BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Stewart v. Dobie's Trustees [1899] ScotLR 36_917 (14 July 1899)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1899/36SLR0917.html
Cite as: [1899] ScotLR 36_917, [1899] SLR 36_917

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]


SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 917

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Friday, July 14. 1899.

( Lord Stormonth Darling, Ordinary.

36 SLR 917

Stewart

v.

Dobie's Trustees.

Subject_1Trust
Subject_2Administration of Trust
Subject_3Personal Liability of Trustee Acting Alone without Consultation with Co-Trustee.
Facts:

For one trustee to take on himself the conduct of an action directed against the trust is not within the due course of trust administration, and while a trustee intervening in that way may be able to show that his intervention was for the benefit of the estate, it lies upon him to do so in order to entitle him to indemnification.

A and B were C's testamentary trustees. A acted alone without consultation with B in a reference following upon the sale of a farm forming part of the trust-estate between the purchaser and the trustees, and also in an action raised by the tenants on the farm against the trustees with regard to their waygoing. On a final division of the trust-estate, in an action of count, reckoning, and payment against the representatives of A and B, and the then acting trustees of C, the pursuers objected that the defenders had taken credit for certain payments entered in their account in connection with the proceedings referred to which had been made by A individually, by cheque on his own bank account, without consultation with his co-trustee. A's representatives having failed to show that his actings were beneficial to the estate, held that they were not entitled to debit the trust with the loss incurred in these proceedings, including the cost of the action.

Headnote:

Thomas Dobie died in 1872 leaving a trust-disposition and settlement by which he appointed George Rogerson and David Dobie his trustees. After Thomas Dobie's death his widow and one of his sons remained on the farm of Scalehill, which formed part of his estate, as tenants, until January 1879, when the property was sold by the trustees. The waygoing of the widow and son gave rise to certain questions between the purchaser and the trustees on one hand, and the tenants and the trustees on the other. The questions between the purchaser and the trustees were referred to arbitration, and resulted in a payment by the purchaser of £248, 14s. 4d. The questions between the tenants and the trustees were the subject of an action in the Court of Session at the instance of the tenants, concluding for £466, which was defended only by David Dobie, who had undertaken the management of the trust all along. After an

Page: 918

order for proof this action was settled on the morning of the proof by a joint-minute setting forth “that the defender David Dobie had agreed to pay, and had paid, the pursuers the sum of £330 in full of the sums sued for in the action.” This sum of £350 was paid by a cheque on David Dobie's private account, and the sum of £248, 14s. 4d. recovered in the arbitration was paid into his private account.

In 1897, George Rogerson and David Dobie having died, Mrs Stewart, a daughter of the deceased Thomas Dobie, and James Stewart her husband, to whom Joseph Jardine Dobie, one of Thomas Dobie's sons, had assigned his share of his father's estate, raised an action of count, reckoning, and payment against George Rogerson's trustees, David Dobie's trustees, and David Dobie and Joseph Jardine Dobie, the acting trustees of Thomas Dobie.

An account of the intromissions of Thomas Dobie's trustees was lodged for the defenders, David Dobie's trustees and the defender David Dobie, in which the above sums of £248, 14s. 4d., and £350 appeared as credit and debit entries respectively. To these and to other debit entries, being payments of expenses in connection with the reference and action referred to, the pursuers objected on the ground that all the transactions in connection with the reference and action were carried through by the deceased David Dobie alone, on his own responsibility, and without consultation with his co-trustee.

After a proof the Lord Ordinary ( Stormonth Darling) pronounced an interlocutor sustaining, with certain exceptions, the pursuers' objections, so far as applicable to the account of intromissions lodged for the defenders David Dobie's trustees and the defender David Dobie.

The objections sustained included the credit entry of £248, 14s. 4d., the debit entry of £350, two debit entries of £47, 14s. 10d. and £71, 0s. 10d., representing the expenses incurred in the action at the instance of the tenants against the trustees. Objections to debit entries of £79, 0s. 10d. and £28, 13s. 8d., representing the expenses incurred in connection with the reference between the purchaser and the trustees, were repelled. With regard to these two last entries no question was raised in the Inner House.

Note,—“I have found some difficulty in deciding the questions raised by this note of objections, chiefly because most of the events out of which they arise occurred eighteen years ago, and are now involved in considerable obscurity.

Thomas Dobie of Scalehill died in 1872, leaving a widow and family, and an estate which consisted almost entirely of heritable property. The accepting trustees under his will were his brother David Dobie and Mr Rogerson of Pearce by hall, but from the first Mr David Dobie seems to have undertaken the entire management of the trust. For some years there was very little to do, because the widow and family remained in occupation of Scalehill, under a lease granted by the trustees to the widow and the eldest surviving sou. This arrangement came to an end in January 1879, when the property was sold for £9000 to Sir Robert Jardine. On receipt of the price, an interim division was made among the family, the trustees reserving £2500 to meet the widow's annuity. A further division was made after her death in 1891, but there still remains a balance for final division, and the questions raised by the pursuer, who is one of the beneficiaries, relates to certain items which the present trustees (Mr David Dobie and Mr Rogerson both having died) propose to charge against the trust-estate.

The first of these consists of a credit entry of £248, 14s. 4d., and a debit entry of £350, connected with the waygoing of the widow and son when they left the farm at Whitsunday 1879. This waygoing gave rise to questions between the purchaser and the trustees on the one hand, and the tenants and the trustees on the other. The questions between the purchaser and the trustees were referred to Mr Asher, the arbiter appointed in the articles of roup, and the reference resulted, not in a formal award, but in findings by the arbiter which were acquiesced in, and which led to payment by the purchaser of £248, 14s. 4d. The questions between the tenants and the trustees gave rise to an action at the instance of the tenants in this Court, concluding for £406. This action was directed against the trustees, but it was defended only by Mr David Dobie. It was raised in May 1880, and after sundry procedure a proof was ordered, but on the morning of the proof the case was settled by joint-minute, and the Lord Ordinary was craved to assoilzie the defenders and to find neither party entitled to expenses, the first head of the joint-minute bearing ‘that the defender David Dobie had agreed to pay, and had paid, the pursuers the sum of £330 in full of the sums sued for in the action.’ It appears that the sum was paid by cheque on Mr Dobie's private account; that the sum of £248, 14s. 4d. received from Sir Robert Jardine was paid into the same account; and that neither of these sums ever appeared in the accounts of the trustees until after the raising of the present action. On the other hand, it appears that the two business accounts of £147, 14s. 10d. and £71, 0s. 10d., representing Mr Dobie's expenses in connection with the action, formed part of a sum of £197, 16s. 6d., which was paid by cheque on the trust account in September 1880, a year before that gentleman's death.

I do not think that the different manner in which these payments were treated can form any ground in principle for distinguishing between them now. If Mr David Dobie settled the tenants' action on his own responsibility, and out of his own pocket, his costs in the action must form a charge against his own estate and not against the trust. No reason completely satisfactory to my mind has been suggested why he should have taken this burden on his own shoulders. I discard the suggestion that he was at fault in not

Page: 919

taking the purchaser bound to pay for all the outgoings for which the trustees were bound to pay. I have looked at the clause in the articles of roup, and it seems to be in the ordinary form. Moreover, I think the pursuer and the other beneficiaries are barred by the discharge of 3rd March 1880 from challenging any acts or omissions of the trustees prior to 10th November 1879, and the articles of roup were prior to that date. I also discard the suggestion that there was any special agreement outside the joint-minute to the effect that Mr Dobie should pay the expenses of the action out of his own pocket. I do not think that any such agreement is proved. But there may have been reasons which it is difficult to estimate now for Mr Dobie undertaking this responsibility. It appears from the oral evidence, confirmed by the discharge to which I have alluded, that he had previously paid out of his own pocket the defenders' expenses in an action of count, reckoning, and payment brought by the beneficiaries against the trustees in October 1879. Moreover, one reason, and I think the principal reason, why Sir Robert Jardine had not to pay the full amount of the tenants' claim was that Mr Asher held him bound to take over only 29 acres of white crop, while the tenants claim was for 45 1 2 acres. This plainly shows that there had been miscropping by the tenants to that extent, and possibly Mr Dobie may have held himself personally responsible for allowing the tenants to do this. There is also some reason to believe, from the evidence of Mr Cormack (a witness for the defenders), that counsel's advice to settle the action was, in part at least, dictated by a desire to save Mr Dobie from worry in the then highly nervous condition of his health, which ended in his dying in a lunatic asylum.

These, however, are all more or less matters of speculation. The substantial fact is that it was Mr Dobie, and not the trustees, who defended the action and settled it. He, and not they, gave the instructions which resulted in the expenses being incurred. He, and not they, agreed to pay, and did pay, the sum of £350 by way of settlement. I do not for a moment doubt that an individual trustee intervening personally for the defence of a lawsuit directed against a trust, might afterwards succeed in showing that his action had been beneficial to the trust, and so might recover his expenditure from the trust estate. But the onus of explaining his action and of proving benefit would be entirely on him. If the proof in this case were to be viewed as an attempt by Mr Dobie's representatives to discharge that onus, it would be difficult I think to say that they had succeeded. I see from the condescendence in the tenants' action that the pursuers offered before the closing of the record to deduct £30 from their original claim of £406, in respect of certain questions as to second year's grass which Mr Asher in the reference had decided in favour of the purchaser. It would thus have been better, so far as the interests of the trust estate were concerned, to have allowed decree to pass for £376, together with the small amount of expenses then incurred by both sides, than to carry on the action till the morning of the proof, and then to pay £350 in addition to a sum of £118, 15s. 8d. as the expenses of the defence. I therefore come to the conclusion that none of the items connected with the tenants' action are chargeable against the trust estate.

None of these considerations, however, apply to the items of £79, 0s. 10d. and £28, 13s. 8d., being the expenses incurred in connection with the reference to Mr Asher. These were proper trust expenses, and the pursuer has shown no reason for disallowing them. The mere fact that the smaller of these two sums was not brought into account until after the raising of the present action seems to me of no consequence.”

The defenders David Dobie's trustees and David Dobie reclaimed, and argued—Though only one trustee lodged defences in the action against the trust, the trust was properly brought into Court. The deceased David Dobie did not profess to be more than one of two trustees, and no objection was taken by the pursuers in the action, or by the co-trustee, or by the beneficiaries. The fact that only one trustee defended the action did not lead to the inference which the Lord Ordinary had drawn, that that trustee intended to pay the expenses of the action out of his own pocket; nor was that inference justified by the fact that he paid the expenses by a cheque on his own account, that having been done as a mere matter of temporary accommodation while there was not a sufficient sum at the credit of the bank account of the trust. The onus having been discharged of showing that the debts paid were trust debts, the only question that remained was as to the propriety of the payments; and their propriety had been unchallenged for eighteen years, and was not challenged on record or in the proof; the defenders ought therefore to be assoilzied.

The defenders Rogerson's trustees adopted the argument presented by the reclaimers, and maintained further that in any case no responsibility attached to them.

Argued for the pursuers—One of two trustees had no power to act without the concurrence of his co-trustee, and a compromise effected by one trustee in such circumstances in an action against the trust was not a trust act. Even if both trustees had acted in the reference entered into and the action defended by the deceased David Dobie, the trust estate had suffered by his actings, and there had been fault on the part of the trustees, for the consequence of which their representatives were liable.

Judgment:

Lord M'Laren—The questions that have come before us on this reclaiming-note relate to the principal sum and certain accounts of expenses which all depend upon the view that may be taken of the action of Mr Dobie, the deceased trustee, as a litigant in a previous case in this Court. Mr Dobie and Mr Rogerson were co-trustees. Neither of them appears to

Page: 920

have been in very good health. We were referred to some correspondence in which it was arranged that Mr Rogerson was not to be troubled about trust matters, and Mr Dobie seems to have lost his health not long after, which may perhaps explain the irregularities that occurred in the administration of the trust. Mr Dobie took the more active part in the administration. He was a brother of the truster, and he arranged that the widow and sons should continue to occupy the farm as tenants and make a living out of it. Eventually the estate was sold to Mr Robert Jardine, and Mr Dobie, as acting trustee, took upon him to give the purchaser a right to the crop and waygoing subjects without having consulted or at least without having preserved evidence of the consent of the tenants to this arrangement. A reference was entered into between the trustees or Mr Dobie on their behalf and the purchaser which resulted in a sum of I think £240 being found due to the trust for crop and waygoing subjects. But concurrently with this reference an action was brought by the beneficiaries or those who were interested in the farm against the trustees claiming the value of the crop and waygoing subjects which had been taken possession of by them. To this action Mr Dobie, apparently without consulting his co-trustee, put in defences, designing himself one of the trustees of the late Mr Dobie, his brother. There is no reason to believe that the propriety of defending the action was ever considered by the trustees in consultation, and for one trustee to take on himself the conduct of an action directed against the trust is certainly a proceeding outwith the due course of that administration. The result of the action was that after proof had been ordered and was about to be commenced, counsel compromised the case under an agreement that Mr Dobie should pay £350 in full of the sum sued for. When the expenses of the suit are added to this sum, it appears that so far from the trust-estate being benefited by the defence of the action, there was a loss of £102—that is to say, the sum of £350 agreed to be paid and the expenses added together come to £102 more than the sum sued for. Whatever may be the rights of Mr Dobie, represented now by his testamentary trustees, it cannot be said that the defence of this action about the waygoing crop was beneficial to the trust-estate. The Lord Ordinary, on a consideration of the claim made against Mr Dobie's representatives for this loss, has decided it by striking out of the account the credit entry for the sum recovered under the reference, and also the debit entry for the sum which was paid under the agreement of counsel, the result being to throw the difference between these two sums (or the loss to the trust-estate on the waygoing), and also the costs of the action, upon Mr Dobie's representatives. His Lordship explains his judgment in this way—he says that while it may be that a trustee intervening in an action without the consent of his co-trustee is able to show that his intervention has been for the benefit of the estate, and may on that ground be entitled to indemnity, it lies upon him to show that it has been beneficial. This, as I think, is a sound and sufficient ground of judgment on the points in dispute in this case. If these two trustees had consulted, and after advising with their solicitor or counsel if necessary, came to be satisfied that the action ought to be defended, then although their defence might turn out to be unsuccessful, or although on further investigation of the facts the trustees might be satisfied that they had no good defence, and that their best course was to make a compromise of the action, I say that if acting according to the best of their judgment after consultation and in the ordinary course of trust administration, the case went against them, they would in the general case be indemnified as to their expenses, and would be entitled to debit the trust with the accruing loss on the matter in dispute. Their right to indemnity in such circumstances may be supported on this ground, that trustees do not in general undertake personal responsibility or guarantee the success of their transactions, but only undertake to give such attention to the conduct of the affairs of the trust as a prudent man of business would give. But then there is no call upon one trustee to defend actions without the consent of his colleague, and still less without consulting his colleague, and if a trustee takes such an unusual course, he is not within the scope of the principle which entitles trustees to debit the trust-estate with loss, and to take credit for their expenses in defending it. In such a case the trustee is not even in so favourable a position as a negotiorum gestor. In the case we are now considering, Mr Rogerson, the co-trustee, was not absent from the country. We know of no reason why he should not have been consulted, or why he should not have been joined as a defender if a joint defence had been resolved upon. I wish to guard myself against being supposed to express any view that would be adverse to the claim of a trustee acting in an emergency, and under circumstances which make it impossible to have the cooperation of his co-trustee. There are cases in which a trustee may legitimately act alone, but certainly the defending of an action while the other trustee is on the spot is not a case which can be justified on the ground of emergency. Then if Mr Dobie was not entitled to the protection which the law gives to a person exercising the office of trustee or other administrative office, it has not been shown that he is entitled to any special protection. He intervened in a manner out of the ordinary course of administration, and it seems to follow that as he intervened in a way in which he was not bound to intervene, that he could only justify his action by showing that it was for the benefit of the estate. I am therefore of opinion with the Lord Ordinary that this loss must fall upon Mr Dobie's representatives. The interlocutor, I think, brings out the pecuniary result correctly, and it is not suggested that there is any

Page: 921

question of detail to be considered. I presume your Lordships would not, in the judgment now to be given, say anything prejudicial to the claim which Mr Rogerson through his counsel intimates he may have to make at a later stage in the proceedings. Mr Rogerson, I understand, contends that if there is any individual loss he is not to share it. There is nothing in the interlocutor which affects Mr Rogerson's position, and we give no opinion upon it.

The Lord President and Lord Kinnear concurred.

Lord Adam was absent.

The Court adhered.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Pursuers— Kennedy— Gunn. Agents— Mackay & Young, W.S.

Counsel for the Defenders Dobie's Trustees— Ure, Q.C.— Cullen. Agents— Webster, Will, & Co., S.S.C.

Counsel for the Defenders Rogerson's Trustees— C. N. Johnston— A. F. Steuart. Agents— J. C. & A. Steuart, W.S.

1899


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1899/36SLR0917.html