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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Hayward v Jackson [2003] EWHC 253 (Ch) (18 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/253.html Cite as: [2003] Ch 422, [2003] EWHC 253 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
In the Matter of the Estate of
PETER MICHAEL BOWLES (Deceased)
Between
JOHN ALBERT DAVID HAYWARD Claimant
and
PENELOPE MARJORIE JACKSON Defendant
JUDGMENT
Approved by the Court for handing down
Mr Nicholas Asprey (instructed by Parker Bullen) for the Claimant
Mr David H B Holland (instructed by Battens) for the Defendant
____________________
____________________
APPROVED BY THE COURT FOR HANDING DOWN
MR NICHOLAS ASPREY (INSTRUCTED BY PARKER BULLEN) FOR THE CLAIMANT
MR DAVID H B HOLLAND (INSTRUCTED BY BATTENS) FOR THE DEFENDANT
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lawrence Collins:
I Introduction
II Background
"3. (a) I GIVE to JOHN ALBERT DAVID HAYWARD of Knoll Farm Damerham near Fordingbridge aforesaid the right to buy from my Executors my freehold land situate at Upper Burgate near Fordingbridge aforesaid comprising thirty nine acres or thereabouts as the same is edged in red on the plan thereof which will be found with my Will at the figure agreed between my Executors and the Capital Taxes Office as its value for inheritance tax purposes:
(b) my Executors shall notify the said John Albert David Hayward of his right under this clause within six months of the date of my death;
(c) if the said John Albert David Hayward wishes to exercise his right under this clause he shall inform my Executors within three months of their notifying him of his right;
(d) the right given by this clause is personal to the said John Albert David Hayward;
(e) the said John Albert David Hayward shall pay the costs of the Conveyance and any mortgage."
"For the avoidance of doubt we write to confirm that your notice is taken as being a notice under clause 3(c) of the Will of the Deceased, which now gives our client three months to exercise his right under clause 3.
As the figure under clause 3(a) has not been agreed with the Capital Taxes Office do you wish our client to propose a figure for agreement or shall the parties appoint an independent valuer?"
"Your client, if he wishes to proceed, must exercise his right by 21st April irrespective of whether a value has been agreed with the Capital Taxes Office. We appreciate that this may mean that he will be committing himself to a price still to be ascertained. There is therefore no question of appointing a valuer."
III Principal contentions
III Options, conditions and time-limits, and Re Avard
"… where there was no gift over, so that there was no question of divesting an interest vested in such ultimate donee the mere time of payment or release was not of the essence of the condition, and accordingly a subsequent release or subsequent payment by the legatee might amount to a substantial compliance with the condition. The language of the Lord Chancellor in Taylor v. Popham is clearly not limited to cases as to release from debts or payment of money, but applies generally to the performance of a condition precedent outside the time mentioned in the will but under such circumstances that the parties can be placed in substantially the same position as if the terms of the will had been strictly complied with. In the present case the direction that the settlement should be exercised within twelve months was no more than a directory provision. It was not of the essence or the substance of the condition, and it was quite clear that all the parties interested could be placed in precisely the same position as if the condition had been literally and accurately complied with."
"It is well settled by authority that where a gift in a will is made subject to a condition, even a condition precedent, to be performed within a specified time, but the condition is not in fact performed within that time, then, at any rate in the absence of an express gift over, it is always a question for the Court to determine whether the time so specified was of the essence of the matter. In determining that question the Court must have regard to what was presumably the intention of the testator in inserting the condition, what it was that he desired to bring about or to guard against; and if the Court finds that a performance of the condition at a time subsequent to the expiration of the period fixed by the testator in substance provides for the very thing that the testator intended to provide for, so that all parties can be put in substantially the same position as they would have been in had the condition been performed within the proper time, time is not regarded as of the essence, and such performance is treated as a sufficient compliance with a condition."
"It is said, that although he did not pay within the time, he did what ought to be considered as equivalent to payment, or ought to exonerate him from any charge of neglect. Now, I have more than once had occasion to say that I think this Court has gone to too great an extent in departing from the precise terms of the contracts into which parties have entered, and so in effect making other contracts for them … No authority has, however, been produced in which this court has varied the terms of a gift under which a benefit is to be taken. The rule there is (cujus est dare ejus est disponere(and if the donor choose to say that in the event of a person paying 2,500l. on or before a specified day the gift shall take effect, I do not see how the court, if the money is not paid on or before the day, can take anything as an equivalent for the payment at the prescribed time."
"It does seem to me that there may be differences between a gift subject to a condition precedent and an option, which are sufficient to account for the different courses which the authorities have taken, and if that is a possibility it is clearly my duty to follow the decision of the Court of Appeal which is at least as near and probably nearer the present case than any of the other decisions."
"That proposition seems to me very difficult to reconcile with the line of cases beginning with Taylor v. Popham and ending with the recent case before Wynn-Parry J. [Re Goldsmith], but two facts remain: one is that the Lord Chancellor did, at any rate in part, approach the question not as though it was one between trustee and beneficiaries, but as though it was one between two independent parties, one making an offer of a contract which it is at the will of the other to accept or not as he pleases. It is only, I think, upon some such footing that the conduct of the trustees could be allowed to affect the rights of the beneficiaries, and it is quite clear that the Lord Chancellor thought that in certain circumstances this might be so. The other fact is that in a case extremely like the present the Court of Appeal as long ago as 1857 decided that the option was not well exercised."
"That again, is a very strong case not altogether unlike the present, and it does not seem to have been possible to apply in that case the doctrine which has been applied in the line of cases beginning with Taylor v. Popham and ending with In re Goldsmith."
"In the circumstances it seems to me that it is my duty to follow the decision in Brooke v. Garrod, and leave the proper reconciliation of the various streams of authorities to others."
IV Conclusions