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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Scottish Equitable Life Assurance Association v. Duncan and Others [1867] ScotLR 5_13 (9 November 1867) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1867/05SLR0013.html Cite as: [1867] SLR 5_13, [1867] ScotLR 5_13 |
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Page: 13↓
By antenuptial marriage-contract a husband and wife mutually conveyed to each other the liferent of all estate “pertaining or belonging, or that shall pertain or belong, to either of them at the dissolution of the marriage.” The fee of the whole property was, with a certain exception, to be divided at the death of the survivor into two equal parts, one share to go to the heirs of either spouse. The husband insured his wife's life, and subsequently assigned the policy gratuitously, continuing to pay the premiums out of income. In a claim by the executors of the wife, who survived, for one-half of the sum in the policy— Held that the assignees of the policy had right to the whole sum.
Per Lord Curriehill—1. Taking the words literally, the policy belonged to the spouses neither at the date of the marriage nor at the date of the dissolution. 2. The husband was entitled to administer the joint estate during the marriage, and to make even gratuitous donations, if not in fraudem of the contract.
The question in this action of multiplepoinding related to the right of property in a sum contained in a policy of insurance effected by the late Rev. Mr Duncan on the life of his wife. Mr Duncan and his wife, by antenuptial marriage-contract in 1831, mutually conveyed to each other, “in case of his or her surviving, the liferent of all and sundry lands, heritages, houses, tenements and other heritable subjects, and of all goods, gear, debts, sums of money, or other moveable estate whatever, pertaining or belonging, or due and addebted, or that shall pertain and belong or be due and addebted, to them or either of them at the dissolution of the marriage by the death of any one of them, with the whole writs and evidents of the said heritable subjects, and all bonds, bills, and other documents and instructions of the said moveable subjects, excepting always from this conveyance the liferent of the heritable subjects presently belonging to the said David Duncan, which it has been agreed shall on his death descend and belong to his own heirs in the manner after mentioned; but declaring always, as is hereby expressly declared and provided, that the survivor of the said parties who shall enjoy the benefit of the conveyance above narrated shall be bound and obliged to support, maintain, and educate any child or children which may be procreated of said marriage in a manner suitable to their station, until they shall respectively attain the age of twenty-one years complete, or be married, which ever of these events shall first happen: Moreover, with regard to the fee of said lands and heritages, and goods, gear, and other moveable estate, the said parties have covenanted and contracted and agreed as follows, viz., in the event of there being procreated of said marriage one or more child or children, then, on the death of the longest liver of the said parties, the whole of the said lands and heritages, goods, gear, and other moveable estate, shall be divided among the said children in such proportions as the said parties
Page: 14↓
shall, by a mutual deed of settlement, fix and determine, or in the event of no such mutual settlement being executed, then in such proportions as the said David Duncan shall think right, by any deed, executed at any time of his life, and even on deathbed, and failing either of such deeds being executed, then the said lands and heritages, goods, gear, and other moveable estate, shall be divided between and among said children equally, share and share alike, in the event of there being more than one child; and in the event of there being only one child, then such child shall succeed to the whole of said heritable and moveable estate; and in the event of there being no child or children procreated of the said marriage, it is hereby agreed on between the said parties that the heritage belonging to the said David Duncan at the date of these presents shall at his death descend and belong to his own nearest and lawful heir whomsoever; and as to the whole other lands and heritages, goods, gear, and moveable estate, the same shall, at the death of the longest liver, be divided into two equal shares or divisions, one whereof shall fall and belong to the heirs and executors of said Mrs Jean Thomson, and the other to the heirs and executors of the said David Duncan; declaring always, however, that both of the said parties shall have power, and full power and liberty is hereby reserved to them respectively, in the event last contemplated, of there being no children of the said marriage, to legate and bequeath, assign, dispone, and convey the fee of the said shares proposed to be descendible to their respective heirs and executors, to such persons and in such manner as they shall think proper, by any deed to be executed by them respectively.” Mr Duncan did not renounce his jus mariti or power of administration. In the same year Mr Duncan effected a policy of insurance on the life of his wife. This policy was in 1838 gratuitously assigned by Mr Duncan to a sister and nephew, who in turn assigned it to trustees for behoof of certain of the family. Mr Duncan continued to pay the annual premiums. Mr Duncan died in 1862. Mrs Duncan died in 1864, leaving a trust-deed conveying to trustees the fee of one-half of the moveable estate which belonged to her husband and herself at the dissolution of the marriage. These trustees now claimed one-half of the sum in the policy, contending that Mrs Duncan was, under the marriage-contract, entitled to one-half of the estate belonging to her husband and herself at the date of the dissolution of the marriage; that the policy formed part of that estate; and that the gratuitous assignation of it by Mr Duncan was in prejudice of the provisions of the marriage-contract, and ineffectual so far as concerned the half to which Mrs Duncan was entitled. The assignees of the policy, on the other hand, contended that the policy had been duly assigned by inter vivos deeds, and that, notwithstanding the terms of the contract, either spouse had right, by such deeds duly delivered, to make gratuitous alienations or assignations of any part of his or her property.
The Lord Ordinary ( Jerviswoode) preferred the assignees to the whole fund, adding the following note to his interlocutor:—
“It appears to the Lord Ordinary that, according to the sound construction of the antenuptial marriage-contract between the deceased Rev. David Duncan and his spouse, under the mutual conveyance in which, between the spouses, this question arises, that conveyance had relation to, and was intended to have effect only upon, the property which should pertain to the parties, or to either of them, at the dissolution of the marriage between them. It is true, terms of de presenti conveyance are used, consistently, as the Lord Ordinary believes, with the ordinary practice in conveyancing where heritage is intended to be included. But taking the whole terms of the deed together, it seems clear that that which was in the contemplation of the parties was that, during the subsistence of the marriage, the conveyance was not to have effect.
Thus, as respects lands and heritable subjects, the liferent of these is conveyed only ‘in case of his or her surviving,’ and that liferent is to extend to the whole estate pertaining and belonging and which shall pertain and belong, and so forth, ‘to them or either of them at the dissolution of the marriage by the death of any one of them.’ The time at which the conveyance is to operate is thus fixed, and the Lord Ordinary can see no ground which would warrant him to hold that the hands of the spouses were so tied, pending the marriage, that they could deal only with the liferent of the funds and estate to which they might have right.
The provision in the contract which probably creates the most serious difficulty in the way of the construction the Lord Ordinary thus puts upon it, is that which relates to the heritable subjects then belonging to Mr Duncan, the liferent of which is excepted from the conveyance so far as in favour of Mrs Duncan, and the fee of which, in the event of his death, is at once to descend to his own heirs. But it appears to the Lord Ordinary, on the whole, that this exception is to be dealt with strictly as such, and that it ought not to operate so as to affect the construction due to the leading provision of the deed. Taking the case, as it has actually occurred, of Mr Duncan's predecease, the result is that his landed estate passes, in its integrity, to his own heirs, while Mrs Duncan's liferent is limited to the remainder, as that existed at the date of the dissolution of the marriage, which, as already observed, is the date which is alone stated as that at which the extent of the estate, subject to the liferent of the survivor, is to be ascertained.”
Mrs Duncan's trustees reclaimed.
Cook for them.
Fraser and J. M. Duncan in reply.
Page: 15↓
That being so, I hesitate to go farther, because it is unnecessary to do so; but as I have a clear opinion as to the meaning of clauses of deeds of the class to which this belongs, I may say that they are not to be interpreted according to the literal meaning of the words used. In Scotch conveyancing, technical meanings are attached to certain words very different from the literal meaning. There are cases in which what is called a liferent is really a fee, and in which what is called a fee is not a fee but a mere right of succession, and so on. But there is another technical meaning given to marriage-contracts from a very remote period, and that is, that where the subject conveyed consists not of a special article of property, but of a universitas, there are very special rules, long established, to be attended to in interpreting the conveyance. One of these is founded, I believe, on what is a common maxim among Scotch people, that a man can't be rich unless his wife let him, an arrangement by which all that is acquired during the subsistence of the marriage is provided for the married parties themselves and their issue, thereby giving an encouragement and reward to a thrifty wife to enrich her husband. But whatever be its origin, the practice is undoubted. The rule is this, that where a universitas is provided by an antenuptial marriage-contract to the wife and children, although it be given by a conveyance de presenti, the husband remains the owner of the property. His rights of administration remain entire, and his power of disposal, onerous certainly, and even gratuitous, unless the deed be of such a character as to be capable of being represented as a fraud on the contract. That rule was clearly established as to children two centuries ago, in the time of Lord Stair. There was one case, Cowan v. Young 9th February 1669 (M., 12,942), which was to be a precedent. The principle is thus stated by Lord Stair:—“Such clauses of conquest are ever understood, as the conquest is at the acquirer's death, but do not hinder him at any time to dispose or gift at his pleasure; which, if he might do to any stranger, there is neither law or reason to exclude him to do it to his daughter; and, albeit it might be interpreted fraud if nothing were left to the daughters of the second marriage, yet where they have special provision, and something also of the conquest with this burden, their father could not be found thereby to defraud them, or to hinder him to use his liberty.” Gosford reports the same case, and his remark is of value as fixing it as a precedent for similar cases in future. After stating the case, he concludes with these words “the Lords declared they would make the decision a practique for the
Page: 16↓
Lord President—I adopt all the grounds of judgment of LORD CURRIEHILL, and, in particular, I agree with his exposition of the fixed technical meaning put by the law of Scotland on clauses of conveyance or obligation in such terms as now before us. I also concur on the other point. I don't think that, in any view, the representatives of Mrs Duncan can claim the sum in dispute, because it is to be observed that the provision of conquest is that the general estate of the spouses, whatever that may be, shall, at the death of the longest liver, be divided into two equal shares, one to go to the heirs of the husband, and the other to the heirs of the wife; reserving to both parties power to bequeath or assign the fee of said shares. It may very well be that the representatives of Mrs Duncan are entitled to one-half of the estate in value, but not to any specific subject; and if they get one-half of the value of the estate, that is the full extent of their claim. On the other hand, the assignees of the policy will be preferable to the executors of the husband, and they will be entitled to take that as part of the husband's estate. It is quite impossible here in this competition to sustain the claim of the representatives of Mrs Duncan.
Interlocutor of Lord Ordinary recalled, and, of new, the claim of the assignees sustained, and the claim of Mrs Duncan's representatives repelled.
Solicitors: Agent for Reclaimers— J. N. Forman, W.S.
Agent for Respondents— Robert Hill, W.S.