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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Macgregor and Others (Morrison's Trustees) v. Macdonald and Others [1890] ScotLR 28_137 (29 November 1890)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1890/28SLR0137.html
Cite as: [1890] SLR 28_137, [1890] ScotLR 28_137

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 137

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Saturday, November 29. 1890.

[ Lord Trayner, Ordinary.

28 SLR 137

Macgregor and Others (Morrison's Trustees)

v.

Macdonald and Others.

Subject_1Succession
Subject_2Conditio si sine liberis
Subject_3Vesting.
Facts:

A testator directed his trustees to pay to the lawful children of his deceased sister a legacy of £1000. One of these children had died many years before the date of the will, leaving children, who on the testator's death claimed a share in the legacy as representing their mother. Held (following Rhind's Trustees v. Leitch and Others, December 5, 1866, 5 Macph. 104) that as their mother had never been instituted to the legacy, the conditio si sine liberis did not apply.

Headnote:

Hector Morrison, Inverness, who died on 4th October 1888, by a deed of settlement dated 4th June 1888 directed his trustees, inter alia, to pay “to the lawful children of my now deceased sister Mary Morrison or Macdonald £1000 sterling.” He also appointed his brothers and sisters and the children of the deceased Mary Morrison or Macdonald to be his residuary legatees, “but that only in shares proportionate to the legacies bequeathed to each of them as before mentioned.”

Mrs Macdonald left nine children, one of whom, Mrs Margaret Macdonald, died on 7th November 1873 leaving four children—Norman, Donald, Angus, and Hector, who claimed under the settlement in respect that their mother, if she had survived the truster, would have been entitled to a share in the legacy and residue. The trustees accordingly raised a multiplepoinding, and called as defenders all the parties interested. The amount of the fund in medio amounted to about £3000.

Mrs Margaret Macdonald's children pleaded—“(1) The claimants being the

Page: 138

whole children of the deceased Margaret Macdonald or Macdonald, who predeceased the truster, are entitled equally among them to the shares of the £1000 legacy and residue as claimed, and to which she would have been entitled had she survived the truster, she having been one of the children of the said Mary Morrison or Macdonald, to whom the same was bequeathed. (2) The testator being in loco parentis to the said Mrs Margaret Macdonald or Macdonald and to her children, the rule si institutus sine liberis decesserit applies.”

Upon 25th June 1890 the Lord Ordinary ( Trayner) repelled their claim, and preferred certain other claimants to the fund in medio.

Opinion.—… A good deal might have been said in favour of this claim, looking to the liberality with which the conditio has been applied in recent years, had Mrs Margaret Macdonald been alive at the date of the settlement. But as she was then dead (a fact of which the testator is not said to have been ignorant), and was not therefore one of the persons instituted to the legacy, I think there is no room for the application of the maxim which sets up an implied conditional institution. ‘There must be a legatee instituted in the first instance, otherwise there can be no conditional institution either under the express terms of the deed or under the implied condition” (per Lord Cowan in Rhind's Trustees, 5 Macph. 109). The law appears to be settled against the validity of a claim made under circumstances similar to those I am now dealing with— Wishart, M. 2310; Sturrock, 6 D. 117; and Rhind's Trustees, supra; M'Laren on “Wills, &c., i. 489. There is this further view against any supposed or implied intention on the part of the testator to favour the present claimants, that he specially provided for the case of two nephews, while he made no provision for the present claimants, whose mother, the testator's niece, had died. The grounds on which I have held that the claimants are not entitled to any share of the legacy equally exclude them from any share of the residue.”

Norman Macdonald and his brothers reclaimed, and argued—This legacy was left to a class, of which Margaret Macdonald was a member, and therefore she was instituted. It was plain from the terms of the settlement that the testator had inteded to benefit all the children of his sister, and therefore the descendants of a deceased child ought to get the benefit which their mother would have had. The case of Wishart turned wholly upon the definition of the word “children,” while in the case of Rhind's Trustees it was found that the testator was not in loco parentis to the parties claiming; there was, however, no such doubt here. The residue followed the same rule as did the legacy.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Justice-Clerk—Thetestator whose will forms the subject of this litigation left certain legacies to the children of his sister Mary Macdonald. One of these—Mrs Margaret Macdonald—died in 1873, many years before the will was made. Her children now demand the benefit of the legacy left to her. The only ground upon which their claim against the estate could be placed was, that Mrs Margaret Macdonald would have been entitled to the legacy if she had been alive, and that therefore her children are entitled to demand it now.

But I think it is clear on principle, and on the authority of the case of Rhind's Trustees quoted to us, that where a testator in such a case as this knew all the facts, and knew that his niece was deceased many years before he deliberated on the disposal of his estate, we cannot hold him to have instituted the predeceasing niece, and that therefore her children cannot take under the conditio si sine liberis decesserit.

Lord Young—I am of the same opinion. I do not think it would have been irrational if it had been decided in such cases as this that the word “children” should include grandchildren, and I do not think that it would have been contrary to common sense if we could have held that when the testator left a legacy to the children of his sister he meant that it should also go to her grandchildren. But it has been decided otherwise, and that settles the matter. It would be contrary to the decisions if we allowed this claim.

Lord Rutherfurd Clark concurred.

The Court adhered.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Reclaimers— Jameson— Cosens. Agents— Macrae, Flett, & Rennie, W.S.

Counsel for Mrs Cameron and Others— H. Johnston— D. Robertson. Agents— Traquair, Dickson, & Maclaren, W.S.

Counsel for Miss Macdonald— Lyell. Agents—D. Maclachlan, S.S.C.

1890


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