A. exclude as objects of the trust children whom Charles Henry survived.
The power and the trust thereby implied arise upon a double con- tingency, namely, the failure of two prior interests owing to the deaths of the beneficiaries. The language of the power shows that Co. (LTD.)
these deaths are regarded as creating a vacancy, SO to speak, which is to be filled by the substitution of other children or another child. For the power says "by way of substitution." When death calls for a substitute you go to the living, not to the dead. Further, the very notion of an appointment means a choice among those answering Co. (LTD.).
the description of objects, not those who once filled the description but have died. "It is hardly necessary to say that a power to appoint to A does not authorize an appointment to his executors &. in the event of his predeceasing the donee" (Jarman on Wills, ch. XIII., note citing Re Susanni's Trusts 1 7th ed. (1930), vol. 1, p. 404; 6th ed. (1910), vol. 1, p. 429).
So far I have relied upon an examination of the meaning of the instrument independently of the rules of construction which would govern the present limitations if they were found in a will or settle- ment. But an application of the principles for ascertaining the objects of a trust implied from a power to appoint among children when it occurs in a will or settlement would, as it seems to me, necessitate the same conclusion. Under those principles no child could take who had died before the failure of the interest of Charles Henry. There is, of course, no opposition between reasoning from the text and the operation of the established rules. Indeed they depend upon or involve similar, if not the same, considerations. It is therefore, perhaps, neither necessary nor proper to divide the discussion of the effect of the clause into two heads, as I have done, but it is a course which makes for clearness. For the rules governing the ascertainment of a class to take under trusts arising from or connected with powers are not in all respects certain and they depend upon distinctions which, unless they are observed, readily lead to error. The best general statement is, I think, that in Lewin on Trusts, 13th ed. (1928), pp. 865, 867.
It is as well, however, to begin by pointing out the characteristics of the limitations now in question which are of importance, both positive and negative.
1. It is a future limitation to take effect in possession at the death of the assured. The analogy, therefore, is to be sought in wills or
1(1877) 47 L.J. Ch. 65 ; 26 W.R. 93.