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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Marshall's Trustees, Petitioners [1897] ScotLR 34_343 (30 January 1897)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1897/34SLR0343.html
Cite as: [1897] SLR 34_343, [1897] ScotLR 34_343

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 343

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Saturday, January 30. 1897.

34 SLR 343

Marshall's Trustees, Petitioners.

Subject_1Trust
Subject_2Power to Sell
Subject_3Prohibition by Truster
Subject_4Trusts (Scotland) Act 1867 (30 and 31 Vict. cap. 97), sec. 3.
Facts:

By a codicil to his trust-disposition a truster directed his trustees as follows:—“As I consider that the value of property in B will improve, I direct and appoint my trustees to hold and retain the property known as K, belonging to me, and not sell or dispose of the same” before the truster's youngest son attained majority. The trust-disposition gave the trustees a general power to sell the trust-estate.

Held (Lord M'Laren dub.) that the Court had no power under section 3 of the Trusts Act 1867 to authorise the sale of the trust-estate dealt with by the codicil before the date fixed by the truster, however expedient such sale might be in the interest of the trust.

Headnote:

Mr John Marshall, coal merchant, Leith, executed a trust-disposition and settlement by which he disponed his whole estate to trustees for the purposes therein mentioned. He requested and authorised them to carry on for the benefit of the family the business of John Marshall & Company at Borrowstounness, with power, however, to wind up the business or sell their shares as they should see fit. The truster further conferred on the trustees power to continue to hold his investments as at his death or reinvest the same, to lease, sell, or dispose of all or any part of the trust-estate, all as therein specified.

By a codicil the truster provided—“ Second, As I consider that the value of property in Borrowstounness will improve. I direct and appoint my trustees to hold and retain the property known as Kinglass Brewery, belonging to me, and not to sell or dispose of the same before the youngest of my sons by my present marriage attains twenty-one years of age.”

Mr Marshall died on 1st January 1879, survived by nine children, and the trust was managed up to the present time by the

Page: 344

original trustees and one who was assumed in 1891.

Mr Marshall's trustees presented a petition craving the Court for power to sell Kinglass Brewery. At the date when the petition was presented all the truster's children had attained majority with the exception of the youngest, who would attain that age in February 1898.

The petitioners averred that the trust-estate was in a very embarrassed condition, the present estimated value being about £4000, while there were bonds and other debts over it to the amount of £4500.

They averred further—“In order to protect the estate and pay off the debts, it is necessary to realise the heritable property, including the property known as Kinglass Brewery. It is considered there is no chance of its improving in value, and the present would be a good time to sell. Had the said Andrew Pratt Marshall been of age, the petitioners would, under their powers under the trust-deed, have at once disposed of it, but owing to the terms of the codicil referred to, special powers are required to enable them to do so.”

There was no opposition to the petition.

The Lord Ordinary ( Stormonth Darling) reported the petition to the First Division.

Note.—My difficulty in granting the prayer of this petition arises from the express terms of the prohibition against selling. In several of the reported cases under section 3 of the Trusts Act a distinction has been drawn between a positive direction not to sell (as in Hay's Trustees, June 13, 1873, 11 Macph. 694) and a destination from which it could be inferred that sale was not in the testator's mind (as in Weir's Trustees, June 13, 1877, 4 R. 876). Cases of the former class have been held not to fall within the statute, because however great the expediency of selling might be, it was impossible to affirm that the power asked was ‘not inconsistent with the intention’ of the trust.

In Whyte's Factor v. Whyte, Jan. 10, 1891, 18 R. 376, this view prevailed, because certain heads were excepted from the general power of sale. In Sutherland's Trustees, however, July 20, 1892, 29 S.L.R. 903, where there was a somewhat similar exception, the Court granted power of sale, in order to preserve the trust-estate against the diligence of creditors.

The circumstances of the present case as stated in the petition have a strong resemblance to those in Sutherland's case, and much may depend on the precise extent to which the trustees are being pressed by creditors. I have thought it better not, at my own hand, to incur the expense of a remit to a man of business, but I have asked the petitioners to be prepared with exact information on this head.

It is to be observed that the prohibition here expires in February 1898, so that unless creditors are very urgent, the trustees could accomplish their purpose in little more than a year without any authority from the Court. This circumstance was founded on by counsel as diminishing the force of the prohibition, but it may be replied that the prohibition while it lasts is couched in as strong terms as could well be used. It is not merely that this particular property is excepted from a general power of sale (as in Whyte and Sutherland), but that the trustees are directed ‘not to sell or dispose of the same‘ before the majority of the testator's youngest son.”

The chief part of petitioners' argument is sufficiently indicated in the Lord Ordinary's note. He further argued that the codicil was merely for administrative purposes, and did not indicate the main design of the trust, and that accordingly a prohibition contained in it was not so binding as one in the trust-deed itself.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—This testator has in so many word directed and appointed his trustees to “hold and retain” this property, and “not to sell or dispose of the same” before a certain date. I am quite unable to get over this direction, and think on that ground we should refuse the petition.

Lord Adam—I am of the same opinion. We have statutory authority for granting such a petition, if a sale is not inconsistent with the purposes of the trust. There is in this deed a direct prohibition against a sale before a certain date, and I do not see how it can be said that a sale before that date could be consistent with that direction.

Lord M'Laren—I understand that this petition is maintained on the ground that the direction contained in the codicil is not one of the main purposes of the trust, but is only an administrative direction. That appears from the preamble to the clause where the truster states that he considers the value of property in Bo'ness will improve, and for that reason he gives the direction to defer selling his property there until his youngest child should be of age. Now, it must be admitted that there may be directions in a trust which in some measure conflict with the notion of a power of sale, and which will not exclude the action of the Court under the Trust Acts. The mere omission of a power of sale may indicate that the truster did not intend that there should be a sale; or there may be cases where it is shown by implication that the truster did not contemplate a sale, yet if the necessity arises, the Court may be legitimately moved to grant the statutory power of sale, which the truster, not foreseeing the circumstances, did not himself grant. The question is one of degree, and unless this administrative direction is to be treated as having that positive character which would exclude the statutory jurisdiction, I should be disposed to think that the power might be granted on the ground that this is a direction intended only to secure as large a price as possible, and is not one of those conditions to which the statute refers as “the purposes of the trust,” or as the Lord President

Page: 345

in a previous case has called them “the main purposes” of the trust.

But as your Lordships think that the case is one where an order of sale would be inconsistent with the purposes of the trust, I am content that the petition should be dismissed, because power of sale should only be granted where the question of competency is free from doubt.

Lord Kinnear—I agree. The statute requires in order to the exercise of the power which it gives the Court to enable trustees to sell where the trust-deed contains no such power, that two conditions shall be satisfied— first, that the sale shall be expedient for the execution of the main purposes of the trust; and second (and equally imperative with the first), that it shall not be inconsistent with the intention of the truster.

Now, a sale may or may not be expedient for the execution of the general purposes of the trust. I assume that it will be so, although there has been no inquiry for the purpose of ascertaining the facts. Mr Smith tells us that it will be, and I therefore take it for granted for the purposes of the argument. But assuming that it will be expedient the further question arises, whether it is consistent with what the truster intended ? On this matter I can have no doubt whatever, because he says in so many words that the trustees are not to sell before 1898.

The Court refused the petition.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Petitioners— R. E. M. Smith. Agents— J. & A. Peddie & Ivory, W.S.

1897


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