whom was a member of the class, a one-third share of her expectant share under the appointment for a very small sum of money, which was in fact paid by B. There was evidence, which the Court accepted, of statements made by A on more than one occasion to the effect that the donee of the power had executed the power of appointment in her favour on condition that she would give half of her property to B, and that she had promised to do so. In an action by the trustees of the original testator for a declaration that the appointment was a fraud on the power and null and void, the defendants WALES LTD. being (inter alios) A, B and the representative of C,
Held, upon this and other evidence, as against B, that the appointment was wholly void
By Griffith C.J. and Barton J., on the ground that on the evidence the appointment was dominated by a desire and intention that a large share of the land should go to B, and that the desire to benefit an object of the power also was not sufficient to save the appointment in whole or in part;
By Isaacs J., on the ground that, it having been established that the appointment was upon a condition, which prima facie affected the whole appointment, that A should assign one-half of the land to B, B had not discharged the onus which lay upon him of establishing a qualification of the condition which would preserve the appointment in whole or in part, assuming that the condition was capable of such a qualification;
By Rich J., on the ground that the appointment would not have been made but for the arrangement that A should assign a large share of the land to B, and that the purpose of the appointment was not to benefit an object of the power but a stranger.
Held, further, that the representative of C had no enforceable right under the assignment to C:
By Griffith C.J. and Barton J., on the ground that on the evidence the appointment was void as against A and therefore the title of C, which was based on the assignment of an equitable interest in A, fell with the title of A;
By Isaacs and Rich JJ., on the ground that the assignment to C, being an assignment of an expectancy and without consideration, was unenforceable.
Observations upon the position of an equitable assignee of an interest which fails on grounds personal to the assignor.
Decision of the Supreme Court of New South Wales (Harvey J.) affirmed.
APPEAL from the Supreme Court of New South Wales.
A suit was brought in the Supreme Court of New South Wales in Equity by the Permanent Trustee Co. of New South Wales, the trustees of the will of John Redman, senior, deceased, and Alice Redman against Etela Joseph Redman, Isabella Hage, Sydney Charles Fraser, John James, John Francis Wynne, Thomas Henry