
Articles
Pension Trustee Companies: An Update after Lehtimäki [2020] UKSC 33
This article was published in Trust Law International, Vol. 36, No. 2, 2022 Click here to view the full article
By Robert Ham KC | David Pollard
Friday 21 October 2022
Robert has a litigation and advisory practice, largely related to trust law. It covers not only traditional private client work, and associated tax law, but also pension schemes together with professional negligence in those fields.
He enjoys devising complex transactions and drafting the documents to give effect to them, as well as sorting out the legal effect of complex transactions for which others were responsible.
Robert is ranked as a leading silk in the areas of Pensions, Trusts and Traditional Chancery in Chambers & Partners and The Legal 500.

Pensions
Robert was one of the first trust practitioners to specialise in occupational pension work. He appeared in the first modern case in the Court of Appeal – Kerr v British Leyland – and the first modern case to go to the House of Lords – the National Grid case.
More recently, he appeared in the first case in which the Pensions Regulator issued an FSD – Sea Containers. He also appeared in the first case in which the Regulator sought a contribution notice – Bonas – both before the Determinations Panel and the Upper Tribunal, as a result of which a multi-million pound claim against his clients was settled for a nominal £60,000.
Robert has been involved in other moral hazard cases, several of which settled shortly before a Determinations Panel hearing, while others were disposed of at an earlier stage. He regularly advises on transactions where the parties are concerned that the Regulator might wish to invoke its moral hazard powers.
Robert has acted as an expert witness in the American and Canadian insolvency proceedings relating to the Nortel Group, where the trustees of the UK scheme and the PPF are seeking to prove in respect of an FSD. The Determinations Panel issued an FSD but the North American courts have declined to recognise it. The Canadian court is about to consider the matter and to make its own assessment of the Canadian parent company’s liability to an FSD and a contribution notice enforcing it.
Robert continues to be actively engaged in all aspects of pensions advisory and litigious work, now that it has moved on from working out how trust law principles operate in the pensions field, to working out how to apply complex and often imperfect primary legislation. He recently persuaded a judge that a notice given by an employer (Dresser- Rand) could be treated as a valid exercise of a power to make interim amendments by notice created by a subsequent deed that did not exist at the date of the notice itself.
Robert is one of the best-known and respected silks in the area. He easily cuts through complexity, getting to the heart of a matter with the minimum fuss, which goes down very well with clients.
Robert is very pleasant to work with and extremely knowledgeable. He is well respected by the court.
He is very calm under pressure and gets on well with clients, being able to explain complex matters in a simple way.’
Robert Ham has vast experience and is great to have on your side.
A brilliant advisor, who adopts a practical approach.

Articles
This article was published in Trust Law International, Vol. 36, No. 2, 2022 Click here to view the full article
By Robert Ham KC | David Pollard
Friday 21 October 2022
Trusts, probate and estates: contentious
Robert Ham is experienced in all areas of trusts and private client law, both contentious and non-contentious. In England a judge has called him a “leading expert in the law of trusts”.
In 2013 he appeared in both private client cases heard by the UK Supreme Court: Futter v Futter, joined with and reported as Pitt v Holt [2013] 2 AC 108, about the rule in Re Hastings-Bass, and Marley v Rawlings [2014] 2 WLR 213, the first probate case to go to the highest court in England since 1958, about the correct approach to the construction of wills and rectification.
He has been described as “a heavyweight figure in international trusts litigation” and has appeared in trust cases all over the world, from Borneo to the BVI. He is a bencher of the Middle Temple and a former deputy high court judge.
Robert Ham is just legendary in the profession as a trust litigator. His written advocacy is probably the best I have ever seen.
He is the oracle when it comes to trusts restructuring, and has an unbelievable amount of experience and knowledge of the area. When acting for a trustee, there is nobody better.
He is exceptionally experienced in trust matters and has been extremely helpful. He takes instructions well.
Robert is one of the best-known and respected silks in the area. He easily cuts through complexity, getting to the heart of a matter with the minimum fuss, which goes down very well with clients.
Robert is very pleasant to work with and extremely knowledgeable. He is well respected by the court.

Events / Webinars
Monday 23 January 2023 | 9am - 5.45pm followed by drinks and dinner
InterContinental Hotel (and online via Zoom), InterContinental Hotel, One Hamilton Place, Park Lane, Mayfair, London W1J 7QY
£360 + VAT/£299 + VAT | 6.0 CPD
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External Conferences
Tuesday 24 May 2022
Jersey & Guernsey,
Speakers:
Robert Ham KC | Tiffany Scott KC | Tom Roscoe
Registered name: Mr Robert Wallace Ham KC
VAT number: 234475658