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

Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Gardner v. Curran [2008] ScotSC 18 (15 July 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2008/18.html
Cite as: 2008 SLT (Sh Ct) 105, 2008 GWD 27-431, [2008] ScotSC 18

[New search] [Help]


SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLAND AND ISLANDS AT WICK

 

A31/07

JUDGEMENT

 

of

 

SHERIFF PRINCIPAL SIR STEPHEN S T YOUNG Bt QC

 

in the cause

 

MARGARET FRANCIS GARDNER

 

Pursuer and Respondent

 

against

 

JOHN JOSEPH CURRAN

 

Defender and Appellant

 

 

 

 

Act: Mr I F Maclean, advocate, instructed by Ewan, Harris & Co, Dornoch

Alt: Mr P G Davies, advocate, instructed by Harper Macleod LLP, Glasgow

 

 

 

Wick: 15th July 2008

The sheriff principal, having resumed consideration of the cause, refuses the appeal and adheres to the interlocutor of the sheriff dated 11 December 2007 under deletion of the words "Meantime appoints parties to be heard on the matter of the expenses of the debate on a date to be fixed"; finds the defender and appellant liable to the pursuer and respondent in the expenses of the appeal and also of the debate before the sheriff on 25 October 2007 and allows an account thereof to be given in and remits the same, when lodged, to the auditor of court to tax and to report; certifies both the debate and the appeal as suitable for the employment by the pursuer and respondent of junior counsel; quoad ultra remits the cause to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

 

 

 

 

Note

 

[1] In this case the pursuer and respondent is the widow of the late Alan Edward James Gardner who died on 29 May 2000 and who at the time of his death was the tenant of Croft 8, Borgue, Caithness. At that time the landlord of the croft was Mrs Margaret Gunn Patterson and the defender and appellant is her executor nominate.

 

[2] Mr Gardner left a will dated 20 September 1999, the material parts of which read as follows:

 

I, Alan Edward James Gardner ........ hereby make the following provisions regarding the distribution of my whole estate on my death:-

1. I revoke all my wills and previous testamentary writings.

2. I appoint as my executor my friend (A) whom failing my wife Margaret Francis Kerr or Gardner .........

3. I direct my executor to give effect to any future writings signed by me, however informal they may be, provided that in the opinion of my executor they clearly express my intentions.

4. For payment of my debts and funeral expenses.

5 . The residue of my estate to my wife, Margaret Francis Gardner.

6. In the event that my wife failing to survive me by thirty clear days, then I leave the residue of my estate to my children (B ,C and D) equally among or between them or wholly to the survivor of them.

 

In terms of clause 7 Mr Gardner made provision for the possibility that a beneficiary might be under age and conferred various powers upon his executor, the details of which are of no significance in this context.

 

[3] So far as material, sections 10 and 11 of the Crofters (Scotland) Act ("the Act") provide as follows:

10(1) A crofter may, by will or other testamentary writing, bequeath the tenancy of his croft to any one person; but where the power conferred by this subsection is exercised in favour of a person not being a member of the crofter's family, the bequest shall be null and void unless the Commission, on application made to them by the legatee, otherwise determine.

(2) A person to whom the tenancy of a croft is bequeathed as aforesaid (in this section referred to as "the legatee") shall, if he accepts the bequest, give notice of the bequest to the landlord within 2 months after the death of the crofter, unless he is prevented by some unavoidable cause from giving such notice within that time, and in that event he shall give such notice within a further period of 4 months. If no such notice is given in accordance with the provisions of this subsection the bequest shall become null and void.

The giving of such notice shall import acceptance of the bequest and, unless the landlord intimates objection to the Commission under subsection (3) below, the legatee shall come into the place of the deceased crofter in the croft as from the date of death of the deceased crofter, and the landlord shall notify the Commission accordingly.

(3) Where notice has been given as aforesaid to the landlord he may within one month after the giving of the notice intimate to the legatee and to the Commission that he objects to receiving the legatee as tenant of the croft and shall state the grounds of his objection.

(4) If, after affording to the legatee and to the landlord an opportunity of making representations to them, the Commission are-

(a) satisfied that the objection is reasonable, they shall declare the bequest to be null and void, and shall notify the landlord and the legatee accordingly;

(b) not so satisfied, they shall notify the landlord and the legatee to that effect, and the legatee shall thereupon come into the place of the deceased crofter in the croft as from the date of the death of the deceased crofter.

(5) If the bequest becomes null and void under this section, the right to the croft shall be treated as intestate estate of the deceased crofter in accordance with Part I of the 1964 Act.

(6) Subject to the foregoing provisions of this section, any question arising with respect to the validity or effect of the bequest shall be determined by any court having jurisdiction to determine the validity and effect of the whole testamentary writings of the deceased crofter.

11(1) Where, owing to the failure of a crofter to bequeath the tenancy of his croft or of such a bequest to receive effect, the right to the tenancy of the croft falls to be treated as intestate estate of the deceased crofter in accordance with Part I of the 1964 Act, and the tenancy is transferred in pursuance of section 16(2) of that Act, the executor of the deceased crofter shall as soon as may be furnish particulars of the transferee to the landlord, who shall accept the transferee as tenant; and the landlord shall notify the Commission accordingly.

 

The Act has recently been amended in certain respects by the provisions of the Crofting Reform etc Act 2007. But it is common ground that the issue in this case falls to be determined in accordance with the provisions set out above.

 

[4] The 1964 Act referred to here is the Succession (Scotland) Act 1964. In their application to this case subsections 16(1) and (2) of this Act provide:

 

16(1) This section applies to any interest, being the interest of a tenant under a lease, which is comprised in the estate of a deceased person and has accordingly vested in the deceased's executor by virtue of section 14 of this Act; and in the following provisions of this section "interest" means an interest to which this section applies.

(2)Where an interest-

(a) is not the subject of a valid bequest by the deceased, or

(b) is the subject of such a bequest, but the bequest is not accepted by the legatee, or

(c) being an interest under an agricultural lease, is the subject of such a bequest, but the bequest is declared null and void in pursuance of section 16 of the Act of 1886 or section 11 of the 1991 Act or becomes null and void under section 10 of the Act of 1955,

and there is among the conditions of the lease (whether expressly or by implication) a condition prohibiting assignation of the interest, the executor shall be entitled, notwithstanding that condition, to transfer the interest to any one of the persons entitled to succeed to the deceased's intestate estate, or to claim legal rights or the prior rights of a surviving spouse out of the estate, in or towards satisfaction of that person's entitlement or claim; but shall not be entitled to transfer the interest to any other person without the consent

(i) in the case of an interest under an agricultural lease, being a lease of a croft within the meaning of section 3(1) of the Act of 1955, of the Crofters Commission;

(ii) in any other case, of the landlord.

 

(In terms of subsection 16(9) "the Act of 1886" means the Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886, "the 1991 Act" means the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1991 and "the Act of 1955" means the Crofters (Scotland) Act 1955).

 

[5] In terms of crave 1 the pursuer seeks a declarator that the tenancy of the croft passed to her under the terms of the will as part of the residue of Mr Gardner's estate and in accordance with section 10(1) and (2) of the Act. In terms of section 61(2) any reference in the Act to a member of a crofter's family includes a reference to his wife, and the pursuer contends that, on a proper construction of the will, clause 5 was effective to carry the tenancy of the croft to her for the purposes of section 10(1) of the Act.

 

[6] The defender on the other hand maintains that the will did not carry the tenancy of the croft to the pursuer since it did not contain a specific bequest of the croft to her. To this end the defender tabled a preliminary plea in law directed to the relevancy and specification of the pursuer's averments and a second plea in law (which it was agreed at the debate should be treated as a preliminary plea) to the effect that, there having been no valid bequest of the croft, the pursuer was not entitled to declarator as craved and the defender should be assoilzied with expenses. By interlocutor dated 11 December 2007 the sheriff repelled these two pleas (and also one of the pursuer's pleas which is no longer the subject of contention) and allowed parties a proof of their respective averments. It is this interlocutor which is the subject of the present appeal.

 

[7] Opening the appeal, counsel for the defender began by examining the statutory scheme set out in sections 10 and 11 of the Act read with section 16(2) of the 1964 Act and submitted in short that it was clear from this scheme that what was required in terms of section 10(1) was a specific bequest of the tenancy of the croft in question to one specific person and that, in the absence of such a specific bequest, the tenancy fell into intestacy - see sections 10(5) and 11(1) of the Act. Counsel submitted that the bequest of residue such as that in the present case was not sufficient to carry the tenancy of the croft to the residuary legatee, and he drew attention to Agnew: Crofting Law at page 72, note 2, and MacCuish and Flyn: Crofting Law at paragraph 7.02. Counsel then proceeded to examine the terms of the earlier Crofting Acts and the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Acts which contained similar provisions to that found in section 10(1) and he submitted that these too supported the proposition that what was required was a specific bequest of the tenancy failing which it fell to be treated as intestate estate of the deceased tenant. Reference was made here in particular to Kennedy v Johnstone 1956 SC 39, Reid's Trustees v Macpherson 1975 SLT 101 and Gill: Agricultural Holdings (3rd Edn) at paragraph 33.02. Counsel then examined the nature of a bequest of residue and submitted under reference to Macdonald on Succession (3rd Edn) at paragraphs 10.70 to 10.74, Hiram on Succession (2nd Edn) at paragraphs 8.4 and 8.7 and Cochrane's Executors v Inland Revenue 1974 SC 158 that a general or residuary legatee was only entitled to receive out of the deceased's estate what was left after the prior purposes of the will had been satisfied including payment of debts, taxes and specific legacies. Thus a residuary legacy could not give rise to a right in the residuary legatee to receive any particular item of property out of the deceased's estate with the result that, once again, what was required for the purposes of section 10(1) was a specific bequest of the tenancy of the croft in question. In the fourth place counsel referred to a number of authorities which had been canvassed before the sheriff at the debate, namely Lindsay's Trustees v Welsh (1890) 34 Journal of Jurisprudence 165, Budge v Gunn 1925 SLCR 74, Kennedy v Breadalbane's Trustees 1933 SLCR 3, Mackay v Macgregor 1941 SLCR 67, Macdonald v Cathcart's Trustees 1943 SLCR 24 and Purdie v Colquhoun 1946 SLCR 26. Counsel submitted that, with one exception, none of these cases provided any satisfactory support for the proposition that a residuary bequest in a will would operate to carry the tenancy of a croft. The one exception was Macdonald v Cathcart's Trustees and that case, said counsel, had been wrongly decided in that the decision flew in the face of the relevant legislative scheme. Finally counsel drew attention to the note appended to the sheriff's interlocutor and submitted in short that he had reached the wrong conclusion with the result that the appeal should be allowed, his interlocutor recalled and the action dismissed.

 

[8] In response, counsel for the pursuer submitted that the appeal should be refused and the interlocutor of the sheriff upheld. The issue in the present case was, said counsel, purely one of construction of the testator's will in light of the relevant statutory provision, namely section 10(1) of the Act. The correct approach was firstly to ascertain what had been the testator's intention so far as this could be discerned from within the four corners of the will and secondly, if the court was satisfied that the testator had intended to dispose of the tenancy of his croft, to determine whether or not he had succeeded in doing so. There was nothing in section 10(1) of the Act which either expressly or impliedly required a specific bequest in the technical sense of that term, in other words a legacy which made express mention of the croft, to carry the tenancy. To interpret the section as requiring a specific bequest would be to impose an additional technical restriction on the tenant's ability to bequeath his tenancy which Parliament had not seen fit to impose. A will which bequeathed the entirety of a crofter's estate by way of a residuary bequest to one person who was a member of the crofter's family, as that expression was defined in section 61(2) of the Act, satisfied the requirements of section 10(1). This section was the statutory successor of legislation in essentially the same terms stretching as far back as the Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886. The researches of counsel before the diet of debate had unearthed no case in which the court had held that the tenancy of a croft could not be transferred by way of a bequest of residue to one person being a member of the crofter's family and had declined to recognise a bequest in that form. Such authorities as there were on the issue pointed the other way. The authorities upon which the defender relied were derived from the different statutory and common law regime which applied to agricultural tenancies and had no relevance to the determination of the present appeal. The question here was one of the proper construction to be applied to the will against a statutory and common law background made up of, on the one hand, the requirements of section 10(1) of the Act and, on the other hand, the strong presumption which existed in the law of Scotland against intestacy - see Auld's Trustees v Auld's Trustees 1933 SC 176 and Forsyth v National Kidney Research Fund [2006] CSIH 35. There was not disclosed either in the terms of the relevant legislation or in the case law any compelling reason of principle or practice for denying effect to a bequest in the form of a bequest of residue in favour of one person, being a member of the crofter's family. If the residue was bequeathed to one person, being a member of the crofter's family, and the residue included the tenancy of a croft, there could be no dispute as to the identity of the person entitled to accept the bequest. In the present case on a proper construction of the will Mr Gardner had left the entirety of his estate to his wife, the present pursuer, who was a member of his family within the meaning of section 61(2). It followed that the bequest of the residue in favour of the pursuer contained in clause 5 of the will was effective to carry the tenancy of the croft.

 

[9] In my opinion the submissions for the pursuer are to be preferred. In the context of this case section 10(1) of the Act poses the question whether in his will Mr Gardner bequeathed the tenancy of his croft to one person, namely his wife. Try as I may, I cannot see how this question can be answered otherwise than in the affirmative. In the opening section of the will Mr Gardner made it clear that his purpose in making the will was to provide for the distribution on his death of his whole estate. There is no dispute that the tenancy of the croft was part of his estate so it seems to me that this opening section of the will admits of no other interpretation than that Mr Gardner intended to provide for the disposal of the tenancy on his death. Thus the question arises whether he effectively did so by bequeathing the tenancy to his wife. In terms of clauses 1 and 2 of the will he revoked all his wills and previous testamentary writings and appointed his friend (A) whom failing his wife as his executor. Then in clause 3 he directed his executor, in short, to give effect to any future informal writings signed by himself, and there is no suggestion in this case that he in fact left any such writings. Clause 4 then provides for payment of his debts and funeral expenses and immediately thereafter there is in clause 5 a bequest of the residue of his estate to his wife. Clause 6 provides for a destination-over, in the event of his wife not surviving him by thirty clear days, to his three children, and it was accepted by counsel for the pursuer that, had this destination-over taken effect, it would not have been habile to carry the tenancy of the croft for the purposes of section 10(1) since in that event there would have been a bequest in favour of more than one person (with the result that the tenancy would have fallen to be treated as intestate estate of Mr Gardner). But of course in this case the pursuer did survive her husband for thirty clear days and accordingly clause 5 in the will took effect with the result that Mr Gardner bequeathed the residue of his estate (in other words, his whole estate including the tenancy of the croft) to his wife subject only to payment of his debts and funeral expenses.

 

[10] It is perhaps a nice question to what extent, if Mr Gardner had died leaving substantial debts, his executor could have realised the value of his tenancy of the croft in order to pay these debts. There is no suggestion in this case that Mr Gardner did leave substantial debts but, if he had done so, it is possible that the bequest to his wife of the residue of his estate would have been defeated to the extent that it included the tenancy of the croft if it had proved necessary to realise its value in order to pay the debts. But it is one thing to say that a valid bequest has been defeated in order to satisfy an antecedent purpose in a will and quite another to say, as the defender does in this case, that there has been no valid bequest in the first place. Besides, as counsel for the pursuer pointed out, exactly the same situation could have arisen even if there had been a specific bequest of the tenancy as opposed to a residuary bequest which included the tenancy.

 

[11] Counsel for the defender submitted that the purpose of section 10 of the Act and section 16 of the 1964 Act (and also of the equivalent provisions in the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Acts) was to provide a mechanism whereby it would be possible following the death of a crofter to identify quickly who was to succeed him as tenant of the croft in question, and he drew attention to the tight time limits to be found, for example, in subsections 10(2) and (3) and 11(1) and (2) of the Act. He pointed out too the difficulties that might arise in practice for a residuary beneficiary if he had to await the outcome of the administration of the deceased crofter's estate in order to ascertain whether the bequest in his favour had failed or not. This, as I understood counsel, pointed in favour of the conclusion that, to be effective for the purposes of section 10(1) and in order to avoid any uncertainty in identifying who was to succeed to the tenancy, it was necessary that there should be a specific bequest of the tenancy in the crofter's will or other testamentary writing.

 

[12] In response, counsel for the pursuer acknowledged the difficulties that could arise in practice in light of the time limits found in the legislation and he acknowledged to that it might be preferable that there should be a specific bequest of the tenancy of a croft as counsel for the defender had proposed. But it is one thing to say that such a specific bequest would be preferable, and quite another to say that it is required by the terms of section 10 of the Act. And as for the difficulties over time limits, counsel for the pursuer pointed out, rightly in my opinion, that once again these same difficulties could arise whether there had been a specific bequest of the tenancy or it had been bequeathed as part of the residue of the deceased crofter's estate.

 

[13] It was a recurring theme in the submissions of counsel for the defender that section 10(1) demanded that there should be a specific bequest of the tenancy of the croft in question in favour of one specified person. But it seemed to me that he looked in vain in the provisions of sections 10 and 11 of the Act and section 16 of the 1964 Act for any clear confirmation of this proposition. He pointed out, for example, that section 10 referred throughout to "the bequest" of the tenancy, and he suggested that section 11(1) of the Act and section 16(2) of the 1964 Act imported the idea that there had to be an active bequest of the tenancy. All this may be true, but it still begs the question what form the bequest should take in order to satisfy section 10(1).

 

[14] Counsel for the pursuer drew attention to Rankine on Leases (3rd Edn) at pages 162/3, and specifically a passage at page 162 which reads: "The tenant's right in and to a lease may be conveyed by him in a will or mortis causa disposition either expressly, or by general words sufficient to indicate or include the right. And now heritable estate - including leases - is in the same position as movable estate so far as regards the mode in which it may be settled mortis causa. So that the only difficulty now lies in the ascertainment of the settler's intention". Counsel submitted that it was always a matter of construction of a will to determine whether a particular bequest was intended to carry a lease or not. He suggested that in a case such as this the clause bequeathing the residue of the testator's estate to his widow would have been sufficient to carry other heritable property such as a flat in Edinburgh or a landed estate in Dumfriesshire and he posed the question why then it should be prevented by the terms of section 10 of the Act from also carrying the tenancy of a croft. He submitted, rightly in my opinion, that, if it had been the intention of Parliament that only a specific bequest of the tenancy of a croft would suffice for the purposes of section 10, then this would have been spelled out explicitly in the section. And in the absence of such an explicit provision, said counsel, there was no warrant for this court to impose a further statutory limit on the freedom of a crofter to bequeath the tenancy of his croft beyond that already to be found in section 10(1) (namely that the bequest must be in favour of one person only).

 

[15] Counsel for the defender founded strongly on the decisions of the Inner House in Kennedy v Johnstone and Lord Grieve in Reid's Trustees v Macpherson. But in my opinion these cases are readily distinguishable from the present case, and neither affords any support at all for the position taken up by the defender in this case.

 

[16] When Kennedy v Johnstone was decided section 20(1) of the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1949 provided: "Subject to the provisions of this section, the tenant of an agricultural holding may, by will or other testamentary writing, bequeath his lease of the holding to any person". Section 20(2) provided for the service on the landlord by the legatee of a notice of acceptance of the lease, and section 20(3) provided for the service on the legatee by the landlord of a counter notice intimating that he objected to receiving him as tenant under the lease. In that case the lease of an agricultural holding expressly excluded assignees, legal or conventional, subtenants and legatees under the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Acts. The tenant died, survived by his widow and son, leaving a will whereby he conveyed to trustees his whole estate and directed them to hold the residue, which included his interest under the lease, in liferent for his widow and, on her death, to divide it among his sons. The sons gave timeous notice of the bequest to the landlord who served a counter notice under section 20(3). The widow had meantime renounced her liferent. Subsequently the sons applied to the Land Court for an order finding them to be tenants of the farm, and the Land Court granted the order. On appeal to the Inner House it was held that the Land Court had not been entitled to grant the order and section 20 could not be invoked when there was an express exclusion of the tenant's legatee in the lease.

 

[17] The first question debated before the First Division was whether it was competent to contract out of the provisions of section 20 of the 1949 Act by a clause in the lease excluding legatees under the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Acts. It was held that this was competent - see in particular Lord President Clyde at pages 45/6 and Lord Sorn at page 49.

 

[18] Lord President Clyde went on at page 46 to consider whether, on the assumption that section 20 could be invoked notwithstanding the express exclusion of legatees in the lease, the applicants were legatees within the meaning of section 20. In a passage at the end of the judgment to which counsel for the defender drew particular attention the Lord President said:

 

In the present case all that the widow is to get is the liferent of the residue, of which the testator's interest in the farm forms part, and all that the fiars get is a share of the residue, including the farm, after all the liabilities have been met. I am by no means satisfied that in any sense this amounts to a bequest to any person of the lease of the holding. It is clearly very different from a specific bequest of the lease to a definite individual, which is primarily what the section had in view. And as Johnston on the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Acts, (6th Edn) says, at page 56: "It may be doubted whether the framers of the statute had in view anything short of a specific bequest of the lease to an individual". There is, of course, no such bequest in the present case, but it is unnecessary to pursue this matter further, since in the present case I am in any event of opinion that the section cannot be invoked in the light of the terms of the lease itself.

 

[19] The first thing to be noticed about this passage is that, as counsel for the defender acknowledged, it is plainly obiter. Besides, it is perfectly intelligible that his Lordship should say that a bequest of the residue of the testator's estate (including the farm) in liferent to his widow and in fee to his sons did not amount to a bequest to any one person of the lease, and that this was "clearly very different from a specific bequest of the lease to a definite individual, which is primarily what the section had in view". But it is one thing to say this and quite another to say (and the Lord President did not say) that only a specific bequest to a specified person would satisfy the section. And it certainly does not follow from what the Lord President said in that case that he would have held in the present case that the bequest to the pursuer in terms of clause 5 of Mr Gardner's will was not apt to carry the tenancy of his croft for the purposes of section 10(1) of the Act.

 

[20] For the sake of completeness I should mention here that counsel for the defender also drew attention to the final part of Lord Sorn's judgment at page 49 where he said that prima facie it was not easy to see how trustees could be brought within the description of a legatee within the meaning of section 20(1) of the 1949 Act. I dare say that no one would quarrel with this, but it does nothing to advance the argument for the defender in the present case.

 

[21] Counsel for the defender relied even more strongly on Reid's Trustees v Macpherson. By the time that case was decided the provisions of section 20 of the 1949 Act had been amended by paragraphs 19, 20 and 21 of schedule 2 to the 1964 Act. In particular section 20(1) provided: "Subject to the provisions of this section, the tenant of an agricultural holding may, by will or other testamentary writing, bequeath his lease of the holding to his son-in-law or daughter-in-law or any one of the persons who would be, or would in any circumstances have been, entitled to succeed to the estate on intestacy by virtue of the Succession (Scotland) Act 1964".

 

[22] In that case an agricultural holding was let to A and B and their respective heirs, excluding assignees and subtenants. The survivor, B, died on 25 February 1970 leaving a trust disposition and settlement in terms of which he assigned, disponed and conveyed to his executors "my whole means and estate heritable and movable ...... over which I may have the power of control or disposal at the time of my death". He then provided for the payment of certain pecuniary legacies and, by purpose third, provided: "I direct my executors to make over the whole residue and remainder of my estate to my said wife as an individual, whom failing, to my said son (C)". The first question debated in the case was whether B could by mortis causa deed assign the remaining interest in the tenancy of the holding to his widow, provided the landlord acquiesced in him doing so. Lord Grieve decided that he could and, after rejecting an argument that the destination in the lease to the heir of B was a special destination, he went on to consider whether the terms of B's will were habile to carry the remaining rights in the lease of the holding to his wife, provided of course that the landlord consented. After quoting the relevant terms of the will, Lord Grieve continued at page 109:

 

Do these words of assignation and disposition of the testator's whole means and estate to his executors, and the residue thereof to his wife, evince an intention to assign the lease of the holding to his wife? Counsel for the pursuer says they do; counsel for the defenders says they do not.

 

What the testator (B) assigned and disponed to his executors was his whole means and estate over which he had power of control and disposal at the time of his death. The disposition was in general terms and no mention was made in it of the lease of the holding. The question as to whether such a disposition could be habile to embrace a lease destined to the heir and excluding assignees has never, so far as counsels' researches could discover, been one for express decision ........ In my opinion, it is well settled that an agricultural lease of ordinary duration, excluding assignees, is something over which the tenant has no power of disposal "at his own motion" ......... Accordingly, the lease of the holding could not be embraced by the words "estate over which I may have the power of control or disposal at the time of my death". In my opinion, these words of themselves do not evince an intention on the testator's part to assign the remainder of the lease to the executors for ultimate transmission as residue to the wife. The remainder of the lease was not (B's) to dispose of ........ and, "of his own motion" he had no control over it. In the circumstances I cannot find in the words used an intention to assign it .......

 

It follows that, in my judgment, the testator in this case did not succeed by his will in effecting the requisite initial move for effective assignation of the lease to his wife, and effect must be given to the destination in the lease which carried the tenancy to (B's heir).

 

[23] In my opinion this decision does not lend any support to the defender's argument in the present case. The reason the bequest by B to his widow of the residue of his estate did not carry his interest in the lease was to be found, not in the provisions of section 20 of the 1949 Act (which as Lord Grieve pointed out at page 110 did not apply in that case), but in the terms of B's will which conveyed to his executors only "my whole means and estate heritable and movable ....... over which I may have the power of control or disposal at the time of my death". In other words, as counsel for the pursuer pointed out, the decision turned simply upon the proper construction of B's will.

 

[24] It is true that at page 110, after pointing out that the provisions of section 20 of the 1949 Act did not apply in that case, Lord Grieve went on to say: "In any event, I agree with the opinion expressed in Kennedy that the provisions of section 20 could only apply to a direct bequest of a lease to a specific person". This comment is plainly obiter, and in any event it begs the question what exactly is meant by the expression "a direct bequest of a lease to a specific person".

 

[25] As already indicated, counsel for the defender also drew attention to the comments by Sir Crispin Agnew and Messrs MacCuish and Flyn in their respective books on Crofting Law. The former deals with the point at issue at page 72, note 2, of his book where he comments on section 10(1) of the Act and writes: "The bequest should be a specific bequest of the croft or croft lease, because a bequest of the residue of the estate without further specification probably does not carry the lease to the residue beneficiary: Reid's Trustees v Macpherson 1975 SLT 100 at 109 (see Macdonald v Cathcart's Trustees 1943 SLCR 24, (now doubtful authority) where the Land Court held that a residue clause would carry the tenancy of the croft)". The comment here that Macdonald v Cathcart's Trustees is of doubtful authority is perhaps understandable. For the rest, I do not consider that Sir Crispin, relying as he does only on Reid's Trustees v Macpherson, lends any additional weight to the argument for the defender in this case. Nor I think do Messrs MacCuish and Flyn when they say at paragraph 7.02 of their book: "Where the bequest is ineffective, the right to the tenancy of the croft falls to be dealt with as intestate estate. It would appear therefore that notwithstanding a will purporting to deal with the whole estate, where there is no valid bequest of the tenancy or that bequest fails, persons who would be entitled to share in intestate estate of the deceased are entitled to share the value of the tenancy no matter how the testator intended the tenancy to be dealt with". Once again the question is begged here what is meant by the expression "valid bequest of the tenancy".

 

[26] The passage in Lord Gill's book on Agricultural Holdings (3rd Edn) at page 327, paragraph 33.02, upon which counsel for the defender relied reads as follows:

 

The question arose in Kennedy v Johnstone whether for the purposes of the section a specific bequest to a single individual is essential, and although the Inner House founded unnecessary to decide the point, the judgments suggest that it is. In Reid's Trustees v Macpherson the Lord Ordinary held that a general bequest of residue did not carry the lease and that the latter must be specifically bequeathed. In that case, as in Kennedy v Johnstone, there was an express exclusion of assignees in the lease itself, and by his trust disposition and settlement the deceased conveyed to his executors "my whole means and estate heritable and movable over which I may have the power of control or disposal at the time of my death". If there is no such exclusion, it appears to be a matter of construction of the will whether a general bequest or a bequest of residue carries the lease.

 

[27] Counsel for the pursuer pointed out that in this passage Lord Gill does not explicitly endorse the obiter dicta of the Inner House and Lord Grieve respectively in Kennedy v Johnstone and Reid's Trustees v Macpherson. But he does make the important point that in both those cases there was an express exclusion of assignees in the lease itself which there is not in the present case - and could not be without the approval of the Land Court in view of section 5(3) of the Act which provides: "Any contract or agreement made by a crofter by virtue of which he is deprived of any right conferred on him by any provision of this Act (other than sections 12 to 19, 21 and 37) shall to that extent be void unless the contract or agreement is approved by the Land Court". Finally Lord Gill makes the point that, if there is no such exclusion, it appears to be a matter of construction of the will whether a general bequest or a bequest of residue carries the lease, and this in my respectful opinion is entirely correct and, as counsel for the pursuer suggested, this is precisely the position that obtains in the present case.

 

[28] I turn now to Cochrane's Executors v Inland Revenue upon which counsel for the defender also relied. The question in that case was whether a residuary legatee had been absolutely entitled (within the meaning of paragraph 9 of schedule 19 to the Finance Act 1969) as against the testator's executors to certain stocks and shares which had been sold by the executors to obtain funds necessary to carry out the antecedent purposes of the testator's will. In the result it was held that he had not been so entitled since the assets in question, having been sold by the executors, had never formed part of the residue of the testator's estate. The opinion of the court was delivered by the Lord President (Emslie) and counsel for the defender drew attention to a lengthy passage in the opinion at pages 164/5 of the report. This begins by summarising the argument for the appellants (namely that the residuary legatee had been absolutely entitled as against the executors to the assets which had been sold by them) and continues:

 

In our opinion this argument rests upon a fundamental misconception of the nature of the right which vested in the residuary legatee in the context of this trust disposition and settlement. What vested in the residuary legatee was a right to the "residue" and no more.

 

A bequest of residue vesting a morte testatoris is not a bequest of the whole estate. It comprises no more and no less than, as it is explained in Henderson on Vesting, (2nd ed.) p. 346, "the entirety of the estate not required for the antecedent purposes of the will." "Residue," said Lord Watson in the case of the Duchess of Montrose v Stuart (15R (H.L.) 19 at p. 21), "is simply so much of his personal means as may remain after the whole antecedent purposes of the deed have been effected-after debts and legacies have been paid ..." If, of course, the antecedent purposes fail, that portion of the estate which would otherwise have been required to fulfil them will form part of the residue vesting in the residuary legatee. Similarly, where the antecedent purposes consist of contingent or conditional bequests which may fail subsequent to the date of vesting in the residuary legatee, the subject-matter of these conditional bequests is in theory deemed to have vested in the residuary legatee under burden of these bequests in certain events ( Storie's Trustees v Gray 1R 953 ). Putting the matter in another way, Lord Sands in  Aitken's Trustees v Aitken (1927 SC 374, 1927 SLT 308)  said this (at p. 313 of the SLT report): "Law attributes to a residue clause an intention to sweep in everything not effectually disposed of ..." In a case such as this, accordingly, where there are antecedent purposes for immediate satisfaction which have not failed, the right which vests in the residuary legatee is not that of a universal legatary under burdens, but a right merely to what may be found to remain of the entire estate after the antecedent purposes have been implemented. It follows, in the particular circumstances of this case, that the particular stocks and shares sold to enable the appellants to fulfil the antecedent purposes of the settlement never formed part of the residue of the estate. The residuary legatee had at no time any right to these assets and no right or title whatsoever to give any directions to the appellants with regard to them. It is no part of the law of Scotland that a residuary legatee in the position of Peter Cochrane in this case acquires a morte testatoris any right to any particular asset forming part of the entire estate which has passed to the executors for disposal in accordance with the testator's directions and intention. It is for executors in the position of the appellants, and for them alone, to determine what particular assets should be realised to enable them to satisfy prior purposes and vested rights antecedent to those of the residuary beneficiary; and although executors may, if they choose, consider the views of the residuary beneficiary before realising any part of the estate, they are in no way bound to do so, and they are in no way obliged to accept any "directions" from the residuary legatee in this connection. Indeed the only directions which the residuary legatee is entitled to give to trustees or executors are in relation to the estate remaining in their hands when they have fulfilled all the prior purposes of the settlement and have otherwise completed the administration of the estate.

 

[29] Accepting entirely what his Lordship says in this passage, again I do not see that it offers any comfort to the defender in this case. I say this since the question here is not whether the pursuer became absolutely entitled, or otherwise acquired right, on her husband's death as against his executor to the tenancy of the croft, or indeed any other part of his estate. The question is whether by clause 5 of his will Mr Gardner intended to bequeath, and did bequeath, the residue of his whole estate, including as it did the tenancy of his croft, to the pursuer subject to satisfying the antecedent purposes of this will. For the reasons already indicated, I am persuaded that he did, and it respectfully seems to me that there is nothing in what the Lord President said in Cochrane's Executors v Inland Revenue which gainsays this conclusion. Of course, if Mr Gardner had left substantial debts, it might have turned out that the bequest of residue to the pursuer would have been defeated altogether by the necessity to satisfy these debts (just as might have occurred if Mr Gardner had made a specific bequest of the tenancy to the pursuer). But this would not detract from the conclusion that he had bequeathed the residue of his estate, including the tenancy of his croft, to the pursuer. Here it may be helpful to be reminded of the remainder of the passage in the judgment of Lord Sands in Aitken's Trustees v. Aitken  to which the Lord President referred. The full passage reads:

 

Law attributes to a residue clause an intention to sweep in everything not effectually disposed of, and that altogether irrespective of what items the testator may have contemplated as possibly falling within this category. This rule has, I think, been expressed somewhat as follows: When there is a general residue clause operative as from the date of death, partial intestacy is impossible, except on failure of a residuary legatee.

 

The emphasis is mine. Of course the right to a croft may fall to be treated as the intestate estate of a deceased crofter in terms of section 10(5) of the Act if a bequest of the tenancy becomes null and void under the section, and one sees in sections 10(1), (2) and (4)(a) the circumstances in which such a bequest may become null and void. Significantly, the fact that the tenancy of a croft has been bequeathed as part of a bequest of residue rather than by means of a specific bequest is not one of these circumstances.

 

[30] I do not think that it is necessary now to consider in detail the various decisions of the Land Court (all of which predated the 1955 Act) to which I was referred. I am inclined to agree with counsel for the pursuer that they afford more support for her position than for the position taken up by the defender. But I do not attach much weight to them in the context of this case, preferring to base my decision upon what seems to me to be the plain meaning and intent of Mr Gardner's will coupled with the fact that, as it appears to me, there is nothing in section 10 of the Act to suggest that only a specific bequest of the tenancy of a croft will meet the requirements of the section.

 

[31] On the whole matter I am persuaded that the sheriff reached the correct conclusion on the question argued before him at the diet of debate, and I have therefore refused the appeal.

 

[32] It was agreed that the expenses of the appeal and of the debate should be awarded to whichever party was successful in the appeal. It was also agreed that I should sanction the employment of junior counsel, and I am satisfied that it would be appropriate to do this.

 

[33] In addition to the authorities already mentioned I was also referred to MacDonald v Dalgleish 1894 21R 900, Anderson v Barclay-Harvey 1917 SLCR 65, Campbell v Department of Agriculture 1936 SCLR 20, Meston: The Succession (Scotland) Act 1964 (5th Edn) at page 127 and Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia, Volume 1 at paragraph 807.

 


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2008/18.html