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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Balfour's Trustees v Johnston [1935] ScotCS CSIH_4 (29 November 1935) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1935/1936_SC_137.html Cite as: 1936 SC 137, 1936 SLT 45, [1935] ScotCS CSIH_4 |
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29 November 1935
Balfour's Trustees |
v. |
Johnston |
At advising on 29th November 1935,—
The first objection made to the condition is that it is too vague to receive effect. In order that this objection should succeed it is not enough to say that the beneficiary may be uncertain how she must conduct herself in order to avoid forfeiture. It must be shown that the condition is so defective that it is incapable of legal construction or interpretation—Wemyss v. Wemyss's Trustees . If that test is applied, I am of opinion that the condition stands good. The testator has clearly evinced an intention that Mrs Johnston shall terminate all communication with the boy Dennis and shall cease to be active in promoting his interests, or shall forfeit the liferent provisions. It cannot be maintained that the prohibition against "holding any communication" is more vague than the prohibition against "allowing to reside," which was the prohibition considered in Wemyss. And, if the prohibition against taking an interest in Dennis is somewhat less definite, it derives clearer meaning from its association with the preceding part of the condition. Moreover, the condition as a whole must be observed, and failure to observe the first branch of it would infer forfeiture.
But it was said that a prohibition of this kind is unlawful because it is contra bonos mores and capricious. It was sought to liken it to a prohibition against a child's residence with his parents—Fraser v. Rose; Grant's Trustees v. Grant . But no authority was cited to us which would justify us in extending the principles applicable to the relationship of parent and child to an association between parties between whom no tie of blood exists, and it is obvious that different considerations apply to the two cases. The objection that the condition is capricious is no better founded in law than the others. No admission is made by the parties to the special case as to the testator's reasons for his disapproval of Mrs Johnston's interest in Dennis. But, on the assumption that it was capricious, that is not a legal ground of objection. I therefore hold that the challenge of the validity of the condition fails.
It is stated in the case that Dennis resided with the second party from the autumn of 1931 to January 1933, and thereafter at intervals. In particular he resided with her in her flat in London during the year 1934 and part of the present year. It is also stated that in 1933, after receiving from the testator information that he had made a new will altering her position under a previous will because of her association with Dennis, the second party had parted with the child for a time. It was maintained for the third party that, by her actings, the second party had forfeited the liferent rights. No stress was laid on the conduct of the second party in parting from the child on being told that the testator had altered his will in consequence of his objection to her association with the child, and, in my opinion, the circumstances antecedent to the second party's knowledge of the terms of the will are not relevant. But it was maintained that, by taking the child to reside with her after she became aware of the terms of the testator's will, she had failed to adhere to the condition, and had forfeited the benefits which were subject to the condition, or had, at any rate, made a final election between observance of the condition and these benefits. It was argued that, since the validity of the condition as part of the testator's will is now established, and since the testator's will is operative as from his death, any action by the second party infringing the condition after she became aware of it was taken, so to speak, at her own risk and infers forfeiture. The second party's counsel maintained against this that she was presented with a choice between giving up her interest in Dennisa and forfeiting the liferents, and that she was entitled to make that choice after the validity of the condition was decided by the Court. It is plain that the doctrine of election applies to the present case—Bell's Prin. (10th ed.) secs. 1938, 1939—and the only question is whether the election must be held to have been already made. If there was no authority, it would, I think, be in accordance with principle to hold that, where there is a dispute about the validity of the condition, election may take place after the determination of that dispute in an action timeously raised. In general, the party put to an election is entitled to have before him all the material circumstances by which his choice may be swayed. If there is a dispute whether the party is put to his election at all, it is difficult to see how a properly informed and final election can be made till that dispute is decided. If the condition here had not been binding on the second party, she would not have needed to make any election. It is only now that she knows that she must elect, and, if she is now to be allowed to make her election, there will be no violation of the testator's intention that she shall not take under his will the benefit of the provisions in her favour unclogged by the condition which he attached to them. There is little authority which bears on the question, but in Stirling v. Stirling it was held that election might take place after a decree determining that a disputed forfeiture clause was operative although the decree was pronounced several years after an election might have been made. I hold therefore that the second party has not made her election, but that she may do so now.
I am also of opinion that her choice, once made, is final. It was clearly not the testator's intention that she might intermittently observe the condition and enjoy the liferents with intervals of non-observance and temporary forfeitures.
[His Lordship then referred to a matter with which this report is not concerned, and concluded]—I am for answering question 1 in the affirmative; question 2 (a) in the negative and 2 (b)in the affirmative; question 3 (a) in the affirmative and 3 (b) in the negative. On the view which I have taken the fourth question does not arise.
On the assumption that the condition is valid and effectual, it was argued by the second party that she has not incurred a forfeiture by her conduct in relation to the child, and that she is entitled to a reasonable time after the decision in this case to make up her mind with regard to the course she intends to adopt. I have come to the conclusion that this contention is well founded. It appears to me that the bequest in her favour raises a question of election or approbate and reprobate. She cannot approbate the gift in her favour and reprobate the prohibition imposed upon her. On the other hand, however, if the condition is unenforceable, there is no room for election. In that event the legatee takes the bequest free of the invalid condition. The doctrine of election is an equitable principle. It can only be inferred from a deliberate act of the elector in the full knowledge of all the material facts and of his rights. Here there was what I think we must regard as a bona fide dispute with regard to whether the condition which had to be approbated was valid and enforceable, and I do not think the legatee can be called upon to make her election until she knows whether the condition is binding upon her. If we decide that it is, then she is put to her election. Accordingly, in my opinion, the second party is now entitled to elect to take the bequest subject to the condition, if she sees fit to do so. On the other hand, she is entitled to elect to renounce the legacy, and so be free to associate with the child as she may think proper. I agree that the questions should be answered as proposed.
The condition being, in my opinion, an effectual condition, I decline to consider whether the introduction of such a prohibition into the settlement indicates caprice on the part of the truster. There is nothing in the adjusted statements of fact which would enable the Court to determine such a question; while the law of Scotland, apart from its sometimes illusory provision of legitim, allows to parents an unrestricted liberty, however capriciously exercised, in disposing mortis causa of their estates. Again I find nothing to indicate a trespass against "good conduct" in a condition which restrains a merely capricious affection, while not interfering with any tie of blood.
I am very clearly of opinion that the second branch of question 2 ought to be answered in the affirmative. It is true that the settlement speaks from the date of the truster's death, and speaks, moreover, as from that date in the terms in which it has now been interpreted by the Court. It is only from the date of this decision, however, that intimation has been made to the second party of the settlement as containing, as part of it, the condition as to the validity of which parties have hitherto been in dispute. Although the terms of the settlement do not put the second party to an election as between alternative provisions, they none the less confer on her an option, and call on her to make a choice, between a benefit subject to a clog and release from that clog with renunciation of the benefit. Before a beneficiary can be asked to make such a choice, just as in the case of a more typical election, I am of opinion that she is entitled to be informed as to the alternatives with all the fullness of detail to which she would have been entitled in the circumstances which more usually have introduced the equity.
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