Chapman v Chapman
[1954] UKHL 1
Cases in which the Court has effected changes in the nature of an
infant's property, e.g. by directing investment of his personalty in the
purchase of freeholds:Cases in which the Court has allowed the trustees of settled
property to enter into some business transaction which was not
authorised by the settlement:Cases in which the Court has allowed maintenance out of income
which the settlor or testator directed to be accumulated:Cases in which the Court has approved a compromise on behalf
of infants and possible after-born beneficiaries.that all adults interested in the trust dispositions consented, and
that the variation was plainly for the benefit of all interested parties
other than adults, viz. infants and unborn persons.Where the trust dispositions have provided for accumulations of
income in favour of an infant during his minority without providing
for his maintenance during that period: but this provision would be
stultified if the infant were not maintained while the income was
accumulating. The Court has in such cases refrained from enforcing
the letter of the trusts, and by authorising maintenance has saved the
infant from starving while the harvest designed for him was in the
course of ripening.Where some event or development unforeseen, perhaps unfore-
seeable, and anyhow unprovided against by the settlor or testator,
threatened to make shipwreck of his intentions: and it was imperative
that something should be saved from the impending wreck. These are
often referred to as the "salvage" cases: and many of the " main-
" tenance " cases which I have classified separately could properly be
subsumed under this wider class.Where there has been a compromise of rights (under the Settlement
or Will) which are the subject of doubt or dispute. It is then often to
the interest of all interested parties, adult or infant or unborn, to have
certainty substituted for doubt, even if the supersession of a dubious
right by an undoubted one may be doing beneficent violence to the
terms of the trust: though it is perhaps inappropriate to speak of
violence to terms to which different persons attribute a different mean-
ing. Whether there is jurisdiction to do the same in reference to rights
which are not in dispute is a point which lies near the centre of the
present appeal, and to which I will revert.
Die Jovis, 25° Martii 1954
Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/1024
Lord
Chancellor
Lord
Oakscy
Lord
Morton of
Henryton
Lord
Asquith
of
Bishop-
stone
Lord
Cohen
HOUSE OF LORDS
CHAPMAN AND OTHERS
v.
CHAPMAN AND OTHERS
25th March 1954.
Lord Chancellor
MY LORDS,
This appeal raises questions of
considerable importance and for that
reason, though I have had the
privilege of reading the Opinion which my
noble and learned
friend. Lord Morton of Henryton, is about to deliver and
agree
with it in its reasoning and conclusions. I think it desirable to
make
same observations upon the main argument of the Appellants.
By way
of preliminary explanation, it is only necessary to say
that your Lordships
are invited to hold that a Judge of the
Chancery Division of the High
Court of Justice has an inherent
jurisdiction in the execution of the trusts
of a settlement to
sanction on behalf of infant beneficiaries and unborn
persons a
rearrangement of the trusts of that settlement for no other
purpose
than to secure an adventitious benefit which may be and,
in the present
case, is, that estate duty, payable in a certain
event as things now stand,
will, in consequence of the
rearrangement, not be payable in respect of the
trust funds.
This argument, which found
favour with Lord Justice Denning, is based, as
I understand it, on
two separate lines of thought which are for this purpose
blended.
On the one hand it is said that the Chancellor, the Court of
Chancery
and the Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice, exercising
in
turn on behalf of the Sovereign as parens patriae a peculiar
jurisdiction
over infants, had and has power to dispose of an
infant's property in any
manner beneficial to him in which he, if
of full age. could have disposed of it ;
and, on the other hand,
it is said that the same Court whose duty it has
been for some
centuries to execute and administer trusts has jurisdiction
to
remodel those trusts by agreeing on behalf of infants and
unborn persons
to any rearrangement which it deems to be
advantageous to them.
These two lines are happily
united in the proposition of the learned Lord
Justice which I
quote—
" He " [that is Lord
Hardwicke] " proceeded on the broad principle
" that the
Court had power to deal with the property and interests of
"
infants and other persons under disability in a manner not
authorised
" by the trust, whenever the Court was satisfied
that what was proposed
" was most advantageous for them
provided, of course, chat everyone of
" full age agreed to
it. I hope to show that this is the true principle
" to-day."
It was natural that die learned
Lord Justice should, upon the basis of an
unlimited inherent
jurisdiction, proceed to the conclusion that, whenever the
Court
had in the past asserted a want of jurisdiction, it had of its
own
motion placed limitations on its own jurisdiction and, giving
as examples
of this abnegation its declared inability to remove a
married woman's restraint
on anticipation, to permit a sale of
heirlooms or to sanction an unauthorised
transaction for the sake
of expediency, should observe that in all these cases
the
intervention of the legislature to vest these powers in the Court
must
not be read as delimiting the jurisdiction of the Court, but
rather as removing
limitations which the Court had imposed on
itself. These statutory pro-
visions he says " show that the
Judges of the late nineteenth century made a
" mistake in
tieing their own hands in these matters. We ought not to
"
make the same mistake to-day."
My Lords. I am unable to accept
as accurate this view of the origin,
development and scope of the
jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery. I
2
do not propose to embark on the
arduous task of tracing to its sources this
peculiar jurisdiction.
Many volumes have been devoted to it, and I have
refreshed my
memory by reference to some of them. Nowhere can I find
any
statement which would support the broad proposition for which
the
Appellants contend. Moreover, the Law Reports contain many
cases in
which the scope of the jurisdiction has been discussed,
everyone of them a
work of supererogation if its scope was
unlimited.
In my opinion, the true view
that emerges from a consideration of this
jurisdiction through the
centuries is not that at some unknown date it
appeared
full-fledged and that from time to time timid Judges have pulled
out
some of its feathers, but rather that it has been a creature of
gradual
growth, though with many setbacks, and that the range of
its authority
can only be determined by seeing what jurisdiction
the great equity Judges
of the past assumed and how they justified
that assumption. It is, in effect,
in this way that the majority
of the Court of Appeal in the present case
have approached the
problem and, in my opinion, it is the right way. It
may well be
that the result is not logical and it may be asked why, if
the
jurisdiction of the Court extended to this thing, it did not
extend to that
also. But. my Lords, that question is as vain in
the sphere of jurisdiction
as it is in the sphere of substantive
law. We are as little justified in saying
that a Court has a
certain jurisdiction, merely because we think it ought
to have it,
as we should be in declaring that the substantive law is some-
thing
different from what it has always been declared to be, merely
because
we think it ought to be so. It is even possible that we
are not wiser than
our ancestors. It is for the Legislature, which
does not rest under that
disability, to determine whether there
should be a change in the law and
what that change should be.
My Lords, I have indicated what
is, in my view, the proper approach
to the problem and do not
propose to traverse the ground which has been
so ably covered by
the majority of the Court of Appeal and will be explored
again by
my noble and learned friends. The major proposition I state in
the
words of one of the great masters of equity. " I decline,"
said Sir George
Farwell, " to accept any suggestion that the
Court has an inherent jurisdiction
" to alter a man's will
because it thinks it beneficial. It seems to me that
" is
quite impossible." It should then be asked what are the
exceptions
to this rule. They seem to me to be reasonably clearly
defined. There is
no doubt that the Chancellor (whether by virtue
of the paternal power or
in the execution of a trust, it matters
not) had and exercised the jurisdiction
to change the nature of an
infant's property from real to personal estate
and vice versa,
though this jurisdiction was generally so exercised as
to
preserve rights of testamentary disposition and of succession.
Equally, there
is no doubt that from an early date the Court
assumed the power, sometimes
for that purpose ignoring the
direction of a settlor, to provide maintenance
for an infant, and,
rarely, for an adult, beneficiary. So, too, the Court had
power in
the administration of trust property to direct that by way of
salvage
some transaction unauthorised by the trust instrument should
be
carried out. Nothing is more significant than the repeated
assertions by
the Court that mere expediency was not enough to
found the jurisdiction.
Lastly, and I can find no other than these
four categories, the Court had
power to sanction a compromise by
an infant in a suit to which that infant
was a party by next
friend or guardian ad litem. This jurisdiction, it may
be
noted, is exercisable alike in the Queen's Bench Division and the
Chancery
Division and whether or not the Court is in course of
executing a trust.
This brings me to the question
which alone presents any difficulty in this
case. It is whether
this fourth category, which I may call the compromise
category,
should be extended to cover cases in which there is no real
dispute
as to rights and, therefore, no compromise, but it is
sought by way of bargain
between the beneficiaries to rearrange
the beneficial interests under the trust
instrument and to bind
infants and unborn persons to the bargain by order
of the Court.
My Lords, I find myself faced at
once with a difficulty which I do not
see my way to overcome. For
though I am not as a rule impressed by
3
an argument about the difficulty
of drawing the line since I remember the
answer of a great Judge
that, though he knew not when day ended and night
began, he knew
that midday was day and midnight was night, yet in the
present
case it appears to me chat to accept this extension in any degree
is
to concede exactly what has been denied. It is the function of the
Court
to execute a trust, to see that the trustees do their duty
and to protect
them if they do it, to direct them if they are in
doubt and, if they do wrong,
to penalise them. It is not the
function of the Court to alter a trust because
alteration is
thought to be advantageous to an infant beneficiary. It was,
I
thought, significant that learned counsel was driven to the admission
that
since the benefit of the infant was the test, the Court had
the power, though
in its discretion it might not use it, to
override the wishes of a living and
expostulating settlor, if it
assumed to know better than he what was beneficial
for the infant.
This would appear to me a strange way for a court of
conscience to
execute a trust. If then the Court has not, as I hold it has
not,
power to alter or rearrange the trusts of a trust instrument, except
within
the limits which I have defined, I am unable to see how
that jurisdiction
can be conferred by pleading that the alteration
is but a little one.
It remains to say a few words on
the authorities. Counsel have not cited,
and I have not found, any
case before the twentieth century in which the
Court has given to
the term "compromise" a meaning which it does
not
legitimately bear and sanctioned an alteration of trusts where
no dispute
existed. Two cases were brought to your Lordships'
notice which occurred
in the early years of this century. One of
them, re Wells, a decision of
Farwell, J., does not, I
think, upon examination support the extension of
the jurisdiction.
I will not anticipate what my noble and learned friend
has to say
about it. I cannot think that it weighs heavily in the scales
against
the emphatic views elsewhere expressed by the same learned Judge.
The
other case, re Trenchard, a decision of Buckley, J., is more
difficult to
explain. I should myself regard it as an isolated
case in which the Court
went further than it had hitherto done in
giving to the word " compromise "
an unnatural meaning
and to itself a jurisdiction never before exercised.
After these
two cases, there appears to have been no case in which the
limits
of the jurisdiction have been discussed until the present case
and
two others with it, which are not the subject of appeal, came
before the
Court. But it seems that Judges of the Chancery
Division have in recent
years entertained jurisdiction to make
orders in Chambers sanctioning on
behalf of infant beneficiaries
bargains or arrangements which involved the
alteration of trusts
but did not arise out of any dispute as to rights which
it was
expedient to compromise; just such orders, in fact, as that which
is
under consideration today. In the reported cases, re Duke of Leeds
in
1947 and re Lucas in the same year, there is a clear
indication of its being
done and learned counsel assured us that
it was done. But neither in these
cases nor in other unreported
cases in which a similar course was adopted.
does there appear to
have been any argument. It is, moreover, clear from
the orders
made by Harman, J., in the present case and by Roxburgh, J.,
in
the related cases of re Downshire and re Blackwell, that
there was in
the year 1952 no generally accepted doctrine on the
question. Nor, though
I am told that I myself made such an order
when I was a Judge of the
High Court, would I assent of my own
recollection to the view that this
jurisdiction was at any time
during my life at the Bar or on the Bench
generally regarded as
belonging to the Court. But this sort of recollection
is
necessarily fallible, and I would rather say that there is nothing in
the
reported cases of the last fifty years to show that there is
now vested in
the Court a jurisdiction which it had formerly
disclaimed.
This appeal must accordingly, in
my view, be dismissed. Your Lordships
will think it proper that
the costs of the Appellants and Respondents should
be paid out of
the trust funds.
I cannot, my
Lords, conclude without expressing to Mr. Buckley the
gratitude of
the House for the very able argument which as amicus curioe
he
addressed to us.
4
Lord Oaksey
MY LORDS,
My experience in the exercise of its jurisdiction by the
Court of Chancery
in the administration of trusts is so limited
that I am not prepared to differ
from the Opinion about to be
expressed by my noble and learned friend,
Lord Morton of Henryton.
I must confess, however, that I only agree with the greatest hesitation.
The general rule is said to be that the Court must see
that the trusts are
executed, but it is conceded that the Court
has no power to insist upon
the execution of the trusts if the
cancellation of the settlement is desired
by all the parties if
they are sui juris and the property can then be resettled
upon
altered trusts. Yet where infants are concerned the Court cannot,
it
appears, sanction any alteration of the trusts under the general
rule
although the interests of the infants appear to demand the
alteration.
Lord Morton of Henryton
MY LORDS,
The case which is the subject of the present appeal is
one of three cases
which came before Judges of the Chancery
Division at the end of July in
the year 1952. The other two are re
Downshire's Settled Estates [1952] 2
A.E.R. 603 and re
Blackwells Settlement [1952] 2 A.E.R. 647. These three
cases
differed to some extent in their facts, but in each of them the
Court
was asked to alter the trusts of a settlement, and in each of
them
the reason for the application was the same. The trustees and
the adult
beneficiaries realised that if the trusts of the
settlement remained unaltered,
the burden of taxation would be
very heavy, whereas if the trusts were altered
in certain respects
that burden would or might be greatly reduced. They
therefore
applied to the Court for an order sanctioning a scheme carrying
out
these alterations, on the ground that the adult parties approved the
scheme
and that it was for the benefit of the infant beneficiaries
and of any after-born
beneficiaries.
The present case, Re Chapman, came before Harman,
J. in Chambers on
the 28th July, 1952, and he dismissed the
application. The learned Judge
did not deliver a formal judgment,
but it is agreed that he took the view that
he had no jurisdiction
to make the order which was sought.
On the same day Roxburgh. J. had to consider the case of
re Downshire.
In that case the Court was asked to sanction
the scheme either under its
general jurisdiction or under section
64 (1) of the Settled Land Act, 1925.
Argument was heard in
Chambers, but judgment was delivered in open Court
on 30th July.
The learned Judge reviewed certain authorities and concluded
as
follows: —
" I hold that the transactions involved in this
scheme amount in
" substance to a re-writing of the trusts,
or a substantial part thereof,
" or to directions to
administer the trust property on the footing that
" new
trusts have been declared and old trusts have been struck out
"
or varied, and the admitted purpose of the scheme is not to solve
any
" administrative problem but to rearrange beneficial
interests to greater
" advantage. Such proposals fall, in my
judgment, outside the scope of
" the Court's ' extraordinary
' jurisdiction."
He held also that the proposals were outside the ambit
of section 64 of
the Settled Land Act, 1925, and section 57 of the
Trustee Act, 1925.
Next day Roxburgh, J. gave judgment in open Court in re
Blackwell,
which had also been argued in Chambers. In that
case the settlement was
of personalty, and the general
jurisdiction and section 57 of the Trustee Act,
1925, were relied
upon. The learned Judge said: "This scheme, in my
"
judgment, proposes a much less drastic re-settlement than the scheme
in
" re Downshire but my conclusions are the same."
5
The Applicants appealed in all
three cases, and as in none of the cases
was there any person or
class of persons concerned to argue against the
Applicants'
contentions, the Court of Appeal thought it proper to suggest
that
counsel should be instructed on behalf of the Attorney-General to
assist
the Court as amicus curiae. Mr. Buckley appeared in
response to that
suggestion, both in the Court of Appeal and in
this House, and has rendered
very valuable assistance.
The Court of Appeal allowed the
appeals in re Downshire and re Blackwell
but by a
majority (the Master of the Rolls and Romer, L.J.) they dismissed
the
appeal in re Chapman. Denning, L.J. would have allowed the
appeal in
all three cases. The present appeal relates only to the
case of re Chapman,
but I have found it convenient to state
the history of all three cases, for
reasons which will appear
later.
The application now before your
Lordships' House relates to three separate
settlements. The first
of these settlements is dated the 15th March, 1944,
and is
hereafter referred to as " the 1944 Settlement". The
settlors were
Col. Robert Chapman and his wife (now Sir Robert and
Lady Chapman).
Clauses 2, 3 and 4 of the 1944 Settlement are as
follows: -
" 2. The trustees shall
stand possessed of the trust premises (subject
" to clauses 3
and 4 following) for all or any the child or children of
"
the settlors' son Robert Macgowan Chapman who shall attain the
"
age of twenty-one years or die under that age leaving issue and if
more
" than one in equal shares as tenants in common."
" 3. Provided always that
until the youngest child of the said Robert
" Macgowan
Chapman shall have attained the age of twenty-five years
" if
that event shall happen within twenty-one years from the date
hereof
" or until the expiration of twenty-one years from the
death of the
" survivor of the settlors if the youngest
surviving child of the said
" Robert Macgowan Chapman shall
not then have attained the age of
" twenty-five years the
trustees shall retain the trust premises and shall
" apply
such part as they in their discretion shall think fit of the income
"
thereof for or towards the common maintenance education or other
"
benefits of the children of the said Robert Macgowan Chapman for
the
" time being living whether minors or adults or for or
towards the
" maintenance education or other benefit of any
one or more of them
" to the exclusion of the other or others
and shall (subject as hereinafter
" mentioned) accumulate the
surplus of such income until the time for
" distribution by
investing the same and the resulting income thereof in
" any
investments hereby authorised in augmentation of the capital of
"
the trust premises to be held upon the same trusts as the original
"
trust premises but so that the trustees may apply the accumulations
of
" any preceding year or years in or towards the
maintenance education
" or benefit of all or any of the said
children in the same manner as
" such accumulations might
have been applied had they been income
" arising from the
original trust funds in the then current year. Provided
"
always that after each child of the said Robert Macgowan Chapman
"
has attained his or her majority the surplus income of his share in
the
" trust premises not expended by virtue of the foregoing
powers of this
" clause shall not be accumulated but shall be
paid to such child."
" 4. Provided also that the
trustees may at any time with the consent
" in writing of the
Settlors raise any part or parts not exceeding in the
" whole
one half of the then expectant or presumptive or vested share
"
of any child whether minor or adult of the said Robert Macgowan
"
Chapman in the trust premises under the trust hereinbefore
contained
" and pay or apply the same to him or her or for
his or her advance-
" ment or otherwise for his or her
exclusive benefit in such manner
" as the trustees shall
think fit and as to the part or parts so raised
" the
maintenance and other trusts of the last preceding clause shall
"
cease to be applicable and no interest on any such advance shall be
"
charged to any child so advanced in the accounts of die trust."
The remaining clauses of the
Settlement were administrative and are not
relevant for the
purposes of this appeal
6
By the second settlement, dated
the 8th February, 1950, and hereafter
referred to as " the
1950 Settlement", Lady Chapman settled certain further
funds
on substantially the same trusts for the benefit of Mr. Robert
Macgowan
Chapman's children as those declared by the 1944
Settlement. In particular
the provisions for common maintenance
and accumulation contained in clause
3 of the 1944 Settlement were
repeated by clause 4 of the 1950 Settlement
save that the
reference in the former clause to the expiration of 21 years from
the
death of the survivor of the settlors was altered in the latter
clause to
the expiration of 21 years from the death of Lady
Chapman.
By the third settlement, dated
the 10th February, 1950 (hereafter referred
to as " the
Nicholas Settlement " and made upon the marriage of Henry
James
Nicholas Chapman with Anne Barbara Croft), Lady Chapman
settled certain
funds upon trusts for the benefit of the children
of that marriage and of the
husband and the wife or (if none of
such children attained a vested interest)
then upon similar trusts
for the benefit of the children of Nicholas by any
subsequent
marriage, and of Nicholas and any subsequent wife, and it
was
provided (clause 4) that in the event of the determination or
failure of such
trusts the trustees should pay over the trust
funds (subject as therein men-
tioned) to the trustees of the 1950
Settlement to be held by them upon the
trusts of that Settlement.
Mr. Robert Macgowan Chapman (who
is the son of Sir Robert and Lady
Chapman) has been married once,
namely, to his present wife, Barbara May
Chapman, and there have
been three children of the marriage, namely, the
Defendants David
Robert Macgowan Chapman, who was born on the 16th
December, 1941,
Peter Stuart Chapman, who was born on the 24th August,
1944, and
Elizabeth Mary Chapman, who was born on the 11th May, 1946.
There
has been no issue as yet of the marriage between Mr. Henry
James
Nicholas Chapman (who is also a son of Sir Robert and Lady
Chapman)
and his wife Anne Barbara.
As at the 24th March, 1952. the
estimated values of the funds comprised in
the three Settlements
were respectively as follows:—The 1944 Settlement
£43.000,
of which £27.700 was settled by Sir Robert, and £15,600
by Lady
Chapman; the 1950 Settlement £14,700; and the
Nicholas Settlement
£19.600. By reason of the discretionary
trusts for the common mainten-
ance of Mr. Robert Macgowan
Chapman's children contained respectively
in clause 3 of the 1944
Settlement and clause 4 of the 1950 Settlement the
trustees of
those Settlements were advised that, except in certain
unlikely
events, a claim for estate duty would arise in respect of
the funds comprised
in the former Settlement on the death of the
survivor of Sir Robert (now
aged 72) and Lady Chapman (now aged
65) and in respect of the funds
comprised in the latter Settlement
upon the death of Lady Chapman.
Further, the Trustees of the
Nicholas Settlement were advised that if the
substitutive
limitation contained in that Settlement, and before referred to,
is
valid and should become effective, a claim for estate duty will arise
in
respect of their funds by reason of that limitation. If the
present rates of
estate duty remain unchanged it is estimated that
nearly £30,000 will be
exigible for duty in respect of the
three trust funds whether Sir Robert sur-
vives or predeceases
Lady Chapman.
In these circumstances a scheme
of arrangement was prepared the object
of which was to avoid the
expected claims for duty on the deaths of Sir Robert
and Lady
Chapman. This object could only be achieved by freeing the 1944
and
1950 Settlement Funds from the provisions for common
maintenance
contained in clauses 3 and 4 of those Settlements
respectively. It was
accordingly proposed that the trustees of
those Settlements should, with the
sanction of the Court, advance
their respective funds to the trustees of a new
Settlement which
was to be entered into containing similar trusts, but omitting
those
provisions; and that the trustees of the Nicholas Settlement should,
on
the failure of the trusts therein contained for the benefit of
Nicholas Chapman
and his present and any future wife and issue
similarly transfer their fund to
the trustees of the proposed new
Settlement to be held upon the trusts thereof.
To the above statement of the facts
(which is taken in substance from the
majority judgment in the
Court of Appeal) I would add that in this House
7
counsel asked for an order in
somewhat different terms, the effect being
that the trusts
declared by clause 3 of the 1944 Settlement and clause 4
of the
1950 Settlement should no longer have any operation.
My Lords, the first question
which arises is solely one of jurisdiction.
and may be stated
thus—Had Harman, J. jurisdiction to destroy the
trusts
contained in clause 3 of the 1944 settlement and the
similar trusts created
by clause 4 of the 1950 settlement, if he
came to the conclusion that the
elimination of these trusts would
result in benefit to the infant beneficiaries
and to any
after-born beneficiaries? For the sake of brevity I shall address
my
observations only to the case of the 1944 Settlement, since precisely
similar
considerations will apply to the 1950 Settlement.
It is common ground that the
discretionary trusts contained in clause 3 of
the 1944 Settlement
are in no way objectionable in themselves, but I shall
assume, for
the purposes of this judgment, that their elimination would
be
beneficial to all parties concerned, by reason of the relevant
taxing provisions.
Mr. Neville Gray for the
Appellant trustees and Mr. Russell for the
Respondents, three of
whom are infants, invite your Lordships to answer the
question
already posed in the affirmative. Mr. Buckley, as amicus
curiae
has put forward, for the assistance of this House,
certain reasons why it
should be answered in the negative. Mr.
Gray first contended that the Court
of Chancery, and its successor
the Chancery Division of the High Court of
Justice, has had for
many years an inherent jurisdiction to make such an
order as is
sought in the present case. The same argument was advanced
in the
Court of Appeal and was stated in the majority judgment as follows :-
" It was the argument of
the learned Counsel for all the Appellants
" (founded on Lord
Chancellor Jeffreys' case, Earl of Winchelsea v.
"
Norcliffe, 1 Vernon, page 435, and other early cases,
including Pierson
" v. Shore, 1 Atkyn. page
480, before Lord Chancellor Hardwicke and
" Inwood v.
Twyne, Ambler, page 417. before Lord Chancellor
"
Northington), that the jurisdiction of the Court to modify or vary
trusts
" and to direct the trustees accordingly was unlimited
provided (1) that
" all persons interested who were sui
juris assented and (2) that it was
" clearly shown to be
for the advantage or convenience of all persons
" interested
who were not sui juris including persons unborn or not
"
presently ascertainable: in other words, that the Court has
unlimited
" jurisdiction in relation to the property of
infants, including the bene-
" ficial interests of infants
and unborn cestuisque trust under a settlement,
" and
will exercise that jurisdiction so as to secure any benefit or
advan-
" tage for the infants or unborn persons which they
could have
" themselves secured had they been in esse and
sui juris, even to the
" extent of sanctioning a
departure from the beneficial trusts of the trust
"
instrument from which the interests in question are derived."
The majority rejected this
argument, but Denning, L.J. accepted it. My
Lords, on this point I
find myself in complete agreement with the majority.
They
expressed their conclusion in the following language, which I
would
desire to adopt as my own: -
" In our
judgment, such a broad and general jurisdiction is
"
inconsistent with the two decisions of this Court in 1901 and 1903.
"
never so far as we are aware subsequently qualified or criticised,
"
namely. Re New ([1901] 2 Chancery, page 534) and Re
Tollemache
" (| 1903] 1 Chancery, page 457) . . . The
general rule ... is that the
" Court will give effect, as it
requires the trustees themselves to do,
" to the intentions
of a settlor as expressed in .the trust instrument
" and has
not arrogated to itself any overriding power to disregard or
"
re-write the trusts (See, for example, D'Eyncourt v. Gregory,
3
" Chancery Division, page 635; Johnstone v.
Baber, 8 Beavan, page
" 233). There have been cases in
which the Court has made Orders
" which did undoubtedly
result in a departure from the trusts declared
" by the
settlor; in our opinion, however, these cases did not establish
"
new rules but only exceptions to the general rule."
8
Mr. Gray contended that the
cases which the Court of Appeal regarded
as exceptions were really
examples of the unlimited jurisdiction which he
sought to
establish. I call it " unlimited jurisdiction ", because
Mr. Gray
set no limit to it, provided only that the two elements
already mentioned
are present. It is necessary, therefore, to
examine these so-called examples
in some detail. Mr. Gray grouped
them under four heads—
As to head (a). In my
view these cases in no way assist the argument
now under
consideration. It is self-evident that a change in the nature
of
property to which an infant is absolutely entitled causes no
change in the
infant's beneficial interest, and it is noteworthy
that even in such cases the
Court usually so framed its order that
the infant's right to make a will during
infancy in the case of
personalty, and the rights of his heir to take the realty
if the
infant died under the age of 21, were carefully safeguarded.
Some
earlier instances of this exercise of the Court's paternal
jurisdiction are Earl
of Winchelsea v. Norcliffe (1686)
supra, Pierson v. Shore (1739) supra.
Bridges v.
Bridges (1752) footnote in 12 A.C. at p. 693, Inwood v.
Twyne
(1762) supra, Ashburton v. Ashburton (1801)
6 Vesey, 6.
Even this limited jurisdiction
was recognised as being of an exceptional
nature in Re Jackson
(1882) 21 Ch. D. 786; see also Glover v. Barlow
reported
in a footnote to that case.
A similar jurisdiction was exercised in the case of lunatics.
As to head (b). The
leading case under this head is Re New [1901] 2 Ch.
534.
In that case the Court of Appeal authorised the trustees of
three
separate trust instruments to concur in a shareholders'
scheme for the
reconstruction of a prosperous limited company,
shares in which, settled
by the settlor or testator in each case,
had become vested in the trustees, it
being proposed that all the
shareholders in the existing company should
exchange their shares,
all of which were fully paid, for more realisable
shares (fully
paid) and debentures in the proposed new or reconstructed com-
pany.
The evidence showed that the scheme would be greatly to the
advan-
tage of all parties interested under the several trusts,
including infants and
unborn persons. In one of the three cases
the trustees had power, under
the trust instrument, to invest in
shares or debentures of such a company
as the proposed new
company. In the two other cases, as the trustees
had no such
power, the Court put them on an undertaking to apply for leave
to
retain the shares and debentures they would obtain under the
scheme,
if they desired to retain them beyond one year from the time
the
reconstruction should be carried into effect.
Romer L.J. in delivering the
judgment of the Court said: " As a rule,
" the Court has
no jurisdiction to give, and will not give, its sanction to the
"
performance by trustees of acts with reference to the trust estate
which are
" not, on the face of the instrument creating the
trust, authorised by its
" terms. The cases of In re
Crawshay. decided by North J., and In re
"
Morrison, decided by Buckley J., are instances where the Court
was asked
" to sanction steps to be taken by trustees which
it thought unjustifiable, and
" which it declared it had no
jurisdiction to authorise. But in the manage-
" ment of a
trust estate, and especially where that estate consists of a
business
" or shares in a mercantile company, it not
infrequently happens that some
" peculiar state of
circumstances arises for which provision is not expressly
"
made by the trust instrument, and which renders it most desirable,
and it
" may be even essential, for the benefit of the estate
and in the interest of all
9
" the cestuis que trust,
that certain acts should be done by the trustees which
" in
ordinary circumstances they would have no power to do. In a case of
"
this kind, which may reasonably be supposed to be one not foreseen
or
" anticipated by the author of the trust, where the
trustees are embarrassed
" by the emergency that has arisen
and the duty cast upon them to do
" what is best for the
estate, and the consent of all the beneficiaries cannot be
"
obtained by reason of some of them not being sui juris or in
existence,
" then it may be right for the Court, and the
Court in a proper case would
" have jurisdiction, to sanction
on behalf of all concerned such acts on behalf
" of the
trustees as we have above referred to. By way merely of
illustration,
" we may take the case where a testator has
declared that some property
" of his shall be sold at a
particular time after his death, and then, owing to
"
unforeseen change cf circumstances since the testator's death, when
the time
" for sale arrives it is found that to sell at that
precise time would be ruinous
"Do the estate, and that it is
necessary or right to postpone the sale for a
" short time in
order to effect a proper sale: in such a case the Court would
"
have jurisdiction to authorize, and would authorize, the trustees to
postpone
" the sale for a reasonable time.
" It is a matter of common
knowledge that the jurisdiction we have been
" referring to,
which is only part of the general administrative jurisdiction of
"
the Court, has been constantly exercised, chiefly at chambers. Of
course,
" the jurisdiction is one to be exercised with great
caution, and the Court will
" take care not to strain its
powers. It is impossible, and no attempt ought
" to be made,
to state or define all the circumstances under which, or the
"
extent to which, the Court will exercise the jurisdiction ; but it
need scarcely
" be said that the Court will not be justified
in sanctioning every act desired
" by trustees and
beneficiaries merely because it may appear beneficial to the
"
estate ; and certainly the Court will not be disposed to sanction
transactions
" of a speculative or risky character. But each
case brought before the Court
" must be considered and dealt
with according to its special circumstances."
My Lords, surely the passage
just quoted tells strongly against the argument
now under
consideration. The opening sentence states the general rule in
the
plainest terms and clearly recognises that even the limited and
exceptional
jurisdiction to sanction transactions in the nature of
" salvage'' of the trust
property must be exercised with
great caution. The Court was, of course,
only dealing with a
proposed investment to be made by trustees, and the
beneficial
trusts were in no way altered ; but surely if the Court had had
the
wide general power to alter trusts, for which counsel contend, the
whole
trend of the judgment would have been different.
Two years
later Kekewich, J. and the Court of Appeal had to consider the
case
of Re Tollemache [1903] 1 Ch 457. In that case the trustees
sought
power to acquire a mortgage of the interests of the tenant
for life. This
transaction was not within the investments
authorised by the settlement,
but it was pointed out that it would
increase the income of the tenant for life
and would not injure
the remaindermen. Kekewich, J. refused the application
and
carefully analysed the relevant authorities as to jurisdiction,
including
Re New. At p. 462, after citing certain cases, he
observed : " The above are
" illustrations of the
exercise by the Court, justified by the practical necessity
"
of the case, of jurisdiction going beyond the mere administration of
trusts
" according to the terms of the instruments creating
them. Others might be
" given : the applications or rather
the circumstances inducing them exhibiting
" large varieties,
but those mentioned suffice to explain the scope of the
"
practice of the Court. There might be added illustrations of the
refusal of
" the Court to exercise this extraordinary
jurisdiction, but there is no occasion.
" All the cases of
refusal may be grouped under one of two classes. Either,
"
notwithstanding the advantage actual and prospective of what is
proposed
" to be done, there is no urgency for it, and the
existing state of things may
" without great mischief be
allowed to remain, or the terms on which the
" advantage can
be gained are such that the Court would by accepting them
"
create a new trust in lieu of that which it is administering."
10
The judgments of the Court of
Appeal are in [1903] 1 Ch. 956. They are
as follows: —
" Lord Justice Vaughan
Williams: It is admitted that the Applicant
" cannot succeed
unless she can bring herself within In re New. Putting
"
that case shortly, it is this—that a case may arise in which,
in the course
" of the administration of an estate, such an
emergency may occur that
" it must be dealt with at once; but
it cannot be said that there is any
" such emergency here.
The appeal must, therefore, be dismissed, and
" with costs.
Lord Justice Romer: I agree. In re New shews how far
"
the Court will go, and beyond what point it will not go. Lord
"
Justice Cozens-Hardy: I agree. I will only add that, in my opinion,
"
In re New constitutes the high-water mark of the exercise by
the Court
" of its extraordinary jurisdiction in relation to
trusts."
To quote again the majority judgment in the present case:
" These Judgments are, in
our view, consistent and only consistent
" with the
conclusion we have expressed above, and are irreconcilable
"
with the broad general proposition for which Counsel for the Appel-
"
lants have contended. It is to be noted that Lord Justice Romer,
who
" had delivered the Judgment in Re New, was a
member of the Court
" in Re Tollemache. And if, in
view of the arguments now ,put forward,
" the present members
of the Court of Appeal wish that he had more
" precisely
stated the limits of the jurisdiction which he plainly had
"
in mind, he indicated no dissent from or qualification of the other
"
Judgments of the Court or the Judgment of Mr. Justice Kekewich."
My Lords, in my view the cases
just mentioned, exemplifying the excep-
tional jurisdiction which
is exercised for the sake of " salvage " of the
trust
property, far from supporting the existence of a general
jurisdiction in the
Court to alter trusts, go far to negative it.
As to head (c). It is
said, and said truly, that in some cases under this
head the
Court's order resulted in an alteration of beneficial interests,
since
income was applied in maintaining beneficiaries,
notwithstanding that the
testator or settlor had directed that it
should be accumulated or applied in
reduction of incumbrances.
Some instances are Revel v. Watkinson (1748)
1 Vesey
Senior. 93, Cavendish v. Mercer (1776) 5 Vesey. 195,
footnote,
Greenwell v. Greenwell (1800) 5 Vesey, 194. Emit
v. Barlow (1807) 14 Vesey,
202. Haley v.
Bannister, 4 Maddocks 279. Havelock v. Havelock
(1881) 17 Ch.
D. 807. This jurisdiction is too well
established to be doubted to-day. It
was explained as follows by
Pearson, J. in Re Collins 32 Ch. D. 232: " The
"
ground of the decision " —that is, the decision in
Havelock—" I take to be,
" that where a
testator has made a provision for a family, using that word in
"
the ordinary sense in which we take the word, that is the children of
a
" particular stirps in succession or otherwise, but
has postponed the enjoy-
" ment, either for a particular
purpose or generally for the increase of the
" estate, it is
assumed that he did not intend that these children should
"
be left unprovided for, or in a state of such moderate means that
they
" should not be educated properly for the position and
fortune which he
" designs them to have, and the Court has
accordingly found from the earliest
" time that where an
heir-at-law is unprovided for, maintenance ought to be
"
provided for him."
A somewhat similar explanation
was given by Farwell, J. in Re Walker
[1901] 1 Oh. 879 at
885. It is clear that neither of these learned judges
regarded the
maintenance cases as affording any evidence that the Court had
an
inherent jurisdiction to alter beneficial trusts in any way it
pleased.
To my mind they must be regarded as an exception, and I
think the only real
exception, to the general rule, as stated by
Romer, LJ. in Re New in the
words already quoted and by
Harwell, J. in Re Walker supra when he said:
" I
decline to accept any suggestion that the Court has an inherent
jurisdic-
" tion to alter a man's Will because it thinks it
beneficial. It seems to me
" that is quite impossible."
Striking instances of cases
which negative the existence of the alleged
unlimited jurisdiction
are Re Crawshay (1888) 60 L.T. 357, Re Morrison
(Buckley,
J.) [1901] 1 Ch 701, and Re Montagu (CA.) [1897] 2 Ch 8. In
the
11
first of these cases North, J.
said " I should not be administering the trusts
"
created by the testator if I consented to this scheme. I should be
altering
" his trusts and substituting something quite
outside the will. On the
" assumption that the scheme would
be beneficial to the estate, I cannot
" decide that I have
jurisdiction to alter it." In the last-mentioned case
the
Court of Appeal held that it had no jurisdiction to allow the
trustees
of a settlement to raise money by mortgage of the settled
estate and to apply
it in pulling down and rebuilding some of the
houses on the property.
Lindley, L.J. said: " We none of us
see our way to hold that there is
" jurisdiction to make an
order in this case. It is very desirable that
" the Court
should have jurisdiction to deal with such a case ; but Par-
"
liament has never gone so far as to give it that jurisdiction. No
doubt
" it would be a judicious thing to do what is wanted in
this case, and if
" the persons interested were all
ascertained and of age, "they would probably
" concur,
and then it might be done; but they are not all ascertained nor of
"
full age ; and unless the Court can authorise the trustees to do it,
it cannot
" be done."
Lopes, L.J. said: " I have
no doubt that what is proposed is beneficial,
" and would
increase both the income and the capital value of the property.
"
The question is whether the Court has jurisdiction to sanction it.
There
" is no provision in the settlement which would
authorise the works in ques-
" tion, nor do they fall within
any of the improvements sanctioned by the
" Settled Land
Acts. It is urged that the Court, having control over trust
"
property, can sanction them, as it would be vastly for the benefit of
the
" persons interested that it should do so. That is not
enough. If the build-
" ings were falling down it would be a
case of actual salvage and would stand
" differently. Even in
cases of repairs the Court has been very careful in the
"
exercise of its jurisdiction. In the case of In re Jackson, Kay.
J., in
" dealing with a case of repairs, said: ' I think that
this jurisdiction should be
" ' jealously exercised, and only
in cases which amount to actual salvage.'
" The present
cannot be said to be a case of actual salvage, and the learned
"
judge was right in refusing to exercise a jurisdiction which he in
fact did
" not possess."
As to head (d). There
are, of course, many cases to be found in the
reports in which the
Court of Chancery, and its successor the Chancery
Division, have
approved compromises of disputed rights on behalf of
infants
interested under a will or settlement and on behalf also
of possible after-
born beneficiaries. In my opinion these cases
in no way support the existence
of the " unlimited
jurisdiction " for which Mr. Gray contends. Where rights
are
in dispute, and the Court approves a compromise, it is not altering
the
trusts, for the trusts are, ex hypothesi, still in
doubt and unascertained.
For these reasons, I would
reject Mr. Gray's contention that the Court has
the unlimited
jurisdiction already described. It now becomes necessary to
examine
a further argument, of far-reaching importance, which was
fully
developed by Mr. Russell. This argument may be summarised as
follows:-
" Let it be assumed, for
the purposes of this argument, that the Court
" of Appeal
rightly rejected our submission as to the general jurisdiction
"
of the Court of Chancery, and its successor the Chancery Division.
"
to modify or vary trusts. Even on that assumption the present
"
scheme can be sanctioned as being a ' compromise'. There
" is
no doubt that in cases where the respective rights of persons
"
interested under a will or settlement were in dispute, the Court of
"
Chancery down to 1873, and the Chancery Division since the passing
"
of the Judicature Act, has had jurisdiction to approve a compromise
"
on behalf of infants and unborn persons. There has never been any
"
logical reason why this jurisdiction should not extend to
alterations
" of beneficial interests under a trust, if such
alterations are desired by
" the adult beneficiaries and are
for the benefit of infants and any after-
'% born
beneficiaries, and it has been so extended on various occasions
"
during the last fifty years. Arrangements of this kind may not be
"
compromises in the strict sense, if no rights are in dispute, but
they
" are compromises ' in the broader sense of the word
'-—to quote the
12
" majority judgment in the
Court of Appeal. The majority had no
" good reason for
rejecting the arrangement in Re Chapman if they
" had
jurisdiction to sanction the arrangements in Re Downshire and
Re
" Blackwell. No one of them is a compromise
of disputed rights ; each
" one results in an alteration or
rearrangement of beneficial interests
" under a settlement,
and each one is made for the same reason—the
" desire
to reduce or avoid taxation."
As this argument is based partly
on the reasoning of the Master of the
Rolls and Romer, L.J. in
their joint judgment, and partly upon the fact
that the Court of
Appeal was unanimous in sanctioning the schemes put
forward in
Downshire and Blackwell. it is necessary to set out in
some detail
the course taken in the joint judgment. After
rejecting the argument as to
the " unlimited jurisdiction ",
and referring to the maintenance cases as an
exception to the rule
that the Court cannot alter or vary trusts, the joint
judgment
proceeded as follows: —
" It must also now be
taken, in our judgment (at any rate since the
" decision of
Re Trenchant fifty years ago, [1902], 1 Ch. 378) that the
"
Court has a further power and jurisdiction ... to approve, on
behalf
" of persons interested under the trust who are under
a disability (particu-
" larly infants) and persons who may
hereafter become interested,
" compromises proposed by or
between persons beneficially interested
" under the trust who
are sui juris, and to direct and protect trustees
"
accordingly ; and the word ' compromise' should not be narrowly
"
construed so as to be confined to ' compromises' of disputed rights."
It is to be noted that it is not
stated at this point how far the word
" compromise " is
to extend.
The Master of the Rolls and
Romer. L.J. went on to consider Re Trenchard
and Re
Wells [1903] 1 Ch 848. I shall consider these cases later. They
then
turned to a consideration of section 57 of the Trustee Act.
1925. They
thought that that section afforded the Appellants no
assistance, and in this
House counsel have stated that they could
not contend that that section had
any application to the present
case. After making some observations on
section 64 of the Settled
Land Act, 1925, the majority then considered the
case of Re
Downshire and said: " In our judgment the present scheme
does
" fall fairly within the ambit of the Court's
jurisdiction to approve com-
" promises (used in the broad
sense of the word) which is illustrated in Mr.
" Justice
Buckley's decision in Re Trenchard." Later they
observed:
"... we think that . . . the proposals may fairly
and properly be regarded
" as constituting a compromise in
the broader sense of the word in which
" it was used in Re
Trenchard." They then turned to the case now under
appeal,
and expressed their views in language which must be quoted in full.
" The only possible way,
therefore, as it seems to us, that the scheme could
" be
brought within the inherent jurisdiction of the Court is by showing
that
" it involves a compromise or composition of beneficial
interests to which the
" principle exemplified in In Re
Trenchard can properly be applied. We
" are unable,
however, to see how any such compromise or composition
"
arises. Certainly there is no question of compromise in the strict
sense,
" for none of the relevant beneficial interests gives
rise to any question of
" construction or is otherwise in
dispute. It is suggested, however, that some-
" thing in the
nature of a composition of the rights of Mr. Macgowan
"
Chapman's children is to be found in the elimination, during the
lifetime
" of the settlors,"—(the last six words
should, I think, read "during the
" period stated in the
settlements ")—" of the expectation that each may
"
have of receiving more or less than the others and in substituting
equal
" rights among the class, as between themselves, in its
place. We think that
" there are two objections to the
acceptance of this view. First, although it
" is true that
the scheme if sanctioned would have the result described we
"
cannot regard that result as constituting a composition of rights in
any real
" sense at all. It is nothing more than a
rearrangement of beneficial interests
" which, to the extent
that it might prove to be of advantage to some members
" of
the class, would correspondingly operate to the prejudice of others.
It
" cannot, therefore, be compared to a proposal under
which, for example, the
13
" contingent interests of
all of the members of a class in a fund are converted
" into
vested interests in a smaller fund, for in such a case the proposal,
if
" beneficial to one member of the class, would of
necessity be beneficial to
" them all. Secondly, it is
impossible to say, on the facts of the case, that
" the
rights and interests of the children under the existing discretionary
trusts
" are prejudicial to them and should therefore be
eliminated. Both of the
" Settlements were executed within
the last 10 years and the trusts in question
" were
presumably inserted therein because the settlors thought that their
"
introduction would be of advantage to the children; they may well
have
" thought, for example, that some of the children might
need more for
" maintenance than others and accordingly they
empowered the trustees to
" provide for this if occasion
should require. Nothing has since transpired
" to show that
their views upon this matter were wrong. All that has
"
transpired is that the manner in which the discretionary trusts were
framed
" may attract an unexpected claim for death duties.
The object of the
" scheme, accordingly, is not to compound
the interests which the children
" have under the
discretionary trust but to avoid the claim for duties; and
"
such avoidance does not, and cannot, be regarded as a composition of
rights
" for the purpose of the second exception to the rule.
Moreover, although,
" as we have previously said, the fact
that a scheme will result in the saving
" of death duties or
income tax is, in itself, no ground for its rejection, the
"
acceptance of the scheme now under consideration might well be
followed
" by the presentation of further proposals of a
similar character whenever it
" should be considered
desirable in the future to avoid or mitigate the effect
" of
such changes as may occur hereafter in the existing fiscal
legislation. We
" would point out, therefore, that it is no
part of the functions of Her
" Majesty's Courts to recast
settlements from time to time merely with a
" view to tax
avoidance even if they had the power to do so which, in our
"
opinion, they have not.
" It follows from what we
have said that the scheme proposed is in truth
" what it
appears on its face to be. namely, the destruction of trusts
expressly
" declared, and that inasmuch as it cannot be
brought within the first
" exception to the general rule and
cannot, under the guise of a composition,
" invoke the second
exception, the rule applies ; and the Court accordingly
" has
no jurisdiction to authorise the trustees to carry it into effect.
This
" appeal, in our judgment, must therefore fail."
To complete the picture, I add
that the majority allowed the appeal in
Re Blackwell, saying:
" In our judgment, therefore, the scheme is of a
"
nature which it is competent for the Court to sanction in exercise of
its
" jurisdiction to approve compromises in the wide sense
of that word which
" we have already indicated."
My Lords, I have set out this
lengthy survey of the majority judgment
because I could devise no
other satisfactory way of approaching the argument
addressed to
your Lordships by Mr. Russell, which I have already summarised.
This argument brings one face to
face with the vitally important question
--is it possible to draw
a line at some point between the Court's undoubted
jurisdiction to
sanction a compromise of disputed rights, and the alleged
unlimited
jurisdiction to alter beneficial interests to any extent, provided
that
every person interested who is sui juris assents
and the change is shown
to be for the benefit of infants and
after-born beneficiaries? I confess that
I have found it
impossible to draw such a line. As I have said, the
Court's
jurisdiction to sanction a compromise in the true sense,
when the beneficial
interests are in dispute, is not a
jurisdiction to alter these interests, for they
are still
unascertained. If, however, there is no doubt as to the
beneficial
interests, the Court is, to my mind, exceeding its
jurisdiction if it sanctions
a scheme for their alteration,
whether the scheme is called a " compromise
"in the
broader sense " or an " arrangement " or is given any
other name.
Mr. Russell in the course of his argument suggested
that the step from the
former to the latter class of case was a
short one. My Lords, it may be a
short step, but it is a step into
a field of extremely wide extent. In my view
that field was not
open to the Court at the beginning of the present century
and is
not open now. I think that Farwell, J. (as he then was) was
right
when in 1901 he used the words already quoted—" I
decline to accept any
14
" suggestion that the Court
has an inherent jurisdiction to alter a man's will
" because
it thinks it beneficial. It seems to me that is quite impossible
".
(Re Walker [1901] 1 Ch 879 at p. 885.) If these
words are true in the case
of a will, they are equally true in the
case of a settlement, and in 1952
Roxburgh and Harman, J.J., in
effect, adopted the words of Farwell. J. and
applied them to the
present day. I think these two learned Judges were
right.
It follows that, in my view, the
majority of the Court of Appeal were
right in dismissing this
appeal, but their decisions in Re Downshire and Re
Blackwell
went too far. The facts in these two cases are fully set out
in
the majority judgment and need not be repeated here. Suffice it
to say
that the scheme in each case involved extensive alterations
of the beneficial
trusts declared in settlements dated
respectively 1915 and 1933. in order
to reduce taxation, including
in each case the release of part of the settled
property from a
protected life interest. In neither case was there any
appeal, but
I have found it necessary to express my view upon them
because
counsel have cited these cases as authorities, and have
submitted (rightly,
as I think) that the present case cannot be
distinguished from them.
I must, however, examine the
cases which were said to establish the
jurisdiction to sanction
the scheme now before your Lordships.
The first such case is Re
Trenchard [1902] 1 Ch 378, and the facts must
be stated
somewhat fully, in view of the argument which has been based
on
this case. A testator who died in 1899 by clause 3 of his will gave
to his
wife " the use of my residence Woodville aforesaid so
long as she shall
" desire to make it her permanent place of
residence and shall remain my
" widow, my estate to pay all
rates, taxes and outgoings in respect thereof,
" and to keep
the house and grounds in tenantable repair ". The testator
gave
his residuary real and personal estate to his trustees upon the
usual
trusts for sale and conversion and payment of debts and
legacies and directed
them to stand possessed of his residuary
trust monies and the income thereof
upon certain trusts for his
children and remoter issue. He directed his
trustees to postpone
the sale of his Honor Oak estate (which included
Woodville House)
until after the death or marriage again of his wife and
he
empowered them from time to time as they should think fit to
develop
the same estate, and for that purpose to use such part of
his estate as they
deemed advisable.
The widow took possession of
Woodville and resided there, but rinding
that it was a larger
house than she required and that there were difficulties
connected
with the management, repairs, outgoings and development of
the
property, she asked the trustees to come to an arrangement
with her.
Questions arose, and on a summons taken out by the
trustees, Byrne, J.
made an order declaring that the widow had the
powers of a tenant for
life under the Settled Land Acts and that
she would not forfeit the benefits
conferred upon her by the
directions in the will by selling or leasing the
house under those
powers. All the persons interested desired that the estate,
which
was freehold, should be developed for building purposes, but
this
could not be done so long as the widow remained in occupation
of Woodville,
and would be prevented if she sold Woodville in
exercise of her powers as
tenant for life under the Settled Land
Acts. The widow estimated her
interest in the rental value of
Woodville, together with the rates, taxes and
outgoings, at £350
a year and offered to release her claims under clause 3
of the
will to the trustees in return for a fixed payment of £320 a
year.
A summons was taken out to
decide whether the trustees had power,
with the sanction of the
Court, to enter into an arrangement by way of
compromise for the
payment to her of a fixed annual sum in satisfaction of
her claims
under clause 3 of the will, and if so, that an agreement to pay
her
a fixed sum of £275 per annum during widowhood by way of
compromise
of the whole of her claims under clause 3 of the will
might be approved
by the Court. There were infants interested in
residue and they appeared
by counsel, who expressed the view that
the compromise was beneficial to
them. Buckley, J. (as he then
was) approved the arrangement, saying: " It
15
" seems to me that this is
a fair compromise for all parties, and I declare
" that it is
within the power of the trustees to enter into it, and I sanction
it
" accordingly ".
My Lords, this decision appears
to me to be no more than the sanctioning
by the Court of a
purchase by the trustees of the widow's rights. It may
be that
Buckley, J. stretched the jurisdiction to approve a compromise
beyond
its proper limits; but I cannot regard him as claiming a
new and extensive
jurisdiction, the existence whereof had so
recently been denied by judges of
the Chancery Division and by the
Court of Appeal.
The next case relied upon was Re
Wells [1903] 1 Ch 848. The facts of
this case are very fully
stated in the majority judgment of the Court of
Appeal and need
not be repeated here. I entirely accept the observations
in the
majority judgment on that case—" There was no
rearrangement or
" altering of any trusts. All persons
interested under the trusts of the
" testator's will,
according to its terms, were sui juris and capable of
determin-
" ing the trusts. The difficulty arose solely from
the fact that derivative
" settlements had been made by the
persons contingently entitled to the
" corpus of the estate.
No alteration was required of any of the trusts of
" these
settlements. What was proposed was that the trustees of the deriva-
"
tive settlements should receive a present and certain subject matter
instead
" of their previously existing contingent rights ".
In my view, Re Wells
affords no support to the argument now
under consideration. It was
decided by Farwell, J. (as he then
was) and I feel sure he did not think
that in sanctioning the
arrangement there proposed he was in any way
departing from the
views, already quoted, which he had expressed so forcibly
in Re
Walker.
So far as reported cases are
concerned, there is a long gap between Re
Wells and Re
Duke of Leeds [1947] 1 Ch. 525. Counsel assured us,
however,
that, during the intervening 44 years, orders had been
made from time to
time in Chambers which were similar in their
effect to the orders asked for
in the present case, in Re
Downshire, and in Re Blackwell.
My Lords, this may well have
been so, but, accepting counsel's statement.
I would make the
following observations. First, when judges are exercising
an
undoubted jurisdiction in Chambers, the manner in which they
exercise
it may form a useful precedent; but no judge can acquire
a jurisdiction
which he does not possess merely by making orders
which extend beyond
that jurisdiction. Secondly, it is impossible
to found any proposition upon
an unreported case without being
aware of all the facts, the precise nature
of the order made, and
the arguments advanced at the hearing. It may well
be that the
question of jurisdiction was never brought to the minds of the
judges
who dealt with these matters in Chambers. I would add this—
according
to my recollection, which may be at fault, it was thought at one
time
by judges sitting in Chambers that the decision in Re New,
supra,
extended by section 57 of the Trustee Act, 1925,
justified the making of
many orders which were later considered to
have been made in excess of
jurisdiction. I agree with the
comments upon Re New and upon section 57
which are
contained in the majority judgment in the present case, and it
is
conceded by counsel that neither that decision nor the section
can possibly
justify the application now before your Lordships.
I now come to the case of Re
Duke of Leeds already mentioned. In that
case freehold estates
comprising a number of coal mines in Yorkshire and
the North
Midlands had been settled by the will of a testator who died in
1927.
By the Coal Act, 1938, these mines were compulsorily acquired by
the
National Coal Commission, the vesting date being 1st July,
1942, and the
compensation therefor was duly assessed by the
National Valuation Boards
of each area and paid to the trustees of
the will. Questions arose as to how
the compensation monies should
be dealt with as between the persons entitled
in succession under
the will, and the matter came before Jenkins. J. (as
he then was).
The learned Judge decided all these questions and said, at
page
556 fin: "In view of the unanimity of all parties in
supporting the
" plaintiff's contention I suggested the
possibility of authorising the proposed
" commutation by way
of compromise, if it could truly be shown to be for
16
" the benefit of all infant
or unborn or unascertained persons interested or
" possibly
interested under the settlement. It appeared, however, that this
"
suggestion was not acceptable, and I was asked to decide the point
one way
" or the other as a matter of construction of the
Coal Act, 1938, and in
" particular paragraph 21 (2). This I
have accordingly done. My decision
" against the plaintiff's
contention as a matter of legal right does not, of
" course,
rule out the possibility of giving effect to it as a compromise or
"
arrangement if shown to the satisfaction of the Court to fulfill the
condition
" mentioned above."
Mr. Wolfe informs us that in
fact a compromise was subsequently approved
by Jenkins, J. under
which, I understand, a certain lump sum was paid to
the tenant for
life out of the compensation monies and the balance was
to be
invested as capital and held on the trusts of the will. He also
informed
us that compromises of a similar nature were sanctioned
by the Court in Re
Lucas which immediately follows Re
Duke of Leeds in [1947] 1 Ch.
My Lords, I should have been
glad if I could have found it possible to
draw some sound
distinction between the two cases just mentioned and
Downshire
and Blackwell on the one hand, and the present application
on
the other. The majority in the Court of Appeal, as I understand
their
judgment, drew a line between schemes which involved "
a compromise or
" composition of beneficial interests",
such as the schemes in Downshire
and Blackwell, and
schemes such as the Chapman scheme, where no such
compromise
or composition was involved. If such a line could be drawn,
no
doubt the schemes in Duke of Leeds and Lucas would fall
on the right
side of it. I do not, however, feel able to draw this
line. I agree that there
is a distinction in fact between the
Chapman scheme and the schemes in
Downshire and
Blackwell, and this is clearly pointed out in the
majority
judgment. Further, I think it might be possible to find
some distinction in
fact between Downshire and Blackwell
on the one hand and Duke of Leeds
and Lucas on
the other. Yet all the five cases do involve an alteration in
the
ascertained and undisputed beneficial interests under a settlement.
For the reasons which I have set
out, I fear at too great length, I am of
opinion that the Court
has only claimed jurisdiction to make such an altera-
tion in the
maintenance cases already mentioned, and has frequently denied
that
it has such a jurisdiction in any other case. In saying this I am
not
overlooking the " salvage " cases, but they relate
to administrative acts by
trustees and not to alteration of
beneficial interests.
I agree with the majority of the
Court of Appeal in their rejection of the
present application, and
I cannot accept Mr. Russell's argument based on
the other cases
which he has cited.
My Lords, it will already be
apparent why I cannot agree with the con-
clusions of Denning,
L.J. in his dissenting judgment, but I feel bound to
comment upon
two passages in that judgment. Denning, L.J. quotes
the following
passage from the judgment of Turner, L.J. in Brooke v.
Mostyn
(1864, 2 DeG. J. & S. 373 at p. 415):-
" That this Court has power
to compromise the rights and claims of
" infants and persons
under disabilities, when those rights and claims are
" merely
equitable, has not been and cannot be disputed. It is a power
"
which has continually been exercised by the Court, and results
almost
" necessarily from the jurisdiction which the Court
exercises over
" trustees. In the exercise of that
jurisdiction the Court may in general
" order the trustees to
deal with the trust property in whatever mode
" it may
consider to be for the benefit of cestuisque trust who are
"
infants or under disabilities. ... I have thought it right to make
these
" observations, because I consider it of great
importance that no doubt
" should be cast upon the power of
the Court. . . . The rights of infants
" and incapacitated
persons must in many cases be sacrificed if the
" power be
not maintained."
It is to be noted that Brooke
v. Mostyn was a case of a true compromise
of disputed
rights, and the only question for decision was whether such
a
compromise could be set aside. In my view the observations just
quoted,
though one sentence is couched in very general terms, must
be read as
relating only to cases of true compromise where, to
quote the first sentence.
17
the Court is compromising "the
rights and claims of infants and persons
" under
disabilities." Denning, L.J., goes on to say: " This
jurisdiction
" is not confined to cases where there is a
dispute about the extent of the
" beneficial interests, nor
to cases of emergency or necessity, but extends
" wherever
there is a bargain about the beneficial interests which is for
"
the benefit of the infants or unborn persons." In support of
this observa-
tion he cites Re Trenchard, Re Wells, and the
argument of Lord Parker, as
junior counsel, in Re New. But,
as I have already said, I cannot regard
these cases as supporting
the proposition.
Later, Denning, L.J., said: "The
proposed scheme for the Chapman
" Settlement is more
troublesome. We are told that the lawyer who drew
" up the
Deed made a mistake. He did not have in mind the statutory
"
definition about property passing ' on the death ' for the purpose of
death
" duties: and he included a discretionary trust for
common maintenance
" when he ought to have omitted it. He
ought to have left the children
" to receive maintenance
equally instead of giving the trustees a discretion
" to
grant more to one than the others. It is a small mistake but it
means
" a difference of £30,000 in death duties. The
mistake cannot be remedied
" under the strict doctrine of
rectification because it is not a mistake in
" expressing the
settlor's intentions but only a mistake as to the legal con-
"
sequences. Nevertheless I do not myself see why the mistake should
"
not be corrected by the settlors themselves." In regard to this
passage
I would say first, that counsel for all parties are agreed
that the wishes
of the grandparents as settlors are entirely
irrelevant on the question of
jurisdiction. By settling the
property on certain trusts they have put it
out of their power to
alter these trusts, however much they may wish to do so.
Secondly,
it is not contended by counsel that there was any mistake, in
the
true sense of the word, in the present case. The trusts contained in
the
settlement are exactly the trusts upon which the settlors
intended the settled
property to be held. The present application
arises only by reason of
the fact that it was afterwards realised
that these trusts, although perfectly
proper and sensible in
themselves, would or might have unfortunate results
as regards
death duties. Lastly, the question is not whether the Court ought
to
have jurisdiction to alter the trusts in this case, but whether in
fact it
has that jurisdiction.
I would add, in amplification of
remarks by the Master of the Rolls and
Romer. L.J. already quoted,
that if the court had power to approve, and
did approve, schemes
such as the present scheme, the way would be open
for a most
undignified game of chess between the Chancery Division and
the
Legislature. The alteration of one settlement for the purpose of
avoiding
taxation already imposed might well be followed by scores
of successful
applications for a similar purpose by beneficiaries
under other settlements.
The Legislature might then counter this
move by imposing fresh taxation
upon the settlements as thus
altered. The beneficiaries would then troop
back to the Chancery
Division and say, " Please alter the trusts again.
" You
have the power, the adults desire it, and it is for the benefit of
the
" infants to avoid this fresh taxation. The Legislature
may not move again."
So the game might go on, if the judges
of the Chancery Division had the
power which the Appellants claim
for them, and if they thought it right
to make the first move.
I would dismiss the appeal.
Lord Asquith of Bishopstone
MY LORDS,
In this appeal Counsel for the
Appellants began by taking his stand on an
ambitious general
principle of law: namely, that there resided in the Court
of
Chancery an inherent jurisdiction to vary the trusts of a settlement
or a
will, in every case in which two conditions were satisfied,
viz.:
18
Speaking with much less
familiarity with these matters than most of my
noble friends, I
cannot but think this principle is too broadly stated,
and
respectfully agree with the conclusions and reasoning of my
noble and
learned friends, the Lord Chancellor and Lord Morton of
Henryton.
In practice, Courts of Chancery
have asserted this jurisdiction mainly, if
indeed not solely, in
three classes of cases:
Leaving this last point for the
time being aside, I would venture to record
my view that the
inherent jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery in this sphere
is
limited to these three classes of cases: " maintenance "
cases. " salvage "
cases, and " compromise "
cases: and that the Court's exercise of jurisdiction
in these
three spheres is limited to those spheres and is not simply
the
exercise in particular circumstances of the far wider
jurisdiction claimed
for the Court by Counsel for the Appellants
of a jurisdiction limited only
by two conditions:
(a) consent of interested
adults ;
(b) benefit to interested non-adults.
If that wider principle had been
valid., a formidable volume of judicial learn-
ing and forensic
argument directed to the question whether the facts of a
case
bring it within the three privileged compartments must have
been
expended in vain. Why this expenditure of time and erudition
if the alleged
broad principle was always there, offering a short
cut? Nor, speaking more
generally, does English jurisprudence
start from a broad principle and decide
cases in accordance with
its logical implications. It starts with a clean
slate, scored
over, in course of time, with ad hoc decisions. General
rules
are arrived at inductively, from the collation and
comparison of these
decisions: they do not pre-exist them.
Now it is argued that even if
this be so, yet the third category or compart-
ment creating
jurisdiction—" compromise " —includes
rearrangements of
property rights or interests even where these
are not in dispute. And certain
cases—In re Trenchard
([1902] 1 Ch 378), In re Wells ([1903] 1 Ch 848),
two
cases under the Coal Mines Act (Re Duke of Leeds [1947]
1 Ch. 525, and Re
Lucas reported immediately after it) and
the cases of Downshire and
Blackwell, decided
simultaneously with the present case (though in a different
sense
by the Court of Appeal) are prayed in aid as supporting this
extension
of the jurisdiction from cases of " compromise
stricto sensu " to " quasi-
" compromise ".
And it is further argued that if these cases or some of
19
them attract the jurisdiction,
then so does the present case. As to this
latter point, though I
can see differences, I cannot see any material distinction
between
the Downshire and Blackwell cases and the present case.
But it will be observed (1) that
until the 20th century the category "com-
" promise "
had been construed as strictly confined to cases of disputed
rights;
(2) that in practice, once it is construed as including what I
have
termed " quasi-compromise ", there is it would seem
no logical stopping point
short of the broad and loose principle
which was contended for by the Appel-
lants and which, for reasons
given above, seems to me untenable. None of the
decisions since
1900, relied on by the Appellants, are binding on your Lord-
ships'
House. Some of them can, I think, be distinguished on the lines
indi-
cated by my noble and learned friend Lord Morton of
Henryton. For
instance, the case of In re Wells, in my
view, is a very special one and does
not on a true view support
the Appellants' proposition. Subject to these
considerations I
would reassert the rule that a compromise in this connexion
means
a compromise in the strict sense and that the attempted creation of
a
category of quasi-compromise is invalid.
As to the effect more
specifically of a decision in this sense on In re
Trenchard
(supra). In re Wells (supra) the two cases decided under the
Coal
Mines Act and the cases of Downshire and Blackwell, I
have had the
advantage of reading in advance the opinion just
delivered by my noble
and learned friend. Lord Morton of Henryton,
and would respectfully adopt
his observations. I am of opinion
that the appeal should be dismissed.
Lord Cohen
MY LORDS,
I have had the advantage of
reading in print the Opinion delivered by
my noble and learned
friend, Lord Morton of Henryton. I agree with him in
rejecting the
main argument advanced by Mr. Gray for the Appellants.
Like him. I
accept the reasons given by the majority of the Court of Appeal
for
rejecting that argument. In my opinion, the cases relied on by Mr.
Gray
are not examples of the unlimited jurisdiction for which he
contends, but
illustrate exceptions from the general principle
that the Court will give
effect, as it requires the trustees
themselves to do, to the intentions of the
settlor or testator as
expressed in the trust instrument.
In considering those cases I
will adopt the grouping made by Mr. Gray
and already stated by the
noble and learned Lord. I agree with his com-
ments on the first
three groups, with the reservation that I do not think that
the
maintenance cases are the only real exception to the rule that the
Court
will not alter beneficial trusts. My reasons for this
reservation will appear
from the observations I have to make on
the scope of the exception which the
Chancery Courts have adopted
as regards the sanctioning of compromises
on behalf of infants and
possible after-born beneficiaries.
My Lords, like the majority of
the Court of Appeal I think that this juris-
diction is not
limited to compromises of disputed rights but extends to
com-
promises in the wider meaning of that word, and had it not
been that some
of your Lordships take a different view, I should
have been content to
express my agreement with the reasoning of
the Master of the Rolls and
Romer, L.J. on this point.
Lord Morton of Henryton sums up
the arguments advanced against their
conclusion somewhat as
follows :-
I. The Court's sanction of a
compromise in the true sense, when the
beneficial interests are in
dispute, is not the exercise of a jurisdiction
to alter those
interests, for they are still unascertained.
II. Re Trenchard ([1902])
1 Ch. 378. which is the foundation of the
majority judgment of the
Court of Appeal on this point, is not a case
of compromise in the
broad sense but is " no more than the sanctioning
" by
the Court of a purchase by the trustees of the widow's rights."
20
III. It is impossible to draw a
line at which the jurisdiction to sanction
a compromise in the
broad sense ends or, put otherwise, it is impossible
to draw a
line at some point between the Court's undoubted jurisdiction
to
sanction a compromise of disputed rights and alleged unlimited
juris-
diction to alter beneficial rights to any extent provided
that every person
who is sui juris consents and the change
is shown to be for the benefit
of infants and after-born
beneficiaries.
My Lords, I am not satisfied
that the Court, in sanctioning a compromise
in the strict sense,
is not exercising a jurisdiction to alter beneficial rights.
It is
true that in such a case the right has not been defined, but the
right of
the beneficiary is a right to that to which, upon its
true construction, the
will or settlement entitles him. The very
essence of a compromise is that
it may give each party something
other than that which the will or settlement
would, on its true
construction, confer on him.
Nor am I able to accept the view
that Re Trenchard (supra) involved
nothing more than the
purchase by the trustees of the widow's interest. Under
clause 3
of the testator's will she was entitled only (a) to the use of
the
testator's residence so long as she desired to make it her
permanent place
of residence and remained the testator's widow,
and (b) during that time to
have the house and grounds kept
up at the expense of the estate. If she
ceased to reside, she
would forfeit those benefits, the value of the tenantable
repair
provision being estimated at £350 a year. Under the
arrangement
sanctioned by the Court she got £275 per annum,
determinable only on
remarriage not by non-residence in the house.
The arrangement, therefore,
in my opinion, clearly involved an
alteration of the quality of the beneficial
interest of the widow.
So far as the residuary legatees were concerned, the
primary
effect was to alter the quantum of what they would receive, but I
am
unable to see that it can properly be said that the only purpose and
effect
of the transaction was a purchase of the widow's interest.
The summons
asked a question as to compromise (see p. 380).
Buckley. J. (at p. 385)
himself described the proposal as a fair
compromise for all parties. He was
not using the term "
compromise " in the strict sense for the legal rights
had
already been decided. He was, I think, sanctioning a
re-arrangement of rights
as between tenant for life and
remaindermen which could not be carried
out without the sanction
of the Court because infants were interested. The
question of
jurisdiction was argued but Buckley. J. seems to have felt no
doubt
as to his jurisdiction. In cases of this kind the Court is
always
under the disadvantage that as most of such cases are heard
in Chambers
there are few reported precedents. There may well have
been earlier
unreported cases in which the Chancery Courts had
exercised their juris-
diction over trustees in a similar way. Be
that as it may the decision in Re
Trenchard (supra) has
stood unquestioned for 50 years and I see no reason
why your
Lordships should now overrule it.
I turn, therefore, to the third
argument. My Lords, a distinguished member
of this House once
said, in another connection, that while he might have
difficulty
in drawing a line, he had never had any difficulty in deciding
on
which side of it a particular case fell. I think that a
comparison of the facts
in Re Downshire and Re Blackwell
on the one hand, and the facts in Re
Chapman which is
now before your Lordships, illustrate where the line might
be
drawn.
In Re Downshire and Re
Blackwell as in Re Trenchard and. I think,
also in Re
Duke of Leeds ([1947]) 1 Ch. 525, and Re Lucas (which
im-
mediately follows that case) the Court was dealing with
compromises in the
broad sense between tenants for life on the one
hand and remaindermen on
the other hand ; they were not varying
the rights inter se of parties whom the
testator had placed
on an equality. In Re Chapman, on the other hand, there
was
no question of compromise between tenants for life and remaindermen
;
the Court was being asked to vary the rights inter se of
a class which the
Testator had directed should be treated in a
particular way. As the majority
of the Court of Appeal said in the
present case, what is proposed is not
" a composition of
rights in any real sense at all. It is nothing more than
21
" a re-arrangement of
beneficial interests which, to the extent that it might
"
prove to be of advantage to some members of the class, would
correspond-
" ingly operate to the prejudice of others."
My Lords, I have, I hope, said
enough to show why I think that the Court
of Appeal were right in
allowing the appeals in Re Downshire and Re Black-
well
and in dismissing the appeal in Re Chapman, and why,
though for
different reasons, I agree that the appeal to your
Lordships' House should be
dismissed.
I cannot sit down without
expressing my doubt whether there is any foun-
dation for the
suggestion made by Denning, L.J. that the effect of your Lord-
ships'
decision may be that schemes sanctioned in the past could be
ignored
by the Revenue and by all persons not sui juris. The
High Court is a superior
Court and the control of trustees is a
matter within its jurisdiction. It would
take a good deal of
argument to satisfy me that its orders were a nullity
and that
trustees were not fully protected by orders made by that Court in
the
exercise of that trust jurisdiction even though your Lordships may,
in a
later case, have said that the jurisdiction had been wrongly
exercised.
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0