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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> McConochie's Trustees v McConochie [1909] ScotCS CSIH_1 (18 May 1909) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1909/1909_SC_1046.html Cite as: 1909 1 SLT 489, [1909] ScotCS CSIH_1, 1909 SC 1046 |
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18 May 1909
M'Conochie's Trustees |
v. |
M'Conochie. |
“institutions” of a particular character named. Certainly the clause itself does not read very intelligibly, because it directs the trustee to divide the residue as he should think fit among such purposes as he should select to be “the recipients” thereof. Now, there is a blunder in grammar there, because a “purpose” cannot be said to be a “recipient.” You may give money for a particular purpose, but a recipient must be somebody who will take charge of it for the purpose. The words of bequest are:—“To divide the same as he shall think fit amongst such educational, charitable, and religious purposes within the city of Aberdeen as he shall select to be the recipients thereof.” I find it impossible myself to read this as meaning that he is to select certain purposes which are combinedly educational, charitable, and religious. I take it that the only reasonable meaning of it is that the trustee shall select certain purposes (by which the testator must have meant certain established purposes), which are educational or charitable or religious, not, of course, excluding any one which might combine all three features; but if the alternatives include the word “religious” then I think the case falls within the case of Grimond, although the word used there was “or.” I think this cannot be read truly in any other sense than as a bequest to each of these purposes as distinguished from the other, there being a power, according to the intention of the testator, to select among them. But then, “religious” has been held not to be a definite object according to the decisions, and if you have a bequest which includes the word “religious” as one of the objects to which the money may be applied, that bequest is bad from vagueness and uncertainty. That being so, I have come to the conclusion that we must answer this question in the affirmative.
LORD DUNDAS was sitting in the Extra Division.
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