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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Archer Shee v Garland [1930] UKHL 2 (15 December 1930) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1930/2.html Cite as: [1930] UKHL 2 |
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Die Lunae, 15° Decembris, 1930.
Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/846
Lord
Buck-
master.
Viscount
Dunedin.
Lord War-
rington of
Clyffe.
Lord
Tomlin
Lord
Thanker-
ton.
ARCHER-SHEE
v.
GARLAND (INSPECTOR
OF TAXES).
Lord Buckmaster.
MY LORDS,
Under Schedule D. 1, a tax is charged in respect of—
(a) " The annual profits or gains arising or accruing
" (i) to any person
residing in the United King-
' dom from any kind of property
whatever whether
" situate in the United Kingdom or
elsewhere."
" Case IV. Tax in
respect of income arising from
" securities out of the
United Kingdom except such income as
" is charged under
Schedule C.
" Case V. Tax in respect
of income arising from posses-
" sions out of the United
Kingdom."
2 [2]
It will be noticed that Case IV applies only to what are called
" securities ", and Rule 1 under it provides that the tax is in that
case to be " computed on the full amount thereof arising in the
" year of assessment whether the income has been or will, be received
" in the United Kingdom or not ", and this differs from the rules
under Case V, which create the present difficulties. The rules in
question are 1 and 2, and their material portions are as follows :—
" 1.—The tax in respect of income arising from stocks,
' shares or rents in any place out of the United Kingdom shall
' be computed on the full amount thereof on an average of the
' three preceding years, as directed in Case I, whether the
' income has been or will be received in the United Kingdom
' or not. . . .
" 2.—The tax in
respect of income arising from posses-
" sions out of the
United Kingdom, other than stocks, shares
" or rents, shall
be computed on the full amount of the actual
" sums annually
received in the United Kingdom from remit-
" tances payable
in the United Kingdom ... on an average
" of the three
preceding years as directed in Case I, without
" any
deduction or abatement other than is therein allowed."
' Lady Archer-Shee (if American
law is the same as Eng-
" lish Law) is, in my opinion, as
matter of construction of the
" will, entitled in equity
specifically during her life to the
" dividends upon the
stocks,"
and on the same page he repeats
this conclusion again made de-
pendent upon the hypothesis of the
identity of the law in the two
countries. He there says :—
' It is, I think, if the law of
America is the same as our
'' law, an equitable right in
possession to receive during her
'' life the proceeds of the
shares and stocks of which she is
" tenant for life."
[3] 3
been enunciated by Wrenbury L.
This opinion was not in accord-
ance with that of Sumner L. who
supported the judgment of
Sargant L. J. in the Court of Appeal
where he said this :—
" What this lady enjoys is not the stocks, shares and rents
" or other property constituting the trust, fund under the will;
" what she has is the right to call upon the trustees, and, if
" necessary, to compel the trustees to administer this property
" during her life so as to give her the income arising there from
" according to the provisions of the trust. Her interest is
" merely an equitable one, and it is not an interest in the specific
" stocks and shares constituting the trust fund at all."
This was the opposite view to that held in this House, and it
was as because it was decided that it did not define accurately Lady
Archer-Shee's position under the will according to English law that
the decision was given in favour of the Crown.
" Every express trust valid as such in its creation, except
" as herein otherwise provided, shall vest the whole estate in
" the trustees in law, and in equity, subject only to the execu-
" tion of the trust period. The persons for whose benefit the
" trust is created shall take no estate or interest in the lands,
" but may enforce the performance of the trust in equity."
This provision, although it relates in terms only to lands, had
been held to be equally applicable to personal property, and again
he said " that Lady Archer-Shee had no right to any specific divi-
"dends or interest at all," and he explained her rights in these
words: —
" While it was true that under the trust in question (there
" being no provision for accumulation) the whole of the net
" income (including in the event of death any income accrued
" but not paid over) must ultimately be either paid over to or
" applied for the benefit of Lady Archer-Shee, the manner and
" times of doing so were within the discretion of the trustees
" subject to judicial supervision; that if the Trustees exercised
" their discretion unconscientiously. Lady Archer-Shee had the
" right to ask the Court to supervise their behaviour in the
" matter both of the management of the income and of the
" capital of the Trust."
I cannot reconcile the statement of the American
lawyer that Lady Archer-Shee had "no right to any specific divi-
" dends or interest at all " with the statement of Lord Wrenbury
that she was " entitled in equity specifically during her
" life to the dividends upon the stocks." Nor, again, can
I reconcile the statement that she took " no estate or interest '
in the funds, though she might enforce the performance
of the trust in equity with the statement of Lord Carson that under
4 [4]
In those circumstances
assessments were made on the trustees
and these assessments were
set aside by this House. One sentence
from the judgment of Cave
L.C. will serve to show how little
to the present purpose is the
consideration of that authority. He
says, p. 72: " The
object of the acts is to secure for the State a
" proportion
of the profits chargeable, and this end is attained,
"
speaking generally, by the simple and effective process of taxing
" the profits where they are found. If the beneficiary
received
" them he is liable to be assessed upon them.
If the trustee
" receives and controls them he is
primarily so liable." The case
of Syme v.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue 1914 AC 1013 again
,is no
assistance. The tax was there assessed upon income " derived
"
by any person from personal exertion ' and this was by the
statute
declared to include " income arising or accruing from any
"
trade " although not arisen from the taxpayer's own
personal
exertion or trade. Under the provisions of a will
trustees carried
on a business and paid the Appellant one fifth of
the profits and on
these the tax was held duly assessed under the
provisions already
quoted. It is rarely profitable to attempt
the interpretation of one
statute by another and in this case the
mere comparison of the
language shows it to be useless. The
former decision in the case
shows that an absolute ownership of
the stocks, shares and divi-
dends is not necessary; a limited
ownership is sufficient to satisfy
the rule, but it shows also
that such ownership must be specific
in relation to the subject,
and the opinion on which we are bound
to act shows that is not the
true position of Lady Archer-Shee. For
these reasons I think
this appeal should be allowed.
Lord
Back-
master.
Viscount
Dunedin.
Lord
Warring-
ton
of
Clyffe.
Lord
Tomlin.
Lord
Thanker-
ton.
[5]
ARCHER-SHEE
v.
GARLAND (Inspector
of Taxes).
Viscount Dunedin.
MY LORDS,
Lord
Buck-
master.
Viscount
Dunedin.
Lord
Warring-
ton.
Lord
Tomlin.
Lord
Thanker-
ton.
[6]
ARCHER SHEE
v.
GARLAND (INSPECTOR OF TAXES).
Lord Tomlin.
MY LORDS,
The answer to the question which
falls to be determined on this
appeal depends in my opinion first
upon the effect of the decision in
your Lordships' House in
Baker v. Archer Shee 1927 AC 844 and
secondly
upon the conclusion as to American Law to be drawn from
the
evidence of the American lawyers.
I do not think it can be doubted
that the majority of your Lord-
ships' House in the former case,
founded themselves upon the view
that according to English law
(with which, in that case, American
law was assumed to be
identical) the Appellant's wife had a pro-
perty interest in the
income arising from the securities stocks and
shares constituting
the American trust and that but for the exist
ence of that
supposed property interest the decision would have
been different.
The appeal therefore in my opinion succeeds.
Lord Thankerton.
MY LORDS,
I concur in your Lordships' opinion.
Lord Buckmaster.
MY LORDS,
(8916-50) Wt 31908-34 14 12/30 P.St. G311