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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Allied Domecq (Holdings) Ltd v Allied Domecq First Pension Trust Ltd & Anor [2008] EWCA Civ 1084 (16 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1084.html Cite as: [2008] Pens LR 425, [2008] EWCA Civ 1084 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE BLACKBURNE)
HC07 C02367
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RT HON. LADY JUSTICE SMITH
and
THE RT HON. SIR JOHN CHADWICK
____________________
ALLIED DOMECQ (HOLDINGS) LIMITED |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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ALLIED DOMECQ FIRST PENSION TRUST LIMITED ALLIED DOMECQ SECOND PENSION TRUST LIMITED |
Defendants/Respondents |
____________________
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Mr Andrew Simmonds QC (instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP, 3 Noble Street, London EC2V 7EE) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 16 May 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir John Chadwick:
" . . . under which the rates of contributions payable by the employer are determined -
(i) by or in accordance with the advice of a person other than the trustees or managers and
(ii) without the employer's agreement . . ."
Paragraph 9(5) of schedule 2 applies if the scheme is:
" . . . a scheme under which the rates of contributions payable by the employer are determined by the actuary without the agreement of the employer . . ."
The Scheme Rules
"12.1.1. What contributions the Participating Companies must pay
The Participating Companies shall pay to the Trustees such contributions as will, in the opinion of the Actuary, (as expressed in the last report made by him pursuant to Rule 18.7.2), enable the Trustees to make due provision for the Benefits payable under the Fund Schemes from the Fund."
"Participating Companies" is defined by rule 1 to mean "the Principal Company and any subsidiary or associated companies which have bound themselves by deed to observe and perform the rules of any of the Fund Schemes so long as they remain subsidiary or associated companies of the Principal Company…". In that context the "Principal Company" is the claimant, Allied Domecq (Holdings) Limited.
"12.1.2 Apportionment of contributions amongst the Participating Companies
The contributions payable by the Participating Companies under the provisions of Rule 12.1.1 shall be borne by the several Participating Companies in their respective due proportions, as determined by the Trustees, and the Trustees shall, by notice in writing, (on or before each 6 April), inform each one of the Participating Companies of the contributions, (or the basis of the contributions), required from it for the ensuing year for the Fund Schemes."
Rule 12.1.3 provides for the time at which contributions are to be paid:
"12.1.3 When Participating Companies' contributions to be paid
The contributions so payable by the Participating Companies shall be paid to the Trustees at such intervals as may be agreed between the Trustees and the Principal Company and in accordance with any schedule of contributions for the time being in force under Section 58 of [the Pensions Act 1995]."
"18.7.2 Requirements for actuarial valuations of the Fund
(i) The Fund shall be actuarially valued by the Actuary at intervals of not exceeding three years and, for that purpose, all necessary accounts and information shall be supplied to the Actuary who shall report in writing to the Trustees and to the Principal Company;
(ii) Without prejudice to sub rule (i) above, the Trustees must obtain an actuarial valuation which satisfies the requirements of the Occupational Pension Schemes (Minimum Funding Requirement and Actuarial Valuations) Regulations 1996 prepared by the Actuary when required by those regulations to do so."
Rule 18.7.3 (to which rule 18.7.4 is ancillary) provides for the application, at the direction of the Principal Company, of a fund surplus disclosed by the Actuary's report. Rule 18.7.5 of the main scheme is in these terms:
"18.7.5 Restoration of solvency in the event of a deficiency
"If the Actuary's report in accordance with Rule 18.7.2 discloses a deficiency in the Fund, the Participating Companies shall collectively pay such an amount by lump sum and/or periodic payments (to be certified by the Actuary) as, after taking into account any reserve and making such other adjustments as the Actuary may consider appropriate, will, in the opinion of the Actuary restore the solvency of the Fund; such amount to be paid by the Participating Companies in such proportions as the Actuary shall certify and within such period as the Trustees may, on the advice of the Actuary, agree with the Principal Company."
Rule 18.7.5 of the executives scheme differs in a minor respect: the reference in the first line is to "Rule 18.7.2(i)". The difference is not material. It is sub-rule (i) of rule 18.7.2 which provides for the Actuary to make a report: when rule 18.7.5 of the main scheme is read with rule 18.7.2, it is clear that that is the report to which reference is made.
"[31] . . . In short, in order to establish that neither paragraph 9(5) nor regulations 5(3)(b) and 8(2)(e) apply to the Main Scheme at a time when rule 18.7.5 applies to it, the claimant needs only to show that rule 18.7.5 is outside those provisions."
The statutory context
"[9] Unless exempted by or under section 221 [of the Pensions Act 2004] - which the two schemes are not - every scheme is subject to the 'statutory funding objective' imposed by section 222(1). This requires that a scheme 'must have sufficient and appropriate assets to cover its technical provisions'. For this purpose 'technical provisions' means, by section 222(2), 'the amount required, on an actuarial calculation, to make provision for the scheme's liabilities'.
[10] The subsequent sections of Part 3 [of the 2004 Act] then set out a mechanism for ensuring that schemes meet this objective. The mechanism comprises the following elements: (1) a 'statement of funding principles', as prescribed by section 223, namely a written statement to be prepared and from time to time reviewed by the trustees or managers setting out, inter alia, 'their policy for securing that the statutory funding objective is met', including any decisions by them as to the basis on which the scheme's technical provisions have been calculated and the period within which and manner in which any failure to meet the funding objective is to be remedied; (2) actuarial valuations, as prescribed by section 224, to be obtained by the trustees or managers at intervals of not more than one year or, if they obtain actuarial reports for intervening years, at intervals of not more than three years; (3) a 'recovery plan', as prescribed by section 226, if 'having obtained an actuarial valuation it appears to the trustees or managers of the scheme that the statutory funding objective was not met [ie the scheme was in deficit] on the effective date of the valuation', with a requirement that such recovery plan set out the steps to be taken to meet the statutory funding objective and the period within which it is to be achieved; and (4) the preparation and, from time to time, review by the trustees or managers of a 'schedule of contributions', as prescribed by section 227, comprising a statement showing the rates of contributions payable towards the scheme by or on behalf of the employer and the active members of the scheme, and the dates on or before which such contributions are to be paid.
[11] Although the duty to procure the statement of funding principles, the recovery plan and the schedule of contributions is imposed on the trustees, the scheme actuary and the employer also have a role in their preparation. Thus, by section 225(1), the scheme actuary is required to certify that the calculation of the technical provisions in any valuation is in accordance with the 2005 Regulations. By section 227(6) he must certify that the schedule of contributions is consistent with the statement of funding principles and that the rates shown in the schedule are such that the statutory funding objective will continue to be met during the period for which the schedule is in force, or, as the case may be, that it will in future be met within the period specified by the recovery plan. Section 230 sets out matters on which, before doing any of them, the trustees or managers must obtain the advice of the actuary. There are therefore limits on what the trustees and employer can do which are circumscribed by the actuary. Nevertheless, the basic scheme of the Act is that funding is set by agreement between the trustees and the employer within the parameters of what the actuary will certify.
[12] Section 229(1) requires the trustees or managers to obtain the employer's agreement to:
'(a) any decision as to the methods and assumptions to be used in calculating the scheme's technical provisions…;
(b) any matter to be included in the statement of funding principles…;
(c) any provision of a recovery plan…;
(d) any matter to be included in the schedule of contributions… .'
Of particular relevance to these proceedings is sub-section (1)(c).
[13] Where the statutory funding objective is not met on the effective date of the valuation, a copy of the recovery plan and of the schedule of contributions must be sent to the Pensions Regulator. Section 231 sets out the powers of the Regulator. They are exercisable when the actuary is unable to give either of the certificates referred to in sections 225 and 227 and in other circumstances, including where the trustees and the employer cannot agree on the matters to which, by section 229, the employer is required to agree. The Regulator's powers under section 231(2) are (a) to modify the scheme as regards the future accrual of benefits, (b) to direct how the technical provisions are to be calculated or the period or manner in which any failure to meet the statutory funding objective is to be met, and (c) to impose a schedule of contributions. In all of these and in other circumstances where the mechanism for ensuring that the statutory funding objective is met has not been properly carried into effect, the Regulator can intervene. In the last resort other, wider, powers are available to him.
[14] From the above summary it is apparent, . . . , that under the 2004 Act the employer has considerable influence over the terms on which a scheme is funded. It can happen, however, that the employer under the regime set out in the 2004 Act would have more influence than it would otherwise have under the particular scheme rules. Although in many scheme rules contributions are set by agreement between the employer and the trustees, usually after having taken the advice of the actuary, under some they are set by the trustees alone, or by the actuary alone. Rules in this form are potentially favourable to the members of the scheme because funding rates can be set without regard to a veto from the employer. When it came to making the 2005 Regulations, Parliament evidently felt that it was unacceptable that the statutory regime, as set out in the 2004 Act, should give the employer a greater say in the terms on which the scheme should be funded than the employer would have had under the scheme rules unmodified by statute. Hence paragraph 9 of schedule 2 to the 2005 Regulations, headed 'Schemes under which the rates of contributions are determined by the trustees or managers or by the actuary'. (Schedule 2 has effect, by regulation 19 of the 2005 Regulations, for the purposes of modifying Part 3 and the 2005 Regulations.)"
"[15] Paragraph 9 of Schedule 2 deals essentially with two situations. Paragraphs (1) to (4) deal with the situation where the trustees or managers set the contribution rates payable by the employer under the scheme rules without the agreement of the employer, and no one else is permitted to reduce the rates or suspend the contributions. In that situation section 229 is modified so as to remove the requirement for employer consent to the matters set out in section 229(1). Instead, the trustees or managers are merely required to consult the employer on those matters. (Paragraph 9(2) sets out the particular modifications of section 229; paragraph 9(3) sets out modifications of regulation 13 (which, in its turn, sets out the period within which, where they are required under section 229 to obtain it, the trustees or managers must obtain the employer's agreement); and paragraph 9(4) provides that where the power of the trustees or managers to determine the rates of contributions payable by the employer without the employer's agreement is subject to conditions the modifications provided for in sub-paragraphs (2) and (3) have effect only in the circumstances where the conditions are satisfied.) It is not suggested by the defendants that paragraphs 9(1) to (4) apply.
[16] Paragraph 9(5) deals with the situation where, under the scheme rules, the actuary sets the contribution rates payable by the employer but does so without the employer's agreement. It provides:
'In the case of the scheme under which the rates of contributions payable by the employer are determined by the actuary without the agreement of the employer, section 227(6) of the 2004 Act shall apply as if it required that, in addition to the matters specified there, the actuary's certificate must state that the rates shown in the schedule of contributions are not lower than the rates he would have provided for if he, rather than the trustees or managers of the scheme, had the responsibility of preparing or revising the schedule, the statement of funding principles and any recovery plan.'
[17] Thus, where paragraph 9(5) applies, the actuary has to provide an extra element of certification when he certifies the schedule of contributions. He has to certify that the rates shown in the schedule of contributions are not lower than the rates he would have specified if he alone had responsibility for preparing the schedule, the statement of funding principles and any recovery plan. This is dealt with by paragraph 9(6) which provides that where paragraph 9(5) applies, regulation 10(6) and schedule 1 (which sets out the form of the actuary's certificate) apply as if the form of certification of the adequacy of the rates of contributions shown in the schedule of contributions included the statement set out in that sub-paragraph.
[18] Paragraph 9(5) thus introduces what was referred to in argument as the 'actuarial underpin'. This is because what the sub-paragraph does is require the actuary, regardless of what the trustees and the employer have agreed, to certify that if he, the actuary, had been left to his own devices he would have set a rate which was no greater than what the trustees and the employer have agreed.
[19] . . . , the thinking behind the whole of paragraph 9 is that the statutory regime set out in the 2004 Act has effectively supplanted the funding mechanism in the scheme rules with the result that, in order to comply with the 2004 Act, it is the trustees and the employer who generally will be setting the terms of the recovery plan and the schedule of contributions. In the case of paragraph 9(5), however, the draftsman is acknowledging that the 2004 Act is removing from the scheme something that might be of benefit to the members, namely the fact that the actuary has an unfettered right to set the rate. In those circumstances the overriding provisions of the Act are modified in order to reintroduce an element of actuarial scrutiny on the actual level of contribution setting. Paragraph 9 is therefore an acknowledgment that at some points the terms of the scheme rules ought to influence and modify the overriding statutory regime."
"5(3) In determining which accrued benefits funding method and which assumptions are to be used, the trustees or managers must: . . .
(b) in the case of a scheme under which the rates of contributions payable by the employer are determined -
(i) by or in accordance with the advice of a person other than the trustees or managers, and
(ii) without the employer's agreement,
take account of the recommendations of that person."
"8(2) In preparing or revising a recovery plan, the trustees or managers must take account of the following matters: . . .
(e) In the case of a scheme under which the rates of contributions payable by the employer are determined -
(i) by or in accordance with the advice of a person other than the trustees or managers, and
(ii) without the agreement of the employer,
the recommendations of that person."
He went on – in a paragraph which, again, is not challenged – to say this:
"[22] The effect of these two regulations is that if the actuary is the person who determines the employers' rates of contribution and he is empowered to do so without the agreement of the employer, the trustees or managers must take account of his advice in calculating the scheme's technical provisions or in preparing and revising the recovery plan. It has a consequence on the exercise by the Pensions Regulator of his powers under section 231. This is because regulation 14(1) provides that in exercising any of his powers conferred by that section in the case of a scheme of the kind referred to in regulations 5(3)(b) and 8(2)(e), 'the Regulator must take into account any relevant recommendations made to the trustees or managers under those regulations.'"
The need for a determination of the issue in the present case
"[24] . . . The evidence before the court indicated that, if the underpin applies, the monthly contributions for the period 1 August 2007 to 5 April 2020 (which is the period of the recovery plan in the case of each scheme) are greater for the period January 2008 to March 2013 than they are for that period if the underpin does not apply, whereas for the period April 2013 to March 2020 the position is reversed: the contributions are smaller if the underpin applies than they would be if it does not. The overall amount to be paid is the same but, where the actuarial underpin applies, the monthly contributions are, as it was put, 'front loaded' to the extent (across both schemes) of an additional £7.8 million annually in the period to March 2013 and thus of material consequence to the employers' cash flow. Indeed, since the statutory timetable has required the 2006 valuations to be finalised within the relevant prescribed period, the parties have proceeded on the provisional footing that the answers to the questions raised by the claim form are both 'yes' (ie that the three statutory provisions do apply to the two schemes) but with an agreed mechanism for adjusting future employer contributions downwards if that is not the correct answer.
[25] From the claimant's perspective, the commercial substance behind the construction issues, . . . , is that, although any disagreement on contribution rates will ultimately have to be resolved by the Regulator, the claimant feels that its bargaining position will be stronger if the Regulator is not required by regulation 14(1) to take into account the actuary's recommendations, even though the Regulator might be expected in any event to have regard to them. From the defendants' perspective, if paragraph 9(5) applies, the requirement for the actuarial underpin may, as has happened in relation to the 2006 valuation, lead to agreement on a higher or accelerated employer contribution rate without any need for Regulator involvement. Moreover, while trustees are always bound to obtain the actuary's advice in relation to scheme funding matters (see section 230), regulations 5(3)(b) and 8(2)(e), if applicable, require them to take account of his recommendations, which may be of value in negotiations with the employer."
The judgment below
"[42] . . . I agree that rule 18.7.5 has the two parts to it which Mr Simmonds identifies and that it mirrors the approach adopted by rule 12.1, ie that the words after the semi-colon provide for apportionment between the individual employers of the collective contribution rates which have been determined by the actuary in the words down to the semi-colon.
[43] Forcefully as Mr Furness's points were put, I am not persuaded that they lead me to prefer the claimant's construction of the rule. Whether or not the collective contribution rates set by the actuary under rule 12.1.1 result in an adequately funded scheme inevitably involves, as Mr Simmonds points out, an element of guesswork. Rule 18.7 deals with what is to happen if, as a result of the actuary's valuation, it should turn out that the scheme is either over-funded (for which rule 18.7.3 caters) or under-funded (for which rule 18.7.5 caters). In agreement with Mr Simmonds, I would not have expected the draftsman to have approached the mechanism for setting the overall contribution rates differently depending upon whether what is being funded are future accruing service benefits as distinct from making good a deficiency in past accrued service benefits."
"[34] . . . Mr Furness submits that, if [rule 18.7.5] had finished at the semi-colon, ie after the words 'restore the solvency of the Fund', and the remainder of the rule had been omitted, one might have inferred that the actuary is to decide what the amount of those instalments should be and thus is to determine the rates of contribution without the employer's agreement (because there would, on that basis, be no reference to any employer involvement in the process). But, he says, the presence within the rule of the words '…and within such period as the Trustees may, on the advice of the Actuary, agree with the Principal Company' means that the period within which the amount is to be paid is a matter for agreement with the employer. Since a rate of contribution is an amount per unit of time it is plain, he submits, that the employer's agreement is an essential component in the setting of the contribution rate: until the Principal Company - as employer or on behalf of the employers - has agreed what the payment period is to be, no rates can be determined. In truth, he says, once the actuary has delivered his valuation report under rule 18.7.2 disclosing a deficiency (the prerequisite for the operation of rule 18.7.5), the actuary's role thereafter is to certify what, in the light of the payment period agreed by the trustees with the employer, the payments are which are needed to discharge the deficiency. In effect, the employer's agreement is essential to determine the contribution rates.
[35] He goes on to submit that this produces a reasonable result: if, he says, there is a scheme rule such as rule 18.7.5 where the actuary sets the amount of the deficiency but the employer has to agree the period of payment, it is perfectly reasonable that paragraph 9(5) should not apply. This is because the purpose of the [Pensions Act 2004] is to ensure that schemes where the actuary or the trustees have a free hand are not overridden by a legislative requirement that the employer has to consent to contribution rates and so forth. But where under the scheme the employer has a major say in the setting of the contributions there is no reason to suppose that it was the policy of the legislation to take that power away given that the general scheme of the legislation is favourable to the need for employer agreement.
[35] He therefore submits that, on a proper understanding of rule 18.7.5, paragraph 9(5) and the two regulations do not apply to that rule and, therefore, do not apply to the Main Scheme as a whole. Since the two schemes are in this respect identical, the same is true of the Executive Scheme.
. . .
[41] Mr Furness seeks to answer [the trustees'] arguments by pointing to what he submits is the clear and unqualified wording to be found after the semi-colon. He agrees that, whereas rule 12.1 is concerned with contributions going forward into the future, rule 18.7.5 is concerned with making good past deficiencies, but submits that that fact provides no reason for equating the two in terms of who has the responsibility of determining the collective contribution rates in question. An employer, he argues, might well say that while he is content for the actuary to set the ongoing contribution rates (under rule 12.1) nevertheless where, as here, there is a deficiency in funding he wants a say in the period over which he has to pay it off. Mr Furness says therefore that there is a good reason why the two rules might be and, he says, are differently framed. In any event, he submits, rule 18.6.6 gives to the trustees (admittedly not the employers) a right to submit to arbitration any 'matters or things relating in any manner to the Fund' so that if a deadlock were to arise it would be in the trustees' power (if not the employers') to bring about a resolution."
The judge rejected those submissions, as paragraph [43] of his judgment makes plain.
This appeal
The structure of rule 18.7.5
The Pensions Act 1995 and the 1996 Regulations
"58(6) The actuary may not certify the rates of contributions shown in the schedule of contributions –
(a) in a case where it appears to him that the minimum funding requirement was met on the prescribed date, 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, and
(b) in any other case, unless he is of the opinion that the rates are adequate for the purpose of securing that the requirement will be met by the end of that period."
Periods to be covered by schedules of contributions were prescribed by regulation 16 of the 1996 Regulations: the basic rule was that the schedule must show the rates of contributions payable during the period of five years beginning with the date on which the rates were certified by the scheme actuary (regulation 16(1)); or, if the schedule were revised under section 58(3)(b) of the 1995 Act during such a period, the remainder of the period then current.
"17(1) The schedule of contributions must show separately – . . .
(b) the rates and due dates of the contributions payable by or on behalf of each person who is an employer in relation to the scheme . . . ".
It is important to keep that requirement in mind when construing rules 12.1.3 and 18.7.5. The rule-maker must have appreciated – when, at rule 12.1.3, he referred to "any schedule of contributions for the time being in force under section 58 of [the Pensions Act 1995]" – that such a schedule would need to show, separately, the rates and due dates of the contributions to be paid by each individual employer.
"17(2) In any case where -
(a) section 58(6)(b) applies; and
(b) in the actuary's opinion on the date 7 days before the date on which he signs the certificate of the rates of contributions shown in the schedule the value of the scheme assets was less than 100 per cent. but not less than 90 per cent. of the amount of the scheme liabilities,
section 58(6)(b) shall have effect with the addition at the end of the words
'and are such that the amount by which the value of the scheme assets falls short of the amount of the scheme liabilities will be reduced either—
(i) by additional contributions of equal or decreasing amounts made at not more than yearly intervals throughout that period, or
(ii) by increasing some or all of the contribution rates by a percentage which either remains the same throughout or decreases during that period'.
The "period" is the period prescribed for the purposes of section 58(4) and (6) of the 1995 Act by regulation 16 of the 1996 Regulations. As I have said, the basic rule was that the period was five years beginning with the date of the actuary's certificate; or was the remainder of the five year period then current. In a case where the increase was to be secured by making an appropriate payment under section 60(2)(a) of the 1995 Act, additional payments and contributions of amounts totalling in aggregate an amount equal to that increase, were to be made before the expiry of the period of one year.
The position after 30 December 2005
Discussion
"[26] . . . It has never been suggested, as far as I know and is certainly not suggested in the present case, that a conventional contribution rule in an ordinary balance of cost defined benefit scheme is overridden by the MFR.
[27] Such a suggestion would, I think, be wrong. This is because the MFR does not purport to be a standard by which a scheme is to be regarded as fully funded. As its name suggests – a name found in section 56(1) itself and not just in the heading which would not be relevant to a question of construction – the MFR sought to identify a minimum level at which contributions were to be set. No doubt if the employer and the trustees agreed a rate of contribution which complied with a scheme rule but was more than the MFR required, a schedule of contributions providing that higher rate would have been compliant with section 58. But if the employer declined to agree that higher rate, he could not be compelled to do so, and the schedule of contributions could only have set out a rate of contributions which fell within section 58(4)(b)."
I respectfully agree. The contractual provisions of an occupational pension scheme were not displaced by the statutory provisions which underly the minimum funding requirement: save where the provisions were in conflict. But, where, as in the present case, the contractual provisions have been drawn with the statutory provisions in mind, it is appropriate to construe the contractual provisions (so far as the language permits) in a manner which avoids conflict.
Conclusion
Lady Justice Smith:
Lord Justice Ward: