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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Macfarlane's Trs v Macfarlane [1910] ScotCS CSIH_1 (21 January 1910)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1910/1910_SC_325.html
Cite as: 1910 1 SLT 40, [1910] ScotCS CSIH_1, 1910 SC 325

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JISCBAILII_CASE_SCOT_PROPERTY_TRUSTS_SUCCSESSION

21 January 1910

Macfarlane's Trustees
v.
Macfarlane.

Lord Dundas.—The first parties to this special case are the trustees, original and assumed, acting under the trust-disposition and settlement executed in 1902 by the late Mr Macfarlane, who died on 20th November 1908. The question raised by the case is whether or not a legacy bequeathed by the settlement has been adeemed. The second parties are three sisters of the truster, who are designated as beneficiaries in the bequest—the terms of which I shall presently quote—and who argue against ademption. The third parties are the whole legatees (other than the second parties) under the settlement; and it is their interest, in the circumstances explained in the case, to maintain that the legacy in question has been adeemed.

We had a careful and interesting argument from both sides of the bar, illustrated by a considerable, but judiciously selected, citation of authorities. It will not, however, be necessary to refer in any detail to more than two of the cases, because I think the gist of all of them is reasonably clear, and can be shortly stated, so far as is requisite for the purposes of this decision. There is no doubt that the Roman Law recognised the intention of a testator, the animus adimendi, as a necessary element of ademption. It seems equally clear that our law, agreeing with that of England, does not so recognise that intention. The only questions which usually arise in a case like this are, Was there a specific legacy? and if so, Did the subject of that legacy remain as part of the testator's estate at his death? If the second of these questions is answered in the negative, the legacy will (in the general case) be held to have been adeemed, without regard to any animus or supposed animus adimendi. This was all very clearly laid down by the Judges of this Division in Anderson v. Thomson . Lord Ormidale said: “It seems to be firmly established in England, ever since the judgment of Lord Thur-low in the cases of Ashburner v. M'Guire and Stanley v. Potter, that the test of ademption is whether the specific thing bequeathed by a testator continued to exist at his death, or had been converted into something else, and this independently altogether of the animus adimendi, a consideration which has been discarded on the ground that it was calculated to create confusion and uncertainty”; and he went on to point out that there were

Scots cases to the same effect, and to cite instances where ademption was inferred from the voluntary payment of a bill, during the truster's life, the contents of which had been specifically bequeathed (Jack), from the paying up of a bond under similar conditions (Pagan), and from the fact that a house, specifically bequeathed, had been purchased compulsorily during the testator's life by a railway company (Chalmers). The other Judges, Lord Gifford and Lord Justice-Clerk Moncreiff, accepted, though with great reluctance, as clearly settled law, the opinion of Lord Thurlow that in a question of ademption the animus adimendi is not a matter to which the Court is to look, and the reluctance of those learned Judges emphasises the sincerity of their adhesion to the law as established. The only other case to which I think reference need be made at this stage is M'Arthur's Executors v. Guild, a unanimous decision of seven Judges. With the particular merits of the case we are not here concerned. It was, as the Lord President explained, sent to seven Judges in order to test whether the decision of this Division in Pollok's Trustees v. Anderson, really conflicted with the decision of the whole Court in Heron v. Espie, and it authoritatively settled that no such conflict existed, the former being a case of ademption, the latter one of conversion. The Lord President pointed the distinction thus: “If it” (i.e., the sale in Heron's case) “had been a voluntary sale, of course the property would have been moveable, but only on the principle of conversion, which depends on the will of the owner and testator. It seems to me that the moment that you settle that intention is neither here nor there in a question of ademption, Heron v. Espie becomes really an authority not at variance with, but in favour of Pollok's Trustees v. Anderson .” All the Judges accepted and sanctioned the doctrine laid down in Anderson v. Thomson . In particular, the Lord President, after referring to Lord Thurlow's judgments as “the leading authority” to the effect that “the test of ademption was whether the thing remained at the testator's death,” and quoting from Lord Thurlow's language, stated that “that doctrine has been fully adopted in the law of Scotland.”

I now pass to the facts of the case before us. The terms of Mr Macfarlane's bequest are as follows: “And to each of my mother” (who, it may here be noted, predeceased him) “and my three sisters at present unmarried, 100 £5 shares of the Empire Guarantee and Insurance Corporation, Limited, my remaining shares in that Corporation to be sold, and after payment of any debts which I may owe, the proceeds to fall into residue.” It was not seriously disputed, and indeed could not be, that this is a specific legacy, but Mr Valentine argued, upon several grounds, that it has been adeemed.

The most formidable of these grounds, to my thinking, was based upon the following facts: On 18th August 1908, the Court (upon a petition by Mr Macfarlane's wife, presented on 30th July) appointed a curator bonis to him, and the curator on 19th November 1908 (the day before the ward's death) sold that gentleman's entire holding in the Empire Company, and lodged the proceeds in bank on deposit-receipt in his own name. The case states that “these shares were realised, not that the money was required for payment of the debts or for the maintenance of the ward, but because the curator bonis considered it imprudent to hold these shares. The curator bonis was not aware of the terms of the deceased's trust-disposition and settlement.” Upon these facts Mr Valentine was able to urge, with much plausibility, that the legacy was plainly adeemed, because at the truster's death there was no part of his estate corresponding to the subject of the bequest; he had no shares of any sort in the Empire Company. I think, however, that this argument, though plausible, is not sound; and that Mr Fleming's answer sufficiently disposes of it. Mr Fleming pointed out, what is indeed trite law, that no act of a curator bonis can avail to affect the order of his ward's succession, or its character in the distribution of it between heir and executor, unless it can be shewn not only that it was a proper and necessary act of administration on the part of the curator, but that it would have been a necessary and unavoidable act on the part of the ward if sui juris. This doctrine is well illustrated by the cases of Kennedy and Moncrief, where the actings of curators were held not to affect the ward's succession, and by that of M'Adam's Executor, where the curator's sale of the ward's heritage was held to operate conversion, because it was an absolutely necessary act in order to the maintenance of the ward. The rule and its exception are both well settled in our law, and I cannot doubt that the present case falls within the former and not the latter. It may have been, in a sense, “necessary” for the curator to sell these shares, but it was obviously not necessary, in any sense, for the ward to have done so if he had remained capax. In these circumstances, though the testator's estate at his death did not, in fact, include the shares in question, they must, in my judgment, be held to have formed part of it at that date, and that without in any degree impinging upon the well-established general rule of law, already alluded to, that a testator's intention is not to be looked to in a question of ademption. The sale of the shares did not arise from any such intention, nor from any act of this testator, but from the act of a third party, the curator bonis, exercised at the time and in the circumstances already mentioned, in the proper course of his administration, but not owing to the necessities of his ward's position. Mr Valentine's first point, therefore, seems to me to fail.

I refer to his next point only to dismiss it in a few sentences. It is stated in the case that “3. At the date when the deceased's will was signed he held 1000 shares of £5 each fully paid of the Empire Guarantee and Insurance Corporation, Limited. From time to time his holding in that company was reduced by sales, and on 21st May 1904 had been reduced to 330 £5 shares. On 22d December 1905 his holding was increased by 120 shares then purchased, and on 7th June 1906 it was reduced by a sale of 330 shares to 120 shares. On 3d June 1907 his holding was 500 £5 shares, he having sold about that time 120 shares, and purchased 500 shares.” An argument appears in the printed case to the effect that “the said bequest has been adeemed in whole or in part by the sales of his shares in the said corporation set forth in article 3 hereof, whereby his holding therein was reduced at 7th June 1906 to 120 shares.” We were told that some authority exists for the argument thus presented, but it was not vigorously maintained, and was ultimately withdrawn. I need therefore say nothing more about this point.

But the case further contains some facts about the history of this Empire Corporation, upon which Mr Valentine's last argument was maintained. It appears that, by a resolution of the company in 1907, each of the fully paid £5 shares was divided into five shares of £1 each fully paid. Mr Macfarlane's holding was therefore converted into 2500 £1 shares fully paid, and for this holding he received a new certificate. These converted shares were in September 1908 designated A shares in order to distinguish them from other B shares which had been created. That Mr Macfarlane became possessed of some B shares is, I think, quite irrelevant to the case, because in June 1908 he retained a holding of 1750 fully paid £l A shares, which was more than sufficient in value to meet the bequests now under consideration. But Mr Valentine maintained that by the conversion of each of the original £5 shares into five shares of £1 the legacy was eo ipso adeemed, because, after conversion, the testator's estate no longer consisted to any extent of “£5 shares of the Empire Guarantee and Insurance Corporation, Limited.” I think this argument is much too fine from the point of view of common sense, and is not at all supported by any of the decisions we were referred to. In one Scots case, indeed (Mitchell's Trustees), ademption was negatived by this Division of the Court under circumstances much more favourable for ademption than are here present. In that case a testatrix bequeathed “the shares standing in my name in the Paisley Gas Company.” Prior to the date of her will, the Paisley Gas Company had ceased to exist, and the interests of its shareholders had been converted into annuities payable by the Corporation of Paisley, which had, by a local Act, obtained the right of supplying gas to Paisley. The language of the will was, therefore, at best inaccurate; but there would, no doubt, have been room for a strong argument, if no further change of circumstances had occurred, to the effect that the bequest of the shares had force to carry the substituted annuities. But prior to the death of the testatrix, the annuities had been redeemed by the Corporation of Paisley, and the price of her annuity had been lent to that Corporation on a mortgage over its gas undertaking. The majority of the Judges of this Division held that the legacy was not adeemed, and that the legatee was entitled to the mortgage as representing the shares. Lord Rutherfurd Clark dissented. His Lord-ship observed that “it is very likely that the testator intended that the party of the second part should take the money which is in question. But I do not think we are entitled to proceed on any such conjecture, however probable”; and he added, in a later passage of his opinion: “That mortgage is neither gas shares, nor has it been declared to be a statutory representative or equivalent for gas shares. It is nothing more than a security which the testator chose to take when she parted with her shares, or rather with the annuity which was the equivalent of these shares, the subject of the legacy perished, and therefore, in my opinion, the legacy is adeemed.” The decision, if sound, is greatly a fortiori of the present case. It stands recorded in the books, and has not, so far as I am aware, been the subject of argument or of judicial comment, favourable or otherwise, in any subsequent case. I confess that, with the greatest respect, I venture to doubt the soundness of the decision, because it does appear to me that the opinions expressed by the learned Judges who formed the majority are difficult to reconcile with the established rule that, in a question of ademption, the testator's animus adimendi is not a matter for the Court to look into,—a rule which, as above stated, received the unanimous sanction of seven Judges in the recent case of M'Arthur's Executor. But Mitchell's case, whether soundly decided or not, goes far beyond anything that Mr Fleming requires for the success of his argument. We have here no extinction of the original company, nor any transfer of its undertaking to a new and different one; nor any essential change in the character of the shares,—the change being, as I think, one of form only, for greater convenience, I suppose, of their commercial negotiation. The five shares of £1 each are not, it seems to me, to be viewed as a surrogatum for each one share of £5, but as being substantially the same thing. I find valuable support for this view in the judgment of Turner, V.C., in Oakes v. Oakes, where that learned Judge held that a bequest of shares in a railway company was not revoked by the subsequent change of those shares into stock by reason of a vote of the company under the powers of their special Act. The following passage in the Vice-Chancellor's opinion may, I think, be usefully quoted here. “The testator had this property at the time he made his will, and it has since been changed in name or form only. The question is whether a testator has at the time of his death the same thing existing, it may be in a different shape—yet substantially the same thing.” This judgment of Turner, V.C., was cited with approval by the present Master of the Rolls in the recent case of In re Slater. The decision there was in favour of ademption; but the facts of the case were widely different from those now before us, and are only interesting by way of contrast. As already said, I think the change of each of the £5 shares into five £1 shares was a change “in name or form only,” and that the new shares were “substantially the same thing” as the old. I am therefore of opinion that Mr Valentine's last argument for ademption fails.

Upon the grounds which I have stated, I think we ought to answer the question of law put to us in this case in the negative.

Lord Ardwall.—I agree with the opinion just delivered by Lord Dundas, but I wish to add a word upon the application to questions of ademption of the rule that a voluntary act of a curator bonis cannot alter the succession to his ward. It was argued for the first and third parties that this rule, though it might apply to questions involving the doctrine of conversion of heritable estate to moveable, or moveable estate to heritable, in regard to succession, was not applicable to questions of ademption, and that for the reason that while the element of intention enters into questions of conversion, as was recognised in the opinions delivered in the case of M'Arthur's Executors v. Guild, yet intention had no place, as was decided in the same case, in questions of ademption, and that accordingly it was of no consequence in such questions, of which the present is one, whether the subject of the specific bequest had been taken out of the estate of the deceased by the act of a curator or by the deceased's own act. Possibly this argument might have had some force if the cases in which the rule referred to had been applied were only cases of testate succession, in which, for instance, the testator while yet capax had made a will bequeathing his heritage to one set of beneficiaries and his moveables to another, and the character of some portions of the estates had been changed from heritable to moveable or vice versa by the act of the curator subsequent to the execution of the will. But that is not so, because the rule has been applied indiscriminately in cases both of testate and intestate succession. Now, in cases of intestate succession there can be, strictly speaking, no question of intention any more than there can be in questions of ademption. In both cases it is a question of fact. In the first case the question is, what parts of his estate were in point of fact heritable, and what parts of it were moveable, at the time of the death of the intestate? Just as in a question of ademption, the question is whether in point of fact the subject of a specific bequest was still in existence, and was in bonis of the testator at the time of his death or not? There is no room, therefore, for any material distinction between the two cases, and as it has been held in the one case that each part and portion of the estate, although changed by the act of the curator, still retains the character it had at the time of the ward's becoming insane, so in the latter case I think it must be held that the subject of a specific bequest, although sold or otherwise disposed of by a curator, must be held to be in bonis of the deceased at the date of his death, and if it has been disposed of, that the legatee is entitled to its proceeds or value as a surrogatum therefor.

I am accordingly of opinion that the sale of the shares in question by the curator had not the effect of adeeming the legacy, and that the second parties are now entitled to receive the value of the shares sold by the curator as a surrogatum for their specific bequest. On the other points of the case I have nothing to add to what has been said by Lord Dundas.

The Lord Justice-Clerk concurred.

LORD LOW was absent.

[1910] SC 325

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