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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Chichester Diocesan Board of Finance v Simpson [1944] UKHL 2 (21 June 1944)
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Cite as: [1944] 2 All ER 60, [1944] AC 341, [1944] UKHL 2

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JISCBAILII_CASE_TRUSTS

    Die Mercurii, 21° Junii, 1944

    Parliamentary Archives,
    HL/PO/JU/4/3/976

    Lord
    Chancellor

    Lord

    Macmillan

    Lord
    Wright

    Lord
    Porter

    Lord
    Simonds

    CHICHESTER DIOCESAN FUND AND BOARD OF
    FINANCE (INCORPORATED)

    v.
    SIMPSON AND OTHERS

    The Lord Chancellor

    MY LORDS,

    The Will with which we are concerned in this appeal is one
    in which a public-spirited testator has directed his executors to
    apply the very substantial residue of his property " for such charit-
    " able institution or institutions or other charitable or benevolent
    " object or objects in England " as they should select. The Court
    of Appeal (Lord Greene M.R., Clauson and Goddard L.JJ.), over-
    ruling Farwell J. has decided that this is not a valid testamentary
    disposition.

    Alter studying the powerful judgment of the Master of the Rolls
    and weighing the arguments which have been presented to the
    House, I cannot doubt that a gift expressed in the terms which I
    have quoted, in the absence of context to vary its prima facie
    meaning,, is void for uncertainty.

    The fundamental principle is that the testator must by the terms
    of his will himself dispose of the property with which the will
    proposes to deal. With one single exception, he cannot by his will
    direct executors or trustees to do the business for him. That ex-
    ception arises when the testator is minded to make gifts for charit-
    able purposes, and where he directs his executors or trustees, within
    such limitations as he chooses to lay down, to make the selection
    of charities to be benefited. This exception from the general
    principle that the testator has to decide in his will the specific
    destination of his property is allowed because of the special favour
    which the English law shows to charities, and the conception of
    what is charitable for such purposes has been elaborately worked
    out so that the courts are able to determine whether a particular
    gift is charitable or not. But when, as here, the expression is
    " charitable or benevolent", it is impossible to attribute to the
    word " benevolent" an equal precision, or to regard the courts as
    able to decide with accuracy the ambit of that expression. It is
    not disputed that the two words " charitable " and " benevolent"
    do not ordinarily mean the same thing; they overlap in the sense
    that each of them, as a matter of legal interpretation, covers some
    common ground, but also something which is not covered by the
    ather. It appears to me that it inevitably follows that the phrase
    ' charitable or benevolent" occurring in a will must, in its ordinary
    :ontext, be regarded as too vague to give the certainty necessary
    before such a provision can be supported or enforced.

    Then, is there any special context in this will which would
    justify a different interpretation ? I have listened with much sym-
    pathy to the efforts to find one, but it does not seem to me, notwith-
    standing the late Mr. Justice Farwell's opinion, that there is any
    context which might give to the impeached phrase a special mean-
    ng. The conjunction " or " may be sometimes used to join two
    vords whose meaning is the same, but, as the conjunction appears
    n this will, it seems to me to indicate a variation rather than an
    dentity between the coupled conceptions. Its use is analogous in
    he present instance to its use in a phrase like " the House of Lords
    ' or the House of Commons ", rather than to its use in a phrase like
    ' the House of Lords or the Upper Chamber ".

    I regret that we have to arrive at such a conclusion, but we
    lave no right to set at nought an established principle such as
    his in the construction of wills, and I therefore move the House
    to dismiss the appeal.

    Lord

    Chancellor

    Lord
    Macmillan

    Lord
    Wright

    Lord
    Porter

    Lord

    Simonds

    [2]

    CHICHESTER DIOCESAN FUND AND BOARD OF
    FINANCE (INCORPORATED)

    v.
    SIMPSON AND OTHERS

    Lord Macmillan

    MY LORDS,

    The law, in according the right to dispose of property mortis
    causa
    by will, is exacting in its requirement that the testator must
    define with precision the persons or objects he intends to benefit.
    This is the condition on which he is entitled to exclude the order
    of succession which the law otherwise provides. The choice of
    beneficiaries must be the testator's own choice; he cannot leave
    the disposal of his estate to others. The only latitude permitted
    is that if he designates with sufficient precision a class of persons
    or objects to be benefited he may delegate to his trustees the selec-
    tion of individual persons or objects within the denned class. The
    class must not be described in terms so vague and indeterminate
    that the trustees are afforded no effective guidance as to the ambit
    of their power of selection. (See Houston v. Burns [1918], A.C. 337,
    per Viscount Haldane, at pp. 342-3.)

    Unfortunately for the efficacy of their testamentary dispositions,
    testators or their advisers, as the many reported cases show,
    frequently fail to observe this rule and by the language which
    they employ leave their trustees at large in the selection of the
    persons or objects to be benefited, with the result that the bequest
    is held void for uncertainty. Thus a bequest to such public pur-
    poses as the testator's trustees may select is not " within the
    " description of a particular class of individuals or objects " (per
    Lord Davey in Blair v. Duncan [1902], A.C. 37, at p. 44). Nor
    is a bequest in favour of benevolent purposes to be selected by the
    testator's trustees sufficiently specific. (See, e.g. Attorney-General
    for New Zealand
    v. Brown [1917], A.C. 393, and Attorney-General
    of New Zealand
    v. New Zealand Insurance Co., Ltd., 1936, 3 All
    Eng. Rep. 888.)

    One class of objects, however, notwithstanding its generality
    and comprehensiveness, namely charitable purposes, has always
    been accepted as sufficiently definite to satisfy the rule, because
    of the favour which the law extends to charity. Most of the cases
    which have arisen have been due to a tendency on the part of
    testators to associate with the word " charitable " other words of
    vague import. The present is one of these. Here the bequest is
    in favour of " such charitable institution or institutions or other
    " charitable or benevolent object or objects in England as my acting
    " executors or executor may in their or his absolute discretion
    " select".

    As the law of England stands it is impossible to sustain this
    bequest as valid. The testator has empowered his executors to
    distribute the residue of his estate inter alia among either charitable
    objects or benevolent objects and has thereby empowered them to
    devote the whole bequest, if they please, to benevolent objects, a
    class of objects which has over and over again been held by the
    Courts to be too uncertain. Alike on authority and on principle
    the bequest is accordingly void.

    In construing a will it is proper to read the instrument as a
    whole. By doing so it may sometimes be found that a testator has
    used a word or a phrase in a sense of his own, different from its

    [3] 2

    ordinary connotation. If a testator were to make a bequest in
    favour of benevolent objects, adding " by which I mean charitable
    " objects", the bequest might well be held to be valid. In the
    present instance, however, I cannot find any context either in the
    words of the bequest itself or elsewhere in the will which would
    justify imparting to the testator's use of the word " benevolent"
    any other than its ordinary wide signification. If the testator had
    written "charitable and benevolent" instead of "charitable or
    " benevolent" the bequest Would, on the authorities, have been
    sustained, for it would then have been read as in favour of such
    benevolent objects as are charitable or such charitable objects as
    are benevolent, charity in either way predominating. But again
    I rind no warrant for reading conjunctively two words which the
    testator has expressly disjoined.

    I confess it is somewhat disconcerting to find that the Court of
    Session in Scotland has in a number of instances taken a different
    view in construing words very similar to those now under con-
    sideration by this House. Thus it has been held competent for a
    testator in Scotland to empower his trustees to make a selection
    among " societies or institutions of a benevolent or charitable
    "nature" (Hay's Trustees v. Baillie, 1908, S.C. 1224); or among
    " charities or benevolent or beneficent institutions" (Paterson’s
    Trustees
    v. Paterson, 1909, S.C. 485); or among "charitable or
    " philanthropic institutions " (Mackinnon's Trustees v. Mackinnon,
    1909, S.C. 1041). The topic is very fully discussed in Reid's Trustees
    v. Cattanach's Trustees, 1929, S.C. 727, where the introduction of
    " public institutions " as an alternative was held fatal to the bequest.
    Yet in Scots law the principle that a testator must himself designate
    his beneficiaries and cannot delegate to others the selection of
    beneficiaries from an indefinite class is equally well established;
    and so too is the recognition of charitable objects as a sufficiently
    definite class.

    It would be out of place to discuss here the validity of the pro-
    cesses of reasoning by which the Courts in Scotland reached the
    decisions which I have just cited. I may remark that they seem
    to have turned mainly on an interpretation of the monosyllable
    " or ", interposed between the word " charitable " and the other
    words in question, not as separating distinct and contrasted classes
    of objects but rather as an exegetical link between convertible and
    equivalent synonyms. The fact that in Scotland the term " charit-
    " able " has in law a less rigidly technical and artificial meaning
    than in England may also have had something to do with it. But
    I must not allow myself to be enticed into a further exploration
    of what for the present purpose is a foreign field, however attrac-
    tive. This is an English case, and in my opinion the decision of
    the Court of Appeal is in conformity with the law of England and
    should be affirmed.

    3

    CHICHESTER DIOCESAN FUND AND BOARD OF
    FINANCE INCORPORATED

    [4]

    Lord
    Chancellor

    Lord

    Macmillan

    Lord

    Wright

    Lord
    Porter

    Lord
    Simonds

    V.

    SIMPSON AND OTHERS

    Lord Wright

    MY LORDS,

    The testator in this case after various bequests, left the residue of
    his estate to his executors to apply to " such charitable institution
    " or institutions or other charitable or benevolent object or objects
    " in England " as in their absolute discretion they should select.
    He died in 1936. The will having in due course been
    proved the executors distributed the residue, amounting to over a
    quarter of a million sterling, among some 140 institutions or objects
    which could properly be described as both charitable and
    benevolent. But some time afterwards certain next of kin claimed
    that the bequest of the residue was invalid and that the next of kin
    were entitled to have it. The question, of course, has to be
    determined on the language of the will. There was no suggestion
    that the testator did not mean to leave the residue to charities. The
    objection was that the bequest was invalid because the words " or
    " benevolent" introduced a different category from " charitable "
    which preceded them. It was not questioned that if the words had
    been " charitable and benevolent" the bequest would have been
    perfectly good. That would mean objects which were both charit-
    able and benevolent. The word " or ", it was said, severed " charit-
    " able " from " benevolent", so that two different classes were
    meant, and the executors were thus faced with a choice between
    two different categories, and could have distributed the residue
    among objects which were benevolent but not charitable, and
    that it was beyond the powers of the Court when engaged in ad-
    ministering trusts to apportion the distribution between what was
    charitable and what was benevolent. The bequest, it was said,
    was void for uncertainty. By using " or " instead of " and " the
    testator had fallen into what was called a trap. The whole bequest
    was thus void.

    No one would deny that charitable bequests, which may
    be made by general words for objects to be selected by the
    Executors and which are free from certain restrictions such as the
    rule against perpetuities, and have certain immunities under the
    Income Tax Acts, should be scrutinised before their right to be
    classed as charitable is admitted, but it is a different matter to make
    the test depend on anything but matters of substance. Courts of
    Equity have been criticised for their construction of particular
    words of bequest or their limitation of what bequests are permissible
    as charitable. In Bourne v. Keane, 1919 A.C. 815 the House of
    Lords overruled a series of authorities extending from 1835 and
    upheld the validity of a bequest of personal estate for masses for
    the dead. There was no decision binding the House so as to prevent
    them holding as they did. In the present case the question here
    relates to the construction of the words of the particular will. These
    have to be construed as they occur in their context. The decision
    depends in my opinion on the meaning of the few relevant words.
    The question is whether the words "or other charitable or
    " benevolent object or objects " mean in their setting two separate
    classes, the one class charitable and the other benevolent, regarded
    as distinct or separate, or whether they mean one class only, that
    is, of objects which may be indifferently described as charitable
    or benevolent. There is no difficulty in the latter construction.

    [5] 2

    There is no authority binding this House to exclude it in this
    particular case: the two words run so closely into each other in
    meaning and overlap so largely that it is a natural view: in
    addition the preceding sentence seems to me to confirm this con-
    struction simply as a matter of words. The difficulty arises from
    the want of definition which has always characterised this branch
    of law. If, in the case of a general bequest to charity, so much
    depends on the mere word which is to govern the executor's power
    of selection, the least that could be expected would be a precise
    definition of the meaning and scope of the dominant word, which
    is charity. The difficulty in a case like the present is not quite the
    same as the difficulty which has constantly faced the Court in
    deciding whether a specific purpose named in a bequest is or is
    not charitable. That indeed has led to a host of decisions, often
    difficult to reconcile or explain. Lord Sterndale M.R., dealt with
    both aspects of the difficulty in in re Tetley, 1923, 1 Ch. 258. The
    question there was the meaning of the word patriotic. He lamented
    the absence of " any . principle which will guide one easily and
    " safely through the tangle of cases as to what is and what is not a
    " charitable gift.... The whole subject is in an artificial atmosphere
    " altogether ". Dr. Allen, the learned author of Law in the Making
    (3rd Ed., p. 343) has dwelt upon the same difficulty. I confess I am
    convinced that the time has come when modern minds imbued with
    modern ideas should attempt to achieve a clear, workable and
    comprehensive definition of what is meant by charitable and its
    cognate terms, such as benevolent, philanthropic and the like.
    That is a task for the legislature.

    These reflections, however, will not help in deciding what is the
    true construction of this will. But I find to my regret, that I cannot
    approach this question or examine authorities which seem to me
    to throw any light on its decision until I have attempted to under-
    stand from the Reports what " charitable " and other kindred words
    have been taken to mean. I do not think that I have found
    any accepted or satisfactory definitions. I may start with the Statute
    of 43 Eliz. (1601). That Statute, or more correctly its preamble,
    together with analogies drawn from it, is still even now, it seems,
    taken as authoritative. The preamble will be found conveniently
    set out in section 13 (2) of the Mortmain and Charitable Uses Act,
    1888, which after reciting that in " divers enactments and docu-
    " ments reference is made to charities within the meaning purview
    " and interpretation of the said Act", enacted that references to
    such charities should be construed as references to charities within
    the meaning purview and interpretation of the said preamble. In
    other respects the Act of 1888 repealed the Act of Elizabeth. That
    Act had provided a special proceeding under the Chancellor for
    the reform of deceits and breaches of trust, touching land given
    to charitable uses. It had long become obsolete, when it was re-
    pealed in 1888, subject to the limited saving of the Preamble quoted
    above. That, however, did not contain any definition of the charities
    it referred to: what it contained was a list of charities so varied
    and comprehensive that it became the practice of the Court of
    Chancery to refer to it as a sort of index or chart. This was observed
    by Lord Macnaghten in Pemsel's case, 1891, A.C. 531, at p. 581.
    Charities had even before 1601 been subject to the equitable juris-
    diction of the Court of Chancery. But the Act of 1601 did not give
    a definition of charities, but merely a collection of instances of a
    somewhat miscellaneous character. The collection included, in addi-
    tion to objects which would ordinarily be considered to be elee-
    mosynary objects, other objects, such as school of learning, repair
    of bridges, ports, havens and churches and other objects of general
    utility. It is difficult to find definitions of charity, though as Lord
    Macnaghten explained (loc. cit.), it has a legal technical sense in
    English Law. But in 1767 Lord Camden L.C., in Jones v. Williams,

    36364 A 3

    3 [6]

    Amb. 651, defined it as a gift to a general public use which extends
    to the poor as well as the rich. In Goodman v. Mayor Saltash
    7 AC
    633, at p. 642, Lord Selborne L.C. said that " a gift subject
    " to a condition or trust for the benefit of the inhabitants of a parish
    " or town or of any particular class of such inhabitants is (as I
    " understand the law) a charitable trust"; and he cited Wright v.
    Hobart, Q Mod. 64, in which Lord Macclesfield established as a
    charitable trust an ancient grant of land for the pasture during three
    months of the year of the cows of as many of the inhabitants of a
    certain village as were able to buy three cows. These inhabitants
    might perhaps have been counted on the fingers of one hand. Not
    only by the original list in the Act of Elizabeth, but by the mass
    of decisions which have been given by the free use of analogies
    extending the original items between that date and the present, it is
    made clear that "charitable trust " in England is a very comprehen-
    sive term, including " purposes beneficial to the community", which
    Lord Macnaghten stated as the fourth and most general of the
    four principal divisions in his definition of charity in its legal sense.
    This division was to coyer purposes not falling under any of his
    other three divisions, which are trusts for the relief of poverty, trusts
    for the advancement of education, trusts for the advancement of
    religion. That was in Pemsel's case, 1891, A.C. 531, at p. 583. The
    question in the case was whether the word " charity," us used in the
    Income Tax Acts, bore the same meaning in its application to Scot-
    land as it did when applied in England and Ireland. The House of
    Lords held that it did, even though the technical meaning of the
    word, that is its comprehensive meaning, which includes educa-
    tion or religious or other general charities, as well as charities for
    the relief of the poor, did not completely prevail in Scotland, but
    Lord Macnaghten concluded that he could not discover any great
    dissimilarity between the law of Scotland and the law of England
    with respect to charities. His definition has been subjected to certain
    criticisms, particularly the fourth division, but shows the extra-
    ordinarily wide and indeterminate range covered by the word
    " charity " in England whenever it is to be construed in its technical
    legal sense. Lindley L. J. after referring to the very wide and in-
    definite sense in which the word " charitable " is used in Courts of
    Equity, adds " Probably not one man in a thousand understands
    " what that sense is, and the sense itself is a very indefinite one "
    (in re Macduff, 1896, 2 Ch. 451, at p. 464). This breadth is con-
    firmed by the decisions upon charities. I shall be content to refer
    merely to two lists of instances; the first is that contained in Tothill's
    Cases in the High Court of Chancery, List 27, which contains deci-
    sions on Charitable Uses between 1598 and 1639; the second is the
    very full collection of decisions up to 1932 as to what are or are not
    charities in Hailsham's Laws of England, Vol. IV, pp. 107 to 138. The
    wide range and variety are bewildering, and show how generously
    the Court has availed itself of the licence to extend the Act of Eliza-
    beth by analogy. But, all the same, it is impossible not to feel some-
    times how difficult particular decisions are to reconcile with others,
    or to understand why one charity is taken and another left, or not
    to feel that over-subtle or fine distinctions have been drawn. The
    absence of a modern and scientific definition cannot fail to intro-
    duce uncertainty, as the great mass of contested litigation shows.
    But what I am concerned with at the moment is that though "char-
    ity " is a very wide and comprehensive term, as shown in its partic-
    ular applications, distinctions have at times been drawn between
    charitable " as a general term, and other similar general terms as
    occasionally used where there is a disposition in favour of general
    objects. But the Court of Chancery have adopted "charity" or "cha-
    ritable as a sufficient general description in cases where testators
    have left bequests to such charitable objects as their executors may
    select. This has been held to be a sufficient definition to enable the
    Court to administer the trust. But if a second description is added

    [7] 4

    and that second description is used disjunctively, not conjunctively,
    the Court washes its hands of the administration and holds the en-
    tire bequest invalid. The whole gift fails for uncertainty. There is,
    it is said, no general trust for charity binding the whole fund. The
    Court will not disregard the invalid part of the bequest and ad-
    minister the valid. Such is the rule of the Court. Whether it is a
    wise or sensible rule is not here material to consider. By way of
    contrast though the cases are not quite parallel, it may be noted
    that the common law ever since Pigot's case, 11 Co. Rep. 26 (b),
    has held that when in the same instrument there are both legal and
    illegal conditions, the legal conditions may prima facie be enforced
    whereas the part which is illegal cannot. Courts of Equity have
    been more rigid and have refused to apply anything like their
    cy-pres doctrine to such cases, or to make any apportionment.
    They have most nearly approached an apportionment in cases like
    in re Douglas, 35 Ch. D. 472, but that is regarded as a special and
    different type. Lord Davey discusses these distinctions in Hunter
    v. Attorney General,
    1899, A.C. 309, at p. 324. But the strict rule
    only applies if it is sought to give the executors a real choice
    between two separate objects only one of which is charitable, that
    is, if the two substantives or adjectives are to be read disjunctively.
    If they are to be read conjunctively, then there is only one class
    or area of selection, and if that is charitable, the bequest is good.
    Such a case is illustrated by in re Best, 1904, 2 Ch. 354, where the
    two adjectives "charitable" and " benevolent," coupled it is true by
    " and ", but " and " and " or " may be interchangeable, were held
    to describe a single class, the members of which combine the quali-
    ties of charitable and benevolent. This is possible because of the
    wide and vague range of the word charitable and its close kinship
    with benevolent. Whether the words are used in any particular
    will as conjunctive or disjunctive must be a question of construc-
    tion of the particular will. " Benevolent," which is the other
    material term here, is also a word of wide connotation, and almost
    interchangeable with charitable. That the two words overlap to
    a very great extent is clear. Lord Herschel, in Pemsel's case (supra),
    is careful to equate charity and benevolence even as the words
    are popularly used. He sums up, at p. 572, that " the popular con-
    " ception of a charitable purpose covers the relief of any form of
    " necessity, destitution, or helplessness which excites the compassion
    "or sympathy of men and so appeals to their benevolence for
    relief ". He went on to include in this conception of charity the
    relief of what is often called spiritual destitution or need, and treats
    that as a form of " benevolent assistance ". In these senses it seems
    to me that the word " benevolence " is used of the spiritual impulse,
    while charity is its embodiment in practice. Lord Herschell would,
    I think, have used the same language in reference to the purposes,
    religious or educational or other purposes beneficial to the com-
    munity, to which Lord Macnaghten referred. The provision of good
    water, or any scheme of social amelioration, involves benevolent
    motives and their practical operation. It may indeed be that the
    benevolent motive is less apparent or in a sense is non-existent in
    such instances as the repair of sea banks or the furtherance of
    scientific research, which would fall outside the popular idea of
    charity. It might thus be said that some charitable purposes, in the
    sense adopted by English law, are not benevolent, and conversely
    that some benevolent acts are not charitable. Lord Bramwell, dis-
    senting in Pemsel's case (supra), gave as instances of purposes
    which he regarded as benevolent but not charitable in the legal
    sense, a fund for providing oysters at one of the Inns of Court or
    a trust to provide music on the village green. As to the latter,
    modern ideas would be disposed to treat the gift as both benevolent
    arid charitable, as it would a fund for the provision of music in a
    London park: the fund for the oysters I should not be disposed to
    regard as either benevolent or charitable in any ordinary or

    36364 A4

    5 [8]

    technical sense. The leading case, Morice v, Bishop of Durham,
    10 Ves. 522, is relied on as showing that the word benevolent ,
    used by itself or coupled as it was in that case with "liberal" , is
    insufficient to evince a charitable purpose. Lord Eldon put the
    question whether, according to the ordinary sense, this testatrix
    meant by these words to confine the Defendant to such acts of
    charity or charitable purposes as this Court would have enforced
    by decree and reference to a Master. He decided in the negative
    and held that the intention was too indefinite to create a trust.
    There the words were not bound up with words or a context show-
    ing a charitable intention, but, on the contrary, showed the opposite.
    Lord Eldon said that upon such words the Court could not have
    charged the executor with maladministration if he had applied
    the whole to purposes which, according to the meaning of the
    testator, were benevolent and liberal, though not acts of that species
    of benevolence and liberality which this Court in the construction
    of a will calls charitable acts. Lord Eldon said that there was
    no magic in words, and if the real meaning of the words used had
    been charity or charitable purposes according to its technical use
    in the Court, the appropriate consequences would follow. This
    qualification should be noted.

    It may be that the word " liberal" gave a special colour to the
    word " benevolent ", and took its scope outside charitable purposes.
    It might, for instance, have covered the case of the fund for pro-
    viding oysters or other lavish entertainment. But in James v.
    Allen,
    3 Mer. 17, the bequest was simply for benevolent purposes,
    at the discretion of the trustees. The Master of the Rolls was of
    opinion that the trust might have been applied to other than strictly
    charitable purposes and was too indefinite for the Court to execute
    and failed altogether. This was the decision where the word
    " benevolent" stood by itself without any context showing or ex-
    cluding a charitable intent. But later cases have shown that the word
    " benevolent" is not fatal to a finding of a charitable trust. It
    becomes a question of the construction of the particular will,
    whether its language sufficiently evinces a charitable trust. As Lord
    Cottenham L.C. said in Ellis v. Selby, i My. & Cr. 286, " the present,
    "like other cases of construction, depends upon the particular
    " language which the testator has used, and very slight expressions
    " may make a most material difference ". He held in that case
    that the expressions " to and for such charitable or other purposes "
    were too wide and held the bequest void. He said he was following
    an earlier decision of his own, when Master of the Rolls, in Williams
    v. Kershaw, 5 Cl. & F. hi, where the residue was to be applied " to
    " and for such benevolent, charitable and religious purposes " as
    the executors should think most advantageous and beneficial. He
    read the three purposes as not conjointly used, but as describing
    three classes, benevolent, or charitable or religious. The two latter
    purposes would also be charitable in the legal sense, but that was not
    the case with benevolent. He held the disposition too uncertain to
    receive effect. It is to be noted there that he read " and " as " or ",
    and as having the same effect as " or " in the previous case. In
    each of these cases separate categories were held to be intended;
    thus according to the decisions " and " and " or " were held to b«
    interchangeable. That depended on the context and the lay-out of
    the sentences.

    In Dolan v. Macdermot, L.R., 3 Ch. 676, Lord Cairns L.C. held
    valid a bequest of personalty for " such charities and other public
    purposes as lawfully might be " in a named parish. The Lord
    Chancellor said that the reasonable and fair construction of the
    will— remembering always that in construing a will of this kind
    " the Court must not lean to the side of avoiding the will in order to
    " gam money for the family, nor, on the other hand, strain to
    " support the will to gain money for the charity "—was

    [9] 6

    that the testator directed his residue " to be paid out for
    " the benefit of the Parish of Tadmartin' in public charities', using
    " the term in the popular sense, and in ' other public purposes'
    " ejusdem generis, using those latter words as supplying and filling
    " up a description of the purposes which, although within the
    " Statute of Elizabeth and the technical doctrine of the Court with
    " regard to charities, are not within the popular meaning of the
    " word ' charities' ". I regard this decision as an object lesson in
    realistic construction. The local limitation does not, of course, affect
    the essential question. (Houston v. Burns, 1918, A.C. 337.) That last-
    named case was an appeal from Scotland, where it was held that
    a bequest " for such public, benevolent or charitable purposes "
    was invalid, on the ground that the three categories were to be read
    disjunctively. This decision was largely determined by considering
    the punctuation. It had been contended that the clause should
    not be read as applying to public or benevolent or charitable pur-
    poses, but that on its true reading it was for the benefit of benevo-
    lent or charitable purposes of a public nature in connection with
    the parish, and that so construed it was good, as benevolent or
    charitable purposes could be held to be charitable purposes. As
    to that contention, Lord Finlay L.C. said: " It appears to me that
    " without the punctuation which appears in the will as printed in the
    "appendix this is quite a possible construction, and where words are
    " ambiguous a construction should be adopted which will not make
    " the bequest void." Lord Finlay then went on to discuss the punctua-
    tion, and on that ground held that the clause was to be read dis-
    junctively. Though the appeal was from Scotland, the Lord Chan-
    cellor states a general principle which seems often to be lost sight
    of, namely, the principle that the issue depends on the construction
    of the particular will. In addition the word " public " introduces
    a category different in character from either charitable or benevo-
    lent (Blair v. Duncan, 1902, A.C. 37), which makes it much more
    difficult in any case to read the words as dealing with anything but
    separate categories. In the same way this House in A.G. v. National
    Provincial Bank,
    1924, A.C. 262, held that the words " patriotic "
    purposes and " charitable " institutions and objects must be read
    disjunctively; they describe disparate and separate classes. On the
    other hand, in in re White, 1893, 2 Ch. 41, the testator left his
    residue "to the following religious Societies, viz.": there followed
    a blank. The word charity was not mentioned. The Court of
    Appeal, while recognising the possibility that a religious Society
    was not necessarily charitable, came to the conclusion that they
    could not, " without splitting hairs ", distinguish earlier cases which
    had held that a religious purpose was a charitable purpose, and
    that they ought to hold that the gift was for charitable purposes
    and was not void for uncertainty. They approved Wilkinson v.
    Lindgren, L.R., 5 Ch. 570, which may be referred to for the use
    which Lord Hatherley L.C. made of the ejusdem generis rule. The
    bequest was for the benefit of certain named institutions, which the
    Court held were in fact religious, or " to any other religious institu-
    " tions " as the executors might think proper. The Lord Chancellor
    said that he did not see " how you can carry on the word ' other'
    " without carrying on ' religious ' also ". The gift was held valid.

    I have referred to these cases as showing that the construction
    of a will cannot be reduced to the mere application of a fixed
    general formula. I think this is also illustrated by A.G. for New
    Zealand
    v. Brown, 1917, A.C. 393, a decision of the Privy Council,
    which showed that " and " could and should there be read as " or ".
    The bequest was in trust for such charitable, benevolent, religious
    and educational institutions " as the trustees should select". It was
    contended that the word "charitable" governed or at least ex-
    plained the following words, so that "benevolent" objects must
    be read as though the words meant such benevolent objects as
    were in their nature the proper subject of a charitable gift. Lord

    7 [10]

    Buckmaster rejected this contention, but he did not do so without
    examining other parts of the will, particularly the investment
    clause, in order to ascertain the testator's intention. The import-
    ance of the decision, which does not bind this House, is that though
    the decision in in re Jarman's Estate,
    8 ChD 584, to which I refer
    later, was cited, the question was not solved by a single absolute
    formula, such as Lord Parker (who was a member of the Board
    in the New Zealand case (supra)), enunciated shortly afterwards
    in the form of the proposition that a gift for charitable or benevo-
    lent purposes is void for uncertainty. Bowman v. Secular Society,
    1917, A.C. 406, at p. 441. This would no doubt be so provided that
    on the true construction of the gift the purposes were to be read
    disjunctively. That must depend on the language of the gift. But
    the point had not been argued and was not necessary for the
    decision of that case. Such general observations have no coercive
    value as precedents.

    In re Jarman (supra) may or may not have been right in the
    language of the particular gift. The Vice-Chancellor there held
    that a bequest to any charitable or benevolent purpose which the
    executors should agree upon was indefinite and inoperative, so that
    the gift failed. But it cannot, in my opinion, be construed as
    stating a general proposition of law that a gift for charitable or
    benevolent objects must be alternative or refer to two classes of
    objects. If it did, it cannot, in my opinion, be justified. Since
    that decision the cases of in re Sutton, 28 Ch.D. 464, and in re
    Best,
    1904, 2 Ch. 354, have been decided. Their effect was that
    a gift for such charitable and benevolent institutions as the trustees
    should determine is not void for uncertainty, but is a good charit-
    able gift. It was held that the testator meant that the objects of
    the gift should be both charitable and benevolent. That is a natural
    construction, because not only are the two words, being both vague,
    practically indistinguishable, though perhaps in theory capable of
    some distinction, but, as Farwell J. said in in re Best (supra), the
    testator may have wished that the two qualities should coincide
    in all the objects of the gift. Hence only one class is intended,
    combining both attributes. I think the same conclusion can be
    reached where the two adjectives are coupled by " or " instead of
    " and ". These two particles are often to be read interchangeably
    as I have shown. The testator in the present case is not likely to
    have thought of charitable and benevolent as describing two
    different classes of objects. He would prima facie mean a class of
    object which could be indifferently described as charitable or
    benevolent, that is, one class having the same two-fold character-
    istics, if indeed he thought of them as more than two epithets having
    the same meaning. Such tautology is not uncommon. Perhaps also
    he may have desired that his money should not be devoted to build-
    ing bridges or the like. This construction, which seems prima facie
    not only probable but sensible, is. I think, confirmed by the frame of
    the sentence. The word " other " (" other charitable or benevolent
    " object or objects in England ") seems to me to carry over the word
    charitable from the previous sentence. If the words had been " or
    " other benevolent objects ", I do not think that anyone would
    seriously contest that what was meant was " other charitable objects
    " capable also of being characterised as benevolent ". The repetition
    of "charitable " strengthens that construction. So does the context.
    If " charitable " and " benevolent " had been completely different
    descriptions, instead of two descriptions, both vague and indeter-
    minate, overlapping, and capable of being applied to the same
    objects, the result might be different. Thus a gift of pigs or cows
    would clearly present an alternative: the two descriptions could
    not be applied indifferently to the same animals. But a dis-
    position in favour of dishonest or unprincipled men would not
    present a true alternative, though it might on other grounds be

    [11] 8

    void for uncertainty. Only the adjectival description is alternative,
    and both adjectives are to be applied indifferently to the same
    objects; there is then only one class and not two. If the testator
    had expressly stated that only one class was meant, that statement
    would have received effect. But the same result may be reached
    by considering the context. This way of looking at the question has
    been adopted by the eminent Scotch judges, Lords Dunedin,
    Kinnear, Maclaren and Dundas, who have held that certain dis-
    positions in favour of charitable or benevolent objects or the like
    referred as a matter of construction to one class and not two classes.
    I refer in particular to the decisions in Hay's Trustees v. Baillie,
    1908, S.C. 1224, and Paterson's Trustees v. Paterson, 1909, S.C.
    485. The Scots Law has not been argued before your Lordships,
    but I think that these decisions involve the application of rules
    of construction common both to English and Scottish law.

    For myself, I would allow the appeal and restore the judgment
    of Farwell J.

    [I2

    CH1CHESTER DIOCESAN FUND AND BOARD OF
    FINANCE (INCORPORATED)

    v.
    SIMPSON AND OTHERS

    Lord Porter

    Lord
    Chancellor

    Lord
    Macmillan

    Lord

    Wright

    Lord
    Porter

    Lord
    Simonds

    MY LORDS,

    It is common ground and undoubted law that in construing a will
    the object of the Court is to try to ascertain the intention of the
    testator. But it is the expressed intention which must govern. The
    principle is succinctly expressed by Lindley, L.J., as he then was,
    in re Morgan
    [1893] 3 Ch 222 at p. 227: " Now I do not see why,
    " if we can tell what a man intends and can give effect to his inten-
    " tion as expressed, we should be driven out of it by other cases or
    " decisions in other cases "; the italics are mine.

    In construing what the testator has said it is permissible to con-
    sider that he did not intend to die intestate; see per Lord St.
    Leonards in Grey v. Pearson 6 h.l.c. 99.

    But technical words must be interpreted in their technical sense
    and " charity " or " charitable " are technical words in English
    law, and must be so construed unless it can be seen from the word-
    ing of the will as a whole that they are used in some other than
    their technical sense. For this purpose and in order to discover the
    testator's intention it is the duty of the Court to take into considera-
    tion the whole of the terms of the will and not to confine itself to
    the disputed words or their immediate context.

    In the present case the words whose interpretation is contested
    are " charitable or benevolent". It is admitted on behalf of the
    Appellants that if the word " benevolent" stood alone, it would
    be too vague a term and the gift would be void; see James v. Allen
    [1817] 3 Mer 17; but it is said that when coupled with the word
    " charitable ", even by the disjunctive " or", it either takes its
    colour from its associate or is merely exegetical, and the phrase is
    used as implying either that " charitable " and " benevolent " are
    the same thing or that " benevolent " qualifies " charitable " so as
    to limit the gift to objects which are both charitable and benevolent.

    In my view the words so coupled dp not naturally bear any of
    the meanings suggested. The addition of "benevolent" to
    " charitable " on the face of it suggests an alternative purpose, and
    I do not see why in this collocation " benevolent" should be read
    as " charitable benevolent". Nor do I think that it can be said to
    be merely exegetical. Primd facie these are alternative objects, and
    even if they were not the word " charitable ", to be exegetical of
    " benevolent", should follow and not precede it. The wording
    should be " benevolent or charitable " meaning " benevolent i.e.
    " charitable "—not " charitable or benevolent " meaning " charit-
    " able i.e. benevolent". In the latter case the gift might still be
    said to be given to too wide a class, viz. to benevolent objects and
    not to charitable ones.

    But in truth, however anxious one may be to strain the language
    used so as to benefit charities only, the weight of authority is too
    great to be readily overthrown.

    Two matters of principle in the interpretation of wills are firmly
    established:

    (1) The testator must make his own will and not leave his
    executors to make their choice of the objects of his bounty, subject
    to this, that a general gift to charity will be upheld. (2) It is not,

    [13] 2

    however, enough that he should leave property under a disposition
    in pursuance of which his assets may be disposed of to charities or
    for some other purpose, not even though his executors in fact
    apply them only to charitable purposes. ' The question is ", said
    Sir W. Grant in James v. Allen 3 Mer. 17 at p. 19, " what authority
    " would this Court have to say that the property must not be
    " applied to purposes however benevolent unless they also come
    " within the technical denomination of charitable purposes ? If it
    " might, consistently with the will, be applied to other than strictly
    " charitable purposes, the trust is too indefinite for the Court to
    " execute ".

    The same principle is enunciated in Hunter v. A.G. [1899]
    A.C. 309 where Lord Davey at p. 323, in saying that the charitable
    purposes must not be mixed up with other purposes of such an
    indefinite nature that the Court cannot execute them, gives as
    illustrations of such mixing the conjunction of " charitable or
    " benevolent", or " charitable or philanthropic ", or " charitable or
    " pious "

    The various tribunals in England which have expressed their
    views as to this combination have all tended the same way.

    So long ago as 1836 Lord Cottenham L.C. expressed the opinion
    in Ellis v. Selby I My. and Cr. 286 at p. 299 that a gift to " charit-
    " able or other purposes " was void.

    Similar opinions are to be found in Attorney-General for New
    Zealand v. Brown
    [1917] AC 393, in Houston v. Burns [1918]
    A.C. 337, and A.G. for New Zealand v. New Zealand Insurance
    Coy.
    [1936] 53 T.L.R. 37, to quote but three from amongst those
    discussed in your Lordships' House or in the Privy Council.
    Indeed, in Williams v. Kershaw 5 Cl. and F. in, a bequest of
    property for benevolent charitable and religious purposes was held
    void because it was considered that the testator could not have
    intended the recipient purposes to be benevolent and charitable
    and religious all at the same time, and therefore that " and " must
    be read disjunctively. I need not refer to the numerous cases
    decided in Courts of first instance and in the Court of Appeal ex-
    pressing a view similar to that contained in those quoted.

    If the authorities be extended beyond those decided in a final
    Court of Appeal, the exact combination " charitable or benevolent "
    is to be found and was held void in re Jarman's Estate, 8 Ch. D.
    584-

    Nor is the force of these and the many other authorities to the
    same effect weakened by the fact that a bequest for benevolent
    and charitable purposes has been held a valid gift (see re Best
    [1904] 2 Ch 354), since the conjunction in that case is effected
    by using "and", not "or". Nor by the decisions in Attorney-
    General for New Zealand v. Brown
    [1917] AC 393, where the
    wording was " charitable, benevolent, religious and educational in-
    " stitutions, societies, associations and objects ", and in re Bennett
    [1920] 1 Ch. 305, where the wording was " for the benefit of the
    " schools, and charitable institutions, and poor, and other objects
    " of charity, or any other public objects ". In each of these last
    two cases it was held the complex phrases used must properly be
    construed so that " benevolent" or " public ", as the case might be,
    took its colour from " charitable " and must be read as ejusdem
    generis
    with it. In so complex a form of words the ejusdem generis
    rule might well be prayed in aid, whereas in a simpler form it might
    be inapplicable.

    But in truth the terms in which other wills are framed are but
    a loose guide to the construction of that in question. Each will
    must be interpreted in the light of its own wording.

    3 [14]

    No doubt the testator in the present case wished his estates to
    go to objects of a benevolent character or, as Goddard L.J. has it,
    to " charity " in the popular sense; but " charity " in that sense is
    not coterminous with "charity" in the technical sense, and I can
    find nothing in the wording of the will to lead to a different result.

    The fact that in another clause of this will he gave certain specific
    legacies leads nowhere, and a gift in the case of institutions limited
    to charitable ones, followed by a gift to " other charitable or
    " benevolent objects ", to my mind suggest a widening of his bene-
    ficence in the latter case rather than a general charitable intent, if
    " charity " be used in its technical sense.

    The Appellants, however, gain their strongest support from the
    Scotch decisions. In those cases " societies or institutions of a
    " benevolent or charitable nature " (Hay's Trustees v. Baillie 1908
    S.C. 1224), " such charities or benevolent or beneficent institutions "
    (Paterson's Trustees v. Paterson 1909 S.C. 485), and " charitable or
    " philanthropic institutions " (MacKinnon's Trustees v. MacKinnon
    1909 S.C. 1041), have all been held valid charitable trusts, whilst
    in Reid's Trustees 1929 S.C. 727, a bequest in the form " poor
    " persons in Eskdale or such charitable, educational, or benevolent
    " societies or public institutions in Scotland " failed only, it appears,
    because of the addition of " public institutions ".

    In all the cases where the gift was held good, the ratio decidendi
    appears to have been that the testator was designating one class of
    recipients, i.e. charities, not two or more separate classes of
    beneficiary.

    But Scotch law differs from English law on this point, probably
    because it approaches the subject from a different angle. In the
    first place the statute of Elizabeth, 43 Eliz. C. 4, the benevolently
    interpreted preamble of which forms the basis for determining
    what are charities in English law, never applied to Scotland, and
    in the second, charities, speaking generally, are not controlled by
    the Scots Courts.

    The ambit of " charity " in Scotland may be narrower than it
    is in England; at any rate Lord Moncreiff thought so, as appears
    from his dissenting Judgment in Grimond v. Grimond, reported
    in [1905] A.C., at p. 605, and afterwards approved in your Lord-
    ships' House at p. 124 of the same volume. Whether it be narrower
    or not it differs, and I do not think your Lordships can obtain
    any satisfactory guidance from the decisions in the Scotch Courts
    in a case where the validity of a gift in an English will depends
    upon its charitable nature.

    I find myself in accord with the Judgment of the Master of the
    Rolls and agree that the appeal should be dismissed.



    Lord

    Chancellor

    Lord

    Macmillan

    Lord
    Wright

    Lord
    Porter

    Lord
    Simonds

    [15]

    CHICHESIER DIOCESAN FUND AND BOARD OF
    FINANCE (INCORPORATED)

    v.
    SIMPSON AND OTHERS

    Lord Simonds

    MY LORDS,

    The question raised in this appeal turns upon the meaning and
    effect of the will of Caleb Diplock, who died on the 2nd March,
    1938. By his will, which was dated the 3rd November, 1919, the
    Testator, after appointing executors and making certain bequests
    and devises, to which I do not think it necessary to refer, gave
    the residue of his estate to his executors upon trust for sale and
    conversion, and subject to certain payments thereout, directed them
    to apply the residue " for such charitable institution or institutions
    " or other charitable or benevolent object or objects in England
    " as my acting executor or executors may in their or his absolute
    "discretion select, and to be paid to or for such institutions and
    " objects, if more than one, in such proportions as my executors
    " or executor may think proper". The Testator added certain
    administrative directions which do not assist in the construction of
    the words that I have cited.

    The will was duly proved on the 16th May, 1938, and the
    executors forthwith proceeded to a distribution of the Testator's
    large estate among a number of institutions, one of which was the
    Appellant, the Chichester Diocesan Fund and Board of Finance
    (Incorporated). After the estate had been distributed the validity
    of the residuary bequest and the propriety of the distribution were
    challenged by certain persons who claimed to be some of the next-
    of-kin of the Testator and accordingly to be entitled to a share of
    his residuary estate as upon his intestacy. On the 10th June,
    1940, the Originating Summons, out of which this appeal arises,
    was issued by the executors in the Chancery Division for the deter-
    mination of the single question whether the trust of residue con-
    tained in the will, which I have already stated, was a valid charit-
    able trust or was void for uncertainty or otherwise. To this summons
    the appellant institution, the claimant next-of-kin and the Attorney-
    General were made defendants. My Lords, I mention these facts not
    because they can in any way affect the construction of the will
    which your Lordships have to construe, but because they explain
    why it was necessary, or at least desirable, that any other party
    than the Attorney-General should be heard to argue the present
    case. In the ordinary case it is the Attorney-General alone,
    representing the Crown as parens patriae, who is heard upon
    the question of validity or invalidity of such a bequest as
    that now under consideration. In the present case the
    actual distribution of the Testator's estate and the pendency
    of proceedings by the next-of-kin for its recovery, in which this
    very question of validity would be vital, made it necessary to take
    the unusual course of adding the appellant institution as a
    defendant as representative of all the institutions which had received
    a share of the estate. But this fact is, as I have said, irrelevant to
    the construction of the will: equally irrelevant are the facts which
    are brought to your Lordships attention that the estate is a large
    one, that the next-of-kin are not near relatives, that the discovery
    of a possible flaw in the will was fortuitous, and that the proceedings
    were belated. The construction of this will is the same, whether
    its invalidity brings an unexpected windfall to distant relations or
    its validity disappoints the reasonable hopes of a dependent family.

    2 [16]

    My Lords, in stating the question for your Lordships' considera-
    tion I have said that it turns upon the meaning and effect of the
    Testator's will. Advisedly I have put meaning before effect, For
    I approach this will, as I approach any other will, with the resolve
    to find the Testator's intention from the language that he has used.
    When I have found it, I consider its effect. If there is an ambiguity,
    it may be that I am at liberty to choose that construction which
    will give legal effect to the instrument rather than that which will
    invalidate it. Where the Testator's words would, if no question of
    invalidity arose, leave no doubt in my mind, I am not at liberty to
    create an ambiguity in order then to place what is sometimes called
    a benignant construction upon the will.

    My Lords, the words for your consideration are these, " charit-
    " able or benevolent": the question is whether, in the context in
    which they are found in this will, these words give to the executors
    a choice of objects extending beyond that which the law recognises
    as charitable. If they do not, that is the end of the matter: the
    trust is a good charitable trust. If they do, it appears to be con-
    ceded by counsel for the appellant institution that the trust is
    invalid, but in deference to the argument of the Attorney-General,
    who invited your Lordships to take a different view, I must say a
    few words at a later stage.

    My Lords, of those three words your Lordships will have no
    doubt what the first, " charitable ", means. It is a term of art with
    a technical meaning and that is the meaning which the Testator
    must be assumed to have intended. If it were not so, if in this will
    " charitable " were to be given not its legal but some popular mean-
    ing, it would not be possible to establish the validity of the bequest.
    The last of the three words " benevolent" is not a term of art:
    in its ordinary meaning it has a range in some respects far less
    wide than legal charity, in others somewhat wider. It is at least clear
    that the two words, the one here used in its technical meaning,
    the other having only, and accordingly here used in, a popular
    meaning, are by no means coterminous. These two words are joined
    or separated by the word " or ", a particle, of which the primary
    function is to co-ordinate two or more words between which there
    is an alternative. It is, I think, the only word in our language apt
    to have this effect: its primary and ordinary meaning is the same,
    whether or not the first alternative is preceded by the word
    "either".

    My Lords, averting my mind from the possible ill effects of an
    alternative choice between objects " charitable " and objects " bene-
    " volent", I cannot doubt that the plain meaning of the Testator's
    words is that he has given this choice and that, if he intended to
    give it, he could have used no words more apt to do so. Is there
    then anything in the context which narrows the area of choice
    by giving to the words " or benevolent" some other meaning than
    that which they primarily and naturally have ? And, if so, what
    is the other meaning which is to be given to them ? Let me examine
    the second question first. Since the test of validity depends on the
    area of choice not being extended beyond the bounds of legal
    charity, a meaning must be given to the words " or benevolent"
    which retains them within these bounds. This result, it has been
    contended, may be reached by giving to the word " or " not its
    primary disjunctive meaning but a secondary meaning which may
    perhaps be called exegetical or explanatory. Undoubtedly " or "
    is capable of this meaning: so used, it is equivalent to " alias " or

    " otherwise called " : the dictionary examples of this use will
    generally be; found to be topographical, as "Papua or New

    Guinea . But, my Lords, this use of the word " or " is only pos-
    sible if the words or phrases which it joins connote the same thing
    and are interchangeable the one with the other. In this case the
    Testator is assumed to use the word " charitable " in its legal sense :

    [17] 3

    I see no possible ground for supposing that he proceeds to explain
    it by another word which has another meaning and by no means
    can have that meaning. I must reject the exegetical ' or ". Then
    it was suggested that the words " or benevolent" should be con-
    strued as equivalent to " provided such objects are also of a bene-
    " volent character ", that is to say, the objects must be charitable
    but of that order of charity which is commonly called benevolent.
    I think that this is only a roundabout way of saying that " or'
    should be read as " and ", that the objects of choice must have
    the two characteristics of charitable and benevolent. It is possible
    that a context may justify so drastic a change as that involved
    in reading the disjunctive as conjunctive. I turn then to the con-
    text to see what justification it affords for reading the relevant
    words in any but their natural meaning. Reading and re-reading
    them, as your Lordships have so often done in the course of this
    case, I can find nothing which justifies such a departure. It is true
    that the word " other " introduces the phrase " charitable or bene-
    " volent object or objects " and to this the Appellants attached some
    importance, suggesting that since " other " looked back to " charit-
    " able institution or institutions ", so all that followed must be of the
    genus charitable. There can be no substance in this, for in the
    phrase so introduced the word " charitable " is itself repeated and
    is followed by the alternative " or benevolent". Apart from this
    slender point it seemed that the Appellants relied upon what is
    called a general, a dominant, an over-riding charitable intention,
    giving charitable content to a word or phrase which might other-
    wise not have that quality. That such a result is possible there
    are cases in the books to show: some of them have been cited to
    your Lordships. But here again I look in vain for any such con-
    text. Upon the plain reading of this will I could only come to the
    conclusion that the Testator intended exclusively to benefit charit-
    able objects if I excised the words " or benevolent" which he
    has used. That I cannot do.

    Coming to the conclusion that upon the true construction of this
    will the executors may if they think fit distribute the Testator's
    estate among objects which are benevolent but not charitable,
    I then ask what is in law the effect of such a disposition. My Lords,
    it may not have come as so rude a shock to some of your Lordships
    as it did to me to hear it suggested that there could be any doubt but
    that it is utterly invalid. But in fact the learned Attorney-General, if
    I understood his argument, categorically invited your Lordships to
    hold that a bequest for charitable or benevolent objects simpliciter
    is in English law a good and effective bequest, and urged
    that the case of re Jar-man which decided the contrary should
    be over-ruled. In other words, his contention was that to enlarge
    the executors' area of choice so as to include benevolent objects
    which are not charitable with objects which are charitable does
    not make the whole gift fail for uncertainty. I do not see how,
    if his proposition is a sound one, it could be limited to the intro-
    duction of benevolent objects: philanthropic objects, liberal
    objects, perhaps patriotic or public objects, must come within the
    scope of this new doctrine. Nor, if a gift for charitable or bene-
    volent objects is valid, could it be any longer contended with any
    show of logic that a gift for benevolent objects alone is invalid.
    My Lords, I suggest that this proposition runs counter to authority
    and principle. Were it necessary to examine the authorities, your
    Lordships would find that a more formidable task than the over-
    ruling of re Jarman lay before you. I say nothing of a chain
    of cases which goes back to Sir William Grant and Lord Eldon.
    who themselves rested on ancient precedent, see Morice v. Bishop
    of Durham,
    10 Ves. 522. I refer only to the fact that in recent times
    Lord Davey in Hunter v. A.G.
    (1899) AC 309, and Lord Parker
    in Bowman v. Secular Society (1907) A.C. 406, have selected such
    words as " charitable or benevolent " as the very type of gift which




    4 [18]

    fails by reason of the admixture of charitable with non-charitable
    objects. There is good reason why this should be so. It is a
    cardinal rule, common to English and to Scots law, that a man
    may not delegate his testamentary power: to him the law gives
    the right to dispose of his estate in favour of ascertained or ascer-
    tainable persons. He does not exercise that right if in effect he
    empowers his executors to say what persons or objects are to be
    his beneficiaries. To this salutary rule there is a single exception:
    a testator may validly leave it to his executors to determine what
    charitable objects shall benefit, so long as charitable and no other
    objects may benefit. To explain or to justify this exception is
    unnecessary. It conveniently and securely rests to-day upon the
    theory that a charitable trust can be executed by the Court, but
    a so-called benevolent trust cannot. For the Court knows what is
    charitable by reference to the preamble to the Statute of Eliza-
    beth, to the objects there enumerated and all others which " by
    " analogies are deemed within its spirit and intendment ", but what
    is benevolent the Court knows not. It is possible that the exception
    was originally established on some broader ground of favour to
    charity. But into this I need not enter. It is sufficient to say that,
    this exception in favour of charity having been long established,
    there is no ground for extending it in favour of objects which are
    not charitable.

    My Lords, I concur in the motion that the Appeal should be
    dismissed.

    (36364) Wt, 8284— 16 25 7/44 D.L. G33


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