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Andrea James, Andrew Darwin & Anna McKibbin
Keynote
06 May 2026
•8 min read
Last year’s decision of the Employment Tribunal in Scott v Walker Morris LLP sheds light on steps that LLPs and partnerships ought to be taking in relation to their retirement provisions and how they deal with partners or LLP members who do not wish to retire. In practice, the decision also underpins or strengthens the position of some partners who would prefer not to retire at the normal retirement age designated in their partnership or LLP members agreement.
In this case, the Tribunal accepted that Walker Morris LLP had legitimate aims in maintaining a collegiate atmosphere by maintaining the dignity of older members, by sparing them from performance management, and in seeking to ensure inter-generational fairness. But the LLP did not establish that its treatment of Mr Scott was an appropriate and reasonably necessary/proportionate way of achieving those aims.
The law
Partners and members who may be victims of age discrimination are affected, not only by statutory discrimination law, and the contractual terms of any partnership or LLP agreement, but also by the statutes and/or regulations relating to partnerships or LLPs. Partnership case law is expressly disapplied in relation to LLPs, however, it is often persuasive and instructive and is frequently relied upon on that basis. In any dispute or difference arising from a partnership or LLP, and irrespective of any apparent narrowness of the issues, these sources should be considered together. Discrimination law may also provide a route to a claim or settlement.
Sections 44 (relating to partnerships) and 45 (relating to LLPs) of the Equality Act 2010 separately provide that:
A partnership/an LLP (A) must not discriminate against a partner/member (B) –
To be actionable, the discrimination has to be in relation to one of the protected characteristics, of which one is age.
Section 13 of the Equality Act 2010 (Direct discrimination) provides:
(1) a person (A) discriminates against another (B) if, because of a protected characteristic, A treats B less favourably than A treats or would treat others.
(2) If the protected characteristic is age, A does not discriminate against B if A can show A’s treatment of B to be a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.
Whether the partnership/LLP can establish a legitimate aim is a question of fact for a Tribunal to decide. The partnership/LLP must demonstrate a real business need to retire members at a particular age, which is in the public interest and satisfies social policy objectives. For example, it might be necessary for older partners to retire to make it possible for younger partners to have career progression (without the prospect of which they might go elsewhere).
Or a partnership or LLP might wish to avoid the indignity for older partners of being taken to task on their failure to perform at the required level, as they (allegedly) lose the ability to put in the required hours or to maintain the mental focus or energy required to achieve in other areas such as practice development.
Take aways for partnerships and LLPs
The Scott v Walker Morris case should be a wake-up call for many partnerships and LLPs.
A partnership or LLP should:
What can partners do when faced with the prospect of retirement before they are ready to retire?
While individually tailored advice is essential, the following should be considered:
If you have questions or concerns about age discrimination, please contact Peter Garry.