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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Shaw's Trustees v. White [1900] ScotLR 37_895 (11 July 1900) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1900/37SLR0895.html Cite as: [1900] SLR 37_895, [1900] ScotLR 37_895 |
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By his trust-disposition and settlement a truster directed his trustees, inter alia, “to invest the sum of £1500 and pay the annual interest or produce thereof to my grandniece A B; and I provide and declare that during the years of her pupilarity and minority the said interest be paid to her legal guardian, and on the said A B attaining her majority my said trustees shall pay over to her the said sum of £1500.” There was no destination-over as to this particular legacy, but the trust-deed contained a general residue clause. A B survived the truster, but died in minority, leaving a settlement by which she disposed of her whole estate. Held, on a construction of the testator's intention, that the legacy of £1500 vested in A B a morte testatoris.
Opinion ( per Lord M'Laren) that in a case where there is an unconditional gift of income to a legatee and there is no destination-over, there is a strong presumption that a direction to pay at majority is to be regarded as merely an administrative direction.
John Shaw, residing in Thorn Street, Earlston, died on 5th September 1892 leaving a trust—disposition and settlement whereby he conveyed his whole estate to David Allan and others, as trustees for the purposes therein mentioned.
The sixth and seventh purposes were in the following terms :—(Sixth) “I direct my trustees to invest the sum of £1500, and pay the annual interest or produce thereof to my grandniece Jessie White, daughter of Thomas White, draughtsman, Glasgow; and I provide and declare that during the years of her pupilarity or minority the said interest be paid to her legal guardian, and on the said Jessie White attaining her majority my said trustees shall pay over to her the said sum of £1500.” (Seventh) “I direct my trustees to pay over to my grandniece, the said Alison Gow, one-half of the residue and remainder of my means and estate, and the other half thereof I direct my trustees to hold, apply, and convey on such conditions and under such restrictions as I may direct by any writing under my hand, and failing any such writing then the same shall be dealt with and disposed of by my said trustees in such way or ways as to my trustees may seem best; my wish being that failing such instructions my trustees should have full power and liberty to dispose of such residue in any manner that may approve itself to them.”
Jessie White, referred to in the sixth purpose supra, survived the truster, but died on 15th November 1899 while still in minority. She left a settlement, by which she conveyed her whole estate to her mother Mrs Jessie Shaw or White. During her lifetime the trustees had paid the income of the sum of £1500 first to her father, and on his death to her mother, the said Mrs Jessie Shaw or White.
The truster left no writing dealing with the one half of the residue of his estate (other than the half bequeathed to Alison Gow), and in an action of multiplepoinding Mrs Jessie Shaw or White and Alison Gow, as his sole next-of-kin, were found entitled thereto on 14th November 1893.
Questions having arisen as to whether the legacy of £1500 had vested in jessie white, a special case was presented for the opinion and judgment of the court by (1) John Shaw's trustees, (2) the said Mrs Jessie Shaw or White, and (3) the said Alison Gow as residuary legatee. The second party maintained that the said legacy vested in the said Jessie White a morte testatoris, and was carried by her settlement to the second party. The third party maintained that in consequence of the said Jessie White having died before attaining majority the said legacy fell into residue.
The questions for the opinion of the Court were— “(1) Did the said legacy of £1500 vest in the said Jessie White ? or (2) Did it fall into residue ?”
Argued for the third party—This was a case in which there were two gifts, an absolute gift of the income and a conditional gift of the fee. The latter gift was conditional because it was only to take effect on Jessie White attaining majority— dies incertus pro conditione habetur. There was no gift of the fee before majority, and there was no authority for holding that a gift of income implied a gift of fee. That would be to read in to the direction to invest a direction to invest “for behoof of” Jessie White. In all the cases cited on the other side there were words of gift and postponement of payment. The fact that
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there was no destination-over was not material, because its absence was supplied by the residuary clause. In Adam's Trustees v. Carrick, June 18, 1806, 23 R. 828, it was held, on a clause very similar to the present, that vesting was postponed till majority. In that case there was a destination-over, but the Court did not proceed on that ground. Argued for the second party—As a question of intention the testator intended this legacy to go to Jessie White and not to the residuary legatee. The third party overlooked the fact that the reading of the clause proposed by her would have resulted in Jessie White, after majority, taking the income and the fee under two gifts, for there was nothing to limit the gift of income to the period of her minority. On the authorities, an immediate gift of income to A, and a direction to pay over the fee to him on his attaining majority, implied vesting a morte testatoris if there was no destination-over or survivorship clause— Wood v. Burnet's Trustees, July 2, 1813, Hume, p. 271; Ralston v. Ralston, July 8, 1842, 4 D. 1496, per the Lord Justice-Clerk; Alves' Trustees v. Grant, June 3, 1874, 1 R. 969; Brodie v. Brodie's Trustees, June 13, 1893, 20 R. 795, per Lord M'Laren ; Mackinnon's Trustees v. M'Neill, June 20, 1897, 24 R. 981, per Lord Kinnear. The case of Adam's Trustees v. Carrick, cit. supra, on which the third party relied, was distinguishable, in respect that there was a survivorship clause, and its authority had been questioned in Ballantyne's Trustees v. Kidd, Feb. 18, 1898, 25 R. 621.
Now, the question as to the meaning of the will seems to have been almost confined to construction of the sixth clause, because there are no other clauses referring to the sum. We have only to deal with the proper construction or the sixth clause; and I think the only question comes to be, what intention are we to draw from the construction of that clause? I confess I think there may be a difficulty in the case. The difficulty is this, the direction is—“I direct my trustees to invest the sum of £1500, and pay the annual interest or produce thereof to my grandniece Jessie White;” and then it goes on, “and I provide and declare that during the years of her pupillarity or minority the said interest be paid to her legal guardian ; and on the said Jessie White attaining her majority my said trustees shall pay over to her the said sum of £1500. “Now, here we have a direction to the trustees to invest the £1500; and the rest is in regard to paying her the interest. And if the words which Mr Hunter wishes us to read in were there, there would be no difficulty about the case at all. He wanted us to read in, “I direct my trustees to invest the sum of £1500 for behoof of Jessie White;” and he thinks that is a fair inference from the statements used—that that is really the testator's meaning; that they were to hold the sum of £1500 for the sole maintenance of Jessie White, and that the process by which he provides that the interest is to be paid to her legal guardian, and so on, were merely administrative clauses, and that the condition of payment to Jessie White on her attaining the age of twenty-one was merely postponing the payment; the meaning being, that when she was twenty-one and was able to administer her own funds, that was to fly off—in other words, it was merely an intention to postpone the payment, and not a condition of giving the legacy. As I have said before, my difficulty is a different one. My opinion is that the testator intended the clause to deal with and dispose of the whole £1500; and so far as I can gather, it is not the intention that anybody should have a right to it except Jessie White herself. There is not, as there is in some cases, any survivorship clause or destination-over, or anything to show that anybody but Jessie White should have any interest in this £1500 which the testator directed to be set aside from his estate. No doubt Mr Macfarlane said there is a residue clause; and if there was any actual failure in respect of Jessie White not attaining twenty-one years of age, that clause would carry the £1500. But I confess that, in the construction of the clause, that has not much weight on my mind, because when a testator in his settlement directs the disposal of a legacy in this way, he does not contemplate the failure of the legatee, but contemplates his taking; and the disposal by a residuary clause is quite a different matter from destination-over to somebody else. There is nothing of that sort here. Here we have a case of a gift given to Jessie White. She is to draw the interest during her pupillarity, and the direction is given to pay her over the fee. That is to say, that this is sufficient for disposal in one view of the whole interest in this £1500. Now, I confess that I think, from the way the clause is worded, that that was the intention of the testator in this matter—that Jessie White, and nobody else, should have an interest in this sum of £1500; and accordingly, I take the view that though we have not the words that the £1500 was for behoof of Jessie White, I think that, in fact, that is what the testator intended. Accordingly, the construction I would put on the will is, that the direction to pay on Jessie White attaining majority was just to postpone payment, but that it was not
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The
The Court answered the first question in the affirmative and the second in the negative.
Counsel for the First and Third Parties— Macfarlane. Agents— Romanes & Simson, W.S.
Counsel for the Second Party— Hunter. Agents— Reid & Guild, W.S.