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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Thomas & Ors v Kent [2006] EWCA Civ 1485 (04 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1485.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1485 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
BRISTOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE WEEKS QC)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE THOMAS
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
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JOAN HILDA THOMAS | ||
JOHN OLIVER | ||
MILFORD IAN MERRYWEATHER | CLAIMANTS/APPELLANTS | |
- v - | ||
PAULINE VICTORIA KENT | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
MR A TROUP (instructed by Messrs Alletsons, 31 College Street, Burham-on-Sea, Somerset, TA8 1AS) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
(a) to pay the income thereof to his daughter Mary Sophia during her life, and after her death,(b) upon trust to pay the income to any child of hers during his or her life and if more than one, equally between them during their lives, and after their deaths,
(c) upon trust as to capital and income for their children absolutely, such children to take per stirpes and equally between them the share or shares of his or her parent.
At paragraph 6 of the will there was an ultimate trust in the event that the trusts which I have just set out failed. The ultimate trust was for the testator's brothers and sisters (but excluding one named brother) in equal shares, with a direction that the share of any deceased brother or sister was to be taken by his or her children in equal shares.
"Unto my brothers (excluding and excepting my brother David Jones) and sisters in equal shares, the share of any deceased brother or sister to be taken by his or her children in equal shares",
he said this:
"The problem really centres on the construction of the word 'deceased': at what point of time does one decide whether this person is a deceased brother or sister who has a share to be taken by his children?"
He was pointing out, in that passage, that it was necessary to decide whether, in speaking of "any deceased brother or sister", the testator was intending to include brothers and sisters who had already died at the date of the will; or was intending only to include brothers and sisters who were living at the date of the will (or, perhaps, at the date of his death) but who had died before the time came for distribution of the residuary estate.
"If this problem had come before a Chancery judge some 40 years ago, I have very little doubt as to the result. In those times the judges followed the rules of construction laid down by their predecessors. This is a class gift to brothers and sisters. Prima facie, therefore, the class has to be ascertained at the date of the testator's death. Deceased brothers and sisters at that date do not take; there is no share that can pass to their children. That logic was applied by North J in the case of Re Hannam [1897] 2 Ch 39, where he was construing a gift, 'to my brothers and sisters in equal shares and proportions, the lawful child or children of any deceased brother or sister taking his, her or their deceased parent's share', which bears a striking resemblance to the present case."
The judge then set out the relevant passage from the judgment of North J in Re Hannam. The passage is to be found at page 41 in that judgment. The judge described the passage as "founded on impeccable and inexorable logic".
"This testator's situation was that most of his brothers and sisters were already dead at the time he was making his will, because he was 84, one of 11 children, and many of them had predeceased him, leaving children. One would not expect him to intend the arbitrary result of benefiting only those branches of his family which happened to be represented by a brother and sister already alive at the time of his will. That seems to me an arbitrary result.
…
That conclusion I think is strengthened by the use of the plural in 'brothers'. This, as [counsel] rightly says, is a small peg on which to hang any conclusion and I rely it no more than as a pointer. The only brother who could possibly have been surviving, apart from David who was excluded, is William, and there is uncertainty as to whether William was living at the time. So there is a straw in the wind here that, by the use of the plural, the testator was thinking of all his brothers and sisters, including those who had already predeceased him."
"In my judgment, the natural conclusion, given the circumstances of this particular testator, is that he was looking at the point of time of the distribution, and that if when the ultimate trusts came to fail there was a deceased brother or sister, as inevitably there would be, then their share was to be taken by his or her children. The conclusion I have therefore reached, which I think avoids an arbitrary result, is that all nine branches of the family were intended to benefit from this particular will.
That gives rise to a second question, which is whether the brothers and sisters who in fact survived the testator, if indeed there was any brother who survived the testator, took vested interests, and whether their representatives take, to the exclusion of their children. Again, I have reached the conclusion that what is intended is to direct the attention of the trustees to the date of the distribution, and despite the so-called presumption in favour of early vesting, what was intended was that the children should all take, to the exclusion of their parents in the event, which is the event that happened, of all the brothers and sisters being dead in 1992, which was the date when the previous trusts failed."
It was on that basis that the judge made a declaration in the terms of paragraph (b) of clause (1) of the particulars of claim.
Order: Appeal dismissed.