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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> M'Clymont's Trustees Petitioners [1922] ScotLR 397 (16 May 1922)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1922/59SLR0397.html
Cite as: [1922] SLR 397, [1922] ScotLR 397

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 397

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Tuesday, May 16. 1922.

[ Lord Ashmore, Ordinary.

59 SLR 397

M'Clymont's Trustees     Petitioners.

Subject_1Trust
Subject_2Trusts (Scotland) Act 1921 (11 and 12 Geo. V, cap. 58), sec. 24
Subject_3Petition for Authority to Complete Title
Subject_4“Entitled to the Possession for his Own Absolute Use.”
Facts:

The Trusts (Scotland) Act 1921, sec. 24, enacts that “Any person who shall be entitled to the possession for his own absolute use of any heritable property or moveable or personal property the title to which has been taken in the name of any trustee who has died or become incapable of acting without having executed a conveyance of such property … may apply by petition to the Court for authority to complete a title to such property in his own name.…”

Held that the above enactment did not apply to a body of trustees who, though beneficiaries in fee under the testator's settlement, were not entitled to the possession of the property for their own absolute use.

Headnote:

This petition was presented by William M'Creath and others, trustees under “The M'Clymont Trust,” petitioners. The circumstances in which it was brought are sufficiently set forth in the opinion of the Lord Ordinary ( Ashmore) infra.

Opinion.—“This is a petition by the trustees of ‘The M'Clymont Trust’ for authority to complete title in terms of section 24 of the Trusts (Scotland) Act 1921 to the trust estate of the late Mrs Ross.

The circumstances under which the petition is presented are as follows:—The late Mrs Ross, by holograph letters dated in 1879 and 1881, appointed trustees to hold £3000 provided by her, with instructions ( a) to make payment of the free annual proceeds to five liferenters and the survivors and survivor, and ( b) to convey the principal sum to the trustees under the trust settlement of her uncle, the late Archibald MacClymont, to be applied for the purposes of the trust created by his settlement.

The trustees nominated by Mrs Ross having died without assuming new trustees, on application to the Court new trustees were appointed.

All the trustees have now died without assuming new trustees, and all the life-renters under Mrs Ross's trust are also dead.

The sum of £3000 provided by Mrs Ross as aforesaid has been partly invested by her trustees in the purchase of heritable properties and in loans on heritable security, and the titles to these properties and securities have been completed in name of Mrs Ross's trustees.

In the events that have happened the petitioners, as the trustees acting under ‘the M'Clymont Trust,’ are entitled to a conveyance of Mrs Ross's said trust estate to be applied by them for the purposes of the M'Clymont Trust.

In these circumstances counsel for the petitioners maintained that section 24 of the Act of 1921 is applicable.

In my opinion authority to complete title in the summary method of the statutory provision founded on without reconstituting the lapsed trust is inappropriate in the circumstances.

The person who can take advantage of section 24 must either himself be entitled to the possession for his own absolute use of property which was vested in the trustees, or must have derived right from someone so entitled.

Now the petitioners are not in either of these positions. In the first place their right to the property is not absolute or unlimited. They are entitled to possession of it only as trustees for the purposes of the trust created by the will of the late Archibald MacClymont.

In that respect the case is in contrast with the case of Trotter, 1895, 3 S.L.T. 57.

Secondly, the alternative provision of section 24 is inapplicable, and indeed counsel for the petitioners did not found on it. I may explain, however, that in my opinion it represents an extension of the scope of the analogous section, viz., section 14, of the Trusts Act 1867, so as to include the assignee of a beneficiary under a lapsed trust—an

Page: 398

extension, no doubt, consequent on the decision in MacKnight ( 1875, 2 R. 667) to the effect that a petition under section 14 at the instance of an. assignee of the proper beneficiary under the trust was incompetent. In the present case, however, the petitioners do not, and as I think cannot, found on a derivative right of the kind referred to in section 24.

For the reason which I have given I must refuse the remedy sought by the petitioners.”

The petitioners reclaimed, and cited the cases of MacKnight, 2 R. 667, and Trotter, 1895, 3 S.L.T. 57.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—The short method of completing title by a beneficiary under a lapsed trust which was provided by the now repealed provisions of the Trusts Act of 1867 is re-enacted in an altered form in the recent Act of 1921. The right to resort to it is by the new statute conferred upon, inter alios, any person “entitled to the possession for his own absolute use of” any property which stands in the name of the lapsed trust awaiting conveyance in his favour. The petitioners say that they are in a position to which this description applies; and so they are, unless the fact that they are themselves a body of trustees takes them out of it. They are the ultimate beneficiaries under the trust settlement of the testatrix, and they are undoubtedly entitled to the possession of the property which it will be their duty to apply to the purposes of the charitable endowment which they represent. The difficulty is to get over the words “for his own absolute use” which the draftsman of the statute has adjected to the expression “entitled to the possession.” The M'Clymont trustees though beneficiaries in fee under the testator's settlement are not entitled to the possession of this property for their own absolute use, but for purposes defined by the settlor of the M'Clymont charity. It may be that these words are inserted only to mark the case provided for as being one in which the administrative purposes of the lapsed trust have been exhausted and nothing remains to be done but to denude in favour of the beneficiary ultimately entitled. I cannot myself see any reason in policy or in the sense of the thing why the benefits of the statute should be denied to such beneficiaries as the present petitioners. But whatever may have been the intention underlying the words “for his own absolute use,” I agree with the Lord Ordinary in thinking that they make it impossible to include the petitioners within the description of persons entitled to use the statutory method of completing title.

Lords Skerrington and Cullen concurred.

Lord Mackenzie did not hear the case.

The Court refused the reclaiming note.

Counsel:

Counsel for Petitioners— Brown, K.C.— Aitchison. Agents— Bonar, Hunter, & Johnstone, W.S.

1922


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1922/59SLR0397.html