BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Royal Bank of Scotland and Others Petitioners [1893] ScotLR 30_675 (31 May 1893)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1893/30SLR0675.html
Cite as: [1893] SLR 30_675, [1893] ScotLR 30_675

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]


SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 675

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Wednesday, May 31. 1893.

[ Lord Low, Ordinary.

30 SLR 675

The Royal Bank of Scotland and Others     Petitioners.

Subject_1Trust
Subject_2Trust for Creditors
Subject_3Appointment of New Trustee
Subject_4Trusts (Scotland) Act 1867 (30 and 31 Vict. cap.97) — Trusts (Scotland) Amendment Act 1884 (47 and 48 Vict. cap.63), secs.1 and 2.
Facts:

Held that the operation of the Trusts Act of 1867 is extended by the Trusts Act 1884 to trusts in which the trustees do not act gratuitously, and that it is competent for the Court under section 12 of the Act of 1867 to appoint a trustee in a trust for creditors.

Headnote:

On November 18th 1890 Francis Robertson Reid granted a trust-deed for behoof of his creditors in favour of Lawrence Hill Watson, C.A., Glasgow. The deed provided that a suitable remuneration should be paid to the trustee.

The trustee died on 27th January 1893, and thereafter the Royal Bank of Scotland and the British Linen Company Bank, the principal creditors of the said Francis Robertson Reid, with his consent and concurrence presented a petition wherein they craved the Court to appoint a trustee under the trust-deed in place of the deceased Lawrence Hill Watson, or otherwise to appoint a judicial factor on the trust estate.

Section 12 of the Trusts (Scotland) Act 1867 provides—“When trustees cannot be assumed under any trust-deed, or when any person who is the sole trustee acting under any such trust-deed has become insane or incapable of acting by reason of physical or mental disability, the Court may, on the application of any party having interest in the trust-estate, after such intimation and inquiry as may be thought necessary, appoint a trustee or trustees under such trust-deed, with all the powers incident to that office.” …

The question arose whether the Trusts Amendment Act 1884 had extended the operation of the Trusts Act 1867 to trusts in which the trustees did not act gratuitously, and the Lord Ordinary ( Low), in respect of the importance of this question, reported the petition to the First Division. The provisions of the Trusts Amendment Act 1884, on which the petitioners founded, are set forth in his Lordship's note.

Opinion.—The petition is presented by two of the principal creditors of Mr Reid with his concurrence, and no opposition to the appointment has been offered by any of the parties interested. The prayer asks alternatively for the appointment of a judicial factor, but the parties desire that a trustee should be appointed, if that course is competent.

The application is made under the Trusts Acts, although they are not cited in the petition, and it appears to me to be

Page: 676

doubtful whether a trust for creditors falls within the provisions of these Acts.

It was decided in the case of Mackenzie, 10 Macph. 749, that the Trusts Act of 1867 applied only to trusts in which trustees act gratuitously, and did not apply to a trust for creditors.

But it is said that the operation of the Act of 1867 is extended by the Trusts (Scotland) Amendment Act 1884.

It is provided by section 1 of that Act that it and the previous Trusts Acts ‘may be cited as the Trusts (Scotland) Acts 1861 to 1884, and shall be read and construed together.’

Then by section 2 it is provided that “Trust” shall mean and include any trusts constituted by any deed or other writing, or by private or local Act of Parliament, or by resolution of any corporation or public or ecclesiastical body, and the appointment of any tutor, curator, or judicial factor by deed, decree, or otherwise. “Trustee” shall include tutor, curator, and judicial factor.’

It is plain that the definition of a ‘trust’ is wide enough to include a trust for creditors, but the same thing could be said of the definition of a ‘trust’ under the Act of 1867.

Again, if the word ‘trustee’ is to include tutor, curator, and judicial factor, I think that it presumably also includes a trustee in the ordinary sense of the word, whether gratuitous or not. Further, I apprehend that the presumption is that the trustees acting under all trusts falling within the definition of ‘trust’ are included in the Acts. There is, however, no separate definition of the word ‘trustee,’ and it was held in the case of Mackenzie that that word, where it occurs in the Act of 1867, means gratuitous trustee.

The Act of 1884 has been followed by the Acts of 1887 and 1891.

By the former Act it is provided that, in addition to the powers conferred on trustees by the second section of the Act of 1867, trustees shall have power to make abatement of rent ‘in all trusts to which that section applies.’

The Act of 1891 deals chiefly with the liability of trustees who have lent money on security of property, and by section 2 it is provided that ‘trust’ and ‘trustee’ shall have the meaning assigned to them by the Act of 1884.

In the Act of 1887 there is no definition, either by reference or otherwise, of ‘trust’ and ‘trustee,’ but the 19th section of the Judicial Factors (Scotland) Act 1889 enacts that the provisions of the Trusts Act of 1887 ‘shall apply to and include all trusts and trustees as defined by the second section of the Trusts (Scotland) Amendment Act 1884.’

The language of that enactment is very emphatic, and to ascertain the scope of the Act of 1887 the definition in the Act of 1884 alone has to be looked to. As I have already said, the definition of ‘trust’ in the Act clearly covers a trust for creditors, and the word ‘trustee’ is only defined as including certain offices, the holders of which, although acting in a fiduciary capacity, are not in ordinary language termed trustees. It therefore appears to me that a trust and a trustee for creditors fall within the operation of the Act of 1887, or, in other words, that the second section of the Act of 1867 as amended by the Act of 1887, applies to such trusts and trustees. I do not think, however, that in view of the decision in the case of Mackenzie it is clear that the other sections of the Act of 1867 have been extended beyond the case of gratuitous trusts, except in so far as applicable to tutors, curators, and judicial factors, and perhaps the fact that the Legislature has specially enacted (as I think) that the second section applies to all trusts, points to the remaining sections having a more limited application.

As it is of importance that the scope of the Trusts Acts should be authoritatively declared, I have thought it right to report the case.”

Argued for the petitioners—The provisions of the Act of 1867 were extended to all trusts by the operation of the Act of 1884. The latter Act was to be read and construed along with the previous Trusts Acts. It contained no definition of gratuitous trustee, but on the contrary its provisions applied expressly to trusts in which the trustees did not act gratuitously—Sections 1 and 2 of Act of 1884. The present case was thus distinguished from the case of Mackenzie, referred to by the Lord Ordinary, in which the Judges proceeded largely upon the ground that the wide definition of “trusts” contained in the Act of 1867, being followed immediately by a definition of “gratuitous trustees,” must be limited and restricted to the scope of that definition. The Court could therefore grant the application for the appointment of a trustee under the Trusts Acts. The Court had also at common law the power of appointing trustees to fill vacancies, and would exercise that power where necessary, and a sufficient case of necessity existed in the present case—M'Laren on Wills and Succession, ii. 219, and following; Aikman, &c., December 2, 1881, 9 R. 213; Melville v. Preston, February 8, 1838, 16 S. 457.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—I think it is competent for the Court to appoint a trustee under the 12th section of the Trusts Act of 1867 where the trust is one in which the trustees do not act gratuitously. The decision in the case of Mackenzie was a decision under the Act of 1867 alone, and the Court held that the insertion of the definition of “gratuitous trustee,” and the collacation of the clauses in section 1 of that Act showed that the intention of the statute was that the wide definition of “trusts” should be controlled by and limited to the scope of the definition of gratuitous trustee. We are now dealing, however, with the Act of 1884, and section 2 of that Act defines “trust” in very wide terms—wide enough to include a trust for creditors—and then defines “trustee” as including tutor, curator, and judicial factor, negativing the idea that the definition of trust

Page: 677

is limited to trusts in which the trustees act gratuitously. Now, that section was attracted by the Trusts Act of 1887 to the 2nd section of the Act of 1867—that is to say, those trusts which are defined in the 2nd section of the Act of 1884 have applied to them the provisions of the 12th section of the Act of 1867, which empowers the Court to appoint trustees on the petition of parties interested. I think therefore that the Lord Ordinary's deduction of the course of legislation is satisfactory up to this point, but it also appears to me to be made out that an application for the appointment of a trustee under the 12th section of the Act of 1867 is competent, even where the trust is not a gratuitous one, because of the effect of the Act of 1884.

Lord M'Laren—I agree, and I think there is no difficulty in our giving effect to the first alternative of the prayer of the petition. As I read the Act of 1884, it deals with only two objects, one being the regulation of the powers of investment by trustees, the other the extension of the scope of the previous enactments relating to trust administration. Now, the Act of 1884 does not specially allude to gratuitous trusts, but defines “trustee” in a wide sense, and in so doing must, I think, be held to confer on the Court power to appoint in private trusts. I have always thought that the Court by its constitution had the power to supply vacancies in private trusts, and the cases cited by the counsel for the petitioners show that it has been exercised, but at the same time the Court has always been reluctant to exercise their power of appointment in the case of private trusts, and most of the cases in which the Court has appointed trustees have undoubtedly been cases of trusts for charitable or public purposes, but the presumption against the exercise of the power of appointment in private trusts has been entirely displaced by the chapter of statutes known as the Trusts Acts.

Lord Wellwood concurred.

Lord Adam and Lord Kinnear were absent.

The Court remitted to the Lord Ordinary to appoint a trustee in terms of the first alternative of the petitioners' prayer.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Petitioners— Boswell. Agents— H. B. & F. J. Dewar, W.S.

1893


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1893/30SLR0675.html