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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Special Case - Forsyth's Trustees and Others [1872] ScotLR 9_367_1 (13 March 1872)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1872/09SLR0367_1.html
Cite as: [1872] SLR 9_367_1, [1872] ScotLR 9_367_1

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 367

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Wednesday, March 13. 1872.

9 SLR 367_1

Special Case—Forsyth's Trustees and Others.

Subject_1Succession
Subject_2Testament
Subject_3Draft of Codicil.
Facts:

Circumstances in which it was held that a writing, holograph of and signed by a deceased, but headed, also in his own handwriting, “Draft of Codicil,” was not a valid testamentary writing.

Headnote:

William Forsyth, spirit merchant in Glasgow, died on 25th December 1870, leaving a widow and three daughters. The eldest daughter, Annie, was never married, and always resided with her parents. The other two daughters, Mrs Currie and Mrs Lindsay, were respectively married on 6th August 1867, and 10th August 1869. Each of them received an outfit, in the way of plenishing, at the time of her marriage, but no money provision.

Mr Forsyth left property to the value of £10,480, besides household furniture, &c., valued at £174.

After his death there was found put up, along with other valuable papers, in a private drawer in his house in Glasgow, a trust-disposition and settlement, dated 25th October, with two codicils, dated 9th August 1848 and 21st March 1867. Each of these deeds was formal and tested, and drawn by different firms of law agents in Glasgow.

By the trust-disposition and settlement he provided a liferent of his estate to his widow, the capital to be divided equally among his children. The codicils did not effect any alteration on the general principle of the trust-deed.

A short time after Mr Forsyth's death, his widow found in an unlocked drawer, where no important

Page: 368

papers lay, in the deceased's bedroom, a document in the following terms:—

“Draft of Codicil.—Should Annie Anderson Forsyth, my daughter, remain unmarried at the death of myself and her mother, and considering the attention and interest she has taken in us since Agus and Mina was married; and farther, considering they were both set off with a compitent assortment of bed and body clothes, table linen, and other things necessary for their house-furnishing, I give and bequeith to my daughter Annie the whole of my household furniture, bed and table linen, silver plate, books, pictures—indeed all in use in the house: and considering at my death there will be in cash £10,000 (ten thousand pounds), less or more, including the life insurances in the Scottish Widow's Fund and Caledonian Life Ins. offices, I bequeith to each of my married daughters £3000, free of legacy-duty, which sum is to be put out to intst. in good heritable security, or in the Glasgow Water or River Trusts, and the intst. paid half-yearly to them so long as they live; and in the event of them leaving a family, the money to be equally divided among their children when the youngest is twenty-two years old; but should there be no family left by either of them, the money is to revert to the longest liver, and after her death to be distributed as follows, viz.:—The reversion or balance of the money, which I expect will amount to considerably more than £3000, is to go to Annie, my oldest daughter, and to be out put at intst. as before mentioned; and in the event of her dying unmarried and without leaving lawful issue, is to revert as before mentioned, along with the proceeds of the sale of the household furniture, and other effects, belonging to her at her death.

21 Sept. 1870. William Forsyth.”

The drawer in which this paper was found was immediately under the private drawer mentioned before. A chest of drawers stood in the deceased's room, with a bookcase upon the top. The private drawer was in the bottom of the bookcase, and was secured by a lock and springs. The unlocked drawer is the top drawer of the chest, and contained articles of dress in daily use by the deceased. The document was found folded, and lying flat in the front of the drawer.

A Special Case was presented by—(1) The testamentary trustees of the late William Forsyth; (2) Mrs Currie and Mrs Lindsay, and their respective husbands; (3) Miss Annie Forsyth.

The parties were agreed that the document last-mentioned was entirely in the handwriting of the deceased.

The question submitted to the Court was as follows:—

“Whether the said last-mentioned document, and which is printed second in the appendix hereto, is a valid testamentary writing, and forms part of the last will and settlement of the said deceased William Forsyth?”

Balfour and Brand for the First and Second Parties.

Shand and M'Laren for the Third Party.

The following authorities were cited— Munro v. Coutts, July 3, 1813, 1 Dow, 437; Horsbrugh, Jan. 12, 1847, 9 D. 329; Scott, Feb. 5, 1864, 2 Macph. 613; Lowson, March 20, 1866, 4 Macph. 631; Sibbald's Trs., Jan. 13, 1871, 9 Macph. 379; Williams on Executors, vol. i, pp. 68, 69.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—Mr Forsyth died on 25th September 1870, leaving a widow and three daughters. The eldest is unmarried, and has always resided with her father and mother. The other two were married in August 1867 and August 1869 respectively. Both of them received an outfit at the time of their marriage, though not any sum of money.

Mr Forsyth had made his settlement originally in 1847. It was duly prepared by a firm of conveyancers in Glasgow, and is a formal and tested deed. Its general principle is the provision of a liferent of his estate to his widow, and an equal division of the capital among his three daughters. By codicils in 1848 and 1867 he made certain alterations, but not affecting the principle of division. But it is said that he made an alteration on 21st September 1870 by a holograph will.

The great difficulty in holding this paper as part of the testament of Mr Forsyth is the title which he has given it. He calls it “draft of codicil.” These words are in his handwriting, equally with the rest of the paper. The object is to benefit the eldest daughter. The motive is declared to be that each of his two married daughters had received an outfit at their marriage—a statement which shows that the writing was made after the marriage of his youngest daughter in August 1869. The effect is to pay off each of the younger daughters with £3000, leaving the balance to the eldest daughter, which, both according to his own estimate, and as it turned out, was between £4000 and £5000.

This is called a “draft of codicil;” and it is very difficult to suppose that the writing is anything but a draft. The question is, Whether, and at what time did it change its character of a draft into that of a perfect testamentary paper? It is signed by the deceased. If it could be proved that it was not signed at first, but that the signature was appended post intervallum, that would give a perfectly intelligible point of time at which the draft was converted into a perfect testamentary paper. But no one can tell that. There is no reason to suppose that the signature was not written at the same time as the body of the paper.

There are also circumstances connected with the discovery of the paper, not conclusive, but more or less material. The original deed and the codicils of 1847 and 1868 were found in what was understood to be Mr Forsyth's repository for papers of value—a locked drawer in a bookcase. This holograph paper was not found there: it was in an unlocked drawer where no papers of value lay, in a chest of drawers under the bookcase in which was the locked drawer. The articles usually kept there were articles of clothing in daily use. In one of these drawers the paper was found folded and lying flat, without backing or indorsement.

We have to determine whether this paper is to be taken as part of the will of the deceased, or only as an intended alteration of his settlement. On the one hand is to be considered the fact that it is signed by the deceased, on the other that it is called, in his own handwriting, a “draft of codicil.” These circumstances are not very consistent with one another. It is not, however, an unknown thing for a draft to be signed for the purpose of authenticating it when it comes into the hands of the conveyancer. Another circumstance, in itself not very important, assumes a certain degree of importance in the present question. There is an important blank in the paper, much more likely to be left in a draft than in a completed testamentary paper. The £3000 left to each of

Page: 369

his younger daughters and their families is to be divided when the youngest of their children reaches the age of twenty-one, but should there be no family left by either of them, the ultimate destination is left blank. The circumstance that Mr Forsyth was in use, when he made testamentary papers, to employ a law agent, is not to be thrown out of view. His three former testamentary writs were executed by three different firms. All these accordingly appear as tested instruments. He had not left Glasgow, so far as we are informed. It is not said that he was not in Glasgow at the time when he wrote the holograph paper. He had thus immediate access to a man of business to put it into shape. It is not alleged that he was in a state of incapacity to employ a law agent. Although he was taken somewhat suddenly ill, that was at a later period. The imperfect state of the paper, and its important blank, are not therefore to be accounted for by sudden illness followed by death.

Taking the whole circumstances into account, I am of opinion that there is no sufficient reason for taking what the deceased himself has described as a “draft of codicil” to be a completed testamentary paper.

Lord Deas—I have had great difficulties in regard to this case; but, on the whole, I am not prepared to differ from your Lordship.

Lord Ardmillan—I have also felt this to be a question of great difficulty, but there are two or three circumstances which have led me to the same conclusion. In the first place, there is no indication that the testator ever attempted to make a holograph settlement. He made several testamentary papers, and in every one he employed an agent. Next, he lived for three months after this document was written; and I think that, whereas a writing which bears to be only a draft has, in certain circumstances, been given effect to, this is not so where the party has had ample time to have converted it into a formal writing, especially taken in connection with his previous practice to make settlements by formal writings. Again, it is important that he leaves a blank, intended to be filled up either by himself, after further reflection, or by the agent on consultation. He may have intended to form his opinion more deliberately, or he may not have known how to express his intention. This is to be taken into account, although the blank in itself would not necessarily be fatal to the deed. Lastly, the paper is not found alongside of his other papers, but in a different drawer, where it is at least as likely that it got by carelessness or accident as that it was deposited by himself. It would not be safe to hold this as part of the settlement.

Lord Kinloch—I am of opinion that the alleged codicil cannot be held part of the last will and settlement of the deceased William Forsyth.

The paper in question is entitled by the deceased “draft of codicil.” This implies that when he wrote it he considered it a mere draft, and not a completed instrument. The same is to be inferred from the circumstance that, in regard to the ultimate destination of his fortune, failing his daughters and their issue, a blank is left in the document for the names to be afterwards filled up. It may be that in a final deed of settlement the want of an ultimate destination would not affect the validity of the writing. But, coupled with the title “draft of codicil,” this blank in the document confirms the inference that Mr Forsyth intended this as nothing but a scroll, and did not leave it as a completed instrument.

I do not think it of any conclusiveness that the document is signed by Mr Forsyth. Some people sign even drafts; and we have cases on the books in which the document was signed, and yet held to be a mere draft or instructions. If, indeed, it could have been shown that the document was originally unsigned, and that some time afterwards Mr Forsyth deliberately put his name to it, that would have been strong evidence to prove that he intended to leave it as a completed instrument. But there is no proof of this. From aught that appears, the name was adhibited at the same time that the document was written. And the mere addition of the signature does not, I think, in that case alter its character from what Mr Forsyth himself calls it—a “draft of codicil.”

The other evidence in the case all runs in the same direction. Mr Forsyth's will, and two prior codicils, are all regularly tested: and the probability is that he intended to follow the same course with the additional codicil. It was not put up with the will and the other codicils, but found loose in an open drawer. It bears the date of 21st September 1870, and Mr Forsyth did not die till 25th December subsequent, so that he had abundance of time to turn this draft into a formal settlement, if he was so disposed. As he did not do so, I think the only legal and safe conclusion is to hold that he left it, as it bears to be, a “draft codicil,” and nothing else.

The Court answered the question in the negative.

Solicitors: Agents for the First and Second Parties— Campbell & Smith, S.S.C.

Agent for the Third Party— Adam Shiell, S.S.C.

1872


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