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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Special Case - The Reverend Alexander Irvine and John Irvine [1873] ScotLR 10_625 (9 July 1873) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1873/10SLR0625.html Cite as: [1873] ScotLR 10_625, [1873] SLR 10_625 |
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Page: 625↓
Where a share of succession was appointed by a testator to be invested by his executors for behoof of C, one of his nieces, and her husband in liferent and her children in fee, and, failing children, the share was directed “to go to the survivors of my nephews and nieces, or the families of such as may have predeceased on the death of C without issue”— Held that descendants of nephews and nieces predeceasing C were included in the terms of the settlement, and entitled to participate in the succession.
The facts of this case, as stated on record, were as follows:—The late Mr Alexander Irvine, merchant in Aberdeen, died on the 19th day of December 1849, leaving five holograph testamentary writings, of dates the 8th October 1842, 10th December 1844, 1st April 1846, 24th December 1847, and 7th November 1849, all recorded as probative writs in the Sheriff-court books of Aberdeenshire, 12th December 1849. Some of the executors named in the earlier writings having died, others were substituted by the testator in their place, and the Reverend Alexander Irvine, minister of the parish of Crimond, Aberdeenshire, the first party, is now the sole surviving executor. By the testamentary writing dated 8th October 1842, along with tha dated 10th December 1844, the testator, after leaving some annuities and a legacy, all of which lapsed by the predecease of the annuitants and legatees, disposed of the residue of his rneans and estate. After the testator's death a state of his affairs was made up, showing the value of his estate, and the amount of debts due by him; and the executors thereafter gave up an inventory of the estate. The estate consisted entirely of moveable property. Shortly after the testator's death the executors drew up a scheme of division of the estate according to the terms of the will, and proceeded to realise the estate, and to pay the proceeds as realised to the residuary legatees, in terms of the directions to that effect contained in the will, with the exception of the shares falling to the testator's nephew, Thomas, and nieces, Margaret and Ann, all of whom survived the testator. The Reverend Alexander Irvine, the first party, and his co-executors, retained those shares falling to Thomas, Margaret, and Ann, in virtue of the powers to that effect given by the testator, and the same were invested by the executors, as realised, in heritable securities and otherwise, in their own names, as executors of the testator; the interest or income thereof, and also portions of the principal, being paid over to those residuary legatees, who were made aware from time to time, by the executor's agent, of the nature of the investments from which the interest remitted to them was derived. The amount of the funds now in the hands of the first party, as executor foresaid, is £2181, 11s. 11d., or thereby. Thomas Irvine died on the 12th February 1862, leaving no children, but survived by his wife, when the portion of his share left in the hands of the executors came to be divided, in terms of the said Alexander Irvine's will. In consequence of a claim by the said Thomas Irvine's executors on the funds in the hands of the said Alexander Irvine's executors, they raised an action of multiplepoinding, in which action the Lord Ordinary ( Barcaple) pronounced an interlocutor which is now final. The persons preferred to the fund were, with one exception, either the testator's nephews and nieces, or the families of such as predeceased. The exception was the case of the executors of a child of one of the families who had predeceased; but as said child was unmarried and left no will, the other members of the family participated equally in the share preferred to said child, it being thus the same whether said child's executors claimed or the survivors of the
Page: 626↓
family had claimed for the full share, and there was no discussion on this matter before the Court. Ann Irvine (Mrs Garrow) died shortly afterwards, and her share was divided in terms of the decision above referred to regarding Thomas Irvine's share. Margaret Irvine (Mrs Smith) has also now died, leaving no husband nor family, and intestate; and the parties now desire the opinion and judgment of the Court in regard to the division of her share. Since the division of the shares held in trust for Thomas Irvine and Ann (Mrs Garrow), several changes have taken place in the families of the testator's nephews and nieces. There were originally four nephews and two nieces of the testator, besides Mrs Smith. Of these the Reverend Alexander Irvine, the first party, alone survived Mrs Smith. Janet Irvine or Drimmie, one of the nieces, left three children who survived Mrs Smith; and Ann Irvine or Garrow, the other niece, left seven children, four of whom survived Mrs Smith, and three predeceased her, two of them leaving issue. Francis Irvine, one of the nephews, left three sons and two daughters, who also survived Mrs Smith. Thomas Irvine, another of the nephews, died on the 12th February 1862, as previously mentioned, and left a widow, Mrs Margaret Colter or Irvine, but no family. He also left a testament appointing executors. Having predeceased Mrs Smith without leaving family, no part of Mrs Smith's share of the residue of the truster belongs to him or his representatives. The remaining nephew of the testator, James Irvine, had three sons and two daughters. Of these, John Irvine, the second party, alone survived Mrs Smith. Louisa Irvine, one of the said James Irvine's daughters, married her cousin, William Garrow, Liverpool, and died on 23d February 1872, leaving a family of four daughters, viz.:—Louisa Ann Garrow, Edith Barbara Garrow, Meta Norrie Garrow, and Alexandrina Maude Garrow, who are in minority, and for whom the said John Irvine, the second party, is administrator. Alexander Irvine, another son of the said James Irvine, who died at the Fiji Islands in the year 1870, is believed to have left a widow and child, also a settlement bequeathing the whole of his estate to his wife. The other two children of the said James Irvine died unmarried. The parties hereto are agreed that Mrs Smith's share of the residue of the testator falls to be divided into five equal parts, one-fifth thereof being payable to the Reverend Alexander Irvine, the first party, the sole survivor after Mrs Smith of the nephews and nieces of the testator; another fifth thereof being payable to the children of the said deceased Mrs Janet Irvine or Drimmie, who survived Mrs Smith; and another fifth to the children of the said deceased Francis Irvine, who survived Mrs Smith. But, as regards the one-fifth thereof payable to the family of the said deceased James Irvine, a question has arisen as to the right of the children of those members of that family, who predeceased Mrs Smith, to participate therein in place of their parents respectively. The parties interested in this question are John Irvine, the second party hereto, on the one hand, and the above named four daughters of the said deceased Louisa Irvine or Garrow, and the child of the said deceased Alexander Irvine, on the other hand. As regards the one-fifth part payable to the family of the said deceased Mrs Ann Irvine or Garrow, the position of that family, with reference to this matter, is exactly the same as that of the said deceased James Irvine's family, two members of the family having predeceased Mrs Smith, leaving issue. The questions of law presented for the opinion of the Court were as follows:—“(1) Whether the second party is entitled, as the sole survivor of James Irvine's family at the date of Mrs Smith's death, to receive the whole share payable to that family on Mrs Smith's death? or (2) Whether the first party hereto is bound to reserve out of the said share, for behoof of the children of the said deceased Louisa Irvine or Garrow, and of the child of the said deceased Alexander Irvine, the proportions thereof which would have been payable to the said Louisa Irvine or Garrow and Alexander Irvine respectively, if they had survived Mrs Smith?”
At advising—
The construction of the words of the deed, fixing the destination of the testator's residuary estate, seems to me to be attended with little or no difficulty. Her share, as appointed by the deed, falls to be taken by surviving nephews and nieces, and (for the disjunctive “or” must plainly be read as conjunctive) by the families of predeceasing nephews or nieces per stirpes; and, as regards the family of James, the testator's grandnephew, who predeceased Mrs Smith, and whose share is in question, they take as his descendants that equal share which he would have taken had he survived. There is no room for holding that they take on any other footing than as in right of James. It is per stirps not per capita, that the succession is to be regulated. The family are to take the share, and I think it must necessarily be held that when immediate descendants fail leaving issue, that issue takes their parents place. The word “family” is of large significancy
Page: 627↓
Assuming, however, that the case should be regulated by the application, or not, of the conditio si sine liberis, as contended for in the argument, I have no hesitation in holding that, on principle as well as on authority, that condition does apply to a case of succession like the present. The testator was admittedly in loco parentis. Had the destination been merely to “nephews and nieces,” that would have led to the descendants of predeceasers being included, so as to take their parents’ share, whether they were of the first or second generation of descendants. This was not disputed in the argument for the second party. But it was ingeniously contended that because the families of predeceasing nephews and nieces are expressly named, this indicated an intention on the part of the testator that the first generation of descendants only was to be included,—a construction of the words which, though there might be living descendants of a remote degree, would in a certain state of the family at the time of distribution have led to intestacy, as e.g. had all the nephews and nieces and their immediate issue predeceased, and only great grand-nephews and nieces been alive. But this view is to mistake the effect of the condition si sine liberis, which, when applicable, embraces all the descendants of the parties called to the succession towards whom the testator stands in loco parentis; and it is also to narrow the true effect and meaning of the very words of this deed in calling the families of predeceasers to the succession.
For these reasons, I am of opinion that the first question should be answered in the negative, and the second in the affirmative.
The other Judges concurred.
Counsel for the First Party— J. Kerr. Agent— Andrew Wilson, W.S.
Counsel for the Second Party— M. T. S. Darling. Agents— Morton, Neilson, & Smart, W.S.