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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 >> Board of the Pension Protection Fund v Dalriada Trustees Ltd [2020] EWHC 2960 (Ch) (06 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/2960.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2960 (Ch), [2021] Pens LR 9, [2021] ICR 479, [2020] WLR(D) 619 |
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IN THE BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY DIVISION
PROPERTY, TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE BOARD OF THE PENSION PROTECTION FUND |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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DALRIADA TRUSTEES LIMITED -and- SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS |
Defendant Interested Party |
____________________
FENNER MOERAN QC (instructed by Pinsent Masons LLP) for the Defendant
JASON COPPEL QC AND KATHERINE APPS (instructed by the Government Legal Department)
Hearing dates: 14,15 and 16 July 2020
Further written submissions filed on 21 and 28 July 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Trower :
Introduction
Dalriada and the Scheme
The scheme has been established by an employer as an occupational pension scheme. Automatic eligibility for membership of the scheme is therefore limited to officers and employees of the employer provider and associated companies, and to family members of such officers and employees. Others who outside the above definition [sic] may only join the scheme with the consent of the trustees.
Following the establishment (or purported establishment) of the Scheme in January 2013, it appears that in the early part of 2013 members were induced to transfer their benefits from other schemes to the Scheme on the promise of receiving "loans". I understand that the total amount transferred to the Scheme was £3,319,668.14. Although it seems some money was liberated to members who received purported "loans", the majority of the benefits appear to have been lost … in May 2013 a payment of £2,684,000 was made by the Original Trustees for a purported investment for the Scheme which appears to be worthless.
Dalriada cannot be certain that the remaining employer companies that have not been positively identified as having or having had employees or remunerated directors definitely do / did not have them but the factual matters set out here, together with the absence of any evidence to the contrary found in any of the documents filed on Companies House, point very strongly towards that being the case.
The Fraud Compensation Provisions
i) In the case of PPF entry under section 127, the scheme failure notice is issued by the relevant insolvency practitioner and is a notice to the effect that a scheme rescue is not possible. Section 122(5)(b) of PA 2004 requires a scheme failure notice issued by an insolvency practitioner to confirm the matters prescribed by regulation 9(2) of the Pensions Protection Fund (Entry Rules) Regulations 2005 (SI 2005/590) (the "PPF Entry Rules"). They are that the employer is not continuing as a going concern and that no other person has assumed responsibility for meeting the employer's pension liabilities under the scheme, or in the opinion of the insolvency practitioner will do so.
ii) In the case of PPF entry under section 128, the scheme failure notice is issued by the Board itself under section 130(2) of PA 2004. Section 130(5)(b) of PA 2004 requires a scheme failure notice issued by the Board to confirm the matters prescribed by regulation 10(3) of the PPF Entry Rules, which are in substance the same as those for which provision is made by regulation 9(2) in the case of an insolvency practitioner.
182 Cases where fraud compensation payments can be made
(1) The Board shall, in accordance with this section, make one or more payments (in this Part referred to as "fraud compensation payments") in respect of an occupational pension scheme if–
(a) the scheme is not a prescribed scheme or a scheme of a prescribed description,
(b) the value of the assets of the scheme has been reduced since the relevant date and the Board considers that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the reduction was attributable to an act or omission constituting a prescribed offence,
(c) subsection (2), (3) or (4) applies,
(d) an application is made which meets the requirements of subsection (5), and
(e) the application is made within the authorised period.
(2) This subsection applies where–
(a) a qualifying insolvency event has occurred in relation to the employer in relation to the scheme,
(b) after that event, a scheme failure notice has been issued under section 122(2)(a) in relation to the scheme and that notice has become binding,
...
(3) This subsection applies where–
(a) in relation to the scheme, an application has been made under subsection (1) … and
(b) in response to that application … the Board has issued a scheme failure notice under section 130(2) in relation to the scheme and that notice has become binding.
(4) This subsection applies where–
(a) the scheme is not an eligible scheme,
(b) the employer in relation to the scheme is unlikely to continue as a going concern,
(c) the prescribed requirements are met in relation to the employer,
(d) the application under this section states that the case is one in relation to which paragraphs (b) and (c) apply, and
(e) in response to that application the Board has issued a notice under section 183(2) confirming that a scheme rescue is not possible in relation to the scheme and that notice has become binding.
(5) An application meets the requirements of this subsection if–
(a) it is made by a prescribed person, and
(b) it is made in the prescribed manner and contains the prescribed information.
(6) Subject to subsection (7), an application is made within the authorised period if it is made within the period of 12 months beginning with the later of–
(a) the time of the relevant event
…
(8) For the purposes of this section, an insolvency event ("the current event") in relation to the employer is a qualifying insolvency event if–
(a) it occurs on or after the day appointed under section 126(2), and
(b) …
(i) it is the first insolvency event to occur in relation to the employer on or after that day
…
(10) In this section–
…
"the relevant event" means–
(a) in a case where subsection (2) applies in relation to an eligible scheme, the event within paragraph (a) of that subsection,
(b) in any other case where subsection (2) applies, the issue of the scheme failure notice under section 122(2)(a) mentioned in paragraph (b) of that subsection,
(c) in a case where subsection (3) applies, the event within paragraph (a) of that subsection, and
(d) in a case where subsection (4) applies, the trustees or managers becoming aware that paragraphs (b) and (c) of that subsection apply in relation to the scheme;
(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;
(2) This subsection applies—
(a) where people in employments of the description concerned are employed by someone, to a person who employs such people,
(b) to a person in an employment of that description, and
(c) to a person representing interests of a description framed so as to include –
(i) interests of persons who employ people in employments of the description mentioned in paragraph (a), or
(ii) interests of people in employments of that description.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (2), if a person is in an employment of the description concerned by reason of holding an office (including an elective office) and is entitled to remuneration for holding it, the person responsible for paying the remuneration shall be taken to employ the office-holder.
(4) In the definition in subsection (1) of "occupational pension scheme", the reference to a description includes a description framed by reference to an employment being of any of two or more kinds.
i) The first circumstance (section 182(2) of PA 2004) is that a qualifying insolvency event has occurred in relation to the employer and the relevant insolvency practitioner has issued a scheme failure notice under section 122(2) of PA 2004, the form of which I have already explained.
ii) The second circumstance (section 182(3) of PA 2004) is where the Board itself has issued a scheme failure notice under section 130(2) of PA 2004 after receipt of an application by the trustees or managers of a scheme that is eligible for PPF entry.
iii) The third circumstance (section 182(4) of PA 2004) applies where the employer in relation to a scheme that is ineligible for PPF entry is unlikely to continue as a going concern and the Board has issued a notice under section 183(2) of PA 2004 that scheme rescue is not possible. For these purposes section 130(5)(b) of PA 2004 applies to the question of whether or not the Board is able to confirm that scheme rescue is possible, and therefore whether or not a scheme failure notice can be issued: section 183(7) of PA 2004.
any increase in the value of the assets of the scheme, being an increase attributable to any payment received (otherwise than from the Board) by the trustees or managers of the scheme in respect of any act or omission –
a) which there are reasonable grounds for believing constituted an offence prescribed for the purposes of paragraph (b) of section 182(1), and
b) to which any reduction in value falling within that paragraph was attributable.
i) the relationship that a company must have with one or more individuals in order to qualify as an employer in relation to the relevant scheme (Questions 1 and 3);
ii) the nature of any liabilities that are capable of constituting the employer's pension liabilities under that scheme (Questions 2 and 3);
iii) the expenses and other liabilities borne by the assets of the scheme which are capable of contributing to a reduction in value attributable to an act or omission constituting a prescribed offence (Question 4);
iv) the extent to which a purported occupational pension scheme that was a sham when established is capable of becoming an occupational pension scheme within the meaning of section 182 of PA 2004 at some time thereafter and the impact that would have on any compensation payable (Questions 5 and 6).
Question 1
Is a company a statutory "employer" for the purposes of section 182(2)-(4) PA 2004 and the Fraud Compensation Regulations if at the times material for section 182(2)-(4) and those Regulations:
(a) the company did not actually have a contract of employment with anyone in the description of employment to which the scheme relates; or
(b) the position was as in (a) but the company had remunerated directors/officers who held an office with emoluments or earnings and who were eligible for scheme membership; or
(c) the position was as in (a) but the company had unremunerated directors/officers eligible for scheme membership?
It has always been a fundamental feature of our judicial system that the courts decide disputes between the parties before them; they do not pronounce on abstract questions of law when there is no dispute to be resolved.
But Wall LJ then went on to recognise that Lord Bridge immediately added:
Different considerations may arise in relation to what are called "friendly actions" and conceivably in relation to proceedings instituted specifically as a test case.
For the purposes of the present case, I think that the principles in the cases can be summarised as follows.
(1) The power of the court to grant declaratory relief is discretionary.
(2) There must, in general, be a real and present dispute between the parties before the court as to the existence or extent of a legal right between them. However, the claimant does not need to have a present cause of action against the defendant.
(3) Each party must, in general, be affected by the court's determination of the issues concerning the legal right in question.
(4) The fact that the claimant is not a party to the relevant contract in respect of which a declaration is sought is not fatal to an application for a declaration, provided that it is directly affected by the issue; (in this respect the cases have undoubtedly moved on from Meadows).
(5) The court will be prepared to give declaratory relief in respect of a "friendly action" or where there is an "academic question" if all parties so wish, even on "private law" issues. This may particularly be so if it is a "test case", or it may affect a significant number of other cases, and it is in the public interest to decide the issue concerned.
(6) However, the court must be satisfied that all sides of the argument will be fully and properly put. It must therefore ensure that all those affected are either before it or will have their arguments put before the court.
(7) In all cases, assuming that the other tests are satisfied, the court must ask: is this the most effective way of resolving the issues raised? In answering that question it must consider the other options of resolving this issue.
In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires – …
"employer"- (a) in relation to an occupational pension scheme, means the employer of persons in the description of employment to which the scheme in question relates (but see subsection (4))
"employer" means-
(a) in the case of an employed earner employed under a contract of service, his employer;
(b) in the case of an employed earner employed in an office with emoluments-
(i) such person as may be prescribed in relation to that office; or
(ii) if no person is prescribed, the government department, public authority or body of persons responsible for paying the emoluments of the office;"
"employment" includes any trade, business, profession, office or vocation and "employed" shall be construed accordingly except in the expression "employed earner"
The distinction in law between an employee, who enters into a contract with an employer, and an office holder, who has no employer but holds his position subject to rules dealing with such matters as his duties, the term of his office, the circumstances in which he may be removed and his entitlement to remuneration, is well established and understood.
"employer", in relation to an occupational pension scheme, means the employer of persons in the description or category of employment to which the scheme in question relates (but see section 125(3))".
i) the meaning of employment as extending to any trade, business, profession office or vocation (whether or not remunerated) can be traced back to the Social Security Act 1975 and the National Insurance Act 1946;
ii) the pre-PSA 1993 legislation did not include employer as a defined term, but it deemed an employer of a person earning remuneration from employment as an office-holder to be the person responsible for paying the emoluments of the office; and
iii) the pre-PSA 1993 legislation included no deeming provision in relation to unremunerated office-holders, a factor which was said to point to a conclusion that there was no employer in relation to those office-holders.
In the case of a company director, it seems relatively straightforward to hold that if the company director is for the purposes of the legislation to be regarded as "employed" then it is the company who employs him.
There are occasions where an occupational pension scheme is set up by an "employer" which has no remunerated employees or office holders. This is not uncommon in circumstances where it is envisaged that employees will transfer under [TUPE]. When TUPE applies, the employer of the transferring employees changes by operation of law at the instant when the transfer occurs. TUPE does not govern the transfer of pensions. It is therefore common for the occupational pension scheme to which the transferring employees' accrued rights will transfer into be created in advance of the moment of the TUPE transfer so that there is no possibility of the employees' entitlement being treated as a withdrawal rather than a transfer. It is not uncommon for the formation of such a "shelfco" scheme to be a requirement of a business sale. This is of particular importance where employees may transfer under Regulation 8(6) of TUPE from a company in administration. Were the definition of "employer" to be interpreted consistently across pensions legislation and to require remuneration of employees or office holders, it is possible that employees transferred under TUPE, could unexpectedly lose their occupational pension entitlements or have unexpectedly triggered a tax charge under section 208 of the Finance Act 2004.
Question 2
Assuming the company (Turnberry Wealth Management Limited) is a statutory "employer", then for the purposes of ss 122(2)(a), 130(2) and 183(2)(a) PA 2004 and regulations 9(2) and 10(3) of the PPF Entry Rules:
(a) does the phrase the "employer's pension liabilities under the scheme" mean:
(i) a legally enforceable obligation under the scheme rules or statute requiring the employer to pay monetary contributions towards members' benefits;
(ii) any legally enforceable obligation upon the employer in relation to the scheme (including, for example, (1) any obligation the employer has under the scheme rules, even one not requiring the payment of money and (2) any liabilities the employer may have to the trustee or members for unlawfully participating in pension liberation activity);
(iii) something else and if so what;
(b) if the employer's only liability in relation to the scheme is one imposed by the Pensions Regulator under sections 8(1)-(2) or 25(6)-(7) PA 1995, can such liability qualify as the "employer's pension liabilities under the scheme";
(c) if the employer has no "employer's pension liabilities under the scheme", does that mean that no notice could validly be issued under sections 122(2)(a), 130(2) or 183(2)(a) PA 2004 or approved under section 123 PA 2004?
i) the phrase "employer's pension liabilities under the scheme" should be given its most restrictive interpretation, namely a legally enforceable obligation under the scheme rules requiring the employer to pay monetary contributions towards members' benefits;
ii) a statutory liability for costs imposed on the employer by TPR does not fall within the scope of "employer's pension liabilities under the scheme"; and
iii) if there are no "employer's pension liabilities under the scheme", a scheme failure notice may not be issued or approved.
(a) the rules of the scheme, except so far as overridden by a relevant legislative provision,
(b) the relevant legislative provisions, to the extent that they have effect in relation to the scheme and are not reflected in the rules of the scheme, and
(c) any provision which the rules of the scheme do not contain but which the scheme must contain if it is to conform with the requirements of Chapter 1 of Part 4 of the Pension Schemes Act 1993 (preservation of benefit under occupational pension schemes).
In subsection (2), "the employer's pension liabilities" in relation to a scheme means-
a) the liabilities for any amounts payable by or on behalf of the employer towards the scheme (whether on his own account or otherwise) in accordance with a schedule of contributions under section 227, and
b) the liabilities for any debt which is or may become due to the trustees or managers of the scheme from the employer whether by virtue of section 75 of the Pensions Act 1995 (deficiencies in the scheme assets) or otherwise.
Question 3
If the answer to each part of Question 1 is no or the answer to Question 2(c) is yes, does this mean that no fraud compensation payments or interim payments could be made in respect of the Scheme under Part 2 Chapter 4 PA 2004?
Question 4
Assuming that the [Scheme] otherwise meets the qualifying conditions for fraud compensation in section 182 PA 2004, could the Board properly determine that the following matters amount to a reduction in value attributable to an act or omission constituting a prescribed offence for the purposes of section 182(1)(b) PA 2004 (and thus qualify as the or a "loss" for the purposes of the Fraud Compensation Regulations):
(a) costs and expenses paid from the Scheme by the new trustees or managers in order to investigate the prescribed offence and the history of the Scheme's administration and to make recoveries of value in respect of the prescribed offence;
(b) administration costs incurred by the new trustees and managers over and above ordinary administration expenses, as a result of irregular scheme administration at the time the prescribed offence was committed;
(c) the costs and expenses in (a) and (b), even if they are the only matter in respect of which compensation is sought (the other losses having been made good through recoveries of value);
(d) any tax liabilities imposed on the Scheme by reason of unauthorised payments made in connection with the prescribed offence;
(e) costs and expenses paid from the Scheme by the trustees or managers in order to investigate or challenge the tax liabilities in (d);
or could the Board only properly determine that the above matters do not amount to such a reduction in value or "loss"?
In very general terms, the underlying policy of the legislation, in common with much predecessor legislation in the same field, was to provide fiscal incentives for the establishment and investment of occupational pension schemes, so as to provide retirement pensions and associated benefits for employees and their dependants, but coupled with strict provisions designed to ensure that the schemes would be properly administered, and that payments made out of them to beneficiaries or sponsoring employers would be confined to certain authorised categories of payment. If unauthorised payments were made, they would be taxed at high rates intended to have a deterrent effect and to compensate the State, in a rough and ready way, for the fiscal benefits previously enjoyed by the relevant funds.
The first point to emphasise is that common sense answers to questions of causation will differ according to the purpose for which the question is asked. Questions of causation often arise for the purpose of attributing responsibility to someone, for example, so as to blame him for something which has happened or to make him guilty of an offence or liable in damages. In such cases, the answer will depend upon the rule by which responsibility is being attributed
…
Not only may there be different answers to questions about causation when attributing responsibility to different people under different rules … but there may be different answers when attributing responsibility to different people under the same rule.
…
one cannot give a common sense answer to a question of causation for the purpose of attributing responsibility under some rule without knowing the purpose and scope of the rule"
…
Before answering questions about causation, it is therefore first necessary to identify the scope of the relevant rule. This is not a question of common sense fact; it is a question of law.
Just as in pension cases, so in these compensation cases, "even if the intervening cause is the negligence or wrongful act of the injured person or a third party," the injury may still be attributable to the original event and give rise to a claim for compensation. It only ceases to be so when the intervening event is so powerful a cause as to reduce the original event to a piece of the history: see Minister of Pensions v. Chennell [1947] K.B. 250, 255.
… these are plain English words involving some causal connection between the loss of employment and that to which the loss is said to be attributable. However, this connection need not be that of a sole, dominant, direct or proximate cause and effect. A contributory causal connection is quite sufficient.
The starting point is not, I think, in the end helped by a debate about the meaning of the words "attributable to". I was referred to a number of dictionaries and none of them provided a definition of "attributable to" which seemed to me to resolve the question of statutory construction or interpretation which I am faced with. It is true that the Ombudsman relied on a dictionary definition of "caused by" or "able to be ascribed to" and, as a general synonym for "attributable to" I see no particular problem with that. In the dictionaries I was referred to, some refer to causation and some refer to ascribing something to something else, but I do not regard "attributable" as in itself a difficult or ambiguous word – it means what the dictionaries say it means: something is attributable to something else if it can properly or reasonably or sensibly be ascribed to something else – and I am content to proceed on the basis that that is the normal meaning of the phrase "attributable to". What, however, the dictionary cannot shed any light on is the normal meaning of the phrase "attributable to pensionable service" and that is the phrase which is to be interpreted in para.26(2)(b) and that is, I think, a phrase that has a conventional or normal meaning in the practice of those who practise in the field of occupational pensions.
The criminal reduction conditions are:
(a) a reduction in the aggregate value of the allocated assets of the scheme occurs;
(b) the reduction is attributable to an act or omission which —
(i) constitutes an offence prescribed for the purposes of section 182(1)(b) of the 2004 Act; … and
(c) immediately after the act or omission or, if that time cannot be determined, at the earliest time when the auditor of the scheme knows that the reduction has occurred, the amount of that reduction exceeds the value of the unallocated assets of the scheme.
The amount of the excess mentioned in regulation 10(3)(c) of the Employer Debt Regulations is defined as "the criminal deficit" (regulation 10(4)) and is the amount to be treated as a debt for the purposes of the version of section 75 of PA 1995 that is applied by regulation 10.
Question 5
Making the assumptions that (1) the [Scheme] purported to be an occupational pension scheme when established, but (2) was in fact a sham when established, would it have become an "occupational pension scheme" or "scheme" within the meaning of section 182 PA 2004:
(a) when an individual member's benefits were subsequently transferred into the [Scheme] and that member and/or the transferring trustees
(i) believed the Trust was a genuine occupational pension scheme;
(ii) gave no thought to whether the [Scheme] was a genuine occupational pension scheme or not;
(iii) were reckless as to the same; or
(iv) believed the [Scheme] was not a genuine occupational pension scheme;
and if so, did it become an "occupational pension scheme" within section 182 for all members or just in relation to that particular member;
(b) when an independent trustee was appointed in relation to the [Scheme], in circumstances where the independent trustee
(i) believed the [Scheme] was a genuine occupational pension scheme (even if it also suspected that it was being used for pension liberation activity or that its administration was subject to significant irregularities);
(ii) suspected the [Scheme] might not be a genuine occupational pension scheme; or
(iii) believed the [Scheme] was a not genuine occupational pension scheme;
and if so, did it become an "occupational pension scheme" within section 182 for all members
i) without challenge to the conclusion in Pi Consulting that the question of whether a scheme can qualify as an "occupational pension scheme" is a matter to be determined by the ostensible effect and purpose (objectively ascertained) of its governing documents; and
ii) having regard to the possibility, left open in Pi Consulting, that a scheme which on the face of its governing documents is an occupational pension scheme, is in truth a sham.
For a trust to be a sham, the original trustees must share the settlor's shamming intent at the time of the constitution of the trust. If they receive assets intending to hold them subject to the terms of the trust instrument, any later arrangement with the settlor or one or more discretionary beneficiary to treat the trust as a sham will constitute a breach of trust and will not convert the valid trust into a sham.
a conclusion that a document, agreement or provision is a sham or pretence does not make it void, or of no effect for all purposes. Rather if there is a sham or pretence: (i) the parties will not be able to rely on it as representing the true position as to the rights and obligations they have created and the court can ignore it in determining what those rights are, and (ii) as against an innocent third party it cannot lie in the mouths of the pretenders to assert to the disadvantage of that innocent third party that the transaction is a sham, or pretence, and thus of no effect.
[45] … But what if [the new trustee] does not know that the "trust" is a sham, and accepts appointment believing the "trust" to be entirely genuine and intending to perform his fiduciary duties conscientiously and strictly in accordance with what he believes to be a genuine trust deed? I cannot see any reason why in that situation what was previously a sham should not become, a genuine trust.
[46] On the contrary, principle argues compellingly that in such circumstances there is indeed, for the future, a valid and enforceable trust. After all, in the circumstances I have postulated, the trust property has been vested in someone who accepts that he holds the property as trustee on the trusts of a document which he believes to be a genuine instrument. He has no intention that the arrangement should be a sham.
Such an unauthorised transfer will often, although not necessarily, be made in breach of trust. In the present case it seems likely that the [transfer] was made in breach of trust, albeit innocently so far as [the transferring trustee] was concerned. The effect of a transfer made in breach of trust is that beneficial title to the property does not pass to the transferee, but if the property reaches a bona fide purchaser for value without notice the effect is then in substance the same as if the trustee in breach had been authorised to transfer the beneficial interest of the purchaser.
48. The power must have been a fiduciary power which the trustees of the EW scheme could exercise only if acting in good faith and for the purposes for which the power was intended – that is, on a transfer from one genuine employment to another. This court has no findings or evidence of the state of mind of the other two trustees … but there are clear findings that Mr Allan himself knew that [the] plan was improper and deceitful. Had his co-trustees known the true facts, they could not properly have joined, and would not have joined, in the exercise of the power. Although the legal interest in the AXA policies passed under the assignments, the beneficial interest remained in the EW scheme. As Cross J put it in Re Abrahams [1969] 1 Ch 463, 485, the beneficial interests:
go back to – or, more properly I think, never left – the [original settlement].
49. Since the court does not know the precise terms of the transfer payments power in the EW scheme it is impossible to say whether the invalidity of its exercise should be classified as an excessive (ie ultra vires) exercise of the power, or as a fraud on the power (which makes the exercise void, not voidable: Cloutte v Storey [1911] 1 Ch 18) or as an example of the operation of the principle in Re Hastings-Bass [1975] Ch 25: see Mettoy Pension Trustees v Evans [1990] 1 WLR 1587 at 1621–24, where Warner J stated at 1624:
For the principle to apply however, it is not enough that it should be shown that the trustees did not have a proper understanding of the effect of their act. It must also be clear that, had they had a proper understanding of it, they would not have acted as they did.
This court formulated the test in less demanding terms in Stannard v Fisons Pensions Trust Ltd [1992] IRLR 27, but in this case even the most demanding test would lead to invalidity.
… the Ceding Schemes were without doubt occupational or personal pension schemes, the pension pots were intended to be transferred only to a Receiving Scheme that was a valid occupational pension scheme and if the Receiving Scheme was not such a scheme then the funds received would have been held either on resulting or a Quistclose trust and therefore remained occupational pension scheme assets held on trust for the Ceding Scheme trustees unless and until transferred to a valid Receiving Scheme.
(1) A member of a pension scheme who has acquired a right to take a cash equivalent in accordance with this Chapter 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 in one of the ways specified below.
…
(2) In the case of a member of an occupational pension scheme…, the ways referred to in subsection (1) are –
a) for acquiring transfer credits allowed under the rules of another occupational pension scheme…
the overriding consideration for a scheme trustee or administrator must be to evaluate the transfer application carefully in order that a valid statutory transfer right is complied with and an invalid transfer application is legitimately withheld.
Question 6
If the [Scheme] is currently an "occupational pension scheme" or "scheme" within the meaning of section 182 PA 2004 and is eligible to make a claim for fraud compensation payments, but there were times during the Scheme's existence when it was not such a scheme, then:
(a) is no compensation payable in respect of a prescribed offence or reduction in the value of scheme assets which occurred at a time when the scheme was not an occupational pension scheme;
(b) if, at such a time, there was an increase in value which would otherwise fall within section 184(3) PA 2004, is such increase not a "recovery of value" for the purposes of sections 184-185 PA 2004?