RJL v NSW Trustee and Guardian
[2011] NSWSC 200
•23 March 2011
Supreme Court
New South Wales
Medium Neutral Citation: RJL v NSW Trustee and Guardian; The Estate of PBL [2011] NSWSC 200 Hearing dates: 7 February 2011 and 10 February 2011 Decision date: 23 March 2011 Jurisdiction: Equity Division - Protective List Before: Hallen AsJ Decision: 1. Subject to any submissions of the parties on the precise terms, I would propose the following orders and declarations:
(a) The net proceeds of the lock up garage formerly owned by PBL are to be invested in a fund ("the Sale Fund") separate to the other funds in the personal estate of PBL ("the Other Funds");
(b) The income from the Sale Fund is to be paid, annually, to the Other Funds;
(c) The sale of the lock-up garage only adeems the devise of the lock up garage to A under the Will executed by PBL on 30 July 1999 (if that Will is found to be the last valid will of PBL upon her death and if he survives PBL) to the extent that the moneys from the Sale Fund are spent on PBL's benefit, care and management;
(d) The Sale Fund, or that part of it that is left at the date of PBL's death, constitutes the devise of the lock up garage to A under the clause of the Will made on 30 July 1999, (if that Will is found to be the last valid will of PBL upon her death and if he survives PBL);
(e) The Sale Fund is not to be spent unless, or until, the Other Funds are exhausted.
2. Subject to argument, I would propose that each party's costs, calculated on the indemnity basis, be paid out of the Other Funds of PBL.
Catchwords: Protection of interests in property of beneficiary named in will of managed person; nature and effect of s 83 NSW Trustee and Guardian Act 2009 Legislation Cited: Guardianship Act 1987
Guardianship and Protected Estates Legislation Act 2002 (NSW)
Interpretation Act 1987
NSW Trustee and Guardian Act 2009
Powers of Attorney Act 2003
Protected Estates Act 1983
Trustee Act 1925Cases Cited: Boykett (by his next friend Blackman) v Boykett (as executrix of the will of Boykett, deceased)
Bull v Attorney-General (NSW) [1913] HCA 60
Christensen v McKnight and Ors (NSWSC, 2 March 1995, unreported)
Commissioner for Railways (NSW) v Agalianos [1955] HCA 27
Commissioner of Stamp Duties (Qld) v Livingston [1965] AC 694
Commissioner of State Revenue (Vic) v Royal Insurance Australia Ltd [1994] HCA 61
ICI Australia Operations Pty Ltd v WorkCover Authority of New South Wales [2004] NSWCA 55
Johnston v Maclarn [2002] NSWSC 97
Marks v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd [1998] HCA 69
Orr v Slender [2005] NSWSC 1175
Project Blue Sky Inc v Australian Broadcasting Authority [1998] HCA 28
Protective Commissioner v "D" & Ors [2004] NSWCA 216Category: Principal judgment Parties: RJL (Plaintiff)
NSW Trustee and Guardian (Defendant)Representation: Counsel:
Mr J E Thomson (Plaintiff)
Mr L J Ellison SC (Defendant)
Solicitors:
Michael C Smith (Plaintiff)
Crown Solicitors' Office (Defendant)
File Number(s): P37/2010
Judgment
Background
HIS HONOUR: On 31 January 2006, the Guardianship Tribunal ordered that the estate of PBL ("the managed person") be subject to management under the Protected Estates Act 1983 ("the former Act"). (I shall not refer to the persons concerned in these proceedings in a manner that will identify them.)
Pursuant to the Guardianship Tribunal's order, the managed person's niece, RNL ("the financial manager"), was appointed the financial manager of the managed person's estate. The order made also contained the notation that, subject to the provisions of s 25M of the Guardianship Act 1987, the financial manager was not authorised to deal with the estate under management (other than to protect assets) unless all necessary directions had been issued by the Protective Commissioner.
The managed person is of mature years. Currently, she resides in the Beecroft Nursing Home, having moved there in January 2006. She remains incapable of managing her own affairs.
On 7 March 2006, the Protective Commissioner gave Directions and Authorities to the Financial Manager pursuant to s 30 of the former Act. Under the heading "RESTRICTIONS ON POWERS", it was stated:
"Subject to the provisions of these Directions and Authorities and to any further or other order or Directions and Authorities hereafter given, the assets and liabilities of PBL shall not be dealt with in any manner without the prior approvals of the Protective Commissioner"
On 30 July 1999, the managed person made what is believed to be her last known Will ("the Will"). At that time, she owned a property at Darlinghurst, which comprised a home unit, a car space and a lock-up garage. She appointed SJL as the sole executrix and trustee. She made a specific devise in the Will of her lock-up garage, to her neighbour, A, for his own use and sole benefit absolutely, and gave a pecuniary legacy to each of MB and SJL. She then devised shares in Pacific Dunlop Limited to her grandnephew, MF. The residue of the estate was left, in equal shares, to the financial manager and her two brothers, RHL and WL, all of whom are the children of the managed person's deceased brother, RL.
The parties accept that, subject to any application for a statutory will to be made by the Court, the Will is likely to be the last valid will of the managed person.
Sale of Managed Person's Property
Relevantly to the issue in dispute in this case, the intentions of the managed person, as expressed in the Will, are clear and unmistakable. She wished A to receive the lock-up garage for his own use and sole benefit absolutely.
However, at the time that the managed person's affairs were brought under the control of the Protective Commissioner, her cash assets were insufficient to pay an accommodation bond at the nursing home.
In November 2007, the financial manager, through her solicitor, sought a valuation of the lock-up garage. On 13 November 2007, a valuation of $75,000 was provided. On 15 November 2007, another estimate of value was obtained which suggested that the selling price for the lock-up garage should fall within the range of $70,000 - $80,000.
By letters dated 10 and 18 April 2009, respectively, the financial manager and her two brothers offered to buy the lock-up garage upon certain terms and conditions.
By letter dated 19 May 2008, the Protective Commissioner stated that "careful consideration should be given to selling the car space rather than disposing of the garage which is specifically bequeathed ... under ... the Will" and that "it appears appropriate to dispose of assets not specifically mentioned in the Will before liquidating those that are specifically mentioned".
The offer made by the financial manager and her brothers was then not pursued until it was made, again, in a letter dated 19 February 2009. On 24 February 2009, the financial manager's solicitor forwarded to the Protective Commissioner a document entitled "Private Manager Branch - Proposal by Manager for Sale of Real Estate" which outlined the proposal to sell the lock-up garage.
On 5 March 2009, the Protective Commissioner responded to the proposal to sell the garage. An updated valuation was sought. It was pointed out that as the lock-up garage had been devised to A, the sale proceeds would need to be set aside under s 48 of the former Act, but that this did not preclude the use of the funds for the managed person's ongoing care costs.
On 19 March 2009, the solicitor for the financial manager received another valuation of the lock-up garage. It was, again, valued at $75,000. On 8 April 2009, the solicitor forwarded a copy of the valuation to the Protective Commissioner.
On 27 April 2009, the Protective Commissioner wrote to the financial manager about the proposal, referring to its letter of 5 March 2009, and pointed out, again, that, as the garage was devised to A, she should obtain A's views about the proposal.
On 27 May 2009 the Protective Commissioner wrote to the financial manager referring to a telephone conversation in which the financial manager had expressed her intention to sell the managed person's apartment, garage and car space. Once again, the financial manager was asked to bear in mind that as A was a person who had an interest in the sale of the garage, she should obtain his views to that part of the proposal that related to the sale of the lock-up garage.
On 29 May 2009, the financial manager wrote to A informing him she intended to sell the property at Darlinghurst, including the lock-up garage.
The financial manager forwarded a "Private Manager Branch - Proposal by Manager for Sale of Real Estate", dated 22 June 2009, to the Protective Commissioner, which Proposal reflected her desire to sell the entire property.
The NSW Trustee and Guardian Act came into force on 1 July 2009. It replaced the Protected Estates Act , 1983. Among other things, the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act abolished the office of Protective Commissioner and replaced it with the office of NSW Trustee and Guardian, which is referred to in that Act as the "NSW Trustee".
On 14 July 2009, the NSW Trustee informed the financial manager, in a telephone conversation, that she must obtain the written views of A. Accordingly, the financial manager wrote to A again on 27 July 2009.
On 29 July 2009, A responded in a letter addressed to the NSW Trustee, stating that he did not agree with the proposed sale as he wished to retain the lock-up garage.
Despite A's opposition to the sale, on 21 August 2009, the NSW Trustee informed the financial manager that it authorised the sale of the managed person's entire property by public auction. The net proceeds of the sale were to be lodged with the Office of the NSW Trustee and Guardian pending the receipt of a proposed investment plan put forward by the financial manager.
On 24 August 2009, the NSW Trustee informed A that the sale of the property would proceed, as the managed person required funding for her ongoing care. On that day also, the NSW Trustee wrote to the financial manager informing her that it had written to A about the pending sale of the entire property and that in due course, the sale proceeds for the garage would need to be set aside.
The financial manager provided a proposal to sell the entire property of the managed person, including the lock-up garage, which proposal was approved on 7 October 2009.
On 18 November 2009, the financial manager wrote to the NSW Trustee enclosing a "Manager's Proposal for Entry into a Residential Care Facility Agreement". It was proposed that the accommodation bond of $210,000 paid to Beecroft Nursing Home be increased to $530,000.
On 18 November 2009, the NSW Trustee sent an email to the financial manager's solicitor to ascertain whether the financial manager had earmarked $75,000 from the sale proceeds to be retained for the benefit of A.
On 19 November 2009, the solicitor responded that $75,000 would be set aside in a fund on a "without prejudice/without admissions" basis, so as not to prevent settlement of the sale of the managed person's property from proceeding, but also suggested that the fund should bear pro rata its share against the total sale proceeds of the expenses for any adjustments required at settlement, the agent's commission, the advertising fees, any future tax obligations incurred in respect of the fund and fees and charges to be paid in respect of the managed person's future maintenance and operation of the fund.
According to an email sent by the financial manager's solicitor, to the NSW Trustee, settlement of the sale of the property was completed on 20 November 2009. The sale of the entire property realised a gross sale price of $890,000.
On 20 November 2009, the financial manager's solicitor arranged for a cheque to be issued from the gross proceeds of sale, to the Beecroft Nursing Home, for an accommodation bond in the amount of $210,000. The balance of the proceeds of sale ($588,549.09), after payment of rates and strata levies, was paid to the financial manager's solicitor's trust account.
On 11 December 2009, the solicitor sent an email again raising the issue of the $75,000 "fund" and also regarding increasing the accommodation bond. He confirmed that he had taken instructions from the financial manager to seek counsel's advice as to the issue of the $75,000 fund. He also mentioned, among other things, that in failing to approve the purchase of the garage as had been previously offered, there was a "significant issue as to whether the NSW Trustee had preferred A's interests under the Will of a living person" to those of the managed person and her estate. The precise basis for this assertion was not disclosed.
On 14 December 2009, the financial manager's solicitor paid the amount of $640,781.82 to the credit of the managed person's bank account.
Meantime, the financial manager advised that she was seeking legal advice from counsel "with respect to aspects bearing upon the administration" of the managed person's estate.
In a letter dated 24 May 2010, the financial manager's solicitor provided a summary of counsel's advice. The letter included:
"In light of ... advice, [the financial manager] has instructed me to indicate that henceforth she will deal with the balance of the proceeds of sale of [the managed person's] realty in an in globo manner and without reference to a fund of $75,000.00 being set aside to deal with the issue of [A] and any entitlement he may have."
In a letter dated 10 June 2010, the NSW Trustee informed the financial manager that it disputed that it could not direct her to ensure the amount of $75,000 was set aside. A direction for that to occur was given again.
By letter dated 15 July 2010, the financial manager requested an internal review of the NSW Trustee's direction.
By letter dated 2 August 2010, the NSW Trustee advised the financial manager that an internal review had been conducted. A copy of the review was provided to her.
As at 26 October 2010, the assets of the managed person included the accommodation bond ($210,000), an amount held in various bank accounts (about $634,000), personalty ($2,000) and shares ($2,680). Her liabilities were $3,200 (current charges of the nursing home). Her income totals about $50,620 per annum, whilst her expenses total $38,400 per annum.
At the date of the hearing, I was informed that the assets of the managed persons included the administration bond, moneys in an operating account ($21,199), and moneys on fixed deposit ($618,068). There may be some liabilities (as yet, uncalculated) of income tax and capital gains tax.
The Present Proceedings
On 2 September 2010, there was filed, on behalf of the financial manager, a Summons in the Supreme Court. No defendant was named.
On 10 November 2010, an order was made, on the application of the NSW Trustee, that it should be joined as a Defendant to the proceedings and that the financial manager should be granted leave to file an amended Summons.
A has not sought to be, and has not been, joined as a party. He has, however, previously been advised of the proceedings. I am satisfied that with the joinder of the NSW Trustee, there is a proper contradictor and that no further steps to involve A in the proceedings are necessary.
An amended Summons was filed on 10 November 2010 naming the NSW Trustee as a Defendant. The financial manager sought the advice of the court under s 63 of the Trustee Act 1925, and, in the alternative, under s 83 of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act 2009.
The questions posed for advice are:
"1 Whether the plaintiff, as manager of the Estate of her Aunt, ... under the Financial Management Order of the Guardianship Tribunal made 31 January 2006 would be justified in treating the whole of the net proceeds of sale of the Protected Person's former residence at Forbes Street Darlinghurst as funds available without differentiation to be applied for the purposes authorised by s 59 and/or s 65(1) and (3) of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act 2009 ("the Act").
2 Whether the plaintiff as manager of the Estate of her Aunt, ... under the Financial Management Order of the Guardianship Tribunal made 31 January 2006 would be justified in treating the purported direction or requirement of the office of the NSW Trustee and Guardian to treat $75,000 of those funds as having been already appropriated by s 83 of the Act for the purpose of satisfying a prospective claim by a beneficiary under the presumptive most recent will of the Protected Person, as being void and not authorised by the Act."
Supplementary questions, which are raised by the NSW Trustee, are, first, whether it has the power to direct a financial manager to set aside the proceeds of sale, or part thereof, equating to the value of a bequest made in the managed person's will; second (and as a corollary of the first question), whether the power to direct a financial manager pursuant to s 83 of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act 2009 resides (solely) in the Supreme Court of New South Wales.
Subject to any further argument, it may not be necessary specifically to answer these questions in view of the orders and declarations that I shall propose and in view of the construction of the legislation.
The Statutory Framework
The former Act commenced on 5 August 1985: s 2(2), Government Gazette No 112 of 2 August 1985, p 3923. It was amended by the Guardianship and Protected Estates Legislation Act 2002 (NSW), which commenced on 28 February 2003: s 2 and Government Gazette No 54 of 28 February 2003 p 3505. That Act repealed ss (3), (8) and (9) of s 5, with the effect that the Protective Commissioner was no longer an officer of the Supreme Court.
The NSW Trustee and Guardian Act was assented to on 26 June 2009 and commenced on 1 July 2009. It replaced the former Act. The savings and transitional provisions of that Act provide that anything done prior to the commencement of that Act, under a corresponding provision of the former Act, is taken to be done under the new Act. Similarly, anything done by the Protective Commissioner is taken to have been done by the NSW Trustee (Schedule 1, Cl. 4 and 5).
The NSW Trustee is "a NSW Government agency", "with the corporate name of the NSW Trustee and Guardian" (see ss 5 and 6 of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act ).
The Act continues to distinguish between the functions formerly undertaken by the former Public Trustee and by the Protective Commissioner.
Section 38 defines "estate of a person" as meaning "the property and affairs of a person and, if only part of the estate of a person is under management under this Chapter, means only that part of the property and affairs of the person". A "protected person" is defined as meaning "a person in respect of whom an order is in force under Part 4.2 or 4.3 or the Guardianship Act 1987 that the whole or any part of the person's estate be subject to management under this Act" whilst a "managed person" is "a protected person, managed missing person or patient whose estate is subject to management under this Act".
Jurisdiction of the Court to answer Questions
Initially, an issue was raised as to the jurisdiction of this Court to answer the questions that have been raised.
Section 61 of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act provides:
"61 Supreme Court may give directions to NSW Trustee
(1) The Supreme Court may give to the NSW Trustee such directions as the Court thinks necessary with respect to the exercise by the NSW Trustee of its functions in its protective capacities.
(2) An application for directions may be made by any of the following:
(a) the NSW Trustee,
(b) a managed person,
(c) a relative, friend or debtor of a managed person,
(d) any other person who has, in the opinion of the Supreme Court, a sufficient interest in the matter."
Section 64 of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act , s 64 provides:
"64 Orders by Supreme Court and NSW Trustee as to management of estates
(1) The Supreme Court or the NSW Trustee may make such orders as it thinks fit in relation to the administration and management of the estates of managed persons.
(2) The Supreme Court or the NSW Trustee may also make such orders as it thinks fit in connection with authorising directing and enforcing the exercise of the functions of managers under this Act.
(3) The Supreme Court may also make such orders as it thinks fit in connection with supervising the exercise of the functions of managers under this Act.
(4) An order by the NSW Trustee is subject to the regulations or to any direction by the Supreme Court or to any order of the Guardianship Tribunal (in the case of a person under guardianship)."
Section 65 of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act provides:
"65 Orders by Supreme Court and NSW Trustee as to property
(1) General power
The Supreme Court or the NSW Trustee may make such orders as appear to it necessary for rendering the property and income of a managed person available for the following purposes:
(a) the payment of the debts and engagements of, and otherwise for the benefit of, the person,
(b) the maintenance and benefit of the family of the person,
(c) otherwise as it thinks necessary or desirable for the care and management of the estate of the person.
(2) Orders as to disposal of estate
Without limiting the generality of subsection (1), the Supreme Court or the NSW Trustee may order that any property of the person be sold, mortgaged, dealt with or disposed of as the Court or the NSW Trustee thinks most expedient for the purpose of raising or securing or repaying with or without interest money which is to be or which has been applied to any one or more of the following purposes:
(a) payment of the person's debts or engagements,
(b) discharge of any encumbrance on property of the person,
(c) payment of any debt or expenditure incurred for the maintenance (including future maintenance), or otherwise for the benefit, of the person,
(d) payment of the costs of any proceeding under this Act or of any sale or other disposition made under this Act,
(e) payment of such other sum or sums to such person or persons as the Court or the NSW Trustee thinks fit.
(3) Orders as to application of money
Without limiting subsection (1), the Supreme Court or the NSW Trustee may authorise and direct the application of money comprising the whole or any part of the estate of the person to any one or more of the following purposes:
(a) the preservation and improvement of the estate of the person,
(b) the taking up of rights to issues of new shares, or options for new shares, to which the person may become entitled by virtue of any shareholdings,
(c) the investment of money, being money not required for the time being for any of the other purposes specified in this subsection, in such manner as the Court or the NSW Trustee thinks fit.
(4) An order by the NSW Trustee is subject to the regulations or to any order of the Supreme Court or to any order of the Guardianship Tribunal (in the case of a person under guardianship)."
Section 66 of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act provides:
"66 NSW Trustee may authorise and direct functions of other managers
(1) The NSW Trustee may, by order:
(a) authorise a manager to have all, or any specified, functions necessary and incidental to the management and care of an estate and such other functions as the NSW Trustee may direct or authorise the manager to have or exercise, and
(b) give a manager such directions in respect of the orders, authorities and directions authorised by this subsection as the NSW Trustee thinks fit.
(2) Without limiting any other provision of this Division, the NSW Trustee may authorise a manager to have functions of a kind specified in section 16.
(3) An order by the NSW Trustee is subject to the regulations or to any order of the Supreme Court or to any order of the Guardianship Tribunal (in the case of a person under guardianship).
(4) This section is in addition to sections 64 and 65."
Section 63 of the Trustee Act 1925, relevantly provides:
"63 Advice
(1) A trustee may apply to the Court for an opinion advice or direction on any question respecting the management or administration of the trust property, or respecting the interpretation of the trust instrument."
"Trustee" is defined in the Trustee Act as having a meaning corresponding with that of trust; and includes legal representative and the NSW Trustee and a trustee company (s 5).
Ultimately, the precise basis of the court's jurisdiction to answer the questions is not necessary to finally determine, as the parties, ultimately, accepted, that the Supreme Court is able to, and should, determine the appropriate orders, regardless of how the claim has come before it, and, indeed (but without either party making any concession), whether the NSW Trustee has the legislative power which it asserts and whether that legislative power (if it exists) has been properly exercised.
In any event, I am satisfied that the Court has power to determine the questions posed and that reliance may be placed on any of the alternative sections set out above.
In addition, as there may be some measure of uncertainty as to the relevant state of the law, I am of the opinion that the parties are entitled to have the opinion of the court.
The Statutory Framework relevant to the Questions Posed
Section 83 of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act relevantly provides:
"83 Protection of interests in property of beneficiaries and other persons
(1) Any managed person and any beneficiary of a managed person has the same interest in any surplus money or other property arising from any sale, mortgage or disposition of any property or other dealing with property under this Act as the managed person or beneficiary would have had in the property the subject of the sale, mortgage, disposition or dealing, if no sale, mortgage, disposition or dealing had been made.
(2) The surplus money or other property arising as referred to in subsection (1) is taken to be of the same nature as the property sold, mortgaged, disposed of or dealt with.
(3) Except as provided by subsection (4), money received on or for equality of partition and exchange, and all fines, premiums and sums of money received on the grant or renewal of a lease where the property the subject of the partition, exchange or lease was real estate of the managed person are to be considered as real estate.
(4) Fines, premiums and sums of money received on the grant or renewal of leases of property of which the managed person was the tenant for life are to be considered as personal estate of the managed person.
(5) The Court may make such orders as it thinks fit to give effect to this section.
(6) In this section:
"beneficiary" of a managed person means a beneficiary under a will of the person or an executor, administrator or assign of the managed person."
The questions posed require a consideration of the nature and effect of this section.
Consideration
There is no dispute, in this case, that the NSW Trustee had the power to authorize the sale of the lock-up garage: see, for example, s 32(2)(a) of the former Act.
The area of debate surrounds how the proceeds of sale are to be held and upon what basis. Ultimately, the questions posed can be distilled to whether the proceeds of sale should be retained as a separate fund, to be used for the benefit of the managed person only after other moneys in her estate had been expended or whether they should be retained with other funds without differentiation and, in that way, be available for use by the financial manager.
So far as I am aware, and this is confirmed by the researches of counsel, the nature and effect of s 83 of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act has not been the subject of any determination by the court.
It is consistent with the approach taken to the interpretation of such legislation that a construction which will afford the " fullest relief which the fair meaning of its language will allow " should be adopted: Bull v Attorney-General (NSW) [1913] HCA 60; (1913) 17 CLR 370 at 384 per Isaacs J; Commissioner of State Revenue (Vic) v Royal Insurance Australia Ltd [1994] HCA 61; (1994) 182 CLR 51 at 98 per Dawson J; Marks v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd [1998] HCA 69; (1998) 196 CLR 494 at 528 per Gummow J; ICI Australia Operations Pty Ltd v WorkCover Authority of New South Wales [2004] NSWCA 55; Protective Commissioner v "D" & Ors [2004] NSWCA 216 per McColl JA at [167].
The NSW Trustee and Guardian Act , like the former Act, should be regarded as both remedial, or beneficial, and protective, legislation. The intent of such legislation is to provide a structure to protect a person who is incapable of managing his, or her, financial affairs. Such legislation provides various methods by which the property of the person whose capacity is diminished may be managed by others, including by means of a power of attorney, or by the appointment of a financial manager. Unlike a capable testator, the managed person does not have the ability to revise her will when it becomes apparent that property that she owns should be sold.
Thus, s 83 must be construed so that it is consistent with the language and purpose of all the provisions of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act , while seeking to give meaning to the words of the section. The Court should prefer a construction that will promote the purpose or object underlying the Act: s 33 Interpretation Act 1987 ; Project Blue Sky Inc v Australian Broadcasting Authority [1998] HCA 28; (1998) 194 CLR 355 at 381 - 382 [69] - [70].
The process of construction must always begin by examining the context of the provision that is being construed: see, generally, Project Blue Sky Inc v Australian Broadcasting Authority at [69] - [71]; Protective Commissioner v "D" & Ors [2004] NSWCA 216 per McColl JA at [48].
In Commissioner for Railways (NSW) v Agalianos [1955] HCA 27; (1955) 92 CLR 390, at 397, Dixon CJ said:
"The context, the general purpose and policy of a provision and its consistency and fairness are surer guides to its meaning than the logic with which it is constructed".
Section 39 of the Act, so far as is relevant, provides:
"39 General principles applicable to Chapter
It is the duty of everyone exercising functions under this Chapter with respect to protected persons ... to observe the following principles:
(a) the welfare and interests of such persons should be given paramount consideration,
(b) the freedom of decision and freedom of action of such persons should be restricted as little as possible,
(c) ...
(d) the views of such persons in relation to the exercise of those functions should be taken into consideration,
(e) ...
(f) such persons should be encouraged, as far as possible, to be self-reliant in matters relating to their personal, domestic and financial affairs,
(g) such persons should be protected from neglect, abuse and exploitation."
Section 83 is in terms similar to s 48 of the former Act , which section has been the subject of some consideration by Hodgson J (as his Honour then was) in Christensen v McKnight and Ors (NSWSC, 2 March 1995, unreported) to which I shall return.
It appears that s 48 was, originally, enacted to avoid what would occur, absent legislative enactment, in circumstances where a financial manager sold property of the managed person during his, or her, lifetime. At least in New South Wales, what would occur in that circumstance, was usefully set out in Johnston v Maclarn [2002] NSWSC 97, in which Young CJ in Eq. (as his Honour then was), said:
"13 Roper on Legacies, 4th ed (William Benning & Co, London, 1847) at p329 and following, sets out the general rule with respect to the ademption of specific legacies. The learned author says:
"The word 'ademption' when applied to specific legacies of stock or of money ... must be considered as synonymous with the word 'extinction'. For it should be observed, that if stock, securities, or money, so bequeathed, be sold or disposed of, there is a complete extinction of the subjects, and nothing remains to which the words of the will can apply (a): for if the proceeds from such sale or disposition were to be substituted and permitted to pass, the effect would be ... to convert a specific into a general legacy."
[14] Roper gives a reference to Badrick v Stevens (1792) 3 Bro CC 431, 432; 29 ER 626, but this reference does not progress the matter.
[15] As Roper notes at p 331, this view of ademption means that the testator's intention is irrelevant. The only thing to be ascertained is whether the testator possessed the property in the specific gift at the time of his death. If he did not, the legacy is adeemed by annihilation of the subject.
[16] Roper's approach has been followed ever since; see eg In re Rudge [1949] NZLR 752, 761, where Callan J affirms that:
"In questions of ademption ... the primary inquiry is not for the testator's intention. The test appears to be whether at his death the property of which the testator has made a specific gift in his ... will still belonged to him."
[17] However, as I noted in my earlier judgment, there is authority that there is an exception where it can be shown that the property ceased to be part of the testator's estate because of the unauthorized action of an agent (see eg Basan v Brandon (1836) 3 Sim 171; 59 ER 68) or committee in lunacy; see eg Re Larking (1887) 37 Ch D 310).
[18] In Jenkins v Jones (1866) LR 2 Eq 323, 328, Stuart VC considered that there was an exception to the ademption rule where the annihilation had taken place without the testator's knowledge, even if it had occurred with implied authority. He based himself on Shaftsbury v Shaftsbury (1716) 2 Vern 747; 23 ER 1089, to which I shall return. Other cases can be found to the footnotes of Jarman on Wills, 8th ed Vol 2 (Sweet & Maxwell Ltd, London, 1951) at p1068.
[19] Although, it is a tad difficult to reconcile these cases with principle, see In re Slater [1907] 1 Ch 665, 671, they remain good law. This was the conclusion reached by Thomas J in Re Viertel [1997] 1 Qd R 110 after reviewing all the authorities including American and Canadian cases and texts."
A similar view of the effect of such a sale was expressed by Nicholas J in Orr v Renee Slender Estate of the late Godfrey Raymond Orr & Ors [2005] NSWSC 1175; (2005) 64 NSWLR 671 at [34].
Section 83 is also in terms similar to s 22 of the Powers of Attorney Act 2003. For this reason, the NSW Trustee submitted, and I agree, that it is legitimate to consider what was said by the Honourable John Hatzistergos (Minister for Justice, and Minister Assisting the Premier on Citizenship) in the Second Reading Speech in respect of the Powers of Attorney Bill on 15 October 2003, in relation to that section:
"Another important innovation in this bill is the provision to overcome hardship which currently may be caused in certain circumstances by a rule of common law called ademption. This concept is perhaps best explained by an example. Say a person, a testator, leaves a will in which he or she gives a particular item, such as a car or a piece of jewellery, to a beneficiary. If the testator sells that item before he or she dies, so that, at the time the will is put into effect, the item is not part of the estate, the law says that the beneficiary gets nothing, not even the monetary value of the item. The gift is said to be adeemed, or lost. The law assumes that the testator could have changed the will after selling the item, to give the beneficiary either money or another object, and if the testator does not change the will the beneficiary is to receive nothing.
The ademption rule can operate particularly harshly where a testator, who has made a gift of a specific item in a will, loses mental capacity and his or her attorney sells the item under an enduring power of attorney. In this case the testator has no chance to alter the will after losing mental capacity. To overcome this situation and prevent injustice to the beneficiary, the bill introduces a provision which will entitle the beneficiary to any surplus left from the proceeds of the sale of the item sold by an attorney under an enduring power of attorney. The provision is modelled on section 48 of the Protected Estates Act , which protects beneficiaries from sales by a manager appointed under that Act to administer the estate of a protected person . The new provision will protect not only named beneficiaries but also classes of beneficiaries - for example, where an item is left to "my children". (My emphasis)"
It is to be noted that s 22(7) of the Powers of Attorney Act provides that the section does not apply to any person to whom section 83 of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act applies.
I turn then to s 83. There is no reason to conclude that its purpose would be any different to the purpose for having inserted s 48 into the former Act. Thus, subject to s 83, the relevant consequence of the sale of the lock-up garage by the financial manager would be that the devise, to A, in the managed person's Will, of that lock-up garage, at the time of her death, would not take effect.
There is no dispute that the purpose of s 48 of the former Act was, and s 83 is, to save a gift made by the managed person in her Will, which gift would, otherwise, be adeemed by activities carried out, not by her, but by her financial manager. In this way, the financial manager is able to take steps required to manage the managed person's property in a way that respects her needs, as well as her wishes made in a will, at a time when she is incapable of managing her affairs on her own.
In Christensen v McKnight and Ors , Hodgson J said of s 48 of the former Act:
"S 48(1) OF THE PROTECTED ESTATES ACT
This is in the following terms:
"48(1) Any protected person, and any other person being an heir, next of kin, devisee, legatee, executor, administrator or assign of a protected person shall have the same interest in any surplus money or other property arising from any sale, mortgage, charge or disposition of any property or other dealing with property under this Act as the person would have had in the property the subject of the sale, mortgage, charge, disposition or dealing, if no sale, mortgage, charge, disposition or dealing had been made."
It follows from David and from the earlier discussion that the contract is effectual only by virtue of some exercise of the manager's powers derived from their appointment under the Act; and such exercise would have to fall within the words in s 48(1) "sale ... or disposition or other dealing with property under this Act". S 48(1) then gives devisees of the deceased "the same interest in any surplus money ... arising" therefrom, as they "would have had in the property... if no sale ... disposition or dealing had been made".
Mr Kaye for the first defendant referred to s 48(5) of the Protected Estates Act , which is as follows:
"(5) In order to give effect to this section the Court may make such orders and direct such conveyances, deeds and things to be executed and done as it thinks fit."
He submitted that accordingly it was a matter of discretion for the Court as to what adjustments, if any, should be made pursuant to s 48(1). He compared the position in Queensland under the Mental Health Act 1974, Schedule 5, CL15, and the Public Trustee Act 1978, s 89(1); and in South Australia under the Aged and Infirmed Persons Property Act 1940 s 15(a). He also referred to Attorney-General v Marquis of Aylesbury (1887) 12 App. Cas. 672, at 688. The exercise of this discretion would require detailed evidence, which the Court did not have.
Mr Legge, solicitor for the residuary beneficiaries, referred me to cases decided on s 123 of the UK Lunacy Act 1890, on which s 48 of the Protected Estates Act was apparently based, especially In Re Palmer (1911) WN (UK) 171, In Re Alston (1917) 2 Ch. 226, and In Re Stillwell (1936) 1 Ch. 637. He submitted that s 48(1) only applied if proceeds of sales to which it related were kept in identifiable form. He submitted further that, in respect of the deceased's property, an estate management plan had been drawn up pursuant to s 50 of the Protected Estates Act , and this plan contemplated that the proceeds of sale of 114 Rosedale Road should be used to pay the debts of the deceased, including a large debt due to the estate of her late husband. This plan should be given effect to. Some debts of the deceased had in fact been paid prior to her death out of the deposit.
In my view, s 48(5) does not introduce a general discretion into the operation of s 48(1), but only gives some flexibility to the means of putting it into effect. I accept that s 48(1) only operates so long as "surplus money" arising from a sale to which it applies is identifiable as such. In my view, the word "surplus" indicates that the section only applies to the net proceeds of any such sale, and only to so much of these as remain identifiable at the date of death . Here, so much of the deposit as was used prior to the death of the deceased to pay debts would not be affected by s 48, nor would any other part of the deposit which was applied so as to lose its character as proceeds of sale. However, the balance of the purchase money received after the death of the deceased could not be considered as other than money arising from the sale, and in my view, could not be affected by the management plan devised before the deceased's death." (My emphasis)
His Honour concluded:
"Order
In my view, therefore, at least the balance of the purchase money, less any expenses of the sale which were deducted from it and less any debts which were secured on the property, would be surplus proceeds of sale within s 48(1); and in my view, that section would be effective to produce the result that that money be treated as representing 114 Rosedale Road for the purposes of giving effect to the will.
I am prepared to make declaration to that effect."
To summarize, so far, the following may be noted about s 83:
(a) The section refers to both the managed person and to any beneficiary of a managed person;
(b) The beneficiary of a managed person includes a beneficiary under a will of that person;
(c) Under the section, each has the same interest as he, or she, would have had in the property the subject of the sale, mortgage, disposition or dealing, if no sale, mortgage, disposition or dealing had been made;
(d) The surplus money, or other property arising, is taken to be of the same nature as the property sold, mortgaged, disposed of or dealt with;
(e) The interest that the managed person, or any beneficiary has, is in any surplus money, or other property, arising from the sale, mortgage, disposition, or other dealing, of the property under the Act;
(f) "Surplus" in this context refers to the net proceeds of any such sale;
(g) The surplus, or such part of it that remains, must exist, in an identifiable form, at the date of death.
The difficulty is to determine how the section operates in practice, and how the surplus should be treated between the date of the sale, mortgage, disposition or dealing and the date of death of the managed person.
There is one authority, to which neither counsel referred, and which, although not precisely on point, is of some interest. In Ex Parte & Ors v Sandra Ann Boykett (As Executrix of The Will of Maurice James Boykett, Deceased) [1997] WASC 11, the Public Trustee in Western Australia, sought, pursuant to s 58 of the Public Trustee Act, 1941 (WA), the direction of the court in circumstances where it was administering the affairs of the estate of a protected person. That protected person appeared to have made a will, clause 4 of which made express provision for the sale of that property, for the division of the net proceeds of that sale into three equal shares, and for the distribution of each of those shares to a number of beneficiaries. (There was a question whether the document was the last valid will of the protected person, but that was not decided.)
In the circumstances of the estate and of the protected person, the decision had been taken that the appropriate course was to sell the property so that the estate was relieved of the burden of its maintenance and so that the Public Trustee had available, if and when they were needed in the future, funds to provide for the maintenance benefit and welfare of the protected person during the remainder of her lifetime. The Public Trustee was concerned, however, as to the possible consequences of the sale on the provisions and effect of the Will should it, in due course, be proved to be her valid last will.
For that reason, the Public Trustee sought directions that the net proceeds of the sale of the property and any income accruing thereon should be invested separately from the other funds in the personal estate of the protected person and that those separate funds not be spent unless and until the other funds were exhausted.
The Public Trustee also sought the opinion of the court on the question whether the sale of the property would adeem the devise of the property under clause 4 of the document (if the document was ruled to be the last valid will following her death) to the extent that the moneys in the separate fund so established were spent on the protected person's maintenance benefit and welfare.
Finally, the Public Trustee sought the opinion of the court whether, if the property were sold, the separate fund comprising the proceeds of sale and earnings on those proceeds would constitute the devise of the property under clause 4 of the document (should the document be ruled to be the last valid will of the protected person following her death).
Parker J, after referring to the questions, stated:
"It will be seen that the Public Trustee is by these means seeking to avoid a situation where an executor or administrator after [the protected person's] death had need to trace moneys that may form part of the devise of the property under cl 4, or in which it could be argued that by not separating the net proceeds of the sale of the property from the other funds, the devise of the property is adeemed.
The subject matter of a gift may cease to be part of the estate where the testator disposes of the thing altogether by selling it or giving it away during a testator's lifetime. In such cases the gift is said to adeem: Atherton & Vines, Australian Succession Law, para [13.3.13]. The principle is not, however, absolute. The issue raised in the present case is the extent to which it applies if the property is sold at a time when the testatrix is not capable of managing her own affairs, nor presently of validly executing a will, and the management of her estate has by law fallen to the Public Trustee who, in that capacity, is to dispose of the property having knowledge of the provisions of the document."
His Honour then dealt with the cases on ademption and concluded:
"For the reasons discussed above, should [the protected person's] property be sold now or at some future time when she lacks both the capacity to sell the property herself and to change her will, and the net proceeds of the sale and any income accruing on those proceeds are held in a separate fund from which moneys are only drawn for the maintenance, benefit and welfare of [the protected person], I would express the opinion of the court that the sale of the property would not adeem its devise under cl 4 of the document (if the document is ruled to be the last valid will of the protected person] following her death) except to the extent that the moneys from that separate fund are spent on [the protected person's] maintenance, benefit and welfare. Further, on the sale in those circumstances it is the opinion of the Court that the separate fund would constitute the devise of the property under cl 4 of the document (if the document is ruled to be the last valid will of [the protected person] following her death).
There remains the question whether the net proceeds of the sale should be invested in a separate fund. The Public Trustee seeks a direction to this effect. The discussion in these reasons sufficiently indicates the desirability, if not the need, for that to be the position. I would direct accordingly.
...
There remains the question whether there should be a direction for the moneys in that separate fund not to be spent on her maintenance, benefit and welfare until other funds in the personal estate of [the protected person] are exhausted. This is not an easy matter to determine. I notice that under the terms of the document, apart from the devise of the property and its provision for a three-way division of the proceeds of the sale of the property, it is provided that the remainder of the estate should go to a beneficiary or beneficiaries who are identical in their description and circumstances of taking to those who would take one of the third shares of the proceeds of the devise of the property under cl 4. I also note the circumstances of living of [the protected person] while she managed her own affairs in that she lived in the house on the property and apparently maintained herself and the property from her other means. In these circumstances I am persuaded that the direction sought by the Public Trustee is appropriate."
Other than identifying what his Honour did in that case, Boykett does not provide any real guidance on the operation of s 83.
I have considered the time, or times, at which the section is to speak. If it speaks at the time of the sale, mortgage, disposition or dealing, of the property, the interest of the managed person is both legal and beneficial. At that time, the beneficiary does not have any legal, or beneficial, interest in the property. It might be said, since the Will of the managed person is unlikely to be revoked, that the beneficiary has, at the highest, an "expectancy" at that time.
If the section speaks at the date of death of the managed person, the legal and beneficial ownership of the surplus of the proceeds of sale, mortgage, disposition or dealing, would remain with the managed person's estate, but the interest of the named beneficiary crystallises into something more than a mere expectancy. At that point in time, until the estate is administered, the beneficiary has no proprietary interest in any particular asset of the estate but a chose in action entitling him, or her, to require the proper administration of the estate. Once the estate has been administered, it is an entitlement to the property the subject of the devise or bequest: Commissioner of Stamp Duties (Qld) v Livingston [1965] AC 694.
It seems to me that the section is speaking of both times. At the time of sale, mortgage, disposition or dealing, the managed person retains the legal and beneficial interest in the surplus money, or other property, which, until death, may be used for his, or her, benefit, care and management, if required. However, the surplus, until used, is notionally treated as being of the same nature as the property sold, mortgaged, disposed of, or dealt with, and the interest of the beneficiary during this period, is treated as being the interest that he, she, or it, would have under the Will of the managed person following his, or her, death.
The key to the interpretation of the section, and the one that provides the answer to the questions posed, is sub-section (2), which explicitly requires the "surplus" to be taken to be as "of the same nature as" the property sold, mortgaged, disposed of, or dealt with. In other words, there is upon the sale, mortgage, disposition, or dealing with, the property, a deemed preservation of the character of the property converted. That concept requires the notion of comparability, despite the fact that the property sold, mortgaged, disposed of, or dealt with, becomes different, qualitatively and quantatively.
In this case, the nature of the property sold is real estate, and it is notionally "as real estate" that the surplus must be taken to be likened, or equated, to.
Thus, as in the present case, if there is money available in the managed person's estate that would have formed part of the residue of her estate, which money can be used for the benefit, care and management of the managed person, it should, first, be used for those purposes. It is when there are no other moneys available for those purposes, that the surplus proceeds of sale mortgage, disposition, or dealing with, property that has been specifically devised may be used. Until that time, the surplus proceeds of sale of that specifically devised property, is treated as if it were real estate and is not able to be used.
Whether the income on the proceeds of the sale of the lock-up garage should be accumulated in that separate fund is another question that requires consideration. In this regard, there is no evidence that the managed person was deriving any income from the lock-up garage.
Because one is required to treat the surplus funds as of the "same nature" as the property sold, it appears to me that the income, from time to time, earned on the surplus, should not, in this case, form part of the surplus, but may be added to the other moneys which are used for the benefit, care and management of the managed person.
It follows that there should be a direction for the proceeds of sale of the lock up garage to be held in a separate fund, not to be spent on the managed person's maintenance, benefit and welfare, until other funds in her estate are exhausted. The income earned on the surplus is to not to be retained in the separate fund, but should be available for use in the maintenance, benefit or welfare, of the managed person.
Turning then to the specific questions posed, I answer each:
"1 Whether the plaintiff, as manager of the Estate of her Aunt, ... under the Financial Management Order of the Guardianship Tribunal made 31 January 2006 would be justified in treating the whole of the net proceeds of sale of the Protected Person's former residence at Forbes Street Darlinghurst as funds available without differentiation to be applied for the purposes authorised by s 59 and/or s 65(1) and (3) of the NSW Trustee and Guardian Act 2009 ("the Act")
The Plaintiff would not be so justified.
"Whether the plaintiff as manager of the Estate of her Aunt, ... under the Financial Management Order of the Guardianship Tribunal made 31 January 2006 would be justified in treating the purported direction or requirement of the office of the NSW Trustee and Guardian to treat $75,000 of those funds as having been already appropriated by s 83 of the Act for the purpose of satisfying a prospective claim by a beneficiary under the presumptive most recent will of the Protected Person, as being void and not authorised by the Act."
The Plaintiff would not be so justified.
Subject to any views of the parties, I would otherwise propose the following orders and declarations for the assistance of the parties:
(a) The net proceeds of the lock up garage formerly owned by PBL are to be invested in a fund ("the Sale Fund") separate to the other funds in the personal estate of PBL ("the Other Funds").
(b) The income from the Sale Fund is to be paid, annually, to the Other Funds.
(c) The sale of the lock-up garage only adeems the devise of the lock up garage to A under the Will executed by PBL on 30 July 1999 (if that Will is found to be the last valid will of PBL upon her death and if he survives PBL) to the extent that the moneys from the Sale Fund are spent on PBL's benefit, care and management; and
(d) The Sale Fund, or that part of it that is left at the date of PBL's death, constitutes the devise of the lock up garage to A under the clause of the Will made on 30 July 1999, (if that Will is found to be the last valid will of PBL upon her death and if he survives PBL).
(e) The Sale Fund is not to be spent unless, or until, the Other Funds are exhausted.
Subject to any argument, I would propose that each party's costs, calculated on the indemnity basis, be paid out of the Other Funds of PBL.
**********
Decision last updated: 21 April 2011
2
11
7