The High Court has dismissed a case against directors who were trustees of a pension scheme where the company had claimed they had breached their fiduciary duties, maximising their own pension benefits to the company’s detriment.
KeyMed (Medical and Industrial Equipment) Ltd (“KeyMed”), part of the Olympus group, brought proceedings against two former directors (“the Defendants”), who had been trustees of KeyMed’s general pension scheme (“the Staff Scheme”) and of a separate scheme established for their benefit (“the Executive Scheme”).
KeyMed claimed that the Defendants, in breach of their duties to KeyMed individually, and in conspiracy with one another, caused their interests to be preferred over those of KeyMed in relation to their benefits under their pension arrangements.
The allegations focus on four particular decisions by the Defendants, relating to:
In the case of each of the allegations, it was argued that the Defendants had breached their duties as directors. Further, KeyMed also alleged that the Defendants owed duties to it as trustees of the Schemes, in relation to the setting of investment and funding strategies for the Schemes.
Marcus Smith J found that the allegations against the Defendants all failed.
In relation to the allegations generally, the High Court found that that there was no dishonest breach of duty. The Defendants’ interests had been properly declared, and decisions had been properly taken. The establishment of the Executive Scheme, and changes to it, had been approved.
In particular, the High Court held that no fiduciary duty is owed by trustees to a sponsoring employer, giving the following reasons:
Marcus Smith J did recognise that, provided the trustees have regard to their primary purpose, and do not subordinate it to other interests, they are entitled to have regard to the employer’s interests, even if the protecting of these interests is a matter of indifference to the beneficiaries of the scheme.
However, if the employer’s interests conflict with those of the beneficiaries, the employer’s interests should be subordinate to those of the beneficiaries of the trust. A decision to consider an employer’s interests (as may be proper for the trustees to do) does not create a fiduciary duty to the employer.
In relation to the funding and investment strategies, the Court found that they were both in KeyMed’s interests, and that KeyMed knew and approved of them. The Defendants had acted honestly and did not breach their duties, dishonestly, or at all.
Smith J noted that “conservative” investment and funding strategies “are generally in the best interests” of DB scheme members, and that employer’s interests may also favour a conservative approach (depending on their appetite for risk).
The investment approach was not inappropriate or “unduly” conservative, and lay inside the range of reasonable approaches that could have been adopted, and indeed, was continued after the Defendants left Olympus.
There has been little law in this area, but for now, the position following KeyMed is that, while it may be appropriate to consider scheme employers’ interests in some circumstances, trustees do not owe a fiduciary duty to employers.