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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Fraser & Anor v Canterbury Diocesan Board of Finance & Anor [2003] EWHC 1075 (Ch) (14 May 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/1075.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 1075 (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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SIMON RICHARD FRASER NATHAN GEORGE FRASER |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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CANTERBURY DIOCESAN BOARD OF FINANCE INTEGRATED SERVICES PROGRAMME |
Defendants |
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(instructed by William Blakeney) for the Claimants
Mr. Vivian Chapman (instructed by Furley Page) for the First Defendants
Hearing dates : 6th, 7th, & 8th May 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Lewison:
Introduction
Background
The School Sites Act 1841
"Any person, being seised in fee simple, fee tail, or for life, of and in any manor or lands of freehold, copyhold, or customary tenure, and having the beneficial interest therein, . . . may grant, convey, or enfranchise by way of gift, sale, or exchange, in fee simple or for a term of years, any quantity not exceeding one acre of such land, as a site for a school for the education of poor persons, or for the residence of the schoolmaster or schoolmistress, or otherwise for the purposes of the education of such poor persons in religious and useful knowledge; provided that no such grant made by any person seised only for life of and in any such manor or lands shall be valid, unless the person next entitled to the same in remainder, in fee simple or fee tail, (if legally competent,) shall be a party to and join in such grant: Provided also, that where any portion of waste or commonable land shall be gratuitously conveyed by any lord or lady of a manor for any such purposes as aforesaid, the rights and interest of all persons in the said land shall be barred and divested by such conveyance; Provided also, that upon the said land so granted as aforesaid, or any part thereof, ceasing to be used for the purposes in this Act mentioned, the same shall thereupon immediately revert to and become a portion of the said estate held in fee simple or otherwise, or of any manor or land as aforesaid, as fully to all intents and purposes as if this Act had not been passed, any thing herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding."
"Upon trust to permit the said premises and all buildings thereon erected or to be erected to be for ever after appropriated and used as and for a School for the education of Children and Adults or Children only of the labouring manufacturing and other poorer classes in the (Parish) or (Ecclesiastical District) of … and for no other purpose"
The educational system
The Reverter of Sites Act 1987
St Philips School
"to permit the said premises and all buildings thereon erected or to be erected to be for ever hereafter appropriated and used as and for a school for the education of Children and Adults of the labouring manufacturing and other poorer classes in the Ecclesiastical District of Saint Philip Maidstone aforesaid and for no other purpose And it is hereby declared that such schools … shall always be in union with and conducted according to the principles and in furtherance of the ends and designs of the National Society for promoting the Education of the Poor in the principles of the Established Church throughout England and Wales"
(a) The school educated children who came from social classes other than the labouring manufacturing and other poorer classes;
(b) The school educated children from outside the Ecclesiastical District of St Philip and
(c) The school did not educate adults, at least after 1903.
The School Sites Act 1841: the law
(1) Until the changes brought about by the Reverter of Sites Act 1987, reverter was automatic once the triggering event had occurred;
(2) Reverter was irrevocable;
(3) Reverter involved a transfer of the legal title and not merely a passing of the beneficial interest (Re Rowhook Mission Hall, Horsham [1985] Ch. 62, not following Re Clayton's Deed Poll [1980] Ch. 99. The conflict between these two cases was settled by section 4 of the 1987 Act which plainly assumes that the former decision is correct);
(4) The possibility of reverter applies not only to a grant made by a limited owner but also to a grant made by a fee simple owner, even if that grant took the form of a sale for full value (Re Cawston's Conveyance [1940] 1 Ch. 27);
(5) Although the 1841 Act itself says that reverter takes place only if the land ceases to be used for a purpose mentioned in the Act, what this means is that reverter takes place if the land ceases to be used for the purpose mentioned in the conveyance, provided that that purpose is itself within the Act (A-G v. Shadwell [1910] 1 Ch 92; Fraser v. Canterbury Diocesan Board of Finance [2001] Ch 669);
(6) If reverter did take place, and the school trustee remained in possession for 12 years or more, he would have acquired title by adverse possession, thereby barring the reverter (Re Ingleton Charity [1956] Ch. 585);
(7) Since a trustee cannot acquire title by adverse possession against a beneficiary under the trust, the Reverter of Sites Act 1987 has now made it impossible for title by adverse possession on the part of a school trustee to bar a reverter;
(8) The real question for me to decide is not whether there has been a breach of trust, but whether there has been a cessation of use for the purpose described in the conveyance;
(9) The answer to this question depends on the identification, as a matter of construction of the conveyance, of the purpose for which the land was conveyed;
(10) In the case of a school in union with the National Society, the purpose of the trust is education in the tenets of the Church of England, so that if such a school loses its denominational character (e.g. if it is leased to and run by the local education authority) it ceases to be used for the purposes for which it was established (Habermehl v. A-G [1996] EGCS 148; Fraser v. Canterbury Diocesan Board of Finance, above)
(11) The reverter must have taken place before 17 August 1975 in order for the reverter to have been barred.
Construction of the conveyance
"for a school for the education of Children and Adults of the labouring manufacturing and other poorer classes in the Ecclesiastical District of Saint Philip Maidstone aforesaid and for no other purpose"
(1) The trust is a trust to permit the land to be used as a school;
(2) The trust then describes the kind of school which the trustees must permit (which I will call "a qualifying school");
(3) I must then ask myself whether the school is a qualifying school;
(4) If it is, I must then ask whether the trustees are permitting the land to be used for any other purpose;
(5) If the answer is "no" then there is no breach of trust, let alone a reverter.
(1) They were of the labouring manufacturing and other poorer classes and
(2) They had to reside in the ecclesiastical district of St Philip as it existed from time to time.
"It may well be that when Master Harris was admitted in 1868 that was a breach of trust by the then trustees under this deed…"
"It may well be that when Master Harris was admitted in 1868 that was a breach of trust by the then trustees under this deed; but on any fair understanding of the ordinary meaning of the English language to say that that act amounted to a ceasing of the use of the site as a school for poor persons seems to me to be extravagant to the limit".