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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Baker v Archer-Shee [1927] UKHL 1 (26 July 1927) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1927/1.html Cite as: [1927] AC 844, [1927] UKHL 1, (1926) 11 TC 749, [1926] 11 TC 749 |
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Die Martis 20° Julii, 1927.
Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/803
BAKER (INSPECTOR OF TAXES)
v.
ARCHER-SHEE.
Viscount
Sumner.
Lord
Atkinson.
Lord
Wrenbury.
Lord
Carson.
Lord
Blanesburgh.
Lord Blanesburgh.
MY LORDS,
x (2)28853—18(28489-2) Wt 9460—G.19518 12 8/27 E & S A
2
I take the case of a Scottish will first, because in relation to
such a will your Lordships have the assistance of a decision of the
First Division of the Court of Session in a case very close to the
present. In Murray v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue, cited in
argument and decided on the 18th June 1926 (No. 245 Tax Cases),
the facts were that the appellant's father by his will gave his
residuary estate on trust for the appellant and her sister equally
during their respective lives and directed the trustees to pay the
expenses of management of the trust. The position in other words
is indistinguishable from the present. There the gross income of the
estate, after deducting an annuity of £70 payable to the testator's
widow under an ante-nuptial marriage contract, was £608 Os. 2d.,
and the whole of it suffered income tax in the hands of the trustees.
The appellant's only other income was £10 War Loan interest, and
for the purposes of a claim for repayment of income tax in respect
3
of
personal allowance, &c. she contended that her taxed income
under
her father's will was one half of the gross income of the
estate,
i.e., £304 Os. Id., without any deduction hi
respect of the
expenses of the management of the trust. The First
Division,
at the instance, in that case, of the Crown—there
is a certain
piquancy in that fact—repelled the claim : "It
is as plain as
" day," said Lord Clyde in delivering
judgment, " that if a liferenter
" returns his or her
income what he returns is precisely what he
" gets and
nothing more nor less. It is as plain as day that the
" total
revenue which arose from the residuary estate was not
" the
income of any of the liferent beneficiaries in the residuary
"
estate, but, on the contrary, was the income of the trustees
"
who were administering the residuary estate. It was for them to
"
pay the full income tax which the receipt by them of that income
"
made incident upon them. It was for them to pay whatever
"
may have been the expenses of administering it, and after meeting
"
those expenses to divide the income of the residue among the
"
liferent residuary beneficiaries. But there was no justification
"
whatever either under the statute or, as far as I can see, in any
"
view consistent, with common sense for the course taken here."
I
have cited these judgments at length because the report of
them
may not be readily accessible. The decision shows, I think,
clearly
that the statement made in the case here by the Commis-
sioners
would be an exact representation of Lady Archer-Shee's
position if
a Scottish Court were in relation to her father's will the
forum
of construction and administration.
4
them
except on proof of misconduct, actual or contemplated, and
then
only in a suit for the execution of the trusts of the will. In
other
words, the interest in the eye of a Court of Equity of
Lady
Archer-Shee in the gross income of the estate is not that of
a
mortgagor in the property charged but is exactly analogous
to
the interest of a residuary legatee of corpus before that
residue
has been actually ascertained. I agree with Sargant, L.J.,
that to
the case with which we are here concerned the reasoning of
this
House in Lord Sudeley v. The Attorney-General in
relation to an
unascertained capital residue is precisely
applicable.
I
agree in that statement, arid it is clear that, basing himself
upon
it, the learned Judge would have decided the case in favour
of the
present respondent had he not misapprehended the effect
of
Williams v. Singer, No. 2, 1921, A.C. 65, by failing to
note,
amongst other things, that the foreign dividends there in
question
had been in forma specified actually received by
the foreign beneficiary
by the direction of the trustee.
5
are,
of course, hi no way concerned with any question of United
Kingdom
income tax, and for the purposes of their own admini-
stration
they have no intelligible purpose to serve by appropriating
their
retentions to any particular receipts, either rateably or in
any
other way, and I cannot suppose that they have ever done
so. In
any case, the respondent, who is not a beneficiary under
the
testator's will, could not require the trustees to do anything
so
entirely superfluous, and in the absence of any such
declared
appropriation he would himself be quite unable to furnish
any of the
statements X or XI (1) of the Fifth Schedule to
the Act which on
this footing would be required of him. These
practical difficulties
confirm me in the view that this is not the
kind of case to which
either of these statements has any reference
at all.
x 28858—16
BAKER (INSPECTOR OF TAXES)
v.
ARCHER SHEE.
Lord
Atkinson.
Lord
Wrenbury.
Lord Carson.
MY LORDS,
It
is, I think, essential in the first place to remember that
the
property which it is sought to tax in this case was in the
hands
of the trustees, to use the words of Sargant, L.J., "
a definite
" and specific trust fund" to the whole of
the income and
profits of which the respondent's wife was
entitled under the
will of her father Alfred Pell. Had the
residue been still undetermined
or had the share to which Lady
Archer Shee was entitled been a propor-
tion only of the income
or profits of the residue other questions would,
no doubt, arise.
The Commissioners in the cage stated have found
that the fund
constituted under s. 6 of the will (being the residue
mentioned
before) consisted of foreign government securities, foreign
stocks
and shares and other foreign property, that the respondent's
wife
was entitled to have the whole of the income and profits from
the
said fund applied to her use, and that the trust company of
New
York (as trustee) had paid over such parts of the sum which
they
received from the said fund as they considered to be income
as
the same accrued to her order at a bank in New York whilst
retaining
in their possession such sums as they thought might be
required to
comply with the income tax or other provisions of
American law.
The Court also held that the income receivable by
the wife of the
respondent from the Trust Company of New York
arose from " the
specific securities, stocks, shares, rents,
or other property which
constituted the trust fund." My
Lords, under these circumstances
I cannot myself draw any
distinction between such a trust fund
and one where specific
securities, stocks and shares were vested
in trustees to pay the
rent and dividends to a cestui que trust for
life. In my
opinion upon the construction of the will of Alfred Pell
once the
residue had become specifically ascertained, the re-
spondent's
wife was sole beneficial owner of the interest and dividends
x
(2)28853-17(28691—11) Wt 9460-G.19518 18 8/27 E&S
2
of
all the securities, stocks and shares forming part of the trust
fund
therein settled and was entitled to receive and did receive
such
interest and dividends. This, I think, follows from the decision
of
this House in Williams v. Singer, 1921, AC. 65, and in
my opinion
the Master of the Rolls correctly stated the law when
he said " that
" when you are considering sums which are
placed in the hands
" of trustees for the purpose of paying
income to beneficiaries,
" for the purposes of the Income Tax
Acts you may eliminate the
" trustees. The income is the
income of the beneficiaries; the income
" does not belong to
the trustees."
The Master of the Rolls, however, yielding to the argument so put
forward
by the respondent, held that, having regard to the facts
found, "
what they remit is not what I will call the dividends in specie
"
in their actual form ; what they remit is the balance in their
hands
" after they have carried out their trust and defrayed
the expenses
" which fall upon the trust .... It has
lost the shape of
" dividends, share warrants, or the like."
In aid of this view he
cites certain statements made by noble
Lords in this House in the
case of The Attorney General v. Lord
Sudeley (1897, App. Cases, p. 11),
and amongst others that of
Lord Halsbury at p. 15 : " It is uncertain
" until the
residuary estate has been ascertained of what it will
"
consist. It may consist of many things, it may consist of only
"
a sum of money; and until that has been ascertained the actual
"
right capable of instant assertion does not exist." My
Lords,
with great respect to the Master of the Rolls, I do not
think either
his own reasoning or the quotations he
relies upon have any
application to a case such as the present
when, as 1 have already
pointed out, we are dealing with " a
definite and specific trust fund."
My Lords, I am unable to
understand why or how the character of
the
sum paid to the respondent's wife ever became changed or as
the
Master of the Rolls graphically says " was no longer clothed
in
" the form in which it was originally received, having no
trace of its
" ancestry," simply because the deductions
due by law have been
made and because it has been mixed up with
other trust moneys by
the trustees. It is, in my view, in the
same position as if the trustees
had arranged to have the interest
and dividends paid direct to the
respondent's wife and she had
discharged the necessary outgoings
in
accordance with the law. Whether the necessary
outgoings
according
to law were discharged by the trustees or by the cestui que
trust
cannot, in my opinion, make any difference. I think the
Appeal
should be allowed, but as it is evident that no distinction
was made
at the hearings before the Commissioners or Mr. Justice
Rowlatt
between what amount of the sum in question consisted of
securities
or stocks and shares or other foreign property, and as
different
considerations apply under the Income Tax law to these
different
classes
of property, 1 agree that the matter must be referred back
to the
Commissioners, and as a consequence that the order of
Mr. Justice
Rowlatt must be modified or discharged.
BAKER (INSPECTOR OF TAXES)
v.
ARCHER-SHEE.
Lord Atkinson.
MY LORDS,
x (2)28853—15(2812-5) Wt 9460-G.19518 12 8/27 E & S
2
"
must have died, we must assume that the estate has been quite
"
fully administered long ago, so that here we have a definite and
"
specific trust fund."
I
quite concur, but may one not justly assume that the words
"
long ago " extend to the year 1914, when Mr. John
Pierpont
Morgan terminated his ten years' administration of the
estate ?
It would be strange indeed if a business man like him,
who, unless
he belies his name, is skilled in financial affairs,
should not have
completed the work of this administration in that
length of time.
If he had done so it would have furnished a reason
for his retirement.
Then, when he did retire, one finds this young
lady, Miss Pell, who,
it is contended, has now no property in or
rights to this fund
beyond the right in equity, by suit
presumably, to compel the
trust company to pay to her the portion
of the income to which she
is entitled, dominating the situation,
and by written instrument duly
acknowledged and filed in the Court
named, appointing not a named
company but some company, i.e.,
some company which she may
select to fill the office of
executor and trustee instead of Mr. John
Pierpont Morgan, Junior,
retired. The choice is left with her. In
addition, her powers and
responsibility are not ended there. She
has, under section 10 of
the will, power over the investment and re-
investment of her
father's estate in any securities, in that her consent
is
necessary for any such operation. 1 think it is not an
unreasonable
inference from these matters that the life interest
given to her by
her father's will had become vested in her, and
that the trust
company which she had appointed were merely her
agents to
administer the fund for her and in her interest. If that
be so, pay-
ments necessarily made properly in the administration
of the fund,
are made in her interest and on her behalf, and, in
my view, are
made with her money.
"
In the year 1914, the said J. Pierpont Morgan, Junior,
"
resigned the Trusteeship, and under the power conferred by
"
Section 9 of the said Will the Trust Company of New York,
"
being a Company constituted under American law and
" resident
in the State of New York, was appointed to be
" Executor and
Trustee of the Will. The fund constituted
" under Section 6
of the Will consisted of foreign government
" securities,
foreign stocks and shares and other foreign
" property.
"
During the three years ended 5th April 1925, the Appellant
"
was married to the said daughter (Frances) of Alfred Pell,
"
who was entitled to have the whole of the income and profits
"
from the said fund applied to her use. The Trust Company
" of
New York have paid over such part of the sums which
" they
received from the said fund as they considered to be
"
income, as the same accrued to her order at Messrs. J. P.
"
Morgan and Company's bank in New York while retaining
" in
their own possession such sums as they thought might be
"
required to comply with the income tax or other provisions
"
of American law."
" It appears from that statement of fact that what they
" remit is not what I will call the dividends in specie in their
" actual form; what they remit is the balance in their hands
" after they have carried out their trust and defrayed the
" expenses which fall upon the Trust. They do not remit the
"
whole of the income from the profits but they remit a sum
"
which has lost its origin or parentage ; it has lost the shape
of
" dividends, share warrants, or the like; it is merely a sum of
" money which
represents the balance after payment of the
" sums which
would properly fall upon the trust"; at page 24
"
But is this sum income arising from securities ? In
"
Singer and Williams, reported in 1891, Appeal Cases,
page 41,
" shares in a foreign trading company are foreign
possessions
"
and are not foreign securities within Case IV of that schedule.
"
In that case the present Lord Chancellor gave an indication
"
or definition of what is the meaning of the word ' Securi-
"
ties ' and this lump sum of money, this balance, does not
"
appear, though it may, rightly to fall within the words of
" Case IV,
Rule I, as securities. It appears to me therefore
" that
it is not income arising from securities. Exactly what
"
those securities are it is unnecessary at present to define, or
"
to determine. But, from what 1 have already said, it is
"
plain that this balance has lost its original character as being
"
dividends from Debentures or Shares or the like, and it
"
appears to me that it does not fall within Case IV, Rule 1, as
"
income arising from securities."
"
They therefore found that the income arising or accruing
' to this
lady hi the present case is not the actual income
' derived from
the various sources of investment but that
' it is such sum as the
trustees from time to time considered
' to be the income while
retaining hi their hands the sums
" which are referred to in
the finding of the Commissioners."
4
should
remit to her all the dividend warrants, cheques received
by them,
and such like, in payment of the income, with the con-
sequence I
have already mentioned. The lodgment of the entire
income with her
bankers would not apparently satisfy these words,
or if it would,
low and why the lodgment of 95 per cent, of the
income, 5 per
cent, being retained to satisfy some lawful claim upon
the fund,
which the beneficiary, if she was resident in New York,
would
probably have had to pay would not satisfy them I cannot
understand.
The trustees do not, I think, properly speaking, consider
what is
to be the income the beneficiary is entitled to receive. They
lodge
the whole income, less what they consider it is necessary to
retain
to discharge lawful claims upon the fund. I am unable to
follow
the reasoning that leads to the conclusion that, by the
deduction
of these sums, the character of the balance lodged changes,
and
acquires a character different from what the entire income would
have
borne if it had been lodged.
Sargant,
L.J., expresses his view of the case in the following
passage
(page 28) :
" The learned Judge has summed up the position, in my
" judgment, perfectly accurately in a passage of his judgment
" which I will now read. He says this : ' What this lady
" ' enjoys is not stocks, shares and rents or other property
" ' subject to the will, bat what she does enjoy and has got
" ' is the right to call upon the trustees and to force the
" ' trustees if necessary to administer this property during
" ' her life so as to give her the interest of it, and so on,
" ' according to the trust. Her interest is that of equity
" ' and it is not an interest in the specific things at all.' "
BAKER (INSPECTOR OF TAXES)
v,
ARCHER-SHEE.
Lord
Carson.
Viscount Sumner.
MY LORDS,
" for income tax purposes the income of foreign securities, held
" by the trustee of a foreign will resident abroad upon trusts,
" which entitled the respondent's wife to the income during her
" life, belonged to the respondent's wife so as to be chargeable
"
to Income Tax under Case 4 of Schedule D of the Income Tax
"
Act, 1018, whether such income was remitted to the United
" Kingdom or not." In different words the respondent's Case
states the question to the like
effect and Counsel so argued it on
both
.sides.
"
during the three years ended .5 April 1925, the appellant was
married
" to the said daughter of Alfred Pell, who was
entitled to have the whole
" of the income and profits from
the said fund applied to her use."
So far it merely follows the will. It proceeds :—
''
The Trust Company of New York have paid over such part of the
sums,
'' which they received from the said fund, as they
considered to be income,
'' as the same accrued, to her order at
Messrs, J. P. Morgan and Company's
'' Bank in New York, while
retaining in their own possession such sums
'' as they thought
might be required to comply with the income tax or
'' other
provisions of American law."
x (14.4.27) (2)28853—14(288853-2) Wt 9460 - G.19518 12 8/27 E&S A
2
stated
recites, that the income arising from the trust property
was
taxable here, whether actually remitted to the United Kingdom
or
not. In truth the issue, as raised, is independent of the
propor-
tions, in which the trust fund is made up of securities,
shares and
other foreign possessions, and this is no doubt the
reason why
the Commissioners, with the concurrence of both
parties, have
thought it unnecessary to define those proportions.
3
as
good and often is better than any legal right, but it is not in
any
case one which for all purposes makes the trust fund "
belong " to
the beneficiary or makes the income of it accrue
to him eo instanti
and directly as it leaves the hand of
the party who pays it. I do not
understand that, so far, there was
any contest. The appellant's
argument is that, whatever may be the
legal position of the capital
and the equitable position of the
trustee and the cestui que trust,
as regards the right to
the income, for income tax purposes the law
is otherwise and that
under the Income Tax Act and by virtue of
some implication the "
accrual " is to the beneficiary.
I
put aside the contention that, if the respondent is not held
liable,
trustees will be liable to supertax on trust funds and
beneficiaries
will be outside the benefit of exemptions from tax. It
is not in
this indirect way that the general law can be set aside for
the
convenience of the Revenue. Supertax and exemptions depend
on the
sections, which impose or confer them, not on some
supposed
incidence, arising argumentatively from provisions as to
the subject-
matter, which attract tax, or as to the extent of it.
Supertax is
chargeable in respect of the income of an "
individual " from all
sources. Even in the easiest case of a
trustee to accumulate income,
no one would say that his trust was
a " source of income " to him
as an " individual,"
for, in the case of several trustees, they are not
" an
individual" at all. The case of exemptions is
similarly
dependent on the construction of the relevant section.
4
arising
from foreign possessions other than securities, stocks, shares
or
rents, which is not remitted to the United Kingdom ? The
first
question would equally affect the case, where fund, trustee
and
beneficiary are all here; the second arises only where there
is property
abroad. It does not seem to matter whether the income
aimed at
is said to arise from or to accrue to or to belong to
this or that
property or person. In the present Case, where the
person assessed
can only be the beneficiary or her husband for
her, authority has
to be shown for taxing her in respect of
something that is not here
and that she does not get. In others,
however, the position of the
trustee would arise for
consideration, if the trustee were here.
I
do not know of any provision, which, clearly or at all,
imposes
either collection at the source or vicarious liability on
a trustee, as
such, as against the beneficiary, and in the case of
foreign possessions,
which is this case, there are express
provisions to the contrary. The
debatable question is generally
one of the person to be assessed,
without deciding anything about
ownership or its rights. There is,
however, no question here as to
the person to be assessed; he must
be Sir Martin Archer-Shee.
Counsel for the Inland Revenue pointed
to no authority that made
his liability depend on anything but the
nature and extent of his
wife's right to the property which is charged.
In the present case
it happens that the settlement is in the
simplest form. There is
only one tenant for life and, (hiring her
life, there is no other
object of the trust to be considered. We
hear of no matters in
which a conflict between income and capital
and their respective
interests has arisen, nor of any business carried
on by the
trustee, as to which the more complex case of trading
profits
would replace the plain case of dividends paid. If there had
been
annuitants with a prior right to be paid or several
beneficiaries
entitled to share in the income; if there had been
reversioners, who
could claim that part of the annual receipts
were in the nature of
accretions to capital; if there was a trust
for accumulation or a
power to vary the amounts payable from time
to time as between
minors, the impracticability of saying that any
or all of the bene-
ficiaries entitled to income owned the whole
or any part of that income
from the moment it became payable and
was paid and to the full
extent of the amount paid, would be
evident. The same rule of
" income tax law " must,
however, be applicable to all these eases.
No doubt it is true
that an accountant could always more or less
simply appropriate
certain fractions of each incoming and each
outgoing to each
object of the trust in a uniform proportion. That,
however, is
done by making assumptions, which may not correspond
to the facts,
and by computing accordingly. The trustee may in
Ms discretion pay
one beneficiary out of the money collected from
a security,
another out of a payment of rent, and a third out of the
profits
of a business. He may, on the other hand, if he thinks fit,
pay
everything received into one account and then draw on that
account
generally in favour of each beneficiary. In cither case it
is
plain that no specific dividend or interest payment " belongs "
in
any proper sense of the word to any particular beneficiary.
The
distribution rests with the trustee, so long as he complies
with his
duties. A series of accounts could be made out between
the trustee
and each beneficiary, crediting the latter with a
fraction of each
item of income and debiting him with a fraction
of each item of outlay,
in such a way that, on aggregating all the
separate accounts, the
debits and credits would exactly correspond
to the trustee's general
account of his trust. Similarly, by
appropriation of payments in the
trust bank account, the source
out of which any given payment was
made, can be calculated.
Neither process shows anything material
to the nature of the
beneficiary's right. They both go only to the
measure and
discharge of it in money.
5
to
questions of administration. Money within the United Kingdom
is
taxed where it is most conveniently found, and though that is
prima
facie in the hands of its owners, in a vast number of cases it
is
otherwise. Collection at the source is effected by express
provisions,
which enable specified persons to pay the tax thereon
to the Revenue
direct and in the first instance, and authorise
them to deduct it
against another person who is placed under a
statutory obligation
to allow it; e.g., under Schedules A
and C, and No. 20 of the General
Rules. As Lord Cave says in
Blott’s case (1921, 2 A.C., 171),
a company pays as
taxpayer and then deducts; it does not pay as
agent for the
shareholder. Where the person to whom the money
belongs is out of
the country, his agent, who is here and handles the
money, may be
taxed for him. In some cases, mostly similar to
this, the
assessment and charge are made on the trustee here for
the
beneficiary abroad. Nothing in this scheme catches the
taxpayer
who is in the United Kingdom and whose trustee and trust
fund
are not.
1
come now to the decisions which were supposed to be in
point. The
appellant contended epigrammatically that " for income
"
tax purposes the trustee is eliminated," a contention, which
goes
far and unwarrantably beyond the words of the Act. The
authority,
on which it was rested, Williams v. Singer
(1921, A.C. i. 65), turned
on the question, whether or not the
trustee, resident here, was
chargeable. The fund was abroad and he
had authorised the
beneficiary, who was abroad also, to collect
the income abroad
where it arose. The difference between legal and
equitable rights
only came in question because it enabled the
Inland Revenue to
argue that the legal owner alone was chargeable
and that the
income must be deemed to have accrued or arisen to
him, that
is to say here. There is no such contention in the
present case,
nor was the distinction between the gross amount
collected by
a trustee and the net amount duly distributed by him
to the
beneficiaries one which arose on the facts of Williams
v. Singer.
The decision of the House was that the
trustee was not chargeable
to tax here, and sundry expressions
used, to the effect that the
beneficiary resident here is
chargeable, are only correlative to the
ratio decidendi in
its actual form and have no reference to the
questions now in
debate. Again the case of Lord Sudeley v. A.G.
(1897, A.C.
11) is said by Sargant, L.J. to be in its general reasoning
precisely
applicable. The points referred to there were, first, the
local
situation, for the purposes of English taxation, of an
equitable
right to have an estate administered, in which the
testatrix was
interested as a residuary legatee at the time of her
death, and, second,
the question, whether for such taxation her
interest was to be deemed
to be confined to a specified fraction
of the residuary estate,
corresponding to her share under her
husband's will, or extended to
the whole of that residuary estate.
In applying this to the present
X 28853—14 B
6
case
the learned Lord Justice says, that Lady Archer-Shee has not
any
specific right to any particular item of income, but, following
Lord
Herschell's reasoning, only an equitable right to have handed
over
to her the net income of the estate, subject to all
proper
deductions, which right of hers is a form of
property situate
hi New York, in whose Courts it would have to be
asserted. I
think the reasoning of this judgment is correct.
It is immaterial
that in Lord Sudeley's case the estate of
the husband of the
testatrix had not yet been administered,
whereas here, no doubt,
this has been long ago accomplished.
Nobody at any rate has
argued the contrary, and the point
does not need discussion.
Furthermore, the Rules of Case
4 of Schedule D, which are
applicable on this occasion,
say expressly that, where no money
has been remitted to
this country, the taxpayer here is not
chargeable in
respect of foreign possessions, other than stocks
and
shares, securities and rents. Lady Archer-Shee, for the
reasons
already given, does not for income tax purposes in my view
own
and is not entitled to any of the stocks, shares, securities
or real
property that form part of the New York trust estate.
These belong
to the trustee company, to whom also the annual
payments made
in respect of them, by way of rent, interest or
dividends, " arise,"
" accrue " and "
belong." All that she has is a right, in the forum
of
the trustee and of the trust fund, to have the trust executed
in
her favour under an order to be made for her benefit by
the
appropriate Court of Equity, and this " possession "
neither consists
in the trust's investments or any of them, nor is
situated here. It
is " foreign."
I
am therefore of opinion that the Appeal fails. I attach no
importance
to the obvious slip, made in one of the judgments in the
Court of
Appeal, as to money having been remitted to Lady Archer-
Shee here
and I need say no more about it, as I do not think that it
affected
the reasoning of the judgment appealed from.