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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 >> Palestine Solidarity Campaign Ltd & Anor, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2018] EWCA Civ 1284 (06 June 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/1284.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 1284, [2018] Pens LR 15, [2019] WLR 376, [2018] WLR(D) 337, [2019] 1 WLR 376 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Sir Ross Cranston
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
and
SIR STEPHEN RICHARDS
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The Queen on the application of Palestine Solidarity Campaign Ltd Jacqueline Lewis |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government |
Defendant/ Appellant |
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Nigel Giffin QC and Zac Sammour (instructed by Bindmans LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 17 May 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Stephen Richards :
The domestic legal framework
"3(1) Scheme regulations may, subject to this Act, make such provision in relation to a scheme under section 1 as the responsible authority considers appropriate.
(2) That includes in particular -
(a) provision as to any of the matters specified in Schedule 3;
(b) consequential, supplementary, incidental or transitional provisions in relation to the scheme or any provision of this Act."
The matters specified in Schedule 3 include:
"11. Pension funds (for schemes which have them)
This includes the administration, management and winding-up of any pension funds.
12. The administration and management of the scheme, including
(a) the giving of guidance or directions by the responsible authority to the scheme manager (where those persons are different) ."
"Investment strategy statement
(1) An authority must, after taking proper advice, formulate an investment strategy which must be in accordance with guidance issued from time to time by the Secretary of State.
(2) The authority's investment strategy must include
(a) a requirement to invest fund money in a wide variety of investments;
(b) the authority's assessment of the suitability of particular investments and types of investments;
(c) the authority's approach to risk, including the ways in which risks are to be assessed and managed;
(d) the authority's approach to pooling investments, including the use of collective investment vehicles and shared services;
(e) the authority's policy on how social, environmental and corporate governance considerations are taken into account in the selection, non-selection, retention and realisation of investments; and
(f) the authority's policy on the exercise of the rights (including voting rights) attaching to investments.
(5) The authority must consult such persons as it considers appropriate as to the proposed contents of its investment strategy.
(6) The authority must publish a statement of its investment strategy formulated under paragraph (1) ."
The Guidance
"Regulation 7(2)(e) How social, environmental or corporate governance considerations are taken into account in the selection, non-selection, retention and realisation of investments
When making investment decisions, administering authorities must take proper advice and act prudently. In the context of the local government pension scheme, a prudent approach to investment can be described as a duty to discharge statutory responsibilities with care, skill, prudence and diligence. This approach is the standard that those responsible for making investment decisions must operate.
Although administering authorities are not subject to trust law, those responsible for making investment decisions must comply with general legal principles governing the administration of scheme investments. They must also act in accordance with ordinary public law principles, in particular, the ordinary public law of reasonableness. They risk challenge if a decision they make is so unreasonable that no person acting reasonably could have made it.
The law is generally clear that schemes should consider any factors that are financially material to the performance of their investments, including social, environmental and corporate governance factors, and over the long term, dependent on the time horizon over which their liabilities arise.
However, the Government has made clear that using pension policies to pursue boycotts, divestment and sanctions against foreign nations and UK defence industries are [sic] inappropriate, other than where formal legal sanctions, embargoes and restrictions have been put in place by the Government.
Although schemes should make the pursuit of a financial return their predominant concern, they may also take purely non-financial considerations into account provided that doing so would not involve significant risk of financial detriment to the scheme and where they have good reason to think that scheme members would support their decision.
Summary of requirements
In formulating and maintaining their policy on social, environmental and corporate governance factors, an administering authority:-
- Must take proper advice
- Should explain the extent to which the views of their local pension board and other interested parties who they consider may have an interest will be taken into account when making an investment decision based on non-financial factors
- Must explain the extent to which non-financial factors will be taken into account in the selection, retention and realisation of investments
- Should not pursue policies that are contrary to UK foreign policy or UK defence policy
- Should explain their approach to social investments"
The judgment below
"4. At the outset it is perhaps helpful to underline a rather obvious point: this case is about whether this part of the Secretary of State's guidance has a basis in law. The claimants and their supporters, including War on Want, the Campaign Against Arms Trade and the Quakers, object to the limiting effect of the guidance on their ability to campaign around the investment of local government pension funds affecting the Palestinian people and the Occupied Territories. In particular the second claimant, Jacqueline Lewis, wishes, as a matter of conscience, to influence how the pension monies she has earned are invested. On the other hand the government is concerned that local government pension funds should not be involved in such political issues because of the mixed messages it might give abroad; because it might undermine community cohesion at home by legitimising anti-Semitic or racist attitudes and attacks (although it accepts that anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian campaigning is not in itself anti-Semitic); and because it could impact adversely on the financial success of UK defence industries."
"28. The starting point in identifying the statutory purposes is the legislation. The preamble to the 2013 Act makes clear that it is to make provision for public service pension schemes and for connected purposes, and the substantive provisions are on their face included for pensions purposes. Therefore in the absence of any provision to the contrary, the regulation-making powers conferred by the legislation can only be exercised for pensions purposes. The purposes for which the power to make guidance under the 2016 Regulations can be exercised can be no wider than those behind the making of the regulations themselves. Thus it is a power which may only be exercised for pensions purposes.
29. Yet it is clear from the Secretary of State's own evidence that the parts of the guidance the claimants challenge were not issued in the interests of the proper administration and management of the local government pension scheme from a pensions perspective, but are a reflection of broader political considerations, including a desire to advance UK foreign and defence policy, to protect UK defence industries and to ensure community cohesion.
30. The Secretary of State attempted to meet the point with the argument that these foreign/defence affairs purposes are pension purposes since non-financial purposes, not connected with prudential management, can be pension purposes. Certainly the general law recognises that non-financial factors can be pension purposes, so long as there is no risk of significant financial detriment from taking investment decisions with such factors into account: for example, Harries v Church Commissioners for England [1992] 1 WLR 1241 and see Law Commission, Fiduciary Duties of Investment Intermediaries, Law Com No 350, 2014, [6.33]-[6.34].
31. So, too, with regulation 7(2)(e) of the 2016 Regulations and that part of the guidance stating that non-financial considerations can be taken into account provided that doing so would not involve significant risk of financial detriment and where there is good reason to think that scheme members would support the decision. There can be no objection to this part of the guidance: it is issued for pension purposes by imposing a base-line of risk and taking into account the role the legislative design gives local government pension scheme members through local pension boards and otherwise.
32 But the flaw in the Secretary of State's approach is that the guidance has singled out certain types of non-financial factors, concerned with foreign/defence and the other matters to which reference has been made, and stated that administering authorities cannot base investment decisions upon them. In doing this I cannot see how the Secretary of State has acted for a pensions' purpose. Under the guidance, these factors cannot be taken into account even if there is no significant risk of causing financial detriment to the scheme and there is no good reason to think that scheme members would object. Yet the same decision would be permissible if the non-financial factors taken into account concerned other matters, for example, public health, the environment, or treatment of the workforce. In my judgment the Secretary of State has not justified the distinction drawn between these and other non-financial cases by reference to a pensions' purpose. In issuing the challenged part of the guidance he has acted for an unauthorised purpose and therefore unlawfully."
The Secretary of State's appeal: unauthorised purpose
The respondent's notice: the IORP Directive
"Institutions which are completely separated from any sponsoring undertaking and which operate on a funded basis for the sole purpose of providing retirement benefits should have freedom to provide services and freedom of investment, subject only to coordinated prudential requirements, regardless of whether these institutions are considered as legal entities."
Recital (32) reads:
"Supervisory methods and practices vary among Member States. Therefore, Member States should be given some discretion on the precise investment rules that they wish to impose on the institutions located in their territories. However, these rules must not restrict the free movement of capital, unless justified on prudential grounds."
"Investment rules
(1) Member States shall require institutions located in their territories to invest in accordance with the 'prudent person' rule and in particular in accordance with the following rules:
(a) the assets shall be invested in the best interests of members and beneficiaries
(b) the assets shall be invested in such a manner as to ensure the security, quality, liquidity and profitability of the portfolio as a whole
(c) the assets shall be predominantly invested on regulated markets
(d) investment in derivative instruments shall be possible
(e) the assets shall be properly diversified
(f) investment in the sponsoring undertaking shall be no more than 5% of the portfolio as a whole
(2) The home Member State shall prohibit the institution from borrowing or acting as a guarantor on behalf of third parties
(3) Member States shall not require institutions located in their territory to invest in particular categories of assets.
(4) Without prejudice to Article 12, Member States shall not subject the investment decisions of an institution located in their territory or its investment manager to any kind of prior approval or systematic notification requirements.
(5) In accordance with the provisions of paragraphs 1 to 4, Member States may lay down more detailed rules, including quantitative rules, provided they are prudentially justified, to reflect the total range of pension schemes operated by those institutions
(6) Paragraph 5 shall not preclude the right for Member States to require the application to institutions located in their territory of more stringent investment rules also on an individual basis provided they are prudentially justified, in particular in the light of the liabilities entered into by the institution ."
"52. The claimants submit that making the permissibility of an investment decision depend upon the guidance is to subject it to a form of prior approval for the purposes of article 18(4). Prior approval is not confined to situations where the administering authorities have to go cap in hand, as Mr Giffin QC put it: it covers the restrictions in the guidance at issue in this case. Article 18(4) cannot be sidestepped simply by making the necessary approval or otherwise of an investment decision a function of the state's general policy, rather than of some more explicit or individual approval process. The application of the Directive must depend upon substance, not form. The broader reading is reinforced, it is also said, by the descriptive phrase "any kind of" which precedes "prior approval" in article 18(4).
53. The claimants' construction accords, the claimants also submit, with the purpose of the Directive where the only limitations which Member States can lay down are so that investments are made prudentially. Otherwise there can be no restrictions as to where to invest. In that context the claimants contend that article 18(4) is the corollary of article 18(3): article 18(3) precludes positive interference, i.e. the state demanding investment in particular assets, whilst article 18(4) precludes negative interference, i.e. the state being able to withhold a required approval for a particular investment decision, whether such approval has to be sought in advance or by way of subsequent notification. Finally, it is said, the breadth of article 18(4) explains why it opens with a saving for article 12, which obliges states to require institutions to prepare periodic statements of their investment policy principles."
"54. In my view the phrase "any kind of prior approval" connotes an obligation to subject individual investment decisions to external oversight before investments are made. It does not cover what the guidance in this case does, in allowing administering authorities to decide what investments to make, but providing a framework for the content of statements of investment policy which administering authorities must prepare. Further, as Mr Milford for the Secretary of State pointed out, prior approval in article 18(4) is linked with notification, both phrases connoting circumstances in which an administering authority must inform some external body about its investment decisions. This distinction between a general framework for investment decisions and a system of prior approval seems supported by the jurisprudence of the CJEU in the context of the use of that phrase in the Non-life Insurance Directive 92/49/EC.
55. This reading of the phrase prior approval is supported both by its immediate context and the Directive as a whole. Recital (32) and Articles 18(5) and (6) of the Directive permit Member States to impose general rules. These cannot mean the same thing as prior approval, since prior approval is by Article 18(4) always impermissible. Article 18(4) is without prejudice to Article 12, that is, Member States' duty to ensure that every institution prepares a strategy. So Article 18(4) itself makes clear that Member States do not subject occupational pension providers to any form of prior approval, merely by requiring them to produce a strategy in accordance with such rules as Member States themselves may determine. As we have seen the guidance does not mandate investment or disinvestment in any particular class of asset. More generally, the Directive is concerned to ensure the smooth functioning of the single market, in particular, the free movement of capital, and the manner in which Member States can legitimately govern the prudential investment decisions of occupational pension providers. These purposes are unaffected by the guidance addressing the non-financial decisions of providers."
"29. It is apparent that the Community legislature clearly meant to secure the principle of freedom to set rates in the non-life insurance sector, including the area of compulsory insurance such as insurance covering third-party liability arising from the use of motor vehicles. That principle implies the prohibition of any system of prior or systematic notification or approval of the rates which an undertaking intends to use in its dealings with policy-holders. The only derogation from that principle allowed by Directive 92/49 concerns prior notification and approval of 'increases in premium rates' in the framework of a 'general price-control system'."
The Court went on to say that the parties agreed that the rules governing premium rates laid down in the Italian legislation "significantly restrict the freedom of insurance undertakings with regard to the fixing and altering of rates for insurance policies covering third-party liability arising from the use of motor vehicles in relation to risks situated in Italy" (para 32). Those rules were held not to be covered by the exception relating to a general price-control system. This led to the conclusion that the legislation infringed the relevant provisions of the Directive.
"23. The Luxembourg bonus-malus system with which the present action is concerned is, as regards its impact on insurance undertakings' rates, different in nature from the Italian legislation which was at issue in Commission v Italy. It is true that the Luxembourg system has effects on changes in the amount of premiums. However, the system does not result in the direct setting of premium rates by the State, since insurance undertakings remain free to set the amount of the basic premium. In those circumstances, the Luxembourg bonus-malus scheme cannot be equated with a system of approving premium rates that is contrary to the principle of freedom to set rates, as defined by the court in para [29] of the judgment in Commission v Italy ."
"102. In the present case, [the national provisions] oblige undertakings providing third-party liability motor insurance to calculate pure premiums and loadings separately, accordingly to their technical bases that must be sufficiently broad and refer to at least five years.
103. On the question whether that rule is compatible with the principle of freedom to set rates as set out previously, it must first be noted that it does not introduce a system of prior approval or systematic notification of premium rates.
105. Thirdly, to the extent that [the national provisions] are likely to have repercussions on premium rates in that they outline a technical framework within which insurance undertakings must calculate their premiums, it is clear that such a restriction on the freedom to set rates is not prohibited by Directive 92/49."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Hickinbottom :
Lord Justice Davis :