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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Leighton's Trustees v. Leighton and Others [1867] ScotLR 3_291 (8 March 1867) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1867/03SLR0291.html Cite as: [1867] ScotLR 3_291, [1867] SLR 3_291 |
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Page: 291↓
Circumstances in which held that trustees having formally resolved to bring an action of multiple poinding for winding up the trust, the share of a beneficiary dying before the action was raised, had vested.
Alexander Leighton, tenant in Drumcairn, by his trust-disposition directed his trustees to hold his estate for behoof of his three sons equally, either paying them the income of their shares, or buying annuities for them, or making money advances to them on any fit occasion. The shares were not to vest until payment. The advances were to bear interest until repayment or readjustment, the trustees having the power to enforce repayment when they thought proper. The testator died in 1857. At that date two of the sons, Robert and Stewart Leighton, had had advances made to them by the testator himself, which were to be reckoned against them in accounting to them for their shares of the trust-estate. The trustees, during their management of the trust, made advances to the sons at various times. They gave over the crop and stocking of certain farms to Stewart, taking his bond for the amount, and in 1860 the advanced him a sum of about £3000, to enable him, jointly with his brother George, to buy a property called Westerton. Altogether Stewart's advances amounted to more than a third of the trust-funds. Stewart Leighton died in February 1865. This multiple poinding was raised in October following. The question was, whether Stewart's share of the trust-estate had vested in him before his death, so as to be carried by his disposition and settlement to Mrs Soutar, who claimed in the action as his disponee?
The Lord Ordinary (Barcaple) held, on a view of the whole circumstances of the case, looking to the state of accounts, and to the minutes of the meetings of the trustees, that vesting had taken place. In 1861 the trustees had contemplated bringing the trust to an end, and had taken legal advice as to their power to do so, while in November 1864 they “resolved to institute an action of multiple poinding, in order to obtain a free and indisputable discharge of their trusteeship.” The Lord Ordinary held this to be a distinct resolution by the trustees, never departed from, to wind up the trust immediately, on the footing of making over their shares to the sons absolutely. He therefore sustained Mrs Soutar’s claim.
Robert, one of the surviving sons of the testator, reclaimed.
Young and Broun for him.
Gifford and Spittal for Mrs Soutar.
At advising,
Page: 292↓
Lord Benholme and Lord Neaves concurred. The Lord Justice-Clerk not having been present at the hearing of the case, did not take part in the advising.
Agent for Leighton— T. Sprot, W.S.
Agents for Soutar— Mackenzie, Innes, & Logan, W.S.