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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Alexander Forbes Trustees Services Ltd v Doe & Anor [2011] EWHC 3930 (Ch) (16 December 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/3930.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 3930 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
7 Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the Chancery Division)
B E T W E E N:
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ALEXANDER FORBES TRUSTEES SERVICES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- v - |
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(1) JOHN DOE (2) RICHARD ROE |
Defendants |
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by John Larking Verbatim Reporters
Suite 91 Temple Chambers,
3 - 7 Temple Avenue, London EC4Y OHP
Telephone 020 7404 7464
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Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PURLE:
"73. Preferential liabilities on winding-up(1) This section applies where a salary related occupational pension scheme to which section 56 applies" -- and it was agreed on all sides that section 56 applies in this case -- "is being wound up to determine the order in which the assets of the scheme are to be applied towards satisfying the liabilities in respect of pensions and other benefits (including increases in pensions).(2) The assets of the scheme must be applied first towards satisfying the amounts of the liabilities mentioned in subsection (3) and, if the assets are insufficient to satisfy those amounts in full, then --
(a) the assets must be applied first of all towards satisfying the amounts of the liabilities mentioned in earlier paragraphs of subsection (3) before the amounts of the liabilities mentioned in later paragraphs; and(b) where the amounts of the liabilities mentioned in one of those paragraphs cannot be satisfied in full, those amounts must be satisfied in the same proportions.
(3) The liabilities referred to in subsection (2) are ...."
There then follow several subparagraphs which, as indicated in subsection (2), are to be met in order. Subsection (3) ends with the following words:
"and for the purposes of subsection (2) the amounts of the liabilities mentioned in the various subparagraphs are to be taken to be the amounts calculated and verified in the prescribed manner."
Those words are important because the amounts calculated and verified in the prescribed manner need not be, and will ordinarily be less than, 100% of the benefits due to the members under the scheme rules.
"(4) To the extent that any liabilities as calculated in accordance with the rules of the scheme have not been satisfied under subsection (2), any remaining assets of the scheme must then be applied towards satisfying those liabilities as so calculated in the order provided for in the rules of the scheme."
That ties in with the explanation I have just given in relation to the closing words of subsection (3). The scheme liabilities may be and often will be greater than the amounts calculated in the prescribed manner, and in relation to those additional liabilities the scheme rules apply. That has no impact in the present case because there will be no remaining assets after dealing with the liabilities calculated in the prescribed manner.
"13. Hybrid schemes
(1) In relation to any scheme --
(a) which is not a money purchase scheme, but(b) where some of the benefits that may be provided are relevant money purchase benefits,
section 73 applies as if --
(i) the liabilities of the scheme did not include liabilities in respect of those benefits, and(ii) the assets of the scheme did not include the assets by reference to which the rate or amount of those benefits is calculated.
(2) In paragraph 1 'relevant money purchase benefits' means money purchase benefits other than --
(a) benefits derived from the payment by any member of voluntary contributions, or(b) underpin benefits.
(3) In this regulation 'underpin benefits' means money purchase benefits which under the provisions of the scheme will only be provided in respect of a member if their value exceeds the value of other benefits in respect of him under the scheme which are not money purchase benefits."
"78. In these circumstances I think it is right to say that in my view regulation 13(1) must be interpreted on the basis that Parliament contemplated, as all sides agree, that money purchase benefits would normally be adequately funded, but not over-funded, and that the money or assets to be withdrawn from the unappropriated fund for the purpose of section 73 of the 1995 Act should be of an amount or value equal to the money purchase benefits.".
"117. Overriding requirements(1) Where any provision mentioned in subsection (2) conflicts with the provisions of an occupational pension scheme --(a) the provision mentioned in subsection (2) to the extent that it conflicts, overrides the provisions of the scheme, and(b) the scheme has effect with such modifications as may be required in consequence of paragraph (a)."
Subsection (2) includes, amongst the provisions referred to in subsection (1), any subordinate legislation made or having effect as if made under the same Part of the Act, which includes regulation 13 of the 1986 regulations.
"82. If there is such a conflict, the rules are overridden to the extent of the conflict. But if there is no conflict then I do not consider that the appeal which Mr Green makes to the overall scheme of Part 3 as providing a complete code has any force. I would take that view even in the absence of section 306. If a person's contractual or other rights are to be overridden, or somehow qualified by legislation, that requires the use of clear words which either expressly or by necessary implication produce that result."
"But it is essential to bear in mind what the court is doing. It is not declaring Parliament has said X, but it obviously meant Y, so we will take Y as the effect of the statute. Nor is it declaring Parliament has said X having situation A in mind, but if Parliament had had our own forensic situation B in mind, the legislative objective indicates that it would have said Y. So we will take Y as the effect of the statute as regards B. What the court is declaring is Parliament has used words which are capable of meaning either X or Y, although X may be the primary natural and ordinary meaning of the words, the purpose of the provision shows that the secondary sense, Y, should be given to the words. So, too, when X produces injustice, absurdity, anomaly or contradiction. The final task of construction is still, as always, to ascertain the meaning of what the draftsman has said rather than to ascertain what the draftsman meant to say. But if the draftsmanship is correct, these should coincide, so that if the words are capable of more than one meaning it is a perfectly legitimate intermediate step in construction to choose between potential meanings by various tests (statutory objective, justice, anomaly, etc) which throw light on what the draftsman meant to say."
(1) the liabilities of the scheme did not include liabilities in respect of those benefits, and
(2) the assets of the scheme did not include the assets by reference to which the rate or amount of those benefits is calculated.