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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Mackay'S Trustees v. Mackay'S Trustees [1897] ScotLR 34_683 (8 June 1897)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1897/34SLR0683.html
Cite as: [1897] ScotLR 34_683, [1897] SLR 34_683

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 683

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Tuesday, June 8. 1897.

34 SLR 683

Mackay'S Trustees

v.

Mackay'S Trustees.

Subject_1Succession
Subject_2Vesting
Subject_3Fee and Liferent
Subject_4Gift Qualified by Restrictions — Repugnancy.
Facts:

A truster directed his trustees at the close of a general liferent given to his widow, to “divide or convey or pay and make over the whole estate and effects then belonging to me … to and among my children … equally share and share alike … it being provided in regard to the shares of my daughters that my trustees are hereby directed to hold the share of each daughter while unmarried in trust for her behoof in liferent for her liferent use allenarly … and on the marriage of such daughter it shall be the duty and right of my said trustees” to settle her share in accordance with the directions in the deed.

M, one of the daughters who survived her father and mother, died unmarried. Held that M had a vested interest in the fee of her share of her father's estate.

Per Lord M'Laren—An original gift of a fee on partition of a residue amongst the members of a family will not be cut down to a liferent by the effect of a subsequent direction to pay the income to one or more of the objects of the gift for life, unless the primary gift is so qualified in expression as to show that no higher right is meant to be given than is more fully explained in the sequel.

Headnote:

Mr John Mackay, Edinburgh, died on 19th April 1881, leaving a trust-disposition and codicil dated respectively 16th January 1878 and 18th July 1879. By his trust-disposition Mr Mackay conveyed his whole estate to trustees. By the third purpose of it, he directed his trustees to pay the whole income of his estate (except so far as required to meet a provision in favour of his eldest son, and certain annuities) to his wife Mrs Agnes Christie or Mackay in liferent, for her liferent use only.

Page: 684

By the 9th purpose it was provided as follows:—“Immediately after the death of the longest liver of us, the said John Mackay and Agnes Christie or Mackay (until which event happens no right to any portion of the estate and effects hereby conveyed shall vest in any of my daughters), my said trustees shall proceed to realise, so far as they shall deem necessary, the estates and effects hereby conveyed, and at the first term of Whitsunday or Martinmas, which shall occur three months after the death of the survivor of us, they shall divide or convey or pay and make over the whole estate and effects then belonging to me to and among my children, except the said John Christie Mackay, equally share and share alike, the lawful issue of any of them who may have predeceased taking the parent's share, it being provided, in regard to the shares of my daughters, that my trustees are hereby directed to hold the share of each daughter, while unmarried, in trust for her behoof in liferent, for her liferent use allenarly, the interest or annual produce thereof being payable to them respectively in equal portions at Whitsunday and Martinmas, and on the marriage of such daughter it shall be the duty and right of my said trustees to take care that the share of the daughter so marrying shall be dealt with and provided for so that the same shall belong to and be held for behoof of the daughter so marrying, exclusive of the jus mariti and right of administration of her husband, and as an alimentary fund for behoof of herself during her marriage; and also that, in case no child or children be born of her marriage, she shall have power to dispose after her own death of the capital sum invested for her behoof, and also of the interest or annual produce thereof, as she shall see fit, but that only, both as regards the capital and interest, to the extent of the one-half of the share of my estate accruing to her, it being hereby expressly provided and declared that the remaining one-half of such share shall not vest in such daughter or daughters, but shall on her or their death without children fall to and be divided among my other children or their issue, in such proportions as such daughter or daughters may direct by any writing under her or their hands, which failing, such share shall fall into and form part of the residue of my estate, and be divided among my other children (the issue of any of them who may have predeceased taking the parents' share), in the same way as is above provided for in regard to the division of the residue of my estate.”

The truster was survived by his widow and by four sons and three daughters. His widow died on 18th December 1885. Of the truster's children, one, Miss Mary Mackay, died unmarried on 14th August 1896, leaving a trust-disposition and deed of settlement by which her whole means and estate, including all estate which at the time of her death she was entitled to test upon, were conveyed to trustees. On the death of Mrs Mackay, Mr John Mackay's trustees, at the request of the parties interested, continued to hold the trust-estate, and divided the free income thereof among the beneficiaries. Thereafter they from time to time realised portions of the estate, and divided the proceeds among the beneficiaries, but continued to hold the portions in which the daughters were interested, and to pay them the interest.

A Special Case was presented by (1st) Mr Mackay's trustees, and (2nd) Miss Mackay's trustees and executors.

The first parties maintained that no fee of a share in her father's estate had vested in Miss Mackay at the date of her death, and that it was not carried by her will.

The second parties maintained the contrary, and alternatively that on her death the fee of her share lapsed and fell into intestacy.

The questions submitted to the Court were—“(1) Had the said Miss Mary Mackay a vested interest in the fee of a share of the said John Mackay's estate, under the ninth purpose of his trust-disposition and settlement? (2) Had the said Miss Mary Mackay a power of disposal by mortis causa deed of the said share, or any part thereof?; or (3) Does the fee of the said share, to any, and if so to what extent, fall into and form part of the residue of the truster's estate?; or (4) Does the fee of the said share lapse and fall into intestacy?”

Argued for first parties—The deed contained no words of absolute gift but merely a direction to the trustees to divide. Moreover, the gift such as it was, was displaced by the restriction to a liferent. Accordingly the direction to pay must be read as qualified by the succeeding direction, and as not conferring a vested right on the unmarried daughters— Muir's Trustees v. Muir's Trustees, March 19, 1895, 22 R. 553; Greenlees' Trustees v. Greenlees, December 4, 1894, 22 R. 136; Spink's Executors v. Simpson, February 16, 1894, 21 R. 553; Campbell v. Campbell, December 3, 1852, 15 D. 173.

Argued for second parties—The clause began by a clear gift of fee; and that being so, it was clear from the authorities that a child could not be divested of this right by subsequently restricting the gift to a liferent, unless there was another fiar inserted. This rule was laid down in Lindsay's Trustees v. Lindsay, December 14, 1880, 8 R. 281, and had been constantly followed, the latest example being Stewart's Trustees v. Stewart, January 23, 1896, 23 R. 416; Dalglish's Trustees v. Bannerman's Executors, March 6, 1889, 16 R. 559.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord M'Laren—This case raises a question which has come to be of considerable importance in the construction of wills, the effect of a gift of a share of residue to a son or daughter followed by an instruction to trustees to hold or retain the share and to pay the income to the beneficiary for life.

The testator John Mackay left his estate for distribution to trustees. Under this

Page: 685

trust-settlement his widow had a general liferent, and after making provision for payment of legacies and the disposal of the business in which he was engaged, in terms which it is unnecessary to consider, the testator provided in the ninth purpose of his trust for the division of the residue amongst his children. The ninth purpose begins by directing that immediately after the death of the testator and his wife (“until which event happens,” he says, “no right to any portion of the estate and effects hereby conveyed shall vest in any of my daughters”) the trustees should proceed to realise the estate, and at the first term thereafter it is said “they shall divide or convey or pay and make over the whole estate and effects then belonging to me” (with certain exceptions) “to and among my children, except the said John Christie Mackay, equally, share and share alike, the lawful issue of any of them who may have predeceased taking the parent's share.” Miss Mary Mackay, whose executors are the second parties to the case, was one of the truster's daughters, and if the trust purpose had stopped here, beyond doubt a share of the residue would have vested in her. But the deed goes on to provide in regard to the shares of daughters that the trustees are to hold the share of each daughter while unmarried, in trust for her liferent use allenarly and to pay the interest half-yearly, and that on the marriage of such daughter her share is to be settled. As we are here concerned with the share of a daughter who died unmarried the subsequent provisions have only an indirect bearing on the question, which is, stated shortly, whether the direction to the trustees to hold the share of Miss Mackay while unmarried in trust for her liferent use, and with a power to settle her share on marriage, amounts to a revocation of the gift of the fee contained in the immediately preceding words. Now, a construction which should treat one member of a sentence as annulling the immediately preceding and related member does not recommend itself as probably expressing what was in the testators mind, and least of all where the subsequent gift is put as a proviso or condition of the first. But the two provisions may quite well stand together if we suppose that the testator, while giving his daughter a share of the capital, was desirous that her share should be held in trust, first, in order the better to secure to her an income for life, and secondly, to enable the trustees to carry out his purpose of settling the money in the event of the daughter's marriage. If this was the testator's intention, then it was not necessary that he should say anything on the subject of the disposal of the fee after the daughter's death, because he had already given her the fee, and by so doing had empowered her to transfer it by will or deed subject to her liferent. And again, it is an argument in favour of vesting under the direction to divide which I have quoted, that unless this direction is held to apply to Miss Mackay's share there is no express disposal of the fee of her share in the event of her dying without issue.

It was suggested in argument that when a fee is given, a direction to trustees to hold the capital in trust and to pay the income only to the legatee is ineffectual. If there had been no direction to settle the shares of daughters in the event of marriage, the observation would be well founded, because then Miss Mackay by bringing an action, or perhaps without an action, might have taken the management of her share into her own hands.

It was also suggested that the original gift or direction to divide the residue was not a substantive gift, but only an announcement of the principle of equal division as between the children. But this construction seems inadmissible when it is considered that the gift of residue was a gift to sons and daughters, and that so far as the sons are concerned it is the only gift in their favour.

In the present case it may be presumed that one reason—perhaps the chief reason—for putting the daughters' shares under trust, was to enable the trustees to fulfil the truster's direction to settle the daughters' shares on marriage. A direction to settle on marriage would of course be effectual as a condition of the gift so long as the daughter's share remained intact in the hands of trustees.

Such a direction is not necessarily inconsistent with the vesting of the fee. Miss Mackay's right was affected by this qualification during her lifetime, because she never married, but the existence of the power to settle on marriage would not, in my judgment, affect Miss Mackay's right of disposing of the fee of her share by a deed or will taking effect after her death.

I may add that there is a considerable body of authority regarding the effect of an original gift with a direction to hold in trust superadded. In the very well-considered cases of Lindsay and Dalglish the two things were held to be reconcileable. And again, in two recent cases, Greenlees, 22 R. 136, and Stewart, 23 R. 416, this principle of construction was generalised; and I think it must now be held that an original gift on partition of a residue amongst the members of a family will not be cut down to a liferent by the effect of a subsequent direction to pay the income to one or more of the objects of the gift for life. Of course there may be cases where the primary gift is so qualified in expression as to show that no higher right is meant to be given than is more fully explained in the sequel, and no rule can be laid down which will dispense with the necessity of carefully considering the effect of all the clauses, and provisions bearing on the right conferred. In the present case my opinion is that Miss Mackay had a vested interest in the fee of her share of her father's estate subject only to the effect of the directions to settle her share in the event of her marriage, and that the first question ought to be answered in the affirmative. The second question does not arise, and the third and fourth questions may be answered in the negative.

Page: 686

The Lord President, Lord Adam, and Lord Kinnear concurred.

The Court answered the first question in the affirmative and the third and the fourth in the negative, and found that the second did not arise.

Counsel:

Counsel for First Parties— Sol.-Gen. Dickson, Q.C.— Burnet. Agent— James Mackay, W.S.

Counsel for Second Parties—Dean of Faculty Asher, Q.C.— Dundas. Agent— Alexander Morison, S.S.C.

1897


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