It is not uncommon for historic drafting errors to be discovered in pension scheme rules. Where the error relates to the scheme’s benefit structure then it may not be possible to amend the rules to correct the error and instead an alternative approach known as "rectification” may need to be sought.
What is rectification?
Rectification is a remedy granted by the court which allows the claimant to correct a mistake in a written agreement.
In a pensions context, this typically involves the scheme’s sponsoring employer applying to the court to correct a drafting error in the scheme’s trust deed and rules which has resulted in the scheme's beneficiaries becoming entitled to greater benefits than had been intended.
The most recent development…
Although not a pensions related case, the Court of Appeal has recently provided welcome and much needed clarification on the test the courts should apply when deciding whether to grant rectification.
In an earlier 2009 decision, the High Court expressed the view that the key test in determining the intention of the parties was not a subjective one (in which the evidence of the parties’ actual state of mind was considered). Instead it was rather an objective one (to be assessed through the eyes of an impartial observer with knowledge of the background facts).
The Court of Appeal has now concluded that the High Court was wrong to reach this conclusion. The Court of Appeal has determined that to apply a purely objective test is not consistent with the remedy of rectification (which is intended to correct a drafting error that fails to reflect the intention of the parties) and instead a subjective test should be applied.
Helpfully, the Court of Appeal also commented that in the context of pension schemes it may not always be necessary to show evidence of a common intention between the trustees and sponsoring employer. In particular, this includes when the scheme’s amendment power can be exercised either unilaterally (i.e. by the principal employer or the trustees alone) or by one party with the consent of the other (i.e. by the trustees with the consent of the principal employer, or vice-versa).
What does this mean, moving forwards?
The Court of Appeal has reverted the law back to the position that most advisers believe to be the correct one; that the remedy of rectification requires a subjective assessment of the parties’ state of mind at the time the drafting error was made.
What evidence should be collated?
Where parties are considering an application for rectification, they will therefore need to collate as much contemporaneous evidence as possible in order to demonstrate the actual intention of the parties. This evidence may take the form of: