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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Turnbull's Trustees v. Turnbull's Trustees [1911] ScotLR 1033 (17 July 1911) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1911/48SLR1033.html Cite as: [1911] ScotLR 1033, [1911] SLR 1033 |
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Page: 1033↓
By his settlement a testator revoked “all and every previous will or settlement” made by him, and conveyed to his daughter his whole property, means, and estate, heritable and moveable, real and personal, wherever situated or by whom held. At different periods during his life he had settled particular properties and certain policies of insurance upon his daughter, partly for her own behoof and partly in trust for her children. At the time of his death the deeds of settlement relating thereto were in the hands of his agents—all of them being testamentary and revocable. In addition to the property so destined the testator left considerable estate, none of which, however, was in other hands than his own.
In a special case, held that the special destinations had been effectually revoked by the terms of the settlement.
On 27th October 1910 Mrs Elizabeth Cochran Turnbull or Robertson, wife of and residing with Hugh Robertson, 16 Portland Road, Kilmarnock, and others, trustees acting under the holograph settlement of the late Andrew Turnbull, Kilmarnock, dated 16th February 1907, and with relative codicils registered in the Books of Council and Session, 2nd February 1910, first parties; James Dunbar Mackintosh, solicitor, Kilmarnock, and others, trustees appointed by a holograph letter written by the said Andrew Turnbull to his daughter the said Mrs Elizabeth Cochran Turnbull or Robertson, dated 13th November 1900, and her reply thereto dated 14th November 1900, second parties; and the said Mrs Elizabeth Cochran Turnbull or Robertson, and the said Hugh Robertson as her curator and administrator-in-law, third parties, presented a Special Case, in which
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they, inter alia, craved the Court to determine whether certain destinations made in favour of Mrs Robertson by her father the said Andrew Turnbull during his lifetime had or had not been revoked by his settlement. The Case stated—‘1. By the said holograph settlement, dated 16th February 1907, the late Andrew Turnbull, F.S.A.A., who died on 10th September 1909, left and bequeathed to his said daughter Mrs Elizabeth Cochran Turnbull or Robertson, his whole property, means, and estate, heritable and moveable, real and personal, wherever situated or by whom held, to be held and possessed by her exclusive of the jus mariti, right of administration, or any other right of her said husband or of any other husband she might subsequently marry.…
3. Some years prior to his death the firm of Mackintosh & Bain, writers, Kilmarnock, acted as the law agents of the testator. At the time of the testator's death the following documents, inter alia, were in the hands of Mr Mackintosh, the senior partner of said firm:—( a) A policy of assurance, dated 23rd July 1890, of the North British and Mercantile Insurance Company, No. 77,223, on the life of the deceased for the sum of £100, in favour of his said daughter Mrs Robertson. The present value of the policy is £129, 4s. ( b) A policy of assurance, dated 27th August 1896, with the same company, No. 82,535, on the life of the deceased for the sum of £400, also in name of the said Mrs Robertson, the present value of which is £478, 11s. ( c) A disposition, dated 26th April 1898, of which the dispositive clause is as follows:—‘I, Matthew Muir, builder, Kilmarnock, for sundry good causes and considerations, do hereby, at the request and with the consent of Andrew Turnbull, sometime Town Chamberlain, Kilmarnock, now accountant there, dispone and assign to and in favour of Elizabeth Cochrane Turnbull, daughter of and residing with the said Andrew Turnbull’ (now the said Mrs Robertson), ‘and her heirs and assignees whomsoever, heritably and irredeemably, All and Whole,’ certain heritable subjects in Prestwick. The disposition is signed by Mr Muir and Mr Turnbull, and is attested.…
6. On 13th November 1900 the testator wrote to his daughter Mrs Robertson a holograph letter, signed over a 6d. stamp, in the following terms:—
‘Kilmarnock, 13th Nov. 1900.
To Mrs Lizzie Cochran Turnbull or Robertson, 49 North Hamilton,
Street, Kilmarnock.
Dear Lizzie,—I have placed in the hands of Mr James Dunbar Mackintosh, solicitor here, for your behoof, deeds and documents to the value of some £1200 stg., which I may add to or diminish as I think proper, but subject to your agreeing, by holograph letter, that on my death, or at my request during life, you will convey the same to the following trustees, viz., The said James Dunbar Mackintosh, Thomas M'Culloch, ironfounder here, James Blackwood Wilson, manufacturer here, and Andrew Aitken, draper here—to be held by them for your behoof in liferent, and your children in fee equally among them, or to any one or more of them nominated by any writing under your hand, exclusive of the “jus mariti,” right of administration, and whole other rights of your present or any future husband you may have; and providing that in the event of your predeceasing me, or dying without leaving children, the whole property carried by said deeds and documents remains my sole property, or falls into the residue of my means and estate. Given under my hand this thirteenth day of November One thousand nine hundred years.
And. Turnbull.’
The said trustees are the parties of the second part.
On 14th November 1900 Mrs Robertson wrote to the testator a holograph letter in the following terms:—
‘49 North Hamilton Street,
Kilmarnock, 14th November 1900.
To Mr Andrew Turnbull, F.S.A.A.,
Kilmarnock.
Dear Father, — I have received your kind intimation dated 13th November 1900, and I hereby agree to accept the properties, policies of insurance, and shares you have handed to Mr J. D. Mackintosh, solicitor here, for my behoof, and I further bind and oblige myself to convey the same to the trustees, and on the conditions you name, and that on such terms as may be devised by the said James Dunbar Mackintosh, whom failing the Sheriff-Clerk-Depute for the time being at Kilmarnock, whose decision and judgment will be binding on me; and on my default in any manner of way whatever I agree to forfeit any right or interest I may have in said properties, policies of insurance, and shares. Given under my hand this fourteen day of November One thousand nine hundred years.
Lizzih Cochrane Turnbull or Robertson.’
These letters were among the documents in the hands of Mr Mackintosh at the testator's death. The parties are agreed that under the ‘deeds and documents’ referred to in the testator's letter to Mrs Robertson were included the following—(1) The policies of insurance and disposition set forth in article 3 hereof; (2) Certificates for ( a) 25 shares in Thomas M'Culloch & Company, Limited, ( b) 20 shares in Thomas Stewart & Sons, Limited; and further, that the heritable subjects contained and described in the said disposition, together with the said shares and the said policies of insurance, were included under the ‘properties, policies of insurance, and shares’ referred to in Mrs Robertson's letter to the testator. The testator sold the shares in Thomas Stewart & Sons, Limited, during his lifetime. The shares in Thomas M'Culloch & Company, Limited, are valueless.
7. Subsequent to the date of the said letters passing between the testator and his daughter Mrs Robertson, the testator granted, inter alia, the following dispositions of heritable subjects, all of which
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were in the hands of Mr Mackintosh at the date of the testator's death, the deeds in each case being completed but not recorded:—(1) A disposition dated 4th May 1903 by the deceased in favour of Mrs Robertson, of property in Morton Place and Park Street, Kilmarnock. (2) A disposition by the deceased in favour of Mrs Robertson bearing to be granted ‘for the love, favour, and affection which I have and bear to my eldest daughter,’ dated 22nd February 1904, conveying certain heritable subjects in Kilmarnock, therein described as Victoria Terrace, Plot No. 1. (3) A disposition dated 22nd February 1904, in terms exactly similar to the preceding disposition conveying certain heritable subjects in Kilmarnock, therein described as Victoria Terrace, Plot No. 2. 8. On 7th March 1904 the testator wrote to Mr Mackintosh a holograph letter in the following terms:—
I enclose disposition of one half pro indiviso of subjects in Morton Place and Park Street, dated 4th May 1903, disposition of subjects Victoria Terrace, Plot No. 1, also of Plot No. 2, dated 22nd February 1904, all in favour of my daughter Mrs Elizabeth Cochran Turnbull or Robertson, residing at Hamilton Place here, which please hold in her interest and for her behoof. Her entry is at my decease, and I reserve full right during my life to deal with them as I please in any manner of way whatever.—I am, very truly yours,
‘ And. Turnbull.’
“9. In the repositories of the testator after his death there was also found a holograph letter in the following terms addressed to him by his daughter Mrs Robertson:—
‘16 Portland Road,
22nd April 1903.
Mr Andrew Turnbull, 4 Bank Place.
Referring to your transfer to me of various shares and life insurance policies, I hereby bind myself to re-transfer the same to you at your expense when called on by you to do so, but in the event of your predeceasing me without having called for a re-transfer, then the shares and insurance policies are to remain my property.—Yours truly, Elizabeth Cochran Turnbull or Robertson.’
10. The testator has left considerable estate which will be carried by the said holograph settlement of 16th February 1907, even in the event of it being found that the policies of insurance and heritable subjects mentioned in article 3 and the heritable subjects mentioned in article 7 are not carried by the said settlement.
11. In these circumstances questions have arisen among the parties as to whether a trust affecting all or any of the properties expressly disponed by the testator in favour of his daughter Mrs Robertson was validly constituted by the said letters dated 13th and 14th November 1900, and, if so, whether such trust applied to and affected the properties conveyed in favour of Mrs Robertson by deeds subsequent to the date of the said letters. In the event of any such trust having been validly constituted, the parties are farther at issue upon the question whether that trust was subsequently recalled by the truster by implication when he executed the general trust-disposition and settlement of 16th February 1907, or was in part discharged in respect of Mrs Robertson's undertaking to reconvey certain of the subjects of trust to the truster upon the terms set forth in the holograph letter dated 22nd April 1903.”
The second parties maintained that by the letters of 13th and 14th November 1900 passing between Mr Turnbull and his daughter Mrs Robertson, an effectual trust was constituted affecting (1) the foresaid policies of insurance, (2) the heritable subjects contained and described in the disposition of 26th April 1898. They also maintained that the heritable subjects contained and described in the disposition dated 4th May 1903 and the two dispositions dated 22nd February 1904 had been brought under the trust. They further maintained that the said trust had never been recalled, and that in terms of it Mrs Robertson falls to pay, transfer, convey, and make over to the second parties in trust for the purposes set forth in the said letters the said policies of insurance and heritable subjects.
The third parties maintained that any operative trust was recalled by the testator when he executed the holograph settlement of 16th February 1907, and that the first parties were bound to pay and make over to them unconditionally the whole estate of the late Andrew Turnbull.
The questions of law included the following—“1. Was a trust validly constituted by the letters of 13th and 14th November 1900 with regard to the subjects of the disposition and the policies of assurance referred to in article 3 of this case? 3. Did the provisions of any such trust extend to and affect the properties conveyed by the said dispositions dated 4th May 1903 and 22nd February 1904? 4. In the event of the first question or the third question being answered in the affirmative, does the said general trust-disposition and settlement of 16th February 1907 operate the recall of any such trust?”
Argued for the third parties— Esto that a trust had been constituted by the letters of 13th and 14th November 1900, it was revoked by the holograph settlement of 1907. The latest expression of a testator's intention was the ruling one, and that being so all prior dispositions must be held to have been revoked. The cases of Campbell v. Campbell, July 8, 1880, 7 R. (H.L.) 100, 17 S.L.R. 807, and Perrett's Trustees v. Perrett, 1909 S.C. 522, 46 S.L.R. 453, were inapplicable, for these were feudal destinations in favour of heirs-substitute.
Argued for second parties— Esto that a general disposition and settlement which revoked all other testamentary writings would revoke a special destination made by a third party, it would not revoke a special destination made by the testator himself— Perrett ( cit. sup.), per the Lord President, p. 527. That rule was not limited to feudal destinations, but applied also to
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destinations of personal estate— Connell's Trustees v. Connell's Trustees, July 16, 1886, 13 R. 1175, 23 S.L.R. 857. The provisions in favour of the third party were special destinations made by the testator himself, and were therefore outwith the scope of the general settlement, which dealt only with the residue of his estate. Nasmyth v. Hare, July 27, 1821, 1 Sh. App. 65, was also referred to. At advising—
It appears that for several years the testator had been in the habit of setting aside both heritable properties and policies of insurance by certain instruments for the benefit of this particular daughter, and it is said that with respect to all of these, and certainly with respect to some, his daughter should take the benefits conceived in her favour subject to a trust in favour of her children. The question is whether these particular settlements remain valid or whether they are recalled by the later trust-disposition and settlement. I do not examine in detail all the instruments to which I have referred, nor do I intend to consider a number of questions raised as to their mutual bearing on one another, upon the assumption that they were all still in force at the date of the testator's death. The material point about which the parties are agreed is that they were none of them donations out and out, but that they were all testamentary and revocable. The only question therefore is whether they are revoked.
I cannot understand that there should be any dispute raised about the terms of the testator's will, which are sufficiently comprehensive to carry everything without exception which belonged to him at the time of his death. But then it is said to be a settled doctrine of the law of Scotland which has been established by cases of great authority, and especially by the decision of the House of Lords in the case of Glendonwyn v. Gordon, 11 Macph. (H.L.) 33, that general words of disposition in a mortis causa deed, unless there is something to control the presumption, are to be understood as applicable only to property the succession to which is not already regulated by special destination to a particular class of heirs. That is the whole extent that the cases to which I have referred really go. But the rule established by these cases with reference to mortis causa dispositions of heritable property, read with reference to previous special destinations, has been extended so as to apply to questions of moveable rights settled by testamentary instruments. It has been observed more than once that it is difficult to reconcile that extension of the doctrine to the settled rules which govern the construction of wills, but the point is too well settled by decision to be disturbed by this Court. We must accept the decisions as they stand. But they do not establish, any more than do the cases as to heritable rights, an absolute rule that a general disposition will not operate as a revocation of a previous special grant or conveyance, but only that there is a presumption against its so operating which may be redargued. In certain of the cases the question has been whether facts extrinsic of the testamentary documents themselves would be sufficient to rebut the presumption, but it is equally clear that it may be excluded by the terms of the will itself. I have come to the conclusion that the special destinations in question have been effectually revoked by the terms of this will. The first point is that it begins by “cancelling and revoking all and every previous will or settlement” made by him. These words are wide enough to cover all instruments which have the effect of testamentary settlements whether they are technically wills or deeds, and they will therefore cover the instruments in whatever form they stood in favour of the daughter, because it is common ground that these were all testamentary and revocable. I confess that if the question were open I should be disposed to say that the rule against general words of gift or bequest being read as derogating from a special destination must be excluded by that revocation alone, because the only question of difficulty is whether the special destination can be evacuated by implication from the use of general terms of conveyance. In Campbell v. Campbell, in which the rule of Glendonwyn's case was held to be inapplicable, Lord Selborne explains the principle of the earlier judgment to be that as both instruments expressed the mind and will of the same person—the one as to a particular part, the other as to the generality of his estate—the two instruments might be construed together so as to make the general words residuary in their operation. But it is not intelligible that two testamentary instruments should be construed together if the later of the two revokes the earlier; and it appears to me that to construe a will which begins by revoking all and every previous will and settlement and thereafter bequeathes the whole means and estate of the testator in a different way, as meaning that certain previous settlements are to stand good as special bequests, and the operation of the new will to be confined to the residue after these special bequests have been satisfied, is to deny all meaning to plain words. But then there is some authority for holding that a general clause of revocation is not necessarily conclusive of the question of intention. I should therefore not be disposed
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The
The Court pronounced this interlocutor—
“Find in answer to the fourth question of law in the case that by the general trust-disposition and settlement of 16th November 1907 therein mentioned all previous settlements by the testator specified in the Special Case were revoked, and that the whole property, real and personal, was effectually conveyed to the testator's daughter: Find it unnecessary to answer the other questions of law in the case, and decern.”
Counsel for the First and Third Parties— Moncrieff— Fenton. Agents— Simpson & Marwick, W.S.
Counsel for the Second Parties— Cooper, K.C.— J. M. Hunter. Agents— Macpherson & Mackay, S.S.C.