Baddeley (Trustees of the Newtown Trust) v Inland Revenue Commissioners
[1955] UKHL 1
Die Jovis, 17° Februarii 1955
Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/1024
Viscount
Simonds
Lord
Porter
Lord Reid
Lord
Tucker
Lord
Somervell
of Harrow
HOUSE OF LORDS
COMMISSIONERS OF INLAND REVENUE
v.
BADDELEY AND OTHERS
(TRUSTEES OF THE NEWTOWN TRUST)
COMMISSIONERS OF INLAND REVENUE
v.
baddeley and others (trustees of the newtown trust)
(second appeal)
17th February, 1955
Viscount Simonds
MY LORDS,
These consolidated appeals raise
once more a question, which has so
often caused doubt and
difficulty in the courts of this country, whether
certain trusts
are charitable in the sense which the law accords to that
word. It
need cause no surprise, though it may cause regret, that this
should
be so. For while no comprehensive definition of legal charity
has
been given either by the Legislature or in judicial utterance, there
is
no limit to the number and diversity of the ways in which man
will seek
to benefit his fellow-men. To determine whether the
privileges, now con-
siderable, which are accorded to charity in
its legal sense, are to be granted
or refused in a particular
case, is often a matter of great nicety and I think
that this
House can perform no more useful function in this branch of the
law
than to discourage a further excess of refinement where already so
many
line distinctions have been made.
In the present appeals the
controversy is about the amount of stamp
duty payable in respect
of two deeds of conveyance, by which trusts were
declared of
certain property thereby respectively conveyed. If the trusts
so
declared were charitable the duty is smaller than if they were
not
charitable. The sums actually at stake are trifling, but the
issue is an
important one. It was decided in favour of the
Appellants, the Com-
missioners of Inland Revenue, by Mr. Justice
Harman but against them
by the Court of Appeal. Hence the present
appeal.
I find it convenient, my Lords,
to examine the two deeds separately and
take first a deed of
conveyance to the Respondents as trustees of certain
land at
Stratford in the county of Essex of an area of about 680 square
yards
with a Mission Church, lecture room and store erected on some
part
thereof. So far as relevant (omitting certain words which
admittedly were
inserted in error) the trusts of this property
were as follows:
" The Trustees shall permit
the said property to be appropriated
" and used by the
Leaders for the time being of the Stratford Newtown
"
Methodist Mission under the name of ' the Newtown Trust' (herein-
"
after called ' the Foundation ') for the promotion of the religious
"
social and physical well being of persons resident in the County
"
Boroughs of West Ham and Leyton in the County of Essex by the
"
provision of facilities for religious services and instruction and
for
" the social and physical training and recreation of such
aforementioned
" persons who for the time being are in the
opinion of such Leaders
" members or likely to become members
of the Methodist Church and
" of insufficient means otherwise
to enjoy the advantages provided by
" these presents . . .
and by promoting and encouraging all forms of such
"
activities as are calculated to contribute to the health and
well-being
" of such persons Provided always that the
Trustees shall not at any|
2
" time hereafter and so
long as the trusts hereby declared shall not
" have totally
failed use or permit the said properly to be used either
"
for physical training or physical recreation or any kind of game on
"
Sundays Christmas Days or Good Fridays or for the sale or consump-
"
tion of intoxicating drink."
This main trust is followed by
certain ancillary provisions which cannot,
I think, affect the
question whether it is a charitable trust. It is at once
apparent
that the document is not skilfully drawn. It is presumably all
the
persons resident in the specified boroughs whose religious, social
and
physical well-being is to be promoted, but this is to be
achieved by providing
certain facilities for religious services
and instruction and for the social
and physical training and
recreation of " such aforementioned persons",
i.e., such
residents, as are for the time being " in the opinion of such
Leaders
" members or likely to become members of the
Methodist Church and of
" insufficient means otherwise to
enjoy the advantages provided by these
" presents". This
awkward phraseology leaves me in doubt whether the
beneficiaries
under this trust are to be all the residents in a certain area
or
only such of the residents as satisfy two conditions, first
that they are
Methodists or in the opinion of the Leaders
potential Methodists, and
secondly that they are of limited means.
It might even he that upon a true
interpretation of the deed some
benefits are open to all the residents, others
to a more limited
class. Fortunately I do not find it necessary to determine
this
question, for I think that, whatever view may he taken of it this
case is
governed by the recent decision of this House in Williams'
Trustees v. C.I.R.
([1947] AC 447).
Before, however, I examine that
case and certain other cases which must.
I think, guide your
Lordships' decision. I must first dispose of two conten-
tions
which were urged, the one by the Respondents and the other by
the
Attorney General, against the appeals.
By the Respondents it was
contended that the trusts of the deed could
be supported as valid
charitable trusts on the ground that they came within
the first
head of Lord Macnaghten's classification in Inland Revenue
Com-
missioners v. Pemsel [1891] AC 531. viz., that
they were for the relief of
poverty. This contention was, in my
opinion, rightly rejected both by Mr.
Justice Harman and the Court
of Appeal. I do not question that there may
be a good charity for
the relief of persons who are not in grinding need or
utter
destitution: see In re de Carteret [1933] Ch. 103. But I agree
with
Mr. Justice Harman, and am content to adopt his words, that
relief connotes
need of some sort, either need for a home or for
the means to provide for
some necessity or quasi-necessity, and
not merely an amusement however
healthy.
The Attorney-General, appearing
as amicus curiae, urged that the validity
of the trust could be
sustained on the ground that, regarded as a whole, it
was an
educational charity. This contention had not previously been
put
forward and your Lordships have not the advantage of knowing
the views
upon it of the learned Judge and the Court of Appeal.
The short answer
appears to me to be that, regarded as a whole,
the sum of the activities
permissible under the deed can only be
regarded as educational in the sort
of loose sense in which all
experience may be said to be educative, and that, if
such
activities are examined one by one, it would be impossible to
regard
many of them as in even the loosest sense educational.
If then this trust is
charitable, it can only be because it falls within the
fourth
class in Lord Macnaghten's classification ; that is, it must be a
trust
of general public utility and must be within the spirit and
intendment of
the preamble to the Statute 43 Elizabeth cap. 4. And
this is what the
Court of Appeal has held it to be.
My Lords, with great respect to
the singularly acute and refined argument
of Lord Justice
Jenkins, who delivered the leading judgment in the Court
of
Appeal. I must doubt whether anything is gained by discussing
whether
the trust should be regarded as prescribing three separate
and distinct objects,
namely (a) the promotion of religious
well-being, (b) the promotion of social
well-being, and (c)
the promotion of physical well-being or as having as its
3
goal a state of complete
well-being with three several aspects, religious,
social and
physical. Let it be assumed that, in the words of the learned
Lord
Justice, the object of the trust is the religious, social and
physical
improvement of the persons resident in the two boroughs:
and let it be
further assumed that this is the end desired for
each of such persons, making
such reservation as may be necessary
for the fact that facilities for social
and physical training are
to be reserved for a limited class of those persons.
Yet in the
end the question is for what purposes may the trust property be
used
without trespassing beyond the language of the deed? I find that
it
may be used for promoting and encouraging all forms of such
activities,
i.e. the provision of facilities for (inter alia)
social and physical training and
recreation, " as are
calculated to contribute to the health and well-being
" of
such persons ". My Lords, I do not think it would be possible to
use
language more comprehensive and more vague. I must dissent
from the
suggestion that a narrow meaning must be ascribed to the
word " social ":
on the contrary, I find in its use
confirmation of the impression that the
whole provision makes upon
me. that its purpose is to establish what is
well enough called a
community centre in which social intercourse and
discreet
festivity may go hand in hand with religious observance and
instruc-
tion. No one will gainsay that this is a worthy object of
benevolence, but
it is another question whether it is a legal
charity, and it appears to me
that authority which is binding on
your Lordships puts it beyond doubt that
it is not. Here we are
not concerned to consider whether a particular use
to which the
trust property may be put is a charitable use: that is a
question
upon which different minds might well come to different
conclusions. On
the contrary, we must ask whether the whole range
of prescribed facilities
or activities (call them what you will)
is such as to permit uses which are not
charitable : if it is, it
is not such a trust as the Court can execute, and it
must fail.
My Lords, I repeat that in this
admittedly difficult branch of the law
nothing is to be gained by
adding refinement to refinement, and I am satisfied
that in the
light of several decisions of this House, in which comparable
general
words have been held not to create a valid charitable trust,
your
Lordships would not be justified in taking a different view
in the present
case. From many cases I will take a
few, selecting only those
in which the generality
of the words has been held to exclude
an
exclusively charitable connotation. In Farley v.
Westminster
Bank Ltd. [1939] AC 430, the
gift was to the respective vicars
and churchwardens of
two named churches " for parish work ". Vague
words
indeed, but, if I had to write them out somewhat less vaguely, I
could
not easily find more appropriate words than those with which
the trust of
this deed begins and ends, adding perhaps something
about the relief of
the poor which at any rate would not detract
from their charitable content.
Yet this trust failed, because
work (or activity) which conduces to the
welfare of the
parishioners (or which promotes their religious, social and
physical
well-being) is not confined to purposes legally charitable. So
in
an earlier case, Dunne v. Byrne [1912] AC 407,
a gift to the Roman Catholic
Archbishop of Brisbane to be used in
the manner " most conducive to the
" good of religion
in this diocese " as he might decide, was held to be
invalid,
because, though it had a prima facie religious content, yet
the
generality of the language admitted an application which the
law would
not consider charitable. The words of Lord Macnaghten
in delivering the
judgment of the Board may be recalled : "
The language of the bequest (to
" use Lord Langdale's
words) would be ' open to such latitude of construction
" as
to raise no trust which a Court of Equity could carry into execution
'".
These words are directly applicable to the present case.
and. being applied,
are fatal to the contention of the
Respondents. I do not refer to Houston
v. Burns
[1918] A.C. 337 or other cases in which the same principle has
been
applied, and come to the recent case of Williams'
Trustees. which I have
already mentioned. There the House had
to consider a deed by which a trust
was established for the
benefit of Welsh people in London. Its object
was declared to
be to establish and maintain an institute and meeting place
in
London for the benefit of Welsh people resident in or near or
visiting
4
London with a view to creating a
centre in London for promoting the moral,
social, spiritual and
educational welfare of Welsh people, and of fostering
the study of
the Welsh language, and so on. The means by which this was
to be
achieved were, without prejudice to the generality of the object,
set
out with some particularity. The noble and learned Lords who
heard the
case (including my noble and learned friend, Lord
Porter) were unanimous
in thinking that this was not a valid
charitable trust. It is true that in the
present case religious
instruction is, but in Williams' Trustees was not,
pre-
scribed, but this distinction is irrelevant as it is conceded
that the trust is not
exclusively for religious purposes. But
apart from this distinction, what
valid ground is there for
distinguishing the two cases? I ignore at this stage
any
difference in the class of beneficiaries: that raises another and
more
difficult question. I look only at the nature of the
benefits which are within
the scope of the two trusts, having
regard in each case to the language of
the exordium, and in this
aspect I am unable to find any material distinction.
I hope that I
do no injustice to the judgments of the Court of Appeal in
the
present case if I say that they appear to give a special
meaning to the word
" social " where it occurs in the
present deed and, having done so, to give
too much significance to
that meaning. It is to be observed that " social "
is
a word that occurs in the Williams' Trustees deed also, It is
probably true
that, as Lord Justice Jenkins says, much turns on
the construction of the
several deeds and it is perhaps because I
have taken a different view of the
meaning of a particular word
that I have come to a different conclusion
on the whole case.
I am glad to think that in doing so I find myself in
complete
agreement with the Court of Appeal of Northern Ireland who
in
Londonderry Presbyterian Church House v.
Commissioners of Inland
Revenue 27 Tax Cases 431 had
to construe a deed which is essentially
comparable with that
which your Lordships are considering and held that
the trust
thereby established was not a valid charitable trust.
Other aspects of the trust
established by the first deed were discussed and
it is right that
I should make some observations upon them, but before
doing so I
will turn to the second deed, by which an area of land at Ilford
in
the county of Essex laid out as a playing field, upon parts of
which
a pavilion and groundsman's bungalow had been erected, was
conveyed to
trustees upon trusts which were substantially the same
as those of the first
deed except that (a) " moral "
was substituted for " religious " in the opening
words
of the trust. (b) no reference was made to the provision of
facilities
for religious services and instruction, and (c)
the benefits were unambiguously
conferred exclusively upon
residents who satisfied the conditions of member-
ship or
potential membership of the Methodist Church and insufficiency
of
means to which I have already referred. The second deed also
contained
certain ancillary provisions to which I need not refer
and further, a declara-
tion of trust of the sum of £10,000
which had been paid to them and of any
other money or property
which might be paid or transferred to them which
the trustees were
directed to use or apply in such manner (I quote) "as the
"
Trustees shall think most beneficial for promoting the objects of the
charity
" hereby constituted ".
Once more I submit to your
Lordships that this trust must fail by reason
of its vagueness and
generality. The moral social and physical well-being
of the
community or any part of it is a laudable object of benevolence
and
philanthropy, but its ambit is far too wide to include only
purposes which
the law regards as charitable. I need not repeat
what I have said in regard
to the promotion of religious, social
and physical well-being, except to
emphasise that to hold the one
a valid and the other an invalid trust would
be to introduce the
sort of refinement which I deplore.
In regard to this second trust I
will only add that it does not follow that,
because a trust in the
vague and general terms of the second deed cannot
be supported,
therefore a gift by devise or conveyance of land for a
recreation
ground must also fail. This was the particular concern
of the learned
Attorney-General, and I think it right to say that,
in my opinion, a gift of
land for use as a recreation ground by
the community at large or by the
5
inhabitants of a particular
geographical area may well be supported as
a valid charity. But I
would reserve my opinion in a case in which the
beneficiaries are
a class determined, for instance, by adherence to a
particular
religion or by employment in a particular industry or
by particular employers.
This brings me to another aspect
of the case, which was argued at great
length and to me at least
presents the most difficult of the many difficult
problems in this
branch of the law. Suppose that, contrary to the view that
I have
expressed, the trust would be a valid charitable trust, if
the
beneficiaries were the community at large or a section of the
community
defined by some geographical limits, is it the less a
valid trust if it is confined
to members or potential members of a
particular Church within a limited
geographical area?
The starting point of the
argument must be, that this charity (if it be a
charity) falls
within the fourth class in Lord Macnaghten's classification. It
must
therefore be a trust which is, to use the words of Sir Samuel
Romilly
in Morice v. Bishop of Durham, of "
general public utility ", and the question
is what these
words mean. It is, indeed, an essential feature of all " charity
"
in the legal sense that there must be in it some element of
public benefit,
whether the purpose is educational, religious or
eleemosynary: see the recent
case of Oppenheim v. Tobacco
Securities Trust Co. Ltd. [1951] AC 297;
and, as I have said
elsewhere, it is possible, particularly in view of the
so-called "
poor relations cases ", the scope of which may one day have
to
be considered, that a different degree of public benefit is
requisite
according to the class in which the charity is said to
fall. But it is said
that, if a charity falls within the fourth
class, it must be for the benefit
of the whole community or at
least of all the inhabitants of a sufficient
area. And it has been
urged with much force that, if, as Lord Greene
said in In re
Strakosch [1949) Ch. 529), this fourth class is represented in
the
preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth by the repair of bridges,
etc., and
possibly by the maintenance of Houses of Correction, the
class of
beneficiaries or potential beneficiaries cannot be
further narrowed down.
Some confusion has arisen from the fact
that a trust of general public
utility, however general and
however public, cannot be of equal utility to
all and may be of
immediate utility to few. A sea-wall, the prototype of
this class
in the preamble, is of remote, if any, utility to those who live
in
the heart of the Midlands. But there is no doubt that a trust for
the
maintenance of sea-walls generally or along a particular
stretch of coast
is a good charitable trust. Nor, as it appears to
me, is the validity of a
trust affected by the fact that by its
very nature only a limited number of
people are likely to avail
themselves, or are perhaps even capable of availing
themselves, of
its benefits. It is easy, for instance, to imagine a charity
which
has for its object some form of child welfare, of which the
immediate
beneficiaries could only be persons of tender age. Yet
this would satisfy
any test of general public utility. It may be
said that it would satisfy the
test because the indirect benefit
of such a charity would extend far beyond
its direct
beneficiaries, and that aspect of the matter has probably not
been
out of sight. Indirect benefit is certainly an aspect which
must have
influenced the decision of the " cruelty to animal
" cases. But I doubt
whether this sort of rationalisation
helps to explain a branch of the law
which has developed
empirically and by analogy upon analogy.
It is, however, in my opinion,
particularly important in cases falling within
the fourth category
to keep firmly in mind the necessity of the element of
general
public utility, and I would not relax this rule. For here is a
slippery
slope. In the case under appeal the intended
beneficiaries are a class within
a class ; they are those of the
inhabitants of a particular area who are
members of a particular
Church: the area is comparatively large and
populous and the
members may be numerous. But. if this trust is charitable
for
them, does it cease to be charitable as the area narrows down and
the
numbers diminish? Suppose the area is confined to a single
street and the
beneficiaries to those whose creed commands few
adherents: or suppose
the class is one that is determined not by
religious belief but by membership
30802
A3
6
of a particular profession or by
pursuit of a particular trade. These were
considerations which
influenced the House in the recent case of Oppenheim.
That
was a case of an educational trust, but I think that they have
even
greater weight in the case of trusts which by their nominal
classification
depend for their validity upon general public
utility.
It is pertinent, then, to ask
how far your Lordships might regard yourselves
bound by authority
to hold the trusts now under review valid charitable
trusts, if
the only question in issue was the sufficiency of the public
element.
I do not repeat what I said in the case of Williams'
Trustees about Goodman
v. Saltash 7 A.C. 633 and
the cases that closely followed it. Further considera-
tion of
them does not change the view that I then expressed, which in
effect
endorsed the opinion of the learned editor of the last
edition of Tudor on
Charities. More relevant is the case of Verge
v. Somerville [1924] AC 496.
In that case, in which
the issue was as to the validity of a gift " to the trustees
"
... of the Repatriation Fund or other similar fund for the benefit of
New
" South Wales returned soldiers". Lord Wrenbury
delivering the judgment
of the Judicial Committee said that, to be
a charity, a trust must be " for the
" benefit of the
community or of an appreciably important class of the
"
community ". " The inhabitants " he said, " of a
parish or town, or any
" particular class of such
inhabitants, may ... be the objects of such a gift, but
"
private individuals, or a fluctuating body of private individuals,
cannot ".
Here, my Lords, are two expressions " an
appreciably important class of
" the community " and "
any particular class of such inhabitants ", to which
in any
case it is not easy to give a precise quantitative or qualitative
meaning.
But I think that in the consideration of them the
difficulty has sometimes been
increased by failing to observe the
distinction, at which I hinted earlier in
this Opinion, between a
form of relief extended to the whole community
yet by its very
nature advantageous only to the few and a form of relief
accorded
to a selected few out of a larger number equally willing and able
to
take advantage of it. Of the former type repatriated New South
Wales soldiers
would serve as a clear example. To me it would not
seem arguable that
they did not form an adequate class of the
community for the purpose of
the particular charity that was being
established. It was with this type of
case that Lord Wrenbury was
dealing, and his words are apt to deal with
it. Somewhat,
different considerations arise if the form, which the
purporting
charity takes, is something of general utility which is
nevertheless made
available not to the whole public but only to a
selected body of the public-
an important class of the public it
may be. For example, a bridge which
is available for all the
public may undoubtedly be a charity and it is indifferent
how many
people use it. But confine its use to a selected number of
persons
however numerous and important: it is then clearly not a
charity. It is
not of general public utility: for it does not
serve the public purpose which
its nature qualifies it to serve.
Bearing this distinction in
mind, though I am well aware that in its applica-
tion it may
often be very difficult to draw the line between public and
private
purposes, I should in the present case conclude that a
trust cannot qualify
as a charity within the fourth class in
Pemsel's case if the beneficiaries
are a class of persons
not only confined to a particular area but selected
from within it
by reference to a particular creed. The learned Master of the
Rolls
in his judgment cites a rhetorical question asked by Mr. Stamp
in
argument. " Who has ever heard of a bridge to be crossed
only by impecu-
" nious Methodists? " The reductio ad
absurdum is sometimes a cogent form
of argument, and this
illustration serves to show the danger of conceding the
quality of
charity to a purpose which is not a public purpose. What is true
of
a bridge for Methodists is equally true of any other public purpose
falling
within the fourth class and of the adherents of any other
creed.
The passage that I have cited
from Verge v. Somerville refers also (not,
I think, for the
first time) to " private individuals " or a "
fluctuating body
" of private individuals " in
contradistinction to a class of the community
or of the
inhabitants of a locality. This is a difficult conception to
grasp:
the distinction between a class of the community and the
private individuals
7
from time to time composing it
is elusive. But, if it has any bearing on the
present case. I
would suppose that the beneficiaries, a body of persons
arbitrarily
chosen and impermanent, fall more easily into the latter than
the former category.
I conclude that on this ground
also I should decide this case against the
Respondents even if I
were otherwise in their favour, and will only add that
in coming
to this conclusion I find myself in agreement with Lord
Justice
Babington in the Londonderry case to which I have
already referred.
I move that the appeals be
allowed accordingly. The costs of all parties
will be paid by the
Appellants in accordance with the undertaking previously
given.
Lord Porter
My lords,
I concur with the Opinion of the
noble Lord on the Woolsack in holding
that the trusts declared in
the two matters now under appeal are not
charitable.
Like Lord Tucker, however, I
desire to express no opinion as to whether
the beneficiaries
constitute a sufficient class for the purposes of Class 4 of
Pemsel's
case.
Lord Reid
My lords,
The first question to be
determined is the proper interpretation of the
trust purposes set
out in the conveyances of the mission hall and lecture
room and of
the playing field. I shall take first the conveyance of the
playing
field. The phraseology is in this deed more concise and
somewhat
easier to follow. The essential part of it for the
present purpose is as
follows: " The Trustees shall permit
the said property to be appropriated
" and used by the
Leaders for the time being of the Stratford Newtown
"
Methodist Mission under the name of ' The Newtown Trust"...
for
" the promotion of the moral social and physical
well-being of persons
" resident in the County Boroughs of
West Ham and Leyton in the County
" of Essex who for the time
being are in the opinion of such Leaders
" members or likely
to become members of the Methodist Church and of
"
insufficient means otherwise to enjoy the advantages provided by
these
" presents by the provision of facilities for moral
social and physical training
" and recreation and by
promoting and encouraging all forms of such
" activities as
are calculated to contribute to the health and well-being of
"
such persons."
This begins by setting out the
object to be attained. " the moral social
" and physical
well-being of persons resident in the County Boroughs of
"
West Ham and Leyton ". There follows a limitation to a section
of those
persons. I must return to this, but as this limitation
throws no light on
the nature of the trust purposes I need not
deal with it now. Then there
follows the method, and the only
permissible method, by which the object
is to be attained: first "
by the provision of facilities for moral social
" and
physical training and recreation" and then " by promoting
and
" encouraging all forms of such activities " (which
must mean the activities
of moral, social and physical training
and recreation) " as are calculated to
" contribute to
the health and well-being " of the beneficiaries. I think
that
" facilities " here means equipment and instruction or
supervision suit-
able for the activities mentioned and it is, I
think, plain that the playing
field can only be used for
activities which are promoted or encouraged
8
by the Leaders. The real
question is, what are the nature and scope of
the activities which
the Leaders are required or permitted to promote or
encourage, and
whether the conduct of any of those activities would go
beyond
what can properly be regarded as the fulfilment of a
charitable
purpose? The proviso, which I have not quoted, throws
little independent
light on this question, and it must, in my
opinion, be determined by
construing the words which I have quoted
in light of the whole circumstances
disclosed in the deed.
The Leaders are, in my view,
required to bear in mind that the donor's
objective is
threefold—to promote the moral and social and physical
well-
being of the beneficiaries: they must not pursue one of
these purposes
in isolation. Of course, some activities will
contribute more to one and
some more to another of these purposes,
but they must not promote or
encourage any activity which may be
detrimental to any of these three
purposes—indeed, they must
prevent any such activity. They are expressly
required only to
promote or encourage activities which are calculated to
contribute
to health and well-being: it is not enough that a particular
activity
should not be harmful to health or well-being; it must only
be
promoted or encouraged if it is such as to contribute to health
and well-
being, and of course it would only be possible to
conduct activities of a
kind which the nature of the premises—a
playing field—permits.
My Lords, it is said that the
words which I have quoted afford so
vague a description of the
permitted activities that a court could not
determine what is
authorised and what is not, or alternatively that these
words are
so wide as to authorise activities which could not come
within
anything that the law regards as charitable, so I must now
consider what
the law does regard as charitable. We were referred
by the Attorney-
General to a number of Acts of Parliament
extending over nearly a century
in which Parliament has regarded
the provision of facilities for recreation
for adults as a
charitable purpose. The first was the Recreation Grounds
Act,
1859, under which land conveyed for the "regulated recreation"
of
adults or for playgrounds for children was, I think, clearly
regarded as land
conveyed for a charitable purpose. It would
appear that Parliament assumed
that this was the law, but if
Parliament was wrong in so assuming then
it would be necessary, in
order to give effect to the Act, that there should
be implied an
enactment that land conveyed in terms of the Act should he
treated
as land held for charitable purposes.
The most important Act is the
Mortmain and Charitable Uses Act, 1888.
This Act. in my judgment,
enacts that the dedication of any park, garden
or other land to "
the recreation of the public " is a charitable purpose and
is
within the meaning, purview and interpretation of the preamble to
the
Act 43 Eliz. c. 4. The drafting of the Act of 1888 is somewhat
unusual,
and it requires careful examination. Section 13 repeals
the whole of the
Act of Elizabeth, including the preamble, and
then enacts : " (2) Whereas by
" the preamble to the Act
of the forty third year of Elizabeth, chapter four
" (being
one of the enactments hereby repealed), it is recited as
follows":
[then the preamble is set out in full]: " and
whereas in divers enactments
" and documents reference is
made to charities within the meaning, purview,
" and
interpretation of the said Act: Be it therefore enacted that
references
" to such charities shall be construed as
references to charities within the
" meaning, purview, and
interpretation of the said preamble ". Part II of
the Act is
headed " Charitable Uses" and begins by enacting in section
4
that, subject to the savings and exceptions contained in the
Act, every
assurance of land to or for the benefit of any
charitable uses shall be
made in accordance with the requirements
of the Act and unless so made
shall be void. Then in Part III,
headed " Exemptions ", section 6 enacts
that Parts I and
II of the Act shall not apply (subject to a limitation which
is
not material) to an assurance of land for the purposes only of (inter
alia)
a public park, and by the definition in section 6 (4) "'
public park ' includes
" any park, garden, or other land
dedicated or to be dedicated to the recrea-
" tion of the
public." It is possible that before 1888 a conveyance of a
park
to trustees for the express purpose that it should be held
and maintained In
perpetuity for the recreation of the public
might not have been held to be
9
a conveyance for a charitable
purpose: the gift would benefit rich and
poor alike, and that
whether or not they are subject to any disability, and
recreation
must here include the use of the land by members of the public
for
mere relaxation and pleasure. But the whole of the provisions of
the
Act must be read together and, unless the ordinary principles
of statutory
construction are to be disregarded, the words taken
from the preamble of
the statute of Elizabeth and enacted in
section 13 as the measure of charitable
purpose must be construed
in light of the earlier provisions of the Act
which make the
express purpose of holding " any park, garden, or other
"
land " for the recreation of the public a charitable purpose. I
would
agree that any " other land" must be ejusdem
generis with parks and
gardens. " Recreation " is a
very wide term, but only certain types of recrea-
tion can be
pursued or enjoyed in a park or garden. It may be that as
regards
other types of land or buildings, where a greater variety of types
of
recreation could be pursued merely requiring that they should be
held
for the recreation of the public would not be a charitable
purpose. But,
in my judgment, the Act of 1888 clearly establishes
that a gift for the
purpose of public recreation of subjects on
which the only possible types
of recreation are those which could
be enjoyed in the open air in a park
or garden is a gift for a
charitable purpose. And if that be so I cannot
see how it could be
denied that a gift of money to be used to promote
or facilitate
the enjoyment of public recreation on such land is also a
gift for
a charitable purpose. I therefore agree with the decision in In
re
Hadden [1932] 1 Ch. 133. It was followed in two unreported
cases to
which we were referred: in In re Foakes in 1933
Luxmoore J. held that a
bequest of certain fields and a barn
(together with a sum for their upkeep)
for use as a recreation
ground was a valid charitable gift, and in In re
Chesters in
1934 Bennett J. held that a bequest of money to provide
public
recreation or playgrounds for the children was a valid
charitable gift.
In re Nottage [1895] 2
Ch. 649 is clearly distinguishable: money was
bequeathed to
provide annually a cup for yacht racing, so the only
possible
beneficiaries were yacht owners who would be somewhat
strange objects
of charity. But what the Appellants found on is
the reasoning in the Court
of Appeal to the effect that
encouragement of a mere sport or game is
not charitable though the
sport or game may be beneficial to the public.
No doubt that is
true in the main, but it cannot apply to the provision
or support
of playing fields: yacht racing is far removed from the kind
of
recreation which Parliament has declared to be charitable. And
a charitable
purpose such as education may well be achieved in
part at least by promoting
sport or games. The emphasis is on mere
sport or games, and I cannot
suppose that any of the learned
Judges had in mind the Acts of Parliament
dealing with recreation
or would have denied that the encouragement of
games as a means to
achieve a charitable purpose for those who took part
in them was
quite a different matter.
As regards recreation the only
other Act to which I need refer is the
Open Spaces Act, 1906.
Section 3 provides for land held by trustees on
trust for the
purposes of public recreation being transferred to a local
authority
and for the conditions of the trust being varied with the approval
of
the Charity Commissioners. And section 5 (1) provides that in
certain
circumstances the owner of an open space may convey his
estate or interest
in it to a local authority " in trust for
the enjoyment of the public " and
such a conveyance must be
for a charitable purpose if it is to be valid.
I am therefore of opinion that
the purpose set out in the present deed
for the provision of
facilities for recreation and for its promotion and
encouragement
is a valid charitable purpose unless the class of beneficiaries
is
too narrow—a matter to which I shall return. I can find no
distinction
between a playing field and a park or garden for it
is, I think, common
knowledge that certain games are habitually
played in public parks and
the dedication to the recreation of the
public authorised by the Act of 1888
must, in my view, have
permitted the playing of games such as are played
on a playing
field.
But I think
that the matter can be dealt with on broader lines. I would
refer
to the passage from Tyssen on Charitable Bequests at p. 5,
quoted
30802
A5
10
with approval by my noble and
learned friend, Lord Simonds, in National
Anti-Vivisection
Society v. Inland Revenue [1948] AC 31 at p. 64: "One
"
by one, the question of the validity of such trusts was brought
before
" the Court of Chancery ... It considered only this.
Having regard to
" all legislative enactments and general
legal principles is it or is it not
" for the public benefit
that property should be devoted for ever to fulfilling
" the
purpose named? If the Court considered that it was not for the
public
" benefit, it held the trust altogether void." It
appears to me that the Court,
in determining what is for the
public benefit, must be guided by the
views of Parliament as
embodied in Acts of Parliament, and, unless any
general legal
principle prevents it, courts should recognise as charitable
purposes
not only the precise purposes mentioned in the statutes but others
so
closely resembling them that they cannot reasonably be
distinguished.
If that be right, then recreation on a playing
field is, to my mind, not
distinguishable from recreation in a
public park. And if the promotion of
recreation on a playing field
is a charitable purpose, a fortiori I would think
the
promotion of moral, social and physical training there to be a
charitable
purpose.
But as this latter purpose is
said to be too vague I must examine it in
more detail. The phrase
" social and physical training " was not the inven-
tion
of the donor in this case. It occurs in section 86 of the Education
Act,
1921, which provides that: "For the purpose of
supplementing and rein-
" forcing the instruction and social
and physical training provided by the
" public system of
education " an education authority may make arrangements
to
supply or maintain or aid the supply or maintenance of inter alia
" other
" facilities for social and physical
training in the day or evening." This
was extended by section
6 of the Physical Training and Recreation Act,
1937, so as to
permit this to be done for persons of whatever age, whether
attending
any educational institution or not. And in the Education Act,
1944,
it is provided by section 53 that it shall be the duty of every
local
education authority to secure that the facilities for
primary secondary and
further education provided for their area
include adequate facilities for
recreation and social and physical
training, and " further education " includes
(section 41
(b)) " leisure-time occupation, in such organised
cultural training
" and recreative activities as are suited
to their requirements, for any persons
" over compulsory
school age who are able and willing to profit by the
"
facilities provided for that purpose "
My Lords, with these examples of
its use before him the donor in the
present case might well
suppose that the phrase " social and physical
" training
" has an ascertainable meaning, and, if it has, the addition of
the
word " moral " could not vitiate the gift. I do not
say that because a phrase
is habitually used in Acts of Parliament
it necessarily follows that it must
have a precise meaning, but I
would not readily hold that it is beyond the
capacity of a court
to determine the meaning of such a phrase with sufficient
precision
to enable it to determine whether any particular case falls within
or
outside its scope.
It is, of course, necessary that
the trust purposes should be sufficiently
precise to enable a
court to determine, if a question should arise, whether
a
particular activity is authorised by them or not and "If the
property, as
" Sir William Grant said in James v.
Allen 3 Mer. 17, ' might consistently
"'' with the
will be applied to other than strictly charitable purposes, the
trust
"' is too indefinite for the Court to execute'"
(per Lord Macnaghten in
Dunne v. Byrne [1912] AC 407 at p. 411). But the best way to show
that the purposes are too
vague is to find a hypothetical case where it
could not be
determined with reasonable certainty whether the case is
within
the purposes or not, and the best way to show that the purposes
are
too wide to be charitable is to find a hypothetical case which
would be
within the purposes but beyond the scope of charity.
Nevertheless, Counsel
for the Appellants refrained, no doubt for
good reason, from submitting any
such case; none was suggested in
argument, and I can find none myself.
It may be that the phrase "
social training " apart from any context would be
too vague,
but in this context I see no great difficulty. The word " social
"
taken alone has acquired a variety of meanings, but to my
mind " social
11
" training " in this
context plainly means training calculated to make a person
more
fit to associate with his fellows in society or the community in a
God-
fearing, civilised and law abiding way, and that surely is
one of the chief aims
of all education. In In re Compton [1945]
Ch. 123, the money bequeathed
was " to be used to fit the
children to be servants of God serving the
Nation ". The
bequest failed because the beneficiaries were only a fluctuating
body
of private individuals, but there was no suggestion that these
words
were too vague if the class of beneficiaries had been
sufficient. Lord
Greene, M.R., said : " The words are most
apt to describe the ideals of such
" an education as that for
which Dr. Arnold stood, and which, at any rate
" since his
time, have always been regarded as the dominant purpose of a
"
public school education ". In my opinion, the words in the
present case
are no more vague than, and not essentially different
from, those to which
Lord Greene referred. It is true that
in that case the words referred to
pupils and in the present case
they refer to persons of any age who can
take advantage of a
playing field. But education does not stop at any
age. Recreation
by itself may not be an educational purpose, but moral,
social and
physical training is. At least, I cannot think of any activity
which
would come within those words but would not be educational
in
character, and I adopt the words of Lord Greene, M.R. in In
re Strakosch
[1949] Ch. 529 at p. 539: " If the object
and the means indicated are clearly
" charitable then the
Court is not astute to look for possible but subsidiary
"
non-charitable means which might be within the words used ". I
note
that in a recent case, In re Webber [1954] 1 W.L.R.
1500, Vaisey J. had no
doubt that furthering the Boy Scouts
Movement was an educational and
therefore charitable purpose.
In some contexts social training
might mean training in those arts and
graces which are sometimes
supposed to facilitate admittance to certain
more exclusive
circles of society, but that is not the meaning here. On a
playing
field a person can learn the value of endurance and perseverance,
of
assiduous practice, of unselfish association in a team, and of
winning
with modesty and losing with a good grace, and, to my
mind, that is the
kind of moral and social training which the
donor's words mean in this
deed and in the Acts from which they
were taken. I did not understand
it to be argued that "
physical training " was too vague a phrase, and if Par-
liament
has enacted that providing for recreation in a public park is
charitable
it would indeed be remarkable that the law should hold
that provision for
outdoor training is not a charitable purpose.
With all respect to your
Lordships who think otherwise, I cannot
feel any substantial doubt that
the purposes of this deed are
charitable and are sufficiently clearly stated
to be enforceable.
But I find the case of the
Mission Hall more difficult. The trust
purposes here are almost
identical with those for the playing field, the
only material
difference being the substitution of the word " religious"
for
" moral " and the insertion of an additional purpose for
the provision
of facilities for religious services and
instruction, which is clearly charitable.
But my doubt arises with
regard to recreation. The possible forms of
recreation in a hall
are very different from those on a playing field, and
it does not
appear that Parliament has ever declared indoor recreation to
be a
charitable purpose. It is well settled that the provision of
entertainment
or amusement is not by itself a charitable purpose:
but if the dominant
purpose of the trust is charitable in
character the fact that recreation is
provided as an adjunct to
that purpose does not destroy the charitable
character of the
trust. That appears to me to have been recognised in
Inland
Revenue Commissioners v. City of Glasgow Police Athletic
Associa-
tion [1953] AC 380, and I may also cite In re
Mariette [1915] 2 Ch. 284,
where providing fives courts for a
school was held to be charitable.
In the present case I have
already pointed out that the Leaders must
endeavour to promote the
religious and social and physical well-being of
the beneficiaries
and only permit such activities as are calculated to con-
tribute
to their health and well-being, and the only reference to
recreation
is in the passage " by the provision of facilities
for religious services and
" instruction and for the social
and physical training and recreation of"
12
the beneficiaries. It was argued
that this case is indistinguishable from
Williams' Trustees v.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue [1947] AC 447. In
that
case the decision of the Commissioners was that " While certain
features
" of the institute conform to the idea of charity,
we have come to the conclu-
" sion that these features are
not so dominating nor is the general character
" of the
institute, such as effectively to distinguish it from an ordinary
social
" club ". In his speech, with which the other
noble and learned Lords con-
curred, my noble and learned friend,
Lord Simonds, set out the activities
of the institute, which
included maintaining a billiard room and tea and
games rooms,
badminton and table tennis clubs and promoting dances, whist
and
bridge drives, a weekly social and dance and an annual dinner
and
garden party: on the other hand there were lectures and
debates, literary
and educational classes and a library, and the
office served as an information
bureau for Welsh people. It is
true that the first object of the institute
was to create a centre
in London for promoting the moral, social, spiritual
and
educational welfare of Welsh people and fostering the study of
the
Welsh language and of Welsh history, literature, music and
art, but there
followed provision for using the institute for
providing a meeting place for
Welsh people in London and their
friends where they could obtain facilities
for social intercourse,
study, reading, rest, recreation and refreshment, and
for
meetings, concerts, lectures and other forms of instruction,
discussion
or entertainment. My noble and learned friend said
after examining the
authorities (at p. 458): " It is clear,
as I have already said, that they" (the
trustees) " have
not applied the income for charitable purposes only, and I
"
do not doubt that they have applied them strictly in accordance with
their
" trust."
My Lords, not only do I fully
accept that decision, but I do not see
how on the facts any other
was possible. Recreation and entertainment
were so prominent both
in the objects and in the activities of the institute
that I do
not see how they could have been regarded as mere adjuncts of
other
and charitable purposes. But surely it must be a question of
degree
whether in any particular case this is so or not, and I
find difficulty in
reading the trust purposes in this case as
permitting the Mission Hall to
be used for anything at all
resembling a social club. The hall is to be
used primarily for
religious services and instruction and social and physical
training,
which are, in my opinion, charitable purposes. It is open not only
to
Methodists but to persons likely to become members of the
Methodist
Church and attendance is of course voluntary. It may
well be that
some of the beneficiaries would not attend if the
activities were severely
limited to those which are strictly
religious and educational. Any recrea-
tion must, under the deed,
be such as is calculated to contribute to the
health and
well-being of those who attend and must be sanctioned by the
Leaders,
and, in my view, recreation is only to be promoted or permitted
in
conjunction with and as ancillary to the other purposes, and
therefore
it is not such as to destroy the charitable nature of
the trust. If I had
thought that the hall could be freely used for
mere recreation, entertainment
or amusement by persons who take no
part in the other activities I would
have reached a different
conclusion.
On this part of the case the
Appellants relied also on several other
authorities and I must now
deal with them. In Dunne v. Byrne [1912] A.C.
407, a
bequest to the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Brisbane to be used
as
he might judge most conducive to the good of religion was held
not
charitable. I think that this decision was inevitable because
the whole
of the money might well have been used for a
non-charitable purpose,
" In Cocks v. Manners, L.R.
12 Eq. 574, there is the well-known instance
" of the
dedication of a fund to a purpose which a devout Roman Catholic
"
would no doubt consider ' conducive to the good of religion' but
which
" is certainly not charitable" (per Lord
Macnaghten at p. 410). But if
I have rightly construed the deed of
gift of the hall, this property could
not be used for any
non-charitable purpose because any purpose or use
not strictly
charitable in itself is purely ancillary to purposes which
are
charitable. In Farley v. Westminster Bank [1939] AC 430, the bequest was
to the Vicar and Churchwardens " for
parish work ". If these words had
13
not been added the bequest would
have been charitable because the law
would have implied that the
money must be used in the performance of
their spiritual duties
for strictly religious purposes. But it was held as a
matter of
construction that the words " for parish work " were
enlarging
words. Lord Atkin (at p. 435) quoted with approval from
the judgment of
Lord Greene M.R. in the Court of Appeal " It
appears to me that, taking
" them as words of ordinary
English, they cover any activity in the parish
"... which
trustees of that character may be expected to perform, whether
"
that work be strictly a religious purpose or strictly a charitable
purpose,
" or whether it be a work considered to be conducive
to the good of
" religion, or considered to be benevolent or
generally useful to the in-
" habitants of the parish or the
congregation of the Church ". Once it
had been decided that
the words were enlarging words and had that
meaning, it was clear
that the whole of the money could have been devoted
to
non-charitable purposes, and again that appears to me to be quite
different
from the present case.
Then the Appellants relied on
the well known series of cases where
expressions such as
charitable or philanthropic, charitable or public and
charitable
or benevolent have been considered. In In re Macduff [1896] 2
Ch.
451, the bequest was "for some one or more purposes,
charitable, philan-
" thropic or ". The blank was held
to be immaterial, but the word
" philanthropic " was
held to be wider than charitable and vague and the
bequest was
held invalid. Lindley L.J. said (at p. 463) " We must get at
"
something sufficiently definite to guide the Court as to the kind of
trust
" which it has to execute, and that trust must be of
the kind called
" technically a charitable trust". And
Lopes L.J. said (at p. 468) " Looking
" at those words,
I ask myself whether or not this property might not con-
"
sistently with the will, having regard to the word ' philanthropic '.
be applied
" to other than strictly charitable purposes, and
I feel compelled to answer
" that question in the
affirmative. It has been said that nothing can be
" suggested
no purpose and no object can be suggested which would come
"
within the meaning of the word ' philanthropic ' which is not also a
charity.
" If that were so, I think the argument of the
Attorney-General could be
" maintained; but that is not a
view that I am able to adopt. I think
" I could suggest many
objects which would come within the word
" ' philanthropic '
and to which the trustees would be entitled to apply the
"
money, which are not charitable. I will not again allude to
recreation
" grounds and grounds devoted to sport which are
not for the poorer classes,
" but are generally for rich and
poor alike. I think that would he a case ".
And then he gives
another illustration. The Appellants found on this
reference to
recreation grounds and it is certainly a dictum of some weight.
It
appears on p. 460 that Lopes L.J. in the course of the argument
asked:
" Would a gift for the establishment of cricket and
recreation grounds be
" charitable? " But the question
does not seem to have been pursued and the
statutes to which we
have been referred were not brought to the notice of
the Court. I
wholly accept the rest of the quotation and particularly the
method
of approach which it sets out.
Cases of bequests for charitable
or public purposes are even further
removed from the present case
because it is clear that public purposes
include purposes which
are not charitable. I need not cite authority for
the proposition
that, if the object is predominantly political, the gift is
not
charitable, and I think that it would be generally agreed that
in a democratic
country political purposes are among the most
important and perhaps the
most important of all public purposes.
I can at this point deal briefly
with an argument for the Respondents
that even if these trusts are
not otherwise charitable they are for the relief
of poverty and
are charitable for that reason. I agree that poverty does
not mean
destitution, and that the relief of poverty can go a good
deal
further than supplying the bare necessaries of life, but it
cannot extend to
supplying everything that one would like people
to have for their own good.
It is true that under these deeds the
benefits are only to be available to
those " of insufficient
means otherwise to enjoy the advantages provided ",
but if
the true meaning of the trust purposes is that something like social
14
and athletic clubs can be set up
to provide mere sport, games, entertainment
and amenities for
those who do not wish to take part in the other activities,
then I
think that providing those advantages for those who could not
other-
wise afford them goes some way beyond the relief of
poverty. There are
many people well above the poverty line who
cannot afford to pay for
such advantages. But if I am right in my
reading of the trust purposes
and in my view of the law, then the
element of poverty is not necessary
to make them valid charitable
purposes.
But holding that the trust
purposes are charitable does not mean that
the Respondents
necessarily succeed. Not only must the purposes be chari-
table
but the beneficiaries must be such a class as will bring in that
public
element which is essential. The beneficiaries here are
the members of the
Methodist Church who reside in two large
county boroughs, and also
residents there who, in the opinion
of the Leaders, are likely to become
members of that Church. I
do not think that this latter extension of the
class of
beneficiaries improves the Respondents' case: if members of
the
Church are not a sufficient class the addition of an
indeterminate number
of individuals cannot remedy the defect.
But, on the other hand, this
extension of the class cannot, in
my view, create any difficulty, it does not
create any
uncertainty about who the beneficiaries are. The donor has
made
the Leaders the judges of whether any particular person has
the
requisite qualification: no doubt the question which they
have to determine
depends largely on opinion, but the Leaders are
in a position to form an
opinion on the question. The selection
of candidates or applicants frequently
depends largely on opinion,
but that has never, so far as I am aware, been
put forward as a
reason against the validity of a charitable bequest for
assistance
to individuals, and I see no reason why it should be an
obstacle
here. And if the members of the Methodist Church
constitute a sufficient
class it was not argued that the
limitation to those members who reside in
a particular large and
populous area or to those members of insufficient
means to provide
the benefits for themselves would make the class insufficient.
The
argument was boldly advanced that, even if the purposes of
these
trusts were charitable so that they would be valid trusts if
the benefits were
open to all the limitation to Methodists
vitiates their charitable character.
This House recently had occasion
to consider this matter in connection
with an educational trust in
Oppenheim v. Tobacco Securities Trust [1951]
A.C.
297, and my noble and learned friend, Lord Simonds, then stated
the
law thus: " It is a clearly established principle of the
law of charity that a
" trust is not charitable unless it
is directed to the public benefit. This
" is sometimes
stated in the proposition that it must benefit the community
"
or a section of the community. Negatively it is said that a trust
is not
" charitable if it confers only private benefits . . .
These words ' section
" ' of the community ' have no
special sanctity, but they conveniently indicate
" first,
that the possible (I emphasise the word 'possible')
beneficiaries
" must not be numerically negligible, and
secondly, that the quality which
" distinguishes them from
other members of the community, so that they
" form by
themselves a section of it, must be a quality which does not
"
depend on their relationship to a particular individual. It is
for this
" reason that a trust for the education of members
of a family or, as in
" In re Compton. of a number of
families cannot be regarded as charitable.
" A group of
persons may be numerous but, if the nexus between them
" is
their personal relationship to a single propositus or to several
propositi,
" they are neither the community nor a section of
the community for chari-
" table purposes." I shall
also quote, for a reason which will appear later,
from the
judgment of the Privy Council delivered by Lord Wrenbury in
Verge
v. Somerville [1924] AC 496: " To ascertain whether
a gift constitutes
" a valid charitable trust so as to escape
being void on the ground of
" perpetuity, a first enquiry
must be whether it is public—whether it is for
" the
benefit of the community or of an appreciably important class of
the
" community. The inhabitants of a parish or town, or
any particular class
" of such inhabitants, may, for
instance, be the objects of such a gift, but
" private
individuals, or a fluctuating body of private individuals,
cannot."
The contrast between a section of the community and
a fluctuating body of
private individuals has been used as the
proper test in several cases
15
without any suggestion that it
is an inadequate test, and it appears to
have its origin in the
speech of Lord Cairns in Goodman v. Mayor of Saltash
7
App. Cas. at p. 650.
If these are the criteria to be
applied in this case then it was not disputed
that members of the
Methodist Church are a section of the community and
an appreciably
important class of the community and are a particular class
of the
inhabitants of West Ham and Leyton. I would not embark on
any
theological enquiry, but it appears to me to be beyond doubt
that member-
ship of any branch of the Christian Church is a
quality which does not
depend on the members' relationship to any
individual or propositus. There
may be small sects which are not
sufficiently numerous to form an
appreciably important class of a
community, but no one would suggest that
that is true of the
Methodist Church. Indeed, I understood Counsel for the
Appellants
to admit that the beneficiaries in this case would be a
sufficient
class to be proper objects for a charitable gift for
educational or religious
purposes or for the relief of any kind of
disability or distress, and that it
would not matter in such cases
that the benefits were not confined to those
who could be said to
be in poverty. But the beneficiaries in this case are
ordinary
people not necessarily suffering from any disability and some
at
least of the purposes may be neither religious nor educational,
and it was
argued that in such a case a trust cannot be charitable
in the eye of the Jaw
unless the benefits are open to the whole
community or at least to all the
inhabitants of an area. The
argument was that while there could be a valid
charitable trust of
the fourth class in favour of a section of the community
consisting
of the inhabitants of a particular area it would not be valid if
in
favour of a section of the community denned in any other way. I
can see no
justification in reason for this distinction, but it
has often been pointed out
that the law of charity is full of
anomalies and I must, therefore, examine
the argument.
The
Appellants found this argument on Lord Macnaghten's
well-known
classification in Income Tax Commissioners v.
Pemsel [1891] AC 531 at
p. 583 : " ' Charity ' in
its legal sense comprises four principal divisions:
" trusts
for the relief of poverty ; trusts for the advancement of
education;
" trusts for the advancement of religion; and
trusts for other purposes
" beneficial to the community, not
falling under any of the preceding heads."
They say that "
beneficial to the community " means beneficial to the
whole
community. But then they are immediately faced with this
difficulty: they
admit that a trust for the relief of sick or
disabled Methodists could be a valid
charitable trust although its
benefits were open to all Methodists rich and
poor alike but to no
one else. But they get over the difficulty by saying that
any such
trust falls within Lord Macnaghten's first class and that when
he
said " trusts for the relief of poverty " he meant to
include trusts for the relief
of disability or distress whether
financial or not. I find it difficult to believe
that Lord
Macnaghten was ever guilty of such inaccurate use of language,
and
I feel sure that this was not his intention here, because on the next
page
in the Law Reports he refers to the first three classes in
these words : " the
" advancement of religion, or the
advancement of education, or the relief of
" the poor ".
The word " poverty " is sometimes loosely or
metaphorically
used to mean lack of some thing other than money,
but no one could say
" relief of the poor " if he meant
to include relief of disabled people irrespec-
tive of their
means. But it is said that Lord Macnaghten took his classifica-
tion
from the argument of Sir S. Romilly in Morice v. Bishop of
Durham 10
Ves. 522 (which can be found quoted by Lindley L.J.
in In re Macduff [1896]
2 Ch. at p. 466). " First,
relief of the indigent; in various ways: money:
" provisions:
education: medical assistance etc.; secondly, the advancement
"
of learning ; thirdly, the advancement of religion ; and fourthly,
which is the
" most difficult, the advancement of objects of
general public utility ". And it
is said that " general
public utility " cannot include a case where the bene-
ciaries
are only a class of the community. But the same difficulty arises
here
again : in which class are we to put a trust for the benefit
of disabled
Methodists? The Appellants again say in the first
class, but the word
" indigent" appears to me to be as
inappropriate as " poor" to
include disabled people of
ample means. It may be that Sir S.
16
Romilly did not have in mind
cases of this kind: I have not
made a search to see whether any
had come before the Court at
that time. But Lord Macnaghten did
not merely copy the words of Sir S.
Romilly. He made at least one
significant alteration, substituting " education "
for "
learning ": for education is now regarded as wider in scope than
learn-
ing in the sense in which I think Sir S. Romilly used the
word. And he
omitted the word " general " in the
description of the fourth class. I cannot
believe that this was
due to inadvertence; it seems to me much more likely
that he was
not satisfied that it should be included.
But a meticulous examination of
words used by judges, however eminent,
cannot be decisive if these
words were used in cases where the present question
was in no
sense in issue, so I turn to consider the authorities. In Verge
v.
Somerville [1924] AC 496, the bequest was "
unto the trustees for the time
" being of the ' Repatriation
Fund ' or other similar fund for the benefit of
" New South
Wales returned soldiers ". There was no such fund in
existence
bin it was held that this was a valid charitable trust
and that a scheme should
be settled. The judgment of the Board
was delivered by Lord Wrenbury. He
made it plain, particularly on
p. 503. that this case fell within the fourth of
Lord Macnaghten's
divisions of charity, and he stated the test to be applied
in the
words which I have already quoted, and I repeal the crucial words :
"
the inhabitants of a parish or town, or any particular class of
such inhabi-
" tants " (the italics are mine) "
may, for instance, be the objects of such a
" gift ".
He then posed the question whether if this lest is satisfied poverty
is a
necessary element and continued : " In argument it was
scarcely pressed that
" it is necessary, and after the
decision in Goodman v. Mayor of Saltash 7
"
App. Cas. 633 it was not possible to maintain the general proposition
that it
" is. A trust or condition in favour of the free
inhabitants of ancient tene-
" ments in the borough of
Saltash, in accordance with a usage whereunder
" they had the
privilege of dredging for oysters, was there held to be a valid
"
charitable trust, and. obviously, some of the inhabitants might not
have been
" poor ". Then on p. 506 he said : " It
is a public trust and is to benefit a class
" of the
community--namely, men from New South Wales who served in the
"
war and were returned or to be returned to their native land . . .
Their Lord-
" ships have no doubt that this is a charitable
purpose. If it were (which in
" their opinion it is not)
necessary to find that need of assistance is to be a
"
qualification for benefit . . . and if it were necessary to find a
reference to
" poverty, their Lordships have no difficulty in
finding it ". Accordingly, the
ratio decidendi was
that without poverty being a qualification there was a
valid
charitable trust within Lord Macnaghten's fourth division in
favour of a class
of the community defined otherwise than by
reference to all the inhabitants
of any particular area. It is
true that there was no discussion of the argument
now submitted by
the Appellants, but that was because it had not then
occurred
to anyone to raise the question ; and if this case stood alone it
would
not be fatal to the Appellants' argument because your
Lordships are not
bound by decisions in the Privy Council.
But your Lordships are bound by
a previous decision in this House, and
it appears to me to be
unquestionable that in Goodman v. Mayor of Saltash
this
House decided that there was a valid charitable trust where there was
no
question of poverty or disability or of education or religion,
and where the
beneficiaries were not by any means all the
inhabitants of any .particular
area. Lord Selborne, L.C. said (at
p. 646) that the usage was " confined to
" a particular
class of persons, viz., the ' inhabitants of ancient messuages
"'
within the borough ' (whose number would not be capable of
indefinite
" increase)". Lord Blackburn based his
dissent on the fact that he thought
it quite clear that they were
not the public at large (p. 654), and Lord
Fitzgerald regarded
them as a recognised class within the borough (p. 668).
It is
quite true that some parts of the ratio decidendi in Goodman's
case have
been so modified by subsequent decisions of this
House that it would appear
that those noble and learned Lords who
took part in these decisions did not
accept as an inflexible rule
that this House is bound by every part of every
ratio decidendi
in every previous case. But no one has ever suggested that
the
rule that we are bound by actual decisions of the House is other
than
absolute and inflexible, and, apart altogether from the ratio
decidendi in
17
Goodman's case, it
appears to me that the actual decision in that case is
inconsistent
with the Appellants' argument. Moreover, if there has been
a
modification of that ratio decidendi, it has only been
with regard to the
question whether the trust purposes must be not
only public purposes but
also of such a nature as to be charitable
in character, and on other matters,
including that now in
question, the case appears to me to be fully
authoritative.
I may add that I have found no
support for the Appellants' submission that
Lord Macnaghten's
first class can include cases for relief of distress or dis-
ability
where poverty is not a necessary qualification for receiving
benefits. But,
besides the authorities I have dealt with, there
are a number of expressions
or indications of opinion that such
cases fall within the fourth class. For
example, I think that it
clearly appears in In re Hobouon Aero Components
[1946] Ch.
194 at pp. 202, 203, that Lord Greene, M.R. thought that the
relief
of air raid distress would be a good charitable object
within the fourth class,
and in Oppenheim's case at p. 311
Lord Normand referred to this and other
cases as being within that
class. I shall not trouble your Lordships with
further examples.
I must now examine the case of
Trustees of the Londonderry Presbyterian
Church House v.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue, 27 T.C.431 : 1946
N.I. 178.
The Appellants relied on it for two purposes: first as an
authority
on the question whether the trust purposes in this case
are charitable in their
nature, and secondly in support of the
argument which I am now consider-
ing. On the former question much
depends on the construction of the
particular deed, and on that
matter I shall be as brief as I can but the second
is a pure
question of law and, as this case contains in the judgment
of
Babington, L.J. the only authority which the Appellants were
able to cite
in support of their argument, I must deal with it in
more detail.
The trust purposes so far as
relevant were " to permit the same or any
" part thereof
to be used as a Hall for meetings or for Social or Recreation
"
purposes in connection with the various Presbyterian Churches in the
City
" of Londonderry and the surrounding district or as a
Hostel or Boarding
" House or as a Library or for such other
purpose or purposes as the Board
" of Governors . . . shall
from time to time think fit, it being the true
" intention
and meaning of these presents that said premises shall be used
"
for the purposes of assisting and helping in the religious moral
social and
" recreative life of those connected with the
Presbyterian Church . . .
" . . . in such manner as the said
Board of Governors . . . shall
" from time to time think
right." These purposes appear to me to be con-
siderably
wider than those set out in the Conveyance of the hall in the
present
case. I have already said that I would not have held that
trust in this case
to be charitable if I had thought that the
recreation permitted was not merely
ancillary to the other
purposes and that the hall could be freely used for
recreation and
entertainment by those who took no part in the other activi-
ties.
I think that both the Londonderry case and the present case
are near
the border line. If I could construe the trust provisions
in the way in which
Lord MacDermott (then MacDermott, J.)
construed them I would reach the
result which he reached but, on
the whole, I prefer the construction put on
these provisions in
the Court of Appeal and on that construction the premises
could be
used for non-charitable purposes in ways not purely ancillary to
the
charitable purposes set out in the deed, and it appears that
they were in fact
so used. I do not find in this case any
sufficient answer to the special con-
sideration which I have
stated with regard to the hall in the present case.
And it appears
to me to have no bearing on the present case with regard
to the
playing field.
On the second question, what is
a sufficient class of the community. Lord
MacDermott and Andrews,
L. C.J. rejected the argument for the present
Appellants for
reasons with which I am in substantial agreement, but
Babington,
L.J. took a different view. He said (at 27 TC pp.451 and 452)
—"
The Presbyterian Church is not a section of the public. Its members,
or
" those of its members to be benefited under this trust,
are no doubt members
" of the public, but they are not a
section of it any more than were the work-
" people in In
re Drummond [1914] 2 Ch.90. and the trust is therefore not a
18
" trust for general public
purposes but for a fluctuating body of private
" individuals
. . . Considerable confusion has, I think, arisen from a failure
"
to distinguish between the public element in cases under the first
three of
" Lord Macnaghten's categories and the fourth. Under
the first three the
" charitable intention must be
established, i.e., for the relief of poverty, the
"
advancement of religion, or the advancement of education. The
objects
" must be of a public nature, as FitzGibbon, L.J.
says, but it is immaterial
" under these categories how the
class is delineated provided it is adequate
" in numbers or
importance. In cases falling within category number four,
"
however, there can be no charity until it is shewn that the gift is
to or for
" the benefit of the public or a section of the
public ... If this trust
" had been for the advancement of
religion the class would clearly be suffi-
" cient in numbers
and importance to sustain it as a good charitable trust,
"
though it only benefits a particular faith, the members of which do
not
" constitute a section of the public."
My Lords, the reasoning in the
passage which I have quoted appears to me
to be in direct conflict
with the decision of this House in Oppenheim's case,
and it
is right to say that that case had not been reported when
Babington,
L.J. gave his judgment. In Oppenheim's case the
trust was for the advance-
ment of education, but the decision of
this House was that it is not enough
that the class of
beneficiaries is numerous, it must also be a section of the
community
and the ratio decidendi applies equally to a trust for the
advance-
ment of religion. So if the reasoning of Babington, L.J.
is correct and the
members of a religious denomination do not
constitute a section of the public
(or the community) then a trust
solely for the advancement of religion or of
education would not
he a charitable trust if limited to members of a par-
ticular
Church. Of course, the Appellants do not contend that that is
right:
they could not but admit the members of a Church are a
section of the com-
munity for the purpose of such trusts. But
they maintain that they cease
to be a section of the community
when ii comes to trusts within the fourth
class. Babington. L.J.
gives no support to that contention, but the Appel-
lants cannot
succeed on this argument unless that contention is sound.
Poverty
may be in a special position, but otherwise I can see no
justification
in principle or authority for holding that when
dealing with one deed for
one charitable purpose the members of
the Methodist or any other church
are a section of the community,
but when dealing with another deed for
a different charitable
purpose they are only a fluctuating body of private
individuals. I
therefore reject this argument and on the whole matter I am
of
opinion that this appeal ought to be dismissed.
Lord Tucker
MY LORDS,
Lord Justice Jenkins' analysis
of the two conveyances in question led
him to the conclusion that
the object of the first trust was the promotion
of the religious,
social and physical well-being of persons resident in the
County
Boroughs of West Ham and Leyton, and of the second trust
the
promotion of the moral, social and physical well-being of
persons so resident
who are considered by the leaders of the
Stratford Newtown Methodist
Mission to be likely to become members
of the Methodist Church and
to be of insufficient means otherwise
to enjoy the advantages provided by
the deed, and that the
remaining provisions merely prescribe the means
whereby these
objects were to be attained.
My Lords, I agree with this
construction of the deeds and I am also in
agreement with all the
members of the Courts below in holding that these
trusts cannot be
regarded as trusts for the relief of poverty.
In considering whether they fall
within the fourth class of Pemsel's case,
as the Court of
Appeal have held, or within Class 2—trusts for the
advance-
ment of education—as was submitted in the
alternative for the first time
before your Lordships, the words
which, in my view, create the difficulty
19
are " the promotion of
social well-being". This is an extremely vague
phrase which
may have different meanings to different minds and may
include
things considered by some, but not by others, to be advantageous.
It
would appear to cover many of the activities of the so-called "
welfare
" state " and to include material benefits and
advantages which have little
or no relation to social ethics or
good citizenship, concepts which are them-
selves not easily
definable. I find it impossible to construe these trusts in
such a
way as to restrict the operation of this language to " promoting
or
" inculcating those standards of secular conduct or
behaviour expected of
" a good neighbour and a good citizen "
as the Court of Appeal have done.
It would, I feel, be a
considerable extension of any previous decision to
allow language
of this vague nature to qualify a trust for inclusion as
charitable
within the spirit and intendment of the preamble to the Statute
of
Elizabeth.
The present case is not unlike
that of Londonderry Presbyterian Church
House v. Commissioners
of Inland Revenue 27 Tax Cases 431. The language
is not, of
course, identical. In the Irish case the relevant words were: —
" Upon trust to permit the
same or any part thereof to be used as a
" Hall for meetings
or for Social or Recreation purposes in connection
" with the
various Presbyterian Churches in the City of Londonderry
"
and the surrounding district or as a Hostel or Boarding House or as
"
a Library or for such other purpose or purposes as the Board of
"
Governors . . . shall from time to time think fit, it being the
true
" intention and meaning of these presents that said
premises shall be
" used for the purposes of assisting and
helping the religious moral
" social and recreative life of
those connected with the Presbyterian
" Church in the City of
Londonderry and surrounding district in such
" manner as the
said Board of Governors . . . shall from time to time
"think
right".
Lord Chief Justice Andrews in
the course of his judgment hi the Court of
Appeal said: -
" Judicial minds have
operated not always consistently on facts
" admittedly
different; and the result can only be described as in a
"
measure chaotic. I shall simply content myself with saying that I
"
find nothing in the statutes referred to which would assist me in
holding
" that the trusts in the present case for religious,
moral, social and
" recreative purposes, excluded as I have
held them to be from Lord
" Macnaghten's third class, fall
within the fourth class as a valid
" charitable trust. The
test is not whether the objects or purposes aimed
" at are
beneficial to or receive the general acceptance of the community.
"
It is simply whether they conform or not to the requirements and
"
essentials of a legal charily ".
My Lords, I would respectfully
adopt this language and apply it to the
present case.
For this reason, which. I think,
also in conformity with the decision of
this House in Williams'
Trustees v. Inland Revenue Commissioners [1947]
A.C.
447. I would allow this appeal without expressing any view on
the
question whether the beneficiaries form a sufficient class for
the purposes
of Class 4 of Pemsel's case.
Lord Somervell of Harrow
MY LORDS,
I am unable to accept the
construction put on these deeds by the Court
of Appeal. Before
addressing myself to the words I will make one or two
general
observations. I agree with the Court of Appeal in rejecting
the
argument that as a matter of law a trust to qualify under Lord
Macnaghten's
fourth class must be analogous to the repair of "
bridges portes havens
" causwaies churches seabankes and
highewaies " being the examples given
20
in the preamble outside the
three main categories of poverty, religion and
education. The
words used by the Court of Appeal in In re Strakosch
deceased
[1949] Ch. 529, do not afford any basis for this argument as
Jenkins,
L.J., demonstrated. The reference was to show that the repair
of a
bridge is charitable notwithstanding its use by rich as well as
poor.
The submission is inconsistent, in my opinion, with some of
the cases decided
under the fourth head. I think, however, that a
trust to be valid under this
head would normally be for the public
or all members of the public who
needed the help or facilities
which the trust was to provide. The present
trust is not for the
public.
I cannot accept the principle
submitted by the Respondents that a section
of the public
sufficient to support a valid trust in one category must as a
matter
of law be sufficient to support a trust in any other category. I
think
that difficulties are apt to arise if one seeks to consider
the class apart
from the particular nature of the charitable
purpose. They are, in my
opinion, interdependent. There might well
be a valid trust for the promo-
tion of religion benefiting a very
small class. It would not at all follow
that a recreation ground
for the exclusive use of the same class would be a
valid charity
though it is clear from the Mortmain and Charitable Uses Act,
1888.
that a recreation ground for the public is a charitable purpose.
This trust not being for the
public, the necessary element of public benefit
if present must be
found in the purposes. I will deal with the first deed
the wording
of which is more favourable to the Respondents' argument
in that
it contains an express reference to religious services and
instruction.
It is not, however, suggested that the trust as a
whole can be treated as
one for the promotion of religion, the
other purposes being merely ancillary.
I agree with the Courts
below that the " means " clause has no application
to
the facilities for religious services and instruction. The clause is
im-
portant in that it implies that the advantages, social,
physical and recrea-
tional are a question of means. The more
pecunious members can get
them elsewhere. The leaders would no
doubt organise (he social and
recreational activities, but if it
was intended that their spiritual and moral
influence should play
an important part the advantages would not have been
referred to
as a question of means. The word " well-being " though
qualified
by " religious " as well as " social and
physical " means primarily, in my
opinion, a happy or
contented state. Social well-being would be promoted
when people
were happy together—an important factor in institutional
life.
Physical well-being is promoted by exercise or recreation
and the health
and contentment which normally follow. "
Social training " is an ambiguous
expression and may well be
too vague. Its meaning to me is training in
social behaviour, in
manners. I think, therefore, these words entitle the
Trustees to
run a social centre in the ordinary sense for the Methodists
and
prospective Methodists as set out in the deed. On this view the
trust,
limited as it is, is plainly not a charity, and the Court
of Appeal would,
as I read their judgments, have so held.
Had I been able to agree with
the more charitable construction placed
on the deeds by the Court
of Appeal I should have felt great difficulty in
reconciling their
conclusion with the decision of this House in Williams'
Trustees
v. Inland Revenue Commissioners (1947) A.C. 427. I am
aware
of the differences that could be emphasised, but on the
whole I think the
deed in Williams' case was nearer the
borderline than the present deeds.
The Attorney-General as amicus
curiae made certain submissions as to
recreation grounds for
the public and village halls. Nothing that I have
said is to be
taken as throwing any doubt or light on these matters. Where
a
ground or hall is for the public different considerations clearly
arise.
I would allow the appeal.
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