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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 - Thomson and Others (Thomson's Trustees) v. Thomson [1879] ScotLR 16_727 (9 July 1879) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1879/16SLR0727.html Cite as: [1879] ScotLR 16_727, [1879] SLR 16_727 |
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Page: 727↓
A policy of insurance was effected after marriage on the life of a wife, payable six months after her decease to “her heirs, executors, or assignees.” The husband paid all the premiums, and on two occasions got advances of money on the security of the policy. By an antenuptial contract of marriage the wife had assigned her whole estate, acquirenda as well as acquisita, to her husband. The husband predeceased, leaving a trust disposition and settlement by which his whole means and estate were disponed to trustees for various purposes. In a question between the wife and the husband's trustees regarding the right to the policy of insurance, held that it belonged to the wife, in respect that it was a donation to her by her husband which was not recalled by him, and therefore was not his property at the time of his death, nor carried by his general trust-disposition and settlement.
Observed ( per Lord Gifford) that the rule of law to the effect that a particular destination of a specific subject is not derogated from by a general settlement of a testator's whole estate, unless the intention appeared to be otherwise, was applicable in such a case as the above.
Thomas Thomson and his wife Mrs Margaret Gray or Lumsden or Thomson were married on 3d October 1838. They had previously executed a marriage-contract, in which, inter alia, Mrs Thomson, in consideration of various provisions in her favour by her husband, which she accepted as in full of all her legal provisions, assigned to her husband, and his heirs and assignees, “all and sundry lands and heritages, goods, gear, debts, and sums of money, as well heritable as moveable, at present belonging or resting-owing to her, or that shall pertain or belong to her during the subsistence of the said marriage,” &c.
Soon after the marriage there was effected on the life of Mrs Thomson a policy of insurance with the Scottish Widows' Fund for £200. The policy was dated 24th October 1838, and was taken entirely in favour of Mrs Thomson, “with consent of her said husband.” The policy bore that the application was made by Mrs Thomson, that the first annual contribution and entrymoney was paid by her, and that “her heirs, executors, or assignees” were to be entitled to payment of the sum insured. The premiums were regularly paid by the husband as they fell due until his death. In 1857 a loan of £80 was given by the insurance company on the security of the policy, which was repaid in 1863 In 1863 another loan of £125 was given in conformity with an agreement dated 18th November and 9th December 1863. This agreement was unilateral in name of Mrs Thomson, with the special advice and consent of her husband, and as taking burden on him for his wife, and was signed by both husband and wife. The advance was repaid on 22d July 1870. Both of these loans were given to and for behoof of Thomas Thomson, and were repaid by him. He died on 25th February 1879, having executed a trust-disposition and settlement dated 6th November 1871, by which, inter alia, he gave, granted, and assigned to his trustees, for the purposes mentioned in the deed, “all and whole lands and heritages, goods and gear, debts and sums of money, policies of insurance,” &c., and generally the whole estate belonging or owing to him, or that should be belonging and owing to him at the time of his death. There was no special mention of the above policy of insurance on his wife's life.
It was admitted at the discussions before the Court that Mr Thomson at his death was the holder of at least two policies of insurance other than the one on his wife's life.
At Mr Thomson's death a question arose between his testamentary trustees, the first parties to this case, and his widow, the second party, as to who was in right of the policy in question, and this Special Case was agreed upon.
The following questions of law were submitted for the decision of the Court:—“(1) Does the said policy on the life of the second party
Page: 728↓
belong to the parties hereto of the first part, or to the party hereto of the second part? (2) Do the bonus additions belong to the parties hereto of the first part, or to the party hereto of the second part?” Argued for first parties—The policy, on the best view for Mrs Thomson, was a donation to her, and her husband was entitled to revoke it whenever he pleased, and he did this by his trust-disposition and settlement. He intended to do so; for policies of insurance were specially referred to, and there was no exception of the one on his wife's life, which besides was nowhere alluded to as a donation to her. It was clear that if the wife had died first the first parties would have been entitled to the money. The mere fact of conversion into money made no difference in the ownership of the policy—the only difference being that payment would be made to the husband's executors instead of to himself. Where there was no question of intention, a general disposition following a special one evacuated it.— Thoms v. Thoms, 6 Macph. 704, Ersk. i. 6, 31.
Authorities — Strachan v. M'Dougall, June 19, 1838, 13 S. 954; Pringle's Trs. v. Hamilton, March 15, 1872, 10 Macph. 621; Smith v. Kerr & Others, June 5, 1869, 7 Macph. 863; Campbell v. Campbell, Feb. 17, 1743, 1 Paton 343; Glendonwyn v. Gordon and Others, May 19, 1873, 11 Macph. (H. of L.) 33.
Argued for second party—It was denied that a general conveyance following a special one evacuated it— Glendonwyn v. Gordon, May 19, 1873, 11 Macph. (H. of L.) 33. The insurance company entered into no contract with the husband, only with the wife; and he had no title to pass the policy, which all along belonged to the wife. If that was not so, the policy must be held to have been a donation to the wife, and it was absurd to say that the wife by assigning in her marriage-contract debarred herself from receiving donations. The husband chose to make this donation, which he never specially recalled, and which was therefore not his property at the time of his death, and therefore not carried by his trust-disposition.
Authorities— Wight v. Brown and French, Jan. 27, 1849, 11 D. 459; Galloway v. Craig, July 17, 1861, 4 Macq. 267; Walker's Exrs. v. Walker, June 19, 1878, 5 R. 965; Muirhead v. Lindsay, Dec. 6, 1867, 6 Macph. 95; and cases quoted supra.
At advising—
It was further said that under the antenuptial contract of marriage the wife assigned all the property she might acquire during the subsistence of the marriage to her husband. And this was undoubtedly the case, but this could not prevent the husband making a donation in his wife's favour. It was argued that this antenuptial assignation to the husband transferred by anticipation any donation made by him, but I do not think this proposition can be maintained. I think it is plain that the husband could not take advantage of this clause to the effect of defeating any express donation made by him to his wife.
It was also said that this was a donation and could be recalled, and so I think it was, and so it was in the case of Smith v. Kerr; but the next question is, has it been revoked? and I am clearly of opinion that it has not. The general settlement does not do it, for it only deals with the husband's own property, and the gift was not revoked during his life. The right to revoke was not transmissible, and the gift not being revoked at his death, was then no part of his estate, and was therefore not dealt with by his general disposition. I think therefore we should answer the first question in favour of Mrs Gray.
In regard to the second question, I think all accessories should follow the principal.
The two questions submitted to the Court are respectively, whether the policy and the bonus additions thereto belong to the first parties, the husband's trustees, or to the second party, the surviving wife?
According to the terms of the policy, the sums covered by it would appear to belong to the wife, for it expressly bears that they are to be payable to her “heirs, executors, or assignees.” But it was argued on the part of the husband's testamentary trustees, the first parties, that notwithstanding the terms of the policy it must be held that the contents belong to them in virtue of the antenuptial contract of marriage of the parties, which bears that the wife, in consideration of the provisions made for her by her husband, “assigns, dispones, conveys, and makes over to and in favour of the said Thomas Thomson” (the husband), “and his heirs and assignees whomso-ever,
Page: 729↓
Without therefore going into an examination of the other cases which were cited at the debate, I am satisfied, on the authority of the case of Smith v. Kerr, that the two queries submitted in the Special Case now before the Court must be answered favourably for the wife, the second party—a result which in my opinion will be conformable to justice and the intention of the deceased husband.
The provision in the antenuptial contract of marriage between Mr and Mrs Thomson, whereby Mrs Thomson, in consideration of the provisions therein mentioned, assigned to her husband, the late Thomas Thomson, her whole estate, acquirenda as well as acquisita, and everything that should pertain or belong to her during the subsistence of the marriage, did not and could not prevent the husband from making additional provisions in favour of his wife in any way he might think proper, or from making over to her as her absolute property any special subject or fund of which he might be possessed, and that in addition to her marriage-contract provisions. No doubt, in so far as such provision or grant was in addition to the provisions stipulated for in the antenuptial contract of marriage, it would be held to be a donation by the husband to the wife, and so would be revocable by the husband at any time of his life; but if the husband died without revocation, such donation or additional provision would subsist and be available to the widow.
Now, I am of opinion that in substance and effect the policy in question, with the whole bonuses and profits arising therefrom, constituted a donation by the late Mr Thomson to his wife Mrs Thomson, who is the second party to the present case. The donation was made by the husband by the very act of taking out the policy in his wife's name by making it payable to the wife's “heirs, executors, or assignees,” and by the husband's paying the whole annual premiums falling due on the policy during the subsistence of the marriage. I think this was quite a valid and competent mode in which Mr Thomson might make a donation to his wife, and it is impossible to hold that the donation became void and nugatory merely because the antenuptial contract conveyed to the husband the wife's acquirenda as well as her acquisita. To hold this would, I think, be to return to the old fallacy that a husband could not renounce his jus mariti over his wife's estate, because such renunciation itself fell under the jus mariti, and was resumed in the very act of granting it.
If, then, the husband might make and did make a donation of the policy to and in favour of his wife, the only question is, Did that donation subsist and remain effectual at the date of the husband's death, or was it revoked by the husband before he died? The donation was undoubtedly revocable during the husband's life, and in substance the husband seems partially to have exercised his right of revocation by more than once, and for temporary purposes, borrowing money on the security of the policy with his wife's consent. But these loans were repaid by the husband during the subsistence of the marriage, and such repayment restored the donation to his wife to its full effect, and disburdened it of the sums with which the husband had charged it.
But it is said that the husband's final trust-disposition and settlement of 1871 operated as a virtual revocation of the donation, and had the effect in law to convey this policy to the husband's testamentary trustees, who are the first parties to the present case. I am of opinion that the trust—disposition of 1871 had no such effect. No doubt the husband had power to revoke the donation, and he might have done so if he had so chosen in his trust-disposition and settlement, or in any instrument fairly expressive of his will and intention to revoke. Nay, if it could be shown on any reasonable construction of the trust-settlement that it was the will and intention of the husband to revoke the donation, and to give the policy and its proceeds not to his wife but to his general testamentary trustees for his general testamentary purposes, the Court would give effect to such intention.
But I cannot so read the general trust-disposition and settlement. No doubt he conveys to his testamentary trustees his whole estate, heritable and moveable, belonging and owing, or that shall belong and be owing, to him at the time of his death, and the words of conveyance are very wide and general. But the policy in question, if I am right in holding that it had been gifted to the wife, did not belong to the husband at the time of his death, and did not form a part of his estate, because the donation thereof had never been revoked, and was not revoked,
Page: 730↓
Even if in a loose sense the policy in question were held to be Mr Thomson's property, he haying a certain power over it, and it being liable in certain circumstances for his debts had he been sequestrated or had he died bankrupt, I think the case would be governed by the principle that a special settlement of a particular subject is not derogated from by a general settlement of the testator's whole estate, unless this can be shown to have been the testator's real intention. This principle is fixed by a large class of cases, a recent example of which will be found in Glendonwyn v. Gordon, May 19, 1873,11 Macph. H.L. 33, where there is a full citation of previous cases. The present case, however, is an a fortiori one to cases like that of Glendonwyn, for until the husband had in some competent way revoked the donation of the policy it could not be regarded as part of his general estate. There is no evidence whatever, either in the terms of Mr Thomson's general disposition and settlement or elsewhere, that he intended the policy in question not to go to his wife but to his general testamentary executors; and holding as I do that it had been validly gifted to the wife, I think she is entitled to be preferred thereto. There is no room for making any distinction between the sum in the policy itself and the bonus additions thereto.
The Court therefore made answer that the policy and bonus additions belonged to the party of the second part.
Counsel for First Parties— J. P. B. Robertson— Moody Stuart. Agents— Duncan & Black, W. S.
Counsel for Second Parties— Asher— Murray. Agents— Tods, Murray, & Jamieson, W.S.