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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 >> Cawdron & Anor v Merchants Taylors' School & Ors [2009] EWHC 1722 (Ch) (13 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/1722.html Cite as: [2010] WTLR 775, [2009] NPC 95, [2009] EWHC 1722 (Ch), [2010] PTSR 507 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) PETER EDWARD BLACKBURN CAWDRON (2) ROBERT MICHAEL HURRAN |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) MERCHANTS TAYLORS' SCHOOL (2) THE MASTER AND WARDENS OF THE MERCHANT TAYLORS OF THE FRATERNITY OF ST JOHN BAPTIST IN THE CITY OF LONDON (3) ANTHONY JOHN WRIGHT (4) HM ATTORNEY-GENERAL |
Defendants |
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Jonathan Adkin (instructed by Charles Russell) for the 1st Defendant
James Mather (instructed by Charles Russell) for the 2nd Defendant
Robin Rathmell (instructed by Speechly Bircham) for the 3rd Defendant
William Henderson (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the 4th Defendant
Hearing dates: 1st and 2nd July 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Blackburne :
Introduction
On what trusts is Durrants held?
"That a Committee be formed for the purpose of inviting donations to a fund to be applied as a lasting and visible record of those Old Merchant Taylors who have fallen in the war, as follows:
(a) The creation of a fund the income or capital of which shall be employed in (1) paying for the education at the School of any son of an Old Merchant Taylor who has fallen in the war or who has been thereby disabled, whether directly or indirectly, or in (2) assisting any relative of such Old Merchant Taylor as may be dependent upon him; in every case the decision as to the eligibility of the candidates and the extent and method of assistance to be in the sole discretion of the Committee.
(b) The erection of a permanent memorial on the School premises.
(c) On the attainment of these objects the fund or so much thereof as shall remain in the hands of the Committee shall be applied by them to such purposes for the benefit of the School as the Committee shall determine."
One report of the meeting has the figures "(1)" and "(2)" inserted in object (a) of the resolution as shown above. They conveniently break down paragraph (a) into two limbs which I shall later refer to as the "first limb" and the "second limb". Another version does not. Both versions record that it was also resolved to form a General Committee - it is the Committee referred to in the resolution - "to carry out the resolution passed, with power to add to their numbers, and elect such sub-committees as they consider necessary". The report then sets out 23 names by way of membership of the General Committee, including the then Master of the Company, a future Lord Chancellor (then Sir George Cave), a judge of the King's Bench Division (Sir Montague Shearman), a retired Lord Justice of Appeal and former judge of the Chancery Division (Lord Wrenbury), and a future judge of the Chancery Division and later Lord Justice of Appeal (AC Clauson KC, later Lord Clauson).
"the War Memorial Committee has made a grant to meet the purchase money of the land and the levelling and fencing, but the cost of erecting a pavilion and other incidental expenses will have to be provided by voluntary subscription … sums amounting to £1600 have already been promised. It is hoped that the remainder of the sum required will be guaranteed before the end of April, when the work must be put in hand with a view to the opening of the ground in October."
"When the fund was first established in January 1918, the Committee were advised that it would be well, until some definite scheme was formulated, to distinguish carefully between Capital and Income, and the accounts had hitherto been prepared upon that basis.
Now that the disposition of the Fund has been finally determined, viz:-
(a) Provision of Fees etc at MTS for sons of OMTs killed in the War,
(b) Mural records at the School, the Mission Church, and Teddington,
(c) A completely equipped Sports Ground at Teddington,
the necessity for this distinction has ceased…
Appeals have been made for two distinct objects - (1) the Fund itself; (2) the Pavilion at Teddington; but as these two naturally merge into one another, the total receipts and payments in connection with both appeals have been combined …"
Details were then set out. The gist of it was that the pavilion cost £5,058 (a part of which had come from a £2,000 loan from the Rugby Football Union) and that the balance of the Fund (ie the War Memorial Fund) would be "devoted" to the Pavilion Fund except for certain housing bonds "the interest on which, together with the rent of £100 per annum with which it is proposed to charge the Sports Club …will, in the opinion of the Committee, be sufficient to meet all grants for School Fees that the Committee are likely to be called upon to pay."
"to pay or apply at the Trustees' discretion the net annual income therefrom in the first place in or towards defraying the school fees at Merchant Taylors School of dependents of former pupils of the said school who fell in the Great War and in the next place in for or towards such purpose or purposes in connection with Merchant Taylors School as to the Trustees may seem proper or desirable."
"The trust property and the proceeds thereof shall be held upon trust to apply the same for the use and enjoyment of such persons and in such manner for the benefit of former pupils of Merchant Taylors School as to the Trustees shall seem fit."
Clause 3 then provided that "so long as there are at least three trustees it shall not be necessary to fill up any vacancy in the Trustees".
The validity of the trusts of the October resolution
The compromise
"…if the Trustees [ie the claimants] wish to move to realise the value of the Durrants asset on the basis that optimises value (that is as a residential development site), then the terms of the proposed transaction [ie the sale contract] remain the best reasonably obtainable in the open market at the relevant time."
They then add:
"Given the complexity of realising the value of this asset it is, in our opinion, unlikely that any replacement purchaser would be identified on better terms in the short term.
The alternative to this would be to mothball the proposed sale and revisit it in due course in improved market conditions. That judgment is the matter for the trustees but were this approach to be adopted, there is a risk that the residential allocation of the Durrants site may be lost."
(I should add that, four days later, a variation to the sale contract was negotiated involving an increase in the up-front payment from £6.5 million to £8.4 million but extending the time for the phase 2 payment, which Montague Evans felt able to recommend.)