National Anti-Vivisection Society v Inland Revenue Commissioners
[1947] UKHL 4
Die Mercurii, 2° Julii, 1947
Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/986
Viscount
Simon
Lord
Wright
Lord
Porter
Lord
Simonds
Lord
Nornand
THE NATIONAL ANTI-VIVISECTION SOCIETY
v.
THE COMMISSIONERS
OF INLAND REVENUE
Viscount Simon
MY LORDS,
In this very important and most
difficult case, going as it does to the
foundations of the
conception of one kind of charitable trust, I have
read and
re-read the opinion which has been prepared by my noble and
learned
friend Lord Simonds. Notwithstanding views to a different
effect
which are to be found in the minority judgment of the Master
of
the Rolls in the Court of Appeal, and in another opinion about to
be
pronounced in this House, I cannot escape from the course of
argument
contained in Lord Simonds' opinion, or from the
conclusion at which
he arrives. I therefore move that this appeal
be dismissed with costs.
[2]
Lord Wright
MY LORDS,
The issue in this case is whether the Appellant Society
is entitled to
exemption from Income Tax under section 37 of the
Income Tax Act,
1918, on the ground that it is a body established
for charitable purposes
only. The year of charge is the year
ending the 5th April, 1943, and the
subject is the Appellant's
invested income aggregating £2,876 15s. 7d.
The Special
Commissioners before whom the matter came felt bound to
allow the
claim on the authority of In re Foveaux, (1895 2 Ch 501),
in
which Chitty J. had held that the Society was a charity, though
they
would, apart from authority, have held that on balance the
object of the
Society, so far from being for the public benefit,
was gravely injurious
thereto, and therefore that the Society
could not be regarded as a charity.
They also on the ground of the
same authority rejected the argument that
the Society could not
claim to be a charity because the alteration of the law
by means
of legislation was a main object of the Society. That decision
was
reversed by the Revenue Judge, Macnaghten J., and his decision
was
affirmed on appeal by the Court of Appeal, by a majority, the
Master
of the Rolls dissenting.
The Commissioners heard a great deal of evidence, and
their material
conclusions in the case they stated were: '' We are
satisfied that the main
" object of the Society is the total
abolition of vivisection, including in
" that term all
experiments on living animals whether calculated to inflict
"
pain or not, and (for that purpose) the repeal of the Cruelty to
Animals
" Act, 1876, and the substitution of a new enactment
prohibiting vivi-
" section altogether. . . .
" We think it has been proved conclusively that: —
" (A) A large amount of present day medical and
scientific knowledge
" is due to experiments on living
animals;
" (B) many valuable cures for and preventatives of
disease have been
" discovered and perfected by means of
experiments on living animals,
" and much suffering both to
human beings and to animals has been either
" prevented or
alleviated thereby. We are satisfied that if experiments
"
on living animals were to be forbidden (i.e., if vivisection were
abolished)
" a very serious obstacle would be placed in the
way of obtaining further
" medical and scientific knowledge
calculated to be of benefit to the
" public."
They were also prepared, if it was to be assumed that
any public
benefit in the direction of the advancement of morals
and education
amongst men would or might result from the Society's
efforts to abolish
vivisection, of which they had no express
evidence, and if their function
was to determine the case on the
fooling of weighing an assumed public
benefit, in the direction of
the advancement of morals amongst men,
which could or might result
from the Society's efforts to abolish vivisec-
tion, to hold on
the evidence that any such assumed public benefit was far
outweighed
by the detriment to medical science and research, and con-
sequently
to the public health, that would result if the Society succeeded
in
its object, and that on balance the object of the Society, so far
from
being for the public benefit, was gravely injurious thereto,
with the result
that the Society could not be regarded as a
charity.
I think the first thing to examine is whether In re
Foveaux (supra)
was rightly decided and whether the
Commissioners were justified in
regarding themselves as bound by
that authority.
Before examining In re Foveaux (supra) it will be
convenient to bear
in mind what is now generally accepted, that
the question whether a gift or
[3] 2
fund is charitable is a matter for the decision of the
Court on all the
materials before it. " Charitable " in
this context has reference to
charitable in the legal
sense. " Charity," indeed, is here a word of art of
precise
and technical meaning. From very early times the decision was
the
function of the Court. Thus rules grew around the very sketchy
list
in the Statute of Elizabeth (43 Eliz. c. 4). Judicial
precedents were estab-
lished. An early attempt to simplify the
problem by a classification under
main heads was the summary under
four heads submitted by Sir Samuel
Romilly (then Mr. Romilly)
arguing in Morice v. Bishop of Durham,
10 Ves. 522.
These heads were, first, relief of the indigent, second,
advancement
of learning, third, the advancement of religion, fourth,
which is
the most difficult, the advancement of objects of general
public
utility. This classification substantially was adopted by
Lord Macnaghten
about 85 years later in his famous list of
charitable purposes in Pemsefy
case (1891, A.C. 531 at p.
583) which is too familiar to call for quotation
here. The noble
and learned Lord had emphasised that he was discussing
the legal
meaning of charity; like Sir Samuel Romilly he remarked on
the
distinction between the popular and the legal meaning of the
word.
It is not necessary at this time of day to observe that
not every object
which is beneficial to the community can be
regarded as charitable. The
legal significance is narrower than
the popular. This was fully and
explicitly held by this House in
A.G. v. National Provincial Bank, (1924,
A.C. 262), which
followed re Macduff, (1896, 2 Ch. 451), and was discussed
more
recently, but more in relation to the construction of general
words
than to specific instances, in Chichester Diocesan Fund
v. Simpson, (1944,
A.C. 341). Even if the object were
in some sense beneficial to the com-
munity, it would still be
necessary to discover that it fell within the spirit
and
intendment of the instances given in the Statute of Elizabeth.
Healthy
and manly sports are certainly in fact beneficial to the
public, but apart
from special concomitants are not generally
entitled to qualify as charit-
able objects. On the other hand
societies or institutes for scientific research
would generally be
charities as being for the benefit of mankind under the
fourth
head, or alternatively as falling within the extended
significance
given to education or the advancement of learning,
which includes, in
modern times, science. Even societies coming
within the first three heads
of Lord Macnaghten's classification
would not be entitled to rank as legal
charities if it was seen
that their objects were not for the public benefit.
Where a
society has a religious object it may fail to satisfy the test if
it
is unlawful, and the test may vary from generation to generation
as
the law successively grows more tolerant. Lord Parker in Bowman
v.
Secular Society, (1917, A.C. 406, at pp. 448 seq.),
gives a long list illustrat-
ing this principle. It cannot be for
the public benefit to favour trusts
for objects contrary to the
law. Again, eleemosynary trusts may,
as economic ideas and
conditions and ideas of social service change, cease
to be
regarded as being for the benefit of the community. And trusts
lor
the advancement of learning or education may fail to secure a
place
as charities, if it is seen that the learning or education
is not of public
value. The test of benefit to the community goes
through the whole of
Lord Macnaghten's classification, though as
regards the first three heads,
ft may be prima facie assumed
unless the contrary appears.
In re Foveaux (supra) was decided in 1895 by
Chitty J. The headnote
is simply: '' Societies for the suppression
and abolition of vivisection are
" charities within the legal
definition of the term ' charity ' ". The
particular
societies in question were either the predecessors of the
present
Appellant or were substantially identical for all relevant
purposes. The
object, as stated by Chitty J., was the total
suppression of the practice of
vivisection. At the time when the
decision was given an Act entitled " the
" Cruelty to
Animals Act, 1876," was in force; that Act made it unlawful
and
an offence to perform on a living animal any experiment calculated
to
give pain except subject to the restrictions imposed by the Act.
One
provision was that the particular experiment was to be performed
with
a view to the advancement by new discovery of physio-
logical
knowledge or of knowledge which will be useful for sav-
ing or
prolonging life or alleviating suffering It was generally
58553 a
2
3
[4]
required by the Act that the animal should be under a
sufficient
anaesthetic, save in special circumstances, in which
case a certificate was
necessary under stringent conditions, and
experimenters were to hold
a licence. This Act has remained in
force since then. Its repeal is the
main object of the Appellant
Society. Chitty J. refers to the Act as being
the subject of
controversy between the supporters and opponents of the
practice
of vivisection. The former, he said, argue that the practice
under
carefully guarded provisions is justifiable because it
tends to promote the
welfare of the human race and even animals.
The latter argue that the
practice is really unjustifiable. The
Judge seemed disposed to regard the
issue as depending on how the
element of the improvement of morality
was to be considered. But
he had already accepted the position that
the Court does not
enter into or pronounce any opinion on the merits
of the
controversy between these two sides. Though he knew
of the Report
of the Royal Commission on Vivisection, the Court, he said,
"
stands neutral." Later in his judgment he said that the
intention
is to benefit the community: whether if they achieved
their object the
community would in fact be benefited is a
question on which the Court
is not required to express an
opinion. Whatever else is clear, it is, I think,
clear that the
question he is proposing involves the balancing of utilities.
I
cannot understand how the Judge could avoid deciding the very
question
necessary for his decision, viz., whether the Society
satisfies the
fourth head, as being beneficial to the community.
That, I think, is the
test he proposes. He questions if the
infliction of pain is necessarily cruelty.
It may be justifiable,
he concedes, but that, he thinks, is a question of
morals on
which men's minds may differ. But he seems to conclude the
matter
by holding that the intention of the creator of the trust is to
benefit
the community. That he treats as decisive: he declines to
determine
whether the community would in fact be benefited.
This judgment has stood since it was delivered. Though
it has not been
reversed, it has been severely criticised by a
great authority, Lord Russell
of Killowen, though by way of
dictum and not decision. There have
also been other judicial
pronouncements which may have to be considered.
The earlier of the cases in which Russell J., as he
then was, adverted
to this question was in re Hummeltenberg,
(1923, 1 Ch. 237); the matter
in that judgment most material
to the discussion of Chitty J.'s judgment
is shortly expressed in
the headnote: '' The opinion of the donor of a
" gift or the
creator of a trust that the gift or trust is for the public
benefit
" does not make it so, the matter is one to be
determined by the Court
" on the evidence before it."
Russell J. at p. 242 rejected the contention
on the lines of the
views expressed in In re Cranston, 1898, 1 I.R. 431,
and
by Chitty J. in In re Foveaux (supra). Russell J. clearly
defined
his opinion at p. 242, " If a testator by stating or
indicating his view that
" a trust is beneficial to the
public can establish that fact beyond question,
" trusts
might be established in perpetuity for the promotion of all kinds
"
of fantastic (though not unlawful) objects, of which the training
of
" poodles to dance might be a mild example. In my
opinion, the question
' whether a gift is or may be operative for
the public benefit is a question
" to be answered by the
Court by forming an opinion upon the evidence
"before it."
I accept these observations as correctly stating the law.
They were in fact adopted by the majority of the Court
of Appeal in the
next case I shall cite, which is an "
animal " case; it is In re Grove-Grady,
(1929, 1 Ch.
557). It is sufficient here to record that the purpose of
the
Society contemplated by the trust was the acquisition of land
for
the provision of refuges for the preservation of " all
animals birds or
" other creatures not human." The
principle of the decision was that
there could hot be a legal
charitable trust unless its execution involved a
benefit to the
community. Hence a trust for the benefit of animals would
not
merely on that ground be charitable. There must be a further
element,
in particular that the discouragement of cruelty
promotes humane senti-
ments in man towards the lower animals
which involves moral benefit to
[5] 4
the human community. Russell
L.J., as he then was, at p. 588 reiterated
the proposition that, "
the Court must determine in each case whether
" the trusts
are such that benefit to the community must necessarily
"
result from their execution." He added significant words: '
The
" authorities have, in my opinion, reached the furthest
admissible point
" of benevolence in construing, as
charitable, gifts in favour of animals,
" and for myself, I
am not prepared to go any further ".
•
The same warning had been
uttered by Lord Sterndale M.R. in In re
Tetley, (1923, 1
Ch. 258 at p. 266). " I confess," he said," I find
con-
1' siderable difficulty in understanding the exact
reason why a gift for the
' benefit of animals and for the
prevention of cruelty to animals generally
" should be a good
charitable gift while a gift for philanthropic purposes,
"
which, I take it, is for the benefit of mankind generally, should be
bad
" as a charitable gift ". Lord Sterndale M.R. agreed
with the principles
stated by Russell J., which formed the basis
of the decision of the Court
of Appeal.
It is clear that In re
Grove-Grady (supra) was not inconsistent with
the general view
in favour of preventing cruelty to animals. The trust in
that case
did not protect the weaker animals from the cruelty of the
stronger
and more savage, because the idea of the testatrix was to
provide a
sanctuary in which animals might be free from the danger
of being shot
or trapped or otherwise maltreated by human beings,
though left at liberty
to indulge their natural instincts of
inherent cruelty against each other.
In re Wedgwood, (1915,
I Ch. 113), was discussed in that case. The
trust there was to
apply the fund for the protection and benefit of animals.
It was
held to be valid on the ground that it was calculated to
promote
public morality by checking the innate tendency to
cruelty. Much that was
said in that case clearly went too far. The
emphasis of the actual decision,
however, was that the moral
benefit to mankind consisted in promoting
feelings of kindness
towards animals and thus promoting feelings of
humanity and
morality generally; the limitation of the doctrine to animals
useful
to man which was prominent in the earlier of the animal
cases,
University of London v. Yarrow (1 De G. &
J. 72), was lost sight of, or
at least had fallen into the
background in view of the wider and less
specific doctrine of
moral improvement, which was held to satisfy the
requirement of
benefit to the community under the fourth head of Lord
Macnaghten's
classification. It was held to be present in In re
Wedgwood
(supra) but absent in In re Grove-Grady (supra),
but in neither case was
it ignored.
I do not intend to make a
complete anthology of the " animal " cases,
but I must
refer shortly to the most important of the Irish cases on gifts
for
the benefit of animals, namely, In re Cranston (supra), a
decision of
the Irish Court of Appeal. There the bequest was in
favour of a vegetarian
society, whose purpose was to stop the
killing of animals for food, which
was condemned as being
inconsistent with the rights of animals and calcu-
lated to
produce demoralising effects upon men. The validity of the gift
was
upheld by the majority of the Irish Court of Appeal, largely
for
reasons taken to be derived from In re Foveaux (supra). But
a powerful
dissenting judgment was delivered by Holmes L.J.: he
was content indeed
to distinguish in In re Foveaux (supra): but
he demanded to know if
a belief by the promoters in the utility of
their project to eliminate the
use of animal food could make it a
charity in any sense which the law
attaches to that term. ' If
so," he said, " every object not actually
" immoral
or illegal must be held a charity ". He enforced his opinion
by
giving instances of matters which might be conceived to be
beneficent
agencies by a few idealists or cranks.
The result so far has been that
it is necessary for your Lordships to
decide whether In re
Foveaux (supra) was rightly decided, or perhaps
more
accurately whether the Commissioners were right in thinking that
it
governed the case before them. No doubt Chitty J. had, in the
Report
of the Royal Commission on Vivisection which was before
him, amply
58553 a
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5 [6]
sufficient evidence of the utility of vivisection and
hence of the mischief
of any project aimed at making it unlawful.
But it is not clear how far
he had appreciated the full force of
the evidence. The evidence now pro-
duced of the enormous advances
in science and research which has been
accepted by the
Commissioners in their findings of fact on the utility of
vivisection
is indeed such as no fair-minded man could refuse full credence.
It
is conclusive to my mind; besides, the findings are binding on
your
Lordships. In re Foveaux (supra) has been the subject
of much dis-
cursive comment, but it has not been the subject of
decision in this House
until the present case. The fact that it
has stood so long cannot bar this
House from reversing it if your
Lordships are satisfied that it is wrong.
Bourne v. Keane,
(1919, A.C. 815), is sufficient authority as to the
general
powers of the House, or, as I should say, its duty. One of the
most
important aspects of the judicial functions of this House is
to
harmonise or correct the decisions of the lower Courts, even
though,
as Lord Birkenhead L.C. said at p. 830, it would be "
overruling decisions
" which have been treated as binding for
generations ".
In my opinion In re Foveaux (supra) was wrongly
decided and should
now be reversed. Chitty J. was wrong in taking
the intention of the donor
as a sufficient test that the gift was
charitable. That is vital. He was
wrong in holding that he could
stand neutral and not decide, on the
facts before him, the
question whether the gift was for the public benefit.
If he stood
neutral he could not decide in favour of one side and against
the
other side. He was inconsistent in holding that the gift was
charitable
while at the same time refusing to decide whether it
was for the public
benefit: unless he so decided in favour of the
gift he could not decide
that it was charitable. If he was not
satisfied that the propaganda and
expenditure for the suppression
of vivisection were beneficial to the com-
munity, he could not
hold that the activities of the Society were charitable.
He was
also wrong in deciding that he could not weigh against each other
the
detriment inseparable from suppressing vivisection on the one
hand
and on the other hand the benefit to the community of higher
moral
standards said to be due to enhanced regard for the
wellbeing of animals.
There is not, so far as I can see, any
difficulty in weighing the relative
value of what it called the
material benefits of vivisection against the moral
benefit which
is alleged or assumed as possibly following from the success
of
the appellant's project. In any case the position must be judged "as
a
whole. It is arbitrary and unreal to attempt to dissect the
problem into
what is said to be direct and what is said to be
merely consequential. The
whole complex of resulting circumstances
of whatever kind must be fore-
seen or imagined in order to
estimate whether the change advocated would
or would not be
beneficial to the community. The Commissioners have
abstained from
any but the vaguest finding on the possibility of
moral benefit:
they had no evidence, they said, on the point.
But at the highest
the assumed or alleged benefit is indirect and
problematical.
There is clearly no general consensus of opinion
or understanding
against the practice of vivisection which has
been permitted by
Parliament as regulated under the Act of 1876.
That Act has stood
all these years substantially without any serious
attack. It seems
that people's moral feelings are not weakened nor their
objections
to cruelty to animals reduced by the existence of the Act. If
they
think about it at all they think of the immense and
incalculable
benefits which have resulted from vivisection: if
that involves some
measure of pain at times to some animals,
notwithstanding the Act, they
fee] that it is due to a regrettable
necessity. Similarly a man who has
a beefsteak for dinner, if he
thinks at all about the slaughter of the beast,
reflects that that
is inevitable in the present constitution of society. I do
not
question that a high degree of regard for animals is a good
thing.
But it must be a regulated regard. Cruelty, that is,
purposeless cruelty,
whether through brutality or through a
purpose to satisfy our pleasure
or our pride, cannot be forgiven.
It is indeed also a penal offence at
law But it is impossible to
apply the word cruelty to efforts of the high-
minded scientists
who have devoted themselves to vivisection experiments
for the
purpose of alleviating human suffering. Harvey was only able
[7] 6
to publish in 1628 his great
work, De motu cordis, because he had been
given deer from
the Royal park for purposes of vivisection. Countiess
millions
have benefited from that discovery. I do not minimise the
suffer-
ings of the unfortunate deer. The subject of vivisection
is not a consenting
party, nor does it benefit. But I put against
that the benefit to humanity.
It has been argued that a Court
cannot weigh moral and material benefits
against each other. This
is not the place to accept or reject Bentham's
pronouncement that
" measure for measure, pushpin is as good as
poetry ",
or debate whether utilitarian or intuitionist ethics is the
truer
theory. But in ordinary life people often have to decide
between a moral
and a material benefit. However, 1 do not think
that is a fair statement
of the issue. The scientist who inflicts
pain in the course of vivisection is
fulfilling a moral duty to
mankind which is higher in degree than the
moralist or
sentimentalist who thinks only of the animals. Nor do I agree
that
animals ought not to be sacrificed to man when necessary. A
strictly
regulated amount of pain to some hundreds of animals may
save and
avert incalculable suffering to innumerable millions of
mankind. I can-
not doubt what the moral choice should be. There
is only one single
issue.
I have great sympathy with much
that the Master of the Rolls has
said in his powerful dissenting
judgment. I have a great love for animals
and some familiarity
with certain classes. I am sorry that rabbits, a weak
and an
innocent, but monstrously destructive, race, should have to
be
destroyed in great numbers, as they were and are being, to save
our people
from qualified starvation. I agree with the Master of
the Rolls that rats,
beetles and other pests, if they have to be
destroyed, should be destroyed
with as little cruelty as possible.
But destroyed they must be. The lives
of animals at the best are
precarious. Millions have perished in the last
frost. That is a
regrettable necessity. But however it is looked at, the life
and
happiness of human beings must be preferred to that of
animals.
Mankind, of whatever race or breed, is on a higher plane
and a different
level from even the highest of the animals who are
our friends, helpers
and companions.
No one faced with the decision
to choose between saving a man or an
animal could hesitate to save
the man.
I have turned for a while to
considerations of fact, because that is
inevitable in balancing
conflicting values. To my mind the scale of the
anti-vivisectionist
mounts up and kicks the beam. A statesman is con-
stantly weighing
conflicting moral and material utilities.
I must add that I have great
doubt, even apart from the final argu-
ment which I shall advert
to in a moment, that the object of abolishing
vivisection can on
any view be regarded as being in law a public charit-
able object.
It is not analogous to any of the objects enumerated in the
preamble
to the Statute. Its only claim to be admitted must rest on
the
fourth head. To get into that class it must be established that it
is
beneficial to the community. What it seems to do, however, is
to destroy
a source of enormous blessings to mankind. That is a
positive and
calamitous detriment of appalling magnitude. Nothing
is offered by way
of counterweight but a vague and problematical
moral elevation. The
law may well say that quite apart from any
question of balancing values,
an assumed prospect, or possibility,
of gain so vague, intangible and re-
mote cannot justly be treated
as a benefit to humanity, and that the
appellant cannot get into
the class of charities at all unless it can
establish that
benefit. If it fails, it can still continue to carry on such
lawful
purposes as the members desire and its funds, exiguous as they
are,
permit. Apart from the " animal " cases I cannot
find any precedent
for such an object being held charitable. On
the other hand, the vivi-
sectionists, who are attacked, can
fairly claim that their purpose is charit-
able and would
generally be so recognised either under the fourth head of
the
accepted classification or under the head of advancement of
learning.
I think that the whole tendency of the concept of
charity in a legal
sense under the fourth head is towards tangible
and objective benefits,
58553 A4
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and at least that approval by the common understanding
of enlightened
opinion for the time being is necessary before an
intangible benefit can be
taken to constitute a sufficient benefit
to the community to justify admis-
sion of the object into the
fourth class. By this test the claim of the appel-
lant Society
would fail.
But there is another and essentially different ground on
which in my
opinion it must fail; that is because its object is to
secure legislation
to give legal effect to it. It is, in my
opinion, a political purpose within
the meaning of Lord Parker's
pronouncement in Bowman v. Secular
Society Ltd. (supra) at p. 442.
Lord Parker was discussing in a different
connection the same
question of the true criterion for deciding if charitable
gifts
are for the benefit of the public in the legal sense; he was
there
referring to the objects enumerated in the Memorandum of
Association
of the Secular Society, Ltd. He said: ' Now if your
Lordships will
"refer for a moment to the Society's
Memorandum of Association you
"will find that none of its
objects, except, possibly, the first, are charit-
"able. The
abolition of religious tests, the disestablishment of the
Church,
"the secularisation of education, the alteration of
the law touching
"religion or marriage, or the obervation of
the Sabbath, are purely
"political objects. Equity has always
refused to recognise such objects
"as charitable. It is true
that a gift to an association formed for their
"attainment
may, if the association be unincorporated, be upheld as an
"absolute
gift to its members, or, if the association be incorporated, as
"an
absolute gift to the corporate body; but a trust for the
attainment
"of political objects has always been held
invalid, not because it is
"illegal, for everyone is at
liberty to advocate by any lawful means a
"change in the law,
but because the Court has no means of judging
"whether a
proposed change in the law will or will not be for the
public
"benefit and therefore cannot say that a gift to
secure the change is a
"charitable gift." While I was
preparing this part of my opinion my
noble and learned friend Lord
Simonds was kind enough to draw to my
attention the passage which
in due course your Lordships will hear quoted
by him from a work
of authority, Tyssen on Charitable Bequests. It is,
I think, a
very important contribution to this question. It appears to
me to
go to explain and justify Lord Parker's opinion. I refer
especially
to Tyssen's words: " the law could not stultify
itself by holding that
" it was for the public benefit that
the law itself should be changed ";
and again: " each
Court . . . must decide on the principle that the law
" is
right as it stands ". I am reminded of the words of a great
common
law judge who warned the Courts against usurping the
functions of the
legislature. I do not regard the statements of
Lord Parker and Tyssen
as inconsistent, but as complementary.
In my opinion, the Respondents' objection under this
head is well
founded. The Commissioners held that " the
alteration of the law by
" means of legislation is a main
purpose of the Society, but the repeal
" of the Act of
Parliament, (i.e., 39 & 40 Vict. c. 77) " [the Cruelty
to
Animals Act, 1876, which I have referred to above] " was
undoubtedly
" part of the Society's object in 1895."
They accordingly felt bound to
follow Chitty J. on this point, as
they had done on the first point.
Your Lordships are not bound by the judgment of Chitty
J., and I
prefer the reasoning on the point of Rowlatt J. in
C.I.R. v. Temperance
Council of the Christian Churches
of England and Wales, (10 T.C. 748).
Rowlatt J. held in
respect of the Respondent in that appeal that the pur-
pose was
not charitable but political within the meaning of the
principle
stated by Lord Parker. He held that legislation occupied
the greater part
of the field in the description of the objects of
the Respondent. He held
that any purpose of influencing
legislation is a political purpose in this
connection on the clear
authorities: that the Respondent's direct purpose
was to effect
changes in the law and that was not a charitable purpose.
He
distinguished what he called the antivivisection cases (that is the
cases
which I have been discussing) on the ground that in them the
alteration
of the law was subsidiary and not a main purpose. While
I agree with
[9] 8
the decision of Rowlatt J., I
venture to think that he fell into error in
distinguishing as he
did, the and vivisection cases, or at least that his
assumed
ground of distinction could not be applied in the present case.
The Commissioners here held
categorically, as already stated, that the
repeal of the Cruelty
to Animals Act, 1876, and the substitution of a new
enactment
prohibiting vivisection altogether, was the main object of
the
Society. I accordingly treat the judgment of Rowlatt J. which
I have just
cited as a precise authority from that very eminent
judge to support my
conclusion that on this special ground, in
addition to the others I have
mentioned, the objects of the
appellant Society were not charitable.
Rowlatt J's. judgment was
distinguished but not disapproved by Lawrence
L.J. in In re
Hood (1931 I Ch. 240, at p. 252). " In that case ", he
said,
' the gift was not for the promotion of temperance
generally, but was for
'' the promotion of temperance mainly by
political means.'' These words,
mutatis mutandis, can be
applied aptly to the present case. The illustra-
tions given by
Lord Parker in the passage quoted above show clearly
what meaning
he attached to the word political. It was not limited to
party
political measures, but would cover activities directed to
influence
the legislature to change the law in order to promote or
effect the views
advocated by the Society. Such a change would be
in the same category
as the instances given by Lord Parker of what
he regarded as political
objects, and would exclude the appellant
from the category of charities.
Its proposed object is of .a
public and very controversial character. The
present capacity of
the appellant Society is not great, but the possibilities
of
political agitation would be immensely increased if a few
millionaires
were to endow it with great financial resources. This
conclusion does not
in any way extend or affect the freedom of the
Society to promote their
cause, which is lawful enough, by any
legitimate or proper means. But
it does prevent them from claiming
the benefit of being immune from
income tax, which would amount to
receiving a subsidy from the State
to that extent. Lord Parker
was, I think, merely enunciating a specific
limitation on the
extent of the legal definition of charitable trusts. There
are in
this case stronger grounds than Lord Parker contemplated in
his
broader statement of principle for the Court declining to say
that a gift
to secure the change is a charitable gift.
I should dismiss the appeal.
[10]
Lord Porter
MY LORDS,
The question what is or is not a charity is always a
difficult problem
partly, I think, owing to the fact that the
meaning now attributed to the
word is derived from the preamble to
the Act of Elizabeth, which, though
the Act itself has been
repealed, has been re-enacted and gives a kind of
example of the
class of matters then held to be charitable. From this
beginning
legal decisions have extended the meaning of the word to many
matters
which would not originally have been included.
But the difficulty does not lie in the origin of the
doctrine alone.
It is, I think, inherent in the subject matter
under consideration. Whether
any two persons would agree in all
cases as to what " charity " should
include is at least
doubtful. It is not the law but the diversity of subjects
which
creates the difficulty.
A step towards a closer definition was however reached
in Pemsel's
Case [1891], A.C. 531 in Lord Macnaghten's
well-known speech dividing
charitable objects into four classes,
with the result that, at the present day,
all claims to embrace an
object under the head of a charity must assert
that it comes
within one of the four classes. In the present case the
Appellants
claim to come under the fourth head.
" Charity ", says Lord Macnaghten at p. 583,
"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." In this language
it
might well have been argued that trusts for any of the first
three objects
were charitable whether they were beneficial to the
community or not, but
that inclusion in the fourth class is only
permissible if such benefit can be
shown. I cannot, however, find
that such a contention has been put for-
ward. It was expressly
repudiated by both sides in the present case and
rejected by
Russell J., as he then was, in Hummeltenberg's Case [1923]
1
Ch. 237 at p. 240. One must take it, therefore, that in whichever of
the
four classes the matter may fall, it cannot be a charity
unless it is beneficial
to the community or to some sufficiently
defined portion of it.
The difficulties of the present case arise firstly in
determining what is
of benefit to the public and who is to
determine that question; but a not
less difficult, though perhaps
less subtle, question is as to whether the
objects of the
Appellant Society are political within the meaning of that
word as
used by Lord Parker in Bowman's Case [1917] A.C. 406 at
p.
442.
The facts have been fully stated by my noble and learned
friend Lord
Simonds, and he has quoted the material passages from
the findings of the
Commissioners. In so far as those findings
are for them and are determina-
tive of the matter in issue your
Lordships are of course bound by their
decision. The only
questions, therefore, are (1) whether the finding of
the
Commissioners that " the main object of the society is
the total abolition
" of vivisection and (for that purpose)
the repeal of the Cruelty to
'' Animals Act 1876, and the
substitution of a new enactment prohibiting
" vivisection
altogether " amounts to a finding that the society's object
is
political in the sense in which that word is used when it is said
that
political objects are not charitable, and (2) whether the
finding that
" any assumed public benefit in the direction of
the advancement of morals
" and education is far outweighed
by the detriment to medical science and
" research and
consequently to the public health which would result if the
"
society succeeded in achieving its object, and that, on balance,
the
" object of the society, so far from being for the public
benefit, is gravely
" injurious thereto " is a finding
of fact as a result of which your Lord-
ships ought to hold that
the objects of the society are not charitable.
[11] 2
My Lords, before dealing with
the first question I would desire to point
out that read strictly
the second finding would appear to contrast moral
and educational
advancement with the public health, and so to contrast
an ethical
with a material benefit.
It was, however, strenuously
and, I think, successfully urged by the
Respondents that this was
not an accurate summing up of the position.
The object of curing
human, or even animal, illness and suffering itself
aims at a
moral end, and the question is not fairly stated as a
conflict
between material and moral benefits but, as Mr. Grant on
the part of
the Appellants was prepared to accept, as a conflict
between one ethical
outlook and another. His point was not that
the material must give
place to the moral but that the
Commissioners or the Court are not
empowered to decide such a
question. In the words of Chitty J. in
Foveaux's Case
[1895] 2 Ch 501 " the Court stands neutral."
The Commissioners, against their
own judgment, felt themselves bound
to follow the opinion of
Chitty J. in that case. Macnaghten J., however,
and the majority
of the Court of Appeal (the Master of the Rolls dissent-
ing) took
a contrary view. In both cases the decision turned upon the
second
point. Neither tribunal decided the first, though it is
obviously
important and, as I understand, in the view of the
majority of your Lord-
ships, is determinative of the present case
in favour of the Respondents.
1. As my noble and learned
friend Lord Simonds points out, it is curious
how scanty the
authority is for the proposition that political objects are
not
charitable, and the only case quoted by Lord Parker in
Bowman's Case
(supra) viz.: de Themmines v. de
Bonneval, 5 Russ. 288, turned upon
public policy, not upon
what, apart from that question, is or is not a
charity.
Moreover, the illustrations
given by Lord Parker at p. 442 of the
political matters which he
had in mind, " The abolition of religious tests,
" the
disestablishment of the Church, the secularization of education,
"
the alteration of the law touching religion or marriage or the
observa-
" tion of the Sabbath ", are I think, primarily
matters which could not
be effected without an alteration of the
law. The object in each case
is to do away with a positive
injunction to which an end can only be
put by repealing the law;
an Act of Parliament is required in order to do
so. An example may
be taken from the first illustration given by Lord
Parker. No
agreement come to by individuals or groups could dispense
with the
obligation of complying with the provisions of the Test Acts,
whereas
slavery or vivisection could be put an end to without disobedience
to
the law if all members of the community could be induced to
desist
from these practices. It is in the narrower sense in which
I think the
phrase " purely political objects " is
rightly used, i.e., as applicable to
objects whose only means of
attainment is a change in the law.
I cannot accept the view that
the anti-slavery campaign, or the enact-
ment of the Factory Acts,
or the abolition of the use of boy labour to
sweep chimneys, would
be charitable so long as the supporters of these
objects had not
in mind, or at any rate did not advocate, a change in
the laws,
but became political and therefore non-charitable if they did
so.
To take such a view would to me be to neglect substance for form.
The
object was to stop slavery or the use of boy chimney sweeps, and
to
ensure that certain minimum requirements were carried out
in
factories. All this could be done by common consent, though no
doubt
the only effective method would be to alter the law. But
persuasion
not force was a possible means of effecting the desired
purpose.
So in the case of members of the
Antivivisection Society a conceivable
though a very unlikely way
of effecting its purpose would be to persuade
mankind to cease
from experiments on animals, and it is possible that
its members
would prefer success by that means, though I have no doubt
they
would frankly admit that they saw no possibility of such an
event.
They would not, however, be asking anyone to break the law
by refrain-
ing from vivisection. Their primary object, as I see
it, is to prevent
58553 A
6
3 [12]
animal suffering caused by vivisection, though a main
method of effect-
ing that end is to repeal the present Act, and
such repeal is in that sense
a main object of the Society. As the
Commissioners say: ' We are
" satisfied that the main object
of the Society is the total abolition of
" vivisection and
(for that purpose the repeal of the Cruelty to Animals
" Act,
1876, and the substitution of a new enactment prohibiting
"
vivisection altogether." And again, " We agree that the
alteration
" of the law by means of legislation is a main
purpose of the Society."
In so far as the decision of Rowlatt J. in Inland
Revenue Commis-
sioners v. Temperance Council, (1926)
42 T.L.R. 618, is inconsistent with
this view, I do not agree with
it, though a distinction might be made
between that case and this
inasmuch as there legislation is put in the
forefront of the
objects of the Council, and some support for this view
may perhaps
be gained from the decision in re Hood, [1931] I Ch. 240.
Moreover, as the Commissioners point out, this point was
as open and
as valid in re Foveaux (supra) as in this case
and yet it was never taken.
For these reasons, which perhaps differ a little from
those presented
by the Master of the Rolls, I agree with his view
upon this point, and
inasmuch as none of the other members of the
Courts below dealt with
it do not find myself at variance with any
of their expressed views.
2. On the second point the Respondents say that the
object, if it is to be
charitable, must, like any other charitable
object, be for the benefit of
the public; the Commissioners have
held that " on balance the object
"of the society, so
far from being for the public benefit, is gravely
" injurious
thereto ": and that that finding was one of fact and
conclu-
sive of the case as against the Appellants.
The Appellants on their part maintain that trusts
inculcating humanity
towards animals are (as has frequently been
held) for the public benefit
and that it is not for the
Commissioners or a Court to enter into what
may be fine
distinctions as to the question of the quantum of benefit as
opposed
to the disadvantages. The conflict, as I see it, is between the
view
held by Chitty J. in re Foveaux (supra) and the criticisms or
sug-
gested criticisms of that view to be found in the Judgments
of Russell J.,
as he then was, in re Hummeltenberg (supra), and
of the Court of Appeal
of whom Russell L.J. formed one in re
Grove-Grady, [1929] I Ch. 557.
Any observations of that learned judge, whether in the
Court of first
instance or the Court of Appeal or in your
Lordships' House, even
though not strictly an essential part of
his decision, could only be differed
from with great diffidence,
and it is therefore necessary to consider their
exact bearing in
the cases in which they are found.
One thing is certain, and was not contested by Mr.
Grant—the intention
of the donor in making the gift cannot
affect the result. The question
must be judged independently of
his idea of what is or is not charitable,
but undoubtedly, as has
been pointed out more than once, a gift for the
protection of
animals is prima facie at any rate a good charitable gift.
It
is enough in this connection to refer to the observations of Swinfen
Eady L.J. in Wedgwood [1915] I Ch. 113.
Such a gift, then, being prima facie charitable,
must remain charitable
unless its charitable nature is taken away
because on the whole it does
more harm than good in the eyes of
some tribunal authorised to determine
that question.
Chitty J., as I understand him, said in re Foveaux
(supra) that that
question was not one which the tribunal of
fact was entitled to decide. The
Court or the Commissioners, as
the case may be, were authorised to deter-
mine whether the object
was one of a class which was or had been held
to be charitable,
i.e., whether it was one of a class which prima facie
benefited
the public. After that the tribunal remained neutral. It was
not
for it, in a conflict of opposed opinions, to analyse further the
beneficial
»r injurious results of the gift.
Foveaux's case (supra) has more than once
been quoted since its
decision, and apparently accepted without
criticism except in so far as
[13] 4.
Lord Russell can be said to
disapprove of it and save for such qualifications
of the
acceptance of its doctrine as may have been implied in the
earlier
case of re Douglas, 35 Ch. D. 472. In re
Wedgwood [1915] 1 Ch. 113, it
appears to have been accepted
without comment by Kennedy and Swinfen
Eady, L.JJ, and Lord
Hanworth M.R. cites it without criticism in re
Grove-Grady
(supra).
Moreover its principle does, I
think, receive support from such a case
as A.G. v. Marchant,
L.R. 3 Eq. 424. It is quite true that in that case
Kindersley
V.-C. refused to increase a gift of doles proportionately with
the
increase which he granted to a number of other charitable objects
on
the ground that doles, though for the relief of property, were
harmful
rather than beneficial. But he acted in this way only with
regard to
accretions to the original gifts on the ground that the
Court had a dis-
cretion, where the original gift has been
unexpectedly augmented, to add
or not to add to the sum originally
given to any one of the different objects.
The original gift
itself presumably was just as harmful as the accretion
would have
been, but that portion of the dole he did not, and indeed it was
not
suggested that he could, touch.
Re Campden Chanties, 18
Ch. p. 310, also turned upon the discretion
which the Court was
given of varying the objects of a charity, where,
but only where,
a scheme was settled cy-pres by the Charity Com-
missioners
as a result of a complete change in the character of
the
neighbourhood and in the value of the gift. The judgment
deprecated the
giving of and denied the benefit to be obtained
from doles, but nowhere
said or attempted to say that to give them
would not be a good charity.
All it decided was that where the
Court was bound to administer the funds
cy-pres it had a
discretion as to the objects to be included in the scheme
and was
under no obligation to perpetuate doles.
There remains for consideration Lord Russell's two warnings.
In Hummeltenberg (supra) he
was discussing the question whether the
intention of the giver
plays any part in making the object charitable or
not, and decides
that it has no effect, and adds: " In my opinion the
'
question whether a gift is or may be for the public benefit is a
question
' to be answered by the Court by forming an opinion upon
the evidence
" before it." It will be observed that the
opinion which the Court has
to form is as to whether the gift is
or may be for the benefit of the public,
not as to whether on the
balance of evidence the scale inclines one way
or the other. If
the latter were the true meaning I do not know why the
words "
or may be " were added. The phraseology is at least capable
of
the interpretation that the Court has to determine whether the gift
comes
within the category of things beneficial to the public, not
whether on
balance the tribunal holds that the disadvantages
attached to it outweigh
its benefits.
Re Grove-Grady, [1929] I
Ch. 557, was concerned with this very point,
viz.: was the gift in
question within that class which could be held to
be a charity.
The Court of Appeal, differing from Romer J., held by
a majority
that it could not because there was no benefit to the community
in
a devise to form a reserve for animals of all kinds, wild or tame,
free
from the interference of man and with no provision even for
his observa-
tion of the result. (See p. 572.)
The Master of the Rolls, after
citing the language of Russell J. in re
Hummeltenberg (supra)
follows re Wedgwood (supra) in quoting the
words of
Fitzgibbon L.J. in re Cranston, [1898] 1 I.R. 431 at p. 448.
"
Any gift which proceeds from a philanthropic or benevolent motive
"
and which is intended to benefit an appreciably important class of
"
our fellow creatures (including, under decided cases, animals), and
"
which will confer the supposed benefit without contravening law or
'
morals, will be ' charitable ' ", and adopts the views of
Kennedy and
Swinfen Eady L. JJ. in the former case. The statement
of Fitzgibbon L.J.
undoubtedly requires qualification in that it
appears to make the intention
of the donor the deciding factor and
fails to point out that it is the stimu-
lation of humane and
generous sentiments in man and not the protection
5 [14]
of animals per se which is important, but this
fact does not affect the view
adopted by the Master of the Rolls.
Russell L.J., however, at p. 582 contemplates the
possibility of anti-
vivisection societies being removed from the
class of charities in the light,
as he says, of later knowledge in
regard to the benefits accruing to man-
kind from vivisection.
In answer to this suggestion it is immaterial to
consider the evidence
which Chitty J. had before him in re
Foveaux, since the principle which
he adopts is not that he is
constrained by the evidence to hold the
society charitable when he
came to weigh the advantages of vivisection
against the benefits
to be obtained by a crusade against it. Russell L.J,
on the
contrary, appears to take the view that the case for and against
the
benefits to be conferred is to be decided by some tribunal
which shall
determine whether the humane and generous sentiments
exhibited in
a desire to save animals from suffering may not be
outweighed by the
benefits conferred by inflicting it.
I find it difficult to accept the view that, once an
object has been held
to be included in the class of charities, it
is then for the court to hear
the evidence of witnesses on the one
side and on the other as to whether
it is in fact beneficial. I
can imagine the severest contest between two
sets of witnesses in
the case of a gift for a religious purpose, the one
saying that it
is most beneficial and the other that it is very harmful.
Is the
tribunal to make up its mind between these two views, whether
on
balance the gift is beneficial to the community or not? Yet if
the argu-
ment be that the tribunal is to make up its mind on the
evidence called
before it, I cannot see where it can stop short of
determining the matter
on the ordinary principles upon which
Courts act in deciding upon a
conflict of evidence, nor can I see
any method of determining what
preponderance of weight is to
incline the scale sufficiently to one side
or the other.
This view is, I think, in accordance with the opinion of
Sir John
Romilly M.R. in Thornton v. Howe, 31 B. 14,
(the Joanna Southcote
case), when he says (inter alia]: "
If the tendency were not immoral and
" although the Court
might consider the opinions sought to be propagated,
"
foolish or even devoid of foundation, it would not on that account .
. .
" take it out of the class of legacies which are included
in the general
" terms ' charitable bequests
Undoubtedly the object must not be a mere fad or
contrary to public
policy, but no argument against the claim of
the society was presented
to Your Lordships on either of these
points, and fads can be dealt with by
the method suggested by
Kennedy L.J. in re Wedgwood.
In my view the object of this society is the protection
of animals from
the sufferings believed to be involved in
vivisection, that object is, in
accordance with the decisions in
what may be called the animal cases,
charitable, and does not
cease to be charitable, in spite of the finding of
the
Commissioners that its success would be gravely injurious to
the
public benefit.
For these reasons, which are substantially those
expressed by the Master
of the Rolls, as well as because I do not
think the objects of the society
are political in the sense which
would prevent them being charitable, I
should allow the appeal.
[15]
Lord Simonds
MY LORDS,
The question raised in this
appeal is whether the National Anti-
Vivisection Society, which I
will call " the Society ", is a body of
persons
established for charitable purposes only within the mean-
ing of
Section 37 of the Income Tax Act, 1918, and accordingly
entitled
to exemption from income tax upon the income of its
investments.
The Commissioners for the
special purposes of the Income Tax
Acts, thinking that they were
bound by authority so to do,
answered this question in the
affirmative. From their decision the
Commissioners of Inland
Revenue appealed to Macnaghten J.
who reversed it, holding that
the Society is not a body of persons
established for charitable
purposes only. His judgment was
upheld by the Court of Appeal
(Mackinnon and Tucker L.J.J.,
Lord Greene M.R. dissenting). Hence
the appeal of the Society
to this House.
I think that it is important to
set out the decision contained in
the Case stated by the
Commissioners. It is amply supported by
the findings of fact which
therein appear.
The material parts of the decision are as follows :
" The object of the
Society, as set out in its book of Rules is
" stated to be '
to awaken the conscience of mankind to the
"
iniquity of torturing animals for any purpose whatever;
"
to draw public attention to the impossibility of any adequate
"
protection from torture being afforded to animals under
"
the present law ; and so to lead the people of this country
"
to call upon Parliament totally to suppress the practice of
"
vivisection.'
" An explanatory resolution
was passed by the Council of
" the Society on 9th February,
1898, in the following terms : —
" ' The Council affirm
that, while the demand for the total
"
abolition of vivisection will ever remain the object of the
"
National Anti- Vivisection Society, the Society is not
"
thereby precluded from making efforts in Parliament
"
for Lesser Measures having for their object the saving of
"
animals from scientific
torture.'
" The
quotations set out above are taken from the book of
" Rules
of the Society as reprinted in 1938.
" We are satisfied that the
main object of the Society is the
" total abolition of
vivisection including in that term all experi-
" ments on
living animals whether calculated to inflict pain
" or not
and (for that purpose) the repeal of the Cruelty to
" Animals
Act, 1876, and the substitution of a new enactment
"
prohibiting vivisection altogether.
" Dr. Fielding-Ould in his
evidence before us suggested that
" there Were some
experiments on living animals to which
" the Society did not
object and that the Society was only
" opposed to such
experiments as caused pain and suffering to
" the animals,
but we find it difficult to reconcile this evidence
" with
the statements contained in the literature produced by
" the
Society, or indeed with the speeches of Dr. Fielding-Ould,
"
as reported in ' The Animals' Defender ' a paper of which he
"
is the editor.
" We are satisfied that the
members of the Society are
" actuated by an intense love of
animals, and that the work
" of the Society is to a large
extent directed towards the pre
" vention
of cruelty to animals. Part of its propaganda
"
literature is directed
towards inculcating a love of animals
"
in the young.
2 [16]
" A number of very
distinguished men were called as
" witnesses by the Crown
with the object of proving the great
" benefits which had
accrued to the public by reason of the
" medical and
scientific knowledge which had been obtained
" through
experiments on living animals.
" We think it has been
proved conclusively that: —
" (a) a large amount of
present day medical and scientific
" knowledge is due to
experiments on living animals;
" (b) many valuable cures for
and preventatives of disease
" have been discovered and perfected by means of experi-
" ments on living animals, and much suffering both to
" human beings and to animals has been either prevented
" or alleviated thereby.
" We are satisfied that if
experiments on living animals were
" to be forbidden (i.e. if
vivisection were abolished) a very
" serious obstacle would
be placed in the way of obtaining
" further medical and
scientific knowledge calculated to be of
" benefit to the
public.
" We were very impressed by
the evidence of Major General
" Poole, Director of Pathology
at the War Office, as to the
" great value of experiments on
living animals in connection
" with the successful carrying
on of the present war by the
" maintenance of the health of
the troops and the avoidance
" or minimizing of many diseases
to which soldiers in the field
" are particularly liable.
" There was no express
evidence before us that any public
" benefit in the direction
of the advancement of morals and
" education amongst men (or
in any other direction) would
" or might result from the
Society's efforts to abolish vivi-
" section, but if it must
be assumed that some such benefit
" would or might so result,
and if we conceived it to be our
" function to determine the
case on the footing of weighing
" against that assumed
benefit the evidence given before us,
" and of forming a
conclusion whether, on balance, the object
" of the Society
was for the public benefit, we should hold,
" on that
evidence, that any assumed public benefit in the
" direction
of the advancement of morals and education was
" far
outweighed by the detriment to medical science and
" research
and consequently to the public health which would
" result if
the Society succeeded in achieving its object, and
" that on
balance, the object of the Society, so far from being
" for
the public benefit, was gravely injurious thereto, with
" the
result that the Society could not be regarded as a charity.
" But, upon the
authorities, we regard ourselves as precluded
" from so
holding ".
The Commissioners then referred
to the authorities, which it will
be my task to examine, and came
to the conclusion which I have
already stated.
Before I refer to the cases and
to the judgments in the Courts
below I will state the two
questions which appear to me to be
raised in this appeal.
The first and shorter point is
whether a main purpose of the
Society is of such a political
character that the Court cannot regard
it as charitable. To this
point little attention was directed in the
Courts below. It is
mentioned only in the judgment of the learned
Master of the Rolls.
As will appear in the course of this opinion,
it is worthy of more
serious debate.
The second point is fundamental.
It is at the very root of the
law of charity as administered by
the Court of Chancery and its
successor, the Chancery Division of
the High Court of Justice. It
is whether the Court, for the
purpose of determining whether the
object of the Society is
charitable may disregard the finding of
fact that "any assumed
public benefit in the direction of the
" advancement of
morals and education was far outweighed by
" the detriment to
medical science and research and consequently
" to the public
health which would result if the Society succeeded
" in
achieving its object, and that on balance the object of the
"
Society, so far from being for the public benefit, was gravely in-
"
jurious thereto ". The Society says that the Court must
disregard
this fact, arguing that " evidence of disadvantages
or evils which
" would or might result from the stopping of
vivisection is
" irrelevant and inadmissible ".
My Lords, upon the first point
the learned Master of the Rolls
cites in his judgment a passage
from the speech of Lord Parker
in Bowman v. Secular
Society, Ltd. (1917 A.C. 406 at page 442):
" A trust for
the attainment of political objects has always been
" held
invalid, not because it is illegal . . . but because the Court
"
has no means of judging whether a proposed change in the law
"
will or will not be for the public benefit". Lord Parker is
here
considering the possibility of a valid charitable trust and
nothing
else and when he says " has always been held invalid
" he means
" has always been held not to be a valid
charitable trust". The
learned Master of the Rolls found this
authoritative statement upon
a branch of the law, with which no
one was more familiar than
Lord Parker, to be inapplicable to the
present case for two reasons,
first, because he felt difficulty in
applying the words to " a change
" in the law which is
in common parlance a ' non-political'
" question ", and
secondly because he thought they could not in
any case apply, when
the desired legislation is " merely ancillary
" to the
attainment of what is ex hypothesi a good charitable
"object".
My Lords, if I may deal with
this second reason first, I cannot
agree that in this case an
alteration in the law is merely ancillary
to the attainment of a
good charitable object. In a sense no doubt,
since legislation is
not an end in itself, every law may be regarded
as ancillary to
the object which its provisions are intended to
achieve. But that
is not the sense in which it is said that a society
has a
political object. Here the rinding of the Commissioners is
itself
conclusive. " We are satisfied ", they say, " that the
main
" object of the Society is the total abolition of
vivisection . . . and
" (for that purpose) the repeal of the
Cruelty to Animals Act, 1876,
" and the substitution of a new
enactment prohibiting vivisection
" altogether ". This
is a finding that the main purpose of the
Society is the
compulsory abolition of vivisection by Act of Parlia-
ment. What
else can it mean ? And how else can it be supposed
that
vivisection is to be abolished? Abolition and suppression
are
words that connote some form of compulsion. It can only be
by Act
of Parliament that that element can be supplied. Upon
this point I
must with respect differ both from the learned Master
of the Rolls
and from Chitty J. whose decision in re Foveaux I
shall
later consider.
Coming to the conclusion that it
is a main object, if not the main
object, of the Society, to
obtain an alteration of the law, I ask
whether that can be a
charitable object, even if its purposes might
otherwise be
regarded as charitable.
My Lords, I see no reason for
supposing that Lord Parker in
the cited passage used the
expression " political objects " in any
narrow sense or
was confining it to objects of acute political contro-
versy. On
the contrary he was, I think, propounding familiar
doctrine,
nowhere better stated than in a text book, which has long
been
regarded as of high authority but appears not to have been
cited
for this purpose to the Courts below (as it certainly was not
to
your Lordships), Tyssen on Charitable Bequests. The passage,
which
is at p. 176, is worth repeating at length: " It is a common
"
practice for a number of individuals amongst us to form an
4 [18]
"
association for promoting some change in the law, and it is worth
"
our while to consider the
effect of a gift to such an association.
"
It is clear that such an association is not of a charitable
nature.
"
However desirable the change may really be, the law could not
"
stultify itself by holding that it was for the public benefit that
"
the law itself should be
changed. Each Court in deciding on
"
the validity of a gift must decide on the principle that the law
"
is right as it stands. On the other hand such a gift could not be
"
held void for
illegality". Lord Parker uses slightly different
language
but means the same thing, when he says that the Court has
no means
of judging whether a proposed change in the law will
or will not
be for the public benefit. It is not for the Court to
judge and
the Court has no means of judging.
The same question may be looked
at from a slightly different
angle. One of the tests, and a
crucial test, whether a trust is charit-
able, lies in the
competence of the Court to control and reform it.
I would remind
your Lordships that it is the King as parens patriae
who is
the guardian of charity and that it is the nght and duty
of His
Attorney-General to intervene and inform the Court, if
the
trustees of a charitable trust fall short of their duty. So too
it
is his duty to assist the Court, if need be, in the formulation of
a
scheme for the execution of a charitable trust. But, my
Lords,
is it for a moment to be supposed that it is the function
of the
Attorney-General on behalf of the Crown to intervene and
demand
that a trust shall be established and administered by the
Court,
the object of which is to alter the law in a manner highly
pre-
judicial, as he and His Majesty's Government may think, to
the
welfare of the State ? This very case would serve as an
example,
if upon the footing that it was a charitable trust it
became the
duty of the Attorney-General on account of its
maladministration
to intervene.
There is undoubtedly a paucity
of judicial authority on this point.
It may fairly be said that de
Themmines v. de Bonneval, 5 Russell
288, to which Lord Parker
referred in Bowman's case, turned on
the fact that the
trust there in question was held to be against
public policy. In
C.I.R. v. Temperance Council, 42 T.L.R. 618,
the
principle was clearly recognised by Rowlatt J. as it was in
re
Hood, 1931 1 Ch. 240, at pp. 250 and 252. But in truth the
reason
of the thing appears to me so clear that I neither expect
nor require
much authority. I conclude upon this part of the case
that a main
object of the Society is political and for that reason
the Society is
not established for charitable purposes only.
I would only add that I would
reserve my opinion upon the
hypothetical example of a private
enabling Act, which was sug-
gested in the course of the argument.
I do not regard re Villers-
Wilkes, 72 L.T. 323, as a
decision that a legacy which had for its
main purpose the passing
of such an Act is charitable.
The second question raised in
this appeal, which I have already
tried to formulate, is of wider
importance, and I must say at once
that I cannot reconcile it with
my conception of a Court of Equity
that it should take under its
care and administer a trust, however
well-intentioned its creator,
of which the consequence would be
calamitous to the community.
I would not weary your Lordships
with a historical excursion
into the origin of the equitable
jurisdiction in matters of charity,
one of the " heads of
Equity " as Lord Macnaghten called it in
Pemsel's case.
Undoubtedly the favour shown by the civil law
to gifts in pios
usus had some part in it. So too had the conception,
to which
I have already referred, that the King as parens patriae
took
under his special care charitable gifts as he took also infants
and
lunatics. But, whatever its origin, from the fact of its existence
[19] 5
arose the necessity of
definition. And so both before and after the
Statute of 43
Elizabeth it became the duty of the Court of Chancery
to determine
what objects were and what were not charitable.
I will refer to Tyssen again at
p. 5 " One by one " he says ' the
"
question of the validity of such trusts was brought before the
Court
" of Chancery ... It considered
only this. Haying 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 ....". The
learned author proceeds to illustrate his
statement by reference
to various trusts which the Court held to
be invalid, as trusts to
say masses for the donor's soul, to keep in
repair a tomb outside
a church, or to teach religious opinions for
which penalties were
inflicted by statute.
The task of the Court was in
some degree simplified by the
Statute of Elizabeth, which made it
clear that at least the purposes
enumerated in the preamble were
charitable, but from the
beginning it appears to have been assumed
that the enumeration
was not exhaustive and that those purposes
also were charitable
which could be fairly regarded as within its
spirit and intendment
This view enabled the Court to extend its
protection to a vast
number of objects which appeared both to the
charitable donor and
to it to be for the benefit of the community.
Nowhere perhaps
did the favour shown by the law to charities
exhibit itself more
clearly than in the development of the
doctrine of general
charitable intention, under which the Court,
finding in a bequest
(often, as I humbly think, on a flimsy
pretext) a general charitable
intention, disregarded the fact that
the named object was against
the policy of the law and applied the
bequest to some other
charitable purpose. Thus in De Costa v.
de Pas, (Ambler 228),
Lord Hardwicke applied a bequest for
instructing the people in
the Jewish religion (then regaraed as an
illegal purpose) for the
benefit of the Foundling Hospital, and in
Gary v. Abbot (7 Ves.
490) Sir W. Grant M.R.
directed that the residue of an estate, which
had been bequeathed
for the instruction of children in the Roman
Catholic faith,
should be applied as the King by Sign Manual
should direct. I
refer to this doctrine in a brief review of the equit-
able
jurisdiction only because, as I think, it has been the cause
of
some confusion in the argument which has been presented to
the
House. It would be very relevant, if the Society, conceding
that
the campaign against vivisection was not a charitable purpose,
argued
that there was yet a general charitable intention and that
its
funds were applicable to some other charitable purpose. That
is
not the argument. If it were, I should not entertain it, though
it
might in an earlier age have succeeded.
My Lords, this then being the
position, that the Court determined
" one by one "
whether particular named purposes were charitable,
applying always
the overriding test whether the purpose was for
the public
benefit, and that the King as parens, patriae intervened
Pro
bono Publico for the protection of charities, what room is
there
for the doctrine which has found favour with the learned
Master
of the Rolls and has been so vigorously supported at the
Bar of
the House, that the Court may disregard the evils that will
ensue
from the achievement by the Society of its ends ? It is to
me a
strange and bewildering idea that the Court must look so far
and
no farther, must see a charitable purpose in the intention of
the
Society to benefit animals and thus elevate the moral
character
of men but must shut its eyes to the injurious results
to the whole
human and animal creation.
I will readily concede that, if
the purpose is within one of the
heads of charity forming the
first three classes in the classification
which Lord Macnaghten
borrowed from Sir Samuel Romilly's
6 [20]
argument in
Morice v. Bishop of Durham, 10 Ves., the Court
will
easily conclude that it is a charitable purpose. But even
here
to give the purpose the name of " religious " or "
educational " is
not to conclude the matter. It may yet not
be charitable, if the
religious purpose is illegal or the
educational purpose is contrary
to public policy. Still there
remains the overriding question: is it
pro bono publicol It
would be another strange misreading of
Lord Macnaghten's speech in
Pemsel's case (one was pointed out in
re Macduff) to
suggest that he intended anything to the contrary.
I would rather
say that, when a purpose appears broadly to fall
within one of the
familiar categories of charity, the Court will
assume it to be for
the benefit of the community and therefore
charitable unless the
contrary is shown, and further that the Court
will not be astute
in such a case to defeat upon doubtful evidence
the avowed
benevolent intention of a donor.
But, my
Lords, the next step is one that I cannot take. Where
upon the
evidence before it the Court concludes that, however
well-
intentioned the donor, the achievement of his object will be
greatly
to the public disadvantage, there can be no justification
for saying
that it is a charitable object. If and so far as there
is any judicial
decision to the contrary, it must in my opinion be
regarded as
inconsistent with principle and be overruled. This
proposition
is clearly stated by Russell J. in re
Hummeltenberg, 1923 1 Ch. 237
at p. 242. " In my opinion
", he said, " the question whether a gift
" is or
may be operative for the public benefit is a question to be
"
answered by the Court by forming an opinion upon the evidence
"before
it". This statement of that very learned Judge
follows
immediately upon some observations on the cases of re
Foveaux,
1895 2 Ch 501, and re Cranston, 1898 1 I.R.
431, which were the
mainstay of the appellant's argument.
In re
Foveaux a testatrix had bequeathed legacies to two
societies
described briefly by Chitty J. as the two defendant anti-
vivisection
societies, one of them being the appellant Society under
the name
which it then bore. The question as stated by the learned
Judge
was whether they were charities in the technical sense in
which
the term " charity " is used in law. That is the same
question
as that which your Lordships have to decide here. Chitty
J.
decided that they were charities. His judgment concludes
with
these words: " The purpose of these societies, whether
they are
" right or wrong in the opinions they hold, is
charitable in the legal
" sense of the term. The intention is
to benefit the community:
" whether, if they achieved their
object, the community would in
" fact be benefited is a
question on which I think the Court is
" not required to
express an opinion. The defendant societies may
" be near the
border line, but I think they are charities." These
words,
which appear to me to be in direct opposition to the passage
that
1 have cited from the judgment of Russell J., in effect repeat
what
Chitty J. said earlier in his judgment: " In determining this
"
question of charity the Court does not enter into or pronounce
"
any opinion on the merits of the controversy which subsists
"
between the supporters and opponents of the practice of vivi-
"
section. It stands neutral."
My Lords, in
the passages that I have cited from the judgments
of Chitty J. and
Russell J. the issue is clear cut. Which of them
is right ? Your
Lordships will now see why I have thought it proper,
however
briefly, to consider the origin of this equitable jurisdiction.
For
at once this question arises. If indeed Chitty J. is right, if
it
is not the duty of the Court to express an opinion whether
the
community will in fact be benefited, should the object of
those
who intend to benefit it be achieved, at what point in its
long
history did it cease to be its duty ? One by one the
purposes
enumerated in the preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth
were held
to be charitable by a Court which performed just this
duty and
[21] 7
applied this
overriding test. And since the Statute the Court has
performed
the same duty in determining whether objects alleged
to be
charitable are within the spirit and intendment of the
preamble.
May I not cite Chitty J. himself in this very case?
" After
all", he said, " the best that can be done is to
consider
"each case as it arises upon its own special
circumstances." Is
there a more special circumstance than
this, that the fact is proved
that " on balance the object of
the Society, so far from being for
" the public benefit, was
gravely injurious thereto " ? Nor do I
understand why in his
concluding words Chitty I. said that the
defendant societies might
be near the border line, if he looked only
at their intention and
formed no opinion upon the result of their
efforts if they were
successful. For there could be no doubt upon
the authority of such
cases as University of London v. Yarrow,
1 De G. &
J. 72, and Marsh v. Means, 3 Jur. (N.S.) 790, that a
gift
for the protection of animals is prima facie a
charitable gift for the
reason later stated by Swinfen Eady L.J.
in re Wedgwood, [1915]
1 Ch. 113, at p. 122. Upon this line
of authority Chitty J. founded
his judgment and, if intention only
was looked at, the defendant
societies could fairly claim to be in
the heart of the province of
charity. If the learned Judge had a
doubt, it could only have
been due to the passing thought that
perhaps result as well as
intention was material. It is worthy of
notice that the same doubt,
so strong indeed that final opinion
was reserved, was entertained
by Cotton, Lindley and Bowen L.JJ.
in re Douglas, 35 C.D. 472.
In that case it was unnecessary
to determine whether the same
anti-vivisection society in its then
form was a charity. But the
learned Lords Justices expressly
reserved their opinion upon the
point. I see no reason why they
should have done so, unless they
held, as I invite your Lordships
to hold, that injury to the com-
munity must be weighed with the
ostensible charitable purpose
of the society.
The learned
Master of the Rolls, from whose opinion upon a broad
question of
principle such as this is I differ with great reluctance,
supports
his decision by reference to such cases as Attorney-General
v.
Marchant, L.R-3, Eq.424, and re Campden Charities, 18
C.D. 310.
In the former case a testator had in the year 1640 left
real estate
upon trust to pay £50 per annum to four
charitable objects, namely,
£20 for the salary of a
schoolmaster, £20 to a college for the
purchase of books and
£5 each to the poor of two parishes with
a direction that
any deficiency should be borne rateably. It
appears to have
been assumed that any excess of the rents and
profits of the real
estate over £50 was applicable for charitable
purposes.
There was in fact a substantial surplus, and the question
submitted
to the Court was whether it should be divided rateably
between the
charities named in the will or should be appropriated
for the
benefit of one or more of them to the exclusion of the
others.
Kindersley V.C., after referring to the rule of law laid
down by
Lord Kingsdown in Attorney-General v. Dean
& Canons of
Windsor, 8 H.L.C. 452, that the
accretion was prima facie to be
applied and apportioned pro
rata among the objects of the testator's
bounty, but subject
to the discretion of the Court to be exercised
in certain cases
and within certain limits, thus expressed himself:
" So, I
apprehend, if it should appear that the directions of the
"
testator with respect to a particular object, if carried out in
these
" days, so far from being beneficial, would be
detrimental to the
" objects he meant to benefit: in that
case, a good reason would
" exist for exercising the
discretion ". Then he applies this principle
to the gifts to
the poor of the two parishes and says, " I think, by
"
common consent, it is estabb'shed at the present day that there
"
is nothing more detrimental to a parish, and especially to the poor
"
inhabitants of it, than having stated sums periodically payable
"
to the poor of that parish by way of charity. The poorest class
"
of all is not allowed to participate in such charities, because the
8 [22]
" Court
in such cases always excludes those who are in receipt of
"
parochial relief, inasmuch as that would be a relief to the poor
"
rates and so a charity to the ratepayers and not to the poor. The
"
only effect of such gifts is to pauperise the parish . . .
."
Accordingly the Vice-Chancellor declined to increase pro
rata the
gifts to the poor and directed that the whole of the
surplus revenue
should be divided between the other two objects of
the testator's
bounty. My Lords, I find in this decision nothing
contradictory
to the principles that I have asserted. A purpose
deemed charitable
in 1640 was no longer deemed charitable in 1866;
therefore the
Court declined to give effect to it in regard to
surplus revenues. It
does not follow from this that, if in 1640
the Court had thought
that nothing could be more detrimental to a
parish than such doles,
it would nevertheless have supported the
gift as a good charitable
gift.
The case of
re Campden Chanties is an authority of some
importance in a
difficult branch of the law of charity relating to
the cy-pres
application of charitable funds and the jurisdiction of
the
Charity Commissioners, and it is often cited in that
connection.
Substantially the same question had arisen as in
Attorney-General
v. Marchant. There, too, a bequest had
been made for the purchase
of lands of the annual value of £10,
half of which was to be applied
towards the better relief of
the most poor and needy people of good
life and conversation in
the parish of Kensington. The value of
the lands so purchased
had greatly increased; so had the parish
of Kensington. It
became necessary to establish a scheme for the
administration of
the charity, and the Charity Commissioners did
so. Taking the
view expressed by Kindersley V.C. that doles to
the poor were
detrimental to the parish, they in substance diverted
to
educational purposes a gift which was in part eleemosynary.
The
Court of Appeal held that they were entitled to do so. "
The
' habits of society ", said Jessel M.R., at p. 324, "
have changed,
' and not only men's ideas have changed but men's
practices have
' changed, and in consequence of the change of
ideas there has
' been a change of legislation: laws have become
obsolete or
' have been absolutely repealed and habits have become
obsolete
' and have fallen into disuse, which were prevalent at
the times
' when these wills were made," and, later, at p.
327, ' With
' our present ideas on the subject and our present
experience,
' which has been gathered as the result of very
careful enquiries
' by various committees and commissions on the
state of the
' poor in England, we know that the extension of
doles is
' simply the extension of mischief". Again, my
Lords, I find
nothing in this reasoning which is opposed to
what I have
said. If to-day a testator made a bequest for the
relief of the
poor and required that it should be carried out in
one way
only and the Court was satisfied by evidence that that
way was
injurious to the community, I should say that it was not a
charitable
gift, though three hundred years ago the Court might
upon different
evidence or in the absence of any evidence have
come to a different
conclusion. I have been careful to add the
condition that the
testator required the gift to be carried out in
one way only. For I
would again remind your Lordships how much
confusion has been
introduced by the doctrine of general
charitable intention, which
is itself the substantial
justification of the cy-pres doctrine.
The two cases
to which I have last referred both fall within
one of the three
determinate categories in Lord Macnaghten's classi-
fications, the
relief of poverty. In a case, which it is sought to
bring within
the indeterminate fourth category, it is, I think, even
more
difficult to pause at a certain stage in the enquiry, to say,
for
example, that the purpose is to protect animals, that kindness
to
animals is conducive to the moral advancement of man, and
[23] 9
to conclude that the purpose is
charitable without looking to the
end of the matter.
Thus in re Grove-Grady,
[1929] 1 Ch. 557, a testatrix left her
residuary estate to
trustees to found an institution which should
have as one of its
objects the acquisition of land for the provision
of refuges for
the preservation of "all animals birds or other
"
creatures not human." The Court of Appeal by a majority
held
that the trust not having been shown to be for purposes
beneficial
to the community was not a good and valid charitable
trust. It
is instructive to see why not. Lord Hanworth M.R.
thus states the
law. Having formulated the test in the two
familiar questions (1)
Is the trust for a purpose beneficial to
the community, (2) If it satis-
fies that first test, is it
charitable, he then asks, " Who is to decide
" these
questions ? I agree with Holmes L.J. that the answer does
"
not depend on the view entertained by any individual' either by
''
the Judge who is to decide the question or by the person who
"
makes the gift': In re Cranston. The test is to be applied
from
" evidence of the benefit to be derived by the public or
a con-
" siderable section of it, though a wide divergence of
opinion may
" exist as to the expediency, or utility, of what
is accepted generally
" as beneficial. The Court must
decide whether benefit to the
" community is established."
The learned Master of the Rolls then
expressly approved the
passage that I have cited from the
judgment of Russell J. in re
Hummeltenberg. The same view is
reiterated by that learned
Judge (Lord Justice Russell as he then
was) at p. 588, " In
my opinion, the Court must determine in each
" case whether
the trusts are such that benefit to the community
" must
necessarily result from their execution."
Counsel for the Society sought
to distinguish this case on the
ground that the initial step was
not there taken; there was not
found to be any benefit to the
community, so that no question
arose of weighing advantage against
disadvantage. In this view,
presumably, however slight the
benefit, the Court must disregard
injury however great. Such a
view is repellent alike to common
sense and to the principles upon
which the equitable jurisdiction
has been founded.
I ought not to let the case of
re Cranston, (1898 1 I.R. 431), pass
unnoticed. In that
case the Court had to consider whether a
bequest to two vegetarian
societies was a good charitable bequest,
and, though there was no
such evidence of injury to the community
arising from the
activities of the societies as was adduced in this
case, yet there
were observations in the judgments of the very
learned Judges who
took part in the decision, upon which counsel
for the appellant
properly relied. But they must not be pressed
too far. Thus when
Porter M.R. (who first heard the case) felt
bound " to give
effect to the intention unless there is some coercive
"
reason to the contrary ", it is at least open to doubt whether
he
would not have been coerced to a contrary view if he had
found
upon the evidence that injury to the community was the
necessary
result of the societies' work. It may indeed be said
that even the
possibility of a coercive reason to the contrary is
fatal to the con-
tention that the Court may not look to the end
of the chapter. Lord
Ashbourne perhaps went further. For he
observed that though
the vast majority might be opposed to it and
it might be dis-
approved by medical men, yet he did not feel at
liberty to sit in
judgment upon objects and purposes or to measure
the success
which they might then have or might thereafter attain
to. If by
this the learned Lord Chancellor meant that it was not a
matter
for his individual opinion, I should not dissent, but I
cannot accept
it, if he meant that the Court could abrogate its
duty of deciding
upon evidence whether the test of charitable
purpose was satisfied.
Fitzgibbon L.J. uses words which I think
worth citing at length.
10 [24]
" What",
he says, " is the tribunal which is to decide whether the
"
object is a beneficent one ? It cannot be the individual mind of
"a
Judge, for he may disagree toto coelo from the testator as
to
" what is or is not beneficial. On the other hand it
cannot be the vox
" populi, for charities have been
upheld for the benefit of insig-
" niticant sects, and of
peculiar people. It occurs to me that the
" answer must be
that the benefit must be one which the founder
" believes to
be of public advantage, and his belief must be at least
"
rational, and not contrary either to the general law of the land,
or
" to the principles of morality." Your Lordships see
how inevitably
some qualification slips in. Here we have the test
of rationality,
of conformity with the general law, of the
principles of morality.
These are tests which the Court must
examine and, so far as they
depend on facts, come to a conclusion
upon relevant evidence. I
do not understand Fitzgibbon L.J. to
support the view of the
appellant that, given a measure of public
advantage, the public
disadvantage can be ignored. Walker L.J.
appears more strongly
to favour the appellant. " The idea ",
he says, " may be erroneous
" and may be visionary, but
it was entertained honestly by the
" giver, and her gift was
designed for the benefit of mankind, and I
" think it is
charitable." I can hardly think that the learned Lord
Justice
intended to say that the honest opinion of a donor is con-
clusive.
At least an exception must be made in the case of an
illegal
purpose or a purpose contrary to public policy. The ques-
tion
here, with which he did not purport to deal, is whether it is
as
fatal to the charitable nature of a gift that it is shown
specifically
to be to the public detriment as that it is regarded
generally as
contrary to public policy. From the dissenting
judgment of
Holmes L.J. your Lordships may get some assistance.
That
learned Lord Justice is careful to say that there is nothing
illegal
or contrary to public policy in the propagation of the
doctrines
of vegetarianism. The question remained whether the
object of
the societies was charitable, and after stating that the
object must
be one by which the public, or a section of the
public, benefits, the
Lord Justice proceeds, " But what is
the test or standard by which
" a particular gift is to be
tried with a view of ascertaining whether
" it is beneficial
in this sense 1 I am of opinion that it does not
"
depend upon the view entertained by any individual—either
"
by the Judge who is to decide the question, or by the person who
"
makes the gift." And he answers the question by saying, "
There
" is probably no purpose that all men would agree is
beneficial to
" the community: but there are surely many
purposes which
" everyone would admit are generally so
regarded, although indi-
" viduals differ as to their
expediency or utility. The test or
" standard is, I believe,
to be found in this common understanding."
He then applies
this standard to the gift there in question, and,
applying it,
finds that the object does not benefit mankind and
therefore is
not charitable. It is, I think, instructive to see how
he
contrasts the vegetarian and the anti-vivisection claims.
Of
anti-vivisection he says " there is a great body of
well-informed
" opinion, holding that it would be for the
true interests of mankind
" to put an end to it [i.e.,
vivisection] altogether. I think that there
" is no analogy
between a practice such as this, pursued by only
" a few
individuals, attended with the severest suffering, and pro-
"
ductive of very doubtful benefit, and the universal habit of
killing
" animals for human food in a manner that causes at
the most but
" momentary pain." It may well be that if
the finding of the
Special Commissioners in this case had been in
similar terms, I
should accede to the Society's claim. But the
value of the
observations of the Lord Justice is that he looks
first and last to
the true interests of mankind. That is the test.
Be the intention
of the donor what it will, let him label his gift
by what name he
likes, he cannot draw a line and say to the Court
that it shall go
thus far and no farther.
[25] 11
My Lords, I
have dealt at some length with the case of re
Cranston, partly
because it was relied on by the appellant, partly
because it is, I
think, one of the most important cases in this branch
of the law
of charity. I do not express any opinion whether it
was rightly
decided. Still less do I express an opinion whether
upon such
evidence as might to-day be available a similar con-
clusion would
be reached. I use it for the purpose of emphasising
a view, too
often, I fear, reiterated, that the Court must still in
every case
determine by reference to its special circumstances
whether or not
a gift is charitable.
My Lords,
what I have said is enough to conclude this case. But
there is an
important passage in the judgment of the Master of the
Rolls,
which I ought not to ignore. ' I do not see ", he says, "
how
' at this time of day it can be asserted that a particular
exempli-
' fication of those objects is not beneficial merely
because in that
' particular case the achievement of those objects
would deprive
' mankind of certain consequential benefits, however
important
' those benefits may be. If this were not so, it would
always be
' possible, by adducing evidence which was not before
the Court
' on the original occasion, to attack the status of an
established
' charitable object to the great confusion of trustees
and all others
' concerned. Many existing charities would no doubt
fall if such a
' criterion were to be adopted." I venture
with great respect to
think that this confuses two things. A
purpose regarded in one age
as charitable may in another be
regarded differently. I need not
repeat what was said by Jessel
M.R. in re Campden Chanties. A
bequest in the will of a
testator dying in 1700 might be held valid
upon the evidence then
before the Court but upon different
evidence held invalid if he
died in 1900. So, too, I conceive that
an anti-vivisection society
might at different times be differently
regarded. But this is not
to say that a charitable trust, when it has
once been established,
can ever fail. If by a change in social habits
and needs, or, it
may be, by a change in the law, the purpose of
an established
charity becomes superfluous or even illegal, or if
with increasing
knowledge it appears that a purpose once thought
beneficial is
truly detrimental to the community, it is the duty of
trustees of
an established charity to apply to the Court, or in suit-
able
cases to the Charity Commissioners or in educational charities
to
the Minister of Education, and ask that a cy-pres scheme may
be
established. And I can well conceive that there might be cases
in
which the Attorney-General would think it his duty to
intervene
to that end. A charity once established does not die,
though its
nature may be changed. But it is wholly consistent with
this that
in a later age the Court should decline to regard as
charitable a
pin-pose, to which in an earlier age that quality
would have been
ascribed, with the result that (unless a general
charitable intention
could be found) a gift for that purpose would
fail. I cannot share
the apprehension of the Master of the Rolls
that great confusion
will be caused if the Court declines to be
bound by the beliefs and
knowledge of a past age in considering
whether a particular purpose
is to-day for the benefit of the
community. But if it is so, then I
say that it is the lesser of
two evils.
My Lords, in
a speech, which I recently delivered in this House,
1 had occasion
to say that the cases decided on this branch of the
law were
legion in number and were not easy to reconcile. This
is the first
time, so far as I am aware, that the issue in the form in
which I
have endeavoured to state it has reached this House. If
your
Lordships are satisfied that the law as laid down by Russell J.
(as
he then was) in re Hummeltenberg is correct, and the
decision
of this House confirms it, I believe that it will be a
useful landmark
in the history of the law of charity.
[26]
Lord Normand
MY LORDS,
The Appellant
Society claims exemption from Income Tax on
its investment income
on the ground that it is a body of trustees
established for
charitable purposes only within the meaning of
Section 37 of the
Income Tax Act, 1918.
The Trust
purposes are to be found in Resolutions passed by a
General
Meeting of the Society held on 31st July, 1897 and by the
Council
on 9th February, 1898. Of these resolutions the first
declares
that the object of the Society is to awaken the conscience
of
mankind to the iniquity of torturing animals for any
purpose
whatever; to draw public attention to the impossibility of
any
adequate protection from torture being afforded to animals
under
the present law; and so to lead the people of this country
to call
upon Parliament totally to suppress the practice of
vivisection.
By the second resolution, which is described as an
explanatory
resolution, the Council affirmed that, while the
demand for the
total abolition of vivisection would ever remain
the object of the
National Anti-Vivisection Society, the Society
was not thereby
precluded from making efforts in Parliament for
lesser measures,
having for their object the saving of animals
from scientific torture.
The first
question in the appeal is whether these purposes do
not
demonstrate that the Society is an association for political
purposes
and not an association or trust for charitable purposes.
The
distinction between a political association and a charitable
trust
has not been denned, and I doubt whether it admits of
precise
definition. The Attorney-General, however, submitted that
any
Association which included among its objects the passing
by
Parliament of any legislation, unless it were an
uncontroversial
enabling Act, was to be considered a political
association, and must
be refused the privileges which the law
allows to charities. But
no authority was cited which would
warrant so extreme a
proposition.
The formation of voluntary
associations for the furtherance of
the improvement of morals is
familiar, and such associations are
a well recognised sub-division
of the fourth of Lord Macnaghten's
divisions of charities in
Pemsel's case, 1891 Appeal Cases 531. It
is also familiar
that trusts for preventing cruelty to animals or
for improving the
conditions of their lives have found a recognized
place in that
sub-division. Trusts for the benefit of animals are
allowed to
be charitable because, to quote the language of Lord
Justice
Swinfen Eady in [Re] Wedgwood, 1915 1 Chancery
113
at page 123, they tend to promote and encourage kindness
'
towards animals, to discourage cruelty, and to ameliorate the
'
condition of the brute creation, and thus to stimulate humane
'
and generous sentiments in man towards the lower animals, and
'
by these means promote feelings of humanity and morality
'
generally, repress brutality, and thus elevate the human race
".
Societies for the amelioration of the condition of
animals, like other
societies for the improvement of human morals,
do not as a rule
limit their activities to one particular method
of advancing their
cause. Commonly they hope to make voluntary
converts, and
they also hope to educate public opinion and so to
bring its in-
fluence to bear on those who offend against a humane
code of
conduct towards animals. But they seldom disclaim, and
frequently
avow, an intention of inducing Parliament to pass new
legislation
if a favourable opportunity should arise of furthering
their pur-
pose by that means. A society for the prevention of
cruelty to
animals, for example, may include among its professed
purposes
amendments of the law dealing with field sports or with
the taking
of eggs or the like. Yet it would not in my view
necessarily lose
its right to be considered a charity, and if that
right were questioned,
[27] 2
it would
become the duty of the Court to decide whether the
general purpose
of the society was the improvement of morals
by various lawful
means including new legislation, all such means
being subsidiary
to the general charitable purpose. If the Court
answered this
question in favour of the Society, it would retain
its privileges
as a charity. But if the decision was that the leading
purpose of
the Society was to promote legislation in order to bring
about a
change of policy towards field sports or the protection of
wild
birds, it would follow that the Society should be classified
as an
association with political objects and that it would lose
its
privileges as a charity. The problem is therefore to discover
the
general purposes of the Society and whether they are in the
main
political or in the main charitable. It is a question of
degree of a
sort well known to the Courts.
The appellant
Society is a Society for the prevention of cruelty
to animals, and
it is not disputed that by the vigilance of its
members it does
much to prevent the infliction of cruelly on
animals undergoing
experiments. But it has chosen to restrict
its attack upon cruelty
to a narrow and peculiar field, and it has
adopted as its leading
purpose the suppression of vivisection by
legislation. This is
apparent from the resolutions which I have
quoted. In the first of
them the Society condemns the existing
legislation as an
insufficient protection against the torture of
animals, and sets
forth as its object the total suppression of vivi-
section by new
legislation passed by Parliament under pressure
from an
enlightened people. By the second resolution the Council
affirms
that the total abolition of vivisection remains the object
of the
Society but intimates that lesser Parliamentary measures
for the
protection of animals from scientific torture will also be
pursued
by the Society. The Society seems to me to proclaim
that its
purpose is a legislative change of policy towards
scientific
experiments on animals, the consummation of which will
be an
Act prohibiting all such experiments. I regard it as clear
that a
Society professing these purposes is a political
association and not
a charity. If for legislative changes a change
by means of Govern-
ment administration was substituted the result
would be the same.
In Bowman
v. Secular Society, 1917 Appeal Cases 406, Lord
Parker said
that " a trust for the attainment of political objects has
"
always been held invalid, not because it is illegal . . . but
because
" the Court has no means of judging whether a
proposed change in
" the law will or will not be for the
public benefit". That was said in
a case in which the Society
was advocating a very important change
in the relations of the
State and the community towards religion.
I respectfully agree
with the comment of the Master of the Rolls
that Lord Parker's
words do not apply when the legislation is
merely ancillary to the
attainment of what is ex hy-pothesi a good
charitable
object. For the charitable purpose, being dominant,
would prevail
as it did in Inland Revenue Commissioners v.
Falkland
Temperance Cafe Trust, 1027 Session Cases 261, and in
Public
Trustee v. Hood, 1931 Chancery 240, where it was held
that,
the main object of the gift being charitable, the gift was
none the
less valid because the testator had pointed out one of
the means by
which, in his opinion, the main object could best be
attained and
which in itself might not have been charitable if it
had stood alone.
But I regret that I cannot agree with the Master
of the Rolls in
limiting the scope of Lord Parker's words to
matters of acute
political controversy. Whether a project for new
legislation
excites acute political controversy may depend on the
prudence
and good management of the promoters. If they have
patiently
prepared the way by a gradual education of the public
they
may succeed in eliminating much of the opposition. But
I
cannot imagine that it is probable that a measure for
the
suppression of the kind of research which is impugned by
3 [28]
this 'Society
would. pass without acute controversy. It excites
little or no
controversy at present because the immediate
prospects of its
success are negligible, but, if the efforts of the
Society were to
bring success near, acute and bitter controversy
would, it is
almost certain, become inevitable. But in my opinion
it is not
relevant to inquire whether the change of policy, for such it
would
be, represented by the prohibition of experiments on animals,
might
be accompanied by controversy or not. The relevant con-
sideration
is that it would be a change of policy, and that this
Society
makes the achievement of that change by legislation its lead-
ing
purpose. That, in my opinion, settles the issue in this case. I
think
that the same reason explains the decision of Inland
Revenue
Commissioners v. Temperance Council o/
Christian Churches of
England and Wales, 136 Law Times 27,
and I adopt the words
used of that case by Lord Justice Lawrence
in Public Trustee v.
Hood, 1931 1 Chancery at page
252:—"In that case the gift was
" not for the
promotion of temperance generally, but was for the
"
promotion of temperance mainly by political means".
The
Anti-Vivisection Society is similarly not a society for the
pre-
vention of cruelty to animals generally, but a society for
the
prevention of cruelty to animals by political means.
It would not,
however, be right to pass by in silence the other
question which
occupied so much of the debate. This question,
which in my opinion
only arises on the assumption that the
appellant Society is held
not to be a political body, is in brief
whether it is sufficient
for it to prove that its purpose is to alleviate
or prevent the
suffering of animals or whether it must prove that
on balance its
purpose is beneficial to mankind. I confess that
my opinion has
wavered and that I was for long inclined to agree
with the
judgment of the Master of the Rolls. But after careful
consideration
of the speech of my noble and learned friend Lord
Simonds, which I
have had the advantage of reading in print,
I have come to agree
with it. I do not propose to attempt to add
anything to what my
noble and learned friend has said on this
part of the case.
(58663r) Wt. 8047-45 35 8/47 DL. G.338
0
0
0