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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Attorney-General v British Museum [2005] EWHC 1089 (Ch) (27 May 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/1089.html Cite as: [2005] Ch 397, [2005] 3 WLR 396, [2005] EWHC 1089 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Her Majesty's Attorney-General |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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The Trustees of the British Museum |
Defendant |
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Christopher McCall QC (instructed by Ian A Doubleday) for the Defendant
Mr Guy Newey QC and Miss Clare Ambrose (instructed by Harbottle & Lewis) for The Commission for Looted Art in Europe – Intervening with the leave of the Court
Hearing dates: 24th May 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
The Vice-Chancellor :
Introduction
"Objects vested in the Trustees as part of the collections of the Museum shall not be disposed of by them otherwise than under section 5 or 9 of this Act [or section 6 of the Museums and Galleries Act 1992]."
S.5 authorises the Trustees to dispose of duplicates, objects made after 1850 and objects unfit to be retained in the collections of the Museum. It also entitles the Trustees to destroy useless objects. S.9 of that Act and s.6 of Museums and Galleries Act 1992 entitle the Trustees to transfer objects comprised in the collections of the British Museum to the Trustees of any other of the specified national museums.
"a payment...out of charity funds which is motivated simply and solely by the belief of the trustees or other persons administering the funds that the charity is under a moral obligation to make the payment",
see Re:Snowden [1970] Ch.700, 709.
"6.4.3 Having regard to the cogency of the evidence adduced within the context of what were acknowledged to be the exceptional atrocities committed during the 1933-1945 era, the claimants request for the return of these drawings ought to be acceded to if and to the extent permissible by law.
6.4.4 With the agreement of the claimants and [Department for Culture, Media and Sport], this case should be referred to the Spoliation Advisory Panel for an opinion on the appropriate action to take in response to the claim given the fact that the claim is solely for restitution."
"..if the Attorney-General were to take a positive view of his powers to sanction Snowden-type action in relation to objects now comprised in a national collection and subject to an acknowledged holocaust restitution claim, he would offer a straightforward solution to the debate in the present case, in respect of which equity requires a swift solution."
1. Whether, as a matter of law, where the Defendants consider that they are under a moral obligation to return an object which forms part of the collections of the British Museum to a previous owner of the object or his heirs by reason of the circumstances leading up to their acquisition of the object, it would be possible for the principle known as the principle in Re: Snowden [1970] Ch. 700 to be applied so as to permit such a return:
(a) whether or not the object is one to which s.5(1) or 5(2) British Museum Act 1963 applies?
(b) where the object is one to which s.5(1) or 5(2) British Museum Act 1963 applies?
(c) at all?
2. Whether, in circumstances where:
(a) The Defendants are sued for the return of an object comprised in its collections by the object's former owner or his successors; and
(b) But for the provisions of the British Museum Act 1963 the principle in Re: Snowden might have been applied so as to permit such return of the object, the Defendants might properly on the ground (and only on the ground) that they regarded themselves as under a moral obligation to return the object to the person or persons suing them for its return, omit to plead or to rely upon a defence based upon the provisions of the Limitation Act 1980 or some earlier Limitation Act which would or might be available to them and, if so, whether they could do so (i) with or (ii) without the approval of H.M. Attorney General.
Specifically
3. On the footing that 4 drawings which were looted from a Dr Feldmann in 1939 and which were subsequently acquired by the Defendants form part of the collections of the British Museum, whether, in the event that (i) the Defendants should consider themselves, by reason of the fact of the drawings having been looted, under a moral obligation to return the drawings to the heirs of a Dr. Feldmann and (ii) the Attorney General should approve such return, the Re: Snowden principle would be capable of being applied so as to permit the Defendants (if the Attorney General approved) properly to return the drawings to the heirs of Dr. Feldmann."
"When the Trustees acquired the drawings in 1946 and 1949 they did so on the mistaken assumptions that title was in each case in order, and given all the facts it is clear that, had they discovered that the drawings had been stolen by the Nazis, they would have expected to return them to their rightful owner in accordance with the declared policy intentions of His Majesty's Government, which they had helped to shape. In the circumstances prevailing at the time and in view of the professional integrity of the people concerned, I think it likely that the assumptions about title were reasonably and honourably made."
"8. If the pre-war owners of art that is found to have been confiscated by the Nazis and not subsequently restituted, or their heirs, can be identified, steps should be taken expeditiously to achieve a just and fair solution, recognising this may vary according to the facts and circumstances surrounding a specific case."
.....
"11. Nations are encouraged to develop national processes to implement these principles, particularly as they relate to alternative dispute resolution mechanisms for resolving ownership issues."
"It has been a long established view that the Attorney-General has no power to authorise the application of the funds of a charity for non-charitable purposes. This precise problem has been put to counsel for the Attorney-General for over 40 to 50 years. Each counsel has treated it as clear law. In the present case the point of moral obligation has been raised."
"In the result I am satisfied that the court and the Attorney-General have power to give authority to charity trustees to make ex gratia payments out of funds held on charitable trusts. It is however a power which is not to be exercised lightly or on slender grounds but only in cases where it can fairly be said that if the charity were an individual it would be morally wrong of him to refuse to make the payment."
(1) As charity depends for its continued existence on the recognition by others of moral obligations to give it would be odd if a charity could not likewise give effect to its own moral obligations.
(2) Analogous powers exist in other cases, such as the management of the property of mental patients and what is for the benefit of an infant.
(3) In sanctioning compromises on behalf of charities the Court does pay regard to moral obligations.
(4) The Attorney-General has power to relieve trustees from their strict legal obligations to make full restitution for breaches of trust committed by them.
"(1)....the Commissioners may by order exercise the same power as is exercisable by the Attorney-General to authorise the charity trustees of a charity –
(a) to make any application of property of the charity, or
(b) to waive to any extent, on behalf of the charity, its entitlement to receive any property,
in a case where the charity trustees –
(i) (apart from this section) have no power to do so, but
(ii) in all the circumstances regard themselves as being under a moral obligation to do so."
(1) The Court will not direct or approve anything which is inconsistent with a statute.
(2) The powers of a statutory corporation such as the Trustees extend no further than what is expressly stated in its governing statutes, is necessarily and properly required for carrying into effect the purposes of its incorporation or such as may fairly be regarded as incidental to or consequential on those things which the legislature has authorised.
(3) Where Parliament has specified by statute where the public interest lies, neither the Court nor the Attorney-General may take a different view.
"...it is of constant occurrence that the court is asked to inquire whether an Act of Parliament shall be applied for. If it is in regard to such a matter as this court has no jurisdiction to alter, or which is already provided for by Act of Parliament, it is obvious it requires the authority of Parliament in such cases to enable the trustees to depart from that which is their prescribed duty, according to the rule existing."
"I hold that it is beyond the jurisdiction of the Court to sanction the Attorney-General's scheme in the face of the opposition of the existing governing body. Their title is founded on Royal Charter, and is established by Act of Parliament. To whatever lengths the Court may have gone, it has never assumed legislative authority: it has never by a stroke of the pen at one and the same time revoked a Royal Charter and repealed an Act of Parliament. It has never ousted from its rights of administering the charitable trusts of such a body as the present governors against their will, and that, too, in a case where no breach of trust is charged."
Later (p.889) he observed that to establish such a scheme as that submitted by the Attorney-General nothing less than an Act of Parliament would suffice.
"It is said on behalf of persons interested in the charity that the court is empowered to make a scheme to authorize a wider range of investments in this case, because the matter is not really covered by the very limited power of investment contained in section 11 of the Act of 1850. On the other hand, it is said on behalf of the Attorney-General that that is not the right way to construe section 11 of the Act of 1850: that although in form it is a positive permission, it involves a negative prohibition and, therefore, to allow any wider power of investment of the trust funds would be to attempt to alter the statute by "a stroke of .. the pen" and the court has no power to do that.
The cases to which I have been referred are far from clear, but I think the general principle which emerges is that the court cannot alter the said statute by a stroke of the pen and cannot therefore direct anything which is inconsistent with the terms of the Act of Parliament in question. The conclusion which I reach is that to allow a wider power of investment is to confer additional powers of investment and is not, therefore, inconsistent with but is in aid of and supplemental to the powers of investment which are conferred by section 11 of the Act. On that view it would be open to the court to allow what has been done by settling a scheme conferring the necessary powers."
"It has long been recognised that, where a charity is established by an Act of Parliament, the court will not exercise its jurisdiction in any way which will conflict with the provisions of the Act (In re Shrewsbury Grammar School (1849) 1 Mac. & G. 324, 333), but this does not mean that in such a case the jurisdiction of the court is entirely ousted. In In re Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners' Royal Benevolent Society [1959] Ch. 220, Danckwerts J. expressed the view (in which I respectfully concur) that the court has power to sanction a scheme in relation to a charity established by an Act of Parliament in respect of matters not in conflict with the provisions of the Act, and even in respect of those matters which are regulated by Act of Parliament the court can entertain an application by charity trustees to consider whether they should apply to Parliament for an amending Act: In re Shrewsbury Grammar School, 1 Mac. & G. 324. It seems that the position may be similar in the case of a charity incorporated by Royal Charter: In re Whitworth Art Gallery Trusts [1958] Ch. 461."
"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."
So, submits counsel, the court cannot enter into the question whether the public interest is better served by observing the statutory prohibition contained in s.3(4) or permitting trustees to give effect to moral obligations at the expense of their trust funds.