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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Royal Insurance (UK) Ltd v. AMEC Construction Scotland Ltd 7 Ors [2007] ScotCS CSOH_179 (09 November 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_179.html
Cite as: [2008] BLR 53, 2008 SLT 427, 2008 GWD 4-63, [2007] CSOH 179, 2008 SC 201, [2007] ScotCS CSOH_179

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2007] CSOH 179

 

A2381/02

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD EMSLIE

 

in the cause

 

ROYAL INSURANCE (UK) LIMITED

 

Pursuers;

 

against

 

AMEC CONSTRUCTION SCOTLAND LIMITED AND OTHERS

 

Defenders:

 

 

ннннннннннннннннн________________

 

 

 

Pursuers: McNeill, Q.C., McLean; DLA

First Defenders: Howie, Q.C., Borland; MacRoberts

Second Defenders: Johnston, Q.C.; Simpson & Marwick

Third Defenders: Doherty, Q.C., MacColl; Bishops LLP

 

9 November 2007

 

Introduction
[1] This is an action of damages against contractors, architects and structural engineers who were involved in major reconstruction works affecting several buildings in central Glasgow between 1987 and 1990. Significant problems manifested themselves some years later, and the pursuers' claim covers inter alia disturbance and remedial costs relative to one of the buildings of which they became tenants in 1991. The action was raised in September 2002, and is principally founded upon alleged breaches of collateral undertakings which the respective defenders granted in the pursuers' favour relative to the conduct of the reconstruction works. In addition the pursuers assert a contractual right, by virtue of the same collateral undertakings, to be indemnified against the losses which they have sustained.

[2] After sundry procedure a debate on the first and third defenders' preliminary pleas took place in the latter part of 2005. In essence, the issues raised in the course of that debate concerned the pursuers' entitlement to claim disturbance and remedial costs where multiple relevant invoices had apparently been rendered to and paid by third parties. At that stage, however, the argument of the first and third defenders was formally directed to the relevancy of the pursuers' pleadings, and the pursuers' fundamental title and interest to pursue the action as a whole were not in issue. Following that debate a proof before answer was allowed, and a 12-week diet was subsequently set down to commence on 25 September 2007. From November 2006, however, an extensive amendment procedure took place in the course of which the first defenders, followed by the second and third defenders, tabled a formal challenge to the pursuers' title and interest to maintain the action. In particular the first defenders averred the disclosure, in the pursuers' own statutory accounts for the year ended 31 December 1992, of an arrangement whereby

"... with effect from that date the pursuer transferred not merely its whole insurance business and staff to Royal Insurance PLC, but all its assets and liabilities as well".

The relative balance sheet, it was averred, showed that the value of leasehold property held by the pursuer was by the same date reduced to nil, as indeed was that of its other former assets. In these circumstances, the first defenders alleged that the collateral undertakings under which the pursuers bore to sue, and the lease representing their supposed interest in the building, had ceased to be their property prior to the inception of these proceedings. They therefore called on the pursuers to condescend upon the basis on which any title or interest to insist in this action could be supported.

[3] By way of adjustment to their answers in February and June 2007, the pursuers responded in inter alia the following terms:

"Until about 1992, the pursuers carried on business as insurers in the United Kingdom and elsewhere. They did so as part of the Royal Insurance group of companies. Their staff occupied the premises. During the course of 1992, the said group reorganised their businesses. As a result, at the end of 1992, the insurance business carried on in the United Kingdom by the pursuers was transferred to another company within the group, namely Royal Insurance PLC (PLC), although until about 1996 the pursuers continued to conduct some insurance business outwith the United Kingdom. After said transfer at the end of 1992, the staff previously employed by the pursuers at the premises became employees of other Royal Insurance group companies. The pursuers employed no staff themselves in the United Kingdom from the end of 1992. The legal framework for the said business transfer was provided by an Agreement between the pursuers and PLC dated 31 December 1992. The Agreement is governed by English law. In terms thereof as construed under English law, the pursuers declared themselves to be bare trustees of the assets that they held, insofar as said assets were not required by PLC to be conveyed to them, for the benefit of PLC. The pursuers' interests in the said lease and in the undertakings ... have not been required to be conveyed to PLC and are accordingly held by the pursuers as bare trustees under an English trust for the benefit of PLC. As such, the pursuers retain title and interest to pursue this action. The pursuers remained and remain as tenants under the said lease, subject to the said tenants' obligations. They provided accommodation for employees of other Royal Insurance group companies in the premises on an informal basis. The pursuers remained and remain liable to the landlords for payment of the rent and related payments due under the said lease, but have been relieved of those charges by other Royal Insurance group companies in consideration of the fact that group employees were occupying the premises."

[4] When the Closed Record was finally amended in June 2007, all three defenders had preliminary pleas and supporting averments to the effect that, on the pursuers' own pleadings taken pro veritate, the latter had no title or interest to pursue the action in their own right. The critical assets and liabilities were now vested in the pursuers in a different legal capacity, namely that of trustees, and as the instance confirmed this was a capacity in which they did not sue. In light of that development, it was necessary to consider whether the pending proof should still proceed or whether (as the defenders maintained) the new challenge to the pursuers' title and interest was sufficiently important to be the subject of a fresh procedure roll debate instead. By interlocutor of 6 July 2007 I sustained the defenders' opposed motion, discharged the diet of proof, and in its place re-appointed the cause to the procedure roll on the respective defenders' new preliminary pleas. I have now heard an extensive debate on the disputed issue of the pursuers' title and interest to sue.

 

The issue for determination
[5
] By comparison with previous authorities on title and interest to sue to which I have been referred, the situation here is unusual. Such earlier cases have commonly involved the holding of relevant rights and interests by independent third parties at or after the time when proceedings were raised, sometimes resulting from a disposal of some sort by pursuers themselves. Remedial attempts pendente processu have thus tended to involve an initial transfer or retrocession in the pursuers' favour, or alternatively reduction of an offending divestiture. For example in Westville Shipping Co Ltd v Abram Steamship Co Ltd 1923 S.C (H.L.) 68, assignations from A to B, and then from B to C, were reduced, with the result that A's original title and interest revived. A striking feature of the present case is, however, that no legal persona other than the pursuers is said to have been involved at any stage. If the pursuers were to be described as A, there is no B or C to be considered here. The pursuers have on averment been the trustees of the bare trust said to have been created in 1992, and all parties agree that it is the trustees of that trust who, since 1992, have had title and interest to sue the defenders under the collateral undertakings which they granted.

[6] Against that background, the real issue for determination comes to be whether, as maintained by the defenders, the absence of any reference to trust capacity in the pursuers' instance is an irremediable defect requiring dismissal of a claim which currently stands at г10 million. By virtue of the recent amendment process the pursuers now have averments of their trustee status in condescendence 2, but according to the defenders it is the instance alone which serves as the definition clause of an action and inter alia identifies the party entitled to obtain decree, do diligence or grant a discharge. In particular, under well-settled rules of practice, one must look to the instance alone to discover any special capacity in which a person sues, and since no special capacity is mentioned in the pursuers' instance here they must be taken to have raised and pursued this action in their own right and not as trustees. The pursuers, on the other hand, dismiss such criticisms as matters of mere pleading practice and "labelling", and stress that as a single and indivisible legal persona they hold, and have at all material times held, the trust title and interest on which the present action is founded. On that basis, it is said, the defenders' new pleas are misconceived and fall to be repelled.

 

The parties' submissions
[7
] In support of their respective positions, the various parties advanced wide-ranging arguments at some length and with considerable reference to judicial and textbook authority. In the end, however, certain matters were not seriously in dispute. In particular:

a. The parties were ultimately in agreement as to the powers and duties of trustees in general. Trustees always had a duty to take reasonable steps to ingather, protect and preserve the trust estate, and in that connection owed an obligation to account to the trust beneficiaries: Elgin County Road Trs. v Innes 1886 14 R. 48, esp. per LP Inglis at 51; Mackenzie Stuart, Law of Trusts, pp.200-3; Halsbury's Laws of England, 4th ed. (re-issue), vol.48 at para.842. In a question with trust beneficiaries, trustees were not in a position to "shake off" the trust or to act as auctor in rem suam: Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia, vol.24 at paras.170, 171, 186 and 221. In seeking to vindicate trust rights and recover trust assets, trustees were at all times subject to the requirements of the trust. In that context, title and interest to raise or defend legal proceedings in relation to the trust estate were vested in the trustees alone, and (other than in highly special circumstances where the trustees' name would still require to be used) beneficiaries had no such rights: Mackenzie Stuart at p.201; Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia, vol.24 at para.49; Blair v Stirling 1894 1 S.L.T. 599; Morrison v Morrison's Exix. 1912 S.C. 892. For the same reasons trusters had no such rights either. The trustees of a foreign trust, moreover, had the ability to sue in Scotland relative to any part of the trust estate situated here: Phipps v Phipps' Tr. 1914 1 S.L.T. 239; Recognition of Trusts Act 1987, section 1(2) and article 11 of the schedule in particular.

b. Against that background, it was admittedly the trustees of the bare trust averred on Record who had title and interest to sue in respect of the collateral undertakings granted by the various defenders. Correspondingly, the pursuers qua truster had no such title and interest in their own right, nor did any such title and interest reside with Royal Insurance PLC as beneficiary of the trust.

c. There was also ultimately no dispute among the parties that before a Scottish court any rules of foreign law were matters of fact which, failing agreement, had to be proved in evidence. In the absence of averments of foreign law sufficiently relevant and specific to warrant proof in due course, Scots law and the foreign law were presumed to be the same and the rules of Scots law would therefore apply: Stuart v Potter, Choate & Prentice 1911 1 S.L.T. 377; Armour v Thyssen Edelstahlwerke AG 1989 S.L.T. 182. In the present case, while at one stage it looked as if the sufficiency of the pursuers' averments of English law relative to the 1992 trust arrangement was a contentious issue, notwithstanding the defenders' acceptance of these averments pro veritate, senior counsel for the pursuers was ultimately content that for present purposes the court could and should proceed on the footing that there was no material difference between Scots and English law, and that accordingly the requirements of Scots law for the constitution of a simple or bare trust over a person's own property should apply.

[8] There the parties' agreement ended, but for present purposes I do not consider it necessary to rehearse the competing contentions in their fullest detail. What I propose to do, without implying any disrespect for counsel's ingenuity and persistence, is to try to summarise the main points which were advanced for each of the parties in turn.

[9] The principal contentions for the first defenders were as follows:

a. Under reference to Bentley v Macfarlane 1964 S.C. 76 and Donaghy v Rollo 1964 S.C. 278, a pursuer must have continuous title and interest to pursue legal proceedings from the date of their inception. If title was absent at the outset, it could not be cured pendente processu, and correspondingly an original title might be lost or invalidated at a later stage.

b. On the pursuers' new averments, taken pro veritatae, they had since 1992 been trustees under a bare trust in favour of Royal Insurance PLC. All relevant assets and liabilities were subject to that trust, including (a) the right to enforce the collateral undertakings on which the present action was founded, and (b) the leasehold rights and obligations which appeared to underpin the averments of loss.

c. The requirements of Scots law for the creation of a valid trust in the hands of the truster himself were laid down by the House of Lords in Allan's Trs. v Lord Advocate 1971 SC (HL) 45, and re-affirmed by the First Division in Clark Taylor & Co Ltd v Quality Site Development (Edinburgh) Ltd 1981 SC 111. In particular, Scots law required actual delivery of trust assets, or its equivalent, from truster to trustee, so as to divest the one and invest the other. For a trust in the hands of the truster himself intimation to one or more beneficiaries was deemed a sufficient equivalent of delivery, and in the present case such intimation was evident from the bilateral Agreement concluded between the pursuers and Royal Insurance PLC in 1992.

d. Although admittedly no physical delivery, transfer or conveyance was possible where truster and trustee were the same person, the key feature of Allan's Trs. and Clark Taylor for present purposes was the repeated affirmation of divestiture of the truster as an essential aspect of the creation of a valid trust. As the Recognition of Trusts Act 1987 confirmed, a separate estate was a fundamental prerequisite for trust status, hence the settled rule that trust property was not vulnerable to the personal creditors of either truster or trustee. In Allan's Trs. the element of divestiture was stressed by Lord Reid at page 54, affirming a passage from Mackenzie Stuart, and at pages 117-119 of his opinion in Clark Taylor the Lord President several times attached significance to divestiture as a necessary consequence of delivery or its equivalent, and as an indispensable feature of the trust arrangements. In a "truster as trustee" situation, the precise form and scope of this divestiture might be open to argument, and was not in terms explained in either Allan's Trs. or Clark Taylor, but what mattered was (i) that the necessary divestiture was the end result flowing from delivery of the trust property or its equivalent, and (ii) that it applied to the whole of the trust property and not to any limited collection of rights or interests short of that. As Lord Reid put it Allan's Trs. at pages 54-5 the search was for something equivalent to delivery or transfer of "...the trust fund" or "...the subject of the trust". On the pursuers' own averments, therefore, the "individual corporate entity" in its own right was in 1992 divested of all relevant assets and liabilities, and it was in the special capacity of trustees that these assets and liabilities had been held since then.

e. According to settled practice over more than a century, any special capacity in which a party sued or was sued must be stated in the instance of the summons. Bell v Trotter's Trs. 1841 3 D. 380, Kay v Morrison's Reps 1984 S.L.T. 175 and Milne's Tr. 1842 5D 68 showed that defenders could not competently be convened as "the trustees (or representatives) of X" without identifying them by name. The corollary, as confirmed by all textbooks on practice since at least 1916 (Maclaren, Court of Session Practice) was that a party suing in a special capacity had to state that in the instance in addition to his ordinary name and designation. Indeed, on a proper construction of Forms 5.2 and 13.2A annexed to the Rules of Court, the term "designation" in this context fell to be read as including any special capacity in which a party sued or was sued. Form 5.2 made that clear in connection with caveats, and it would be strange if the same terminology meant something different in Form 13.2A relative to the instance of a summons.

f. Anderson v Duncan 1861 23 D. 258, Rackstraw v Douglas 1919 S.C. 354 and Hunter v LMS Railway Co 1938 S.L.T. 598 and 1939 S.L.T. 297 were all cases in which the pursuer's initial instance did not set forth the true capacity in which proceedings were brought. Admittedly remedial amendment was allowed in all of these cases, but their true importance lay in the court's acceptance of the need to specify any special capacity in the instance of a summons.

g. Against that background the present pursuers, having specified no special capacity in the instance, must be taken to have brought this action as an "individual corporate entity" in their own right. As such, they had no title or interest to enforce the collateral undertakings on which the claim proceeded, the relevant rights having been held since 1992 in an entirely different capacity, namely that of trustees under the bare trust averred in condescendence 2. There having been no assignation here, there could be no question of this action proceeding in the name of cedents even if that had been averred. The problem for the pursuers was not merely one of practice and procedure. It was a matter of substance, there being good reasons for the necessity to disclose any special capacity in the instance of a summons. The summons was a sovereign writ in which a pursuer's demands were set forth. It carried a warrant to cite the opposing party on pain of decree being pronounced if the latter failed to respond. It was only in the capacity disclosed in the instance that a party was entitled to seek or obtain such decree, and similarly that capacity was important for the purposes of extracting a decree, granting a discharge, resolving issues of expenses or working out any claim to set-off or compensation. More generally it was capacity, rather than mere legal personality, which governed the incidence of rights and obligations. The legal significance of capacity was affirmed in textbooks such as Walton, Roman Law, Mackeldey, Civil Law and Menzies on Trustees, and by Lord Justice Clerk Scott Dickson in Rackstraw.

h. Taking Slattadale Ltd v Tilbury Homes (Scotland) Ltd 1997 S.L.T. 153 as an example, there were admittedly cases in which pursuers had been permitted to overcome apparent deficiencies in this area. These were, however, cases where the pursuers turned out to have "a good title at bottom" which merely required to be purified or completed in some formal way. A classic example might be that of an executor raising proceedings before obtaining formal confirmation. The present pursuers did not qualify for relief in that category, since as an individual corporate entity they had never had title or interest to pursue this claim in their own right, and there was nothing capable of being formally completed or perfected. In their private capacity they had parted with all relevant rights before this action was raised. At best the pursuers retained a capability to sue qua trustees, but they had not done so and the mere existence of rights and duties in that connection could not legitimately support any inference to the contrary. In summary, the pursuers had chosen to sue in the wrong capacity, and this was fatal to the whole proceedings.

[10] In adopting the foregoing submissions, the second defenders stressed the element of divestiture as denoting a substantive change in legal rights and obligations. The beneficial right to the collateral undertakings was in a third party (Royal Insurance PLC) who did not sue, and the pursuers did not sue in their fiduciary capacity either. As the Latin maxim unus homo potest sustinere plures personas reflected, one individual might have many roles or characters, the word "persona" originally denoting the mask worn by an actor in a drama. But for practical reasons, especially in the context of set-off or compensation, the distinction between personal and special capacities had to be clearly maintained, and this underlay the long-standing rule of practice whereby any special capacity must be disclosed in the instance of a summons. The court could not ignore the capacity in which the pursuers had in fact sued, since that would be to treat personal and trust interests as if they were the same. Even if the pursuers' instance here was unclear, the responsibility was theirs alone, and the action should still be dismissed for want of a proper title.

[11] The third defenders also adopted the foregoing submissions, maintaining that the basis of the action was alleged breaches of the defenders' collateral undertakings; that the exclusive right to found on such breaches was vested in the trustees acting on behalf of Royal Insurance PLC; and that as the instance confirmed these proceedings were brought by the pursuers in their own personal capacity. There was nothing in the conclusions or pleas-in-law to point in any other direction, and throughout the condescendence there were references to "the pursuers" in a context (especially pre-1992) where only the individual corporate entity could be in focus. It was conceded, however, that had the pursuers expressly sued in their capacity as trustees some or all of these averments might have been in identical terms. Beyond these general submissions, the third defenders laid stress on the following particular considerations:

a. As a matter of law, a party wishing to sue in a trust capacity must state that in the instance of his summons. All textbooks on Court of Session practice since 1848 (Shand, Practice of the Court of Session) contained statements to this effect, although in a footnote at p.293 of Maclaren (1916) the author said "This is the practice, although not absolutely necessary". That footnote, which was briefly echoed in Green's Encyclopaedia (1926) at vol.1 para.146, reflected obiter views expressed by Lord Justice Clerk Inglis and Lord Cowan in the case of Anderson, but significantly it was the instance which the court there allowed to be amended in the pursuer's favour. The decision in Anderson also depended on the Court of Session Act 1850, which inter alia mentioned only a party's name and designation as formal requirements for the instance. Although the equivalent Form 13.2A annexed to the present Rules of Court appeared to be in similar terms, Form 5.2 concerning caveats made it clear that the phrase "designation and address" should also include any special capacity in which a party might be sued. In any event, so far as Anderson was concerned, the Lord Justice Clerk's remarks had to be treated with some caution because the Session Cases and Scottish Jurist reports were materially different in that regard.

b. The picture in the Sheriff Court was substantially the same, although the Ordinary Cause Rules of 1993 expressly required a pursuer in the instance to design himself and state any special capacity in which he was suing.

c. The case of Hunter to which reference had been made was perhaps in the "good title at bottom" category, which would explain why the court allowed a remedial amendment. More importantly, the Lord Ordinary's criticism of the dicta in Anderson was tacitly approved on appeal, and thereafter Maclaren's qualifying footnote was omitted from all textbooks on practice. Significantly, the researches of counsel had identified no other case in which trustees bringing an action had failed to state their special capacity in the instance.

d. Plotzker v Lucas 1907 S.C. 315 was also an important case for present purposes. Five individuals had brought a passing off action, averring that they carried on business in partnership. At page 319 the court, and in particular Lord Kinnear, held that the pursuers' special capacity must nevertheless be stated in the instance although, in the event, a remedial amendment was allowed.

e. For all of these reasons the pursuers here had not set forth a proper title, since they did not have a valid instance for an action brought in their capacity as trustees. This served to confirm that the action had in fact been brought by the pursuers in a private capacity in which they had neither title nor interest to sue, and the absence of a motion to amend precluded consideration of any possible relief which the pursuers might obtain by that means.

[12] In countering the defenders' submissions, counsel for the pursuers maintained that the action had been raised, and continued to be pursued, by the correct and indeed the only party with title and interest to sue. There was nothing incompetent about the way in which the action was pled, and the pursuers were entitled to proceed with their claim. In particular, the defenders' approach was misconceived for inter alia the following reasons:-

a. Taking the pursuers' averments pro veritate, they clearly had not lost their right to enforce the collateral undertakings against the defenders. They held that right subject to the bare trust of 1992 in which they were both trusters and trustees. The trust affected only assets which were not conveyed to Royal Insurance PLC, and the pursuers expressly offered to prove that "... As such" they retained title and interest to pursue this action. Moreover, they remained as tenants of the damaged property, as the first and second defenders appeared to accept at pages 12C and 16D/E. These were the averred consequences of the express declaration of trust contained in the relevant Agreement. Importantly, there was no question of any divestiture of the critical assets in favour of any third party, nor was there any dispute as to the valid existence of a simple or bare trust in which the pursuers were the trustees.

b. As Lord Reid made clear in Allan's Trs. at page 53 while discussing the (then) novelty in Scots law of a person making "himself" trustee of "his own property", a party could have only one legal persona before the court. Similarly, in Clark Taylor, the Lord President noted that in such a situation truster and trustee were "identical" or "the same person(s)", and at page 119 discussed the divestiture of a person "in favour of himself as trustee". It was a failure properly to appreciate such considerations which lay at the heart of the defenders' mistaken approach to this case. The only legal persona involved here was the pursuers. They might be clothed with different roles or capacities, but in law the pursuers qua trustees were one and the same legal persona as the pursuers qua individual corporate entity. Even if their different roles or capacities involved different powers, duties and restrictions, that did not alter the fact that only one legal persona was involved. These propositions were entirely consistent with the latest thinking of the Scottish Law Commission in their Discussion Paper on the nature of trustees' rights in Scots law. That document explained at length why the concept of separate legal personality for trusts was rejected, and why the preferred theory was that a party acting under different roles or capacities merely enjoyed separate patrimonies. Every individual had his own private patrimony, and should such an individual become a trustee he would acquire a trust patrimony as well. Although these patrimonies would be subject to different rights and obligations, the individual's legal personality remained the same throughout. Significantly, for present purposes, the Discussion Paper treated the position of a "truster-as-trustee" along the same lines, noting the dual patrimonies which would arise on the declaration of trust becoming effective. Where no separate trustee was involved there was no possibility of a true delivery, transfer or conveyance from the truster, and all that was really happening was the "re-labelling" of the trust estate as a new patrimony held by the same legal persona alongside his private patrimony.

c. As regards the necessary "divestiture" of a truster to which the defenders attached such importance, it was difficult to define the concept in ordinary terms where, in a case like this, no delivery, transfer or conveyance was involved. Significantly, this difficulty was evident throughout Lord Reid's speech in Allan's Trs. where divestiture was discussed as a consequence of delivery or its equivalent. At pages 53-4, by reference to the earlier case of Cameron's Trs. v Cameron 1907 S.C. 407, his Lordship alluded to rights and property being taken out of the truster's control; at page 54 the attainment of irrevocability was mentioned; and at page 55 his Lordship went on to refer to assets being "earmarked" as trust property. In the same vein, the Lord President in Clark Taylor at pages 117-118 mentioned irrevocability, and also the character of the trustee's possession being "marked". Moreover, with reference to the opinion of Lord Fraser in Kerr's Tr. v IR 1974 S.L.T. 193, the Lord President went on to discuss divestiture with regard to "the beneficial right" in the estate. In Kerr's Tr., again, Lord Kissen preferred to stress loss of control on the part of the truster. In these circumstances, "divestiture" did not necessarily signify as much as the defenders claimed. Obviously it covered a state of affairs in which trust assets were no longer attachable by the personal creditors of the truster, but beyond that its primary function was to mark a transition from untrammelled control of the truster's own property. On no view, however, could it have the effect, in the present case, of converting the pursuers into two different legal personae.

d. There being no one else entitled to sue in relation to the trust property, and the pursuers as trustees having the only title and interest to do so, their position could not legitimately be challenged. To require "magic words" in the instance on a question of title was unduly technical, and in that context it was not mandatory for the pursuers to have narrated the bare trust in the instance. Such a narrative would have made no difference to the defenders, whose collateral undertakings were assignable, and it could properly be said that the trustee/beneficiary relationship was res inter alios so far as these alleged wrongdoers were concerned. As notional assignees the pursuers qua trustees might be taken to have sued in their own name as cedents, in which case there would have been no need for the instance to contain any reference to the trust.

e. The situation did not prejudice the defenders in any way. A discharge from the pursuers as trustees would be valid whether or not their trust capacity was stated in the instance. The absence of such a statement could not possibly entitle them to re-raise proceedings against discharged defenders. Similarly, on expenses, the pursuers as trustees would carry personal liability, supplemented as necessary by the liability of the trust estate, and in regulating the expenses of litigation the court was not concerned with the form of instance or conclusions: Mulholland v Macfarlane's Trs. 1928 S.LT. 251, and the cases therein cited. The pursuers' possible right to claim reimbursement of payments made by them was of no concern to the defenders:- Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia, vol.24 at paras.226 and 232-5; Merrilees v Leckie's Trs. 1908 S.C. 576. As regards compensation or set-off, no such claim was made here. As the case of Stuart confirmed, however, the defenders could set off any debt due to them by the pursuers as the owners of particular rights or property.

f. On the title issue, therefore, the defenders' challenge was misconceived. The trustees were the party having title to sue; the pursuers were the trustees, as averred in condescendence 2; and there could be no legitimate objection to their pursuing this action. The pleadings in their entirety were relevant here, and a conveyancing approach to the instance alone was inappropriate.

g. The defenders' citation of textbooks on pleading and practice did not advance matters. Authors had recently drifted, without judicial guidance, towards a mandatory requirement for special capacity to be disclosed in the instance of a summons. This drift was not borne out by the authorities commonly undernoted. Bell, Kay and Milne's Trs. all concerned the requirement for names and were distinguishable. Anderson confirmed that amendment of the instance was permissible although (on the majority view) not strictly necessary, and even Lord Benholme's dissent was based on practice rather than substantive law. Hunter was also a case in which remedial amendment was allowed, this time where the pursuer plainly had no title at the outset. The Lord Ordinary's opinion was, moreover, based on practice in the context of representative capacity (not relevant in the present case concerning trustees), and in any event the Inner House allowed amendment to cure any supposed difficulty. If the pursuers were now relying on the minority view in Anderson, and on the (overruled) Lord Ordinary in Hunter, that was a slim foundation for their argument.

h. Against that background, scrutiny of the textbooks revealed a changing picture over time. Statements favourable to the pursuers appeared after 1850 in Mackay, Maclaren and Green's Encyclopaedia. Thereafter however, Thomson & Middleton, Maxwell, Mackenzie, Macfadyen and the Parliament House Book contained indications of the mandatory rule alleged by the defenders. Such developments were unforeseen in Maclaren's day and unsupported by later authority. The same applied to the Sheriff Court works, although interestingly Lewis drew a clear distinction between title to sue, being a matter of substantive law, and the style of an instance, being a matter of procedural law.

i. Specifically none of the textbooks dealt with how a bare trust under English law should be reflected in the instance of a summons. The court should be wary of setting up a universal mandatory rule where the position was unclear, and in any event a failure of style could not deprive a party of title. In some countries, trustees were legally barred from disclosing their capacity. This applied to STAR trusts in Cayman, and to a Liechtensteiner Anstalt, and such bodies had sued in Scotland in the past. Trust entities could sue without disclosure of beneficial interests, especially where deliberately set up in a latent form for privacy, and where a single persona was involved there was even less reason for trust capacity to be spelled out. There was no reason in law, equity or common sense why litigation at the instance of such trustees should be rendered impractical, or why the validity of a claim should be jeopardised if defenders happened to discover the underlying trust status. The explanatory and permissive provisions of the Recognition of Trusts Act 1987 did not assist the defenders here. The Rules of Court were not prescriptive, Rule 1.4 in particular making it clear that the prescribed Forms could be varied as circumstances might require. The decision in Hunter was now 70 years old, and much had changed since 1938. With regard to the disclosure of any special capacity in the instance, both Maxwell and Macfadyen used the verb "should", and the latter work treated "qualification as trustees" as something different from name and designation. Yet again, the only authorities undernoted were Bell and Kay which concerned name alone. There was, moreover, no universal pleading practice, as evidenced by four petition styles where trust capacity had not been disclosed in the instance. The rules for petitions were akin to those for actions, and similar issues might arise in relation to extract, discharge or expenses. Counsel had not, however, come across any reported action other than Anderson where a pursuer's trust capacity was not stated in the instance.

j. For all of these reasons, the pursuers had had title all along; there was nothing fundamentally objectionable about the way in which the action was framed; the bare trust under English law of 1992 was clearly averred, and no need to change the instance had been made out. The defenders' challenge to title was altogether ill-founded. This was not even a case in which the pursuers had a "good title at bottom". Their title was fully valid from the start, and nothing required to be done to give them a good title now.

 

Discussion
[13
] In approaching this matter I am greatly indebted to counsel on all sides for the diligence of their research and the clarity of their presentation. The issues for determination are now, I think, well-focused, with the scope of the parties' dispute having been considerably narrowed down in the course of the debate. In particular the application of English law need no longer be considered; the rights and obligations of trustees in general are not in contention; and the parties further agree that the legal requirements for the creation of a trust in a person's own hands and over his own property are to be found in (i) the decision of the House of Lords in Allan's Trs., and (ii) the decision of the First Division in Clark Taylor. In addition, there is no dispute that the pursuers in their own right qua "individual legal entity" have neither title nor interest to pursue the present claim, and that (taking the pursuers' averments pro veritate) such title and interest have at all material times reposed in the trustees of the bare trust which came into existence in 1992.

[14] On the arguments presented to me, I consider that there are two major issues to be resolved. In certain respects they are inter-connected. First, can it properly be said that the named pursuers have no title or interest to maintain the present action? And second, is the action defective in form to such a degree that, even if the pursuers' title and interest to sue are upheld, it cannot be allowed to proceed as it stands? The defenders seek dismissal of the action on both counts, whereas the pursuers invite me to resolve both in their favour and allow a proof before answer. In the event of shared success, with the first issue but not the second being decided in the pursuers' favour, I understand parties to be in agreement that the case should be put out By Order for further submissions as to future progress.

[15] Dealing first with the issue of title to sue, I have no difficulty with the proposition that the pursuers' capacity as trustees is separate and distinct from their capacity as an individual corporate entity. Where truster and trustee are the same person a legally significant separation of capacities is obviously necessary to ensure that the trust estate is not vulnerable to the personal creditors of the truster. Further, on the authority of Allan's Trs. and Clark Taylor, I am in no doubt that divestiture of the truster in a case of this kind is an essential component of the creation of a valid trust. That divestiture will, as recognised in these cases, involve a loss of rights and freedoms. The truster must inter alia lose his freedom to deal with the property concerned as his own. An element of control must be ceded to the trust, in the sense that the trustee and beneficiaries may thenceforth restrain any diversion of the property towards non-trust purposes. Indeed beneficiaries of full age and capacity may be in a position to call on the trustee to denude in their favour. Again, the constitution of a valid trust demands an end to revocability of intention, and this requires some overt act capable of marking out the transition from private to trust status. In all of these respects, as counsel for the pursuers accepted, the truster suffers a measure of divestiture when a trust comes into being. But in my opinion the concept of divestiture here must go further than that, and involve full divestiture of the truster's interest in the trust property as such. Only divestiture to that extent could be sufficient to put the trust estate out of reach of the truster's personal creditors, and I agree with the defenders that the cases of Allan's Trs. and Clark Taylor, properly understood, confirm that to be the position. Clearly beneficial interest, control, revocability and demarcation form part of the conceptual analysis in these decisions, and also in the intervening case of Kerr's Trs., but at the same time it seems to me that divestiture in its fullest sense is also affirmed as a necessary legal consequence of the delivery or its equivalent by which a trust is brought into existence. In particular, Lord Reid in Allan's Trs. at pages 54-5 expressly refers to delivery of "the trust fund" or "the subjects of the trust" in that context, and at page 59 Lord Upjohn goes further in expressly confirming the requirement for delivery, not of beneficial rights, but of the "subject matter of the trust".

[16] It is at this point, however, that the defenders' argument on title seems to me to lose impetus and direction. The main reason for this, in my view, is that in a case of this kind truster and trustee are one and the same legal persona. As Lord Reid said in Allan's Trs. at page 53, "I do not see how any individual can convert himself into two different legal personae", and in referring to truster and trustee as "one and the same person", "the same person" and "identical" in the context of a trust declared by the truster in his own hands the Lord President in Clark Taylor appears to have held the same opinion. On that basis the necessary divestiture of the pursuers in their own right in 1992 was simultaneously accompanied by re-investiture of the pursuers themselves as trustees, and no change of legal personality occurred at any stage. In Clark Taylor at page 118, the Lord President summarised the situation in this way:

"The result of this analysis of the ruling authorities is that in order to bring about the successful constitution of a trust recognised as such by our law, where the truster and trustee are the same persons, there must be in existence an asset, be it corporeal or incorporeal, or even a right relating to future acquirenda; there must be a dedication of the asset or right to defined trust purposes; there must be a beneficiary or beneficiaries with defined rights in the trust estate, and there must also be delivery of the trust deed or subject of the trust or a sufficient and satisfactory equivalent to delivery, so as to achieve irrevocable divestiture of the truster and investiture of the trustee in the trust estate."

This re-investiture of the same legal persona, albeit now clothed with the character or capacity of a trustee, is in my view a critical feature of the present case to which the defenders' argument on title provides no satisfactory answer.

[17] If in relation to this case one were to ask "Do the pursuers have title to sue on the collateral undertakings granted by the defenders?", or indeed if that question were hypothetically to be put on the day before proceedings were raised, I think that the answer must be in the affirmative. Even if the pursuers' title is in their capacity qua trustees, and not in their own right qua "individual corporate entity", the inescapable point is surely this: that at all material times the pursuers, as a single and indivisible legal persona, have held all requisite capacities for the purposes of the present claim. In particular they hold, and have always held, the capacity of trustees under the bare trust of 1992 by virtue of which these proceedings are maintained. In my opinion the defenders' pleas of no title to sue cannot sensibly be sustained against pursuers who have at all material times been invested in the relevant right of action, and who have all along held the character or capacity necessary for that purpose. Conversely no relevant character, capacity or right of action has ever been held by anyone else. It would, I think, be an affront to justice if a claim stated at г10 million were to be dismissed for want of title in such circumstances, and I am not prepared to accede to the defenders' contention that, in judging title to sue, the court must ignore the realities of the situation to which I have referred.

[18] Considerations of capacity and divestiture thus being insufficient per se to deprive the pursuers of title to sue, the defenders' remaining argument founds heavily on the form of the instance. In summary, their position is that well-settled rules require any special capacity in which a party sues to be stated in the instance; that the instance in this case is silent on that matter; and that the inevitable inference is that the pursuers must be taken to have raised and maintained this action in their own right qua "individual corporate entity". According to the defenders, it is of no consequence that the pursuers as trustees might competently have pursued this action. They had not done so, and according to the principle in Bentley the initial deficiency in their title could not be cured pendente processu. In other words, the absence of any statement in the instance to the effect that the pursuers were trustees for behoof of Royal Insurance PLC was immediately and irremediably fatal to their claim. In my opinion, however, the issue of title cannot be determined on such a narrow and technical basis. For one thing the first defenders' call on Record at page 15D, in line with the procedure described in textbooks such as Maclaren (at p.118) and Maxwell (at p.173) and with the court's observations in Bentley, is for the pursuers to "... condescend upon ..." their title and interest to insist in the action. This hardly suggests that, for the purposes of title and interest, the form of the instance is all that matters. In addition, as already pointed out, I consider that a party's title must be judged by reference to the realities of the situation and not by mere appearances in a pleading context. It would be strange if some ambiguity, or lack of clarity, in the instance of a summons were, on the Bentley principle, to be held irremediably fatal to the validity of an action. By the same token, the omission of a few words from the instance should not in my view constitute a fatal defect either. Where a pursuer de facto and de jure holds the requisite capacity and right of action, I see no good reason why that should not of itself furnish a complete answer to a plea of no title to sue.

[19] It therefore comes as no surprise to find that such authorities as there are in this area point in the same direction. Anderson, Plotzker, Morrison, Rackstraw, Hunter and Donaghy were all cases in which some apparent deficiency in the pursuers' title as disclosed in the instance was held curable by means of amendment, and in which the court, sometimes in colourful language, rejected an unduly technical and inflexible approach where a pursuer's underlying right of action was evident. Anderson, Morrison and Hunter in particular involved curative amendment of the pursuers' instance so as to reflect trust or executry status, and standing these decisions I do not think that the defenders' respective pleas in this action can properly be sustained on pleading considerations alone. At the very least, it seems to me that the pursuers here may be said to have a "good title at bottom" which is capable of being effectually stated by way of amendment. In Anderson, moreover, the majority of the court took the view that amendment of the instance quoad title to sue was not essential where conclusions could be clarified, and in Hunter the Lord Ordinary twice indicated that if the pursuers' title had been reflected in their condescendence the position might well have been different. There is no indication that the Inner House disagreed with the latter view. In the present case, of course, the pursuers do have averments of their trustee status in condescendence 2, following the recent amendment procedure, and in my view that makes it all the more difficult to hold that, on pleading grounds, they have failed to set forth a valid title to maintain this action. Even if they could and should have disclosed their trust status in the instance pursuant to established rules of practice, I do not think that this can avail the defenders on their primary argument where (a) the pursuers are the correct legal persona to be bringing this claim, and (b) the pursuers have all along held the requisite capacity for that purpose. The point is neatly summarised at p.74 of Lewis, Sheriff Court Practice in these terms:

"The title and interest of pursuers to sue and the liability of defenders to be sued are matters regulated by the substantive law affecting the merits of each particular action. The method or style to be followed in framing the instance and the crave, so as to give effect to the legal right involved, falls within the law of procedure ...".

[20] At one point the pursuers suggested that this action might have been raised by the trustees in name of the pursuers as cedent, assuming some sort of assignation of the relevant rights in 1992. In my view there are two reasons why that suggestion cannot be accepted. First, the pursuers' claim on Record is not presented along any such lines. And second, in the absence of any actual delivery, transfer or conveyance in 1992, it is hard to see any basis for the assumed assignation on which the argument depends. That said, however, the example of an assignee being entitled to sue in the name of his cedent in my view serves to illustrate the point that a pursuer's true status need not always be disclosed in the instance. Under subrogated rights, for instance, insurers may promote litigation in the name of their insured; an agent may sue ostensibly as a principal; and in other situations the identity of the true dominus litis remains undisclosed.

[21] Having concluded, for all of these reasons, that the defenders' respective pleas of no title to sue are ill-founded and must be repelled, I turn to consider whether any other consequence may flow from the pursuers' failure to state their trust capacity in the instance. As illustrated by the cases mentioned in paragraph [19] above, and by the court's decisions in Bell and Kay regarding identification of defenders, it seems to me that a rule requiring proper disclosure of any special capacity in the instance has been well established for a very long time. There was perhaps room for doubt on that matter at the time of Anderson, and as subsequently reflected in Maclaren and Green's Encyclopaedia, but since the cases of Morrison and Hunter were decided the existence of such a rule has not, I think, been seriously open to question. The Forms annexed to the Rules of Court are regrettably ambiguous in this context, but for the last 70 years or so all standard textbooks have sought to reflect the court's approach in the case of Hunter. In particular Thomson & Middleton, Maxwell, Macfadyen and Mackenzie, along with the current annotations to the Rules of Court, bear to support the existence of a firm rule in this connection notwithstanding the measure of flexibility conferred by Rule of Court 1.4 and its precursors.

[22] In addition, as submitted by the defenders, there are sound practical reasons why such a rule should exist, notably the potential problems which would otherwise be liable to arise in the context of expenses, extract, discharge, compensation or set-off and the operation of confusio. Res judicata and insolvency would, as it seems to me, be further areas in which difficulties might arise if a party's special capacity did not require to be stated in the instance. There is in my view no obvious reason why such potential problems should be regarded as res inter alios so far as opposing parties are concerned, and even if (as suggested in argument) there may have to be scope for exceptions in special circumstances I do not think that any convincing basis has been put forward for excluding the pursuers in this case from the normal ambit of the rule. A further consideration here is that the application of this rule does not in my view depend on causation of actual prejudice to opposing parties. Even if that were not so and prejudice was a material consideration, it seems to me that the first and third defenders here could legitimately point to their commitment of time, resources and expense in conducting the procedure roll debate of 2005 on what now turns out to have been a completely wrong footing. The value of the awards of expenses which the defenders have obtained to date may also be open to question.

[23] The relevant case-law is in any event binding upon me, and in my view this serves to confirm that, without appropriate amendment, the instance of a summons which omits to state the special capacity in which a pursuer sues must be regarded as defective and incompetent. In Plotzker, moreover, the court expressly held that averments in a pursuer's condescendence were no substitute for a proper instance. Admittedly, that case concerned the failure to disclose the existence of a partnership - a separate legal persona from the five individuals in whose name the action was initially raised - but in my view the same broad principle should apply here, and the pursuers' averments (such as they are) cannot be regarded as an adequate substitute for an instance in proper form.

[24] Accordingly, while I do not consider that this problem adversely affects the pursuers' fundamental title to sue, I am persuaded that as a matter of proper practice the action cannot be allowed to proceed while the instance remains in its present defective form. As it seems to me, the pursuers' omission of any reference to their trust capacity in the instance is arguably a more serious and problematic defect than, for example, omission of their designation or even their name in disregard of the prescribed Form 13.2A annexed to the Rules of Court. In reaching this conclusion I am fortified by the fact that in condescendence 2 the pursuers do not unambiguously state that the action is brought by them in their capacity qua trustees, the averment at page 10B/C being merely to the effect that (as trustees) "... the pursuers retain title and interest to pursue this action".

 

Disposal
[25
] For all of the foregoing reasons, I shall repel the first plea-in-law for the first and second defenders respectively, together with the third defenders' seventh plea-in-law, all of which allege that the pursuers had and have no title to sue. Beyond that, standing the conclusion which I have reached regarding the form of the pursuers' instance as a matter of proper practice, I shall appoint this case to call By Order to enable parties (if so advised) to make further submissions as to future procedure.


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