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UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> UK Social Security and Child Support Commissioners' Decisions >> [2007] UKSSCSC CP_3577_2006 (25 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSSCSC/2007/CP_3577_2006.html Cite as: [2007] UKSSCSC CP_3577_2006 |
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[2007] UKSSCSC CP_3577_2006 (25 June 2007)
CP 3577 2006
DECISION OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY COMMISSIONER
REASONS
The disputed decision
The tribunal decision
The facts
Occupational pension: GMP £85.02
Basic Category A (own contribution) retirement pension £82.05
Graduated retirement benefit (pre 1975 contributions) £7.15
State additional pension (or earnings related pension)
Maximum £90.37
Less GMP £85.02
Payable £5.35
Total state retirement pension payable £94.55
Occupational pension: GMP £95.99
Basic Category A (own contribution) retirement pension £80.41
Graduated retirement benefit (pre 1975 contributions) £3.97
State additional pension (or earnings related pension)
Maximum £116.72
Less GMP £95.99
Payable £20.73
Total state retirement pension payment £105.11
As noted above, Mrs R's pension could have been based on her husband's contributions in that week, but were not. This is because she gained no advantage in her particular circumstances from basing her pension on his contributions.
Occupational pension: GMP £95.99
Inherited GMP from late husband's pension £42.51
Basic Category A and B (own and husband's contributions)
retirement pension £82.05
Graduated retirement benefit (pre 1975 contributions of
both self and husband) £7.55
State additional pension (or earnings related pension)
Own maximum £116.72
Maximum from husband £90.37
Capped at maximum entitlement £143.08
Less GMP (own) £95.99
Less GMP (widow) £42.51
Payable £4.58
Total state retirement pension payment £94.18
(1) She gained a widow's pension from her late husband's occupational pension, which for these purposes (as measured by the GMP) was worth half his own pension. I do not have the full details, but this follows the standard approach of such schemes of providing a widow's pension of half the pension of the late husband. Mr R's pension was a contracted out occupational pension scheme. Put at its simplest, the GMP for a widow's pension is normally half the GMP of the late husband. That is the figure here.
(2) She gained an increase in her basic state retirement pension from £80.41 to £82.05. She was receiving slightly less than the maximum weekly amount of basic pension from her own contributions. After Mr R died, she became entitled to the full basic pension on her husband's contributions.
(3) She gained an increase in the graduated retirement benefit. This is payable in respect of contributions made under the pre-1975 scheme. After Mr R's death she continued to receive her own entitlement for her own contributions and also a benefit from half her late husband's contributions.
(4) She lost a weekly sum from her entitlement to additional pension. The maximum entitlement from her own contributions was £116.72. She inherited her late husband's entitlement of £90.37. On the other side, she had a deduction for her own occupational pension of £95.99 and a deduction for the occupational pension inherited from her late husband of £42.51. However, there is a maximum amount of additional pension payable to any one pensioner in any week. When Mr R died, the maximum amount was £143.08. The Pension Service allowed Mrs R entitlement of that amount, and then deducted both her own and her inherited pensions from that sum. The balance left was £4.58 a week.
(5) In summary, on Mr R's death, Mrs R:
• Gained £42.51 weekly inherited occupational pension (as measured by GMP)
• Gained £1.64 weekly basic pension
• Gained £3.58 weekly graduated retirement benefit
• Lost £16.15 weekly additional pension
Of course, she no longer had any of her husband's pension to share.
The cap on additional pensions
Parliament provides a different cap in these cases. It is called the "prescribed maximum". The main rule is in section 52(3) of the Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992 ("the 1992 Act"). This allows a surviving spouse to receive an amount of additional pension payable by reference to the additional pension entitlement of the late spouse. It is payable up to, but not beyond, the weekly amount of the prescribed maximum.
The offset for occupational pensions
Applying the rules to Mrs R's pension
"My contention is that the Pension Service's calculation of [my] inherited pension is flawed and unjust remains. [The tribunal] states that: "the tribunal could find no authority for her contention that there should be a proportional adjustment to the inherited contracted out deductions and the tribunal concludes that the law does require that her additional pension is restricted to the prescribed maximum before a contracted out deduction is applied."
The decision R(P) 1/ 03 to which [the tribunal] refers does not deal with the issue of proportional adjustment to the inherited contracted out deductions only the stage in the calculations at which any deductions would be made. In this respect [I] raise important issues which need to be decided by the Commissioner who, in his decision R(P) 1/ 03, makes the point that the GMP would not be deducted twice. In effect the manner in which the Pension Service carried out the calculation means that, because of the cap, £26.37 of Mr R's pension is actually inherited but subject to a £42.51 deduction. This means that Mrs R's £116.72 additional pension is reduced by her own GMP and then by a second deduction of £16.14 from her inherited GMP. This is disproportionate and unjust."
There is therefore no double deduction in respect of her late husband's GMP. Nor is there any deduction of any amount greater than the GMP on her inherited pension.
There is a further aspect to the case, not explored by Mrs R, the Pension Service or the tribunal that I consider I should investigate in order to see if Mrs R was awarded the best available pension in her particular circumstances. That is the question whether Mrs R would have been better off if she had claimed only a Category A pension, or a Category B pension, rather than both.
Did Mrs R have other options?
The central provision is section 46(1) of the Pension Schemes Act 1993. That subsection, as relevant to this case, provides:
"Where for any period a person is entitled both –
(a) to a Category A or Category B retirement pension … and
(b) to one or more guaranteed minimum pensions,
the weekly rate of the benefit mentioned in paragraph (a) shall for that period
be reduced by an amount equal –
…
(ii) to the weekly rate of the pension mentioned in paragraph (b) (or, if there is
more than one such pension, their aggregate weekly rates)."
Conclusion
David Williams
Commissioner
25 06 2007
[Signed on the original on the date stated]