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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 >> Allfrey v Allfrey & Ors [2015] EWHC 1717 (Ch) (23 June 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/1717.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1717 (Ch) |
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Fetter Lane, LONDON EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE CHANCERY DIVISION)
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MARTHA VIRGINIA ALLFREY |
Claimant |
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(1) JACK MERLIN SAMUEL ALLFREY (a child by his litigation friend Alexander Peter Allfrey) (2) WILLIAM JUDE ALLFREY (a child by his litigation friend Alexander Peter Allfrey) (3) STANLEY ADRIAN ALLFREY (a child by his litigation friend Alexander Peter Allfrey) (4) FRANK PETER ALLFREY (a child by his litigation friend Alexander Peter Allfrey) (5) ROSE SUSANNA ALLFREY (a child by her litigation friend Alexander Peter Allfrey) (6) MERLIN BINGHAM SWIRE (7) ANNA CARLIN SWIRE (a child by her litigation friend Alexander Peter Allfrey) (8) SAMUEL COMPTON SWIRE (9) SIR ADRIAN CHRISTOPHER SWIRE LADY JUDITH SWIRE |
Defendants |
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Mr William Massey QC (instructed by Messrs Lester Aldridge LLP, of 70, Chancery Lane, LONDON WC2A 1AF) for the First, Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth and Seventh Defendants
Mr James Rivett (instructed by Messrs Lester Aldridge LLP, of 70, Chancery Lane, LONDON WC2A 1AF) for the Sixth and Eighth Defendants
Miss Georgia Bedworth (instructed by Messrs Lester Aldridge LLP, of 70, Chancery Lane, LONDON WC2A 1AF) for the Ninth and Tenth Defendants
Hearing dates: 9th March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JEREMY COUSINS QC:
The family
The settlement
Background to the application
(1) The trusts appointed by the December 2014 Deed be modified (i) by enlarging the power of appointment conferred by clause 3 so as expressly to authorise the accumulation of income during the extended trust period, and (ii) by adding to the default discretionary income trust, in clause 5, a power to accumulate income during the extended trust period.
(2) It be ensured that a reserve share of 25 per cent of the trust fund should be held on the varied trusts but for the exclusive benefit of grandchildren and remoter issue of Sir Adrian born during the current 80-year trust period.
(3) The trustees, as a condition of the arrangement's coming into effect, execute a deed whereby the power of revocation reserved by the December 2014 Deed was released.
The resettlement issue
"There are a number of obvious indicia which may help to show whether a settlement, or a settlement separate from another settlement, exists. One might expect to find separate and defined property; separate trusts; and separate trustees. One might also expect to find a separate disposition bringing the separate settlement into existence. These indicia may be helpful, but they are not decisive. For example, a single disposition, e.g., a will with a single set of trustees, may create what are clearly separate settlements, relating to different properties, in favour of different beneficiaries, and conversely separate trusts may arise in what is clearly a single settlement, e.g. when the settled property is divided into shares. There are so many possible combinations of fact that even where these indicia or some of them are present, the answer may be doubtful, and may depend upon an appreciation of them as a whole.
Since "settlement" and "trusts" are legal terms, which are also used by business men or laymen in a business or practical sense, I think that the question whether a particular set of facts amounts to a settlement should be approached by asking what a person, with knowledge of the legal context of the word under established doctrine and applying this knowledge in a practical and common- sense manner to the facts under examination, would conclude. To take two fairly typical cases. Many settlements contain powers to appoint a part or a proportion of the trust property to beneficiaries: some may also confer power to appoint separate trustees of the property so appointed, or such power may be conferred by law: see Trustee Act 1925, section 37 . It is established doctrine that the trusts declared by a document exercising a special power of appointment are to be read into the original settlement: see Muir (or Williams) v Muir [1943] AC 468 . If such a power is exercised, whether or not separate trustees are appointed, I do not think that it would be natural for such a person as I have presupposed to say that a separate settlement had been created: still less so if it were found that provisions of the original settlement continued to apply to the appointed fund, or that the appointed fund were liable, in certain events, to fall back into the rest of the settled property. On the other hand, there may be a power to appoint and appropriate a part or portion of the trust property to beneficiaries and to settle it for their benefit. If such a power is exercised, the natural conclusion might be that a separate settlement was created, all the more so if a complete new set of trusts were declared as to the appropriated property, and if it could be said that the trusts of the original settlement ceased to apply to it. There can be many variations on these cases each of which will have to be judged on its facts."
"The cases show there is no single litmus test for deciding that question. The paradigm case for the creation of a new settlement would involve the segregation of assets, the appointment of new trustees, the creation of fresh trusts which exhaust the beneficial interest in the assets and administrative powers which make further reference to the original settlement redundant ... The absence of one or more of those features is not necessarily inconsistent with a resettlement. It seems to me that the question is one of construction of the settlement using the approach recommended by Lord Wilberforce and looking at the documents in the light of surrounding circumstances. Putting the same thing another way, it is a matter of endeavouring to ascertain the intentions of the parties."
"If an arrangement, while leaving the substratum, effectuates the purpose of the original trusts by other means, it may still be possible to regard that arrangement as merely varying the original trusts, even though the means employed are wholly different and even though the form is completely changed."
"The trustees remain the same, the subsisting trusts remain largely unaltered and the administrative provisions affecting them are wholly unchanged. The only significant changes are (1) to the trusts in the remainder, although the ultimate trust in favour of George and his personal representatives remains the same, and (2) the introduction of the new and extended perpetuity period."
"The effect of the arrangement was not to get rid of the discretionary trust but to preserve it for a longer period. This circumstance makes it equally difficult to say that the discretionary trust was in some manner (either by surrender, assurance, divesting, forfeiture or in some other manner) "determined." The arrangement of January 12, 1960, did not bring about the ending of the discretionary trust; it brought about its prolongation."
Discussion