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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Futter & Anor v Futter & Ors [2010] EWHC 449 (Ch) (11 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/449.html Cite as: [2010] STC 982, [2010] WTLR 609, [2010] BTC 455, [2010] Pens LR 145, [2010] STI 1442, [2010] EWHC 449 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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In the matter of the Futter (No. 3) Life Interest Settlement And in the matter of the Futter (No. 5) Life Interest Settlement (1) Mark Stephen Futter (2) Clive Donald Cutbill |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) Elizabeth Gaye Futter (2) Adam Jacob Futter (3) James Daniel Futter (4) Natalie Helen Futter (5) The Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs |
Defendants |
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The First to Fourth Defendants did not appear.
Ms Sarah Harman (instructed by the Solicitor for HM Revenue and Customs) for the Fifth Defendants
Hearing date: 18 January 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Norris :
"The best formulation of the principle seems to me to be this. Where trustees act under a discretion given to them by the terms of the trust, in circumstances in which they are free to decide whether or not to exercise that discretion, but the effect of the exercise is different from that which they intended, the court will interfere with their action if it is clear that they would not have acted as they did had they not failed to take into account considerations which they ought to have taken into account, or taken into account considerations which they ought not to have take into account".
"…the main ways at present open to the court to control the application of the principle are: (a) to insist on a stringent application of the tests as they have been laid down, (b) to take a reasonable and not over-exigent view of what it is that the trustees ought to have taken into account, and (c) to adopt a critical approach to contentions that the trustees would have acted differently if they had realised the true position…."
"Had we been fully aware of the CGT consequences of advancing the entirety of the Trust Fund of the No.3 Settlement to [Mark Futter] and making advancements to [his children] in excess of their annual exempt amounts at the time of the advances [Mark Futter] and I simply would not have made any advancement to [Mark Futter] from the No.3 Settlement nor have made advancements in excess of the [children's] annual exempt amount for CGT…in view of the fact that [Mark Futter] and I failed to pay any regard to the provisions of section 2(4) [TCGA] at the time, and therefore failed to consider the full tax implications, of the advancements, as a consequence the advancements had a very different fiscal effect to that which we had both anticipated and intended".
HMRC is in no position to challenge this evidence and has not sought to cross examine either Mark Futter or Mr Cutbill. In these circumstances I accept that evidence.
"If a party enters into a deed (with a view to saving tax) on terms which are fully understood and where the effect of such terms is fully appreciated and if for whatever reason the anticipated desirable tax consequences thereafter do not flow, it would really not be open, in the ordinary way at least, to such a person to seek to set aside that deed on the ground that he had not understood its nature or effect. I say this appreciating that possibly the position may be different in a case of the exercise of a power or of a discretion by a fiduciary: it may be – and I say no more than that it may be – that the adverse and unexpected tax consequences of the exercise of the power or discretion may be invoked to set aside the exercise of that particular power or discretion. But I think the position is entirely different where what is sought to be set aside is a deed entered into by way of voluntary transaction".
Ms Harman submitted that the effect of the transaction was the same whether undertaken by an individual or a fiduciary, that there could be no reason in principle for treating the mistake of an individual which brought about that effect differently from the mistake of a fiduciary which brought about an identical effect, and that Lloyd LJ's formulation of the Rule in Hastings-Bass by reference to "the effect" of the transaction afforded an opportunity to harmonise the two streams.
"In these circumstances, to what considerations is it reasonable to suppose that the trustees addressed their minds before making the advancement? No doubt it is right to say that they should, and would, have considered whether the aggregate of all the provisions of the sub-settlement … would be for William's benefit, but in doing so they could not … have failed to consider to what extent each of those provisions could properly be regarded as contributing to the aggregate benefit … Had it occurred to the trustees that the ulterior trusts might all fail for perpetuity, they could not reasonably have thought that this could tip the scales in the weighing operation against the scheme. The law cannot, in our judgment, require the trustees' exercise of their discretion to be treated as a nullity on the basis of an absurd assumption that, had they realised its true legal effect, they would have reached an unreasonable conclusion as a result of the weighing operation…"
There is another passage at page 41C which refers to the exercise of power being such that it could not reasonably be regarded as beneficial. Ms Harman submitted that this approach survived in Lloyd LJ's guidance (in paragraph 82 of Sieff v Fox) that the court should "take a reasonable and not over-exigent view of what it is that the trustees ought to have taken into account": and in his observation (at paragraph 86 of his judgment) that if the trustees were unaware of some subtle and perhaps unforeseeable detail of the tax consequences of an action it might not be the case that their decision would be vitiated by "the Hastings-Bass principle". She submitted that in the case of the No. 5 Settlement the unforeseen capital gains tax charge of £1762 for each beneficiary failed to cross the threshold of significance.
"The question whether the difference in effect has to be substantial in order for the principle to apply comes into the test as part of the process of answering the question whether, if the trustees had been aware of the true position, they would not have acted as they did."
"One's instinctive reaction (not necessarily a satisfactory substitute for legal analysis) is to ask why the Chancery Division, rather than the party's professional indemnity insurers, should have to pick up the pieces…"
"…the mere fact that the appointment is void does not prevent the court of equity from having regard to it e.g. an appointment under a limited power to a stranger is void, but equity may cause effect to be given to it by means of the doctrine of election".
I respectfully disagree with the suggestion of Lewison J in Re Griffiths [2008] EWHC 118 (Ch) paragraph 34 that if relief is discretionary it must follow that the relevant transaction is voidable and not void. (I would as a footnote that the doctrine of severance, such as was applied in Re Hastings-Bass itself, will also operate to mitigate the rigours of the analysis).
a) If the origins of "the Rule" lie in the law relating to invalid exercise of a power (rather than in the law of mistake) then in principle an invalid exercise of a power should result in a void transaction. The trustees have not made a decision within the ambit of the power.
b) That the relevant deed was void (not voidable) is the only basis upon which the decision in Re Abrahams WT [1969] 1 Ch 463 can have proceeded.
c) Where a fraudulent execution of a power is established the effect (according to the authorities, some of which have been called "problematic") is that the execution is wholly void: Re Marsden (1859) 4 Drew 594, Cloutte v Storey [1911] 1 Ch 18 Vatcher v Paull [1915] AC 372. (See also Sugden on Powers 8th ed. at 611).
d) Where a power is exercised in form but not in substance then the appointment will be declared void: Turner v Turner [1984] Ch 100. (I acknowledge that this case is not without its critics: but it seems to me consistent with principle).
e) The form of order approved by the Court of Appeal and by the House of Lords in Topham v Duke of Portland (1869) LR 5 Ch. App. 40 in such cases is a declaration that the appointments "are void" and consequential orders for an account of receipts by the person who has benefited under the void deed: see Seton's Judgments and Orders 7th ed. p. 1672.
f) Orders declaring the relevant deeds void ab initio were made in Green v Cobham (supra) and Abacus v NSPCC (supra).
g) The statement that the deed is an invalid exercise of trustees power of appointment and consequently void in its entirety is one that recurs in the authorities: see e.g. Mettoy Pensions v Evans [1990] 1 WLR 1578, and AMP (UK) Ltd v Barker [2000] EWHC 42 (Ch) .
h) It is the view favoured in Lewin on Trusts 18th edition paragraph 29 -249 and in Underhill & Hayton Law of Trusts 17th edition paragraph 61.22.
Mr Justice Norris………………………………………………………..11 March 2010