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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> St Aubyn v Attorney General (No.2) [1951] UKHL 3 (12 July 1951)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1951/3.html
Cite as: [1952] AC 15, [1951] UKHL 3, [1951] 2 All ER 473

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JISCBAILII_CASE_TAX

    Die Jovis, 12° Julii 1951

    Parliamentary Archives,
    HL/PO/JU/4/3/1010

    HOUSE OF LORDS

    Lord

    Simonds

    Lord
    Normand

    Lord

    Oaksey

    Lord
    Radcliffe

    Lord
    Tucker

    ST. AUBYN AND OTHERS

    v.
    ATTORNEY-GENERAL (on behalf of His Majesty), et e contra

    12th July, 1951.

    Lord Simonds

    MY LORDS,

    This appeal and cross appeal are brought from an order of the Court
    of Appeal, by which that Court as to the subject matter of the appeal
    reversed an order of Croom-Johnson, J., and as to the subject matter
    of the cross-appeal thought fit to make no order.

    The facts of the case are somewhat involved but present no real difficulty.
    It is in the application to them of the relevant sections of the Finance
    Act, 1940, that I have found it impossible to reach any conclusion that is
    wholly satisfactory.

    I will give a broad outline of the relevant facts supplementing it as
    occasion demands.

    Immediately before the execution by the late Lord St. Levan, who died
    on the 10th November, 1940, and to whom I will refer as Lord St. Levan,
    of the instruments dated in March, 1927, which are next mentioned, he was,
    under a Resettlement dated the 26th April, 1879, tenant for life in
    possession of certain settled property consisting of (a) freehold lands in
    the counties of Devon and Cornwall (b) investments representing capital
    moneys arising under the Resettlement and (c) equitable interests which by
    virtue of the Law of Property Act, 1925, represented certain undivided
    shares in land which at the date when that Act came into operation were
    subject to the Resettlement. The whole of the settled property was under
    the Resettlement and a Deed Poll dated the 9th January, 1905, subject to
    an overriding general power of appointment exercisable by Lord St. Levan
    and Sydney Alexander Ponsonby (hereinafter called " Mr. Ponsonby ") who
    was one of the trustees of the Resettlement but had no beneficial interest
    thereunder. The subsequent limitations of the Resettlement, as varied by
    the said Deed Poll and other instruments, were such as to cause the settled
    property to devolve together with the Barony of St. Levan, which on the
    death of Lord St. Levan without having had a son devolved on and is now
    held by his nephew Francis Cecil St. Aubyn.

    On the 21st March, 1927, St. Aubyn Estates Ltd. (hereinafter called
    " the Company ") was incorporated under the Companies Acts, 1908 to 1917
    (by the name of St. Aubyn Settled Properties Ltd. which was afterwards
    changed) with a nominal capital of £200,000 divided into 200,000 shares
    of £1 each with power to issue any part of its capital with such preferential
    rights as might be thought expedient. The Company's Memorandum of
    Association was subscribed by seven persons, including Lord St. Levan and
    Mr. Ponsonby, each of whom agreed to take one share. These seven shares
    were held by the subscribers as nominees of the Trustees of the Resettle-
    ment. By the Company's Articles of Association it was provided that Lord
    St. Levan should be the Governing Director of the Company.

    By a Deed Poll dated the 23rd March, 1927, Lord St. Levan and Mr.
    Ponsonby exercised their overriding power of appointment in such manner
    as to authorise the transactions next mentioned.

    By an Agreement dated the 24th March, 1927, to which Lord St. Levan,
    Mr. Ponsonby and the Company were parties it was agreed that the whole
    of the settled property should be sold to the Company for £1,700,000 of
    which £950.000 was to be paid to the Trustees of the Resettlement (herein-
    after called " the Trustees ") in cash on completion of the sale (which was to

    2

    take place on the 26th March, 1927) and the balance of £750,000 was to
    be paid to the Trustees in cash by 40 half yearly instalments of £18,750
    each (the first payment to be made on 24th June, 1927) without interest
    except that any instalment not paid within 21 days of becoming due was
    to carry interest at 5 per cent, per annum from the date on which it
    ought to be paid until actual payment thereof.

    On the same date (the 24th March, 1927) the Company allotted 100,000
    7 per cent. Cumulative Non-participating Preference shares of £1 each to
    Lord St. Levan at par and 49,993 Ordinary shares to the Trustees at a
    premium of £16 a share.

    By a Deed dated the 25th March, 1927, Lord St. Levan as tenant for
    life directed, and he and Mr. Ponsonby in exercise of their overriding power
    of appointment ratified such direction, that the Trustees should invest the
    capital money subject to the Resettlement in Ordinary shares of the Company
    at the premium required by the Company.

    On the 26th March, 1927, the sale to the Company of the freehold lands
    and equitable interests which I have already mentioned was completed by
    two conveyances of that date. The sales to the Company of the investments
    already mentioned were completed on or about the same date by appropriate
    separate instruments. The consideration payable immediately in cash
    (£950,000) was so paid but as to £850,000 immediately repaid by the Trustees
    to the Company in consideration of the issue to them or their nominees of
    50,000 Ordinary Shares of the Company (including the shares for which
    the Memorandum had been subscribed) at the price of £17 a share. The
    balance of £100,000 was dealt with as hereafter stated.

    The net result of the transactions so far described was that the property
    formerly subject to the Resettlement had been converted into (a) 50,000
    fully paid Ordinary Shares of the Company (b) the right to receive from
    the Company a capital sum of £750,000 by the instalments already mentioned
    and (c) the above mentioned sum of £100,000 paid by the Company to
    the Trustees.

    By a Deed Poll dated the 28th March, 1927, Lord St. Levan and Mr.
    Ponsonby in exercise of their overriding power appointed that the said
    sum of £100,000 and the said sum of £750,000 payable by instalments and
    any interest which might become payable in respect of any instalment should
    be held upon trust for Lord St. Levan and that he should be entitled
    thereto for his own sole use and benefit instead of for his life only.

    The Trustees thereupon paid over the said sum of £100,000 to Lord St.
    Levan and he immediately paid the like amount to the Company in con-
    sideration of the issue to him of 100,000 Preference Shares fully paid.

    By a further, and final, Deed Poll dated the 29th March, 1927, Lord St.
    Levan and Mr. Ponsonby in exercise of their overriding power appointed
    new trusts of (in effect) the whole of the property then remaining subject
    to the Resettlement i.e., the 50,000 issued Ordinary Shares of the Com-
    pany. The terms of the new trusts so declared were somewhat complicated
    but they admittedly had the effect of extinguishing the life interest of Lord-
    St. Levan in the 50,000 Ordinary Shares and of excluding him from all
    benefit so far as those shares and the income thereof were concerned.

    The following further facts are not now in dispute: —

    1. That the Trustees are to be regarded for the purposes of section
      43 (2) (a) of the Finance Act, 1940, as having assumed bona fide
      possession and enjoyment of the 50,000 Ordinary Shares immediately
      after the determination by the Deed Poll of the 29th March, 1927,
      of the late Lord St. Levan's life interest therein.

    2. That the Company is a Company to which section 56 of the
      Finance Act, 1940, applies and was concerned in associated operations
      (as defined by section 59 of that Act) of which the determination of
      Lord St. Levan's life interest was one.

    Lord St. Levan having, as I have said, died on the 10th November, 1940,
    claims for estate duty were made against his executors in respect of the
    outstanding instalments of the purchase money and the 100,000 Preference

    3

    shares which he still retained and these claims were admitted and paid. But
    other claims also were made which are the subject of the present appeal and
    cross-appeal. They were (a) a claim under section 43 of the Finance Act,
    1940, against the Appellants, the present Trustees of the Resettlement, for
    estate duty on the 50,000 Ordinary shares of the Company, and, alternatively,
    (b) a claim under section 46 of that Act against the Company for estate duty
    on a proportion of the Company's assets corresponding to the benefits
    accruing to Lord St. Levan from the Company. These claims were not
    admitted and proceedings were accordingly begun by English Information for
    their enforcement. On the 20th May, 1949, Mr. Justice Croom-Johnson
    dismissed the information in regard to both claims. His Majesty's Attorney-
    General appealed to the Court of Appeal, which allowed the appeal under
    claim (a) but made no order upon claim (b). From that order the Appellant
    Trustees have appealed to this House in respect of claim (a), and in respect
    of claim (b) the Attorney-General has similarly appealed. To his appeal the
    Trustees and the Company are respondents. The two claims are for the
    purpose of the present proceedings admitted to be strictly alternative and
    it was for that reason that the Court of Appeal, having decided in favour
    of claim (a), refused to make any order upon claim (b). In the result your
    Lordships are deprived of the assistance which you would otherwise have
    had from the consideration by the learned Judges of the Court of Appeal
    of the very difficult problems that arise under the latter claim.

    The two claims, my Lords, are not only alternative but wholly independent
    of each other, and I find it convenient to deal with them separately.

    I have said that the first claim arises under section 43 of the Finance Act,
    but this claim must be considered under two aspects. For the Crown,
    while contending that the claim would be valid, even if section 43 stood
    alone, invoke also the provisions of section 56 if their primary claim fails.
    I propose therefore first to consider the question whether there is a valid
    claim under section 43 and for the time being to disregard section 56.

    Section 43, so far as relevant and in force at the death of Lord St. Levan,
    provided as follows :—

    " 43. (1) Subject to the provisions of this section, where an interest
    " limited to cease on a death has been disposed of or has determined,
    " whether by surrender, assurance, divesting, forfeiture or in any other
    " manner . . . and whether for value or not, after becoming an interest
    " in possession,—

    " (a) if apart from the disposition or determination the property
    " in which the interest subsisted would have passed on the death
    " under section one of the Finance Act 1894, that property shall be
    " deemed by virtue of this section to be included as to the whole
    " thereof in the property passing on the death ....

    " (2) Where the relevant disposition or determination was bona fide
    " effected or suffered three years before the death . . . the preceding
    " sub-section shall not have effect—

    " (a) if bona fide possession and enjoyment of the property in
    " which the interest subsisted was assumed immediately thereafter
    " by the person becoming entitled by virtue of or upon the dis-
    " position or determination and thenceforward retained to the entire
    " exclusion of the person who had the interest and of any benefit
    " to him by contract or otherwise . . . ."

    I apply the provisions of this section to the facts that I have stated. On
    the 27th March, 1927, Lord St. Levan had an interest in possession limited
    to cease on his death in the settled property which on that date had assumed
    the form of (1) 50.000 Ordinary shares of the Company and (2) the sum
    of £750,000 payable in the instalments that I have mentioned and (3) the
    sum of £100,000 paid or immediately payable by the Company. But he had
    also jointly with Mr. Ponsonby an overriding general power of appointment
    which could be exercised so as to vest all or any part of the settled property
    in him absolutely. They so exercised it as to vest in him the properties
    I have numbered (2) and (3), and, when they had done so, he surrendered
    his life interest in the Ordinary shares. It is agreed that bona fide possession

    4

    and enjoyment of the shares was assumed immediately thereafter by the
    persons becoming entitled upon the determination of Lord St. Levan's
    interest. But was it—and this is the only question—thenceforth retained to
    the entire exclusion of Lord St. Levan and of any benefit to him by contract
    or otherwise?

    My Lords, 1 cannot think that any doubt could be entertained upon this
    matter but for the use which the Crown seeks to make of certain decisions,
    particularly A.G. v. Worrall
    [1895] 1 QB 99 and Grey v. A.G. [1900]
    A.C. 124, to which I will refer later. If A., being the owner in fee of an
    estate in Yorkshire and an estate in Wiltshire, gives outright to B. his
    estate in Yorkshire, it is an irrelevant circumstance that he retains his estate
    in Wiltshire: equally it is irrelevant, if, being tenant for life of the two
    estates, he surrenders his interest in one and retains it in the other: and
    equally so if, his interest being not in two geographically separate estates
    but in land and capital moneys subject to the same settlement, he surrenders
    his interest in the one form of property and retains it in the other. But let
    it be supposed that he is neither the owner in fee, nor the tenant for life
    and nothing more, but that he is tenant for life with an overriding general
    power of appointment, by virtue of which he can dispose of all or any
    part of the settled property at his absolute discretion. I cannot doubt
    that, if he chooses so to exercise the power as to make some part of the
    settled properly his own, it is wholly irrelevant that by a contemporaneous
    or later transaction he surrenders his life interest in other parts of it. It
    is true that he has disposed of his life interest in one part of the property
    and it is true that he has enlarged his life interest in the other part of it
    into an absolute interest, but these two truths do not add up to the
    proposition that the property in which he has surrendered his interest is
    not retained by the donees to the entire exclusion of him and of any
    benefit to him by contract or otherwise.

    I do not think that the examples that I have given of cases, where duty
    would not be exigible in respect of property in which a life interest had
    been surrendered, were or could be seriously challenged. If so, it can
    only be due to a radical misconception of the facts in the present case
    that the learned Attorney-General pressed the claim under section 43 unaided
    by section 56. For though truly the overriding power of appointment was
    not vested in Lord St. Levan alone, there is nothing to suggest that there
    was a bargain of any kind between him and Mr. Ponsonby. They were
    together masters of the situation, and, if they thought fit to appoint to Lord
    St. Levan an absolute interest in part of the settled property, the effect,
    so far as section 43 is concerned, is precisely the same as if Lord St. Levan
    had had the sole power and had exercised it. It is not necessary to determine
    what the result might be if there had been a bargain between Lord
    St. Levan and the remaindermen or even between Lord St. Levan and Mr.
    Ponsonby. It is sufficient that these two in their united wisdom thought
    fit to do what he in his single wisdom, had he had the sole power, might
    have done. I am therefore of opinion that the claim for duty upon the
    Ordinary shares, so far as it is based on section 43 alone, is not well
    founded. 1 will defer my observations upon the cases, which I have men-
    tioned, until an attempt has been made to discover the scope and effect
    of section 56.

    Section 56 of the Finance Act, 1940, so far as relevant, provides as
    follows (the subsections being inverted for the sake of clarity):.—

    " 56. (2) Where a company to which this section applies was con-
    " cerned in the disposition or determination of an interest limited to
    " cease on a death effected or suffered as mentioned in sub-section (2)
    " of section 43 of this Act ... or was concerned in any one or more
    " of associated operations of which the disposition or determination . . .
    " formed one, the conditions as to the entire exclusion of the person
    " who had the interest . . . and of any benefit to him, specified in the
    " said sub-section (2) ... shall be treated as having been satisfied if
    " and only if they would have been so treated in the circumstances
    " aforesaid."

    5

    The " circumstances aforesaid " so referred to are those stated in sub-
    section (1) of the same section 56 in the following words:—

    " the following circumstances, namely, if the assets of the company
    " had been held by it on trust for the members thereof and any other
    " person to whom it is under any liability incurred otherwise than
    " for the purposes of the business of the company wholly and exclusively,
    " in accordance with the rights attaching to the shares in and debentures
    " of the company and the terms on which any such liability was
    " incurred, and if the company had acted in the capacity of a trustee
    " only with power to carry on the business of the company and to
    " employ the assets of the company therein."

    It is, as I have said, admitted that the Company is a company to which
    the section applies. The assets of the Company consisted of the settled
    property or the property for the time being representing it, and the members
    were at the relevant date (i.e., immediately before the surrender by Lord
    St. Levan of his life interest in the Ordinary shares) the Trustees as holders
    of the Ordinary shares and Lord St. Levan as holder of the Preference
    shares and as the person to whom the Company owed the instalments of
    purchase money. This flows from the definitions of " member " and
    " debenture " in the Act. Then—and here I paraphrase the subsection—
    the conditions as to the entire exclusion of Lord St. Levan from the property
    in which he surrenders his interest, i.e., the Ordinary shares, and of any
    benefit to him by contract or otherwise are only satisfied, if they would
    have been so treated, i.e., would have been satisfied, if the Company
    had held its assets on trust for the Trustees and Lord St. Levan in accordance
    with the rights attaching to the Ordinary and Preference shares and the
    Debenture.

    My Lords, 1 must admit that I find this a bewildering conception. The
    Court of Appeal in a judgment delivered by Jenkins, L.J., found it possible
    to give a meaning to the section and summarised its conclusion in words
    which I think it worth while to quote. " We think ", they said, " that
    " for this purpose ' the property in which the interest subsisted ' within the
    " meaning of section 43 (2) (a) must be taken as being the settled property as
    " it stood before the sale to the company, the subsequent creation of the
    " different equitable interests which the statutory hypothesis supposes being
    " merely in the nature of a preliminary carving up of the property into the
    " appropriate beneficial interests with a view to securing the desired benefit
    " to the deceased out of it upon the intended determination of his life interest.


    " But even if we are wrong in this, and ' the property in which the
    " ' interest subsisted ' must, as Sir Andrew contended, be considered as
    " consisting only of the residue of the property remaining after provision
    " for the other interests, we are satisfied that the benefit taken by the
    " deceased in the shape of the creation and vesting in him of the right
    " to receive the half-yearly instalments, though on this view not taking effect
    " out of the ' property in which the interest subsisted, ' was on the facts so
    " clearly referable to and connected with the determination of the deceased's
    " life interest in that property as to constitute a fatal objection to exemption
    " under section 43 (2)."

    It had been stated earlier in the judgment that the application of the
    statutory hypothesis (as it was conveniently called) was to eliminate com-
    pletely the element of sale from the Trustees to the Company and the
    consequent conversion of the property and to make the case stand for
    the purpose of section 43 as if the property had been transferred to the
    Company as trustee upon trust (1) to pay thereout to the Trustees £750,000
    by the instalments and on the dates mentioned to be held by them as capital
    moneys on trust for Lord St. Levan for life with remainders over, (2) subject
    thereto to raise and pay to Lord St. Levan £100,000, on whatever future
    event should be taken as corresponding for the purposes of the hypothetical
    trust to the winding-up of the Company and in the meantime to pay him
    interest on that sum at 7 per cent, per annum out of the net income of
    the property, and (3) subject thereto upon trust both as to income and
    capital for the Trustees upon trust for Lord St. Levan for life with remainders

    6

    over in accordance with the terms of the settlement. And this view is
    emphasised by saying that the right to receive the instalments of the £750,000
    is converted into "an equitable interest charged by way of primary trust
    " on the entire income and capital of the settled property as it stood before
    " the sale to the Defendant Company ".

    My Lords, I will assume that the Court of Appeal rightly stated the
    effect of applying the statutory hypothesis to the facts of this case. The
    question whether duty is exigible still remains one of great difficulty.

    Whatever the words, which have appeared in a series of Acts, might
    have meant to your Lordships if the matter were res integra, it cannot in
    face of the decision in A.G. v. Worrall be denied that it is possible for
    possession and enjoyment of property not to be retained by the donee to
    the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him by contract or
    otherwise, though the donor himself no longer has any sort of interest in it.
    But the words, and particularly the word " exclusion ", are singularly inapt
    to cover a benefit which does not arise by way of reservation out of that
    which is given, and I am not disposed to travel further than I am constrained
    by authority along a line of interpretation which appears to me difficult
    to justify.

    Two recent cases in the Privy Council are of great assistance upon this
    matter. In Munro v. Commissioner of Stamp Duties
    [1934] AC 61, the
    facts were that the owner of a large area of land in New South Wales, on
    which he carried on the business of a grazier, in 1909 agreed with his
    six children that thereafter the business should be carried on by him and
    them as partners at will, the business to be managed by him and each
    partner to get a share of the profits. In 1913 he transferred by way of gift
    to his children or to trustees for them all his right, title and interest in
    the land. He remained a partner in the business until his death in 1929
    and duty was then claimed in respect of the land because, as it was said,
    it had not been retained by the donees to the entire exclusion of him or
    of " any benefit to him of whatsoever kind or in any way whatsoever whether
    " enforceable at law or in equity or not". But upon this Lord Tomlin,
    delivering the judgment of the Board, said, " What was comprised in the
    " gift was, in the case of each of the gifts to the children and the trustees,
    " the property shorn of the right which belonged to the partnership, and
    " upon this footing it is in their Lordships' opinion plain that the donee
    " in each case assumed bona fide possession and enjoyment of the gift
    " immediately upon the gift and thenceforward retained it to the exclusion
    " of the donor. Further, the benefit which the donor had as a member
    " of the partnership in the right to which the gift was subject was not in
    " their Lordships' opinion a benefit referable in any way to the gift. It
    " was referable to the agreement of 1909 and nothing else, and was not
    " therefore such a benefit as is contemplated by section 102, subsection
    " (2) (d)".

    Here are words of great significance. The benefit, if it is to attract duty
    to the subject of the gift, must be a benefit referable to it. The words are
    not easy to construe but they clearly import that the owner of property
    may in certain circumstances retain a benefit when he makes a gift and yet
    the subject matter of the gift be not dutiable.

    More important is the case of Commissioner of Stamp Duties for N.S.W.
    v. Perpetual Trustee Company Ltd.
    [1943] AC 425, for in that case the
    Judicial Committee took the opportunity of reviewing the earlier cases
    and in particular Worrall's case, Grey's case, and In re Cochrane [1905]
    2 I.R. 626 and in the Court of Appeal [1906] 2 I.R. 200. And it is
    to the latter case that I must first turn, for the judgment of the Irish Court
    of Appeal was expressly approved by Lord Russell of Killowen delivering
    the opinion of the Board and its bearing on the case now under appeal will
    be seen to be immediate. For that reason I venture to repeat the facts
    substantially as stated by him. Sir Henry Cochrane was the mortgagee
    of estates in Mayo in a sum of £15,000 with interest at 41/2 per cent. The
    mortgage debt and securities having been vested in trustees, Sir Henry
    by an indenture made in 1902 declared that they were to stand possessed

    7

    thereof in trust out of the income to pay in each year to his daughter,
    Mrs. Day, the sum of £575 for her life, and after death upon trust as to
    the principal sum for her children as therein mentioned with power to
    Mrs. Day to appoint an annual sum to a surviving husband during his life.
    If no child of Mrs. Day attained a vested interest in the trust funds,
    they were to be held in trust for Sir Henry absolutely and there was also
    a trust of the balance, if any, of the yearly income for Sir Henry absolutely.
    The trustees received the interest of the mortgage which amounted to £675
    per annum and paid £575 to Mrs. Day and the balance to Sir Henry.
    In March, 1904, he directed them to pay the whole income to Mrs. Day,
    but, as he died within a year thereafter, this direction could not affect the
    claim to duty which the Crown made in respect of the entire sum of £15,000
    as property passing on his death under section 2 (1) (c) of the Finance
    Act, 1894. It was held by Palles, C.B., and his decision was affirmed by
    the Court of Appeal, which consisted of Walker, L.C., and Fitzgibbon and
    Holmes, L.JJ., that duty was not payable in respect of the £15,000 but only
    in respect of the values of Sir Henry's interest in the balance of income
    and his contingent interest in the principal sum. It is important to see how
    Lord Russell of Killowen summarises the judgment of the Chief Baron.
    " Gift", he says, " in the context meant beneficial gift. A person who
    " declares trusts of property only gives the beneficial interests covered by
    " the trusts. Everything else he retains and does not give; and there is an
    " entire exclusion of the donor from the property taken under the disposition
    " of the gift. Sir Henry Cochrane obtained no benefit either by way of
    " reservation out of the gift, or collaterally in reference to the gift." Then,
    after citing Holmes, L.J., he said, " If In re Cochrane was rightly decided, as
    " their Lordships think it was, it covers the present case ". Lord Russell of
    Killowen then proceeded to a close analysis of Grey v. Attorney-General,
    convincingly showed that it was not inconsistent with In re Cochrane and
    said of it: " There is nothing laid down as law in that case which conflicts
    " with the view that the entire exclusion of the donor from possession and
    " enjoyment which is contemplated by section 11 (1) of the Act of 1889
    " is entire exclusion from possession and enjoyment of the beneficial
    " interest in property which has been given by the gift, and that possession
    " and enjoyment by the donor of some beneficial interest therein which
    " he has not included in the gift is not inconsistent with the entire exclusion
    " from enjoyment and possession which the sub-section requires."

    It followed from the approval given to the decision in In re Cochrane
    that the claim against the Perpetual Trustee Company failed. In that case
    a settlor vested certain shares in trustees, of whom he was himself one, upon
    trusts for the benefit of an infant son but with a resulting trust for himself
    if the son did not attain the age of 21. It was contended that as the settlor
    (a) was a trustee and (b) had an equitable interest in reversion, there was
    not an entire exclusion of him and of any benefit to him of whatsoever
    kind and in any way whatsoever. The contention failed because the settlor
    in his capacity of donor " was entirely excluded from possession and enjoy-
    " ment of what he had given to his son .... In the interval between the
    " gift and his death, the settlor received no benefit of any kind or in any
    " way from the shares, nor did he receive any benefit whatsoever which was
    " in any way attributable to the gift ". As Dixon, J., said in the same case in
    the High Court of Australia (64 C.L.R. 492 at 511), "The settlement con-
    " tained nothing defeating, revoking or destroying any interest given. It
    " contained no reservation out of the interest given and no recompense or
    " benefit in reference to the interest given ".

    It appears to me, my Lords, that this is nothing but the logical application
    to a more complex situation of the proposition which I venture to think
    was self evident, viz., that the life tenant of two separate pieces of property
    can surrender his life interest in one and retain it in the other without
    duty becoming exigible in respect of the former. The question is what
    he has given: it may be a life interest in part of the settled property ; it
    may be a part of the income of settled funds and that part may be a
    fixed sum which is payable in priority or the residue after the prior payment
    of a fixed sum thereout. I venture to think that much of the argument
    that was addressed to the House in this case and much of the confusion

    8

    that has arisen in the past upon this admittedly difficult branch of the law
    have been due to the failure to bear in mind that that of which enjoyment
    is to be assumed and retained and from which there is to be exclusion
    of the donor and any benefit to him by contract or otherwise is that which
    is truly given, a proposition which is obvious enough in the case of two
    separate estates but more difficult to follow and apply where trusts are
    declared of a single property which are not completely exhaustive in favour
    of a donee. It should at last be clear from the judgment of Lord Russell
    of Killowen that by retaining something which he has never given a donor
    does not bring himself within the mischief of the section. I venture to repeat
    in other words what I have already said when dealing with section 43 alone,
    for its underlying principle is not altered by an alliance with section 56. In
    the simplest analysis, if A gives to B all his estates in Wiltshire except Black-
    acre, he does not except Blackacre out of what he has given: he just does
    not give Blackacre. And if it can be regarded as a " benefit" to him that
    he does not give but keeps Blackacre, it is a benefit which is in no relevant
    sense (to use the language of Lord Tomlin) " referable " or (to use that of
    Lord Russell of Killowen) " attributable " to the gift that he made of the
    rest of the Wiltshire estate. Applying this principle to the artificial situation
    created by the statutory hypothesis, I see no reason for saying that that which
    Lord St. Levan gave was not retained by the donee to the entire exclusion
    of him and of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise. To avoid
    misunderstanding I must add that different considerations arise where the
    donor obtains some benefit which is " referable " to the gift or " attributable "
    to it. Thus, if in the present case there had been a bargain by which in con-
    sideration of the surrender of his life interest in part of the settled property
    Lord St. Levan had been enabled to enlarge his life interest in another part
    of it, it might well be that following Worrall's case I should be bound to hold
    that he had not been excluded from the surrendered part. But as I have
    already pointed out, here was no bargain of any kind. What Lord St. Levan
    chose to give he gave, and what to keep he kept. He made no bargain and
    he was entirely excluded from, and obtained no benefit referable to, that which
    he gave.

    My Lords, in order to test the claim under section 43 aided by section
    56 I have been content to assume that the statutory hypothesis requires that
    the trusts upon which the Company is to be deemed to hold its assets
    should be written out in the terms advocated by the Crown and accepted
    by the Court of Appeal. And even upon this footing I am satisfied that
    the claim must fail if the principle established in the cases that I have
    cited is applied. But I am far from being convinced that I am entitled
    to write out the trusts in a manner so favourable to the Crown's contention.
    It would perhaps be beyond the wit of the most skilful conveyancer to
    set out with any degree of accuracy the trusts which should correspond
    with the rights of the members of the Company as that word is defined:
    for the legal relations in which the members stand to each other and to
    the Company cannot be transmuted into those of trustee and cestui que
    trust.
    I need not however pursue this matter, since I hold that even upon
    the ground which the Crown has chosen the claim for estate duty on
    the Ordinary shares of the Company fails and the appeal must be allowed.

    The alternative claim which arises under section 46 of the Finance Act,
    1940, must now be considered. It involves the consideration of provisions
    which are, I think, of unrivalled complexity and difficulty and couched in
    language so tortuous and obscure that I am tempted to reject them as
    meaningless.

    I must set out not only section 46 but certain other sections which have
    to be read with it. They are as follows:—

    " 46.—(1) Where a person dying after the commencement of this Act
    " has made to a company to which this section applies a transfer of
    " any property (other than an interest limited to cease on his death or
    " property which he transferred in a fiduciary capacity), and any benefits
    " accruing to the deceased from the company accrued to him in the
    " three years ending with his death, the assets of the company shall
    " be deemed for the purposes of estate duty to be included in the property



    9

    " passing on his death to an extent determined, in accordance with
    " subsection (2) of this section, by reference to the proportion that the
    " aggregate amount of the benefits accruing to the deceased from the
    " company bore to the net income of the company.

    " (2) The proportion aforesaid shall be ascertained for each accounting
    " year that fell wholly or partly within the three years ending with the
    " death, by comparing the aggregate amount of the benefits accruing
    " to the deceased from the company which accrued to him in that year
    " with the net income of the company for that year, and the extent
    " to which the assets of the company are to be deemed to be included
    " in the property passing on the death shall be the average of the
    " proportions so ascertained: ..."

    "47.—(1) The following shall be treated as benefits accruing to the
    " deceased from the company, that is to say—

    " (a) any income of the company, and any periodical payment
    " out of the resources or at the expense of the company, which
    " the deceased received for his own benefit whether directly or
    " indirectly, and any enjoyment in specie of land or other property
    " of the company or of a right thereover which the deceased had
    " for his own benefit whether directly or indirectly; . . ."

    " (2) In this Part of this Act the expression ' periodical payment'
    " means a payment by way of dividend or interest, a payment by way
    " of remuneration not being a single lump sum payment, and any other
    " payment being one of a series of payments, whether inter-connected
    " or not, whether of the same or of varying amounts and whether
    " payable at regular intervals or otherwise . . . ."

    " 58.—(2) A person shall be deemed for the purposes of this Part
    " of this Act to have made a transfer of property to a company if the
    " property came to be included in the resources of the company by the
    " effect of a disposition made by him or with his consent or of any
    " associated operations of which such a disposition formed one. . . ."

    " (4) References in this Part of this Act to a disposition's being made
    " by any person, to a power's being exercised or exercisable by any
    " person, or to any other act's being done by any person, include
    " references to its being made, or being exercised or exercisable, or
    " being done, by him and another jointly or by another at his
    " direction. . . ."

    " (5) References in this Part of this Act to a person having any
    " power or control or doing any act in a fiduciary capacity shall be
    " construed as references to his having that power or control or doing
    " that act in a fiduciary capacity imposed on him otherwise than by a
    " disposition made by him and in such a capacity only."

    The claim of the Crown rests on two conditions; first, it must be shown
    that Lord St. Levan transferred property to the Company and did so in
    some other than a fiduciary capacity (for this I will coin the expression
    " non-fiduciary capacity "), and, secondly, that benefits accrued to him from
    the Company in the three years ending with his death.

    Upon the first of these questions numerous points arise for discussion.
    What property was transferred to the Company by Lord St. Levan? So
    far as he transferred it, did he do so in a fiduciary capacity? What is the
    effect of the ratification and confirmation or further assurance by Lord
    St. Levan and Mr. Ponsonby contained in the several deeds of conveyance
    or transfer? What is the effect of the several subsections of section 58 which
    I have set out and how do they operate inter se? These and other points
    I must deal with seriatim.

    The first point arises on the subscription by Lord St. Levan for 100,000
    Preference shares. For these he paid cash according to the ordinary use of
    language. Did he then " transfer property " to the Company within the mean-
    ing of section 46? My Lords, I have no hesitation in saying that the payment
    of cash to a company upon a subscription for shares is not a transfer of
    property to the company. No one, lawyer, business man or man in the street,
    was ever heard to use such language to describe such an act and I decline to

    10

    stretch the plain meaning of words in an Act of Parliament in order to comply
    with what is said to be its purpose. Lord Wensleydale's familiar words, which
    were cited by Lord Halsbury in Tennant v. Smith
    [1892] AC 150, may again
    be repeated: " It is a well established rule that the subject is not to be
    " taxed without clear words for that purpose; and also, that every Act
    " of Parliament must be read according to the natural construction of its
    " words ". Lord Halsbury adds that in a taxing Act it is impossible to
    assume any intention or governing purpose in the Acts to do more than
    take such tax as the statute imposes: it must be seen whether the tax is
    expressly imposed. This is true doctrine which I must bear in mind as I
    listen to the constant refrain of learned Counsel for the Crown that this
    or that is just the transaction at which this or that section is aimed. The
    question is not at what transaction the section is, according to some alleged
    general purpose, aimed but what transaction its language, according to its
    natural meaning, fairly and squarely hits. Applying this, the one and
    only proper test, I say that when Lord St. Levan paid for his shares he
    did not transfer property to the Company.

    The next point arises in this way. The conveyance of the settled land to
    the Company, to which I have already referred, took the form of a grant
    by Lord St. Levan in exercise of (to put it shortly) his Settled Land Act
    powers and the extended powers given by the St. Aubyn settlement and the
    Deed Poll of the 23rd March, 1927. It is beyond question, first, that this
    grant operated to convey the fee to the Company, and, secondly, that the
    grant by Lord St. Levan as tenant for life, whether made in pursuance of
    statutory or extended powers, was a transfer by him in a fiduciary capacity.
    But the conveyance contained not only a grant by Lord St. Levan. By it
    also he and Mr. Ponsonby in exercise of their general power of appoinment
    " by way of ratification " appointed and confirmed unto the Company the
    land which he had granted. Therefore, it was said, the property was not
    transferred by Lord St. Levan in a fiduciary capacity but by him and Mr.
    Ponsonby in a non-fiduciary capacity. This is not a valid argument. The
    ratification and confirmation and appointment could have no operation in
    law except to the extent to which the grant by Lord St. Levan was ineffective
    to convey the fee. Ex concessis that grant was wholly effective: therefore
    the ratification, etc.. effected no transfer of property nor anything else.

    The same point arises, but with a refinement upon it, in regard to the
    investments representing capital moneys of the settlement. These were
    transferred to the Company by the Trustees by the usual deeds of transfer.
    The Trustees no doubt acted in a fiduciary capacity, but they acted (a) upon
    the direction of Lord St. Levan as tenant for life and (b) upon the exercise
    by Lord St. Levan and Mr. Ponsonby of their joint power of appointment
    " by way of ratification ". Then, the argument runs, under section 58 (4)
    the transfer by the Trustees becomes the transfer of those who directed it:
    and those who directed were not only Lord St. Levan as tenant for life
    but he and Mr. Ponsonby in exercise of a non-fiduciary power. If Lord
    St. Levan was competent to direct the transfer under the Settled Land Act
    or under the extended powers given to him by the Deed of the 23rd March,
    1927, then the argument fails for the reasons given in regard to the settled
    land: for the direction by Lord St. Levan and Mr. Ponsonby added nothing
    to that already given by Lord St. Levan. But at this point the argument
    opened a question of a far-reaching character, which I am sorry to have
    to decide without the assistance of Judges who have a greater familiarity
    with such problems. It is the broad question whether it is competent for a
    tenant for life to direct the trustees to change an investment of capital
    moneys into another investment authorised by the Act or by the settlement.
    Upon this question Counsel on either side agreed in saying that there
    was no direct authority and they agreed too that the reason for that was
    that the answer was clear. But unfortunately here harmony ended, for
    the clear answer given on the one side was the exact opposite of the
    clear answer given on the other. It falls therefore to your Lordships to
    determine a question which I should have expected to find well settled
    long ago.

    Part III of the Settled Land Act, 1925, which is entitled " Investment or
    " other application of capital money ", provides by section 73 (1) that capital


    11

    money arising under the Act shall subject as therein mentioned be invested
    or otherwise applied wholly in one or partly in one and partly in another
    or others of the following modes: then follow twenty-one so-called modes,
    of which the first is "investment in Government securities, or in other
    " securities in which the trustees of the settlement are by the settlement
    " or by law authorised to invest trust money of the settlement, with power
    " to vary the investment into or for any other such securities" and the
    others are the numerous forms of application which experience had shown
    to be necessary or expedient. So far there is nothing to indicate with
    whom the direction or initiative lies. This is to be found in section 75,
    which provides by subsection (1) that "capital money arising under this
    " Act shall, in order to its being invested or applied as aforesaid, be paid
    " either to the trustees of the settlement or into court at the option of the
    " tenant for life, and shall be invested or applied by the trustees, or under
    " the direction of the court, as the case may be, accordingly ". At this
    stage the tenant for life, having exercised his option for payment to the
    Trustees or into Court, appears to leave the scene. But subsection (2)
    provides that " the investment or other application by the trustees shall
    " be made according to the direction of the tenant for life, and in default
    " thereof according to the discretion of the trustees . . . and any investment
    " shall be in the names or under the control of the trustees ", subsection (3)
    provides that "the investment or other application under the direction of
    " the Court shall be made on the application of the tenant for life or of
    " the trustees " and subsection (4) that " any investment or other application
    " shall not during the subsistence of the beneficial interest of the tenant
    " for life be altered without his consent". I do not think that any assistance
    is to be got from subsection (5) or subsection (6), but subsection (7)
    provides that " those securities " [i.e. the securities representing capital money]
    " may be converted into money, which shall be capital money arising under
    " this Act ". By definition " capital money arising under this Act ", unless
    the context otherwise requires, means " capital money arising under the
    ' powers and provisions of this Act or the Acts replaced by this Act,
    ' and receivable for the trusts and purposes of the settlement and includes
    " securities representing capital money ".

    Upon these sections the contention of the Crown is that the tenant for
    life, having under section 75 (2) directed the application of capital money
    in the mode first mentioned, viz., in investment in authorised securities,
    has no power to direct a change of investment into other authorised
    securities, that the power to vary rests with the Trustees and that, though
    under subsection (4) of section 75 they cannot exercise that power without
    the consent of the tenant for life, he has no power of direction. On
    the other hand it is argued that, just as the tenant for life has the initial
    power of direction and the further power (which is not denied) of directing
    that investments shall be realised and the proceeds applied in some authorised
    mode of application, e.g., in discharge of incumbrances, so he has power
    to direct that an investment shall be realised and the proceeds shall be
    invested in other investments, or, in other words that the words " with
    "power to vary" which occur in section 73 (1) (i) do not confer a power
    on the Trustees apart from the tenant for life but merely indicate that the
    right of the tenant for life to direct is not exhausted when he has directed
    that the mode of application of capital money shall be the investment
    in securities.

    My Lords, between these two views, both of which are, I think, possible,
    I choose the latter without hesitation. It would be at once illogical and
    inconsistent with the scheme of the Settled Land Act to give to the
    tenant for life the right to say whether capital money should be applied
    in investment in securities or (say) in the discharge of incumbrances (section
    73 (1) (ii)), or in the purchase of land in fee simple (section 73 (1) (xi))
    and the right too to direct the sale of securities and the application of the
    proceeds in some other mode, but to deny him the right to direct a variation
    of investment. It is not, I think, inconsistent with this view that section
    75 (4) contemplates the consent of the tenant for life, which presupposes
    action initiated by the Trustees: for under section 75 (2) the Trustees may
    in default of direction by the tenant for life act at their own discretion
    and section 75 (4) is apt to cover such a case. Nor can I disregard

    12

    section 75 (7). If securities can be converted into money (which I take to be
    something that can and must be done at the discretion of the tenant for
    life) the proceeds become capital money of which the tenant for life can
    direct the application and, if he directs the investment in securities, he
    can choose the securities so long as they are authorised. I am therefore
    of opinion that a tenant for life can direct an exchange of investments,
    assuming always that he acts within and according to his statutory or
    extended powers, and, coming from the general to the particular, I am
    of opinion that Lord St. Levan was competent to give the direction, to
    which I have referred, in regard to the investments forming part of the
    settled property. Accordingly the ratification and appointment by himself
    and Mr. Ponsonby added nothing to his direction. It was that which was
    effective and it was given by him in a fiduciary capacity.

    The same point was raised also in regard to a third class of property
    which was transferred to the Company, viz.: the property which has been
    called " the equitable interests ". What I have already said covers this
    class of property also and I do not think it necessary further to explain
    why this property too was transferred to the Company by Lord St. Levan
    in a fiduciary capacity.

    So far, my Lords, I have endeavoured to interpret and apply section 46
    of the Act to the facts of this case with only an oblique glance at section 58.
    But now I must turn to the contentions of the Crown which are based
    on that section and first to a contention based on subsection (5). That
    subsection provides that " references in this Part of this Act to a person
    " having any power or control or doing any act in a fiduciary capacity
    " shall be construed as references to his having that power or control or
    " doing that act in a fiduciary capacity imposed on him otherwise than
    " by a disposition made by him and in such a capacity only "

    It was urged on behalf of the Crown that, inasmuch as the additional
    powers by the exercise of which Lord St. Levan, as tenant for life, was
    enabled to transfer or direct the transfer of property to the Company, owed
    their existence to a disposition made by him, viz., the Deed Poll of 23rd
    March, therefore the fiduciary capacity in which he exercised those powers
    was imposed on him by that disposition. I do not think that this argument
    is valid. Admittedly he was a trustee of the powers and therefore could
    only exercise them in a fiduciary capacity, but this flowed from the pro-
    visions of section 107 of the Settled Land Act, 1925. It was Lord St. Levan
    who created the power but the capacity in which he exercised it was
    imposed by the Act. Take any settlement that you will and suppose
    that the tenant for life exercises a power conferred on him by the settlement
    in extension of his powers under the Settled Land Act. Whether the
    settlement is made by himself or another, it could not be said that the
    fiduciary capacity, in which he exercised the power, was " imposed " by the
    settlement. The word " impose " is, I think, apt to describe a consequence
    which flows from a statutory provision but inapt to describe a power
    voluntarily created.

    The next contention that I must notice is founded upon section 58 (2)
    which must be read in conjunction with section 58 (4). Subsection (2)
    provides that " a person shall be deemed for the purposes of this Part
    " of this Act to have made a transfer of property to a company if the
    " property came to be included in the resources of the company by the effect
    " of a disposition made by him or with his consent or of any associated
    " operations of which such a disposition formed one ".

    The argument here is that it was by the effect of a disposition made
    by Lord St. Levan in a non-fiduciary capacity, viz., the Deed Poll of the
    23rd March, or at least by the effect of associated operations, of which that
    disposition formed one, that the property came to be included in the
    resources of the Company and that therefore Lord St. Levan must be
    deemed to have transferred the property to the Company within section 46
    and to have done so in a non-fiduciary capacity.

    Here it is regrettably necessary to make further distinctions, for there
    were, as I have already pointed out, different species of property, and they
    demand separate consideration. First, it was urged that the cash paid by Lord

    13

    St. Levan for the Preference shares was caught by the subsection. I have
    already expressed the view, which is, I understand, held by the majority
    of your Lordships, that section 46 does not cover a cash subscription for
    shares. If this is so, it is I think impossible to say that the cash is
    " property included in the resources of the company" which anyone is
    deemed to have transferred. The transaction is outside the purview of
    the section and the subsection.

    Next, the argument turned to the land. This was a kind of property
    which was in fact and in law transferred by Lord St. Levan himself to
    the Company. The sale and the conveyance were made by him as tenant
    for life and were therefore made by him in a fiduciary capacity. I see no
    room for what I may call a deeming provision when that which is to be
    deemed has effectively taken place without it. Lord St. Levan transferred
    the property in a fiduciary capacity: the subsection does not in my opinion
    entitle me to deem him to have transferred it in a non-fiduciary capacity.

    Next, and more difficult, come two other kinds of property which I can
    take together, the investments representing capital moneys and the equitable
    interests, and I must now turn to section 58 (4). This subsection so far
    as relevant provides as follows: " References in this Part of this Act to a
    " disposition's being made by any person ... or to any other act's being
    " done by any person, include references to its being made ... or being
    " done by him and another jointly or by another at his direction . . . ".
    I have already expressed the opinion and will assume that it was competent
    for Lord St. Levan as tenant for life to direct the Trustees of the settlement
    to invest capital moneys in the purchase of or in exchange for shares of the
    Company, and that the effect of the deed of the 25th March was that he
    validly exercised that power of direction with the result already pointed
    out that the confirmatory direction by him and Mr. Ponsonby in exercise
    of the overriding power added nothing to it. If so, the act of the Trustees
    in transferring the investments was an act done by another at his direction
    and accordingly it was under this subsection his act: it was he who trans-
    ferred the property, and ex concessis he transferred it in a fiduciary capacity,
    for he was acting in exercise of additional Settled Land Act powers. But
    here comes the crux. If subsection (2) stood alone, and subsection (4)
    had not been enacted, I could not avoid the conclusion that Lord St. Levan
    must be " deemed " to have transferred the investments. The deeming
    provision would not (as it was in the case of the land) be excluded by
    an actual transfer, and, even though the direction to transfer was given
    in a fiduciary capacity, that could not alter the fact that the property
    became included in the resources of the Company not as in the case of
    the land by an actual transfer by Lord St. Levan, but by a series of operations
    of which the exercise of the non-fiduciary overriding power was one. But
    subsection (2) does not stand alone and the question is what part subsection
    (4) is to play. The latter like the former is in effect a deeming provision.
    Am I then to say that as the result of subsection (4) Lord St. Levan was
    for the purposes of section 46 the actual transferor of the investments,
    just as he was of the land, so as to exclude the operation of the deeming
    provision of subsection (2)? Or am I to say that subsection (4) is to be
    denied any operation where subsection (2) would without it be brought
    into play? It may be urged that as subsection (2) expressly does, but
    subsection (4) does not refer to transfers, the former section should apply.
    But this is a very tenuous thread on which to hang a taxpayer, for subsection
    (4) does not the less apply to transfers because it uses general words such
    as " disposition " and " act " which cover both transfers and other operations.
    I have come after much hesitation to the conclusion that the provision of
    subsection (4) must prevail. It is, I think, a subsection which is intended
    and is apt to cover every case : its language is absolutely general: it does not
    open as it might by a saving reference to subsection (2) and it should
    not be restricted unless it is necessary to do so in order to give some meaning
    to that subsection. But this clearly is not necessary: for subsection (2)
    has in any case ample scope where no question arises as to the capacity,
    fiduciary or non-fiduciary, in which a transfer is made but the question is
    whether that which was done, by whomsoever done, amounted to transfer.

    14

    My Lords, having come to the conclusion that Lord St. Levan did not
    transfer any property to the Company within the meaning of section 46
    except in a fiduciary capacity, I am of opinion that upon this ground the
    alternative claim for duty which is made against the Company fails and the
    cross-appeal of the Crown must be dismissed. But in case your Lordships
    take a different view on this very difficult question, it is right that I should
    state my opinion on the further question whether any and what benefit within
    the meaning of the section accrued to Lord St. Levan from the Company in
    the three years ending with his death.

    That some benefit so accrued to him is admitted by the Company, for he
    received the proper instalments of the sum of £750,000 which were payable
    within those years and he also received dividends upon the Preference
    shares. But a dispute has arisen in regard to certain sums received by
    Lord St. Levan from the Company in the circumstances which I must
    now state.

    By a Mortgage Deed dated 30th January, 1933, and made between Lord
    St. Levan of the one part and the Company of the other part the Company
    covenanted to advance to Lord St. Levan on every 25th March, 24th June,
    29th September and 25th December, during the joint lives of Lord St. Levan
    and his nephew Francis Cecil St. Aubyn (now the third Baron St. Levan)
    at four per cent, interest a sum of £500 unless and until Lord St. Levan
    should give notice to the Company that he did not require such advance
    to be made and it was thereby agreed that payment of the said sums
    and of the interest thereon should not be required by the Company until
    the expiration of a period of two years from the death of Lord St. Levan
    unless he or his personal representatives should desire to repay the same
    previously and in the meantime interest becoming due thereon should be
    added to the principal money and carry interest accordingly and the said
    Deed contained a provision for deduction of the said debt by instalments
    from any instalment of the said sum of £750.000 remaining outstanding at
    the expiration of the period of two years and for charging the same upon
    such instalments.

    By another like Deed dated 4th August, 1936, the Company covenanted
    to advance to Lord St. Levan on every 1st January and 1st July during the
    same joint lives a further sum of £500 upon the same terms as the advances
    to be made under the said Deed of 30th January, 1933.

    Pursuant to the said Deeds the Company advanced to Lord St. Levan
    in each of the three years preceding his death sums amounting in all to
    £3.000 all of which with the interest thereon remained due and owing at
    his death.

    The question is whether the advances so made were " benefits " within
    the meaning of section 46. The argument for the Crown is a simple one.
    Under section 47 (which I have already cited) any periodical payment out
    of the resources of the Company is to be " treated as a benefit ": the loans
    or advances were payments made to Lord St. Levan out of the resources
    of the Company and they were made periodically: and they were received
    by Lord St. Levan for his own benefit directly or indirectly. Therefore they
    were " benefits". The Company on the other hand appeals once more
    to the plain use of ordinary words and denies that a man can fairly be
    said to receive for his own benefit a sum which he receives by way of loan
    and has to repay, and further relies on the omission of loan from a definition
    which refers to payment by way of dividend or interest or by way of
    remuneration or any other payment. The latter argument may derive some
    force from the contention of the Crown that a transaction of loan was
    just what the section was aimed at. But perhaps that contention had only
    become common form by the time this stage of the case had been reached.
    My Lords, here again is a question upon which I find it impossible to
    express a confident opinion. It is indeed strange that no reference is
    made to a transaction of loan and the result of holding such a transaction
    to be a benefit must, as learned Counsel for the Crown was constrained to
    admit, have strange results. But I have come to the conclusion, nevertheless,
    that the contention of the Crown must be upheld. I cannot escape from
    the fact that as each periodical loan was made to Lord St. Levan there

    15

    was a payment to and receipt by him. And I cannot think that he
    received it any the less for his own benefit because he had, or his estate
    had, at a later date to repay it. He had the beneficial use of what he
    received and can fairly be said to have received it for his own benefit.
    I may add that I do not find it possible to find in the definition of periodical
    payment any genus of payments created from which, by the application of
    the ejusdem generis rule, a loan could be excluded nor can I get any assistance
    from the provisions of the Seventh Schedule to the Act to which reference
    was made,

    I am therefore of opinion that the loans were " benefits " within section 46.
    But this is only relevant if Lord St. Levan transferred property to the
    Company within the same section except in a fiduciary capacity, and this,
    in my opinion, he did not.

    It follows from what I have said that in my opinion the appeal should be
    allowed with costs and the cross appeal dismissed with costs and the judgment
    of Mr. Justice Groom-Johnson restored.

    Lord Normand

    MY LORDS,

    I have had the advantage of reading the opinions of my noble and learned
    friends Lord Simonds and Lord Radcliffe, and I am in agreement with them
    at all points where they are at one. It will, therefore, be possible for me to
    deal with the case without trespassing for long on your Lordships' patience.

    On the Crown's claim under sections 43 and 56 of the Finance Act. 1940,
    I can state my view quite briefly. After the death of Lord Amherst on
    7th March, 1927, there was vested in Lord St. Levan and Mr. Ponsonby a
    joint power of appointment over all the property comprised in the settle-
    ment, which they were free to exercise for the personal benefit of Lord St.
    Levan. Mr. Ponsonby was not a trustee in relation to that power, and
    Lord St. Levan was the effective dominus of the settled property. He also
    had the powers of a tenant for life under the Settled Land Act, 1925. His
    powers, derived from one or the other of these sources, enabled him to
    bring about an enlargement of the powers of investment and a realization
    and reinvestment of the settled property, to appropriate to himself in fee
    the whole or any part of the property or of substituted investments of the
    proceeds, and to make a gift or settlement of such part as he did not
    appropriate in favour of persons selected by him. By his exercise of these
    powers, the original settled property, the lands, equitable interests and invest-
    ments, were sold to the Company, part of the price was invested in the
    Ordinary shares of the Company and the balance was appropriated by Lord
    St. Levan, who also resettled the Ordinary shares in trust in such a way as to
    extinguish his life interest and to exclude himself from all further interest in
    them. In substance and in form, therefore, he took part of the trust property
    as his own absolutely, and made a gift of what remained under trust to donees
    selected by himself. Admittedly the trustees for the donees immediately
    assumed bona fide possession and enjoyment of the Ordinary shares of the
    Company. These shares were an item of property separate from the part
    of the purchase price which had not been invested in them, and which was
    represented by the preference shares of the Company and a jus crediti in a
    balance payable by the Company, both owned by Lord St. Levan. If Lord
    St. Levan had been the holder of debentures and preference and ordinary
    shares in the Company and had transferred the ordinary shares, whether by
    gift or for value, the transferee thenceforth would have retained possession and
    enjoyment of the ordinary shares to the entire exclusion of Lord St. Levan and
    of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise. The present case is in no way
    different from that and the effect of the transactions is that the possession
    and enjoyment of the ordinary shares by the trustees were retained by them to
    the entire exclusion of Lord St. Levan and of every benefit to him by contract
    or otherwise.

    16

    The application of the statutory hypothesis as provided for by section 56
    can in this respect make no difference. The fictional mutation of the Com-
    pany into a trust and of the Company's creditors and shareholders into
    beneficiaries, however far it is carried, still leaves the beneficial rights repre-
    senting the ordinary shares and the beneficial rights representing the prefer-
    ence shares and the instalments separate items of property ; and the beneficial
    rights representing the ordinary shares are, when the statutory hypothesis is
    applied, still enjoyed by the donees thereof to the entire exclusion of Lord
    St. Levan and of any benefit to him.

    On the case law of this branch of the appeal I need say nothing, since it has
    been fully dealt with by my noble and learned friends.

    The Crown's cross appeal and claim under section 46 and the sections
    which have to be read with it, as set out in the opinion of my noble and
    learned friend Lord Simonds, raise questions of some difficulty. The first
    point is whether Lord St. Levan, when he paid £100,000 for the preference
    shares in the Company, made a transfer of property within the meaning of
    section 46. My opinion is that " transfer of property " are not the usual
    words which would be naturally selected to describe a payment of money,
    though it cannot be denied that money is property or that payment is a
    transfer. I think that if it had been intended to strike at money payments
    the simple words necessary to make that intention clear would have been
    added.

    The next question is whether Lord St. Levan made a transfer to the Com-
    pany of the lands, equitable interests and investments which formed the
    original settled property otherwise than in a fiduciary capacity (section 46 (D).
    The precise wording of the subsection is of importance. If the question had
    been whether Lord St. Levan transferred the lands, to take the clearest case,
    otherwise than in a fiduciary capacity, the answer might well have been that
    he did not. For it was he who transferred the lands by the conveyance of
    26th March, 1927, and he did so in pursuance of the fiduciary power imposed
    on a tenant for life by the Settled Land Act, 1925. It could then have
    been argued with some plausibility that the inquiry was complete, and that
    there was neither necessity nor justification for pursuing it further by recourse
    to a provision under which a person may be deemed to have made a transfer
    of property.

    But when the inquiry is whether Lord St. Levan made a transfer of the
    lands, the answer may be different. I find it impossible to read section 46
    and the related sections without being forced to recognise that the same
    party may make more than one transfer within their meaning, and that
    the making of one such transfer otherwise than in a fiduciary character satisfies
    pro tanto the conditions for charging the company's assets under section 46.
    It is no answer that the same party made another transfer in a fiduciary
    capacity.

    Now by the appointment of 23rd March, 1927. Lord St. Levan made a
    disposition, as defined in section 59, by the effect of which the lands, equitable
    interests and investments, came to be included in the resources of the
    company and therefore he must be deemed to have made a transfer of the
    property to the company (section 58 (2)). Admittedly this transfer was not
    made in a fiduciary capacity. A further disposition was necessary to complete
    the transfer of the property to the company. But I think that the whole
    trust property came to be included in the company's resources by the effect
    of the appointment of the 23rd March, for without it the sale of the trust
    property to the company would not have been carried out.

    Lastly, I see no way of escaping the conclusion that the advances made
    under the Deeds of 30th January, 1933, and 4th August, 1946, were periodical
    payments and therefore benefits within the meaning of section 47, despite
    the arbitrary results and crude anomalies to which such a conclusion may
    lead.

    For these reasons I would concur in my noble and learned friend Lord
    Radcliffe's proposals for disposing of the appeal and cross appeal.

    17

    Lord Simonds

    MY LORDS,

    My noble and learned friend Lord Oaksey, who is unable to be here
    today, has asked me to say that he concurs at all points in the Opinion
    which I have just delivered.

    Lord Radcliffe

    MY LORDS,

    The original appeal relates to the Crown's claim to Estate Duty
    under section 43 of the Finance Act, 1940, that claim being assisted or
    encumbered by the provisions of section 56 of the same Act. It is no doubt
    convenient to dispose of the questions which are involved in that appeal
    before going on to deal with the cross appeal of the Crown.

    No one could suppose that section 43 is anything but an obscure section.
    So was section 11 of the Finance Act, 1900, the statutory parent of the
    present enactment. So were section 35 and section 39 of the Finance Act,
    1930, which extended the scope, without elucidating the meaning, of the
    charge imposed by the 1900 Act. All these sections have now disappeared
    and their place is taken by section 43 and the accompanying provisions of
    the Finance Act, 1940. But there still appears as a condition upon which
    freedom from duty depends that difficult phrase about bona fide posses-
    sion and enjoyment of the property being assumed and " thenceforward
    " retained to the entire exclusion of the person who had the interest
    " and of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise." There was very
    general uncertainty as to what, if not all, benefits were intended to be
    covered by these words, and as to the circumstances in which, if there
    were indeed any circumstances, a person might legitimately be found in
    the enjoyment of some contractual benefit after the termination of the
    limited interest without involving the property in continuing liability for duty.
    I think it regrettable that when, in 1940, opportunity was found to wipe out
    the old sections and to enact a new set of provisions, opportunity was not
    at the same time found to make those provisions more readily intelligible.
    I can appreciate that at any rate some of the transactions with which section
    43 and section 56 appear to be concerned are deplorable from the point
    of view of those interested in revenue collection, but for all that, the taxpayer
    is entitled to be told with some reasonable certainty in what circumstances
    and under what conditions liability to tax is incurred or else to be told
    explicitly that the circumstances and conditions of liability are just those
    which the Commissioners, of Inland Revenue in their administrative discretion
    may consider appropriate. The seventeen sections which constitute Part IV
    of the Finance Act, 1940, are expressed with what proves on investigation
    to be a vagueness so diffuse and so ambiguous that they may well produce
    in practice the second alternative while adopting in form the requirements
    of the first. This would be an unfortunate situation to have brought about.
    The prayer of Ajax—'—has been heard before in your

    Lordships' House, but I think its appeal is even stronger when obscurity
    is created by deliberate legislation than when it arises from the less wilful
    confusions of the common law.

    My Lords, I have formed the opinion that the fate of this appeal must turn
    upon the meaning that you attribute to the phrase which appears in sub-
    section 2 (a) of section 43: —" if bona fide possession and enjoyment of
    " the property in which the interest subsisted was assumed immediately there-
    " after by the person becoming entitled by virtue of or upon the disposition
    " or determination and thenceforward retained to the entire exclusion of
    " the person who had the interest and of any benefit to him by contract or
    " otherwise." For the facts of this case, complicated as they may seem, come
    down to a simple legal issue. Those facts have been fully stated in the
    opinion of my noble and learned friend, Lord Simonds, and it is quite
    unnecessary for me to travel through them again. What it comes down to

    18

    is this. The Crown's claim is for Estate Duty on the Ordinary shares of
    St. Aubyn Estates Ltd. Those shares constitute the property in which the
    deceased had a life interest at the date when he and Mr. Ponsonby executed
    the Deed Poll of 29th March, 1927 ; and it is because that Deed had the
    effect of determining his life interest in that property that the Crown prefers
    its claim under section 43. So far there is nothing in controversy. The
    Appellants, however, maintain that upon the 29th March the deceased was
    immediately and thereafter continued to be excluded from any possession
    or enjoyment of those Ordinary shares, since the whole beneficial interest
    in them belonged to others than himself, and that the possession and enjoy-
    ment so taken by or on behalf of those others was such as to exclude him
    from any benefit by contract or otherwise. This is where the whole con-
    troversy comes. For the Crown, while not disputing that after the Deed
    of 29th March the whole beneficial interest in the Ordinary shares belonged
    to others than the deceased, contends that the existence of those interests
    of which he had become the absolute owner by virtue of the Deed of 28th
    March, 1927. made it impossible to say that the possession and enjoyment
    of the Ordinary shares which had been assumed by or on behalf of those
    others was retained to the entire exclusion of any benefit to the deceased by
    contract or otherwise.

    At first sight it is difficult to see any basis for this contention. No right
    or interest that was left to Lord St. Levan after the 29th March interfered
    with the new owners' full possession and enjoyment of that " bundle of
    " rights " which constituted the Ordinary shares and which formed the pro-
    perly in which he had given up his life interest. It is true that, putting aside
    his ownership of the Preference shares, he continued to enjoy the benefit
    of the Company's contract to pay such part of the purchase price as was
    to be discharged by half-yearly instalments of £18,750 each. Certainly this
    was a benefit by contract: certainly the right to receive this money in this
    way had been created as one step in the series of transactions which began
    with the Deed of 23rd March and ended with the Deed of 29th March,
    1927. Moreover, I do not think it necessary to treat it as less than certain
    that Lord St. Levan and Mr. Ponsonby, the joint authors of all that was
    brought about at that time, intended from the first that the benefit of this
    contract, when created, should become the absolute property of Lord St.
    Levan and that the Ordinary shares should be resigned to follow the trusts
    declared by their Deed of the 29th March to the exclusion of any further
    interest of Lord St. Levan in those shares. But unless it is a valid pro-
    position of law that for the purposes of section 43 bona fide possession and
    enjoyment of property is not assumed and retained to the entire exclusion of
    any benefit to a person by contract or otherwise merely because it is found
    that after releasing a limited interest in the property that person continues
    to enjoy a contractual benefit created as part of the whole scheme in which
    that release is involved, I do not see that the recital of the facts that I have
    set out above brings the Crown any nearer to establishing its case under
    section 43. I am afraid that there is a good deal that is yet to be said on
    this appeal: but in substance the case for the Crown stands or falls by that
    proposition. If it is right, the wording of the section is indeed inapt to
    express its meaning: for to adopt it requires no more than to ascertain
    whether the deceased was left in possession of any contractual benefit at all at
    the end of the transaction and gives no significance to the question whether
    that benefit, whatever it is, is such as to trench upon the possession and enjoy-
    ment of the property in which the interest has been surrendered. My own
    view is that the whole proposition is fallacious. Nor do I think it the better
    founded if the qualification is introduced that a benefit by contract, to be within
    the mischief of the section, must be " referable to " the transaction by which
    the life interest is determined. Your Lordships were invited to accept that
    qualification because the words in question had been used by Lord Tomlin
    when delivering the Opinion of the Judicial Committee in Munro v. Com-
    missioner of Stamp Duties
    [19341 A.C.61. But there is a difference between
    using words to explain a point and using words to define a proposition:
    and the words " referable to " are in themselves of too ambiguous an import
    to afford any satisfactory gloss upon the meaning of the section.

    19

    There is this much, and not more than this much, to be said for the proposi-
    tion advanced by the Crown. It was decided long ago in A.G. v. Worrall,
    [1895] 1 QB 99, that a contractual benefit may interfere with the exclusive
    possession and enjoyment required by such a provision (in that case, section
    11 (1) of the Customs and Inland Revenue Act, 1889) even though it does not
    amount to a reservation out of the property that is the subject of the gift.
    My Lords, so it may. For my part I see nothing in the decision of Worrall's
    case that cannot readily be accepted as good law. But what did it decide?
    A father had made a present to his son of a sum of about £24,000 secured
    on mortgage and the son had bought in the equity of redemption for a
    small sum: in return for his father's gift the son had covenanted to pay him
    an annuity of £735 per annum during his life. In effect the son was returning
    to the father the income on the property given during the remainder of the
    father's life. It seems to me reasonable enough for a Court to hold in those
    circumstances that the son had not obtained the enjoyment of what was given
    free from a contractual benefit to the father which encumbered the enjoy-
    ment of the very thing that was given. To hold otherwise would have been
    to stop at the mere form of the transaction. Even if I did not think that
    Worrall's case was rightly decided, as I do, I should not think it right at this
    date to suggest that it ought to be overruled. It has stood too long, and has
    been too often relied upon. But I think it a very mistaken form of reason-
    ing to deduce from a decision that a benefit, to be within the mischief of the
    section, need not necessarily be by way of reservation out of the subject
    matter of a gift the general proposition that all benefits are within the mis-
    chief of the section, whether they are by way of reservation out of the subject
    matter of the gift or not. To deny the validity of one general proposition
    is not to assert the general validity of its opposite. I suggest, therefore,
    that your Lordships can safely put aside the case of A.G. v. Worrall as having
    no further bearing on this appeal than that of showing that the benefit of the
    instalment payments which Lord St. Levan retained was not without the
    mischief of the section merely because the Company's contract to pay them
    was neither a charge upon nor a reservation out of the property which con-
    sisted of the Ordinary shares. But it leaves unresolved the essential question
    whether that benefit was nevertheless within the mischief of the section.

    I do not believe that there is any great difficulty in answering that question.
    I think that in this, as in other cases arising on similar legislative provisions,
    there are two matters that have to be attended to before the answer can
    be given. The first is, How did the deceased come to be in enjoyment of
    that benefit by contract, the existence of which is said to compromise the
    possession and enjoyment of the property released? The second is, What
    precisely is the property the life or other interest in which has been deter-
    mined? On the first point the answer is plain. The deceased enjoyed that
    contractual benefit because he decided to create it and to take it for himself.
    This is not a case in which he had to bargain to get what he wanted: nor
    is it a case in which by some ambiguous arrangement he took back in
    substance a part of that of which he had affected to dispose. The whole
    of this scheme was brought about by an exercise of the powers of the
    deceased alone or of the deceased in conjunction with Mr. Ponsonby.
    Between them they brought the Company into being; created the instalment
    debt, the Preference and the Ordinary shares ; secured that the instalment
    debt, the cash and the Ordinary shares should become the property held
    on the trusts of the Resettlement instead of the land, investments and other
    interests transferred to the Company ; and then withdrew the cash and
    the instalment debt to become the deceased's absolute property and put an
    end to any further interest of his in the Ordinary shares. Nor can there
    be any doubt about the answer to the second point. It was the Ordinary
    shares in which the life interest was determined; not the Ordinary shares
    as they might have been had some scheme been operated other than that
    which was in fact adopted, but the Ordinary shares as in fact they were,
    shares in a Company which had acquired assets on the terms of paying for
    them in part by the satisfaction of this instalment debt.

    Now, if that was the situation, the possession and enjoyment of the
    rights which constituted the Ordinary shares were only affected by the
    existence of the instalment debt in the sense that the half-yearly payment

    20

    of the instalments reduced the resources which, had there been no debt,
    would have been available for the benefit of the shareholders of the Company.
    But I think that there is formidable authority against the view that in such
    a situation the possession and enjoyment of the relevant property is not
    exclusive of a benefit to the donor or releasor of such property. A man
    may have an arrangement which gives him contractual benefits that affect an
    estate and may subsequently make a gift of his interest in that estate: if
    he does the donee has possession and enjoyment of what is given, to the
    entire exclusion of the donor or of. any benefit to him. That is the Munro
    case
    [1934] AC 61. Shares may be made the subject of a trust for another
    person, the maker of the trust having the right under it to be one of the
    trustees, to retain in his control the voting-power in respect of the shares
    and to take an ultimate resulting interest: yet that benefit does not bring
    the property within the mischief of a similar provision. That is the Perpetual
    Trustee Co.
    case [1943] AC 425. No more is possession and enjoyment
    of a gift compromised if a man vests property in trustees upon trust to
    provide out of it certain limited benefits for a donee, but subject thereto upon
    trust for himself. That is the Cochrane case [1905] 2 I.R. 626; 1906, 2 I.R.
    200. All these decisions proceed upon a common principle, namely, that
    it is the possession and enjoyment of the actual property given that has to
    be taken account of, and that if that property is, as it may be, a limited
    equitable interest or an equitable interest distinct from another such interest
    which is not given or an interest in property subject to an interest that is
    retained, it is of no consequence for this purpose that the retained interest
    remains in the beneficial enjoyment of the person who provides the gift.

    My Lords, I think that the application of that principle is sufficient to
    destroy the Crown's claim under section 43. In substance the position of
    Lord St. Levan was the position of a man who creates a rent charge in
    his own favour upon property which is in his absolute disposition and
    then makes a gift of that property subject to that charge. Nothing is then
    given except the interest so charged. Is possession and enjoyment of what
    is given exclusive of the donor or of any benefit to him, despite his continued
    receipt of the amounts secured by his charge? I conclude that it is, for
    I cannot imagine that, had the law been otherwise, the case of Grey v. A.G.
    [1898] 2 QB 534; [1900] AC 124, would have taken the course that it did.
    In that case Earl Grey had at least created a rent charge for himself on
    parting with his estates: but I think that the judgments in the Court of Appeal
    make it plain that it was not because he had done that, but because he
    had done and secured for himself so much more than that, that liability for
    duty attached. The explanation of that decision which was offered by the
    Irish Court of Appeal in the Cochrane case makes it turn upon the existence
    of the covenants which the transferor had secured for himself by the trans-
    action and which left him still the effective master of all that he had trans-
    ferred, and the reasoning of Lord Russell in the Perpetual Trustee case seems
    to me to be directed to making the same point. I agree with those views,
    and I cannot more aptly conclude my opinion on this part of the appeal than
    by quoting what Lord Russell there says on this point (see [1943] A.C. at 446):
    " the entire exclusion of the donor from possession and enjoyment which is
    " contemplated ... is entire exclusion from possession and enjoyment
    " of the beneficial interest in property which has been given by the gift.
    " and . . possession and enjoyment by the donor of some beneficial interest
    " therein which he has not included in the gift is not inconsistent with the
    " entire exclusion from possession and enjoyment which the subsection
    " requires."

    Hitherto I have made no reference to section 56. I have not done so
    because, in face of the considerations which I regard as the determining
    considerations in this matter and which I have tried to set before your
    Lordships, I do not see what difference it makes whether section 56 (2) is
    applied or not. But, since it was the existence of this section that caused
    the Court of Appeal to decide the appeal in favour of the Crown, a decision
    to which, I gather, they would not have come had section 43 been unfortified
    by section 56, I must state briefly why it is that I do not regard that
    section as having any importance in this case. It introduces what has
    been called " the statutory hypothesis"; but it introduces that hypothesis

    21

    for a limited purpose only. The property on which Estate Duty is claimed
    remains the same: the Ordinary shares. The property in which the life
    interest has been determined remains the same: the Ordinary shares. It is
    only when the further question arises under section 43 (2) (a) whether
    possession and enjoyment of that property has been assumed and retained
    to the exclusion of the releasor and of any benefit to him that the statutory
    hypothesis comes in to test the exclusion by asking whether, even if it has
    been completely achieved in circumstances as they are, it would have been
    equally true to say that it was achieved if the Company had been trustee
    of its property to give effect to equitable rights analogous to those in fact
    created by the shares and " debentures " of the Company. If the answer
    would have been No in the imaginary state of things postulated by the
    hypothesis, then the protection of section 43 (2) (a) cannot be invoked
    by the taxpayer.

    Of course this is a clumsy device. It is impossible to say with any
    precision what are the equitable rights which ought to be thought of as
    analogous to the existing rights represented by shares and " debentures".
    It is particularly difficult in the case of shares, for the section throws
    no light on the extent to which one is supposed to retain or to discard
    the managerial powers to which the rights of Ordinary and other share-
    holders are subject but which they may ultimately control. But I do
    not think that it is necessary for Che present purpose to investigate these
    details or to try to resolve them. It can certainly be accepted that on the
    assumptions required by the hypothesis the Company holds all its assets
    as a trust fund upon trust in the first place to make thereout the payments
    to Lord St. Levan required by the instalment debt, subject thereto to make
    such payments to the Preference shareholders as may correspond to the
    rights that they would have as Preference shareholders, and subject thereto
    upon such trusts for the Ordinary shareholders as may correspond to their
    share rights, but not so as to prejudice or destroy the prior equitable
    rights. Thus there is one trust fund and different sets of equitable rights
    to be satisfied out of that fund. Thus, too, the imaginary situation on the
    29th March, 1927, was that Lord St. Levan had the equitable rights in
    that trust fund corresponding to the Preference shares and the instalments
    and he had surrendered to those interested under the Resettlement his life
    interest in the equitable rights in the trust fund corresponding to the
    Ordinary shares.

    If it were enough for the Crown to succeed that it should be possible
    to point out that after 29th March Lord St. Levan continued to enjoy
    an interest in the same trust fund as was bound in equity to satisfy those
    other equitable rights in which he had determined his life interest, then
    section 56 would be very important in this case. I think that the Court
    of Appeal held that it was enough. Here I part company with them, and
    the sentence that I have already quoted from Lord Russell's opinion in
    the Perpetual Trustee case as a summary of existing authority shows why
    I do. In brief, I do not think that turning the instalments into one kind
    of equitable right in property and the Preference and Ordinary shares into
    other kinds of equitable rights in property, as the statutory hypothesis does,
    makes them any the less distinguishable interests or properties than they
    were in their actual non-hypothetical form.

    I must now come to the Crown's cross appeal under section 46. It
    raises three principal questions. The first is whether Lord St. Levan " made
    " a transfer " of any property to St. Aubyn Estates Limited. The second
    is, whether, if he did, that was property which he " transferred in a fiduciary
    " capacity ". The third is whether, if he did make a transfer of some
    property and did not make that transfer in a fiduciary capacity only, any
    " benefits " accrued to him from the Company within the three years ending
    with his death. It is perhaps sufficient to say, since at this stage we are
    dealing with matters of principle only, that if the first question is answered
    in the affirmative, the second in the negative and the third in the affirmative,
    section 46 has imposed a charge of Estate Duty, payable by the Company
    and arising on the death of Lord St. Levan.


    22

    The first question requires that your Lordships should consider the manner
    in which three separate classes of property came to be included in the
    resources of the Company: —the freehold lands ; the investments representing
    capital moneys and the equitable interests and rights in respect of undivided
    shares of land, these interests and rights being considered as one class with
    the investments for the present purpose; and thirdly, the moneys paid on
    the subscription of Lord St. Levan's 100,000 Preference shares. It is con-
    venient to deal first with the investments in relation both to the first and
    to the second questions, since the consideration of their case raises most
    of the difficulties of interpretation that affect the others and one at least
    that is peculiar to themselves.

    If the word " transfer " is taken in its primary sense, a person makes a
    transfer of property to another person if he does the act or executes the
    instrument which divests him of the property and at the same time vests
    it in that other person. In this sense the only persons who made a transfer
    of the investments to the Company were Mr. Drummond and Mr. Ponsonby,
    the Trustees of the St. Levan Resettlement. If section 46 stood alone that
    would, I think, conclude the matter. Lord St. Levan would not have
    made this transfer. But section 58 imposes various interpretations of the
    language of the preceding sections, to which interpretations effect must be
    given: and, as I see it, it is in applying those interpretations and in discerning
    the true inter-relation between them that the first major difficulty is en-
    countered. For, in one way or another, they do certainly constitute Lord
    St. Levan a transferor.

    To begin with, there is section 58 (2). There is more than one reason
    why it should be considered before section 58 (4). It comes the earlier in
    the section. It deals explicitly with the subject of " transfer ", which sub-
    section (4) does not. And, since it refers to a disposition being made by a
    person, it incorporates within its own provisions all the extended or artificial
    meanings of that phrase which subsection (4) itself lays down. Now sub-
    section (2) is concerned to declare what persons are to be " deemed " to
    have made a transfer of property to a company. It identities them, rather
    unhappily, not so much by what they have done as by the results of what
    they or other persons have done. The word "deemed" is used a great
    deal in modern legislation. Sometimes it is used to impose for the purposes
    of a statute an artificial construction of a word or phrase that would not
    otherwise prevail. Sometimes it is used to put beyond doubt a particular
    construction that might otherwise be uncertain. Sometimes it is used to
    give a comprehensive description that includes what is obvious, what is
    uncertain and what is, in the ordinary sense, impossible. I think that it is
    in the last of these three ways that it is used in section 58 (2), for the
    subsection begins its description of the class of persons who are to be
    deemed to have made a transfer with the person the effect of whose own
    disposition has been to add the property transferred to the resources of the
    company, and ends with the person who has done no more than make a
    disposition which is " associated " with operations that have had a similar
    result.

    If I apply to Lord St. Levan this statutory conception of a transferor I find
    this consequence. The investments were transferred to the Company at
    his direction, for he so directed as tenant for life when he and Mr. Ponsonby
    jointly executed the Deed of Appointment dated 25th March, 1927. It will
    save time in this very long opinion if I say that I accept the Company's
    argument that under the Settled Land Act, 1925, he had power to direct the
    Trustees of the Resettlement to change the investments that represented
    capital moneys, and that this power had to be exercised by him in a fiduciary
    manner. I have had an opportunity of reading in advance the opinion
    of my noble and learned friend Lord Simonds and I am in full agreement
    with what he says on this point. By virtue of this operation then Lord
    St. Levan is deemed to have made a transfer of those investments to the
    Company, for they came to be included in the resources of the Company
    "by the effect of" a disposition made at his direction, and this by sub-
    section (4) is the same thing as a disposition made by him. But that
    is not the only way in which section 58 (2) requires that he must be
    deemed to have made a transfer, for it was the execution of the Deed

    23

    of Appointment dated 23rd March, 1927, made by him and Mr. Ponsonby
    that alone made possible the transfer of the investments to the Company
    in the manner in which and for the consideration for which they were in
    fact transferred. This Deed, which was the first step in the whole scheme,
    was a disposition which formed one of a series of associated operations of
    which the actual transfer of the investments was another; and on this
    ground also, therefore, I think that the Crown is entitled to treat Lord
    St. Levan as a person who made a transfer to the Company.

    There remain two points that have to be disposed of before an answer
    can be given to the problems which are raised by section 46. One is
    this: if the suppositious transfer by Lord St. Levan which arises
    by virtue of the fact that he directed the transfer of the invest-
    ments is exempted from recognition for the purposes of section 46
    by the further supposition that he made such a transfer in a fiduciary
    capacity, does this prevent Lord St. Levan from being treated as having
    made a transfer by virtue of the appointment dated 23rd March, 1927?
    On no view can that act be said to have been done in a fiduciary capacity.
    My Lords, I can only say that I can see no reason why, if one way of looking
    at the position involves no liability, that should prevent it being looked at in
    another way that does involve liability. A provision that is drawn in the
    form of section 58 (2) brings it about that quite different acts may indepen-
    dently of each other constitute a person a transferor on the occasion of a
    single transfer. If they do, the alternative is this: either the subject is
    entitled to select that act the circumstances of which suit his interest best
    as leading to exemption from or reduction of duty and to insist that the
    Crown's claim succeed or fail by consideration of those circumstances, or
    the Crown is entitled to found upon either or both of the acts and to succeed
    if its claim is good by either test. I think that the latter is the right alterna-
    tive, for I think that it accords with what are in effect the cumulative provi-
    sions of section 58 (2) and that an option of this sort is not unusual in
    taxing statutes. In my opinion therefore Lord St. Levan did make a transfer
    of the investments to the Company for the purposes of section 46 because he
    and Mr. Ponsonby executed the Appointment dated 23rd March, 1927.

    The second question is, whether, in so far as he was a transferor by
    virtue of having given a direction as tenant for life for the change of invest-
    ment that led to the investments representing capital moneys being exchanged
    for ordinary shares of the Company, he made that suppositious transfer
    " in a fiduciary capacity " within the meaning of section 46. That he acted
    in a fiduciary capacity I have already accepted: and, though the Act is
    wholly obscure on this point, I think that when a person is a suppositious
    transferor by virtue of a suppositious transfer the act, whatever it may be,
    that makes him subject to the supposition must itself be treated as a transfer
    in order to see whether the suppositious transfer was made " in a fiduciary
    "capacity" or not. The effect of section 58 (5) is to impose a special
    meaning on the words " fiduciary capacity ": it must be a fiduciary capacity
    imposed on the actor otherwise than by a disposition made by him and no
    other sort of capacity. I have felt some doubt whether the circumstance
    that Lord St. Levan created the power of investment by making
    the Appointment of 23rd March, 1927, did not result in the fiduciary
    capacity in which he gave his direction being imposed by a disposition made
    by him. But your Lordships, I believe, are unanimous in rejecting this
    construction of section 58 (5) and it is with something less than regret that
    I waive my doubts in the matter and accept the view that in giving the
    direction Lord St. Levan made a suppositious transfer in a fiduciary capacity
    only and that, regarded in this way, his transfer is exempted from recognition
    under section 46. But, as I have already said, I think that he was a supposi-
    tious transferor of the investments in another way and, as such, did not
    act in a fiduciary capacity.

    So much for the investments; and it was conceded that the equitable
    interests in undivided shares of land are for this purpose governed by the
    same considerations as apply to the investments. So I think that those too
    were transferred by Lord St. Levan. Then there is the settled land. Its
    situation is different from that of the investments in that Lord St. Levan
    was himself the conveying party and therefore made a transfer to the

    24

    Company in the ordinary sense. This he was in a position to do because the
    freehold in fee simple had been vested in him by the operation of the
    Settled Land Act, 1925, to hold the same upon trust to give effect to the equit-
    able interests from time to time subsisting under the settlement. He sold the
    land as tenant for life and transferred as trustee to give effect to the sale
    that he had made: and in this case I do not think that he could possibly
    be said to have imposed the fiduciary capacity in which he transferred by
    any disposition made by himself, for in fact the Resettlement of 1879 neither
    vested in him an estate in fee simple nor gave him a power of sale. It was
    the Act of 1925 that both transferred the fee simple to him and enacted that
    he should hold it as a trustee. Therefore when he came to transfer it he acted
    in a fiduciary capacity imposed upon him otherwise than by a disposition
    made by himself. But for section 58 (2) that would be enough to exempt
    the transfer of the settled land from the operation of section 46. That sub-
    section however raises the same difficulty as I have discussed in relation to
    the investments. If it were no more than a provision supplementary to
    section 46, in the sense that it was so drawn as to apply only to cases
    which section 46 did not cover by its own terms, it might be proper to
    ignore it in a case where, as here, section 46 did, in the natural and ordinary
    sense of " transfer ", apply. But, as I have said, I do not think that section
    58 (2) can be regarded in this way. It applies directly to Lord St. Levan, for
    the settled land came to be included in the resources of the Company by the
    effect of his conveyance. It applies to him also in the extended sense,
    for the transfer that he made was one of a series of associated operations
    of which the Appointment dated 23rd March, 1927, was one: without that
    appointment that transfer could never have been made, as it was, for a
    consideration consisting in part of payment by instalments. Here again
    therefore Lord St. Levan can be treated as a transferor in two distinct ways,
    one, as actual transferor but in a fiduciary capacity, the other, as suppositious
    transferor but acting, as such, not in a fiduciary capacity. Here again I
    think that the Crown is entitled to choose whichever way of presenting
    the matter under section 58 (2) may better suit its case and, accordingly,
    I think that there was a transfer of the settled land also for the purposes
    of section 46.

    Lastly, there is the £100.000 which Lord St. Levan paid as his subscription
    for the Preference shares. My Lords, I must say quite briefly that in my
    opinion, when he did this, he made a transfer of £100,000 to the Company
    within the meaning of this statute. Certainly the Company got £100,000
    as part of their resources: first a cheque, then a credit with Messrs. Glyn,
    Mills & Co. Certainly Lord St. Levan by giving the cheque which led to
    the transfer of bank credit reduced his own credit by an equivalent amount.
    I have spoken of Lord St. Levan as having given a cheque for £100,000,
    for I assume that he must have. In any event he must have given some
    authority to the Bankers to debit his account with £100,000 and to credit
    the Company with a like amount, and that is, I think, sufficient for the
    purpose. Whatever form the authority took, it was a disposition made by
    him and it was an essential part of the transaction by which the Company's
    resources were augmented by this £100,000. I am bound to say that in
    that state of affairs Lord St. Levan seems to me plainly to have made a
    transfer of £100,000 to the Company for the purposes of section 46 as
    interpreted by section 58 (2).

    One question remains upon which I must express my opinion. It only
    arises if your Lordships should consider, as I do, that one or more items of
    property were transferred by Lord St. Levan within the meaning of section 46.
    During the three years preceding his death he received from the Company
    sums amounting in the aggregate to £3,000 in each year by way of loan.
    These loans carried interest at the rate of 4 per cent, per annum, but the
    Company could not call for repayment of either principal or interest until
    the expiration of two years after Lord St. Levan's death. Were the sums
    so received " benefits" accruing to him from the Company within the
    meaning of section 46?

    I would answer this question by saying that they were benefits because
    section 47 of the Act has declared them so to be. That section does in
    terms declare that among the things to be treated as benefits accruing to a

    25

    deceased transferor from a company are any periodical payments out of
    the resources of the company which the deceased received for his own
    benefit. A man receives for his own benefit moneys paid to him on an
    advance by way of loan, not the less because the transaction involves an
    obligation to repay an equivalent amount at a future date with interest
    in the meantime. A " periodical payment" is defined by section 47 (2) in
    terms which give it the widest possible scope and show at any rate that
    a payment may be a benefit by way of periodical payment even though it
    is made in consideration of services rendered or by way of interest on money
    lent

    I can appreciate the force of several criticisms if loans are treated as
    benefits for this purpose. To have money advanced to one is, no doubt,
    a benefit: but to treat the whole sum advanced as itself the benefit seems
    a curious procedure. Yet the statute makes no provision for any valuation
    of the benefit, since it treats the payment itself as being the benefit. The
    procedure becomes the more curious when it is discovered that a payment
    made in respect of a loan without interest is treated as equivalent to other
    payments made in respect of loans at normal interest, high interest or even
    exorbitant interest. A loan made within the statutory period and repaid
    before death is treated as equivalent to a loan still outstanding. I appreciate
    the force of these criticisms, as I do of other criticisms that might be levelled
    at the width of the definition of " periodical payments ". But I am unable
    to find in the wording of the Act any warrant for allowing them to cut down
    what seems to me the arbitrary interpretation that is deliberately imposed
    upon us. It is not as if these criticisms depended on obscure or complicated
    considerations. They are fairly obvious, and I think that the only possible
    conclusion is that the Legislature, intending to prescribe for a branch of
    enterprise that may often involve what are at least highly artificial opera-
    tions, decided to impose its charge in the widest and most comprehensive
    terms: a decision which excludes the more normal distinctions between what
    is reasonable and what is unreasonable and the usual connotations of the
    English language.

    For these reasons I would be in favour of allowing the cross appeal of
    the Crown and of making a declaration to the effect that for the purposes
    of section 46 Lord St. Levan made a transfer of (a) the investments and the
    equitable interests in undivided shares of land (b) the settled freeholds and
    (c) the £100,000 paid as subscription for the Preference Shares, and a further
    declaration that the moneys advanced to him on loan during the statutory
    period are benefits within the meaning of the same section.

    Lord Tucker

    MY LORDS,

    I have nothing to add to what has already been said in stating my agree-
    ment with the view which is held by all Your Lordships that for the reasons
    which have been given the appeal in the present case should be allowed.

    With regard to the cross appeal and dealing first with the investments
    and equitable interests, I have formed the view—accepting as I do that
    Lord St. Levan as tenant for life had power under the Settled Land Act,
    1925, to direct a change of investment of the capital monies—that by
    the joint effect of Section 58 (2) and Section 58 (4) of the Finance Act,
    1940, he must be deemed to have made a transfer, but I think that such
    transfer was made by him in a fiduciary capacity, because the Act which
    results in the notional transfer was done in a fiduciary capacity, so that the
    resulting transfer must be regarded as having been made in that capacity
    It was, moreover, in my view a fiduciary capacity imposed upon him solely
    by the provisions of the Settled Land Act, 1925.

    But Lord St. Levan must, I think, also be deemed to have made a
    transfer of the investments by reason of the Deed of Appointment of 23rd
    March, 1927, made by him and Mr. Ponsonby, without which the subsequent

    26

    direction and transfer could not have been given and made. In executing
    this deed he was clearly not acting in a fiduciary capacity and this act
    on his part was accordingly sufficient to bring it within Section 58 (2).
    I agree with the view that if one operation which is within Sub-section (2)
    was performed in a fiduciary capacity and another operation within the sub-
    section in a non-fiduciary capacity the taxpayer cannot avoid the con-
    sequence that the second operation becomes by the " deeming" process
    a transfer within Section 46 (1). My Lords, I do not deal in greater detail
    with this aspect of the case, as I am content to say that the reasoning of
    my noble and learned friend Lord Radcliffe on the inter-relation of Sub-
    sections (2) and (4) of Section 58 and the results that follow therefrom
    appear to me convincing.

    When, however, I come to apply these sub-sections to the transfer of the
    lands the position seems to me wholly different. Here Lord St. Levan was
    himself the conveying party. He was, I think, for the reasons which have
    been stated, acting in a fiduciary capacity imposed on him by the Settled
    Land Act and in such capacity only. Like my noble and learned friend
    on the Woolsack I can see no ground for calling in aid a " deeming " section
    when that which is to be deemed has in fact taken place without its
    assistance. If the notional transfer is to supersede the real transfer with
    consequences detrimental to the taxpayer this should I think be made
    plain by unambiguous language.

    As to the £100,000 paid for the Preference Shares, I agree that to refer
    to money paid by way of subscription for shares as a transfer of property
    to the Company is an unusual use of words, none the less, not without
    some doubt, I have come to the conclusion that the words in their present
    context are wide enough to include payment in cash or by cheque. It must
    be remembered that the companies referred to are only those to which
    the section applies and that one of the commonest ways in which benefits
    of the kind enumerated in Section 47 are obtained is as a result of payment
    of money. Furthermore, Section 58 (2) once again requires consideration
    and, although it does not elucidate the meaning of the word property, it
    would be odd if a sum of money which " comes to be included in the
    " resources of the Company " is not property. Some support for this view is,
    I think, also to be obtained from Section 51.

    My Lords, I am accordingly of opinion that there have been transfers of
    property within the meaning of Section 46 which are not exempted by the
    terms of that section in the case of the investments and equitable interests
    and in the case of the £100,000 paid for the Preference Shares, but that
    the transfer of the lands is exempted. With regard to the benefits accruing
    to the deceased from the Company, I agree that the sums amounting to
    £3,000 advanced to Lord St. Levan during the 3 years preceding his
    death were benefits which accrued to him from the Company. I feel con-
    siderable doubt whether they come within the definition of periodical pay-
    ments in Section 47 (2), a definition which on the Crown's construction
    would include loans which had been repaid at the date of death, but I do
    not regard Section 47 as containing an exhaustive definition of the word
    " benefits " but merely as enumerating certain matters which are " to be
    " treated as benefits ". It does not, I think, exclude other transactions, such
    as the present, which in the circumstances of particular cases may clearly
    confer benefits on the deceased in the natural and ordinary meaning of
    that word.

    I would accordingly allow both appeal and cross-appeal.

    (12700) Wt. 8025-142 35 7/51 D.L/PA/19


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