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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 >> Howard v Howard-Lawson [2011] EWHC 63 (Ch) (21 January 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/63.html Cite as: [2011] NPC 8, [2011] WTLR 397, [2011] EWHC 63 (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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PHILIP WILLIAM HOWARD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Sir JOHN HOWARD-LAWSON |
Defendant |
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Sir John Howard-Lawson, the defendant, in person
Hearing dates: 1st and 2nd December 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Proudman :
"I DECLARE that every person (other than Lady Lawson or a peer or peeress) who under the limitations hereinbefore contained becomes entitled as tenant for life or as tenant in tail male or in tail general by purchase to the possession or to the receipt of the rents and profits of my settled estates or any part thereof and does not at the time of becoming so entitled use and bear the surname and arms of Howard shall within one year after becoming so entitled or (being an infant) within one year after attaining the age of twenty one years and also every person (other than…Sir Henry Joseph Lawson or a peer) being the husband of a woman becoming so entitled shall within one year after his marriage or within one year after his wife becomes so entitled or if he be an infant then within one year after attaining the age of twenty one years (whichever of the three last mentioned events last happens) unless in any case prevented by death take use and bear and every person becoming so entitled who already uses the name of Howard shall continue to use and bear in all deeds and writings which he or she shall sign and upon all occasions the surname of Howard as to every such person who shall also for the time being be entitled to the possession or receipt of the rents and profits of the Lawson family Estates in the County of York and elsewhere or upon whom the Baronetcy held and enjoyed by …Sir Henry Joseph Lawson shall devolve in conjunction with the surname of Lawson and so that the surname of Howard shall immediately precede the surname of Lawson and as to every other such person without any other surname and shall also use the arms of Howard As to every such person who shall also for the time being be entitled to the possession or the receipt of the rents and profits of the Lawson Family Estates aforesaid or upon whom the said Baronetcy held and enjoyed by … Sir Henry Joseph Lawson shall devolve quartered with the Lawson Family arms and as to every other such person without any other arms and every such person if not having already borne and used the surname and arms of Howard shall apply for and endeavour to obtain the Royal Licence or take such other steps as may be requisite to authorise the user and bearing of the said surname and arms"
"AND FURTHER that in case any person or the husband of any person becoming so entitled (other than Lady Lawson and…Sir Henry Joseph Lawson and not being a peer or peeress) and not having already taken or used and borne such surname and arms should refuse or neglect within the time aforesaid to take use and bear the same respectively or to take such steps as aforesaid or if any person or the husband of any person so entitled and using or bearing such surname and arms should discontinue to use and bear the same (except in the case of a woman upon marriage) then and in every such case immediately after the expiration of the said term of one year or immediately after such discontinuance as aforesaid as the case may be if the person who or whose husband shall so refuse or neglect or discontinue as aforesaid shall be tenant for life the estate for life of that person shall absolutely determine and if the person who or whose husband shall so refuse neglect or discontinue as aforesaid shall be tenant in tail male or in tail general then the estate in tail male or in tail general of that person shall absolutely determine and my settled estates shall immediately go to the person next in remainder under the limitations hereinbefore contained in the same manner as if in the case of a person whose estate for life is so made to determine that person were dead or in the case of a person whose estate in tail male or in tail general is so made to determine that person were dead or there were a general failure of issue of that person inheritable to that estate which is so made to determine."
"Every person who…becomes entitled…to the possession or to the receipt of the rents and profits of my settled estates or any part thereof and does not at the time of becoming so entitled use and bear the surname and arms of Howard shall within one year after becoming so entitled…take use and bear…in all deeds and writings which he…shall sign and upon all occasions the surname of Howard…and shall also use the arms of Howard…and every such person if not having already borne and used the surname and arms of Howard shall apply for and endeavour to obtain the Royal Licence or take such other steps as may be requisite to authorise the user and bearing of the said surname and arms…"
Did the defendant in fact use the surname Howard within the year?
"In pursuance of the provisions of the name and arms clause [the defendant] duly applied before the Fifth day of January One thousand nine hundred and sixty-two for the Royal Licence to assume the name and arms of Howard and such licence was duly granted on the Twenty sixth day of April One thousand nine hundred and sixty two as from which date [the defendant] assumed the surname of Howard in place of the surname of Lawson and assumed the arms of Howard and has at all times since then used and borne on all occasions the surname and arms of Howard…"
What use of the surname must be assumed within the first year?
"only one 'space of one year' within which the beneficiary must take the surname and arms of Neeld and take the requisite steps to enable him lawfully to do so."
Upjohn LJ said (at 676),
"the beneficiary…has one year after becoming entitled or attaining full age, as the case may be, in which to take upon himself and use upon all occasions the surname of Neeld, and to apply for an Act of Parliament or licence from the Crown to enable him to take and bear the arms of Neeld."
"It appears, therefore, clear as a matter of language that, although one year from the date of entitlement (or, in the case of an infant, of attaining majority) is allowed for the assumption of the name and arms, a further year is permitted within which any necessary licence must be applied for and (if possible) obtained. It may well be sensible to allow such second period of a year within which to take the necessary formal steps in relation to the assumption of arms: though it is not apparent what the testator could have intended in this respect as regards the taking of the name…
…it is at once evident that a serious question of construction arises in regard, at any rate, to the assumption of the name, whether a beneficiary after becoming entitled has in fact a period of two years or one year within which to adopt the name of Neeld."
"I see no difficulty in telling whether a person is using a particular surname and not any other surname, and upon any given set of facts whether actual or, if adequately stated, hypothetical, I see no difficulty in reaching a conclusion as to whether a beneficiary has neglected or discontinued to use a particular surname only."
"With respect to the mode of acquiring the right to the name and arms, the direction in the form in this collection is to apply for a licence from the Crown, or take such other steps as may be requisite to authorise the use of the surname and arms. In the older forms, application for an Act of Parliament was one of the specified modes of compliance; but it is believed that it is now unusual to have recourse to the authority of Parliament for this purpose, except under special circumstances…"
There then follows a significant passage:
"The general option to take such steps as may be requisite to authorise the use of the surname would probably (though a person succeeding to the estate could hardly be advised to rely on this view) be satisfied by mere assumption, without any royal licence or other authority for that purpose, surnames having been originally acquired by that mode, and being of the nature of an addition to the Christian name, which is the proper and inalienable designation."
The footnote to this passage cites observations of Lord Mansfield in Gulliver v. Ashby (1766) 4 Burr 1929, in which he appeared to say that a surname could only legally be assumed by royal licence or an Act of Parliament (although the editors of Davidson express the view that this was not in context what was meant), and a passage from Lord Eldon C in Leigh v. Leigh (1808) 15 Ves 92, in which he said that the king's licence was nothing more than permission to take the name and did not give it: "A name taken in that way is by voluntary assumption." However I note that a royal licence is permissive as to the change of arms as well as the change of name; that is to say it does not purport to grant new arms: see Halsbury's Laws 4th edition vol 35 paragraph 975.
"…that he may take use and bear the surname and Arms of Howard only in lieu of his present surname and Arms and that such surname and Arms of Howard only may in like manner be taken and used and borne by his issue…"
The forfeiture provision
What steps was the defendant required to take?
"apply for and endeavour to obtain the Royal Licence or take such other steps as may be requisite to authorise the user and bearing of the said surname and arms".
Conclusion