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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 >> Secretary of State for Culture, Media And Sport v BT Pension Scheme Trustees Ltd & Anor [2014] EWCA Civ 958 (16 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/958.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 958 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
Mr Justice Mann
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE GLOSTER
and
SIR STANLEY BURNTON
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR CULTURE, MEDIA AND SPORT |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BT PENSION SCHEME TRUSTEES LIMITED BRITISH TELECOMMUNICATIONS PLC |
Respondents |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Alan Steinfeld QC and Mr Jonathan Hilliard (instructed by Hogan Lovells International LLP) for the First Respondent
Mr Andrew Simmonds QC and Mr Henry Legge QC (instructed by BT Legal) for the Second Respondent
Hearing dates: 1 and 2 May 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
Introduction
The background to the Scheme
The material provisions of the Scheme
'… to be interpreted by English law and having as its primary purpose the securing of pensions and other benefits for or in respect of some or all of the present and future employees of [the Corporation] and the present and future Members of the Corporation in accordance with [the scheduled Rules].'
'10. The Corporation shall contribute to the Fund by monthly instalments:
(a) such contributions as are certified by the Actuary as needed to meet the cost of benefits under the Schedule 1 Rules, excluding a member's contributions towards the cost of family and dependants' benefits;
(b) such sums as may be due under Rule 12 of the General Rules;
(c) such further contributions as may from time to time be required to repair any deficiency reported by the Actuary'
Clause 1 defines 'the Fund' as 'all moneys from time to time held by or on account of the Trustees and any Custodian Trustee in pursuance of this Deed and the investments and securities for the time being representing the same.'
'12. (1) On or before [31 March 1988] and thereafter at the end of such periods not exceeding 5 years as the Trustees shall from time to time determine the Actuary shall make an actuarial valuation of the assets and liabilities of the Fund and shall make a report upon the financial position thereof making therein any recommendations he thinks fit to the Trustees who shall forthwith transmit to the Corporation and to such organisation or organisations as are mentioned in Clause 3(2) a copy of such report and any recommendations they may wish to make in regard thereto.
(2) Where on any such valuation the Actuary certifies that a deficiency or a disposable surplus in the Fund is disclosed the Corporation shall within 3 months after receiving the valuation and report and the Trustees' recommendations (if any) make arrangements which in the opinion of the Corporation are expedient for making good the deficiency or as the case may require for dealing with the surplus.
(3) Subject to the provisions of sub-clause (4) if a deficiency is certified in the Fund any arrangements made shall provide for an annual deficiency contribution of such amount as may be certified by the Actuary to be required to make good the deficiency over such period not exceeding 40 years from the date of the valuation as the Corporation may determine.
(4) The Corporation may instead of arrangements in accordance with sub-clause (3) or in substitution at any time for any such arrangements previously made make arrangements consisting of:-
(a) an undertaking by the Corporation by deed to make to the Trustees payments of such equal or unequal amounts as the Corporation may determine and specify in the deed payable in the case of arrangements pursuant to sub-clause (2) at such time or times in every year during such period not exceeding 40 years from the date of the valuation as the Corporation may determine and so specify or in the case of substitutionary arrangements at such time or times in every year during a period co-terminous with the outstanding term of the arrangements replaced as the Corporation may determine and so specify; and (unless the Actuary certifies that in his opinion no further provision is required);
(b) provision for an annual deficiency contribution of such amount as may be certified by the Actuary to be required in his opinion to make good over such period not exceeding 40 years from the date of the valuation or (in the case of substitutionary arrangements) from the date of the last valuation as the Corporation may determine that part of the total deficiency disclosed on the valuation or (in the case of substitutionary arrangements) on the last valuation which remains after taking account of the provision made by the said deed and (in the case of substitutionary arrangements) the total amount paid by way of deficiency contribution since the date of the deed or (if earlier) the beginning of the month in which payments under the deed are deemed to be first due.'
20. (1) If the Scheme terminates an actuarial investigation shall be made and the Fund shall be realised and subject to the payment of all costs charges and expenses and the Trustees' liabilities to creditors properly payable thereout the monies then in hand together with such sums as may be due from the Corporation to restore the solvency of the Fund shall be applied under the advice of the Actuary, where appropriate, so far as they permit to the purposes and with the priorities indicated in the following sub-clauses.
(2) The words and expressions used in this clause shall have the same meanings as in the Social Security Pensions Act 1975 as amended from time to time.
(3) On a winding up of the Scheme, any liabilities of the Scheme in respect of:-
(a) guaranteed minimum pensions and accrued rights to guaranteed minimum pensions;
(b) any such benefits as are excluded by Section 33(5) of the Social Security Pensions Act 1975 from earners' guaranteed minimum pensions;
(c) pensions and other benefits in respect of which entitlement to payment has already arisen; and
(d) state scheme premiums; shall be accorded priority over other liabilities under the Scheme.
(4) If the assets of the Scheme are not sufficient to meet in full the liabilities specified in sub-clause (3) above, the assets shall be applied to meet those liabilities in the order of priority in which those liabilities are specified in sub-clause (3).
(5) If after the liabilities specified in sub-clause (3) have been met there are assets in hand then such assets together with any sums due from the Corporation to restore the solvency of the Fund shall be applied under the advice of the Actuary to the following purposes (if and to the extent that those purposes have not been satisfied under sub-clause (3) above), and with the priorities indicated, namely:-
first in the purchase from the Government or from any insurance company to which the Insurance Companies Acts 1974 and 1981 apply of non-commutable non-assignable annuities payable under the same conditions as payments receivable under the Rules for those persons who immediately before the winding up were entitled whether immediately or in reversion to pensions out of the Fund such annuities to be of amounts equal to the pensions to which those persons are then entitled;
secondly in the purchase in like manner of non-assignable (and except in so far as the Trustees may with the consent of the Commissioners of Inland Revenue determine non-commutable) deferred annuities for members and others who might at some future date become entitled to the benefits out of the Fund regard being had to their respective prospects of becoming so entitled had the Fund continued to exist the amount of their service reckonable for such benefits and the amount of such benefits at the date of termination of the Scheme;
thirdly any moneys which remain after the first two purposes set out in this sub-clause (5) have been satisfied shall be returned to the Corporation.'
By way of just one example of the imprecision of the drafting, it will be noted that whereas clause 20(3) gives priority on a winding up to the provision for, inter alia, pensions in payment (see sub-paragraph (c)), clause 20(5) then provides for the provision for the same liability. No doubt the draftsman included clause 20(3) so as to give effect to the statutory priority requirements on a winding up. But he appears to have given little thought to that when he came to draft the subsequent provisions of the clause.
'12. The Corporation from [1 April 1983] shall contribute to the Fund by monthly instalments.
(a) a monthly sum equal to 1½ times the standard contributions of all members (excluding those members for whom an approved employer pays the Corporation's contributions);
(b) a monthly sum as calculated by the Actuary equal to its members' contributions in respect of family benefits in so far as such provision has not already been made;
(c) a monthly sum equal to all members' contributions for dependants' benefits;
(d) such sums as are certified by the Actuary as necessary to cover the purchase of added years including the normal family benefits related to those years at the Corporation's sole expense;
(e) such sums as are certified by the Actuary as necessary to cover the cost of enhancement of service under Rule 1 of Section A.
(f) such sums as are certified by the Actuary as necessary to cover the cost of enhancement of service under Rules 4(a) and (b), 5, 7(3)(b) and 12(1) of Section B including family benefits related to those years.'
The privatisation
'60. (1) On such day as the Secretary of State may by order appoint for the purposes of this Part (in this Act referred to as "the transfer date"), all the property, rights and liabilities … to which British Telecommunications was entitled or subject immediately before that date shall (subject to the following provisions of this section) become by virtue of this section property, rights and liabilities of a company nominated for the purposes of this section by the Secretary of State (in this Act referred to as "the successor company"). …
(4) References in this Act to property, rights and liabilities of British Telecommunications are references to all such property, rights and liabilities, whether or not capable of being transferred or assigned by British Telecommunications.'
The 'successor company' was BT.
'36. – (1) Except as otherwise provided by the foregoing provisions of this Part of this Schedule (whether expressly or by necessary implication), any agreement made, transaction effected or other thing done by, to or in relation to British Telecommunications which is in force or effective immediately before the transfer date shall have effect as from that date as if made, effected or done by, to or in relation to the successor company, in all respects as if the successor company were the same person, in law, as British Telecommunications, and accordingly references to British Telecommunications –
(a) in any agreement (whether or not in writing) and in any deed, bond or instrument;
(b) in any process or other document issued, prepared or employed for the purpose of any proceeding before any court or other tribunal or authority; and
(c) in any other document whatsoever (other than an enactment) relating to or affecting any property, right or liability of British Telecommunications which vests by virtue of section 60 of this Act in the successor company,
shall be taken as from the transfer date as referring to the successor company. …
37. – (1) It is hereby declared for the avoidance of doubt that –
(a) the effect of section 60 of this Act in relation to any contract of employment with British Telecommunications in force immediately before the transfer date is merely to modify the contract (as from that date) by substituting the successor company as the employer (and not to terminate the contract or vary it in any other way); and
(b) that section is effective to vest the rights and liabilities of British Telecommunications under any agreement or arrangement for the payment of pensions, allowances or gratuities in the successor company along with all other rights and liabilities of British Telecommunications; and accordingly for the purposes of any such agreement or arrangement (as it has effect by virtue of paragraph 36 above in relation to employment with the successor company or with a wholly owned subsidiary of that company) any period of employment with British Telecommunications shall count as employment with the successor company or (as the case may be) with a wholly owned subsidiary of that company. …'
'68. Liability of Secretary of State in respect of liabilities vesting in successor company
(1) This section applies where –
(a) a resolution has been passed, in accordance with the Companies Act 1948, for the voluntary winding up of the successor company, otherwise than merely for the purpose of reconstruction or amalgamation with another company; or
(b) without any such resolution having been passed beforehand, an order has been made for the winding up of the successor company by the court under that Act.
(2) The Secretary of State shall become liable on the commencement of the winding up to discharge any outstanding liability of the successor company which vested in that company by virtue of section 60 above.'
More history
'25. The Fund currently has about 344,000 members. It is the biggest private sector pension fund in the UK. At its last actuarial valuation at the end of 2008 it had assets worth £31.3 billion, a decrease of about £4 billion from the preceding valuation three years before that. On an ongoing basis there are liabilities of £40.4 billion, so there is a deficiency. I was told that that was currently being addressed by deficiency contributions. Measured in terms of liabilities, roughly 80% of the liabilities of the Fund relate to pre-transfer joiners. 20% relates to post-transfer joiners. About 7,000 of the members are employees of participating companies. The original 1983 Scheme did not provide for participating companies. They were allowed in by amendment at some later date.'
Issue 1: does clause 20 impose a 'buy-out lump sum' obligation?
'… a provision of a trust deed must be interpreted in the light of the factual situation at the time it was created. This includes the practice and requirements of the Inland Revenue at that time, and may include common practice among practitioners in the field as evidenced by the works of practitioners at that time.'
The arguments on the appeal
'… capable of supporting an inference of a new obligation if other circumstances justify or require it. It is true, but not conclusive, that the draftsman could have achieved the Trustee's result by clearer words, but that can be said in virtually every construction or implication case.'
'[The Post Office's] superannuation arrangements will be the subject of a negotiation with the appropriate staff organisations. As with other nationalised industries, these arrangements will be subject to approval by the responsible Minister.
The aim will be a scheme which can be applicable both to staff transferred to the Corporation and to new entrants; but whatever the details of any new scheme, existing Civil Servants will be entitled to opt instead to have the benefits they would have enjoyed had they not been transferred from the Civil Service. In any case the Government will require [the Post Office] to ensure that all reckonable service before the transfer took place is counted as reckonable service for the purpose of [the Post Office's] arrangements.
The Civil Service scheme will apply pending the introduction of the [the Post Office's] new arrangements.
[The Post Office], in negotiation with the staff, will be free to modify the initital superannuation arrangements in the light of the prevailing circumstances and subject to the approval by the responsible Ministers.'
Conclusion on the interpretation of clause 20
Issue 2: the Crown Guarantee issue
'… I do not think that the meaning of the word [liability] can be limited … to a present, enforceable liability, excluding any contingent or potential liability. Used simpliciter, the word seems to me to be fully capable of embracing the latter form of liability, as in a surety's liability for his principal before there has been any default.'
'62. The Trustee argues that the contribution obligations under the pension deed are all a single indivisible liability to pay money. The amount of money payable varies from time to time, and in particular varies as employees come and go (and in particular come), but the liability to pay the money was imposed at the outset and it was the same immediately before the transfer moment as it was after it, and remained the same when the next new post-transfer employee was engaged. It was that liability that was transferred by section 60. The wording of the deed and the Act are clear, and it is that liability that is "guaranteed" by section 68 because it is that liability that is vested. This construction is said to have the additional benefit of workability. The scheme does not distinguish between pre- and post-transfer joiners, so any moneys paid under the guarantee would swell the general funds of the scheme. There is no way in which a limited payment, intended to be paid purely for the benefit of the pre-transfer joiners, could be applied for only that purpose. … The only way of benefiting pre-transfer joiners to the full extent is to pay in enough to satisfy the obligations of the post-transfer joiners as well.
63. The Secretary of State advances an argument with more refinements. It looks at the situation as at the transfer date and points out that the obligations as at that date (or immediately before the transfer) could relate only to the then members (pre-transfer joiners). As at that date, there was no obligation to contribute to the scheme in respect of post-transfer joiners, because by definition there were no such people at that point. "Liabilities" at that time could not include liabilities that had no existence then and which could only arise by reason of future matters (within the control of BT) after that date. … The argument goes on to rely on absurdity – it is said that it would be absurd to attribute to Parliament an intention to create a statutory guarantee for employer contributions in respect of all members of the BT scheme, whenever they joined. …'.
'66. … Paragraph 36 has a useful sort of mopping up function to perform in this area (amongst other important functions), because it effectively substitutes BT as a party to all transactions in which the Corporation was a named party, so if there was something which might or might not have been a liability, but which affected the Corporation anyway, then it affects BT equally. But one would expect section 60 to be the primary section.'
'67. There can be no doubt that BT has become liable to make contributions in respect of post-transfer joiners under the pension trust deed. The question for me is whether it is liable because of section 60 alone, or because of a combination of section 60 (dealing with pre-transfer joiners) and paragraph 36 (which brings in obligations in respect of post-transfer joiners).
68. The "liability" under consideration is one which arises under the pension trust deed. It is a liability to the Trustees, not to the individual members. The obligation arises under covenants. The covenants are to pay money from time to time in the future, that money being measured in various ways – some mechanical (depending on the contributions of others – see Rule 12), some dependent on the assessment of the actuary. Those moneys will be affected, inter alia, by the numbers of employees from time to time. However, the liability remains the same. I agree with Mr Steinfeld that the liability is a single, indivisible liability. The obligation, in legal terms, remained the same either side of the transfer date. The same is true of the liability. Its quantum is measured differently from time to time, but in legal terms the liability is the same. It is not divided up by reference to classes of members, or those who are members from time to time. It is one obligation (liability) to a trustee, not a series of obligations to employees.
69. It is this "liability" that is transferred on the transfer date. Immediately before that date it is a single liability, extending into the future. After the transfer date it is the same thing. It is true that at that moment it is measured by reference to the then existing members; but that is its measure. No new "liability" arises when a new employee is taken on an becomes a new member. The existing liability merely increases in amount. …
71. … It must be remembered that section 60 operates across the whole business of the Corporation. It is not confined to pensions. It is a blunt but effective instrument, designed to shift property, contractual and other rights and obligations from the old entity to the new. If the old entity is liable, then and to the same extent is the new. If there is, for example, a lease with a rent review clause in, then the liability to pay future rent is, in my view, a liability, and that liability includes the reviewed rent. Any division of the rental obligation between pre- and post-transfer rent periods, or pre-review and post-review rent, for the purposes of section 60 would be an artificial and forced reading of the section. It is the same with pre- and post-transfer date pension payments under the deed, whether in respect of pre-transfer joiners or post-transfer joiners. They are all part of the one liability. …'
'My Lords, I have come to the conclusion that, as a matter of law, there are sound reasons for making a limited modification to the existing rule (subject to strict safeguards) unless there are constitutional or practical reasons which outweigh them. In my judgment, subject to the questions of the privileges of the House of Commons, reference to Parliamentary material should be permitted as an aid to the construction of legislation which is ambiguous or obscure or the literal meaning of which leads to an absurdity. Even in such cases references in court to Parliamentary material should only be permitted where such material clearly discloses the mischief aimed at or the legislative intention lying behind the ambiguous or obscure words. In the case of statements made in Parliament, as at present advised I cannot foresee that any statement other than the statement of the Minister or other promoter of the Bill is likely to meet these criteria.
… Statute law consists of the words that Parliament has enacted. It is for the courts to construe those words and it is the court's duty in so doing to give effect to the intention of Parliament in using those words. It is an inescapable fact that, despite all the care taken in passing legislation, some statutory provisions when applied to the circumstances under consideration in any specific case are found to be ambiguous. One of the reasons for such ambiguity is that the members of the legislature in enacting the statutory provision may have been told what result those words are intended to achieve. Faced with a given set of words which are capable of conveying that meaning it is not surprising if the words are accepted as having that meaning. Parliament never intends to enact an ambiguity. Contrast with that the position of the courts. The courts are faced simply with a set of words which are in fact capable of bearing two meanings. The courts are ignorant of the underlying Parliamentary purpose. Unless something in other parts of the legislation discloses such purpose, the courts are forced to adopt one of the two possible meanings using highly technical rules of construction. In many, I suspect most, cases references to Parliamentary materials will not throw any light on the matter. But in a few cases it may emerge that the very question was considered by Parliament in passing the legislation. Why in such a case should the courts blind themselves to a clear indication of what Parliament intended in using the words? The court cannot attach a meaning to words which they cannot bear, but if the words are capable of bearing more than one meaning why should not Parliament's true intention be enforced rather than thwarted?'
'As I understood the point which the noble Lord, Lord Weinstock, made earlier, it was that the Secretary of State is taking responsibility for the liabilities of British Telecom as at the date of transfer if the successor company, on being wound up, does not meet those liabilities. The reason for that is that up until the time of transfer British Telecom, being a nationalised operation, would be understood to be supported by the Government and, therefore, those who were creditors of it would have become creditors on that basis.
Among those obligations perhaps the one of most interest is that relating to the pension provision for the employees of British Telecom as at that date. I think that that is perhaps particularly the point to which the noble Lord, Lord Weinstock, referred. Under Clause 66 the Government stand behind British Telecom plc in backing the fulfilment of those pension liabilities which are vested in British Telecom plc at the transfer date, so that the employees as at that date have the backing of the Government for their pension arrangements, which seems a very reasonable provision.
One of the liabilities so vested would be a requirement under the pension fund trust deed to ensure that there are sufficient funds available to meet the pension entitlements of current employees who are already members of the pension scheme at the time of the transfer when they come to retire in the future. Accordingly, the Government stand behind the pension entitlement of current employees in respect of all their service to retirement; that is to say, service both before and after the transfer date.
The Government also stand behind the British Telecom public limited company's liability to ensure that there are sufficient funds available to meet the entitlement of British Telecom pensioners at the time of the transfer; that is to say, those who are already pensioners. However, there will not be any Government backing for pension obligations for new recruits who join British Telecom plc and the pension scheme after the transfer date.
This is not a subsidy because, first, the Government guarantee would come into effect only if British Telecom plc were to go into liquidation, and would be directed to recompensing the creditors, not saving the company. The guarantee – and this is the second reason why it is not a subsidy – does not apply to fresh obligations which British Telecom plc would take on after the transfer date. Therefore, while making clear the nature of the obligations which are covered by this clause, I do not accept that these amount in any sense to a subsidy to British Telecom plc.'
Conclusion on the Crown guarantee issue
Lady Justice Gloster :
Sir Stanley Burnton :