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First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) >> L'Oro Di Napoli Ealing Ltd v Pensions Regulator [2023] UKFTT 466 (GRC) (06 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/GRC/2023/466.html Cite as: [2023] UKFTT 466 (GRC) |
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GENERAL REGULATORY CHAMBER
(PENSIONS REGULATION)
B e f o r e :
ALEXANDRA MARKS CBE
(SITTING AS A FIRST TIER TRIBUNAL JUDGE)
____________________
L'ORO DI NAPOLI EALING LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE PENSIONS REGULATOR |
Respondent |
____________________
11 MAY 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Background
The law
The facts
Submissions
22. The Employer's Notice of Appeal dated 19 January 2023 says that:
(1) She had been running two business for almost 10 years and has never received any penalties from any government departments.
(2) She always follows correspondence from the Regulator: both her businesses are registered with NEST for workplace pensions.
(3) Before the £400 penalty notice, she did not receive any letter so did not respond and submit the re-declaration on time.
(4) Although she explained this to the Regulator, they rejected her appeal.
(5) She would like the penalty cancelled as she is a law-abiding citizen who always does her returns promptly.
(1) The Regulator relies on the strong statutory presumptions about the service and receipt of documents sent to the proper address.
(2) There is no basis for displacing these statutory presumptions unless the contrary can be shown by evidence. Mere assertion that posted items have not been received is insufficient. The Employer in this case has provided no evidence or explanation for what she claims is non-delivery of the Compliance Notice. There is no record of any of the Regulator's correspondence having been returned undelivered.
(3) The Employer has also not explained why it received the Penalty Notice but not the Compliance Notice and other prior correspondence all sent to the same address, namely the Employer's registered office address of L'Oro Di Napoli, 6 The Quadrant, London W5 4EE.
(4) The Employer was directly reminded of her duty to re-enrol employees and then file a re-declaration of compliance as far back as June 2021, and then again in November 2021. These reminder letters advised of the deadline of 28 February 2022 for making the re-declaration of compliance. There is no legal requirement for the Regulator to provide such reminders: they are sent as a courtesy. Ultimately, it is the Employer's duty to comply with all its pensions obligations.
(5) The decision to issue a Penalty Notice was fair, reasonable and proportionate because:
(a) The Compliance Notice as well as the Penalty Notice was correctly served on the Employer at its proper address, namely its registered office address. The Employer has failed to produce any evidence to overturn the presumption of service of these Notices.
(b) In any event, the Employer failed to take timely steps to make the re-declaration so the Regulator was entitled to issue the Penalty Notice.
(c) The re-declaration of compliance is a vital source of information for the Regulator, and a central part of its compliance and enforcement approach.
(d) The Regulator has repeatedly made clear that action will be taken against employers who fail to provide a re-declaration of compliance.
(e) The five-month period for compliance, starting with the third anniversary of the employer's staging date, is a generous period within which to complete the re-declaration. By the time the Penalty Notice was issued on 20 December 2022, more than nine months had elapsed since the original deadline of 28 February 2022.
(f) The amount of the Penalty is prescribed and neither the Regulator nor the Tribunal has any discretion to alter that amount.
(g) No reasonable excuse in fact or law has been provided for the Employer's failure to complete the re-declaration on time.
Conclusions
(1) The Regulator does not have to prove that the documents were received. This is because the Act and related Regulations say that if a document is sent to a company's registered office by post, which is its proper address, it is presumed that it was received by the person to whom it was addressed. This is only a presumption and, if there were strong evidence to the contrary, the presumption can be displaced. The Employer does not have to prove that the documents were not received but, beyond the simple statement that the reminder letters and the Compliance Notice were not in fact received, and that further checks were made, the Employer has produced no evidence in support of this position (such as evidence from the Post Office of post being disrupted in the local area; or post being wrongly delivered to another similar address).
(2) Secondly, even if the Employer received neither the Compliance Notice nor either of the reminder letters (all of which were sent to the same registered office address), that would not relieve the Employer of the duty to comply with the legal obligations relating to re-enrolment. Such obligations include filing with the Regulator a re-declaration of compliance by the required deadline.
(Signed)
DATE: 6 June 2023
ALEXANDRA MARKS CBE
(Sitting as a Judge of the First Tier Tribunal)