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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Macleod v. Wilson [1903] ScotLR 41_130 (15 December 1903)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1903/41SLR0130.html
Cite as: [1903] ScotLR 41_130, [1903] SLR 41_130

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 130

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Tuesday, December 15. 1903.

[ Lord Low, Ordinary.

41 SLR 130

Macleod

v.

Wilson.

Subject_1Succession
Subject_2Testament
Subject_3Conditional Institution
Subject_4Destination to Daughter “and her heirs and assignees” — Legacy or Bond of Provision — Gift Held not Conditional on Surviving or Leaving Issue.
Facts:

M. died leaving a disposition and settlement whereby “for the settlement of the succession to my means and estate after my decease” she disponed her whole estate “to my daughter J., and her heirs and assignees whomsoever absolutely,” and she nominated J. to be her executrix. The disposition concluded with declarations for the protection of J. in the enjoyment of “the provision hereby made” in her favour, and M. reserved her own “liferent of the premises.” M. was predeceased by J., who was her only child, and who left no issue. In an action at the instance of M.'s heirs ab intestata against the

Page: 131

heirs of J., in which the pursuers sought declarator that the disposition and settlement referred to was of no force and effect, and that M.'s estate had fallen into intestacy, in respect that the settlement was only to take effect if J. survived her mother or predeceased her leaving issue— held ( aff. judgment of Lord Low, dub. Lord Moncreiff) that the deed referred to was testamentary, and that under the destination to J. “and her heirs” J.'s heirs were entitled to take as conditional institutes.

Headnote:

Mrs Margaret Mackie or Isbister, 705 Shields Road, Glasgow, widow of John Isbister of Pittsburg, U.S.A., died on 15th January 1903, having executed in January 1870 a disposition and settlement in the following terms:—“I, Mrs Margaret Mackie or Isbister, for the settlement of the succession to my means and estate after my decease, do hereby assign and dispone to my daughter Jessie Sarah Isbister and her heirs and assignees whomsoever absolutely all and sundry the whole means and estate presently belonging or which shall belong to me at my decease, and I nominate the said Jessie Sarah Isbister to be my sole executrix, but these presents are granted under burden of all my just and lawful debts and sick-bed and funeral charges; declaring also that the provision hereby made in favour of the said Jessie Sarah Isbister shall be exclusive always of the jus mariti, courtesy, curatory, and right of administration of any husband she may marry, and not affectable by the debts or deeds of such husband, nor by any action, diligence, or execution competent to follow thereupon; and I reserve my own liferent of the premises; and I dispense with the delivery hereof; and I consent to the registration hereof for preservation.” The greater part of the estate left by Mrs Isbister was heritable property in Glasgow.

Mrs Isbister's daughter Jessie Sarah Isbister, afterwards Mrs Brown, who was her only child, died on 14th March 1902, and so predeceased her mother. Mrs Brown left no issue.

In June 1903 the present action was raised by Mrs Elizabeth Mackie or Macleod, Myrton, Prestatyn, Flintshire, and another, two of Mrs Isbister's heirs ab intestata, against Mrs Sarah Agnes Isbister or Wilson, Millburn House, Claremont, near Cape Town, South Africa, and others, the heirs of Mrs Jessie Sarah Isbister or Brown. The pursuers sought to have it declared that the disposition and settlement referred to was of no force and effect, and that Mrs Isbister's estate had fallen into intestacy.

The defenders maintained that the disposition and settlement was effectual to carry Mrs Isbister's whole estate to them as conditional institutes.

The pursuers averred, inter alia, that before Mrs Brown's death Mrs Isbister had been certified as incapable of managing her affairs or of giving directions for the management of them, and that if she ever realised the fact of her daughter's death, she never was capable of comprehending the effect of the disposition which she had executed in 1870 or of giving instructions for the preparation of a new will.

The pursuers pleaded—“(1) The pursuers are entitled to decree of declarator as concluded fur, in respect (1st) that the said settlement was only to take effect in the event ( a) of Mrs Brown's surviving her mother, or ( b) of her predeceasing her mother leaving issue. (2) That Mrs Isbister being her daughter's heir quoad one-third of her daughter's moveable estate cannot be presumed to have intended to institute herself as heir to her own succession. (3) that it having been Mrs Isbister's desire to benefit only her daughter or daughter's issue, she was mentally incapable after her daughter's death of destroying the said settlement or of making a new one.”

The defenders pleaded—“(1) The action as laid is incompetent. (2) No relevant case. (3) The disposition and settlement being the valid deed of Mrs Isbister, and entitled to receive full force and effect, the defenders should be assoilzied. (4) The destination to Mrs Brown's heirs in said disposition and settlement being a proper conditional institution of her heirs in the event of her predeceasing Mrs Isbister, the defenders should be assoilzied. (5) The material averments of the pursuers being unfounded in fact, the defenders should be assoilzied.”

By interlocutor of 19th July 1903 the Lord Ordinary (Low) sustained the second plea-in-law for the defenders and dismissed the action.

Opinion.—This case has been argued very ably by Mr Macfarlane and Mr Graham Stewart. They have said everything that can be said for the pursuers, and therefore I have the more confidence in expressing the opinion which I have formed.

The question is whether the writing which the late Mrs Isbister left purporting to regulate the disposal of her estate at her death was a will or a bond of provision. The document bears to be a settlement, because the cause of granting is stated to be for ‘the settlement of the succession of my means and estate after my death.’ That is clearly a testamentary purpose. Then the terms used are unambiguous. Mrs Isbister dispones her whole means and estate to her daughter ‘and her heirs and assignees whomsoever.’ The meaning of such a destination is very well settled. The case of Bowman's Trustees is an authority for saying that a destination-over to heirs is just as much a conditional institutional as if it were to a third party nominatim, and there is nothing in this instrument to justify the words being read in any other sense. Now, what grounds are there for treating this instrument, which bears to be a testamentary settlement, as being merely a bond of provision in favour of the daughter? I think there are only two grounds, in so far as the answer to this question depends, upon the terms of the instrument. The one is that the daughter is nominated as sole executor, and the other is that the disposition in her favour is spoken of as a ‘provision.’

In regard to the nomination of the daughter as the executor it was argued

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that if Mrs Isbister had intended that the disposition should take effect, even if her daughter predeceased her, she would have nominated an executor to act in that event. Very likely Mrs Isbister did not think of her daughter predeceasing her, but however that may be, if an executor, failing the daughter, had been nominated, it would have required to be a person who had no interest in the succession, because those to whom the estate was destined, failing the daughter, could not be known, and, indeed, did not exist, at the date of the settlement. I think that that sufficiently explains the nomination of the daughter only.

In regard to the use of the word ‘provision’ it occurs in this way. It is declared that ‘the provision hereby made shall be exclusive of the jus mariti, courtesy, and right of administration of any husband she may marry.’ Now, the word ‘provision’ just refers back to what had been given to the daughter in the preceding part of the deed, that is, an absolute conveyance of the whole estate. I think that the use of the word ‘provision’ is very naturally explained by the relationship which existed between the parties—the relationship of mother and daughter—because I think it is a matter of everyday experience to find that legacies or gifts by a parent to a child are spoken of as provisions. It therefore seems to me that the mere use of the word ‘provision’ in the clause which I have quoted is altogether insufficient to reduce what bears to be, and in form is, a testamentary settlement to a bond of provision.

It was further argued that as Mrs Isbister was in fact one of her daughter's heirs it could not be supposed that she intended to make a will in her own favour as conditional institute. But the fact that, as the event turned out, Mrs Isbister happened to be one of her daughter's heirs was a mere accident. If the daughter had survived her mother, or if she had left children, the mother would not have been one of her heirs. It seems to me that the unforeseen, and, I imagine, unlikely event of the daughter predeceasing her mother without issue cannot prevent the writing being construed according to the ordinary significance of the language used. The result of Mrs Isbister turning out to be one of her daughter's heirs seems to me simply to be that to the extent of one-third of the estate the settlement has proved to be ineffectual.

Mr Macfarlane further argued that the word ‘heirs’ should be read as meaning heirs of the body. In some cases the word has been so read, but that was where the context showed that the testator in speaking of heirs in one part of the deed really referred to heirs of the body. In this deed, however, there is nothing to suggest that the word is used otherwise than in the ordinary sense.

I shall therefore dismiss the action.”

The pursuers reclaimed, and argued—Mrs Isbister did not intend to benefit anyone except her daughter, and the benefit conferred upon her daughter was expressly described as a “provision.” The deed was intended to take effect only in the event of the granter's daughter surviving her or leaving issue if she predeceased her— Findlay v. Mackenzie, July 9, 1875, 2 R. 909, 12 S.L.R. 597; Baillie's Executor v. Baillie, June 16, 1899, 1 F. 974, 36 S.L.R. 739. Mrs Isbister was herself one of her daughter's heirs; therefore even if the deed was a mortis causa settlement it was ineffectual— Birnie v. Simpson's Trustees, November 29, 1892, 20 R. 481, 30 S.L.R. 259. The words “heirs and assignees whomsoever absolutely” merely marked Mrs Isbister's indifference as to what became of her estate if her daughter did not survive her or leave issue; “heirs” meant “heirs of the body”— Craw's Trustees v. Craw, February 15, 1899, 1 F. 572, 36 S.L.R. 414. The word “assignees” would be meaningless except in the view that the deed was only to take effect if Mrs Brown survived, because unless she survived there could be no assignation of her rights— Thompson's Trustees v. Jamieson, January 26, 1900, 2 F. 470, 37 S.L.R. 346.

Argued for the respondents—Mrs Brown's heirs were conditional institutes, and they were to be sought for as at the date of Mrs Isbister's death— Maxwell v. Maxwell, December 24, 1864, 3 Macph. 318; Halliburton, &c., June 26, 1884, 11 R. 979, 21 S.L.R. 686; Cleland v. Allan, January 13, 1891, 18 R. 377, 28 S.L.R. 264. The language of the deed was testamentary, and it was a will.

Judgment:

Lord Justice-Clerk—The late Mrs Isbister left behind her a document which was stated to be for “the settlement of the succession to my means and estate after my death.” The destination was to her “daughter Jessie Sarah Isbister, and her heirs and assignees whomsoever.” Jessie was an only child, and was married. The settlement was executed in 1870. Jessie died in 1902 and Mrs Isbister died in 1903, there being nine months' interval between the two deaths. The question is, whether the deed was a bond of provision which fell by the death of the daughter, so that Mrs Isbister's estate goes to her next-of-kin by intestacy, or whether it was a testamentary bequest and is effectual in favour of Jessie's heirs as conditional institutes.

I agree with the Lord Ordinary in holding that there is no ground for treating this deed as being other than it bears to be—a death settlement. I attach no importance to the nomination of Jessie as executrix. It was quite natural that if she survived her mother she should be her executrix, and the fact that those who might take failing the daughter could not be ascertained at the time of granting seems reasonably to account for no one being nominated failing the daughter. I am also satisfied that the use of the word “provision” in the description of the deed in the clause excluding the jus mariti, &c., cannot be held to override the testamentary words in the disposing part of the settlement. I think it would be quite unreasonable to do so. The word “provision” is frequently

Page: 133

used as descriptive of what is really a bequest by testamentary legacy made to a child and its heirs, and cannot reduce the effect of what is on the face of it of the latter class.

I do not think that the other arguments of the pursuers require notice, viz., that, as it has happened, Mrs Isbister, by the predecease of her daughter, was herself an heir, and that “heirs” should be read as “heirs of the body.” I agree in what the Lord Ordinary says on them, and am in favour of adhering to his interlocutor.

Lord Young—The question in this case is a simple one—whether the defender's fourth plea-in-law is sound and should be sustained. Now, I think it clear that the deed in question is a will, a testamentary disposition of the estate of the testatrix—nothing else. It has been decided, and is beyond doubt, that a destination in a will to the heirs of a nominate legatee makes the heirs of the legatee conditional institutes. This will was prepared by a man of business, and we have to consider the meaning of the words which he used as though they had been used by the testatrix in the meaning which he attached to them, and that is a technical meaning. It would be a serious thing to give a different meaning to technical words to that given to them by the decisions and the text writers; but no doubt a different meaning would have to be given to the technical words employed here if there was anything in the will to show that the testatrix did not intend them to bear their technical meaning. I agree, however, with the Lord Ordinary, that there is nothing in this deed to show that the testatrix did not intend the heirs of the nominate legatee, her daughter, to take as conditional institutes in accordance with the technical meaning of the words employed.

Lord Trayner—I agree with the Lord Ordinary. I cannot regard the writ before us as being anything but a testamentary writing. It presents all the characteristics of a will, and none of the characteristics of a bond or deed of provision. The fact that the bequest to Mrs Brown is called a “provision” does not affect the question. It is quite common in testamentary writings to find proper bequests or legacies in favour of beneficiaries described as provisions made in their favour. Dealing with the writ as a testamentary writing, the one question in the case is, whether the bequest there made to Mrs Brown was dependent on her surviving the testatrix. I have no hesitation in answering that question in the negative. A legacy or bequest to A B lapses if the legatee predeceases the testator, but a legacy to A B “and his heirs and executors” does not. The recognised effect of such an addition is to prevent lapsing, and when I find these words in the deed before us I conclude that they were put there to prevent lapsing, and thus in themselves exclude the idea that the legacy or bequest was only to be effectual in the event of the survivance of the legatee. There is provision made for the event of the legatee's predecease by these words. The result in this case of applying the well-established rule is no doubt anomalous, for it happens that the testatrix herself is one of the heirs of her daughter. That, I believe, was not expected. But that it turns out so is merely accidental, and does not alter the legal effect of the language used.

Lord Moncreiff—The deed under consideration is a combination of a will and a bond of provision, although the characteristics of a will undoubtedly predominate. Such were the deeds in the cases of Findlay v. Mackenzie, 2 R. 909, and Baillie's Executor, 1 F. 974, relied on by the pursuers, and also in the defenders' authority— Halliburton, 11 R. 979. The question turns upon the meaning to be ascribed to the words “her heirs and assignees whomsoever,” and that again depends on whether, on consideration of the whole of the deed, we hold that it was the intention of the testatrix that the provision or bequest should or should not be dependent on her daughter Jessie Sarah Isbister surviving her.

The words “heirs and assignees whomsoever,” when adjected to a conveyance or bequest, admit, according to circumstances, of different constructions. They may import a conditional institution of the disponee's or legatee's heirs, but, on the other hand, they may be inserted merely for the purpose of expressing emphatically that the conveyance or gift is absolute. Of this there are numerous examples. We have to decide which meaning is to be given to the words as used in this deed.

None of the cases which were cited are precisely an all fours with the present. In the case of Findlay it was expressly declared that the bequest was made to the testator's wife in the event of her surviving him; and in the case of Baillie's Executor the gift was also made to the wife “in case she shall survive me.” In that respect the deeds in these cases afforded stronger indications of intention that the bequest should be conditional on survivance than the deed in the present case. On the other hand in the case of Halliburton the bequest of residue to the testator's youngest daughter, “her heirs and assignees,” was not made dependent on her surviving her father, and there was nothing else in the deed to indicate that the gift was conditional on survivance. The same may be said of the case of Cleland v. Allan, 18 R. 377.

But while the deed in the present case lacks some of the indications of intention which are to be found in Findlay's Trustees and Baillie's Executor, it contains one indication of intention (which occurred in Findlay's Trustees, and to which the Lord President attached importance, as appears from his opinion in Halliburton), but which is not to be found in the cases of Halliburton and Cleland v. Allan, viz., that the testatrix nominates her daughter to be sole executrix. On this the pursuers rely as showing that the testatrix did not contemplate

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her daughter predeceasing her, and from that they argue that the expression “heirs and assignees whomsoever” could not have been inserted for the purpose of conditionally instituting her daughter's heirs. Another consideration is that it is improbable that the testatrix intended that her whole estate made by her own exertions, or at least two-thirds of it, should go to her husband's relatives if her daughter predeceased her without issue, the daughter, be it observed, having ex hypothesi no power to assign it. I think that there is considerable force in these contentions, and my impression is that the pursuers are right as to the intention of the testatrix. But the question is narrow, and as your Lordships all agree with the Lord Ordinary, I do not feel justified in dissenting.

The Court recalled the interlocutor reclaimed against and sustained the fourth plea-in-law for the defenders.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Pursuers and Reclaimers— Macfarlane, K.C.— Graham Stewart. Agents— Clark & Macdonald, S.S.C.

Counsel for the Defendeis and Respondents—Solicitor-General ( Dundas, K.C.)— Hunter. Agents— Steedman & Ramage, W.S.

1903


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