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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Thomson's Trustees v. Thomson and others [1889] ScotLR 26_368 (22 February 1889) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1889/26SLR0368.html Cite as: [1889] SLR 26_368, [1889] ScotLR 26_368 |
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Page: 368↓
Trustees were empowered by trust-deed to lend the trust funds upon certain enumerated securities. They were also recommended not to change any of the investments made by the trustee, which they were authorised to continue without incurring personal responsibility. A company, which was not among the enumerated securities, but which paid large dividends, and in which the trustee held several shares, was wound up voluntarily for the purpose of being re-constituted with larger capital and more extensive powers.
Held that, however desirable it might be for the beneficiaries under the trust-deed to become shareholders in the new company, it was not within the powers of the trustees to hold the shares allotted to them in lieu of those held in the old company.
David Jugurtha Thomson, merchant in Edinburgh, died on or about the 16th March 1871, leaving a trust-disposition and settlement dated 3rd December 1868 and recorded 23rd March 1871. By said deed Mr Thomson disponed his whole estate, heritable and moveable, including “shares in trading and other companies,” to trustees therein named, with the powers and for the purposes therein expressed.
The deed conferred the usual general powers upon the trustees, and contained a number of special directions with regard to the management and investment of the trust-estate, and specially, with regard to trust investments, the trustees were authorised “to continue or not, as they may think advisable, such investments of my means and estate as I may have made during my lifetime of whatever kind or denomination, and that without incurring any responsibility for so doing, but (though without prejudice to the general discretionary powers hereby conferred) I recommend my trustees not to change any of the said investments, unless circumstances may in their opinion render it expedient for them to do so.” The trustees were further empowered to lend the trust funds upon heritable security, or upon security of debentures of incorporated companies, or on the security of the Government funds, or of shares in chartered or incorporated companies in Great Britain, and they were empowered to invest the trust-estate, or any part thereof, in the Government funds in the purchase of heritable property, feu-duties, ground annuals, or other heritages, or of the guaranteed or preference or debenture stock of railway or other incorporated companies in which the liability of each shareholder is limited, or to retain the same in bank in Great Britain. General power was also conferred upon them to alter and renew the securities from time to time as they might consider expedient.
The estate left by the truster included 37 £100 shares of the North British Rubber Company, Limited, a company registered under the Limited Liability Act 1856 (19 and 20 Vict. c. 47) on 30th March 1857. The trustees continued to hold these shares except three, which they sold. The investment proved a very renumerative one for the trust, the dividends during the last ten years on the ordinary selling price of the stock having averaged about 8 per cent. On or about 28th March 1888, at a general meeting of the company, a scheme for the reconstruction of the company was submitted, and the meeting approved thereof and instructed the directors to carry it out.
Under that scheme it was arranged that the company should go into voluntary liquidation, and that a new company should be formed upon the same basis as the old one, but with enlarged capital and more extensive powers. The old shareholders were, if they wished it, to have their interest in the old company satisfied by shares in the new company, and to have the first offer of the additional shares about to be issued by the new company. The new company was registered under new memorandum and relative articles of association on 9th August 1888, and on 3rd September the liquidator of the old company intimated to Mr Thomson's trustees that he had accepted on their behalf certain shares in the new company, and as an equivalent for the foresaid shares held by them in the old company. By the re-constitution of the company there was no material change of the assets or liabilities of the company as it existed prior to re-constitution, and it was probable that the registration under the later Companies Acts would prove of advantage to the shareholders.
The beneficiaries under the trust-deed were anxious to become shareholders in the new company, but the trustees being doubtful as to their powers to hold the shares allotted to them without incurring personal responsility in the event of loss occurring to the trust-estate in said shares, a special case was prepared by the trustees of the first part, and the beneficiaries of the second part, submitting the following questions for the opinion and judgment of the Court, viz.—“(1) Are the parties of the first part bound to sell the shares in the new company now offered to them in exchange for those formerly held by them in the old company? Or (2) are they entitled in the circumstances stated to retain the same as a proper investment of the trust funds?”
Argued for the first parties (the trustees)—They were not entitled to invest the trust funds in any other securities but those enumerated above, and this was not one of them. They were, no doubt, entitled to retain the investments made by the truster, but his investment in this company had come to an end by its liquidation. They were not entitled to hold the shares allotted to them in the company as now re-constituted. It was virtually a new company, although many of the old shareholders were members of it.
Argued for the second parties (the beneficiaries)—The shares of the new company offered to the trustees being of a greater nominal value, as well as of at least an equal actual value, as the shares in the old company originally held by the testator and thereafter by his trustees, formed an
Page: 369↓
investment for the trust funds authorised by him by his trust-disposition and settlement foresaid, which the trustees might hold without incurring personal responsibility therefor; and further, that looking to the powers generally and specially conferred upon the trustees by the said trust-disposition and settlement, and the testator's recommendation therein expressed not to change any of his investments unless circumstances rendered it expedient, the trustees were not in the circumstances entitled to realise the shares offered to them in the new company, but were bound, or at all events entitled, to accept and hold them as a proper investment of the trust funds. It was the same business, which was to be carried on by the same people, only with more extensive powers. This case was analogous to that of two railway companies being amalgamated. At advising—
The testator recommends his trustees not to change any of his investments, but that is a totally different thing from authorising them to become members of a new company, with new capital, and under new conditions. The company in which the shares were held is in liquidation. It has been put an end to, and could not have been put an end to in any other way. Probably the new company will consist largely of the same members as the old one, and no doubt it may be highly successful. In this age of competition large extensions are sometimes of immense advantage to companies, but that does not make this company the less a new one, of which the trustees have no power to become members.
The Court answered the first question in the affirmative and the second question in the negative.
Counsel for the Trustees— G. W. Burnet. Agents— Fodd, Simpson, & Marwick, W.S.
Counsel for the Beneficiaries— Jameson. Agents— Boyd, Jameson, & Kelly, W.S.