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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Hughes v The Royal London Mutual Insurance Society Ltd [2016] EWHC 319 (Ch) (19 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/319.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 319 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A1NLL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DONNA-MARIE HUGHES |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE ROYAL LONDON MUTUAL INSURANCE SOCIETY LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Mr Fenner Moeran QC (instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 18 January 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MORGAN:
Introduction
The statutory provisions
"1. Categories of pension schemes.
(1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires—
"occupational pension scheme" means a pension scheme–
(a) that–
(i) for the purpose of providing benefits to, or in respect of, people with service in employments of a description, or
(ii) for that purpose and also for the purpose of providing benefits to, or in respect of, other people,
is established by, or by persons who include, a person to whom subsection (2) applies when the scheme is established or (as the case may be) to whom that subsection would have applied when the scheme was established had that subsection then been in force, and
(b) that has its main administration in the United Kingdom or outside the EEA states,
or a pension scheme that is prescribed or is of a prescribed description;
"personal pension scheme" means a pension scheme that–
(a) is not an occupational pension scheme, and
(b) is established by a person within section 154(1) of the Finance Act 2004; "
"93.— Scope of Chapter IV.
(1) This Chapter applies—
(a) to any member of an occupational pension scheme—
(i) whose pensionable service has terminated at least one year before normal pension age, and
(ii) who on the date on which his pensionable service terminated had accrued rights to benefit under the scheme,
except a member of a salary related occupational pension scheme whose pensionable service terminated before 1st January 1986 and in respect of whom prescribed requirements are satisfied".
(b) to any member of a personal pension scheme (other than a scheme which is comprised in an annuity contract made before 4th January 1988) who has accrued rights to benefit under the scheme."
"94.— Right to cash equivalent.
(1) Subject to the following provisions of this Chapter—
(a) a member of an occupational pension scheme other than a salary related scheme acquires a right, when his pensionable service terminates (whether before or after 1st January 1986), to the cash equivalent at the relevant date of any benefits which have accrued to or in respect of him under the applicable rules; and
(aa) a member of a salary related occupational pension scheme who has received a statement of entitlement and has made a relevant application within three months beginning with the guarantee date in respect of that statement acquires a right to his guaranteed cash equivalent
(b) a member of a personal pension scheme acquires a right to the cash equivalent at the relevant date of any benefits which have accrued to or in respect of him under the rules of the scheme."
"95.— Ways of taking right to cash equivalent.
(1) A member of an occupational pension scheme or a personal pension scheme who acquires a right to a cash equivalent under paragraph (a), (aa) or (b) of section 94(1) may only take it by making an application in writing to the trustees or managers of the scheme requiring them to use the cash equivalent to which he has acquired a right in whichever of the ways specified in subsection (2) or, as the case may be, subsection (3) he chooses.
(2) [Deals with a member of an occupational pension scheme]
(3) In the case of a member of a personal pension scheme, the ways referred to in subsection (1) are—
(a) for acquiring transfer credits allowed under the rules of an occupational pension scheme—
(i) the trustees or managers of which are able and willing to accept payment in respect of the member's accrued rights, and
(ii) which satisfies prescribed requirements;
(b) for acquiring rights allowed under the rules of another personal pension scheme—
(i) the trustees or managers of which are able and willing to accept payment in respect of the member's accrued rights, and
(ii) which satisfies prescribed requirements;
(c) for subscribing to other pension arrangements which satisfy prescribed requirements."
"transfer credits" means rights allowed to an earner under the rules of an occupational pension scheme by reference to:
(a) a transfer to the scheme of, or transfer payment to the trustees or managers of the scheme in respect of, any of his rights (including transfer credits allowed) under another occupational pension scheme or a personal pension scheme, other than rights attributable (directly or indirectly) to a pension credit, or
(b) a cash transfer sum paid under Chapter 5 of Part 4 in respect of him, to the trustees or managers of the scheme".
" "earner" and "earnings" shall be construed in accordance with sections 3, 4 and 112 of the Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992;
"rights", in relation to accrued rights (within the meaning of section 73, 136 or 179) or transfer credits, includes rights to benefit and also options to have benefits paid in a particular form or at a particular time; "
"3.— "Earnings" and "earner".
(1) In this Part of this Act and Parts II to V below—
(a) "earnings" includes any remuneration or profit derived from an employment; and
(b) "earner" shall be construed accordingly."
"any trade, business, profession, office or vocation".
The Ombudsman's determination
"Although there is nothing in the legislation that expressly states that Miss Hughes' status as an earner had to be in relation to a scheme employer, I find that it did. It would be a very strange result if people not in "employments of a description" who were earners in some other context (with earnings, however small or irregular, from some completely unconnected enterprise) could require a transfer value to be paid to the scheme, when other people not in "employments of a description" could not. It would give the reference to "earner" arbitrary consequences if it just means a person with any earnings from any source."
The submissions
(1) the definition of "occupational pension scheme" allows such a scheme to be established for providing benefits to or in respect of people with service in employments of a description and "other people"; see section 1(1)(a)(ii) of the 1993 Act and Pi Consulting;(2) an OPS can include arrangements for providing pensions for self-employed individuals: see PNPF Trust Company Ltd v Taylor [2010] Pens LR 261 at [333];
(3) in so far as the definition of an "occupational pension scheme" requires the founder of such a scheme to employ a person of a relevant description when the scheme was founded, any such requirement is satisfied by the founder being a company with an unremunerated director and such a director may be a member of the scheme by virtue of his directorship: see section 1(1) and (2) of the 1993 Act and Pi Consulting;
(4) there was therefore no justification for denying transfers to members of an OPS who were not employees under the OPS, in particular, to persons who were self-employed or who were not remunerated by the scheme employer.
Discussion
"I freely acknowledge that this interpretation of section 18(1)(g) involves reading words into the paragraph. It has long been established that the role of the courts in construing legislation is not confined to resolving ambiguities in statutory language. The court must be able to correct obvious drafting errors. In suitable cases, in discharging its interpretative function the court will add words, or omit words or substitute words. Some notable instances are given in Professor Sir Rupert Cross's admirable opuscule, Statutory Interpretation , 3rd ed. (1995), pp. 93–105. He comments, at p. 103:
"In omitting or inserting words the judge is not really engaged in a hypothetical reconstruction of the intentions of the drafter or the legislature, but is simply making as much sense as he can of the text of the statutory provision read in its appropriate context and within the limits of the judicial role."
This power is confined to plain cases of drafting mistakes. The courts are ever mindful that their constitutional role in this field is interpretative. They must abstain from any course which might have the appearance of judicial legislation. A statute is expressed in language approved and enacted by the legislature. So the courts exercise considerable caution before adding or omitting or substituting words. Before interpreting a statute in this way the court must be abundantly sure of three matters: (1) the intended purpose of the statute or provision in question; (2) that by inadvertence the draftsman and Parliament failed to give effect to that purpose in the provision in question; and (3) the substance of the provision Parliament would have made, although not necessarily the precise words Parliament would have used, had the error in the Bill been noticed. The third of these conditions is of crucial importance. Otherwise any attempt to determine the meaning of the enactment would cross the boundary between construction and legislation: see per Lord Diplock in Jones v Wrotham Park Settled Estates [1980] AC 74, 105–106. In the present case these three conditions are fulfilled.
Sometimes, even when these conditions are met, the court may find itself inhibited from interpreting the statutory provision in accordance with what it is satisfied was the underlying intention of Parliament. The alteration in language may be too far-reaching. In Western Bank Ltd v Schindler [1977] Ch 1, 18, Scarman L.J. observed that the insertion must not be too big, or too much at variance with the language used by the legislature. Or the subject matter may call for a strict interpretation of the statutory language, as in penal legislation. None of these considerations apply in the present case. Here, the court is able to give effect to a construction of the statute which accords with the intention of the legislature."