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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> YVONNE QUINN AS TRUSTEE IN THE SEQUESTRATED ESTATE OF JOHN O'BOYLE AGAINST KAREN BRENNAN [2020] ScotCS CSIH_3 (23 October 2019)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2020/2020_CSIH_3.html
Cite as: [2020] CSIH 3, 2020 SC 217, [2020] ScotCS CSIH_3, 2020 SCLR 470, 2020 SLT 152, 2020 GWD 4-65

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FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
Lord President
Lord Brodie
Lord Drummond Young
[2020] CSIH 3
CA116/17
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LORD DRUMMOND YOUNG
in the cause
YVONNE QUINN as Trustee in the sequestrated estate of John OBoyle
Pursuer and Respondent
against
KAREN BRENNAN
Defender and Reclaimer
Pursuer and Respondent: Gardiner; TC Young LLP
Defender and Reclaimer: McDougall; Halliday Campbell WS
23 October 2019
[1]       The pursuer is the trustee currently acting on the sequestrated estate of John OBoyle
(the debtor). The debtor was sequestrated on 11 February 2015, on his own application,
and was subsequently discharged from sequestration on 1 May 2016.
[2]       In December 2017, the pursuer raised an action on the commercial roll seeking
declarator that certain payments made by the debtor to the defender were gratuitous
alienations in terms of section 34 of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985. Payments of
Β£190,960 (the first alienation) and Β£67,837.97 (the second alienation) were said to have
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been made by the debtor to the defender in August and September 2014, and it is to those
payments that the declarator relates. The pursuer also concluded for payment of those sums
by the defender. The first of those payments, of Β£190,960, was used to acquire a house at
16 Attlee Road, East Kilbride, title to which was taken in the defenders name. The defender
admits the payment of Β£190,960 made in August 2014 and the acquisition of the house, but
she avers by way of defence that the house was sold in January 2017, and that on 17 January
2017 she paid the sum of Β£197,462.20 to the debtor. She contends that the payment made by
her on 17 January 2017 constituted adequate consideration for the alienation, and that she
thus restored the relevant property to the debtors estate. The critical question is
accordingly whether the defender is correct in averring that she provided adequate
consideration for the alienation of Β£190,960 made in August 2014.
[3]       The action proceeded to a debate before the Lord Ordinary on 17 May 2018. At the
hearing, the pursuer accepted that the defenders averments relating to the second alienation
were suitable for inquiry, and accordingly the only challenge was to the defenders
pleadings in respect of the first alienation. The Lord Ordinary, in an interlocutor dated
12 September 2018 and corrected by a further interlocutor of 12 October 2018, held inter alia
that the defence in respect of the first alienation was irrelevant, and that declarator should
accordingly be granted that that payment was a gratuitous alienation. He further decerned
against the defender for payment to the pursuer of the sum of Β£190,960. The defender has
now reclaimed against that interlocutor of 12 September 2018 as corrected by the
interlocutor of 12 October.
The relevant statutory provisions
[5]       The date of sequestration precedes the coming into force of the Bankruptcy
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3
(Scotland) Act 2016. The issues in the present case are accordingly governed by the
Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985, as amended by inter alia the Bankruptcy and Diligence etc.
(Scotland) Act 2007) (the 1985 Act). The relevant provisions of the 1985 Act are as follows:
31.- Vesting of estate at date of sequestration.
(1) Subject to section 33 of this Act ... the whole estate of the debtor shall by
virtue of the trustees appointment, vest in the trustee as at the date of sequestration
for the benefit of the creditors.-¦
34.- Gratuitous alienations.
(1) Where this subsection applies, an alienation by a debtor shall be
challengeable by-
(a) any creditor who is a creditor by virtue of a debt incurred on or before
the date of sequestration, or before the granting of the trust deed or the
debtors death, as the case may be; or
(b) the trustee, the trustee acting under the trust deed or the judicial
factor, as the case may be
(2) Subsection (1) above applies where-
(a) by the alienation, whether before or after the coming into force of this
section, any of the debtors property has been transferred or any claim or
right of the debtor has been discharged or renounced; and
(b) any of the following has occurred
(i) his estate has been sequestrated ...; and
(c) the alienation took place on a relevant day.
(3) For the purposes of paragraph (c) of subsection (2) above, the day on which
an alienation took place shall be the day on which the alienation became completely
effectual; and in that paragraph relevant daymeans, if the alienation has the effect
of favouring-
(a) a person who is an associate of the debtor, a day not earlier than
5 years before the date of sequestration, the granting of the trust deed or the
debtors death, as the case may be; or
(b) any other person, a day not earlier than 2 years before the said date.
(4) On a challenge being brought under subsection (1) above, the court shall
grant decree of reduction or for such restoration of property to the debtors estate or
other redress as may be appropriate, but the court shall not grant such a decree if the
person seeking to uphold the alienation establishes-
(b) that the alienation was made for adequate consideration;
(6) For the purposes of the foregoing provisions of this section, an alienation in
implementation of a prior obligation shall be deemed to be one for which there was
no consideration or no adequate consideration to the extent that the prior obligation
was undertaken for no consideration for no adequate consideration.
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(8) A trustee ... shall have the same right as a creditor has under any rule of law
to challenge an alienation of a debtor made for no consideration or for no adequate
consideration.
The pleadings so far as relevant to the first alienation
[6]       As already noted, the pursuer avers that the debtors estate was sequestrated on
11 February 2015 on his own application. Until 22 August 2014 the debtor had been the
heritable proprietor of subjects in Cherrytree Wynd, East Kilbride. Those subjects were sold
on that date, realising free proceeds of Β£283,500. It is further averred, and admitted by the
defender, that on 28 August 2014 the debtor transferred Β£190,960 to a bank account created
to finance the acquisition of a house at 16 Attlee Road, East Kilbride. The defender was at
the material time the partner of the debtor. The sum transferred was to cover the purchase
price, registration dues and associated fees. Title to 16 Attlee Road was taken in the
defenders sole name on 4 September 2014.
[7]       The pursuer avers that the defender and the debtor resided together at 16 Attlee
Road until it was sold, that having occurred on 24 January 2017. The sale price is averred to
have been Β£200,000. Since the sale, the pursuer avers, the debtor and the defender have
resided together at a flat owned by the defender. This is denied by the defender.
[8]       The pursuer contends that the transfer of Β£190,960 by the debtor to the defender and
the defenders subsequently taking title to the property at Attlee Road in her own name
amounted to, in combination, a gratuitous alienation in terms of s 34 of the Bankruptcy
(Scotland) Act 1985, having been granted for no adequate consideration. The pursuer
maintains that the defender acted in bad faith by facilitating the putting of funds out of
reach of the debtors creditors.
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5
[9]       For her part, the defender denies that she knew or ought to have known about the
debtors sequestration or his financial affairs at the relevant times, or that she acted in bad
faith with a view to putting funds out of the reach of his creditors. Her position in the
pleadings is that she had very limited understanding of the debtors financial affairs and a
very poor understanding of financial affairs generally. She avers that she trusted the debtor
and, in so far as he discussed his financial affairs with her prior to his sequestration, he
assured her that he had sufficient funds to pay his creditors. The defender avers that she
accepted the transfer of 16 Attlee Road into her name and that there was a loose
understandingbetween her and the debtor that she would look after him if his health
deteriorated. It is not, however, averred that this was adequate consideration for the first
alienation.
[10]       The defender further avers that, when the debtors financial situation deteriorated,
he asked her to sell 16 Attlee Road, and she complied. Net sale proceeds of Β£197,462.20
(Β£200,000 less Β£2,537.80 in respect of legal fees and other expenses) were paid to her on
16 January 2017. On 19 January she gave the debtor a cheque for that amount. She avers
that the payment to the debtor of the net sale proceeds constituted adequate consideration
and that she restored the relevant property to the debtors estate, through payment of a
sum which represented the entire net proceeds of sale. That sum, it is said, constituted
adequate consideration. The fundamental issue in the reclaiming motion is whether that last
averment is correct as a matter of law
The Lord Ordinarys decision
[11]       The Lord Ordinary accepted that the combined effect of (i) the transfer by the debtor
of Β£190,960 to an account created to finance the acquisition of 16 Attlee Road, and (ii) the
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taking of title in the defenders name, was that there was an alienation by the debtor to the
defender which was challengeable under section 34(1). It involved part of the debtor-™s
property (s. 34(2)(a)), the debtors estate had been sequestrated (s. 34(2)(b)(i)) and the
alienation took place on a relevant dayin terms of sections 34(2)(c) and 34(3). The object
of the 1985 Act, and of section 34 in particular, was important (MacFadyens Trustee v
Macfadyen, 1994 SC 416 at 421H; Shorts Trustee v Chung, 1991 SLT 472 at 476K; and Joint
Administrators of Oceancrown Limited v Stonegate Limited 2015 SCLR 619, [2015] CSIH 12). To
suggest that, although the first alienation was gratuitous at the time it was made, it lost that
character when, more than two years later (and almost two years after the sequestration),
payment of an equivalent sum was made to the debtor for his own benefit, was a startling
propositionand would mean that the object of section 34 could be circumvented with
impunity.
[12]       In terms of section 34(4) what the court had to do where there had been an alienation
to which section 34(1) applied, and no defence had been established, was to grant redress
which so far as possible put the creditors in the position they would have been in had the
gratuitous alienation not occurred. The reference to other redress as may be appropriate
was designed to enable the court to make an appropriate order in a case where reduction or
restoration of the property is not a remedy which is available; it did not allow resort to
equitable considerations and accordingly did not provide a relevant ground for resisting
decree. On a proper construction of section 34(4) the words debtors estatemeant the
estate vested in the trustee to be administered for the benefit of creditors. That is the natural
reading of those words. It is a construction which sits comfortably with the other provisions
of the Act. It is the only reading which gives effect to the clear purpose of the provision.
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[13]       The alienation here became challengeable (by the trustee or by a creditor) by virtue
of section 34(1) as soon as the requirements of section 34(2) were satisfied. All relevant
section 34(2) requirements were met at the time the debtor was sequestrated. Those
requirements continued to be met when the trustee brought the section 34(1) challenge. But
for the alienation, the funds concerned would have vested in the trustee at the date of
sequestration. As a result of the alienation they did not so vest. The alienation was to the
clear prejudice of the debtors creditors. The character of an alienation generally fell to be
determined at the time it was made. Where after the date of alienation but before the date of
sequestration an alienation had been restored to the debtors estate or adequate
consideration for it had been granted, there might be scope for arguing that it is the position
as at the date of sequestration which is important. On each of those scenarios it might be
possible to show that in the result the purported alienation had not prejudiced creditors. It
was unnecessary, however, and probably undesirable, to reach a concluded view on those
questions because they did not arise in the present case.
[14]       Here, the character of the alienation was not changed by subsequent events. It did
not cease to be an alienation by reason of the defender-™s complying with the debtors request
to transfer funds to him. The transfer by the defender was not a repaymentof the
alienation. It did not in any way redress the gratuitous alienation or the resulting prejudice
to those creditors. In relation to the submission that even if the payment to the debtor did
not redress the alienation it was nevertheless adequate consideration for it, the defender had
to establish that the alienation was made for adequate consideration(s. 34(4)(b)(emphasis
added)). She had to show that at the time of the alienation something of more or less
equivalent value was obtained in exchange for it. It was not suggested that adequate
consideration was given between the date of the alienation and the date of sequestration,
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8
and it was therefore unnecessary to explore whether the provision of consideration at that
time could have provided a relevant defence although the decision in Blackburn v Alexander
[2015] CSOH 179 was noted.
[15]       The Lord Ordinary considered certain further authorities: MacFadyens Trustee v
Macfadyen, 1994 SC 416, at 421E 422A; Cays Trustee v Kay 1998 SC 780, at 785H - 786C;
Liquidator of Letham Grange Development Co Ltd v Foxworth Investments Ltd, 2013 SLT 445, and
on appeal, 2014 SC (UKSC) 203, at para 25; Joint Administrators of Oceancrown Limited v
Stonegale Limited, 2015 SCLR 619, [2015] CSIH 12, and on appeal, 2016 SC (UKSC) 91 at
para 17. On the authorities, it was equally plain and obviousfrom the defenders
averments that the first alienation had not been made for adequate consideration. The
alienation had been made for no consideration. Nothing had been granted by the defender
in exchange for the alienation; she had undertaken no obligation to repay the debtor. There
was no relevant nexus between the making of the alienation and the defenders subsequent
compliance with the debtors request that payment be made to him.
[16]       There was no restriction of the section 34(1) rights of trustees and creditors to
challenge gratuitous alienations requiring that the trustee ought to have challenged the
alienation before the debtors discharge. The discharge did not end the sequestration. The
sequestrated estate remained vested in the trustee, who continued to be obliged to
administer it for the benefit of creditors. His title to challenge alienations and preferences
subsisted (Henderson v Bulley (1849) 11 D 1470 at 1473; McBryde, Bankruptcy (2nd ed.),
paras 1-07 and 18-57; Mackenzie Skene, Bankruptcy, para 18-04). The Lord Ordinary
accordingly concluded that the defenders pleadings disclosed no relevant defence to the
pursuers challenge to the first alienation.
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9
The grounds of appeal
[17]       The defender has reclaimed against the Lord Ordinarys decision. She contends that
the Lord Ordinary was in error in holding that the defender has to show that at the time of
the alienation something of more or less equivalent value was obtained in exchange for it.
If that was so, consideration could never come after the time of the alienation. The critical
issue was accordingly whether a repayment made after an alienation could constitute
adequate consideration for the purposes of section 34(4)(b) of the 1985 Act. On that issue,
the defender contends that the words the alienation was made for adequate consideration
meant that there must be a nexus between the alienation and the consideration. The
subsection was nevertheless silent and non-prescriptive as to what the requirements for that
nexus are. The defender submits that subsequent repayment could constitute such a nexus.
[18]       In particular, the defender submits that the expression was made fordoes not
require any temporal nexus between the alienation and the consideration. Nothing
excluded the benefit of hindsight. Consequently a subsequent repayment of the amount of
the alienation can be taken into account. The case law on the meaning of consideration in the
context of section 34 and other provisions dealing with gratuitous alienations in insolvency
proceedings is largely concerned with the adequacy of the consideration provided, rather
than whether or not something could amount to consideration. In Joint Liquidators of
Grampian Maclennans Distribution Services Ltd v Carnbroe Estates Ltd, 2018 SC 314, a case
dealing with the adequacy of consideration, it was said that consideration in the context of
section 242 of the Insolvency Act 1986 (which corresponds to section 34 of the Bankruptcy
(Scotland) Act 1985) must mean something of material or patrimonial value which could be
vindicated in a legal process. The meaning of consideration in the context of section 34
was, however, addressed directly in MacFadyens Trustee v MacFadyen, 1994 SC 416. In that
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case the court held that considerationmust be given its ordinary meaning as something
which is given, or surrendered, in return for something else. The consideration could be
granted in respect of some past, present or future return, and what is material is whether
at the time of giving the consideration it is intended to be consideration for an alienation of
property.
[19]       Historically, repayment in full would constitute a defence. The focus of the
Bankruptcy Act 1621 had been on the adequacy of the value received. This was reflected in
section 34(4) namely that its purpose was to restore the debtor to the position that he or she
would have been in but for the alienation. That function was fulfilled at the point when the
defender repaid the debtor for the alienation. Assuming the defender-™s averment that she
acted in good faith to be true, whatever then took place between the debtor and the trustee
is a matter between them, and has no bearing on the adequacy of the consideration.
Furthermore, if consideration paid subsequently to an alienation could not constitute
adequate consideration, an unjust and anomalous result would follow, in that the defender
would have to repay the alienation twice, once to the debtor and once to the trustee.
The meaning of consideration
[20]       The defenders challenge to the Lord Ordinarys decision accordingly turns on the
meaning of the word considerationas used in the insolvency legislation generally, and in
particular as it is used in section 34(4) of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985; the same issue
might arise in relation to the successor of that section, section 98 of the Bankruptcy
(Scotland) Act 2016, and section 242(4) of the Insolvency Act 1986, dealing with corporate
insolvency. In the present context, the critical issue is not the adequacy of the amount paid,
but whether the payment of Β£197,462.20 by the defender to the debtor on 19 January 2017
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was consideration for the earlier transfer of funds by the debtor to the defender on
28 August 2014. Was the payment made in 2017 consideration, in the statutory sense, for
the alienation made in 2014?
[21]       In our opinion the payment made by the defender was not consideration in this
sense for the earlier payment made to her by the debtor. We reach this conclusion for two
distinct reasons. First, we are of opinion that if a payment is to amount to consideration
for an alienation for the purposes of section 34 and its successor, it must properly be
regarded as the counterpart of the alienation. That element is absent in the present case,
where the payment by the defender was made more than two years after the alienation that
has now been challenged, without any prior obligation to make such a payment.
[22]       Secondly, we are of opinion that the payment of funds to a discharged bankrupt is
not capable, as a matter of law, of amounting to consideration for an alienation made by the
bankrupt prior to his sequestration. The result of sequestration is to transfer the debtors
existing property to the trustee in sequestration, to be applied in the manner specified in the
Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985 or its successor, the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 2016. That
property, which is subject to a form of statutory trust, forms a separate estate, or patrimony,
from any property that the debtor may acquire after his discharge from the sequestration.
Thus a payment made to the debtor after his discharge is not a payment into the estate or
patrimony that was prejudiced by the gratuitous alienation that is under challenge.
[23]       We will consider these reasons separately.
Whether the payments made by the defender to the debtor on 19 January 2017 amounted
to consideration for the transfer of funds by the debtor to the defender on 28 August 2014
[24]       If a payment is to amount to considerationfor an alienation, it must in our opinion
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be the counterpart of that alienation. This means that there must be a fundamental element
of exchange or reciprocity between the payment and the alienation; the payment must be
regarded on objective grounds as a quid pro quo for the alienation. That is the fundamental
meaning of the word consideration. Such an interpretation is supported by the decision of
the court in MacFadyens Trustee v MacFadyen, 1994 SC 416, where Lord McCluskey,
delivering the opinion of the court, stated (at 421E-I):
The word considerationis not defined in the Act and we consider that it must be
given its ordinary meaning as something which is given, or surrendered, in return
for something else. If something is given without any return being demanded or
expected or obtained and at the time of giving is not intended to be regarded as a
consideration of some past, present or future return-¦ that which is given cannot
later be converted into a consideration just because at the later date the giver and
receiver chose so to describe it. A consideration appears to us to acquire its character
as a consideration not later than the time when the giving or surrendering takes
place. In the context of bankruptcy law, the bankrupt debtor must be regarded as a
trustee for the creditors in respect of such of his assets as are under his control. In
that context, it is our view that a consideration must mean something of material or
patrimonial value which could be vindicated in a legal process, whether by being
claimed or possibly by being pled in answer to anothers claim. A principal purpose
of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985 is to regulate intromissions by a debtor with
his material assets in order to safeguard the interests of his creditors: cf the headnote
to secs. 34 and 35. These interests are patrimonial and able to be vindicated by legal
process.
[25]       For present purposes three important points emerge from this passage. First, for the
purposes of the legislation governing gratuitous alienations, consideration must be given its
ordinary meaning. As we have indicated, this inevitably involves an element of exchange or
reciprocity between the alienation and the consideration; the consideration must be the
counterpart of or a quid pro quo for the alienation. Secondly, whether the necessary element
of reciprocity exists must be determined on strictly objective grounds; such an approach
runs through the whole of the foregoing statement of the law. In any event, in legal
provisions that govern the distribution of estate on insolvency, an objective approach will
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13
almost invariably be called for unless good faith or a comparable subjective criterion is
referred to expressly in the legislation.
[26]       Thirdly, the existence or otherwise of the necessary element of reciprocity must be
determined at the time when the exchange is agreed. That in our opinion is the clear
implication of the quoted passage, read as a whole. It is implicit in the proposition that
something given cannot later be converted into consideration merely because the giver and
receiver choose so to describe it. Furthermore, the emphasis in the passage on the notion of
returnis a clear indication that the character of a payment or transfer as consideration
must be apparent when the exchange, or quid pro quo, is agreed. Indeed, that proposition is
necessarily implicit in the notion of return or exchange; if a return is to be given or an
exchange is to take place there must be two parties to the transaction, each of whom gives
something to the other. It is when those parties agree on the exchange, or the giving of a
return, that it becomes possible to speak of considerationin any sense. If there is no
agreement to exchange one thing for another, there cannot be consideration.
[27]       Counsel for the defender argued that in the quoted passage the word somethingin
the second sentence referred to the consideration, not the alienation, and that the words at
the time of givingin the same sentence likewise referred to the time when consideration
was given, rather than the time when the alienation was made. On that basis counsel
submitted that the critical time was when the claimed consideration was provided to the
debtor, and that it was sufficient that at that time the thing so provided was intended to be
consideration of some past, present or future return; the quoted words are used in the
passage and, it was submitted, indicated that it was immaterial that the thing for which the
consideration was given had been transferred to the person providing consideration at some
time in the past. In our opinion this interpretation of the passage cannot be correct. It is true
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14
that the wording tends to focus on the time when consideration was given. Nevertheless, as
indicated in the last paragraph, the existence of consideration requires that there should be
an exchange -“ -œsomething given-¦ in return for something else-. That requires the
agreement of both parties to the transaction. If they do not agree on the necessary element
of exchange or reciprocity at that time, there is no consideration. For that reason, a
subsequent payment cannot be converted into consideration; the most elementary feature of
that concept is absent.
[28]       In the passage quoted from MacFadyens Trustee, reference is made to a consideration
for some past, present or future return. That reference is entirely consistent with the
fundamental requirement of exchange or reciprocity for the existence of consideration. It is
important to bear in mind that contracts frequently provide for supplies or work or
payments to take place in future, or by instalments. Consequently a distinction must be
drawn between the time when consideration is agreed and the time when it is paid or
supplied. If, for example, a contract is concluded for the supply of goods by instalments
over a period of two years and for the payment of consideration for each instalment within
28 days after supply of that instalment, the consideration from both parties falls to be
provided in future. Nevertheless, the consideration provided by each party is the product of
the same agreement. It is the existence of that agreement that gives the performance by each
party its character as consideration, by providing the necessary element of reciprocity. A
past return, as referred to in the passage quoted from MacFadyens Trustee, is more unusual,
but this can occur where supplies take place, or payments are made towards the eventual
price, during a period of contractual negotiation. In such a case the effect of the parties
agreement is to treat what has been done during the intervening period as consideration
that forms part of the agreement. The critical point is that agreement is needed to create
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15
consideration, and the existence or otherwise of consideration must be determined at the
time of that agreement.
[29]       In the present case it is averred that the debtor transferred the sum of Β£190,960 to an
account created to finance the acquisition of the property at 16 Attlee Road, and that title to
that property was taken in the defenders sole name on 4 September 2014. The Lord
Ordinary held, and it is not now challenged, that the combined effect of the transfer of funds
and the taking of title in the defenders name was that there was an alienation by the debtor
to the defender which was challengeable in terms of section 34(1). The payment by the
defender to the debtor is averred to have been made on 17 January 2017, more than two
years after the alienation that is now challenged. It is not averred that there was any prior
obligation on the defender to make such a payment. In particular, there is no averment that
the transfer of funds by the debtor to finance the acquisition of the property was made on
the basis that any future sum, whether a specific amount or the proceeds of sale of the
property, would subsequently be transferred to the debtor.
[30]       In these circumstances it is impossible to hold that the payment made by the
defender to the debtor on 17 January 2017 was considerationfor the earlier transfer of
funds and acquisition of the property in the defenders name. The critical element of
reciprocity or exchange of the defenders payment being a quid pro quo for the transfer of
the property is entirely lacking. The transfer of the property to the defender in September
2014 was not made for any reciprocal obligation on the part of the defender. Without that,
however, it cannot be said that the transfer was made for any consideration. As we have
already emphasized, it is the time of the agreement to transfer that is critical for this
purpose, because it is then that the necessary element of exchange must occur. Furthermore,
as the Lord Ordinary indicates in his opinion, the argument for the defender involves the
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16
startling propositionthat, although the first alienation was gratuitous at the time when it
was made, it lost that character when more than two years later and after the debtors
sequestration payment of an equivalent sum was made to the debtor. If that were so, as the
Lord Ordinary indicates, the object of section 34 of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985 could
be circumvented with impunity. Funds would be diverted from the trustee in sequestration
and returned to the debtor after his discharge, in such a way that they made no contribution
to payment of his debts.
Whether the payment of funds to a discharged bankrupt is capable of amounting to
consideration for a transfer of assets prior to formal insolvency proceedings
[31]       Our second reason for rejecting the arguments for the defender is perhaps of an even
more fundamental nature than the first reason. In our opinion the payment of funds to a
discharged bankrupt is not capable, as a matter of law, of amounting to consideration for an
alienation made by the bankrupt prior to his sequestration. This conclusion follows from
the effect of sequestration on the insolvents estate. On sequestration (or any other formal
insolvency proceedings) the estate is vested in the trustee in sequestration, in the present
case by virtue of section 31 of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985, and thereafter that estate
is held by the trustee for the purposes summarized in sections 38-43 and 51-53 of the Act.
(This is obviously subject to the rights, obligations, powers and liabilities found in other
sections of the statute and the general law). The proper legal analysis of these provisions is
in our opinion that the trustee in sequestration holds the debtors property on a form of
statutory trust. In summary, the trustee is responsible for ingathering the whole of the
debtors estate and holds the free estate for payment of outlays, remuneration and certain
expenses, and thereafter for payment to the preferred, ordinary and postponed creditors.
Page 17 ⇓
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[32]       Estate of that nature, held on trust for statutory purposes, forms a distinct patrimony
from the debtors own property. The concept of dual patrimonies was developed by
Professors GL Gretton and, subsequently, KGC Reid in an important series of academic
articles; for present purposes it is perhaps sufficient to note GL Gretton, Trusts without
equity, (2000) 49 ICLQ 599, and KGC Reid, Patrimony not equity: the trust in Scotland,
(2000) 8 European Review of Private Law 427; the effect of the articles is set out in the
Scottish Law Commissions Report on Trust Law (Scot Law Com No 239) (2014) at
paragraph 3.4. The dual patrimony theory was put forward to explain the fact that the trust
estate is not liable for the trustees own private debts, but is a distinct patrimony, with its
own assets, rights and liabilities. This explains the fundamental principle, laid down in
particular in Heritable Reversionary Company Co Ltd v Millar, 1892, 19 R (HL) 43, that if a
trustee is sequestrated or made subject to corporate insolvency procedures, the trust
property is not affected, but remains held for the purposes of the trust.
[33]       The notion of a distinct trust patrimony has a further important application,
however, in that the trust estate forms a separate patrimony from the estate of the truster.
This has two important consequences. First, the trust estate must be applied for the trust
purposes and cannot be used, in the absence of express authority in the trust purposes, to
satisfy the debts of the truster as an individual, that is to say, debts incurred independently
of the trust patrimony. Secondly, a payment made to the truster will not be a payment to
the trust, as it involves a payment to a distinct patrimony. Those propositions are an
inevitable consequence of the existence of a distinct trust patrimony, which is quite separate
from the property of either the truster or the trustees as individuals.
[34]       In the circumstances of the present case, the two patrimonies that are relevant are,
first, the estate of the debtor as it exists at the date of sequestration and, secondly, the estate
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acquired by the debtor following his discharge from the sequestration. The first of these
patrimonies, the estate at sequestration, is transferred to the trustee for the statutory
purposes summarized in paragraph of [31] above. Following sequestration, that estate must
be applied by the trustee for those purposes, and in that way it forms a distinct patrimony.
Following the discharge of the debtor from the sequestration, however, he is able to acquire
further property, and in so far as he does so that property forms a distinct patrimony from
the property that he held prior to sequestration which was transferred to the trustee. That
result follows from section 55 of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985, which provides that on
discharge and subject to certain exceptions the debtor is to be discharged of all debts and
obligations contracted by him or for which he was liable at the date of sequestration. That
necessarily implies that the debtors estate after discharge is a distinct patrimony from his
estate prior to sequestration; it cannot be used to meet debts incurred prior to sequestration,
and conversely the estate held by the trustee (the pre-sequestration estate) cannot be used to
meet debts incurred by the debtor after his discharge.
[35]       The estate held by the trustee in sequestration includes the right to challenge
gratuitous alienations and other preferences, together with any property obtained by the
trustee as a result of such challenge. That right, and any property that results from a
successful challenge, accrues to the trust patrimony. By contrast, a payment to the debtor
after the date of his discharge is made to the debtors own patrimony, and does not accrue to
the trust patrimony.
[36]       Thus the alienation was made from the debtors original patrimony, which passed to
the trustee, and the trustees right to reverse that alienation also forms part of that original
patrimony. The payment made by the defender, by contrast, was made to the new
patrimony that results from the debtors discharge. It did not accrue in any way to the
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original patrimony which passed to the trustee. Consequently the payment by the defender
in January 2017 cannot be consideration for the original alienation made by the debtor in
August and September 2014 because, although in a sense the same individuals are involved,
the 2014 alienation was made from the debtors original patrimony whereas the 2017
payment was made to his new patrimony following his discharge. A straightforward
analogy can be drawn with an ordinary trust: if a third party purchases a trust asset from
trustees, the consideration that he pays for it must be paid to the trust to the trustees as
such. If, instead of paying the trust, the purchaser pays an individual trustee as an
individual, that will not amount to consideration for the acquisition of the asset from the
trust. If a payment is to be consideration, it must respect the double patrimonies. If it does
not, it cannot amount to a valid payment of consideration. That is an elementary principle
of trust law, and in our opinion it is fatal to the defenders argument in the present case.
The statutory purpose of section 34 of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985 and other
legislation dealing with gratuitous alienations
[37]       The defender submitted that regard should be had to the fundamental purpose of the
legislation governing gratuitous alienations. This was reflected in subsection (4) of
section 34, which requires the court to grant reduction or other restoration of property. This
reflected an underlying policy that insolvent debtors should manage their estates in such a
way as to protect the interests of creditors: Joint Liquidators of Maclennans Distribution
Services Ltd v Carnbroe Estates Ltd, supra, at paragraphs [12]-[15]. It was submitted that that
underlying purpose was fulfilled when the defender repaid the debtor for the alienation in
full, as the debtor was then put in the same position as he would have been in but for the
alienation.
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20
[38]       In our opinion this argument is erroneous. The fundamental point, made in the
preceding part of this opinion, is that the repayment was made to the estate of the debtor
following his discharge, at a point where the repayment did not benefit the creditors of his
estate as at the date of formal insolvency. This is the result of the existence of two
patrimonies, the estate of the debtor prior to insolvency, which on insolvency must be held
for the trust purposes referred to in paragraph [31] above, and the estate held by the debtor
following his discharge. Because of the existence of the two patrimonies, it is inaccurate to
state that the debtor was put in the same position as he would have been in but for the
alienation; the insolvency intervened, separating the alienation and the prepayment.
The position of the defender in the event that decree is granted
[39]       For the defender it was submitted that if a payment made subsequent to an
alienation could not as a matter of law constitute adequate consideration for the purposes of
section 34, an unjust and anomalous result would follow, in that she would require to repay
the alienation twice, first on 17 January 2017 and secondly following decree. In our opinion
this is not a valid defence to the trustees claim to redress for the gratuitous alienation.
While it is correct that the defender has made a payment to the debtor of Β£197,462.20 on
17 January 2017, and will require to make a further payment to the trustee, she will not be
left without redress. It seems likely that the payment to the debtor was made as a result of
an error as to the legal consequences of what she was doing. Furthermore, on the reasoning
in paragraphs [24]-[30] above, the payment that she made was made without consideration.
On either of these analyses, it is likely that she will be able to claim repayment of the sum
paid to the debtor, relying on a restitutionary remedy: either the condictio indebiti to remedy
a payment made under a material error, or the condictio causa data causa non secuta in the
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event of a failure of consideration. In either event, the debtor has been enriched as a result
either of an error made by the defender or the failure to provide any return for the
defenders payment.
[40]       For present purposes, however, it is inappropriate to express a definitive opinion on
the availability of these remedies. We merely note that it cannot be said that the defender is
left without a remedy in respect of the payment that she made in January 2017.
Conclusion
[41]       For the foregoing reasons we are in agreement with the Lord Ordinary that there is
no relevant defence to the pursuers challenge to the first alienation made by the debtor. We
will accordingly refuse the reclaiming motion and affirm the Lord Ordinarys interlocutor of
12 September 2018. It is still necessary for the court to consider the challenge made to the
second alienation, made on September 2014. For that reason we will remit the action to the
Commercial Court in order to deal with that aspect of the case.



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