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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Bogie's Trustees v. Brown and Others [1878] ScotLR 15_342 (5 February 1878)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1878/15SLR0342.html
Cite as: [1878] ScotLR 15_342, [1878] SLR 15_342

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 342

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Tuesday, February 5. 1878.

[ Lord Young, Ordinary.

15 SLR 342

Bogie's Trustees

v.

Brown and Others.

Subject_1Succession
Subject_2Legacy
Subject_3Uncertainty
Subject_4“Ragged Schools.”
Facts:

A testator directed his trustees to pay a share of the rents of his estate annually during the subsistence of a lease for thirty years to “The Ragged Schools in Dundee.”— Held, in a competition between the “Dundee Industrial Schools Society” and the “Mars Training Ship Institution, ” which was conducted on board a vessel permanently moored in the Tay, not far from Newport, that both charities were entitled to participate in the bequest so long as the existing circumstances of each remained the same.

Headnote:

Alexander Bogie of Balass and Newmill died on 1st June 1870, leaving a trust-disposition and settlement, in which, inter alia, he provided that the rents of his properties of Balass and Newmill (amounting to £550) during the subsistence of a lease of thirty years should be divided annually among certain charities, one share to be given to “the Ragged Schools in Dundee.”

The question in this action (which was a multiplepoinding raised by Mr Bogie's trustees) was, Whether the Mars Training Ship, which was anchored in the Tay, in the immediate vicinity of the town, and within the precincts of the harbour of Dundee, though without the burgh and parish, came under the description of “Ragged Schools in Dundee, ” and was entitled to share in the bequest? The other claimant was the secretary of the Dundee Industrial Schools Society, which schools were alleged to be popularly known as “The Ragged Schools.”

The Mars Training Ship Institution was licensed on 30th September 1869 (immediately before the date of the testator's settlement), under the provisions of the Industrial Schools Act 1866. There were on board about 300 boys of the

Page: 343

poorest class, who received education and were clothed and fed.

The Lord Ordinary ( Young), on 6th July 1877, pronounced an interlocutor finding that while existing circumstances continued, the real raisers would act within their trust and according to their duty by distributing the said share of the trust-funds between the “Dundee Industrial Schools Society” and the “Mars Training Ship Institution.” His Lordship added the following note:—

Note.—[ After narrating the facts as above stated]—In the argument submitted to me nothing turned on the use of the popular name ‘ragged school, ’ which is not in fact used by either claimant. It was conceded (I think rightly) that the description of the pupils, the terms of their reception, and the character of the instruction and discipline in the ship, were such that if instead of being a ship in the Tay without the burgh, it had been a building on shore within the burgh, the name ‘ragged school in Dundee’ would have been applicable. The objections to its applicability were rested on the character and locality of the structure in which this ragged school is conducted.

With respect to the nature of the structure, I think there is no validity in the objection. If an old ship affords the requisite accommodation, any kind of school may be conducted in it more or less conveniently, and the character of the school will depend precisely on such considerations as those which make this in my opinion a ragged school, as that term is popularly used.

With respect to the locality, I think the substance of the thing is to be looked to, and, so regarded, I think this ragged school is in Dundee, although without the burgh. It is a Dundee institution. Dundee might be well provided with ragged schools although all of them were without the burgh, and I should not in that case think that this bequest must fail because of the words ‘in Dundee, ’ for ‘ qui hæret in litera hæret in cortice.’ This opinion is of course only applicable while the ship, although in the water, is kept in its present place, or so close to Dundee that a school on shore equally near would, although outside the burgh, be properly and reasonably regarded as a town school. But while I have thought it proper thus to express my opinion, I have to point out that it only applies to the present time and existing circumstances, and goes no further than this—that in these circumstances, and while they remain unchanged, these trustees will be within their trust and according to their duty in admitting both claimants to participate in the bequest, in such proportions as they in their discretion shall judge proper, and I shall so express my judgment.

It is perhaps proper, although but for some observations made in argument I should have thought it superfluous, to say that my judgment has no bearing whatever in the case of a legacy immediately payable to ragged schools in Dundee, however the bequest may be expressed. The case I am dealing with is that of the division of an annual contribution, which is exhausted year by year, and admits of all changes of circumstances being followed and attended to by the administering trustees, and my opinion on it involves no indication of opinion upon the case of a proper legacy payable at once.”

Mr Swanston, the secretary of the Dundee Industrial Schools Society, reclaimed.

Authorities— Duff's Trustees v. Society of Scripture Readers, &c., Feb. 19, 1862, 24 D. 552; Grant v. Grant, Law Rep., 5 P.C. 727; Clergy Society, June 7, 1856, 2 Kay and J. 615; Wilson's Executor v. Scottish Society for Conversion of Israel, Dec. 2, 1869, 8 Macph. 233.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Ormidale—I take it to be undoubted that where the description by a testator of the object of his bounty is ambiguous and uncertain, parole evidence is admissible to show what the testator truly meant, as is well illustrated in the comparatively recent case in re Kilvert's Trust, Dec. 16, 1871, Law Rep., 7 Chan. Cases 170, to which we were referred at the debate. Applying this principle to the present case, where the testator's description of the object of his bounty as regards the bequest more immediately in dispute is in some degree attended with doubt and uncertainty, I should, in the ordinary case, have been disposed to think that the proper course would have been, before deciding the question, to have allowed the secretary to the Dundee Industrial Schools Society proof of certain of his averments. But keeping in view that the case has come before us very much as a concluded one, so far as further proof is concerned; that the Lord Ordinary's remarks in the note to his judgment, that in the argument submitted to him “nothing turned on the popular name ‘ragged schools, ’ which is not in fact used by either claimant;” and that the same remark may fairly be made in reference to the argument which was submitted to us—I am not disposed to differ from the opinion which has been expressed by the Lord Ordinary.

The Lord Justice-Clerk and Lord Gifford concurred.

The Court adhered.

Counsel:

Counsel for Secretary of the Industrial Schools Society (Reclaimer)— Guthrie Smith— M'Kechnie. Agent— J. Duncan Smith, S.S.C.

Counsel for Bogie's Trustees (Respondents)— Black. Agents— Curror & Cowper, S.S.C.

Counsel for The Mars Training Ship) (Respondent)— Lee. Agent— H. W. Cornillon, S.S.C.

1878


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