was incumbent upon the trustees, or of any recommendation made to the
trustees from which an obligation to follow such a programme could be
inferred. The pursuers go on to aver
that had such a programme been instituted, with £1 million of each tranche
being invested in "government stock" and £1 million in "corporate bonds", the
value of the Scheme's investments would have increased over the relevant
period. Again, she submitted, there is
no basis for these averments. In any
event, the fact that it might be said with hindsight that particular investment
decisions resulted in losses to the Scheme does not by itself instruct a
relevant basis for the inference that the trustees "acted with gross negligence
consisting of a reckless disregard for the consequences of their acts and omissions"
so as to be held liable. She submitted
that there was a mismatch between the averments in Article 10 and those in
Article 25.
[49] The fourth defender adopted these
submissions, save for those relating to timing which were peculiar to the third
defender. Mr Thomson, for the fifth
defender, made the point that the majority of the averments in Articles 10 and
22, and all of the averments of loss in Article 25, were founded upon acts or
omissions of the trustees at a time before his client became a trustee on 26
April 2002. No relevant case was pled
against his client. There was no
averment from which it could be inferred that he was responsible for what had
happened before be became a trustee. Nor
was there any case directed specifically at what he ought to have done after
his appointment and how his alleged failures after his appointment caused any
and, if so, what loss.
The early retirements claim
[50] Mrs Munro then turned her attention to the
early retirements claim. The pursuers
aver that the third and fourth defenders took early retirement in breach of
their duty to administer the Scheme for the benefit of all members with an
interest therein (including a duty to ensure equivalence between the position
of members taking transfer values and members taking pensions on early
retirement), notwithstanding the company's financial difficulties as elaborated
upon in Article 8, and in the knowledge that taking early retirement would
damage the ability of the Scheme to meet its liabilities. It is further averred that the third and
fourth defenders, as directors of the company, were among its most highly-paid
employees, with the result that their pension entitlements were substantially
in excess of the average entitlements of members of the Scheme.
[51] Mrs Munro submitted that those averments
were irrelevant and provided no basis for the inference that the trustees,
including the third defender, acted "knowingly and intentionally in breach of
trust" and/or "with gross negligence consisting of a reckless disregard for the
consequences of their acts and omissions".
On the pursuers' own averments, the third defender took early retirement
with his "full benefit entitlement under the Scheme Rules". There is no foundation for the averment that
the trustees of the Scheme were obliged to secure equivalence between members
transferring out of the Scheme and members taking early retirement. There is no averment that the retiring
directors were treated differently from others who took retirement early. There were no averments that the trustees
knew that the Scheme was about to be wound up; indeed there are averments to
the effect that a rescue package was being put together. But if the complaint was that the trustees knew
or should have known that the Scheme was to be wound up, the complaint ought to
relate to their treatment of all who took early retirement, not just the two
directors. Further, even if the third
and fourth defenders had a conflict of interest in the matter of their own
retirements, there is no averment that the remaining trustees, or the trustees
as a body, were thereby barred from consenting to their early retirement; or
that the third and fourth defenders were barred from taking it in accordance
with the Scheme Rules.
[52] In those circumstances, and in any event,
the averments of loss in Article 25 as regards the early retirements were
irrelevant and lacking in specification.
In the absence of any averment that the third and fourth defenders were
not entitled to take early retirement in 2002, the pursuers must be taken to
concede that they were entitled to payment in some amount at that time
and subsequently. Accordingly, there was
no basis for the averment that the third defender's early retirement represents
a loss to the Scheme in the amount of £1,006,000 plus the income that would
have been earned on that amount had it been invested in government securities
and corporate bonds.
[53] Again, the fourth defender associated
himself with Mrs Munro's submissions.
For the fifth defender, Mr Thomson also adopted what Mrs Munro had said,
and added, by reference to the fact that his client had only become a trustee
on 26 April 2002, that there were no averments that the fifth defender was a
trustee at the time when any relevant decisions were taken. The pursuers averred that the relevant
decisions were taken by the trustees "between about March and 3 May 2002". It was clear from reading the averments in
full, and in particular the averment (at p.42B) that at the trustee's meeting
of 31 March 2002 the forthcoming early retirement of the third and fourth
defenders was noted, that in fact all relevant decisions had been taken before
then. He noted also that, since the
fifth defender had never been a member of the Scheme, he could not have been placed
in a position of conflict of interest.
The
repayment of expenses claim
[55] Mr Thomson pointed to the pursuers'
averments in Article 14 that these repayments were made by setting them off
against contributions due from the company between May and November 2002. Thus, no money was actually paid out by the
trust. According to Article 8 of
Condescendence, no contributions were actually collected during this period. The contributions claim already includes the
total value of the contributions which, allegedly, should have been collected
during this period. Accordingly, Mr
Thomson submitted, this head of claim would give rise to a double recovery in
respect of the same alleged loss.
[56] The pursuers aver that the actuary's
calculations failed to disclose the effect on the fund of making the
repayments. They claim damages from the
actuary on the basis that the loss was occasioned by his negligent advice. But there are no averments of any matters
which should have led the trustees, as laymen, to recognise any defect in this
advice. Accordingly there was no basis
for the inference that the trustees "acted with gross negligence consisting of
a reckless disregard for the consequences of their acts and omissions".
Submissions for the pursuers
[57] Mr Clark, for the pursuers, invited me to refuse the defenders'
motions and allow a proof before answer.
He reminded me of the test to be applied at a discussion on the
Procedure Roll. The court should dismiss
the action only if, giving the pursuer's averments a fair reading, it was bound
to fail even if the pursuer proves all the facts within the scope of his
averments. The words "within the scope
of his averments" were, he submitted, a gloss on the way the test was usually
expressed. The gloss was justified by
the case of Cosar Ltd. v UPS Ltd. 1999 SLT 259,264E. However, he requested that, if I was against
him, I should put the case out By Order rather than simply dismiss the action
or delete any of the claims.
[58] Although Mr Clark was content to deal with the matter on a
claim by claim basis, he urged me to view each claim in the context of the
action as a whole. By this I understood
him to mean not only that some averments made under one claim might be relevant
to other claims, but also that the wide range and number of complaints made by
the pursuer on record might, after a proof, and to the extent proved, be
relevant to an assessment of whether the trustees actions were merely negligent
or crossed the line into gross negligence or recklessness.
Joint and Several Conclusions
[59] Mr Clark explained that the first Conclusion, as now amended,
stripped out the global claim for "early retirement". Conclusion 1(a) was for all losses except (i)
the early retirement claim, (ii) the contribution claim in respect of the
period after 26 April 2002
(when the third defender ceased to be a trustee) and (iii) the repayment of
expenses claim. Conclusion 1(b) was for
the contribution claim after 26 April
2002 and the repayment of expenses claim. Conclusions 1(c) and (d) related to the claim
for reduction of the decisions on early retirement. Conclusions 1(e) and (f) proceeded on the
basis that those decisions were reduced, and were for recovery of the early
retirement payments made to the third and fourth defenders. Conclusion 2 proceeded, in the alternative,
on the basis that the decisions to allow early retirement were not reduced, in
which case the claims were added in to the sums concluded for against the
trustees qua trustees.
[60] Dealing with the question of gross negligence and recklessness
as a basis for asserting a case against the trustees, Mr Clark said that the
formulation employed in the pleadings was not intended to infer fraud and did
not do so. His averments lacked any
element of an averment of dishonesty. He
referred to Erskine's definition of fraud as a "machination or contrivance to
deceive" (Institute III, 1, 16): see
Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia (1990), vol.11, at para.719. Gross negligence was a species of negligence,
not to be equiparated with fraud. The
allegations of gross negligence here could not be regarded as allegations of a
machination or contrivance to deceive.
Millet LJ was wrong in Armitage v Nurse to apply the notion that
recklessness was equivalent to fraud (as used in the English tort of deceit) to
conduct other than statements; but in any event his remarks did not represent
Scots law. In Hunter v Hanley 1955 SC 200 the court had used the test of gross negligence, culpa lata or crassa
negligentia for the liability of trustees claiming protection under an
immunity clause in a trust deed (see, in particular p.205). In Wyman
v Paterson 1900
2F 37, 40, Lord Halsbury LC confessed to having "great difficulty in weighing
the exact amount of what is described as negligence" required to hold a trustee
liable. Those cases showed that, in
Scots law, gross negligence and fraud as the basis of a trustee's liability
were distinct concepts. Mr Clark
submitted that the question of whether in any given case there was gross
negligence was a question of fact. The
speech of Lord Herschell in Raes v Meek (in the report of the decision of
the House of Lords, at p.35) showed that it was "impossible to draw any hard
and fast line between the want of that care which a man of ordinary prudence
would display in the management of his own affairs and that high degree of
negligence which is termed culpa lata". Such questions should be determined after the
evidence was led.
[61] Turning to the question of whether it was competent in a case
such as this to have a conclusion for joint and several liability, Mr Clark
submitted that the conclusions were not only competent but they were the
appropriate conclusions for a case such as this. He referred to Fleming v Gemill, and in
particular the Opinion of Lord Pearson at page 345, to suggest that this type
of conclusion was highly flexible. Under
reference to McGillivray v Davidson, he emphasised that part of the
purpose of a joint and several conclusion was to enable rights of contribution
and apportionment to be worked out between the defenders. He submitted that the case of Rae v Meek, when it first came before the Second Division, supported the
competency of a joint and several conclusion in a case such as the
present. Nothing in the report of the
case when it came back before the Inner House altered this. It was difficult to see what the Lord
President had in mind in referring to the fact that the conclusions were
directed against both the trustees and the law agents jointly and severally as
"one of the peculiarities of the case".
In any event, the Court did not decide that there was anything untoward
in having such a conclusion. He relied
upon the case of Grunwald v Hughes at page 213-4 as supporting the
proposition that a joint and several conclusion was possible even where one
defender was sued in negligence and the other on the basis of a breach of a
strict obligation. It was incorrect to
say that the wrongs alleged against the actuaries and the trustees were disconnected. The statutory framework was set out article 4
of condescendence. There were detailed
averments about the involvement of the actuary and the trustees. They required to work closely together. The pursuers offered to prove that there was
a connection between their actings and their wrongs. The Court could not, at least at this stage,
say that the wrongs were clearly disconnected so that there could not be joint
and several liability. Far from it, he
submitted, the wrongs were enmeshed together.
[62] As to the argument that, as a matter of causation, the
liability of one was inconsistent with that of the other, he asked,
rhetorically, whether the Court could say now that the liabilities were plainly
mutually exclusive and could not stand alongside each other as contributory
causes of the loss. He suggested that
the answer was in the negative. That was
sufficient to require the Court to repel the defenders' argument. No authority had been cited for the
proposition that gross negligence or recklessness of the type averred against
the trustees necessarily interrupts causation.
He could understand the argument in the context of an allegation of
fraud or dishonesty against the trustees, but that was not what was alleged
here. Absent authority that gross
negligence or recklessness always interrupts causation, there was no basis on
which to hold the joint and several conclusion to be competent. Mr Clark suggested that there might be a
question of where the onus of pleading lay on an issue such as this. He accepted that if the liability of the
actuary and the trustees were, in truth, mutually inconsistent, then he could
not have a joint and several conclusion.
[63] Mr Clark returned to this question towards the end of his
submissions. He referred me to the
decision of Mance J in Red Sea Tankers
Ltd v Papachristidis (The "Hellespont
Ardent") [1997] 2 Lloyds Rep 547.
That case concerned the sale and purchase of a tanker on terms which
included an exemption from liability except where the damage resulted from acts
or omissions which (a) were the result of gross negligence, and (b) constituted
wilful misconduct. In reviewing the
authorities, Mance J referred, at page 586, to the ordinary meaning of the
expression "gross negligence" as, in that context, appearing to embrace
"serious negligence amounting to reckless disregard, without any necessary
implication of consciousness of the high degree of risk or the likely
consequences of the conduct on the part of the person acting or omitting to
act". He went on to say that "gross"
negligence
"... is clearly
intended to represent something more fundamental than failure to exercise
proper skill and/or care constituting negligence. But as a matter of ordinary language and
general impression, the concept of gross negligence seems to me capable of
embracing not only conduct undertaken with actual appreciation of the risks
involved, but also serious disregard of or indifference to an obvious risk".
He referred to various authorities,
in particular a decision of Megaw J in Shawinigan
Ltd v Vokins & Co Ltd [1961]
2 Lloyds Rep 153. In that case Megaw J
had emphasised that each case had to be viewed on its own particular
facts. He suggested that the test was an
objective one. Mance J concluded his
summary of the cases by saying this: "The heedlessness, indifference or
disregard need not be conscious". A
number of factors, including the seriousness or otherwise of any injury which
might arise, the degree of likelihood of its arising and the extent to which
someone takes any care at all, were all potentially material when considering
whether particular conduct should be regarded as so aberrant as to attract the
epithet of "gross" negligence. Relying
upon this discussion of the meaning of "gross negligence", Mr Clark submitted
that any consideration of whether a case fell within or without that term was
best dealt with after enquiry. He
referred me also to the Scottish Law Commission's discussion paper on breach of
trust at paragraphs 3.13, 3.16, 3.19, 3.23 and 3.30. The authors of that discussion paper took the
view that "gross negligence" was a workable concept, but recognised that it was
impossible to draw a hard and fast line between negligence and gross
negligence. Whether or not a particular
set of circumstances amounted to gross negligence was a matter of fact to be
resolved after the evidence was heard.
It was impossible to tell how extreme the negligence was or whether it
would interrupt causation until the Court had heard the evidence.
The
contributions claim
[64] Mr Clark identified the three building blocks, as he called
them, of this part of the pursuers' case against the trustees. First, there was the duty to set and collect
appropriate levels of contribution.
Second, there was the duty not to re-schedule or keep putting off
payments due to be made by the company.
And third, there was the duty not to allow an artificial increase in the
retirement age to 75. As to the first,
he pointed to averments relevant to the defenders' knowledge. They were directors and trustees, and as
directors would have knowledge of the company's financial position. It was to be noted that the winding up
commenced soon after their retirements in November 2002. In Article 6 there were averments about the
MFR deficit and the requirement for a fourfold increase in contributions
required from the Company. In Article 8
there were averments relating to the trustees' awareness of the problems faced
by the pension fund and of the reduction in value of members funds. The pursuer did not suggest that the Company
was required to make payment of the 27 % or the 31%; the pursuers were simply
saying that those were the figures, the Company did not pay those amounts and
the trustees knew that. It was averred
that, as at July 2001, there was no reasonable likelihood that the £500,000
lump sum would be paid. In reality, Mr
Clark submitted, all that is being said is that in the context of the duty to
set and collect, the trustees set that figure, knew that it would not be paid,
but did not seek to get it paid. He
emphasised that the duty was to set and collect appropriate levels of
contribution. There was repeated
re-scheduling of contributions, and unaffordable lump sums were required to be
paid. Matters had reached the stage by
mid to late 2002 (page 21C-D) that there was such a deficit that contributions
should not only have been set but should have been collected. The pursuers' case is that the trustees
should have set and collected additional contributions of £42,000 per month. The figures are explained in the averments of
loss at page 58 of the Record. Mr Clark
submitted that the pleadings gave fair notice of the pursuers' case.
[65] As to the second duty, the duty not to reschedule or keep
putting off the payments from the Company, this was an alternative to the
first. In other words, if the trustees
set certain levels of contribution and payments were not made, the trustees
should not be re-scheduling the contributions but should be enforcing
payment.
[66] The third duty was not to allow the artificial increase in the
retirement age up to 75. It is suggested
that the trustees went along with the scheme of representing to the bank the
reduced figures without questioning them.
This fed into the trustees' disregard for their duties as trustees. The whole purpose was to put before the bank
a lower figure to secure future funding.
[67] Mr Clark turned to the points taken by the defenders. The first was that there was no enforceable
duty as regards payment by the Company of the 27% and, subsequently, 31%. He said that the pursuers were not suggesting
that there was such a duty. The purpose
of the averment was simply to show knowledge on the part of the trustees as to
the affordability of payments by the Company.
The second point was that no payment was actually due from the Company
because of revisions to the schedule of contributions before the payments fell
due. Mr Clark accepted this. No doubt, he said, the trustees were entitled
to revise the schedule of contributions.
But that did not exonerate them from breaches of duty: they could not
just "revise away the problem". He said
that the pursuers offered to prove that repeated re-scheduling amounted to
gross negligence. The third point was that
there were no averments as to what was paid.
He said that it was clear that 13% continued to be paid. His complaint was that the trustees did not
set and collect the other sums. Next, he
said, the defenders questioned how the idea of enforcing contributions after
April 2001 fitted with the pursuers' case that the Scheme should have been
wound up. He said that the pursuers'
primary case was that the Scheme should have been wound up. It was in the context of a failure to wind up
the Scheme that the duty of setting and collecting came into play.
The
investments claim
[68] In dealing with the investments claim Mr Clark took me through
Articles 9 and 10 and to the averments of fault in Article 22. He submitted that the pursuers had pled
enough to justify the inference that the trustees must have disregarded the
interests of the trust. They had failed
to follow the advice of their professional advisers. Whether this was a failure to consider it or
a failure, having considered it, to follow it, was something that the pursuers
did not at the moment know. It was
sufficient for them to say that the trustees' actions were wholly unexplained
and, in the absence of explanation, inexplicable. The pursuers had pled enough to be able to
ask the court to draw the inference that the trustees must have disregarded the
interests of the trust. By April 2002
the trustees had agreed to implement changes in the balance of the
investments. They did not in fact
implement these changes until late 2002.
The pursuers' averment was that they should have started by April 2002
at latest. There may have been any
number of strategies, but the details of those strategies were for proof.
[69] As to the points taken against the pursuers' pleadings, the
first was that the third defender had ceased to be a trustee on 26 April 2002. Mr Clark said that he could see that there
might be a causation argument, but that ought to be dealt with after the
evidence. All the material failures, he
said, occurred "on his watch", meaning the watch of the third defender. The second point was in relation to the
averment (on page 35) that, on 22 April 2002, the trustees met and agreed in
principle to reduce the percentage holding of the Scheme's investments in
equities but took no action to do so. He
maintained the position that since the third defender was present and in place
on that date, he was liable for the failures thereafter to act upon that
decision.
The
early retirements claim
[70] Mr Clark next addressed the early retirements claim. The essence of the pursuers' case, he
submitted, was that not only was the writing on the wall by the time the early
retirements were taken, but that the trustees put themselves in a better
position than others in the Scheme. Mr
Clark said that the pursuers offered to prove that the decision to take early
retirement was a breach of duty. He
pointed to the averments in Article 11 to the effect that the directors needed
the consent of the trustees to retire early.
In Article 12, there was a reference to the Company's accounts. Although not incorporated brevitatis causa, the accounts to 31 March 2001 were shown to me
without objection. They were signed on 30 April 2002. The last page referred to post-balance sheet
events including "closure of pension Scheme" on 30 April 2002.
There was an early reduction in transfer values under the Scheme, and
the pursuers offered to prove, at page 42D, that the trustees would have been
aware at the time of making any decision to approve the early retirement of the
third and fifth defenders that the transfer values would be reduced to little
or nothing by May 2002. Mr Clark
suggested that there was a conflict of interest between the defenders as
trustees and the defenders as directors.
As directors of the Company, the third, fourth and fifth defenders had
intimate knowledge of the Company's affairs and of those of the Scheme. Mr Clark accepted that he could not and did
not invoke some analogy to insider dealing.
However, the third, fourth and fifth defenders had a fuller picture of
what was going on and their knowledge had a bearing on the case made against
them. As trustees, they could have
prevented the early retirements. The
case fell fairly and squarely on their duty as trustees not to approve the
early retirements. It had to be the
case, Mr Clark accepted, that the complaint would apply equally to their
approval of early retirements of individuals other than the third, fourth and
fifth defenders. In this context, he
emphasised that he did not suggest that the defenders, as trustees, had treated
themselves as retiring directors worse than any other directors or
employees.
The position of the fifth defender
[71] At
this point Mr Clark turned his attention on the arguments raised by the fifth
defender. He accepted much of what had
been said by Mr Thomson as regards the temporal difficulty in his claim against
the fifth defender. To some extent, he
submitted, the division of the conclusions into 1(a) and 1(b) sought to divide
the losses between those which occurred before 26 April 2002 and those which occurred afterwards. The conclusions in 2(a) and 2(b) were split
in the same way. As regards the
contribution claim, he accepted that the fifth defender should not be liable
for any failure to enforce contributions from the Company before he became a trustee. As regards the investments claim, he
accepted, as I understood it, that the fifth defender could not be held liable
for any failures before 26 April 2002 but there was a further slide, he said, in the
period between 26 April 2002 and October 2002.
The details of that slide would need to be brought out in evidence. The fact was that the fifth defender was in
place as a trustee for a few months of inactivity and disregard of the advice
given by the professional advisers. As
to the early retirement claim, Mr Clark accepted that the fifth defender was a
trustee for only a matter of days before the early retirements took
effect. He accepted, as I understood it,
that the decision, according to the pursuers' own averments at page 42 of the
Record, must have been taken by about 31 March or at any rate before the fifth
defender became a trustee. So far as
concerned the joint and several conclusions, in so far as they concerned the
fifth defender, Mr Clark referred to Duthie v Caledonian Railway Company
1898 25 R 934. In that case there had been
a decree jointly and severally against both defenders for a certain sum
(representing the statutory limit of the liability of one of them) and several
liability against the other for the balance.
This showed the general flexibility of the joint and several conclusion
and could apply in the present case if after proof, it turned out that the
fifth defender was not liable for substantial parts of the claim. If there was a technical problem in leaving
the fifth defender in, however, he could be deleted from conclusions 1(a) and
2(a).
The
expenses claim
[72] Finally, Mr Clark turned to the expenses claim. He recognised, as I understood it, that there
would be double counting if the pursuers recovered an award in full under this
claim as well as under the contribution claim.
However, he submitted, it would be wrong at this stage to delete this
part of the claim.
[73] Mr
Clark, in summary, invited the Court to allow a proof before answer on all the
averments on Record. If I was minded to
do otherwise, he asked that I should put the case out by order rather than
dismiss it or any particular part of it.
Response for the defenders
[74] In a brief response, Mrs Munro submitted that, in substance,
the pursuer alleged a fraud on the trust.
There was always a high burden on a pleader alleging fraud, and this
applied whether it was fraudulent misrepresentation or the type of conduct
which would render a trustee liable for breach of trust.
[75] Turning to the question of gross negligence or recklessness,
she referred me to Transco plc v HM Advocate 2004 SLT 41 where, at paragraph 4, the Court had
appeared to equate recklessness with "gross and wicked negligence". She sought to take a similar equivalence from
the unreported Opinion of Lord Eassie in Anderson
v Express Investments Co Ltd (4
September 2002). She submitted that in a
trust context this equivalence must obtain.
If gross negligence or recklessness was not equivalent to fraud, no
relevant case would be pled against the trustees.
[76] She went on to submit that if, as she said was the case, we
were in the territory of fraud, there was a particular responsibility on
counsel pleading fraud. She referred to Royal Bank of Scotland v Holmes 1999 SLT 563 at 569 KL. The same high degree of responsibility applied
to the pleading of gross negligence in the trust context. She caricatured Mr Clark's submission as
having been to the effect that the Court should read the averments as a whole,
give them a fair reading, look at them in the round and have regard to their
general tenor. She submitted that this
fell far short of the standard required.
It was not sufficient to make more or less pejorative averments and then
seek to extract from the fog various inferences from which the liability of the
trustees could be established.
[77] Returning to the question of causation, and whether the
liability of the actuaries and that of the trustees was mutually inconsistent,
Mrs Munro accepted (under reference to Stansbie
v Troman [1948] 2 KB 48) that when a
negligent act was followed by an act of a third party, even a negligent act of
a third party, that subsequent act may not necessarily break the chain of
causation. Whether the subsequent act
has the effect of breaking causation depends on whether the second wrongful act
could be said to have been within the scope of the duty owed. When an adviser or agent undertakes duties
such as those undertaken by the actuaries in this case, the duty of reasonable
care does not extend to a duty to avoid the fraud or gross negligence of the
trustees. It is within the contemplation
of the actuary that the trustees will rely upon his advice. It is not within his contemplation that they
will fraudulently or recklessly disregard it.
If the trustees have culpably relied upon the advice given by the
actuary, the actuary cannot be held liable.
The position is a fortiori if
the trustees have not relied upon that advice.
Finally, she referred me to Thomson
v Ross (unreported, Lord Eassie,
18 July 2000) for the proposition that rules are rules, however technical. In that case, a joint and several conclusion
had been held to be incompetent.
[78] For the fifth defender, Mr Thomson adopted Mrs Munro's
additional submissions. In addition to
the cases that he had previously brought under my attention on the question of
competency of the joint and several conclusion, he referred me to Barr v Neilson 1868 6 M 651 and Sinclair
v The Caithness Flagstone Company Ltd
1898 25 R 703 where joint and several conclusions had been held to be
incompetent. He said that those cases
were more easily squared with the facts of the present case.
Discussion
[79] It is convenient to deal with the issues in the order in which
they were addressed by counsel, albeit that it will be necessary to return to
the form of the conclusions after I have given my decision upon the matters of
substance.
The
joint and several conclusions
[80] The meaning of a joint and several conclusion was made clear by
Lord McLaren in Fleming v Gemmill at page 345:
"the word
'severally' implies that against whatever number of defenders there now
proceeds, each is liable for the whole sum sued for, and the words 'jointly' or
'conjunctly' secures to those against whom the decree is made operative the
right of rateable relieve against the persons who have not paid".
This explanation was approved by
Lord Walker in Grunwald v Hughes at page 214-5. It is reflected in the opinion of the
Lord President in Ellerman Lines
Limited v Trustees of the Clyde
Navigation, at page 692:
"That where you
have joint delinquents it is quite clear, I think, that the pursuer can sue
these joint delinquents, and that the meaning of a conclusion for a sum of
damages jointly and severally, or severally, as the case may be, is that if he
is able to show that they are joint delinquents he will get a joint and several
decree against both, which he may make good against either, leaving the person
who is so distressed to make good his claim of relief if he can. With that the pursuer has nothing to do, but
if, on the other hand, he does not prove, that they are both delinquents, but
that only one of the delinquent, then he may get a decree for the same sum of
damages against the one who, upon the proof, is shown to be the
delinquent".
It is not necessary on this point to
refer to the other authorities which were cited to me, since, thus far at
least, the principle is uncontroversial.
[81] There are three matters to be noticed at this stage. The first is that the wrongs allegedly
committed by the various defenders should be connected or, as it is more
commonly put in the negative, "not disconnected". This is made clear in a number of authorities
including Barr v Neilsons and Sinclair v Caithness Flagstone Co. The cases and the principles emerging
therefrom are discussed in the opinions of the Lord Justice Clerk and
Lord Strachan in Grunwald v Hughes.
The question whether wrongs are connected or disconnected is, to my
mind, illustrated by considering the difference between, on the one hand, two
wrongs committed by two different defenders on different occasions, each of
which causes the pursuer some loss or damage.
In some cases, the damage caused by the second incident may overlap with
that caused by the first, but that does not make the wrongs connected, though
it may give rise to difficult issues of quantification. For the wrongs to be connected it must be
shown that the separate acts have together contributed to one common
result: see per Lord Strachan in Grunwald v Hughes at page 213.
[82] The second point is that there is no requirement for the
different wrongs to be of the same character.
The cases show instances of a conclusion for joint and several
liability, where one defender was sued in delict and the other for breach of
contract: see Grunwald v Hughes. Nor is it essential that the basis of
liability in the case of both defenders, or indeed either of them, should
involve negligence. Belmonte Laundry Co v Aberdeen
Steam Laundry Co Ltd was a case where one defender was sued for breach of
contract and the other for what would now be called inducement to breach of
contract. In Rae v Meek, over which
counsel exercised much ingenuity, the pursuers, beneficiaries under a trust,
sued both the trustees and the law agent appointed by them to advise on
investments. The question of competency
for a joint and several conclusion was raised but not decided, at any rate
expressly; the case eventually went to proof against both defenders with that
conclusion still standing, and the law agent was assoilzied on the basis that,
having been appointed by the trustees, he owed no duty to the
beneficiaries. Although it is, perhaps,
going too far to cite this case as an authority for the proposition that there
can be joint and several conclusions where the claim is against professional
advisors for negligence and trustees for gross negligence or culpa lata, the case does at least
provide an illustration of that having occurred.
[83] The third point to notice is that there is no requirement that
each defenders' breach was a material cause of the whole damage: see McGillivray v Davidson. It is sufficient
if the individual fault of each defender contributed in a material way to a
single common result. It is a fortiori that there is no requirement
that there be equal or commensurate fault on the part of the various
defenders.
[84] Mrs Munro's main submission was that there could not be a
conclusion for joint and several liability in a case where it was impossible
that both defenders should be liable.
Mr Clark accepted this. That
concession was, in my view, properly made.
It is clear from cases such as Ellerman
Lines Limited v Clyde Navigation Trustees that a pursuer may put forward
a conclusion for joint and several liability on the basis of an offer to prove
that the liability of two or more defenders jointly contributed to his
wrong. The fact that he may not make
good his case against more than one of them does not, retrospectively, render
incompetent the conclusion for joint and several liability. In such a case, having gone to proof on his
joint and several conclusions, he is entitled to such decree in his favour as
his proof allows him against the one defender against whom he has established
liability. But it must, I think, be right
that in a case where the liability of the two defenders can be shown at the
outset necessarily to be mutually inconsistent, then a pursuer cannot
competently conclude for joint and several liability. I therefore turn to consider whether this is
such a case.
[85] The issue, as presented by Mrs Munro for the third
defender, and adopted by the fourth and fifth defenders, is one of
causation. Assume, so the argument goes,
that the actuaries acted negligently, whether by proffering negligent advice or
otherwise. It is not averred against the
trustees that they had any specialist knowledge in the matters in respect of
which the actuaries were engaged to advise.
In such circumstances, if the trustees followed the advice proffered by
the actuary, how could they be convicted of negligence, let alone gross
negligence or recklessness, that being the minimum standard required to
establish their liability? If, on other
hand, the trustees disregarded the advice given by the actuary, and did so
recklessly or with gross negligence, how could the advice given by the actuary,
albeit negligent, have caused any loss to the pursuers? In developing her argument, Mrs Munro
was at pains to emphasise that the gross negligence or recklessness alleged
against the Trustees was equivalent to fraud.
It was impossible to envisage, she argued, that the actuary in giving
advice should reasonably foresee that the trustees would act fraudulently. As I understood it, Mr Clark was minded
to accept that in such a case it might be difficult to conceive of any basis
upon which both actuary and trustee could be held liable. In practice I suspect that this is right,
though I do not find it impossible to conceive of a situation in which the
trustee, being fraudulent and therefore not relying upon the actuary's advice,
nonetheless seeks to avail himself of the opportunity afforded to him by that
advice or, perhaps, to clothe himself with the protection given by the fact
that that advice coincides with his proposed course of action. In such an event there might still be the
possibility of both being liable, since without the negligent advice by the
actuary the trustees would have been unable to act in such a way.
[86] Such considerations, however, are somewhat removed from the
circumstances of the present case.
Although at one point it appeared that, despite the initial concession
by Mrs Munro that the trustees might be held liable on a finding of gross
negligence, I was being asked to decide whether it was necessary for the
pursuers to aver fraud to plead a relevant case against them, I consider, on
reflection, that the characterisation of the requisite conduct as "fraudulent"
or "grossly negligent" had the more limited aim of seeking to focus the
argument on causation. If that was its
purpose, I do not think that it assists.
Rather than seeking to attach a particular label to the averments of
liability made against the trustees, it is better, in my opinion, to look to
see what charges are laid at their door.
In the case of the contribution claim it is averred (at article 21
of condescendence) that the Trustees "knowingly and wilfully in breach of
trust, or in any event with gross negligence consisting of their reckless
disregard for the consequences of their acts or omissions". As regard the investments claim, it is
averred (in article 22) that the Trustees "acted with gross negligence
consisting of a reckless disregard for the consequences of their acts and
omissions". As regard the early
retirement claims, the averments in (Article 23) are first that the
Trustees acted knowingly and intentionally in breach of trust, but if they did
not, they acted "with gross negligence consisting of a recklessly regard for
the consequences of their acts and omissions".
There is no averment of knowing and intentional breach of trust in
respect of the expenses claimed but it is averred (in article 24) that
they acted with gross negligence using the same formulation as previously. Stripping out, for present purposes, the
allegations of knowing and intentional breach of trust, the less extreme case
against the trustees is that they acted with gross negligence, which the
pursuers equate with a reckless disregard for the consequences of their acts
and omission. It may, in some
circumstance, be appropriate to attach to such a case the label "fraud". But I do not think that that helps in
answering the question about whether an actuary, under a duty of care in
respect of the advice that he gives, should reasonably foresee that it might be
acted upon by trustees acting in the manner in the pursuers aver that they
acted. It does not help to ask whether
the actuary could reasonably have foreseen that the trustees would act
fraudulently, since what is averred is that they acted with gross negligence
amounting to recklessness. If one asks
that question in the abstract, the answer, to mind, is far from obvious.
[87] In truth, the answer will usually be: it depends on the
particular circumstances. No argument
was addressed to me, by reference to the particular circumstances alleged
against the trustees in respect of the four individual heads of claim, to the
effect that the trustees' particular acts or omissions were acts or omissions
which could not reasonably have been foreseen by the actuaries. Absent such a detailed analysis, it is, in my
view, impossible at this stage for the trustees to establish that their
liability and that of the actuaries are necessarily mutually exclusive. In saying this, I have in mind that, as the
cases make clear, it is impossible to draw "any hard and fast line between the
want of that care which a man of ordinary prudence would display in a
management of his own affairs and that high degree of negligence which is
termed culpa lata", as
Lord Hershaw put it in Rae v Meek (1889) 16R (HL) at 3135; and see
the discussion of this topic by the Scottish Law Commission in its Discussion
Paper No. 123 ("Discussion Paper on Breach of Trust") at para 3.30. I have to assume that the court may make
findings of fact when the matter comes to proof which are at what one may call
the lower end of the gross negligence spectrum, just sufficient to justify a
finding of liability against the trustees.
It is impossible, so it seems to me, to identify precisely the threshold
which the pursuers have to cross in order for the trustees to be found guilty
of gross negligence and therefore liable in damages. So also it is impossible, before evidence is
led, to be certain that they will only be liable upon proof of acts or
omissions which are so far outwith the reasonable contemplation of the
actuaries that any possible causative link between their negligence (if proved)
and the pursuers' loss will be broken.
[88] For these reasons, it seems to me that the causation argument,
upon which depends the question whether the liability of the actuaries and that
of the trustees is mutually exclusive, is a question that cannot be decided
before proof. At this stage, therefore,
it is impossible to say that the joint and several conclusions are incompetent;
and, since competency must be decided at this stage, it must follow that the
joint and several conclusions are competent.
[89] I shall return later to the other objections made to the joint
and several conclusions based upon the different dates at which the various
defenders became or ceased to be Trustees.
The
contributions claim
[90] In considering the
contributions claim, and indeed all claims in this action, I approach the
matter according to the well known principles stated in Jamieson v Jamieson 1952
SC (HL) 44. That test, as re-stated in Cosar v UPS Limited at page 264E, requires a defender, who is seeking to
exclude a head of claim at debate, to satisfy the court that even were the
pursuer to prove the facts within the scope of his averments, and the judge of
fact hearing the proof were to interpret those facts as liberally in favour of
the pursuer as he might legitimately do, the pursuers' claim would be bound to
fail. One must not underestimate the
importance of the expression "within the scope of his averments" within that
test. In my opinion, Mrs Munro was
correct in submitting, under reference to Royal
Bank of Scotland v Holmes, that
charges of this sort made against trustees required to be carefully and
precisely pled. Although the case
against them is not strictly put in terms of fraud, the allegation of
recklessness is, as Millet L J points out in Armitage v Nurse at 251F,
in effect a charge of dishonesty ("if he acts in a way which he does not
honestly believe is in their interests then he is acting dishonestly"). In considering the challenge to the relevancy
of the pursuers' averments against the trustees under the various heads of
claim, I must, so it seems to me, scrutinise the pursuers' averments with care
to see whether those averments against the trustees are sufficiently cogent,
clear and precise to support such a claim.
[91] The averments of fault are in Article 21. The pursuers' case there is that by failing
in "the said respects" the trustees acted knowingly and wilfully in breach of
trust or, in any event, with gross negligence consisting of reckless disregard
for the consequences of their acts or omissions. The "said respects" must refer back to the
respects in which it is earlier alleged in that same Article that the trustees
failed. There are two such matters. The first is that the trustees allowed the
Company to postpone its contributions on a number of occasions. The second is that they allowed the minimum
contributions payable by the company to be artificially reduced by allowing the
minimum retirement age to be nominally increased to 75. Reading further back into Article 21,
those matters are, I think, said to be breaches of the certain other
duties. Those duties are: a duty to set
and collect an appropriate level of contribution from the Company; and a duty
not to allow the minimum contribution payable by the company to be artificially
reduced by allowing the minimum retirement age to be nominally increased to
75. These averments of duty are coupled
with a duty to consider whether the contributions are affordable and a duty to
consider the winding up of the Scheme or at least cessation of benefit accrual
thereunder; as well as a duty to use their powers to this effect.
[92] Underlying Mrs Munro's argument was a submission that the
pursuers had failed in their pleaded case to differentiate between the role of
the actuaries and that of the trustees; and had misstated the obligations
placed on the trustees in respect of setting and collecting payment. It is necessary to look in a little more
detail at the provisions of the Pensions Act 1995.
[93] S.47(1)(b) of the 1995 Act provides that for every occupational
pension scheme there shall be an individual appointed by the trustees or
managers as actuary. In the present case
the actuary is sued as the first defender.
It is the actuary who is required to prepare and sign the actuarial
valuations referred to in s.57 of the Act, that is to say, written evaluations
of the assets and liabilities relevant to a determination of whether the
minimum funding requirement is satisfied (see s.56). In terms of s.57, on certain occasions the
actuary must also prepare a certificate stating whether or not in his opinion
the contributions payable towards the scheme are adequate for the purpose of
securing that the minimum funding requirement will continue to be met
throughout the prescribed period, or will be met by the end of that
period. The obligation of the trustees
is, on prescribed occasions or within a prescribed period, to obtain the
actuarial valuation and the certificate prepared by the actuary. S.58 of the Act requires the trustees to
secure the preparation, maintenance and periodical revision of a schedule of
contributions. It is to be observed that
the trustees are not required themselves to prepare this schedule. It is a matter of agreement by all parties on
Record that the schedule of contributions, or at least the revised schedule of
contributions, was in fact prepared by the actuary. No criticism is made of this. Although s.58 is silent as to who is required
to prepare the schedule of contributions, its preparation is closely tied in
with the actuarial valuation; and the rates of contribution, both in the
original schedule of contributions and in any revised schedule, must be
certified by the actuary. It therefore
comes as no surprise that the actuary in this case has prepared the schedule of
contributions and the revisions thereto.
[94] Against that statutory background, it seems to me that the role
of the trustees in relation to the contributions payable by the company is
essentially administrative or facilitative in nature. They obtain an actuarial valuation. They procure that a schedule of contributions
is prepared. They procure that the
contributions referred to in that schedule are certified by the actuary. If there is to be criticism of their action
or inaction in relation to the schedule of contributions, one would expect the
criticism to focus upon the duties which, it may be contended, the trustees owe
to ensure that the schedule of contributions and any revisions thereto are
properly made. In a case where the
revised contributions are certified by the actuaries, one would expect some
averment as to the circumstances in which the trustees ought to have
second-guessed that certification. One
would expect also to see averments as to the skill or expertise which the
trustees possessed, ought to have possessed or, by virtue of having accepted
office as trustees, held themselves out as possessing, so as to inform the
criticisms of what they did or did not do.
Without such averments it is difficult to see how the criticisms
levelled against the trustees in respect of the schedule of contributions could
ever be made good.
[95] The pursuers go some way towards attempting to address these
points. In my opinion they do not go far
enough. The specific duties said to be
owed in relation to these matters are those which I have already summarised
from Article 21. The pursuers aver,
first, that it was the trustees' duty "to set and collect an appropriate level
of contributions from the Company". But
in terms of the statutory scheme, their duty did not extend beyond securing
that a schedule of contributions was prepared, maintained and from time to time
revised. It was the schedule of
contributions, prepared by someone other than the trustees (in the event
prepared by the actuary) which set the appropriate level of contributions. It is not quite clear what is meant by saying
that the trustees had a duty to "collect" an appropriate level of
contributions, save to the extent that this would involve them in, at least,
making a demand of the Company for payment.
However, this does not matter since there are no averments that the
Company was at any time in default, the schedule of contributions having been
revised from time to time on dates before the lump sum payments, which are the
subject matter of the real complaint, fell due.
The complaint about the trustees' failure to collect the appropriate
level of contributions therefore merges into the complaint, which I have already
considered, that the trustees should not have allowed the schedule of
contributions to be revised in the way it was revised. Secondly, there is said to be a duty to
enforce the additional annual payments required from the company after August
2000. This refers to the lump sum
payments of varying amounts identified in Article 8. However, again, the criticism is really a
criticism that the schedule of contributions should not have been revised so as
to postpone the obligation to pay, and I have already pointed out that there is
no basis set out on Record for a criticism of the trustees in this regard. Next, it is said, it was the duty of the
trustees to consider whether the contributions were affordable in view of the
cash flow of the company. Nothing in the
averments on a record or in the statutory scheme which I have identified
appears to support the existence of such a duty. Nor are there any averments as to the
trustees' expertise and skill in such matters that to support the existence of
such a duty when the level of contribution is set and certified by the
actuary. Finally, it is said that, being
aware that there was no reasonable prospect that the company could afford to
pay the contribution levels which were being set, it was the trustees' duty to
consider winding up the scheme or at least the cessation of benefit accrual;
and, indeed, that it was their duty to use their powers to require that the
scheme be wound up or that benefit accrual should cease. But, as I have said, there are no averments
which would instruct a case that the trustees should be expected to
second-guess the actuary, still less that their failure to do so amounts either
to a knowing and wilful breach of trust or to gross negligence or recklessness.
[96] I therefore consider that the arguments for the trustees on
this aspect are substantially correct and that the contributions claim as
presently pled is irrelevant.
[97] Having come to this conclusion, it is unnecessary for me to
consider in detail each of the allegations in Article 8 of
Condescendence. In general terms, it
seems to me that many of them are subject to the same criticisms which I have
already identified. Thus, at page 20A-B
there is an averment that in late 2001 the trustees did not seek to enforce
payment by the Company of the lump sum contribution of £500,000 identified in
the schedule of contributions. At that
time (i.e. in late 2001) that payment was not due until April 2002 at the
earliest. Before April 2002 the schedule
of contributions was revised; and, as a result, there was never any moment when
the Company was in default of its obligation in respect of the lump sum
contribution of £500,000. The same
applies mutatis mutandis to the
revised lump sum contributions set out in the various revisions to the schedule
of contributions, on various dates in early 2003. Again, at page 21B, there is the
averment that the trustees accepted the reduction in contributions by the
company (the reduction having been achieved by the increase of the normal
retirement age to 75) without questioning it.
But there are no averments such as would be necessary to inform the
existence of a duty on the part of the trustees, or even to demonstrate an
ability on their part, to question such a reduction. Another averment at page 21C-D is,
simply, that the trustees "failed to enforce contributions from the
company". Such an allegation has no
basis in law or in fact for the reasons I have given. Stripped of these key components, the
averments in Articles 7, 8 and 21 cannot stand as part of any relevant
claim against the trustees in respect of contributions.
[98] Article 25 of Condescendence sets out the losses allegedly
sustained as a result of the actions or inactions of the trustees under all
four heads of claim. It follows from
what I have said so far that that part of Article 25 relating to loss
suffered in relation to the contributions claim must be deleted. However, even if I had not been minded to
accept the defenders' arguments on the relevancy of the averments in Articles 7,
8 and 21, I would still not have allowed the averments in Article 25 anent
the contributions claim to have gone to probation in their present form. The averment in Article 25 is that the
scheme suffered a loss of contribution which should have been received from the
company during the period April 2001 to November 2002. This is, as it was explained to me,
calculated on the basis that during the nineteen months between April 2001 and
November 2002 the company should have made contributions at the rate of £42,000
per month. This is not based upon any
figure in the schedule of contributions.
Rather it is based on the pursuers' analysis of what sums the company
ought to have paid to make good the amount of the MFR deficit below 90%; and
seems to assume that the trustees themselves ought to have set the level of
contributions based upon their own analysis of the MFR deficit. As I have indicated, such a claim is
irrelevant. But the claim also appears
to assume that the Company paid no contributions during that period. In fact the pursuers accept that the Company
continued to pay contributions up to the end of May 2002. It ceased to make contributions after that
date because, as the pursuers themselves aver, it could not. In such circumstances there seems to be no
way in which, on the present averments, the pursuers can relevantly claim that
the Scheme lost that sum, or any sum, as a result of the trustees' alleged
breaches of duty.
[99] The position of the fifth defender requires separate consideration. Mr Clark accepts that he cannot be held
liable for any failures by the trustees to enforce contributions from the
Company before he became a trustee in late April 2002. Whether that leaves over any claim against
him in respect of contributions (even if that claim were otherwise good) is
unclear. If a claim under this head was
to be proved against the fifth defender, it would require averments focusing
the issues on when he became a trustee, what he should or could have done or
not done from then on, and the consequences of him having done or not done
it. On this ground, even if I had
reached a different conclusion as to the arguability of the contributions
claim, I would not have allowed it to proceed as against the fifth defender on
the present state of the pleadings.
[101] The first of the points that gives cause for concern is that the
pursuers have not addressed what has been referred to as the "temporal"
question, namely the fact that the third defender ceased to be a trustee on
26 April 2002 and the fifth defender only became a trustee on that
date. In order to make a relevant case
against the third defender for any losses or decrease in value of the equities
occurring after he ceased to be a trustee, there would need to be averments
directed at showing how his acts or omissions before that date caused or
contributed to the loss arising thereafter.
This is not mere formalism. The
question of causation is one of substance.
Equally, and perhaps with more force, in order to make the fifth
defender liable for all or part of the loss claimed to have been sustained,
there would require to be averments directed to his role on becoming trustee,
what he ought to have known and what steps he ought to have taken thereafter
and how it is said that he became liable for losses occurring before that
date. There are no such averments in the
present case. In the case of the fifth
defender, the point is rendered more forceful by the fact that, in
Article 25, the loss under this head is premised upon the notion that the
trustees should have switched from equity investments on three specific dates,
all arising before the fifth defender became a trustee. Clearly he could not be expected to have done
anything as a trustee on those dates.
There is no indication of what the case is against him in terms of the
loss said to arise from his acts or omissions.
[102] The second point picks up on the averments of loss in
Article 25. The basis of
calculation of the loss, based upon the three dates on which the trustees
allegedly should have switched from equities into fixed interest securities,
are not foreshadowed by any factual averments, for example as to the advice
that the trustees were given, which would justify the assessment of damages on
this basis. The calculation appears to
be totally arbitrary. It was submitted
that this is simply illustrative of how the loss was suffered. However, that does not give the trustees fair
notice of how the case is put against them on quantum.
[103] In those circumstances, I would not be minded to allow the claim
in its present form to proceed to proof against the third and fifth
defender. I would, however, be prepared
to give the pursuers an opportunity of making substantial amendments to tie in
that liability of the third and fifth defenders and to give fair notice of how
the claim for damages is put as against them.
[105] The pursuers offer to prove that the trustees knew, at the
material times, or could have made themselves aware, that the Scheme was in
substantial deficit; and that transfer values had been reduced and would be
further reduced, so that those who took early retirement on full benefit would
inevitably benefit compared with others in the Scheme who did not. It seems to me that there is sufficient in
the averments on Record, as supplemented by the Company's accounts to which I
was referred without objection, to entitle the pursuers to seek to prove these
facts. I do not accept the submission
for the trustees that there is no basis for the averment that the trustees knew
that the scheme was about to be wound up.
That is a matter for proof.
[106] However, I do not think that these facts, even if proved, take
the pursuers very far. In my opinion Mrs
Munro was correct in submitting that the pursuers have not averred any basis
for the alleged duty to ensure that persons taking early retirement were not
placed in a favourable position vis-à-vis other members of the Scheme. The pursuers rely upon the fact that, in accordance
with the Rule 7(1)(a) of the Scheme Rules, where a member opts to take early
retirement for reasons other than incapacity, his pension entitlement may be
reduced. That Rule provides that the
reduction is to be by such amount as the trustees, on actuarial advice, shall
determine. That advice, and that
determination, is to be by reference to the period by which the retirement is
brought forward from his normal retirement date. That is a classic actuarial calculation, and
has nothing to do with trying to match the benefits of those taking early
retirement with the position of those receiving transfer value payments. It is, as I read the averments, the only
reduction in the pension entitlement of someone taking early retirement
permitted by the Rules. The pursuers
also refer to the provision in the 1995 Act that where
a pension Scheme has insufficient funding to meet its liabilities, priority is
given to persons in receipt of pensions over both deferred and active
members. From that, when taken in conjunction
with the duty on the trustees to administer the fund for the benefit of all
members having an interest in it, they seek to spell out a further duty on the
trustees to ensure, with advice from the Scheme actuary, that the pension
entitlements of those taking early retirement should be reduced commensurate
with the reduced transfer value payments made to those staying within the
Scheme. This does not seem to me to be
consistent with the actuarially based reduction, essentially for acceleration,
expressly allowed by the Scheme Rules. I
would have thought that a person taking early retirement would be entitled to
complain if the trustees sought to reduce his pension entitlements otherwise
than a reduction calculated in accordance with Rule 7(1)(a) by reference
to the period by which the retirement is brought forward from his normal
retirement date. It is notable that the
pursuers do not aver that the trustees should simply have refused to allow the
third, fourth and sixth defenders to take early retirement. This is, no doubt, in part because of the
difficulty of arguing that the trustees should have put into effect an "across
the board" policy of refusing to allow any early retirements after some
identified date.
[107] It is a curious feature of the pursuers' case that their
complaint against the trustees under this head of claim relates only to the
trustees' approval of the early retirements on full benefit entitlement of the
third, fourth and sixth defenders. If
the trustees were under a duty, derived from the duty to administer the fund
for the benefit of all members taken together with their knowledge of the
precarious state of the fund, to reduce the benefit entitlements of those
taking early retirement, that duty would surely apply so as to require them to
reduce the benefit entitlement of all of those taking early
retirement. Yet there is no hint in the
pursuers' case on Record of any complaint that the trustees should have reduced
the pension entitlement of others who took early retirement. The reason appears to be that one aspect of
the complaint was that the third and fourth defenders had a conflict of
interest since they were, on the one hand, directors seeking to take early
retirement on full entitlement and, on the other, trustees making decisions
about whether to approve their early retirements and the reduction of their
entitlement; and another aspect of the complaint is that the third, fourth and
sixth defenders were being put in an unduly favourable position compared with
others interested in the Scheme.
However, Mr Clark confirmed to me that others had taken early retirement
in the relevant period, and the pursuers made no complaint that the third,
fourth and sixth defenders had been preferentially treated as compared to these
others. On the basis that the pursuers
did not object to these others taking early retirement, it would surely have to
have been the pursuers' position, if their case on Record is to be justified,
that the trustees should have treated the third, fourth and sixth defenders
less favourably than others taking early retirement - but Mr Clark very
sensibly baulked at this proposition.
[108] In light of the above, I can see no coherent argument in support
of the pursuers' case under this head of claim.
In case I am wrong on this, however, I should deal with the separate
submissions made by Mr Thomson on behalf of the fifth defender.
[109] It seemed to me that Mr Thomson was correct in saying that
insofar as the claim was based against the fifth defender it was clearly irrelevant. The averments in Article 12 make it
clear that the decision to allow the early retirements of the third and fourth
defenders from the scheme was taken before the end of March 2002. Although their retirements did not take
effect until 3 May 2002, the pursuers make no averments on the basis of
which it could be said that the fifth defender ought to have taken some step in
the days immediately following his appointment to undo that decision. Nor is it alleged that he could have done
so. Further, the sixth defender had
already retired in early April 2002, before the fifth defender became a
trustee. In those circumstances this
claim as against the fifth defender must be dismissed.
[110] I should add that, even if I had thought that the pursuers should
be allowed to take this head of claim forward to a proof before answer on
liability, I would have been minded to uphold Mrs Munro's criticisms relative
to the averments of loss in Article 25.
On the assumption that the trustees both could and should have reduced
the pension entitlements of the third, fourth and sixth defenders, any claim
for damages should address the question of what such a reduced entitlement
would be. Only then can any reasonable
estimate be made of the cost to the fund of paying the full entitlement to
those defenders. The pursuers' averments
do not address this issue at all.
The expenses claim
[111] This claim relates to the
repayment of expenses. The complaint is
that the Company should not have been re-imbursed the expenses of
administration from the fund, because the trustees knew, or ought to have
realised, that such payment from the fund would prejudice the benefits provided
by the fund. The decision was taken by
the trustees in May 2002 to re-imburse the Company by setting off the sums to
be re-imbursed against contributions payable by the Company. By then it was clear that the fund was in
substantial deficit.
[112] It is sufficient, on this head of claim, to say that the pursuers
have in my opinion pled sufficient to allow them to proof before answer. The fact that the actuary's calculations did
not disclose the effect on the fund of making the repayments to the Company
does not, in my opinion, lead inevitably to the conclusion that the trustees
cannot be liable either by themselves or along with the actuaries. Since allowing a proof before answer, I
should say no more about this claim at this stage.
[113] It is accepted by the pursuers that the rules against double
recovery mean that this claim cannot succeed in addition to the contributions
claim. But this is not an obstacle to my
allowing a proof before answer. I have
refused to admit the contributions claim to probation. If that refusal stands, the risk of double
recovery is removed. And in any event,
even if I had taken a different view of the contributions claim, it would be
wrong at this stage to pre-judge the outcome of the proof.
Disposal
[114] In the course of this Opinion I have indicated that certain
claims fall to be excluded from probation, whether because they are, in my
opinion, fundamentally irrelevant or because certain of the averments are
insufficiently specific to focus the claim against particular defenders. My conclusions on the substantive claims will
have an impact also upon the conclusions, since it is apparent that the third
and fifth defenders' roles as trustees did not overlap and it is therefore
difficult to see any basis, on the present averments, for their liability, if
any, to be joint and several.
[115] I propose to put the case out By Order to enable parties, and in
particular the pursuers, to decide how they wish to proceed. I shall make no other order in the meantime
save to extend further the time allowed to the defenders to initiate an amendment
process answering the amendments made by the pursuers immediately before the
Procedure Roll hearing. I shall reserve
all questions of expenses.