Equal Opportunities
Transcription
Equal Opportunities
LEGAL Equal opportunities Pension schemes seeking compensation for past equalisation mistakes are running out of time, says Anthony Harrington. For many, it is already too late. 48 PensionsInsight / Augustt 2009 www.pensions-insight.co.uk went up significantly, by around £30 million for a case and Smith versus Advel. The Barber case mid range scheme such as Foster Wheeler (Barber versus Guardian Royal Exchange) according to some experts. established that pension benefits are equivalent to pay and therefore subject to the European Union’s A race against time equal treatment rule. This rule was set in stone by Article 141 of the European Economic Community Naturally enough, schemes up and down the country Treaty, which required pension schemes to amend raced to amend members’ entitlements in order to their rules to eliminate the discriminatory effect of close the Barber window and limit it to as brief different normal a period as possible. retirement ages for Remember, four years men and women with had already passed Trustees are being forced into effect from 17 May before the Coloroll a frenzied dash for the courts if 1990 (the date of judgement established they don’t want their actions to the Barber the rules for levelling judgement). down. fall foul of a 15-year deadline The problem This is where the fun with Article 141, begins. David Hosford, however, and with the Barber case, was that a partner at solicitors Pitmans, points out that though it established unequivocally that through the halcyon days of the 1980s, when pensions were pay within the companies wanted to alter scheme benefits, it meaning of what is now Article was usually to the advantage of the members in 141, neither the Article itself nor one way or another. “People got used to making the Barber judgement explained amendments by simply announcing the changes how companies should go to members. No one objected since no one minds about equalising benefits. getting improved benefits,” he says. As Maclay Murray & Spens Accordingly, having consulted their scheme head of pensions Gary Cullen advisors to help them understand the implications observes the decision left of Coloroll and so on, trustees and companies were companies with a range of happy to have the consultants write to the members options. Companies could pick any explaining the change. Everyone then went about of a range of age dates between 60 their business assuming that the Barber window and 65, with levelling both sexes to had been closed. Trustees had plenty of other 65 being the least expensive option for issues on their plates through the 1990s with the the scheme. The problem with levelling raft of new legislation and regulations that down to 60 for males is that it gives them an earlier retirement age, with no casehistory penal actuarial deductions for early retirement. A few years after the Barber case the he Court of Appeal’s judgement in Coloroll case began, concluding four years Foster Wheeler is being hailed by many after Barber, and the judgement there law firms, including Wragge & Co, the created the so-called “Barber window”. solicitors acting for the Britannia Trustees, The court in Coloroll ruled that for the as “the most important case to be decided period following the Barber judgement in in the last decade”. However, Norton Rose 1990 up to the point where an organisation partner Lesley Browning explains that Foster amended its scheme to level down to 65 for Wheeler goes not so much to the Barber both sexes, male members were entitled to Window, as to the matter of how to interpret enjoy the age 60 retirement date accorded to the drafting of deeds to close the Barber their female colleagues. Any “levelling” Window and effect equalisation. Here too, amendment could only affect future it seems, there are traps awaiting the service. With male members accruing unwary. See Analysis on page 21 and pension rights on the basis of an earlier Briefings page 13. retirement age, the cost to the scheme [ “ “ P rofessional courtesy was a disregarded casualty when Wragg & Co, acting for Britannia Building Society Pension Scheme Trustees, filed an action against law firm Eversheds and HR consultants Mercer. The first Eversheds heard of the impending action against the firm was when a journalist from The Lawyer rang them up to ask them how they felt about it. “To say we are annoyed with this way of discovering an action against us would be putting it mildly. What made it worse,” a spokesperson for Eversheds told Pensions Insight, “was that when we contacted Wragge to ask them for more details, they told us they needed more time to put their case together.” Unfortunately for those who expect litigation to proceed in a more genteel fashion, for pension equalisation cases involving the so-called “Barber window” there is now no time for professional niceties. Trustees of pension funds up and down the country are being forced into a frenzied dash for the courts if they don’t want their actions to fall foul of a 15-year deadline. In fact, according to Lesley Browning, a partner at Norton Rose, trustees who believe that they were misadvised on any pensions equalisation action they may have taken following the landmark Barber versus Guardian Royal Exchange ruling back on 17 June 1990, may already have run out of time. Nevertheless, Eversheds are unlikely to be the last law firm to discover that pensions advisory activities they might have been involved in almost two decades ago are now rising from the dead in the guise of potential multimillion pound law suits. The whole issue stretches back to the Barber case at the start of the 1990s and to two further cases, the Coloroll T ] started to come their way. Unfortunately, as Maclay’s Cullen explains, in an unknown, but potentially rather large number of cases, the Barber window had not, in fact, been closed at all. “What scheme trustees and sponsor companies overlooked is that there have been a number of cases over the years where the courts have ruled that alterations which are not done by the book under the scheme’s ‘alteration power’, which often requires a specific amendment to the scheme trust deeds, have no validity.” No valid alteration means no closure for the Barber window. That creates a painful liability if you are a trustee of a scheme that has just discovered that the “window” you thought you’d closed in 1994 is still open in 2009, creating 15 years’ of additional liabilities. Suing whoever was the advisor at the time seems a natural course of action – especially if said advisors happen to be a large firm with deep pockets. However this is where multiple “time traps” come in. As Pitman’s Hosford explains, any action is subject to a cut off point of six years from the date of the breach of contract. There is a further period of grace, in that an action can be brought at a later date if it can be reasonably argued that the plaintiff had no reason to be aware of the breach at an earlier point. Here too, there is a cut off point. Action has to be brought within three years of a point where the plaintiff should reasonably have known of the breach. Going deeply to sleep for a prolonged period, in other words, is not a defence against the cut off rule. There is also a final, absolute cut off rule of 15 years, the so called “long stop” rule, where even “reasonable ignorance” won’t keep an action alive. If you add Coloroll to Barber the 15 year long stop rule comes out at 2009; ie. now. Filing an action stops the clock and the law firm involved then has a grace period of four months to put their case together, Hosford explains. A lucky find What really annoyed Eversheds was the fact that they thought, mistakenly, as it turns out, that the other side had “briefed” The Lawyer on the story without telling Eversheds first. In point of fact, as The Lawyer told Pensions Insight, the only reason the journal picked up on the Eversheds story was that it has someone regularly going through court lists. Wragge, it seems, had dashed to file an action, even in advance of building a coherent case which it could present to Eversheds, simply in order to squeak inside one or other of the time limitations. Norton Rose’s Browning points out that a key case for the Barber window and scheme amendment rules was the Trustee Solutions vs Dubery case, which again reiterated the need for proper, written, formal amendment. Crucially, judgement in this scheme was handed down on 21 June 2006 – and irrespective of the 15 year limitation, which still lurks, the three year time guillotine could reasonably be argued to have started running within days, or, if the court is feeling lenient, possibly weeks of the judgement being available. To conclude, trustees of schemes that have reason to doubt the effectiveness of any action taken to close off the Barber window are perilously close to “timing out” as far as remedial action against advisors is concerned. From the advisors’ perspective, many of whom will at least arguably have some liability for past, defective advice, the best defence going forward will undoubtedly be that time has already run out for all further actions. I The Scottish perspective ensions law is not a devolved matter, but pensions equalisation litigation plays inside a Scots law context which has different “cut off ” periods to English law. Martha Quinn, partner and head of pensions at Brodies LLP says that the pensions equalisation issue is every bit as big in Scotland as it is in England. Ian Gordon, a partner in McGrigors, has two actions in the Scottish courts at present where the firm is representing pension scheme trustees who are suing pension administrators for allegedly making invalid amendments to the Barber window. Gordon says that in his experience “the number of schemes in Scotland that made valid amendments to close their Barber window are well outnumbered by schemes that have made invalid amendments.” Interestingly, the Scottish “long stop” rule is 20 years, not 15 as in England, so Scottish cases could play on long after English cases have been stopped out. Also Scotland has a five year limitation on commercial actions, not six as in England. But Gordon believes that Scottish pensions advisors and fund administrators are much less likely than their English counterparts to be able to “wriggle off the hook” on a time limitation plea. “In Scottish law the five year rule starts either from the time when losses started to accrue or from the point where scheme trustees should have been aware that there was a problem. Since we are only now getting Court judgements on scheme specific invalid amendments, the Court may well decide that the five year rule is only just beginning in Scotland. However, the matter now has such a high profile that trustees would be well advised to consider that the clock is now running,” he says. Mark Hamilton, a partner in Maclay Murray & Spens's pensions team says scheme trustees and their advisors will be watching the current cases going through the Scottish courts with great interest and treating them as test cases. He expects a dash to litigation to follow the first judgements. P August 2009 / PensionsInsight www.pensions-insight.co.uk 49