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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Scottish Burial Reform & Cremation Society v Glasgow Corp [1967] UKHL 3 (26 July 1967) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1967/3.html Cite as: [1967] UKHL 3, [1968] AC 138 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/1157
Lord Reid
Lord Guest
Lord Upjohn
Lord
Wilberforce
Lord Pearson
HOUSE OF LORDS
SCOTTISH BURIAL REFORM AND
CREMATION
SOCIETY LIMITED
v.
CORPORATION OF CITY OF
GLASGOW
Lord Reid
MY LORDS,
The
Appellants seek a declarator that they are entitled to remission
of
rates payable to the Respondents in terms of section 4 (2) of
the Local
Government (Financial Provisions etc.) (Scotland) Act
1962. That section
grants a partial remission where lands are
occupied by a charity and are
wholly or mainly used for charitable
purposes. If the Appellants are a
charity it is not disputed that
the second requirement is satisfied in this
case. The question for
decision is whether they are a charity. Section 4
of the Act
provides that charity means an institution or other
organisation
established for charitable purposes only, and that "
charitable" is to be
construed in the same way as if it were
contained in the Income Tax Acts.
It is well settled that that
means that we have to apply the English law of
charities.
The
Appellants are a limited company incorporated in 1890. Their
leading
objects are:
" (a)
To promote reform in the present methods of Burial in Scotland,
"
both as regards the expense involved and the dangerous effects on
the
" public health.
" (b)
To promote inexpensive and at the same time sanitary methods
"
of disposal of the dead, which shall best tend to render the
remains
" innocuous; and, in particular to promote the method
known as
" Cremation."
Their
Memorandum of Association prohibits any payment to members by
way
of dividend or profit and prohibits any payment to any director;
and
it farther provides that on a winding up nothing is to be
distributed to
members but any assets are to be transferred to
some other organisation
having similar objects. The paid up
capital is £3,492.
The
Appellants have for many years carried on a crematorium in
Glasgow,
the average number of cremations per annum being now over 2,000.
They
charge fees which are not intended to yield a profit, but in many
years
there has been a surplus, and, in addition to owning the
premises for which
they know seek rating relief, they have
substantial reserve funds.
It is not
disputed that to be a charity they must shew not only that
their
purposes are beneficial to the community but also that those
purposes are
within the spirit and intendment of the preamble to
the Statute of
Elizabeth (now set out in the Mortmain and
Charitable Uses Act 1888
section 13).
In the
Court of Session the Lord Ordinary and the Second Division (the
Lord
Justice-Clerk, Lord Strachan and Lord Wheatley, Lord
Walker
dissenting) dismissed this action on the ground that the
Appellants'
averments are irrelevant. All but Lord Walker held
that they had failed
to bring their purposes within the spirit and
intendment of the preamble to
the statute of Elizabeth. The Lord
Ordinary, Lord Strachan and Lord
Walker held that their purposes
were beneficial to the community. The
Lord Justice-Clerk and Lord
Wheatley held that their averments were
insufficient to justify
that conclusion.
The
Appellants' main purpose and activity is to promote and
afford
facilities for cremation. In this they were pioneers, and
it may be that, if
the question had arisen soon after 1890, it
would have been necessary to
adduce evidence of benefit to the
public. But I do not think that that is
now necessary. It is
common knowledge that in all parts of the United
Kingdom
cremations are now very numerous. And the propriety of
2
cremation
was recognised by Parliament as long ago as 1902 (Cremation
Act
1902). Local authorities now have power to conduct crematoria,
and
Glasgow now has a municipal crematorium. I cannot see why
farther
evidence of public benefit should be required. If there is
a public benefit,
the Appellants cannot on the facts of this case
be disqualified because there
is or might also be a profit or
benefit to individuals involved in the
prosecution of their
objects. Nor can they be disqualified because the
benefit does not
extend to a sufficiently large section of the community.
But the
Appellants must also shew that the public benefit is of a kind
within
the spirit and intendment of the Statute of Elizabeth. The
preamble
specifies a number of objects which were then recognised
as charitable. But
in more recent times a wide variety of other
objects have come to be
recognised as also being charitable. The
Courts appear to have proceeded
first by seeking some analogy
between an object mentioned in the preamble
and the object with
regard to which they had to reach a decision. And
then they appear
to have gone farther and to have been satisfied if they
could find
an analogy between an object already held to be charitable and
the
new object claimed to be charitable. And this gradual extension
has
proceeded so far that there are few modern reported cases
where a bequest
or donation was made or an institution was being
carried on for a clearly
specified object which was for the
benefit of the public at large and not of
individuals, and yet the
object was held not to be within the spirit and
intendment of the
Statute of Elizabeth. Counsel in the present case were
invited to
search for any case having even the remotest resemblance to this
case
in which an object was held to be for the public benefit but yet
not
to be within that spirit and intendment. But no such case
could be found.
There is,
however, another line of cases where the bequest did not
clearly
specify the precise object to which it was to be applied
but left a discretion
to trustees or others to choose objects
within a certain field. There the
Courts have been much more
strict, so that if it is possible that those
entrusted with the
discretion could, without infringing the testator's
directions,
apply the bequest in any way which would not be charitable
(for
example, because it did not benefit a sufficiently large
section of the public)
then the claim that the bequest is
charitable fails. But that line of cases
can have no application
to the present case, and it is easy to fall into error
if one
tries to apply to a case like the present judicial observations
made
in a case where there was a discretion which could go beyond
objects strictly
charitable.
In the
present case the Appellants make a charge for the services which
they
provide. But it has never been held that objects, otherwise
charitable,
cease to be charitable if beneficiaries are required
to make payments for
what they receive. It may even be that public
demand for the kind of
service which the charity provides becomes
so large that there is room for
a commercial undertaking to come
in and supply similar services on a
commercial basis. But no
authority and no reason has been put forward
for holding that when
that stage is reached the objects and activities of the
non-profit
earning charitable organisation cease to be charitable.
If then
all that is necessary to bring the objects and activities of
the
Appellants within the spirit and intendment of the preamble to
the Statute
of Elizabeth is to find analogous decided cases, I
think that there is amply
sufficient analogy with the series of
cases dealing with burial. I would
therefore allow this appeal.
Lord Guest
MY LORDS,
I have had
the advantage of reading the speeches of my noble and
learned
friends, Lord Reid and Lord Wilberforce. I agree with them that
the
appeal should be allowed.
Lord Upjohn
MY LORDS,
In this
appeal the Appellant Company claim rating relief for the years
1962/3
in respect of certain premises owned and occupied by them at Tresta
3
Road,
Glasgow, by virtue of section 4 (2) (a) of the Local
Government
(Financial Provisions &c.) (Scotland) Act, 1962.
That section grants a certain
remission of rates in respect of
lands or heritages occupied by a charity
which is wholly or mainly
used for charitable purposes. It is common ground
between the
parties that the words " charity " and " occupation
for charitable
purposes " are to be construed by the law of
England and not by the rather
broader principles applicable to the
law of Scotland.
The
Appellant Company was incorporated in 1890 and its principal
objects
expressed in its Memorandum of Association are:
" 3.
(a) To promote reform in the present methods of Burial in
Scotland,
" both as regards the expense involved and the
dangerous effects on the
" public health.
" (b)
To promote inexpensive and at the same time sanitary methods
"
of disposal of the dead, which shall best tend to render the
remains
" innocuous; and, in particular to promote the method
known as
" cremation.
" (c)
To publish information on all matters tending to promote Burial
"
Reform or Cremation, in the form of books, circulars, reports or
"
transactions."
Clause 4
of the Memorandum of Association provided that the income
and
property of the Appellant Company should be applied solely
towards the
promotion of the objects of the Appellant Company as
set forth in the
Memorandum and that no portion should be paid or
transferred directly or
indirectly by way of dividend, bonus or
otherwise howsoever by way of
profit to members of the Company,
and Clause 7 provided that upon a
winding up any surplus should be
given or transferred to some other
organisation having objects in
whole or in part similar to the objects of the
Appellant Company
and, if that was impracticable, then to some charitable
object.
The
Appellant Company seems to have done little in relation to
Clause
3(c) of its Memorandum in the way of publishing matters
tending
to promote burial reform or cremation, but it at once
provided a crematorium
in Glasgow which seems to have been a great
success over the years and
probably this was the most sensible and
practical way of promoting and
advertising the benefits of
cremation. The Appellant Company makes,
naturally, charges for the
services is performs but in accordance with the
provisions of its
Memorandum no part of those charges has been applied
to the
benefit of the members, and although the Appellant Company
has
substantial reserves it has not been argued before your
Lordships that the
objects of the Appellant Company are thereby
precluded from being strictly
charitable. It is quite clear that
the mere making of a charge for the services
rendered does not
prevent an organisation, otherwise charitable, from being
charitable
(see Brighton College v. Marriott [1926] A.C. 192 at
204;
Campbell's School case [1964] 1 W.L.R. 912 ; the
Falkirk Temperance Trust
case 1927 S.C. 261) and many other
examples could be cited. Furthermore, it
has not been suggested in
this case that the Appellant Company is carrying
on anything in
the nature of a trade.
Before
your Lordships, as in the courts below, the matter has been
argued
upon the basis, first, does the provision of a crematorium
fall within the
fourth class of Lord Macnaghten's famous
classification in Pemsel's case, that
is: " trusts for
other purposes beneficial to the community not falling under
"
any of the preceding heads " ([1891] A.C. at 583). But it is
familiar law
that not every such purpose is charitable so,
secondly, the Appellant Company
must establish that it falls
within the spirit and intendment of the preamble
to the Statute of
Elizabeth (see Re MacDuff [18961 2 Ch. 451 per Lindley L.J.
at
466 and Williams' Trustees v. Commissioner of Inland Revenue
[1947]
A.C. 447 per Lord Simonds at page 455.
Upon the
first point it must be remembered that Lord
Macnaghten's
classification was taken from Sir Samuel Romilly's
argument in Morice v.
Bishop of Durham (10 Vesey 522 at
531) 162 years ago when the great
majority of the inhabitants of
the country were living in conditions which
to-day would be
regarded as of the utmost squalor. The concept of purposes
beneficial
to the community might then appear to have the qualities of a
4
class and
so perhaps to a lesser extent in 1891. This so-called fourth class
is
incapable of further definition and can to-day hardly be regarded as
more
than a portmanteau to receive those objects which enlightened
opinion would
regard as qualifying for consideration under the
second heading.
My Lords,
I agree with the majority of the Second Division that the
objects
of the Appellant Company fall well within this fourth division.
The
disposal of the dead is, and always has been, not merely a
purpose
beneficial to the community but a matter of public
necessity. In the old
days the churchyard was there and there was
no difficulty. With the explosion
of population in the nineteenth
century, the tidy disposal of human remains
became more difficult,
the church grave yard became overloaded and so
Parliament enacted
many provisions providing for burial places. Thus,
between 1852
and 1906 no less than thirteen Burial Acts were passed (the
Burial
Acts 1852-1906) and there was also the Public Health (Interments)
Act
of 1879. It is important to remember that these Acts did not
relate
only to burial according to religious rites; the parties
who operated these
Acts might be a Burial Board or a local
authority, and in later years were
normally the local authority.
And, although an application might be made
for the consecration of
part of lands set aside for this purpose to religious
burial or to
certain denominations, it was no part of the scheme of the
Burial
Acts that the ground appropriated to burial under these Acts
should
be on consecrated ground. I mention this because I think it
is important to
notice that although the Appellant Company has in
fact always conducted
its operations on the footing of a religious
cremation with a Chapel, Garden
of Remembrance and so on, its
Memorandum, which must be the governing
consideration, does not so
confine it. But it is quite plain that Parliament
recognised in
the nineteenth century that disposal of human remains, with
parish
burial grounds becoming overfull, was a matter of national
importance,
as it had always been a matter of local concern, and
thus gave Parliamentary
recognition to the public importance of
disposal of the dead. If burial was
a matter for the public
benefit of the community why, then, not cremation?
The burning of
a body, instead of burying it, is lawful at common law
provided
the burning does not amount to a public nuisance (see R. v.
Price
12 Q.B.D. 247). So it seems to me clear that the
provision of a crematorium
must be just as much for the public
benefit of the community as the provision
of a burial ground. But
if there should be any doubt about this, the
Cremation Act, 1902,
which provided that Local Authorities might provide
crematoria in
addition to burial grounds, must put all doubts upon this
matter
at rest. So, in my opinion, the provision of a crematorium
is
something which falls within the fourth classification in
Pemsel's case, and
I turn to the second test.
This
depends entirely upon the preamble to the Statute 43 Eliz. I Ch.
4.
While it may seem almost incredible to anyone not familiar with
this branch
of the English law that this should still be taken as
the test, it is undoubtedly
the accepted test, though only in a
very wide and broad sense, well illustrated
by the observations of
Lord Greene MR. in Re Strakosch [1949] Ch. 529 at
page 537
which I set out at greater length:
" In
Williams' Trustees v. Inland Revenue Commissioners the House
"
of Lords has laid down very clearly that in order to come within
Lord
" Macnaghten's fourth class, the gift must be not only
for the benefit of
" the community but beneficial in a way
which the law regards as
" charitable. In order to satisfy
the latter it must be within the
" ' spirit and intendment '
of the preamble of the Statute of Elizabeth.
" That preamble
set out what were then regarded as purposes which
" should be
treated as charitable in law. It is obvious that as time
"
passed and conditions changed common opinion as to what was
"
properly covered by the word charitable also changed. This has been
"
recognized by the courts as the most cursory examination of the
"
cases shows. In order to be within the spirit and intendment of the
"
preamble we take it that one must find something charitable in the
"
same sense as the recited purposes are charitable. Lord
Macnaghten's
" fourth class is represented in the preamble by
the repair of bridges,
" etc., and possibly by the
maintenance of Houses of Correction. This
5
"
negatives any suggestion that charitable must be confined to the
poor
" (Verge v. Somerville).
"
We have come to the conclusion that though undoubtedly of
"
benefit to the community the purpose under consideration is not
"
' charitable ' in the sense in which the benefits to the community
"
instanced in the preamble are charitable. The benefit, as we
"
understand it, does not have to be in any way ejusdem generis with
the
" recited purposes but it has to be charitable in the
same sense."
My Lords,
I have some feeling of sympathy with the expression of opinion
of
Lord Strachan who said:
" In
regard to the nature of the pursuer's purposes, it is of course
"
difficult to find a place for a crematorium in the preamble to the
statute
" of Elizabeth. But if there had been in the preamble
any purpose in
" any way akin to the disposal of the bodies
of the dead, or to the public
" health, or the prevention of
dangers to the public health, I would have
" been disposed to
hold that the spirit of the preamble was wide enough
" to
include the pursuer's purposes. I cannot, however, find in the
"
preamble anything which is at all akin to these purposes."
This is a
powerful argument but authority, I think, does provide a
different
answer. Thus in Re Vaughan 33 Ch. Div. 187 a
trust for the repair of the
parish church yard was held to be
charitable. While this case was decided
mainly upon an Act of
Parliament it was also decided, as Warrington J.
pointed out in
the next case I shall cite, on the ground that there was
no
difference between a gift to repair God's House and God's acre.
Then, hi
Re Manser [1905] 1 Ch 68, a trust for keeping in
good order burial grounds
for members of the Society of Friends
was considered charitable.
Warrington J. (as he then was) held
that such trusts could be brought within
the advancement of
religion, for he said: " I think one naturally connects
the
burial of the dead with religion ". Though I doubt
whether it can be said
to be for the advancement of religion, that
decision was plainly right because
it was for a purpose beneficial
to the community and was analogous to the
repair of a church
within the preamble of the Statute of Elizabeth. This
was carried
further in Re Eighmie [1935] Ch. 524 where a trust for
the
maintenance of a cemetery owned and managed by a local
authority as a
public burial ground was held to be charitable.
That case was not decided
on the ground that it was on consecrated
ground. I see no reason to doubt
the correctness of that decision
though it carried the spirit and intendment
of the preamble one
step further.
My Lords,
if a trust for such a burial ground is charitable why (even
if,
contrary to the facts of this case, it is used for burials not
in accordance with
religious rites) is not the provision of a
crematorium? In my view, the
Appellant Company qualifies as a
charity. In view of the arguments which
impressed some members of
the Second Division I should say that, in my
opinion, to establish
its charitable status the Appellant Company does not
have to aver
that cremation provides a better or cheaper method of disposal
of
human remains than that of burial.
My Lords,
I conclude by saying that the authorities shew that the "
spirit
" and intendment" of the Preamble to the Statute
of Elizabeth have been
stretched almost to breaking point. In the
nineteenth and early twentieth
century this was often due to a
desire on the part of the Courts to save the
intentions of the
Settlor or Testator from failure from some technical rule of
law.
Now that it is used so frequently to avoid the common man's
liability
to rates or taxes this generous trend of the law may one
day require
reconsideration.
My Lords, for the reasons I have given I would allow this appeal.
Lord Wilberforce
MY LORDS,
The
Scottish Burial Reform and Cremation Society Limited was formed
in
1890 with the following main objects, as stated in its Memorandum
of
Association:
"3. ...
" (a) To promote reform in the present methods of Burial in
6
"
Scotland, both as regards the expense involved and the dangerous
"
effects on the public health.
" (b)
To promote inexpensive and at the same time sanitary
"
methods of disposal of the dead, which shall best tend to render
"
the remains innocuous ; and, in particular to promote the method
"
known as Cremation ".
The
Company is non-profitmaking in the sense that its income and
property
must be applied solely towards the promotion of its
objects and that its
members receive no dividends nor any
distribution on a winding up.
In 1890
the Company was no doubt a pioneering venture ; it must have been
one
of the earliest undertakings offering to provide a service of
cremation
for the inhabitants of Glasgow and of Scotland. Though
its first object is
stated as the promotion of reform in burial
methods, its activity in this
direction has not been by way of
propaganda, but rather by way of providing
services of a kind and
in a manner which would progressively persuade the
public of their
advantages. Its undertaking has grown to the extent that it
now
carries out between 2,000-3,000 cremations per annum and, from
an
initial subscription of £3,492, it has
fixed assets, according to the latest
accounts available to us,
valued at £48,300 and further current assets. These
figures
show that the services offered have satisfied a need. In order to
be
entitled to the statutory rate remission of 50 per cent., the
Company must
establish first that it is established for "
charitable purposes only" and,
secondly, that the rateable
lands and heritages in question are wholly or
mainly used for
charitable purposes. There is admittedly no difficulty as
to the
second requirement if the first is made good. The word "
charitable "
in this context has to be interpreted in the
sense in which it is used in the law
of England.
Was, then,
the Company established for charitable purposes only? I
interpret
its objects clause as meaning that the Company was formed for
a
general and a particular purpose: the general purpose was to
promote methods
of disposal of the dead which should be
inexpensive and sanitary; the
particular purpose (to which the
Company has in fact confined itself) to
promote the method known
as cremation. It is this combination of purposes
which has to be
examined in order to see whether it satisfies the legal test
of
charitable purposes.
On this
subject, the law of England, though no doubt not very
satisfactory
and in need of rationalisation, is tolerably clear.
The purposes in question,
to be charitable, must be shown to be
for the benefit of the public, or the
community, in a sense or
manner within the intendment of the preamble to
the statute 43
Eliz. I c. 4. The latter requirement does not mean quite what
it
says ; for it is now accepted that what must be regarded is not the
wording
of the preamble itself, but the effect of decisions given
by the courts as to its
scope, decisions which have endeavoured to
keep the law as to charities
moving according as new social needs
arise or old ones become obsolete or
satisfied. Lord Macnaghten's
grouping of the heads of recognised charity in
Pemsel's case
is one that has proved to be of value and there are many
problems
which it solves. But three things may be said about it, which
its
author would surely not have denied: first that, since it is a
classification of
convenience, there may well be purposes which do
not fit neatly into one
or other of the headings: secondly, that
the words used must not be given
the force of a statute to be
construed ; and thirdly, that the law of charity is a
moving
subject which may well have evolved even since 1891.
With this
in mind, approach may be made to the question whether the
provision
of facilities for the disposal of human remains, whether,
generally,
in an inexpensive and sanitary manner, or,
particularly, by cremation, can
be considered as within the spirit
of the statute. Decided cases help us at
any rate to the point of
showing that trusts for the repair or maintenance
of burial
grounds connected with a Church are charitable. This was, if
not
decided, certainly assumed in In re Vaughan 33 Ch.D.
187 as it had been
earlier assumed in Attorney-General v.
Blizard 21 B. 233.
More
explicitly, in Re Manser [1905] 1 Ch.D. 68, a trust for
keeping in
good order burial grounds for members of the Society of
Friends was
considered charitable. The opinion of Warrington J.
was that such trusts
7
could be
brought within the heading " Advancement of religion "—"
I think
one naturally connects the burial of the dead with
religion " he said (page 74).
Then in In re Eighmie [1935]
1 Ch. 524, a trust for the maintenance of a
cemetery owned and
managed by a local authority was held charitable. The
cemetery was
an extension of a closed churchyard so that the decision can
be
regarded as a logical step rather than a new departure. Now what
we
have to consider is whether to take the further step of holding
charitable
the purpose of providing burial, or facilities for the
disposal of mortal
remains, without any connection with a Church,
by an independent body.
I have no doubt that we should. I would
regard the earlier decisions as
falling on the borderline between
trusts for the advancement of religion and
trusts otherwise
beneficial to the community. One may say either that burial
purposes
fall within both, or that the categories themselves shade one
into
the other. So I find no departure in principle in saying that
purposes such
as the present—which, though the Company in
fact provides the means for
religious observance, should be
regarded as independent of any religious
basis—are to be
treated as equally within the charitable class.
It was
argued for the Respondents that the Company's purposes were
neither
for the benefit of the community nor, in any event, within
the
intendment of the preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth. One or
other of
these arguments was accepted by the Lord Ordinary and by
three members
of the Inner House. As to the first of these, there
was some suggestion that
the necessary basts of fact had not been
shown, and that the Appellants
should have averred, and if
necessary proved, that their services were more
inexpensive and
more sanitary than normal methods of burial. In my
opinion, the
Appellants rightly made no such averment, for no such
comparison
was called for. All they had to do was to show that the
provision
of inexpensive and sanitary methods, and of cremation in
particular,
was for the benefit of the community. As to this, the facts speak
for
themselves; for it being admitted by joint minute that the Company
had
used its premises in carrying out its objects, the scale on
which the
Company's services were resorted to clearly showed that
they met a need
pf the public. And it can hardly be said that to
meet a need of this
character is not beneficial. The second
argument can be met in two ways.
First, it may be said that the
same evolutionary process which has carried
charily from the "
repair of churches " to the maintenance of burial grounds
(i)
in a churchyard (ii) in a cemetery extended from a churchyard,
should
naturally carry it further so as to embrace the Company's
objects. Secondly,
and more generally, the Company's objects
themselves may directly be seen
to be within the preamble's
spirit. The group " repair of bridges, ports,
havens,
causeways, churches, sea banks and highways " has within it
the
common element of public utility and it is of interest to note
that the original
label of Lord Macnaghten's fourth category "
other purposes beneficial to
the community " affixed by Sir
Samuel Romilly in Morice v. Bishop of
Durham (10
Ves. 522 at 532) was "... the advancement of objects of
general
public utility ". In this context I find it of
significance that Parliament in
1902 by the Cremation Act of that
year placed cremation, as a public service,
on the same footing as
burial.
I regard,
then, the provision of cremation services as falling naturally,
and
in their own right, within the spirit of the preamble.
One other
point requires mention. The Company makes charges for its
services;
to enable it, in the words of the joint agreed minute, to
fulfil
effectively the objects for which it was formed. These
charges, though
apparently modest, are not shewn to be higher or
lower than those levied
for other burial services. In my opinion,
the fact that cremation is provided
for a fee rather than
gratuitously does not affect the charitable character of
the
Company's activity, for that does not consist in the fact of
providing
financial relief but in the provision of services. That
the charging for
services for the achievement of a purpose which
is in itself shown to be
charitable does not destroy the
charitable element was clearly, and in my
opinion rightly, decided
in Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. The
Falkirk
Temperance Cafe Trust 1927 S.C. 261 as well as in
English authorities.
8
I am
therefore of opinion that the Appellant makes good its claim
to
rating relief and I would allow the appeal.
Lord Pearson
my
lords,
i
I agree.
(32533) Dd. 196999 100 7/67 St.S.