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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Special Case - M'Dowall's Trustees v. M'Dowall's Trustees [1882] ScotLR 19_716 (16 June 1882) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1882/19SLR0716.html Cite as: [1882] ScotLR 19_716, [1882] SLR 19_716 |
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A husband and wife executed a mutual trust-disposition and settlement of the whole means and estate belonging to them respectively, or that should belong “to us respectively at the time of our death, nothing excepted or reserved,” for payment to the survivor of the liferent of the whole estate, and of certain legacies and other bequests after the death of the longest liver. The deed was to take effect as a delivered deed at the death of the first deceaser. The survivor was to have power to revoke the deed to the extent of one-half. The wife survived and enjoyed the liferent for twenty years, during which she made large savings out of her income. Held that these savings did not on her death fall under the mutual settlement, but under a separate settlement by which she disposed of them.
On 23d May 1861 Mr John M'Dowall of Glasgow, and Mrs Ann Morris or M'Dowall, his wife, who were then aged about 57 and 56 years respectively, executed a mutual trust-disposition and deed of settlement. There had been no marriage-contract executed either prior or subsequent to their marriage. By their mutual trust-disposition and deed of settlement the spouses “having resolved to settle our worldly affairs during our lifetime, in order to prevent all disputes and differences concerning the same after our deaths, and for the love, favour, and affection which we have and bear to each other, do hereby give, grant, assign, dispone, convey, and make over from us and our respective heirs and successors, to and in favour of the survivor of us, and” certain trustees, declaring that should the husband survive he should be sole acting trustee during his lifetime, “All and sundry the whole means and estate, heritable and moveable, real and personal, of whatever nature and description, and wheresoever situated, now due or belonging to us respectively, or that may pertain and belong or be addebted and resting-owing to us respectively at the time of our death, nothing excepted or reserved.” The purposes of the trust were, after payment of debts, sick-bed and funeral expenses, &c., for providing a liferent to the wife if she survived her husband of the free revenue of the whole estate excepting a house in Stranraer, for payment on the death of the longest liver of the spouses of a number of legacies to relatives and religious and charitable objects, including a legacy of £15,000 to Miss M'Dowall, a niece of Mr M'Dowall, who had been brought up by him and afterwards married a Mr Hannay; and lastly, in the event of there being any reversion or revenue of the estates after payment of the legacies, the trustees were directed to apply the same as the spouses should jointly appoint, and failing such joint appointment, then to the extent of one-half the reversion as the survivor should appoint, and the remaining half to the heirs and executors of the first deceaser. The mutual settlement also contained a clause nominating the trustees under it to be the “sole executors and intromitters withour respective personal means and estates,” and concluded thus—“Lastly, we do hereby revoke and recall all former deed or deeds of settlements made and executed by us or either of us, and reserve full power and liberty to us at any time during our joint lives, and even on deathbed, to alter, innovate, or revoke these presents in whole or in part: And we also reserve to the survivor of us full power and liberty to revoke these presents to the extent of one-half of the whole estates hereby conveyed, and to bequeath and dispose of said one-half in such manner as the survivor shall think proper: Declaring that in the event of such revocation, the legacies above granted shall suffer an abatement pro rata so far as the other half of said estates shall be insufficient to pay the same in full: And we dispense with the delivery hereof, and declare these presents, in so far as not altered or revoked, though found lying by us undelivered or in the hands of any third party at the time of the death of the first deceaser of us, to have the effect of a delivered evident.”
Mr M'Dowall died on 9th September 1861. Mrs M'Dowall survived him by nearly twenty years, dying on 18th February 1881. At Mr M'Dowall's death his personal estate amounted to £74,000, including a sum of £10,000 to which his wife had succeeded during the marriage, and which had fallen to him jure mariti. After his death Mrs M'Dowall enjoyed the liferent of the estate till her own death in 1881. She left two testamentary deeds, by one of which, a deed of bequest, dated in 1874, together with a codicil dated a few weeks before her death, she disposed of the one-half of the residue of which she was empowered to dispose by the mutual deed of 1861. This half of residue she bequeathed to the trustees under the mutual deed, in trust for payment of a number of legacies, any reversion after payment thereof being directed to be given to Mrs Hannay in liferent alimentary, and to her children in fee. By this deed she declared her intention of not exercising the power of revocation of the mutual deed to the extent of one-half.
Her other testamentary deed, which was dated 3d June 1874, proceeded on the narrative of the mutual deed of 1861—“And whereas I am advised that I am entitled to revoke the said deed with the codicil thereto, dated the 22d August 1861, in so far as the same conveys, disposes of, or affects the means and estate acquired by me since the dissolution of the marriage by the decease of my said husband: Therefore I do hereby revoke the said trust-disposition and deed of settlement and codicil in so far as the same conveys and disposes of or otherwise affects the means and estate, heritable and moveable, real and personal, acquired by me since the dissolution of the marriage by the decease of my said husband John M'Dowall.” The truster subsequently in the deed disponed to certain trustees—“All and sundry the whole estate and effects, heritable and moveable, real and personal, acquired by me since the dissolution of the marriage between
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me and my said husband, or which may hereafter be acquired by and belong, or be due and owing, to me at the period of my decease.” The purposes of this trust were for payment of the expenses of the trust, to make over to Mrs Hannay a quantity of jewellery, and for payment to the marriage-contract trustees of Mrs Hannay of the whole residue of her estate for behoof of Mrs Hannay in liferent, exclusive of the jus mariti of her husband or any future husband she might marry, and for her children in fee. The means acquired by Mrs M'Dowall since her husband's death consisted of her savings out of the liferent of the joint estate which she enjoyed, and amounted to £18,000. The question in this Special Case related to the validity of Mrs M'Dowall's deed of settlement disposing of the savings just mentioned. The trustees under the mutual settlement claimed the £18,000 contained in it, on the footing that it was inept, as being contrary to the conveyance in the mutual settlement. On the other hand, Mrs M'Dowall's trustees maintained that it was valid, and claimed the £18,000 contained in it for the purposes of the trust erected by it. This Special Case was then presented. Mrs M'Dowall's trustees were the first parties, and the trustees under the mutual deed were the second parties.
The question of law was—“Are the parties hereto of the first part, or the parties hereto of the second part, for the purposes of their respective trusts, entitled to the whole estate acquired by Mrs M'Dowall since the dissolution of her marriage by her husband's death, or to any and what part thereof?”
Argued for first parties—The settlement of Mrs M'Dowall was not inconsistent with the mutual deed. That deed was only intended to convey to the trustees under it what might belong to the spouses at the date of the dissolution of the marriage. If the contention on the other side was right, and the husband had survived, all that he might have made in business after his wife died would be included under the mutual settlement. That would be an unreasonable result. Further, if everything conveyed by the spouses in the mutual settlement was to be enjoyed by the survivor in liferent, that must mean that the conveyance only included what belonged to the spouses at the dissolution of the marriage. It would be strange if savings from what the lady might have spent could not be included in a mortis causa deed. Alternatively, the settlement might be supported as a partial revocation of the mutual deed, as Mrs M'Dowall was entitled to make such revocation. True, she professed not to be making such revocation, but this might be held tantamount to revocation.
Authority— Nimmo's Trustees v. Hogg's Trustees, Jan. 24, 1840, 2 D. 458.
Argued for second parties—There was a mutual conveyance by the spouses of all their property, “nothing excepted or reserved.” These savings would never have gone to the widow's executors if she had died intestate, but would have been held to come under that general conveyance. The mutual conveyance was not only mutual but delivered as at the death of Mr M'Dowall. Nimmo's case was distinguishable because there was no mutuality there. It was the case of a husband's will giving a power of disposal to the wife. The deed could not be supported as a revocation, since Mrs M'Dowall had expressly declared that she did not intend to revoke the mutual settlement.
Authorities— Wood v. Fairley, Dec. 3, 1623, 2 Sh. 549; Hogg v. Campbell, March 18, 1863, 1 Macph. 647; Mitchell v. Mitchell's Trustees, June 5, 1877, 4 R. 800; Main v. Lamb, March 10, 1880, 7 R. 688.
The Lords made avizandum.
At advising—
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I am, for these reasons, of opinion that the portion of the liferent which has not been spent by the liferenter was the absolute property of the widow, and does not fall within the purposes of the mutual settlement. I am accordingly for answering the question in favour of the first parties.
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Now, I agree in thinking that all the various things which your Lordship pointed out in going over this deed are important considerations. I need not go over them all again. It is plain, however, that on the death of one of the spouses the mutual settlement became irrevocable as a whole, and came into effect and as a delivered deed. But that that mutual settlement does not affect the savings of the widow during the liferent is a view of the case which is borne out by all the clauses read by your Lordship, and is, I think, made plain by the narrative with which the deed sets out. The “love, favour, and affection” which the spouses have for one another is the ground on which the whole deed proceeds. It would be strange if in a deed containing such words, and in which it is provided that the liferent shall go to the survivor, it should be meant that if the survivor does not spend the whole income, that income is to be accumulated for certain purposes over which the survivor has no control. That, I say, is strange even in the case of the survivance of the wife, but it would be still more strange if the wife had died first and the husband had gone again into business and made a second fortune. I do not think that that is a natural construction at all, and, on the whole, though the deed was intended to take, and did take, immediate effect on the death of the survivor, I cannot think that it would be a sound construction, and one in accordance with the love, favour, and affection which were the motives with which it was made, to hold that the survivor was tied up by it so that the liferent did not completely operate in favour of him or her to the effect of giving complete right over the savings out of the liferent.
The Court therefore answered the question in favour of the first parties (Mrs M ‘Dowall's trustees).
Counsel for First Parties—Solicitor-General Asher, Q.C.— Readman. Agent— John Walls, S.S.C.
Counsel for Second Parties— R. V. Campbell— Rankine. Agents— J. & A. Peddie &Ivory, W.S.