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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Crawford Leslie v. Petitioner [1905] ScotLR 42_569 (28 February 1905) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1905/42SLR0569.html Cite as: [1905] SLR 42_569, [1905] ScotLR 42_569 |
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Page: 569↓
[Bill Chamber.
In 1878 the heir-apparent of an entailed estate, with consent of the heiress in possession, granted a bond of annuity and provision in favour of his wife and younger children, and died in 1898.
In 1885 the said heiress in possession granted a bond of provision in favour of her younger children, and died in 1904.
In a petition by the heir of entail in possession for authority to record an instrument of disentail, held that, in computing the free rental available to satisfy the provision granted in 1885, the provisions granted in 1878 viz., (1) the annuity to the widow, (2) interest on the provision to children, fell to be deducted in virtue of the terms of the Aberdeen Act 1824 (5 Geo. IV, c. 87), sec. 4, and the Entail Amendment Act 1868 (31 and 32 Vict. c. 84), sec. 6.
A petition was presented to the Court by Reginald William Henry Crawford Leslie, heir of entail in possession of the entailed lands of Badenscoth and others, in the county of Aberdeen, for authority to record an instrument of disentail.
A remit was made to Francis J. Dewar, W.S., to report upon the facts and procedure. He reported, inter alia, that in 1878 Lieutenant—Colonel Crawford, heir-apparent of his mother Mrs Isabella Crawford Leslie, then heiress of entail in possession of the estate now sought to be disentailed, granted with her consent, under the powers of the Aberdeen Act and of sec. 6 of the Entail Amendment Act 1868, a bond of annuity and provision in favour of his wife and younger children. The amount of the annuity payable to his wife after his death was to be £200 during the life of Mrs Crawford Leslie, and £500 thereafter, and the amount of the provision to younger children was £4000, payable a year after his death. The said Lieutenant-Colonel Crawford died on 5th December 1898 survived by a widow and six children. Mrs Crawford Leslie, his mother, having obtained the authority of the Court, in February 1899, charged the entailed estates with a bond and disposition in security in favour of her son's younger children for £4000 in implement of her son's said provision in their behalf. On 8th March 1899 the widow completed her title to her annuity by infeftment. The statutory affidavit necessary to obtaining the leave of the Court to charge the estate with the £4000 provision to younger children had disclosed the existence of a then unsecured provision for £9500 granted under the powers of the Aberdeen Act 1824 (5 Geo. IV, cap. 87), sec. 4, by Mrs Crawford Leslie in 1885 in favour of her younger children Mrs Margaret E. Gordon and Mrs Isabella Gordon, contingently payable on their survivance, and revocable at her option. Mrs Crawford Leslie died on 25th April 1904 and was succeeded in the entailed estates by the petitioner, and survived by her two daughters, who were thus now creditors in the £9500 provision as far as it did not exceed two years' free rental of the estates as at the death of their mother. The two years' free rental of the estates amounted to £7087, 2s. 11d. In these circumstances the question arose whether the petitioner in computing the free rental was entitled to deduct the sum of the heir-apparent's provisions previously made, viz., two years' annuity to the widow at £500, and two years' interest on children's provision (£4000) at 3 per cent.—in all £1240.
The Aberdeen Act 1824 (5 Geo. IV, c. 87), sec 4, inter alia, after conferring power upon heirs in possession of entailed estates to grant bonds of provision to children provided that the amount of such provision should in no case exceed certain proportions of the free yearly rents or free yearly value of the whole said entailed lands and estates “after deducting the public burdens, liferent provisions, including those to wives or husbands authorised to be granted by this Act, the yearly interest of debts and provisions, and the yearly amount of other burdens of what nature soever affecting or burdening the said lands and estates, or the yearly rents or proceeds thereof, and diminishing the clear yearly rent or yearly value thereof as aforesaid to the heir of entail in possession.”
The Entail Amendment (Scotland) Act 1868 (31 and 32 Vict. c. 84), sec. 6, after enabling heirs-apparent of entailed estates to grant with consent of the heir in possession such provisions in like manner and in similar conditions as were competent to heirs in possession under the powers of the Aberdeen Act 1824, inter alia, enacts that “such
Page: 570↓
provisions to be granted by such heir-apparent shall not interfere with or affect any provisions which have been granted by the heir in possession of such estate, and shall be postponed to the provisions granted by such heir in possession.”
The material facts are these—In 1878 Lieut.-Colonel Crawford, then heir-apparent to the entailed estates, with the consent of his mother Mrs Crawford Leslie, who was then heiress of entail in possession, granted a bond of annuity and provision in favour of his wife and younger children, under the powers of the Aberdeen Act and of section (i of the Entail Act 1868, the amount of the annuity being £500, and that of the children's provisions £4000, payable one year after his death. In 1885 the said Mrs Crawford Leslie granted an Aberdeen Act bond of provision, revocable in her option, being the bond mentioned in the schedule above referred to for £9500, payable one year after her death to her said younger children Mrs Margaret Elizabeth Gordon and Mrs Isabella Gordon. Lieut-Colonel Crawford died on 5th December 1898, survived by his wife and by certain younger children. In February 1899 his mother, who also survived him, applied to the Court for authority under the Aberdeen Act and the Entail Act 1868, section 6, to charge upon the entailed estate her son's said provision of £4000, and this was done by way of a bond and disposition in security for that amount in favour of the younger children. The widow of Lieut.Colonel Crawford also completed title to her annuity by infeftment. For the reasons explained in Mr Dewar's report, no account was taken in these proceedings of the bond for £9500 of which mention has been made. Mrs Crawford Leslie, the granter of it, died in April 1904, survived by her grandson the petitioner, who succeeded to the entailed estates, and by her two daughters already named. These ladies desire that the proper amount of their provisions under their mother's bond be secured or paid to them before the disentail is carried through by their nephew. The reporter explains that two years' free rental of the estates as at Mrs Crawford Leslie's death would amount to £7087, 2s. 11d.
In these circumstances the question has been raised and argued, whether or not the petitioner is entitled in ascertaining the amount of his sisters' provisions, to deduct ( a) the annuity of £500 to Lieut.-Colonel Crawford's widow, and ( b) interest on his children's provisions of £4000. If the petitioner's contention is correct a sum of £1240 or thereby would fall to be deducted, as explained by the reporter, leaving the amount of the provisions of the petitioner's aunts at £5847, 2s. 11d. or thereby.
The question is I believe a new one, and is not without difficulty. If regard were to be had to the terms of the Aberdeen Act only, the deduction would appear to be a good one, the sums involved being clearly burdens affecting the entailed estate as at the date of the death of the granter Mrs Crawford Leslie, within the meaning of that statute. But one must consider also the language of section 6 of the Entail Amendment (Scotland) Act 1868 (31 and 32 Vict. c. 84), which confers power upon an heir apparent to an entailed estate to grant provisions to his wife and children, with the consent of the heir in possession, to the same extent as an heir in possession may do under the Aberdeen Act. A proviso follows, the full intention and effect of which I have found it difficult to appreciate. It is provided, however, inter alia, that “such provisions to be granted by such heir-apparent shall not interfere with or affect any provisions which have been granted by the heir in possession of such estate, and shall be postponed to the provisions granted by such heir in possession.” … Now it seems to me that the question under consideration may be capable of solution if due regard be had to the words “which have been granted” above quoted. These words must refer to some particular punctum temporis I think that in their grammatical sense, and according to the ordinary use of language, they must be held to refer to the point of time at which the heir-apparent, with consent of the heir in possession, grants his bond of provision. He can grant no bond without such consent. If that be the true sense of the phrase, then in 1878, when Lieut.-Colonel Crawford with his mother's consent granted his bond, there were no provisions which “had been granted” by the heir in possession which could be interfered with, and the result would be that the deduction now claimed by the petitioner is a good one. Another point of time to which the words “have been granted” might be held to refer is the date at which the provisions made by the heir-apparent become payable, viz., in this case a year after the death of Lieut-Colonel Crawford. I do not think that this reading of the words is so natural or proper a one as that above indicated. But the result in the present case would in my opinion be the same; because I do not think
Page: 571↓
The deductions claimed by the petitioner in computing the free rental were allowed.
Counsel for the Petitioner— Hon. W. Watson. Agents— Tods, Murray, & Jamieson, W.S.
Counsel for the Respondents— Cullen. Agents— Tods, Murray, & Jamieson, W.S.