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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Lord Advocate v. M'Neill [1866] UKHL 236 (15 March 1866) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1866/01SLR0236.html Cite as: 1 ScotLR 236, [1866] UKHL 236 |
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Page: 236↓
Subject_Donation — Bill — Indorsation — Delivery.
Held (rev. Court of Session) that a bill cannot be validly transferred by indorsation without delivery, and circumstances in which held that delivery had not been proved.
This is an appeal from an interlocutor of the First Division of the Court of Session.
The respondent, Mr Dugald M'Neill, is the executor of his mother, Mrs Margaret Campbell or M'Neill, who died on the 12th of May 1844, and also of his brother, Lachlan M'Neill Campbell, who died on the 2d May 1852. On the 4th of October 1852 he gave up in the Commissary Court of Argyllshire an inventory of his deceased mother's personal effects, accompanied by an affidavit of the same date, in which he described himself as his mother's executor, and declared her personal estate to be of the value of £198, 16s. 1d. Along with this inventory he recorded a document described as his mother's last will and testament, which is, however, invalid and ineffectual in consequence of an informality. He thereafter paid a duty of £2, being the inventory duty applicable to a testate succession of the amount sworn to by him. On the 14th of the same month the respondents gave up an inventory of the personal effects of the said Lachlan M'Neill Campbell, which was therein stated to be of the value of £6034, 8s. 6d., and upon this sum he paid a duty of £120. On the 14th of August 1855 the respondent presented to the Commissioners of Inland Revenue an application for return of £118 of the duty so paid, upon the ground that he had discharged debts dne by the deceased, and payable out of his personal estate, to the amount of £5892, 6s. 2d., leaving only £142, 2s. 4d. as the balance on which duty was exigible. In the course of a correspondence which ensued the Revenue officials discovered that a holograph will had been executed by Mrs Campbell subsequent to the invalid testamentary writing recorded by the respondent. This will is in the following terms:—“ Drumdressaig, 20th January 1838.—My dear Dugald,—Circumstances has occurred that has prevented me executing a settlement of my money until that is in my power I now write you to say that all I have is yours—you making up Bella's money to three thousand three hundred—she having all my little trinkets, &c.—Your affect. mother, Margt. M'Neill.” The person referred to as “Bella” is the respondent's sister, and the Commissioners of Inland Revenue being advised that he had so made up her money by the payment to her of £1300 out of the contents of a bill for £6000, which was the property of Mrs M'Neill at the time of her death, callled upon the respondent to give up an additional inventory of his mother's estate, and agreed upon his doing so, and paying the additional duty, to repay him £70 of the duty paid upon the succession of Lachlan M'Neill Campbell. The agent of the respondent thereupon stated that the bill for £6000 was specially endorsed in favour of his client by the creditors of Mrs M'Neill, and delivered to him some time before her death, and that the interest has ever since been paid to him. The Inland Revenue officials thereupon proposed to withdraw their claim for additional duty on the part of the Crown upon the one estate, on condition that the respondent withdrew his claim for return of duty on account of the other. To this the respondent would not accede, and on the 13th of December 1861 raised an action against the appellant as representing Her Majesty, concluding for repayment of the sum of £70, being the duty paid in excess by him on the succession of Lachlan M'Neill Campbell. A counter-action was thereupon brought by the appellant for payment of the sum of £88 due upon Mrs M'Neill's succession. A proof was allowed to each of the parties, and after debate Lord Ormidale, Ordinary in Exchequer causes, pronounced an interlocutor conjoining the actions, finding that the respondent failed to establish that the bill for £6000 had been made over to him as a donation, that its contents were therefore in bonis of Mrs M'Neill at the time of her death, and that he was therefore liable to pay the sum of £88, being the duty applicable to that amount, less the £1300 paid to Miss Isabella M'Neill. His Lordship also found that the respondent was entitled to repayment of £70 on account of duty paid on Lachlan M'Neill Campbell's succession. Against this decision the respondent presented a reclaiming note to the Judges of the First Division, who upon the 6th February 1864 altered the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor, decerned against the appellant in the action brought against him by the respondent, and assoilzied the respondent from the conclusions of the action brought against him by the appellant. Lord Deas dissented ( 2 Macph. 626).
Against this interlocutor the present appeal is brought.
The Lord Advocate, for the Crown, said the first presumption as to the endorsement of a bill of exchange was, that it had been endorsed for value. That presumption could not arise in the present instance, because the holder himself admitted that he gave no value for it. Then, upon a question whether a particular act or deed constituted a donation or a trust, the onus probandi lay upon the person alleging donation. Donation was never presumed, according to the law of Scotland; but the learned Judges in the Court below had apparently overcome that presumption by two objections—namely, that a bill is supposed to be endorsed for value, and that under the statute of 1696 a trust in such a case as this could only be proved by the truster's writ or oath. His Lordship quoted Lord Stair (B. 4, tit. 45, sec. 17) to the effect that a man who gave gratuitously was presumed to intend a trust only “donatio non presumitur.” Mr Erskine also (Inst. 3, 3, 92) laid down the same rule. Henderson v. M'Culloch
Page: 237↓
The Solicitor-General (Sir R. P. Collier) then followed on the same side, and in commenting upon the evidence, said it was remarkable the respondent had not called Mr Peter Campbell, who was a witness of the greatest importance.
Mr Anderson explained that he could not call witnesses from the other world.
The Solicitor-General said he was willing to accept his learned friend's statement that the witness was dead, but it did not appear from the case.
Mr Anderson said his client informed him that the witness had been dead for many years; he begged to disclaim any personal knowledge of the fact.
The Solicitor-General then proceeded to remark upon the presumption of Scotch law that an endorsement was made for value received.
Mr Anderson said there were still points of variance arising in the city of London.
The Solicitor-General than continued his argument, and submitted that a donation had not been proved by the respondent, and that consequently the contents of the bill for £6000 were in bonis of Mrs Campbell at the time of her decease, and were therefore liable to duty.
Mr Anderson, on the part of the respondent, admitted that it was a rule of Scotch law that donation was not to be presumed; there were, however, exceptions to that rule, one being that a transfer to a child was presumed to be a donation. Erskine, B. 3, tit 3, sec. 92. Another institutional writer, Lord Bankton (B. r, tit. 9, sec. 11, 17, 19), also supported that doctrine. Further, as regarded authorities it would be found that there was no presumption against donation in the case of a child when the transfer was completed (Hume's Decisions, 295; Braidwood v. Braidwood ( 14 S. 64); and Fyfe v. Kedslie, 9 D. 853)—a case decided by the whole Court).
Mr Anderson said there were many others. In Morison's Dictionary, p. 1498, and subsequent pages—under the title presumption—a whole string of cases would be found. Then the onus probandi lay upon the Crown, which sought to invalidate a complete legal title.
Mr Anderson said there was not; but there was a presumption upon that subject which he would refer to presently. The markings on the back of the bill, too, of interest being paid, were admissible in evidence, as being against the writer's interest, to show that he was the real owner
Mr Anderson said undoubtedly; as was also the case when a bill was made payable at sight. Then as to endorsation, that was presumed by the law of Scotland to have been made at the date it bore, so that thus the bill in the present case had become the property of the respondent six years before his mother's death. Then as to delivery, Maitland v. Forbes ( 5 Brown's Suppl. 491) decided that a bond of provision is regarded as delivered on the day it bore date. With reference to the testamentary writings he thought them both invalid, but assuming that the latter was good it was quite consistent with a gift of this bill. Then from the evidence, and particularly that of Miss Maclean, whose interest must be regarded as opposed to that of her brother, it was plain that she perfectly understood from her mother that the latter had made an absolute gift of the bill to Dugald, and had never interfered with the contents of the bill nor received the interest which was paid upon it. He therefore submitted that this appeal should be dismissed with costs.
The Lord Chancellor—There is no direct evidence in whose possession the bill was.
Mr Anderson said there was not.
Sir Hugh Cairns then followed on the same side. He contended that the maxim donatio non presumitur merely meant that the mere custody of property was not to raise a presumption of donation, but had no application when the legal title was complete. Here the legal title was completed, and that in the only mode in which it was possible to confer a title—namely, by endorsement. He begged to refer to Wilson's Thomson's Bills of Exchange, pp. 20 and 125, where the difference between deposit receipts and bills of exchange was very conveniently stated. He protested against the onus probandi being cast upon him, but a reference to the evidence showed that Mrs Campbell did not part with all her means of maintenance by making a gift of this £6000 to her son. The memoranda on the back of the bill—markings of interest and of capital paid—were admissible in evidence as entries against the writer's interest, and show that he was the real owner. The endorsement must be presumed to have been made at the date it bore. The respondent was executor of Mrs Campbell; but that could make no difference. It would be very hard if a person who was subsequently appointed should be bound to prove that he had received a bill in a legal manner. He ventured to say there was no such absurd doctrine in the law of Scotland as that which the Lord Ordinary had laid down—namely, that a donation inter vivos could not be proved by parole evidence.
Sir Hugh Cairns said he would content himself with less exciting illustrations; besides, in such a case, the presumption of donation might possibly be stronger than in any other. He would therefore refer to the evidence in the present case.
Page: 238↓
Sir Hugh Cairns said he would not follow their example, but must refer to it for the purpose of showing that the valid will was not made subsequently to the time at which he submitted the gift of the £6000 bill was made. He submitted, in conclusion, that the endorsement conferred a legal title which there had been no evidence produced to invalidate.
The Lord Advocate then briefly replied upon the part of the appellant.
Judgment was given to-day (March 23).
The question decided is that not only endorsement, but also delivery, is requisite to the valid transfer of a bill of exchange, and that in the particular case no delivery was made.
The Lord Chancellor said—The respondent in this appeal, upon his mother's death, paid succession duty upon the sum of £198, 16s. 1d., which he alleged to be the value of her estate. In addition to that sum, however, the officers of Inland Revenue allege that Mrs M'Neill was at the time of her death possessed of £6000, the contents of a bill of exchange dated 22d November 1838, drawn by her upon Lachlan M'Neill Campbell, and accepted by him. The respondent denies that that was so; but he paid duty on the sum of £1300, which was part of the £6ooo. Two actions were brought—one on the part of the Crown to recover the amount of stamp duty due upon this sum of £6ooo, and the other by the respondent against the Crown to obtain repayment of what be alleged he had paid in excess as duty upon the succession of Lachlan M'Neill Campbell. It was admitted, however, that the question at issue in both actions was simply whether this £6000 formed part of Mrs M'Neill's estate at her death. If it did, then succession duty was exigible upon it. That Mrs M'Neill was at one time entitled to the bill is not denied; but Dugald alleges that she had subsequently endorsed it to him. Now, endorsement is not sufficient to transfer the property in a bill of exchange, if by that is meant the mere writing upon its back; it is further necessary that it should be delivered to the endorsee. Now Dugald has utterly failed to show that he ever had possession of this bill in his mother's lifetime, and its being in his hands now is as much attributable to the fact that he is his mother's executor as that he is an endorsee. The bill was produced, and it was argued for Dugald that the markings of payment of interest upon its back, as being against his interest, went to show that he was its real owner. But then there is nothing to show that those markings were made at the time they profess to be. They are all in Dugald's handwriting, and all apparently written at the same time, and with the same ink. It is improbable, too, that the interest would be paid for so many years with such perfect regularity as the dates would denote, and I observe that one payment bears to be made upon a Sunday, which is hardly credible. I beg, therefore, to advise your Lordships that there never was any delivery of this bill of exchange; and if that is so, then the question as to what presumption arises from its endorsement it is unnecessary to decide. I move your Lordships to reverse the interlocutors appealed against, and to affirm that of the Lord Ordinary.
Interlocutors reversed.
Counsel for Appellant— The Lord Advocate Moncreiff), the Attorney-General (Palmer), the Solicitor-General (Collier), and Mr Agnew. Agent— Mr Angus Fletcher.
Counsel for Respondent— Sir Hugh Cairns, Q.C., and Mr Anderson, Q.C. Agent— Mr William Sime, S.S.C.