All courts articles – Page 3
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News
Safeway gets clarity on pension equalisation case
On the go: Safeway has reached the end of a pensions legal process that started in 2016, with the Court of Appeal ruling that its defined benefit scheme's normal pension ages were equalised retrospectively, but not for as long as initially predicted.
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News
High Court to clarify if PPF can pay redress to scam victims
The High Court has been asked to clarify whether legislation that created the Fraud Compensation Fund, managed by the board of the Pension Protection Fund, could allow for compensation to victims of pension scams.
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News
Government ponders solutions to £17bn McCloud problem
The Treasury has set out two proposals for ending the discrimination between scheme members that resulted from its 2015 public sector pension reforms, with costs of unwinding its scheme changes estimated to cost £17bn.
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Podcasts
Podcast: PPF could face new court case on benefits
Podcast: After the ruling from the High Court that the Pension Protection Fund cap on deferred member benefits is illegal on age discrimination grounds, the pensions lifeboat could face a new legal challenge as members who have not reached retirement age have their benefits cut to 90 per cent, argues Ian Neale, director at Aries Insight. He and Sara Protheroe, chief customer officer at the PPF, discuss this topic, as well as the interim regime for superfunds and the implications of the new insolvency bill for pension schemes.
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News
United Biscuits awaits CJEU ruling in long-lasting VAT saga
On the go: The trustees of United Biscuits’ defined benefit pension scheme are waiting for a final ruling from the Court of Justice of the European Union, after the advocate general sided with HM Revenue & Customs on a long-lasting battle on value added tax.
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News
High Court rules ‘drafting errors’ sufficient to justify switch to CPI
A High Court decision has found in favour of a pension scheme switching to the consumer price index from the retail price index, but only because of a drafting error in the scheme’s rules.
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News
PPF cap is age discrimination, court rules
A High Court judge has ruled that a key feature of the Pension Protection Fund’s benefit structure is illegal on age discrimination grounds, leaving the defined benefit lifeboat liable for back payments to wealthier pension members.
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News
PPF: DWP is ‘key’ for Bauer solution
On the go: The Pension Protection Fund hopes to use Department for Work and Pensions data to help it implement tricky increases required by the landmark Bauer judgment, according to Sara Protheroe, chief customer officer at the PPF.
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News
High Court delivers another CPI setback
Employers seeking to switch their defined benefit pension schemes from the retail price index to the consumer price index have been dealt another blow, as the High Court yet again refused to establish a precedent.
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News
RPI inflation court ruling could cost defence company millions
On the go: The High Court ruled against an attempt by a UK defence company to change the way it calculates final salary pension increases last week, the latest decision in a string of debates that have put millions of pounds in payments to retirees at stake.
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News
Investigation into state pension age complaints resumes
On the go: The Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman has resumed its investigation into complaints about the state pension age rise for women, following the outcome of a judicial review last year.
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News
Lawyers demand simpler system to rectify drafting mistakes
Lawyers are urging reform to ease the correction of obvious drafting mistakes in pension scheme rules, after Lloyds Bank was forced to go to the High Court to avoid a £25m hit to its liabilities.
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News
PPF only needs to hike benefits if member faces poverty risk
The European Court of Justice ruling on the Bauer case has been described as a “welcome relief” for the Pension Protection Fund, as the lifeboat will only have to up member benefits if the individual is living below the at-risk-of-poverty threshold.
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Opinion
All eyes on European Court’s Bauer ruling
A key European Court ruling in Bauer is to be released on December 19. If it goes in favour of members, it could be the biggest shock to the UK pensions system since the Barber case in 1990.
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News
High Court tells ombudsman to reconsider pension case
A dispute over whether a university employee was entitled to her full pension has been sent back to the Pensions Ombudsman after the High Court disagreed with the initial decision.
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News
Court approves BA trustees' pension increase settlement
On the go: Trustees of British Airways’ defined benefit schemes have had a settlement allowing them to pay discretionary increases approved by the High Court.
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News
Treasury accepts pension reforms were unlawful
On the go: The Treasury accepted that its 2015 public sector pension reforms were unlawful on Monday, with the court judgment likely to cost the department £4bn a year and restrict the next chancellor’s spending.
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News
Court of Appeal rejects ITV appeal against Upper Tribunal decision
On the go: The Court of Appeal has dismissed ITV's appeal against the Upper Tribunal's decision that a Financial Support Direction should be issued to the broadcaster in relation to the Box Clever scheme.
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News
ECJ ruling could force PPF to provide buyout uplift
On the go: An opinion given to the European Court of Justice by its Advocate General could mean that defined benefit lifeboats like the Pension Protection Fund have to cover the entire value of members’ benefits when their sponsor becomes insolvent.
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News
PPF beset by fresh court proceedings over 50% payout level
On the go: Court proceedings have started against the Pension Protection Fund, seeking to challenge its approach for calculating any increases due to its members as a result of a European Court of Justice ruling last September.