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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> A & Ors v D & Ors [2017] EWHC 2222 (Ch) (12 September 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/2222.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2222 (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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A B C |
Claimants |
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- and – |
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D (by a litigation friend) E (by a litigation friend) F (by a litigation friend) G (as representative of the class of unborn beneficiaries) |
First Defendants Second Defendant |
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Edward Waldegrave (instructed by Fladgate LLP) for the First Defendants
Oliver Conolly (instructed by Fladgate LLP) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 12 June and 28 July 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Chief Master Marsh:
Background to the Deeds of Appointment
i. Until a principal beneficiary obtained an interest in possession in his or her share of the trust fund, that share would not form part of any individual's estate for IHT and would not be subject to the "relevant property" regime, which normally applied to settled property which did not form part of a person's estate. Under the relevant property regime, settled property would be subject to an IHT charge at rates of up to 6% on every tenth anniversary of the settlement – known as the periodic or 10 yearly charge – and to exit charges.
ii. On obtaining an interest in possession in a share of the trust fund, the capital value of that share would be deemed to be part of the principal beneficiary's estate for IHT purposes. There would be no exit charges as a result of the property ceasing to be held upon non-interest in possession trusts.
i. Conversion into a new A&M Trust. This required one or more beneficiaries to become absolutely entitled to the trust property on or before their 18th birthday.
ii. Conversion into an 18 to 25 Trust in accordance with the requirements of s.71D(3) to (7) of IHTA as amended by FA 2006. If those requirements were met, the settled property would not be relevant property after 5 April 2008 and a special exit rate would be applicable when s.71D ceased to apply.
Section 71D IHTA
"(3) Subsection (4) has effect where –
(a) at any time on or after 22nd March 2006 but before 6th April 2008 … any property ceases to be property to which section 71 above applies without ceasing to be settled property, and
(b) immediately after the property ceases to be property to which section 71 above applies –
(i) it is held on trusts for the benefit of a person who has not yet attained the age of 25, and
(ii) the trusts secure that the conditions in subsection (6) below are met.
(4) From the time when the property ceases to be property to which section 71 above applies, but subject to subsection (5) below, this section applies to the property (if it would not apply to the property by virtue of subsection (1) above) for so long as –
(a) the property continues to be settled property held on trusts such as are mentioned in subsection (3)(b)(i) above, and
(b) the trusts continue to secure that the conditions in subsection (6) below are met.
…
(6) Those conditions are –
(a) that the person mentioned in subsection (1) (a) or (3)(b)(i) above ("B"), if he has not done so before attaining the age of 25, will on attaining that age become absolutely entitled to –
(i) the settled property,
(ii) any income arising from it, and
(iii) any income that has arisen from the property held on the trusts for his benefit and been accumulated before that time,
(b) that, for so long as B is living and under the age of 25, if any of the settled property is applied for the benefit of a beneficiary, it is applied for the benefit of B, and
(c )that, for long as B is living and under the age of 25, either –
(i) B is entitled to all of the income (if there is any) arising from any of the settled property, or
(ii)no such income may be applied for the benefit of any other person.
(7) For the purposes of this section, trusts are not to be treated as failing to secure that the conditions in subsection (6) are met by reason only of –
(a) the trustees having the powers conferred by section 32 of the Trustee Act 1925 (powers of advancement),
(b) the trustees having those powers but free from, or subject to less restrictive limitation than, the limitation imposed by proviso (a) of subsection (1) of that section,
…
(e )the trustees having powers to the like effect as the powers mentioned in any of paragraphs (a) to (d) above."
i. The view taken by HMRC is that where the provisions refer to a "person", it means a person who is alive at the date when the settled property ceases to be subject to s.71 IHTA. In other words, the new 18 to 25 Trusts cannot be created for a class of persons including persons who may be born after date.
ii. Subsection 71D(6) is explicit that the beneficiary must become absolutely entitled on reaching the age of 25;
iii. Subsection 71D(7) leaves open the possibility that the trusts may include powers of advancement and that such powers will not prevent the new trusts from qualifying as 18 to 25 Trusts. A power to advance may be used to postpone the vesting of an interest – Pilkington v IRC [1964] 1 Ch 612, at 633,636 per Viscount Radcliffe.
Deeds of Appointment
"2 Appointment
In exercise of the power of appointment given to the [trustees] in clause [xx] of the Settlement and all other relevant powers the [trustees] hereby revocably appoint and declare that the Trust Fund shall from the date of this Deed be held by the Trustees upon the trusts powers and provisions contained in clauses 3 to 7." [my emphasis]
"6. Restrictions on certain powers
6.1 In this clause qualifying property means any part of the Trust Fund which is for the time being property to which section 71D of the Inheritance Tax Act 1984 applies.
6.2 Where the Trust Fund or any part of it would (in the absence of the restrictions imposed by this clause 6.2) fail to be qualifying property by reason only of powers conferred on the Trustees by the Settlement, this Deed or by law, those powers shall be capable of being exercised only in a manner which does not prevent the Trust Fund or that part of it from being qualifying property."
"(1) While equity has power to rectify a written instrument so that it accords with the true intention of its maker, as a discretionary remedy rectification is to be treated with caution. One aspect of that caution is that the claimant's case should be established by clear evidence of the true intention to which effect has not been given in the instrument. Such proof is on the civil standard of balance of probability. But as the alleged true intention of necessity contradicts the written instrument, there must be convincing proof to counteract the evidence of a different intention represented by the document itself (1154h-1155b);
(2) There must be a flaw in the written document such that it does not give effect to the parties'/donor's agreement/intention, as opposed to the parties/donor merely being mistaken as to the consequences of what they have agreed/intended; for example, it is not sufficient merely that the document fails to achieve the desired fiscal objective (1158f-g);
(3) The specific intention of the parties/donor must be shown; it is not sufficient to show that the parties did not intend what was recorded; they also have to show what they did intend, with some degree of precision (1158g-j);
(4) There must be an issue capable of being contested between the parties notwithstanding that all relevant parties consent. This criterion has been much criticised: the purpose of it, and its actual content and scope, are by no means clear. In Racal Peter Gibson LJ expressly approved the following summary of the principle by Vinelott J in the same case. Vinelott J stated that the court must be satisfied:
"that there is an issue capable of being contested, between the parties or between a covenantor or a grantor and the person he intended to benefit, it being irrelevant first that rectification of the document is sought or consented to by them all, and second that rectification is desired because it has beneficial fiscal consequences. On the other hand, the court will not order rectification of a document as between the parties or as between a grantor or covenantor and an intended beneficiary, if their rights will be unaffected and if the only effect of the order will be to secure a fiscal benefit." (1155c-1158b)."
"… is about putting the record straight. In the case of a voluntary settlement, rectification involves bringing the trust document into line with the true intentions of the settlor as held by him at the date when he executed the document. This can be done by the court when, owing to a mistake in the drafting of the document, it fails to record the settlor's true intentions. The mistake may, for example, consist of leaving out words that were intended to be put into the document; or putting in words that were not intended to be in the document; or through a misunderstanding by those involved about the meanings of the words or expressions that were used in the document. Mistakes of this kind have the effect that the document, as executed, is not a true record of the settlor's intentions."
i the trusts created by the appointment would satisfy the requirements of s71D and that they had sufficient understanding of what those requirements were.
ii A's children would become entitled to their share of the trust capital if they attained the age of 25.
iii any deferral of a child's entitlement to capital should be made pursuant to a power of advancement or appointment exercised for the benefit of that child and not by revoking the earlier appointment.
iv the capital and income should be appointed for the benefit of D, E and F in fixed equal shares and not appointed for a class of beneficiaries that had not closed.
"What about going the 71D route, whereby before 2008 the children are given the right to the capital at 25? Would this then 'eliminate' the ten year charges in 2014. [D] will be 25 in 2024.
Then, say in 2023 'we' review the position. If [A] is then happy for [D] to get (a third) of the fund, then fine – we will have the 4.2% charge on her fund (but will have avoided the 3.9% charge in 2014 and the 6% charge in 2024). If [A] is not happy for [D] to get the funds, then the Trustees revoke her interest and we revert to the relevant property regime and get the 4.2% charge in 2024 – but would still have eliminated the ten year charges.
…
I appreciate that the children have to be given 'fixed' interests."
"1. Change the terms such that the beneficiaries become entitled to a fixed share of capital (say equally) at the age of 25.
2. This will eliminate the £1 million 2014 charge.
3. Then just before the beneficiary([D]) becomes 25, we would discuss the position with you. The trustees could either
i) Do nothing, and then [D] would become entitled to her (1/3) share of the capital. IHT would be payable at 4.2%. The tax would be say £40 million x 1/3 at 4.2%, £560,000 instead of the £2.4 million mentioned above. There would then be 4.2% charges in 20026 [sic] [E] and 2029 [F]. Or
ii) Revoke the beneficiary's interest, such that the trust reverts to the terms as they are today. The tax would be as in (i) above and there would be the ongoing 10-year charges." [AT's emphasis – both the underlining and enboldening]
"3.1 HMRC accept that the mere possibility of a power of advancement being used to defer entitlement to capital at … 25 does not cause the trust to fail to satisfy the requirements of … s71D given the terms of … s71D(7) … If the power of advancement is exercised in favour of that person so as to create continuing trusts under which the beneficiary's capital entitlement will be deferred beyond the age of … 25 … those trusts will fall within the relevant property regime (with …. the usual exit charge under s71E, computed according to the provisions in s71F, assuming the proper exercise of the power causes property to be "paid or applied for the advancement or benefit of B"; otherwise the computation would be under s.71G)."
"AT stressed that it is not entirely certain that one will be able to revoke many years hence but there should be no reason why this should not still be the case – particularly as this is a trust rather than a tax matter.
On this basis the trustees – subject to [C's] agreement – have decided to proceed.
The trustees instructed AT to write to [C] at Fladgate Fielder and asked him [sic] to draw up the relevant documentation."
"At the recent meeting here with [A] and [B], [A] confirmed that he would like to proceed with the 71D Plan, whereby the beneficiaries of The Children's Trust and The [M] Trust are, before 5 April 2008, given revocable interests in the capital at age 25.
You will recall that this is with a view to mitigating the ten year charges on such trusts introduced in FA 2006.
If you agree, as trustee, where applicable, could you please draft suitable Deeds for consideration."
"Just to clarify then as I was not a party to the original discussions, the appointments are to create new 18-25 s71d trusts for the [M] and Children's trusts, which it is intended to revoke just before each child reaches the age of 25. This mitigates the ten year charges that would otherwise arise prior to the children attaining the age of 25."
"Following the decision made at the last trustees meeting to revocably appoint out the interests in the above settlements onto new trusts in line with the new trust legislation introduced by the Finance Act 2006, which will mitigate the inheritance tax charges that would otherwise arise. I have completed the relevant documentation and now all that is required prior to 5 April 2008 is your execution of the same as trustees."
"The children are due to take their share of the capital of the trust outright at age 25." [His emphasis]