All courts articles – Page 2
-
News
Mitchells & Butlers trustees win ‘significant’ inflation court case
A decades-old rule change to the Mitchells & Butlers Pension Plan that shifted the authority in deciding pensions indexation should be rectified, a high court judge has ruled, in what has been described as “one of the most significant pension rectification cases in recent years”.
-
News
USS says High Court challenge has ‘no merit’
On the go: The Universities Superannuation Scheme has said that a wide-ranging legal challenge recently brought to the High Court by university academics has “absolutely no merit”.
-
News
UCU considers legal action against USS and calls for valuation pause
The University and College Union’s general secretary has written to the Universities Superannuation Scheme’s chief executive outlining the potential for legal action against the scheme’s trustees and has called for a pause in the 2020 valuation process.
-
News
DWP rules out appeal on PPF’s compensation cap ruling
On the go: The Pension Protection Fund will soon start making changes to its benefit structure, since the Department for Work and Pensions will not be appealing the Court of Appeal decision which ruled the compensation cap unlawful.
-
News
TPR reviews schemes eligible for Fraud Compensation Fund
The Pensions Regulator and the Pension Protection Fund are undertaking a review of schemes that may be eligible for the Fraud Compensation Fund, following uncertainty surrounding instances where no independent trustee has been appointed to a scheme.
-
News
DWP loses court battle on PPF cap
The Department for Work and Pensions has seen its appeal on the Pension Protection Fund cap, previously considered discriminatory by the High Court, dismissed by the Court of Appeal, which means the pensions lifeboat will have to alter its benefits structure.
-
News
High Court clarifies rules over pension back payment arrears
The High Court has further clarified the procedure for paying arrears when a member has not claimed a back payment within the usual six-year period, confirming that scheme rules will determine whether trustees have discretion as to whether those benefits have been forfeited.
-
News
Treasury slammed for McCloud errors, but members will foot the bill
The Public Accounts Committee has issued a scathing report highlighting HM Treasury’s failure to predict the numerous problems stemming from 2011-15 public sector reforms, warning its mistakes will take “generations” to resolve.
-
News
Britvic wins appeal on pension inflation change
On the go: Soft drinks manufacturer Britvic will be able to reduce the inflation-proofing it provides for its defined benefit pension scheme, as the Court of Appeal has ruled in its favour.
-
News
Schemes to pay maximum fraud compensation levy
On the go: The Pension Protection Fund has announced it will raise the fraud compensation levy to the maximum allowed by law as the number of claims rise.
-
News
Supreme Court rejects BackTo60 state pension appeal
On the go: An appeal against state pension age changes for women born in the 1950s has been denied by the Supreme Court, leaving campaigners disappointed after hopes of a return to the old pension age.
-
Opinion
Schemes should take a practical approach to GMP transfers
In November 2020, the High Court handed down a ruling on the equalisation of past transfers with guaranteed minimum pensions, which means trustees will now have to revisit 30 years of transfer data.
-
News
Govt to correct part-time judges’ pensions by 2022
On the go: The Ministry of Justice plans to lay regulations in early 2022 with amendments to the Fee-Paid Judicial Pension Scheme, in a move that will provide remedy to judges who are owed past pension contributions.
-
News
Court of Appeal gives green light to Pru annuity sale
On the go: The Court of Appeal has overturned a High Court ruling that blocked the transfer of £12bn of annuities from Prudential, now M&G, to Rothesay Life.
-
News
Podcast: Industry needs to work together to sort out GMPs
Podcast: As schemes might struggle to find information about members who are due top-ups to past transfers due to guaranteed minimum pensions equalisation, the industry is being called on to work together and help close those data gaps. Lynda Whitney, partner at Aon, and David Brooks, technical director at Broadstone, discuss what lies ahead for trustees and administrators as they try to digest the latest High Court ruling in this area.
-
News
Advisers could help trustees with GMP past transfers
On the go: Advisers have been urged to proactively check whether their clients could be entitled to a top-up payment on their defined benefit transfer, which could help trustees in tracking down members affected by the latest guaranteed minimum pensions ruling.
-
News
GMP ruling implementation will be ‘Herculean’ task for schemes
A ruling on guaranteed minimum pension equalisation will see trustees having to revisit 30 years of pension transfers, which will be a “Herculean” task for administration teams amid missing data and poorly kept records.
-
News
High Court deems rectification law ‘settled’
The High Court has upheld the precedent that pension scheme documents can be overwritten by the courts if trustees can show that changes to them have been made in error.
-
News
Women state pension claims dismissed in appeals court
On the go: The Court of Appeal has backed a previous High Court judgment and rejected claims that the increase in the state pension age affecting women born in the 1950s was discriminatory.
-
News
Ombudsman decision sets financial loss precedent
A recent Pensions Ombudsman determination has opened the floodgates for financial loss claims resulting from the mere possibility of missing out on stock market profit, due to trustees being tardy in processing transfers.