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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Blyth v. Curle [1885] ScotLR 22_429 (20 February 1885)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1885/22SLR0429.html
Cite as: [1885] SLR 22_429, [1885] ScotLR 22_429

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 429

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Sheriff of Roxburghshire.

Friday, February 20. 1885.

22 SLR 429

Blyth

v.

Curle.

Subject_1Donation mortis causa
Subject_2Bank Pass-Book
Subject_3Apprehension of Death not Necessary
Subject_4Delivery.
Facts:

In order to the validity of a mortis causa donation it is not necessary that the donor be at the time of the gift in immediate prospect of death or ill of the disease of which he dies.

A man gradually accumulated money in a bank account kept in name of himself and his wife conjunctly and severally, and the longest liver of them. He gave his wife the bank book to keep, and told her repeatedly that the money was intended to be hers and to be a provision for her on his death. Held on the death of the husband that a good mortis causa donation had been effected, and that actual delivery of the money was not necessary.

Headnote:

William Curle died on 5th January 1882, intestate and without children, survived by his wife, Elizabeth Baptie or Curle, who was decerned executrix-dative qua relict of her husband.

This action was raised in the Sheriff Court of Roxburghshire at Jedburgh, by Agnes Curle or Blyth, wife of Walter Blyth, and only surviving full sister of the deceased, to enforce payment of what the pursuer alleged was her share in the succession of her deceased brother. The defender admitted the claim except in so far as the pursuer alleged right to share in a sum of £182, 10s. 1d. deposited in the National Security Savings Bank at Jedburgh in name of her deceased husband and herself. This, the defender said, was the subject of a mortiscausa donation to her from her husband.

The material facts of the case, as brought out in the proof before the Sheriff, are given in the opinion of the Lord President, infra.

The Sheriff Substitute ( Russell) on 21st August 1883 pronounced an interlocutor by which, after several findings in fact, he found that the estate of the deceased, after deduction of the deposits in the Savings Bank, interest thereon, and debts and expenses, amounted to £25, 16s. 2d., and that the pursuer as one of the next-of-kin, was entitled to payment of one-fourth, being £6 9s. 6d. Quoad ultra he assoilzied the defender.

The pursuer appealed to the Sheriff ( Pattison), who on 24th May 1884 pronounced this interlocutor:—“Finds, as matter of fact, that the deceased William Curie, the husband of the defender, who died intestate and without children on the 5th day of January 1882, did during his life, and in the prospect of death, give and make over to the defender, his wife, the money which then stood deposited with the National Security Savings Bank at Jedburgh, in name of himself and his wife, and which at the 20th day of November 1881 as then accumulated amounted to £182, 10s. 1d., and that this donation remained unrecalled at his death: Finds that the defender, as executrix of the said defunct, is not liable to account for or to pay to the pursuers, Agnes Curle or Blyth and Walter Blyth, her husband, she being one of the nearest of kin of the said defunct, the sum of £183, 19s. 7d. (being the above-mentioned sum with interest to the

Page: 430

date of her confirmation as executrix aforesaid) or any part thereof: Finds the defender as executrix foresaid liable to the pursuers in the sum of £6, 10s. 6d. sterling, being the amount of the share belonging to said female pursuer of the free residue of the moveable estate of the said defunct, exclusive of the above sum of £183, 19s. 7d., and decerns against the defender for payment to the pursuers of the said sum of £6, 10s. 6d. to the pursuers: Quoad ultra sustains the defences and assoilzies the defender from the action.”

The pursuer appealed to the Court of Session, and argued—The facts of the case were not in dispute, but admitting the defender's statement, there was no proof of donatio mortis causa. To constitute a proper mortis causa donation the gift must be made when the donor is under apprehension of death.— Morris v. Riddick, July 16, 1867, 5 Macph. 1043, per Lord Deas; Milne v. Grant's Executors, June 5, 1884, 11 R. 887, per Lords Young and Craighill. The donation must at least be made in “emergency or exceptional circumstances. ” In this case the deceased had said nothing to his wife about the deposits during his last illness. This case was distinguishable from Crosbie's Trustees v. Wright, May 28, 1880, 7 R. 823, because (1) there the subject of the donation was a deposit-receipt, here it was a bank passbook; (2) the donation there was a present donation of money— Watt's Trustees &c., July 1, 1869, 7 Macph. 930; Cuthil v. Burns, March 20, 1862, 24 D. 840; Commercial Bank v. Rhind, January 31, and Feb. 10, 1860, 3 Macq. 643. There had been no delivery here— Morris v. Riddick, supra; Thomson v. Dunlop, January 23, 1884, 11 R. 453.

The defender argued—The present case was ruled by Crosbie's Trustees, supra. There was no distinction in such a matter between a deposit receipt and a pass book. Thomson's Executor v. Thomson, June 8, 1882, 9 R. 911. There could be no actual delivery of money deposited in bank— Gibson v. Hutchison, July 5, 1872, 10 Macph. 923; Lord Advocate v. Galloway, February 8, 1884, 11 R. 541. It was clearly proved that it was the intention of the deceased to give the donee a title to the money.

At advising —

Judgment:

Lord President—The pecuniary interest of the parties in this case is small, but the points of law raised in the appeal are important, and require careful consideration.

The question to be decided is, whether the defender, the widow of the deceased William Curle, who died on the 5th January 1882, is entitled to a sum of £182, 10s. 1d. deposited in the National Securities Savings Bank at Jedburgh by the deceased. The pursuers maintain that this sum forms part of the executry estate of the deceased, who died intestate, while the defender asserts that it formed the subject of a donation mortis causa to her by her deceased husband.

The onus, of course, lies on the defender of proving this allegation, and the circumstances established by the evidence are as follows:—

The deceased was a working-man earning 14s. 6d. per week of wages. Neither of the spouses had any other means. But by rigid economy they had saved so much that when the husband died at the age of seventy, his estate amounted in value to £241, consisting (besides furniture) of a deposit of £50 in the British Linen Bank at Jedburgh and the sum in dispute. The deposits in the Savings Bank began with a sum of £13 on 4th October 1862, and by the 23d November 1867 they amounted to £150. By the rules of the Savings Bank this is the full amount that any one person is entitled to have on deposit. The difference between this sum and £182, 10s. 1d., being the balance due on the account at Curle's death, is made up of interest accrued since November 1867, less six payments drawn out of the account during the same period, amounting in all to £34, 5s. 9d., thus shewing that the drafts on the account for a period of fourteen years fell short of the interest for the same period by about one-half. This history of the account indicates a desire on the part of the deceased to accumulate as much as possible the money invested in the Savings Bank, while it is proved otherwise that when he wanted money for current purposes he preferred to draw it from his account with the British Linen Company. The account in the Savings Bank is headed “William Curle, miller, Bongate Mill, and Elizabeth Baptie, his wife, conjunctly and severally, and the longest liver of them.” I need hardly say in passing that I ascribe no testamentary effect to this heading, though made at the request of the deceased himself. It is only an indication that the deceased had at the time some purpose in his mind beyond merely making a deposit of money. In that view it is an article of evidence in support of the allegation that a mortis causa gift was made. Mr Grieve, the actuary of bank, who wrote this heading, is now dead, but the defender depones that when the first deposit was made, and when the heading must have been written, her husband said to Mr Grieve “that he was doing this to keep me comfortable in case anything befel him,” and when the husband and wife were leaving the bank, taking with them the pass-book containing the above heading, Mr Grieve said, “Now, you are all right whatever happens either of the parties.” This evidence receives confirmation from the statements of Mr Heriot, present actuary, as to the practice of the Savings Bank. The defender farther depones that the pass-book was always kept by her, and remained in her possession at the time of her husband's death, and that she alone operated on the account, while as regards the deposit-account at the British Linen Company's Bank (which was in name of her husband alone), “When I needed money my husband used to say, ‘Just go to the British, and let the other money lie; it is aye gathering for you.’ He always gave this as the reason.” These statements of the deceased are proved by the defender's brother (a perfectly independent witness) to have been made in his presence. In her additional evidence the defender depones that her husband “often said he hoped he would be taken away before me, for I could do well without him, but he could not do wanting me. He died on the 5th of January, and on the New Year's day he wished me a happy new year, and said that I would never want because the money was all mine.” It is proved by the same evidence that the deceased suffered from heart disease, that he was often unwell, that for the last five years of his life he was quite unable to work, and that he died very suddenly, “falling down on the floor in a moment.”

Page: 431

If this evidence is to be believed (and I see no reason to doubt it, considering how satisfactorily the documents harmonise with and support the defender's deposition), the animus donandi is very clear, and the words of present gift are, I think, also quite sufficient. In these respects it seems impossible to distinguish this case from Crosbie's Trustees, 7 R. 823, and The Lord Advocate v. Galloway, 11 R. 541.

But the appellant contends that the defender's case is imperfect in two respects—(1) that the alleged gift is not proved to have been made under an immediate apprehension of death; and (2) that the subject of the gift was not delivered by the donor to the donee.

(1) In support of the first of these objections, the appellants rely on the opinion of Lord Deas in the case of Morris v. Riddick, 5 Macph. 1043, to the effect that a donation mortis causa must be made in the immediate prospect of death, and “takes effect only in the event of death occurring from the existing illness; otherwise it falls to be returned.” Reference was also made to some expressions which fell from Lord Young and Lord Craighill in the later case of Milne v. Grant's Executors, 11 R. 887, which give countenance to the same view.

After a careful consideration of the question thus raised, I am satisfied (1) that if a donation mortis causa cannot be sustained according to the law of Scotland unless the donor at the time of making the gift believes himself to be in imminent peril of speedy death, then the law of Scotland has adopted the third, and the third only, of the three kinds of donation mortis causa known in the Roman law, and has made the condition more severe than it was in the Roman law; and (2) that if there be superadded this farther condition, that in the event of death not occurring from the specific peril apprehended, the gift falls to be returned, then the law of Scotland has introduced a new species of gift which was unknown to the Roman law, from which it professes to be borrowed.

The text of the Digest is as follows (Lib. 39, tit. 6): — “Julianus tres esse species mortis causa donationum, ait. Unam cum quis nullo præsentis periculi metu conterritus, sed sola cogitatione mortalitatis, donat. Aliam esse speciem mortis causa donationum ait, cum quis imminente periculo commotus ita donat ut statim fiat accipientis. Tertium genus donationum ait, si quis periculo motus non sic dat ut statim fiat accipientis sed tuno demum cum mors fuerit secuta.” The second species named by Julianus we should of course class as donation inter vivos. The first requires only that the gift shall be made in prospect of death, in the sense that it is not intended to take full effect until the death of the donor. And with regard to the third, the imminency of the peril required may be best estimated by the examples which are given in the same title, on the authority of Paullns, Gaius, and Ulpian—“Non tantum infirmæ valetudinis causa, sed periculi etiam propinquæ mortis vel ab hoste vel a prædonibus vel ab hominis potentis crudelitate aut odio, aut navigationis ineundæ, aut per insidiosa loca iturus, aut ætate fessus.” In no part of these texts is there any appearance of the doctrine that upon the removal of the immediate peril under a sense of which the gift was made, or on the donor's escape from or survivance of that peril, the subject of the gift falls necessarily to be returned to the donor. On the contrary, the fair implication seems to be, that while the donor's power of revocation subsists till his death, if he die without revoking, the gift will become absolute by his death, though that may occur after many years and not as the result of the peril, the apprehension of which was the immediate motive of the gift.

In the Institutes no mention is made of more than one species of donatio mortis causa, which is thus defined,—“Mortis causa donatio est, quæ propter mortis fitsuspicionem; cum quis ita donat, ut si quid humanitus ei contigisset, haberet is qui accepit; sin autem supervixisset is, qui donavit, reciperet, vel si eum donationis penituisset, aut prior decesserit is cui donatum sit.”—Inst. 2, 7, sec. 1.

In the Code (8, 57, 4), formalities to be observed in making donations mortis causa are prescribed, and the donations are spoken of as made under different circumstances, “sive juxta mortem facientis fuerint celebratæ, sive longiore mortis cogitatione subsecutæ sunt,” clearly shewing that such a gift might be made either under the fear of an imminent peril or on a calm contemplation of death as the common lot of humanity.

The mortis causa donation of the Roman Jurists has been adopted in almost all the European systems of jurisprudence—in England, France, Germany, and Holland,—though with a variety of different qualifications and conditions to suit the genius and principles of each particular system and country. Obviously the only relevant inquiry here is, to what extent and effect the principle or rule which gives effect to such donations has been recognised in the decisions of our Courts, and thus made part of the common law of Scotland.

I adhere to the opinion which I expressed in Morris v. Riddick, that in the law of Scotland donatio mortis causa does not precisely answer to any of the species of donation described in the Digest, but follows more the general definition of the Institute, which distinguishes it from donation inter vivos on the one hand, and legacy on the other. But I cannot find in any of our authorities, with the exception of the dicta relied on by the appellants, a recognition of the necessity of a present imminent peril to life as a condition of the right or power to make a donation mortis causa.

To avoid misapprehension, however, I must here observe that the state of the donor's health, his prospect of life, and above all, his own feelings and belief on this matter, are relevant and important considerations in such a case, as bearing on the proof of the animus donandi, and also as tending to shew whether the gift is meant to be absolute or sub modo. In many of the cases, therefore, these considerations are dealt with as material, for an apprehension of an early or immediate death may naturally supply or suggest the motive and occasion of the gift.

The earliest reported case, so far as I know, in which the subject was discussed is Irvine v. Skeen, March 7, 1707, M. 6350, where an assignation by a mother to her bastard son was objected to as being a donatio mortis causa and so void because the donor survived the donee. The representatives of the assignee maintained that the assignation was a deed inter vivos, and could not be

Page: 432

donatio mortis causa, because such donation is “never presumed unless it clearly appear from the testamentary conception of the writ, or be granted in contemplation of immediate death, or some eminent danger feared by the disponer.” The Court found the assignation to be donatio mortis causa, and so disregarded this plea.

Bankton, theonly one of our institutional writers that bestows much attention on the subject, cites the above-mentioned case of Irvine v. Skeen, and defines donatio mortis causa as “a deed where by one in contemplation of his death gives anything to another, or grants a right in his favour, revocable at the granter's pleasure,” and adds,—“The characteristic of these donations is, that the giver prefers the grantee to his heir, but prefers himself to both.” But there is nothing to shew in the section which he devotes to the subject, that by the words “in contemplation of his death” he mean anything more than that the gift is made intuitu mortis, and to take effect at death and not sooner—1 Bankton, Tit. 9, secs. 16, 18, and 19.

In the middle of last century there occurred two cases, Whiteford v. Ayton, 1742, M. 8072. and Mitchell v. Wright, 1759, M. 8082 (the one before and the other after the publication of Bankton's Institute), which are valuable authorities, particularly in combination, because while in both the donatio mortis causa was sustained, in the latter the gift was made on deathbed, and in the former the donor was apparently in his usual health, under no apprehension of speedy death, and lived for two years after, when he fell sick in a friend's house and died there. The Court made no distinction between the two cases, and in neither does the judgment refer in any way to the circumstances now mentioned.

Fife v. Kedslie, 9 D. 853, was a donation mortis causa of bank stock constituted by deed of transference and back-letter, which was sustained by a large majority of the whole Court, Lord Mackenzie, at the final advising in the First Division, remarking,—“He meant clearly to make a donatio mortis causa, and while I find all the features of such a donation here, I cannot find those of an ordinary trust.” In that case the donor survived the gift for nine months, and it is not stated that his health was in any way impaired at the date of the gift, though probably, from the relation of the parties and the circumstances of the case, he was an old man.

Miller v. Milne's Trustees, 21 D. 377, was also before the whole Court, and led to a great diversity of opinion, the question being whether a provision of £200 to be paid after the granter's death was a direct obligation with a postponed term of payment, or a donation mortis causa, or a legacy. But the Judges, and particularly those who were in favour of donation mortis causa, never inquired or concerned themselves with the question, whether the gift was made while the donor was under some immediate apprehension of death. In fact, the lady, who was the donor, was, so far as appears, in perfect health when the gift was made, and survived the donee.

In Gibson v. Hutchison, 10 Macph. 923, two separate donations mortis causa by a husband to a wife were sustained by this Division of the Court, affirming the judgment of Lord Gifford, Ordinary, though there was no allegation or proof of any immediate apprehension of death on the part of the donor. I had the misfortune to differ from the other members of the Court as regarded the second gift, because the proof of gift depended entirely on the evidence of the donee, and because I thought the words ascribed by the donee to the donor did not necessarily import a present intention to make a donation mortis causa. But this does not at all interfere with the authority of this judgment in the present question.

Lastly, there is the case of The Lord Advocate v. Galloway in this Division of the Court last year ( 11 R. 541), in which the Judges now present sustained a donation mortis causa as good though the donor was engaged in the management of his farm at the date of the gift, and survived the gift for three years, and could not be said to be in any particular peril, except perhaps what is expressed in Ulpian's phrase ætate fessus.

In this state of the authorities I am unable to give any effect to the appellants' first objection.

2. The second ground of objection may be disposed of in a very few words. It could not be sustained without deciding in effect that money lodged in a savings bank could not form the subject of a gift mortis causa, unless the money were actually uplifted by the donor and delivered to the donee de manu in manum. But in such cases proof of actual delivery is not required, as is clearly established by the judgments of this Court in Gibson v. Hutchison and Crosbie's Trustees.

It is only necessary to observe in conclusion that Lord Deas' opinion on this point, expressed in Morris v. Riddick, was afterwards largely qualified by his Lordship, if not altogether withdrawn, in his subsequent opinion in Crosbie's Trustees.

Lord Mure—I entirely concur in the exposition now given by your Lordship of the various important questions of law raised in this case, and I have very little to add.

I think that the circumstances of this case as disclosed on the evidence bring it within the principal of Crosbie's Trustees. With reference to the question of the necessity for delivery of the subject of donation, I then expressed certain views after a careful examination of the authorities, and the conclusion to which I came was that actual delivery of the subject is not necessary, provided there is distinct evidence of an intention to make a donation. I think there is such evidence in the present case.

In these circumstances, the only other point of difficulty is whether the donor must be at the time he makes the gift in the knowledge that he is ill of the disease from which he subsequently died. On that point I agree with your Lordship that there is no authority for saying that such knowledge is necessary. I do not think it is essential for the donor to know himself to be suffering from the disease of which he afterwards dies. The wife here states in her evidence that she knew her husband was subject to heart disease, and I am inclined to think that if the question had been asked it would have turned out that her husband was also aware of it.

Lord Shand—The argument which was maintained by the appellant has made this decision of

Page: 433

great importance. The case has formed the subject of anxious consideration by the Court, and I am entirely of the same opinion as your Lordships.

No doubt it has not been shown that when this donation of the money put in the bank pass-book was made the deceased was under any apprehension of immediate death. If therefore the appellant's argument were sound, that a mortis causa donation can only be made by one who is under apprehension of immediate death, then she must succeed. But I am of opinion that the donation here was made in contemplation of death. The deceased thought his life was short and uncertain, and that his wife would probably outlive him. In these circumstances I think that this mortis causa donation was good, and that it was not necessary that, the donor should be in immediate peril of death, provided he intended that on his death the subject of the donation should become the property of the donee. I cannot see any sound principle for the necessity of there being immediate peril. Both on principle and on the authorities I am of opinion that this was a mortis causa gift which ought to receive effect.

The Court affirmed the judgment of the Sheriff.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Appellant— Strachan. Agents— Mack & Grant, S.S.C.

Counsel for the Respondent— Darling. Agent— J. H. S. Graham, W.S.

1885


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