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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Smith's Trustees v. Smith [1924] ScotLR 364 (05 March 1924)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1924/61SLR0364.html
Cite as: [1924] ScotLR 364, [1924] SLR 364

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 364

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Wednesday, March 5. 1924.

61 SLR 364

Smith's Trustees

v.

Smith.

Subject_1Succession
Subject_2Testament
Subject_3Construction
Subject_4Annuity — “Free of All Income Tax, Government Duties (if any), and All other Deductions” — Whether Super Tax Included — Finance (1909–10) Act 1910 (10 Edw. VII, cap. 8), sec. 66 — Income Tax Act 1918 (8 and 9 Geo. V, cap. 40), sec. 4 — Finance Act 1920 (10 and 11 Geo. V, cap. 18), sec. 15 (1).
Facts:

By trust-disposition and settlement, executed on 11th April 1914, a testator directed his trustees to pay to his wife duringall the days of her life an annuity of £2000, free of all income tax, Government duties (if any), and all other deductions. Her total income exceeded £2000 and was accordingly liable to super tax. Held that the trustees were bound to relieve the widow of her liability to super tax in respect of the annuity.

Headnote:

Mrs Florence May Wimble or Smith, widow of Joseph James Smith, and others, the testamentary trustees of the said Joseph James Smith, first parties, and the said Mrs Florence May Wimble or Smith, second party, presented a Special Case for the opinion and judgment of the Court.

The case stated—“1. The said Joseph James Smith died on 14th March 1914 leaving a trust-disposition and settlement whereby he conveyed his whole estate to the trustees therein mentioned in trust for the purpose therein set forth.… The testator was survived by his wife and a son, … who died on 13th January 1915.… the second party thus survived her son. 2.… By the fifth purpose of the said trust-disposition and settlement the testator directed his trustees to make payment to his said wife during all the days of her life of an annuity of £2000, such annuity to be payable free of all income tax, Government duties (if any), and all other deductions.… By the seventh purpose of the said trust-disposition and settlement the testator directed his trustees to pay to his said son, should he survive the testator, during all the days of his life, the free annual income of the residue and remainder of the trust estate after satisfying the said annuity; and by the eighth purpose thereof the testator directed that in the event of his said son predeceasing his (the testator's) said wife (the event which happened) and of the free income of said residue exceeding the said annuity of £2000, his trustees should in lieu of the said annuity pay to his (the testator's) said wife during all the days of her life the free annual income of said residue.… 4. … Since the commencement of the trust administration the free annual income of the residue of the estate has varied from year to year. In the first year of the trust, ending 14th March 1915, the second party received payment of the fixed annuity of £2000 per annum; thereafter (the testator's son having died as already stated in January 1915) she received payment for each of the three years up to the year ending 14th March 1918 of the available free income which was in excess of the fixed annuity. For the years from 14th March 1918 to 14th March 1921 the second party received payment of the said fixed annuity, and for the following year the free income was less than the amount of the annuity free of income tax and super tax. 5. In addition to the annuity or free income which the second party has thus received from the first parties in terms of the said trust-disposition and settlement, she has a private income which is at the present time approximately £700 per annum, and thus the second party is in respect of her total income liable to the Inland Revenue for super tax in respect that her income exceeds £2000. Super tax is collected from the second party direct, and has not formed a deduction or payment in any of the first parties' trust accounts. The second party, however, claims that the first parties should pay either in whole or in part the super tax for which she is liable when she is in receipt of the said annuity, or when the free annual income payable to her, although in excess of the said annuity, falls short of the said annuity and super tax effeiring thereto. In the circumstances of the present case and in virtue of the terms of the said trust-disposition and settlement, the first parties do not feel themselves free to do so without the judicial

Page: 365

determination of the Court. In any event they consider it necessary to have judicial guidance as to the proportion for which they would be liable in the event of it being held that the second party is entitled to relief of super tax.”

The question of law was—“Are the first parties bound to relieve the second party in respect of her liability to super tax when she is in receipt of the said annuity under the fifth purpose of the said trust-disposition and settlement?”

Argued for the second party—“Income tax” included “super tax.” That had been decided in Wordie's Trustees v. Wordie, 1922 S.C. 28, 59 S.L.R. 39. Doxat's case, [1920] W.N. 262, was exactly in point. There the direction was to pay “free of income tax and of all other deductions,” and the Court held that the widow was “entitled to the naked amount of the annuity free from both income tax and supertax,” per Sargant, J., at p. 263. Any other interpretation would have the effect of restricting the meaning of “income tax” merely because the words “all other deductions” followed. The case of Crawshay, [1915] W.N. 412, proceeded on a specialty. Accordingly the question of law should be answered in the affirmative.

Argued for the first parties—Super tax was not a “deduction,” unless it was specifically mentioned by the testator as such— In re Crosse, [1920] 1 Ch. 240, per Astbury, J., at p. 246. As for Doxat's case the words there were different. Here Crawshay's case was in point, and the question of law should be answered in the negative.

Judgment:

Lord Justice-Clerk (Alness)—The parties to this Special Case are the trustees of the late Joseph James Smith and his widow, the trustees being the first parties and the widow being the second party. The Special Case as it originally came before us contained a number of questions of law; but it has come before us to-day in a somewhat emasculated form, for the parties are in agreement in regard to the appropriate answers to be made to all the questions of law with the exception of the first part of the first question. The only question which we are called upon to deal with is whether the trustees are bound to relieve the second party of her liability to super tax on an annuity of £2000 which was conferred upon her under the deed under construction.

It is well settled that income tax includes super tax, and it is also clear that if the words of the bequest in this deed had stopped at “tax” the case would have been covered by and would have been indistinguishable from the decision of this Division in the case of Wordie's Trustees, 1922 S.C. 28. And accordingly the first parties are constrained to argue that the fact that certain words follow upon the words “income tax,” namely, “Government duties (if any) and all other deductions,” so far from enlarging, abridge the interpretation of the words “income tax” which precede. That appears to me to be an extravagant contention and quite disconform to the obvious intention of the testator.

But the case is not without useful analogy, because I find that in the case of Doxat, ([1920] W. N. 262), which was decided in England, the words used by the testator were “free of income tax and of all other deductions,” and the same argument which has been urged to-day was there urged before Mr Justice Sargant, who held—as I suggest your Lordships should hold—that it would be extravagant to decide that the words “all other deductions,” whether exactly correct in their application or not, diminish the force of the words which precede them. In other words, this case is indistinguishable from the case of Doxat.

The case is distinguishable from the case of Crawshay ( [1915] W.N. 412), to which reference has been made in the argument. There, as was pointed out in Wordie's Trustees and also in Doxat, the language employed was quite different; and, as Mr Justice Sargant further pointed out in Doxat's case, Crawshay laid down no general principle at all. The case of Oldham v. Crosse ( [1920] 1 Ch. 240) does not seem to impinge upon the authority of Wordie's Trustees or Doxat.

Accordingly, whether one regards this case as one for the application of common sense or as covered by authority, the result is the same, and leads to answering the question in the affirmative; and I now propose to your Lordships that we should so answer it.

Lord Ormidale—I agree. As I said during the discussion, I am not altogether surprised that the trustees who have the duty of administering this trust should have been uncertain as to whether or not the words “free of income tax,” in the context in which they are found in the deed, include super tax. And I have no doubt that difficulty was occasioned by the fact that in more than one case the word “deduction” has occurred, and that in one of them at any rate “deduction” was held to have a limiting meaning upon the generality of the clause otherwise. But even in Doxat's case ( [1920] W.N. 262), which like the present case starts out with the words “free of income tax,” the addendum of the words “all other deductions” was not held to have any such limiting effect, and I think the same view applies here.

Crawshay's case ( [1915] W. N. 412) has always been considered somewhat special. It appears that owing to the context in that case it was held that the word “deductions,” taking precedence of the words “income tax,” and therefore as it were holding the place of first importance, was supposed to supply a gloss upon the words “income tax” which made it impossible in the view of the Court which decided Crawshay's case that super tax could be included, not being a deduction.

Here, however, in accordance with the decision in Wordie's Trustees ( 1922 S.C. 28) and in the cases of Doxat and Crosse ( [1920] 1 Ch. 240), the words “income tax” are intended to and do in fact include super tax.

Page: 366

Lord Hunter—I agree. The decision in this case appears to me to be covered by the decision in this Court in the case of Wordie's Trustees, 1922 S.C. 28. In that case and in one or two other cases the English case called Crawshay ( [1915] W. N. 412) was referred to. The language in Crawshay's case was “clear of all deductions including income tax.” That language, to my mind, was to all intents and purposes the same as the language used in the case of Doxat ( [1920] W.N. 262), to which your Lordship has referred. But in Doxat's case and also in Wordie's Trustees distinctions were drawn by the Judges between the language used in these cases and the language used in Crawshay's case. For my own part I fail to appreciate any real difference in the language of the deeds. It may be that the decision in Crawshay stands because of specialties which it possessed in some part of the deed; but if I were called upon to construe the expression “free of all deductions” without assistance from any other part of the deed, I should follow the decision in Wordie's Trustees and Doxat, and hold that the expression included super tax as well as income tax.

Lord Anderson did not hear the case.

The Court answered the question of law in the affirmative.

Counsel:

Counsel for the First Parties—Hon. W. Watson, K.C.— Crawford. Agents— Tods, Murray, & Jamieson, W.S.

Counsel for the Second Party— Henderson, K.C.— Macdonald. Agents— J. & J. Galletly, S.S.C.

1924


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