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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 >> HM Attorney General v Zedra Fiduciary Services (UK) Ltd [2020] EWHC 18 (Ch) (14 January 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/18.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 18 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
OF ENGLAND AND WALES
PROPERTY TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST
London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
HM Attorney General |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
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Zedra Fiduciary Services (UK) Limited |
Defendant |
____________________
Robert Pearce QC (instructed by Macfarlanes LLP) for the Defendant
Giles Richardson (instructed by Forsters LLP) for the Applicant
Hearing date: 12 December 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Chief Master Marsh:
Joinder
"(a) it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve all the matters in dispute in the proceedings; or
(b) there is an issue involving the new party and an existing party which is connected to the matters in dispute in the proceedings and it is desirable to add the new party so that the court can resolve that issue."
(1) The term "in dispute" should be read widely so as to include 'in issue': see In Re Pablo Star Limited [2017] EWCA Civ 1768 at [50] – [51] per Sir Terence Etherton MR.
(2) The Master of the Rolls also observed in In Re Pablo Star Limited at [60] that when a court considers an application for joinder "… two lodestars are the public policy objective of enabling parties to be heard if their rights may be affected by a decision in the case and the Overriding Objective in CPR Part 1".
(3) The parties are agreed that the Applicant must be able to demonstrate that the issue in dispute that forms the basis for joinder must be an issue that has adequate prospects of success. Mr Richardson who appeared for the Applicant submitted that the 'real prospect of success' test should be applied. Mr Henderson, who appeared for HM Attorney General submitted, against himself, that the test under CPR 3.4(2)(a) should be applied. If the "no reasonable grounds" test is applied in the way it has been construed in Hughes v Colin Richards & Co [2004] EWCA Civ 266 and other cases, the Applicant need only show that the issue has some prospect of success or, put the other way around, that it is not bound to fail.
(4) The thrust of both limbs of CPR 19(2) concerns the desirability of all the parties involved in or affected by a dispute being before the court. This avoids a multiplicity of proceedings[1] and has the benefit of all relevant parties being bound by the court's determination.
Background
(1) On 10 November 1927 cash and securities with an approximate value of £500,000 were deposited in an account with Baring Brothers & Co. Limited ("Barings") by the benefactor. It need hardly be said that in 1927 £500,000 was an enormous sum of money.
(2) At around the time of making the deposit, the benefactor wrote a letter to Barings explaining the reason for making the gift:
"Gifts to the Nation of historic sites, buildings and works of art, are happily frequent; gifts to repay debt comparatively rare, this last being a dull objective but bringing its accomplishment certain comforts of its own. To repay the National Debt may be thought to be beyond the reach of individual effort, but as a beginning towards this end I am placing at your disposal, as Trustees for the Nation, some £500,000 as the nucleus of a fund to accumulate in your hands, and to be applied eventually to this object.
I am entrusting this fund to your house in order to secure the benefit of your long experience in finance: and in the hope that others may from time to time be prompted to add to it, or on similar lines to set up funds of their own, citizens and City uniting in an attempt to free their country from debt."
(3) On 22 December 1927 the Superannuation and Other Trusts (Validation) Act 1927 ("the 1927 Act") received the Royal Assent and came into immediate effect.
(4) On 9 January 1928 Barings executed the Deed.
(5) On 26 January 1928 Lord Revelstoke, who was then the Chairman of Barings, wrote to Winston Churchill as Chancellor of the Exchequer to formalise earlier communications about the Charity and to convey the terms of the benefactor's letter.
(6) The Chancellor of the Exchequer then made a public announcement in which he acknowledged the government's gratitude for the gift and expressing regret that he could not thank the benefactor by name. In describing the National Fund, he said:
"The capital is to accumulate at compound interest over a long period of years. Ultimately, with all its accrued proceeds swelling progressively with the passage of time, it is to be applied to the reduction of the National Debt. In order to facilitate this gift Parliament was invited last session to make an exception to the law forbidding Perpetuities and to declare long accumulations lawful when they had this especial object in view."
"Provisions as to Funds for the reduction of the National Debt
9 Validation of trust funds for the reduction of the National Debt
(1) Where by any instrument directions are given for any property being held upon trust and the income thereof being wholly accumulated … for any period to be determined under the provisions of the instrument, and for the property and accumulations being transferred at or before the expiration of that period to the National Debt Commissioners to be applied by them in reduction of the National Debt, then unless the Treasury within three months after they receive notice of the taking effect of the instrument disclaim the interest of the National Debt Commissioners under the said directions, notwithstanding any Act or rule of law to the contrary, the directions shall be valid and effective and no person shall be entitled to require the transfer of any part of the property, income or accumulations otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of the instrument."
"An Act to amend the law relating to perpetuities and accumulations, as respects certain benefit funds and as respects trust funds for the reduction of the National Debt."
The Deed
"… upon trust until the date of application to accumulate the net income and profits thereof in the way of compound interest by investing such income and profits and all resulting income and profits from time to time and on and from the date of application shall stand possessed of the National Fund including the accumulations Upon trust then to transfer and pay the same to the National Debt Commissioners to be applied by them in reduction of the National Debt."
"The date of application shall be the date fixed as such by the Trustees as being the date upon and after which effect can be given to the desire of the founder of this trust that the National Fund shall be retained and accumulated until either alone or with other Funds then presently available for the purpose it is sufficient to discharge the National Debt …".
The Application
"Subject to any further order of the court:
(1) The court does not see fit to direct the Defendant to take any steps to identify any persons now representing or interested in the estates of persons who donated assets to the Fund, or to give notice of the claim to such persons or to join such persons as Defendants. Notwithstanding this, the Defendant is to be prepared to present arguments at the trial of the claim (if required to do so by the trial judge) in support of the interests of persons who would be beneficially interested in the Fund if the trusts declared by the deed dated 9 January 1928 are in whole or part ineffective."
(1) Any property being held upon trust and the income being wholly accumulated for any period to be determined under the provisions of the instrument;
(2) The property and accumulations to be transferred at or before the expiration of that period to the National Debt Commissioners to be applied in the reduction of the National Debt.
(1) Notwithstanding any Act or rule of law to the contrary, the "directions" shall be valid and effective; and
(2) No person shall be entitled to require the transfer of any part of the property, income or accumulations otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of the instrument.
(1) The long title to the Act, which is an aid to interpretation[2] not just in cases of ambiguity, points towards the Act having the function of amending the law relating to perpetuities and accumulations, inter alia, as they relate to trust funds for the reduction of the National Debt.
(2) The provision in section 9(1) that refers to the accumulation of income for any period determined by the instrument is consistent with the long title.
(3) The need for the 1927 Act arises from section 164(1) of the Law of Property Act 1925 ("LPA 1925"). He points to the stipulation in section 164(1) LPA 1925 that any accumulation other than in accordance with the provisions of section 164(1)(a) to (d) LPA 1925 is void. He submits that the drafting of section 9(1) of the 1927 Act mirrors that in section 164(1) LPA 1925 in order to make valid the accumulation of income for a period other than one permitted in that section.
(4) The two final parts of section 9(1) are to be read conjunctively to the effect that the prohibition on any person being entitled to require the transfer of the property, income or accumulations should be read with the validation of the directions.
(1) Insufficient weight is placed on the words of section 9(1) and the need to place the text at the centre of attention. He relies on a passage from the judgment of Lord Neuberger in Williams v Central Bank of Nigeria [2014] UKSC 10 at [72]:
"When interpreting a statute, the court's function is to determine the meaning of the words used in the statute. The fact that context and mischief are factors which must be taken into account does not mean that, when performing its interpretive role, the court can take a free-wheeling view of the intention of Parliament looking at all admissible material, and treating the wording of the statute as merely one item. Context and mischief do not represent a licence to judges to ignore the plain meaning of the words that Parliament has used."
(2) The Applicant has not formulated a way in which section 9(1) of the 1927 Act should be read. He relies on the following passage in Bennion:
"When a particular meaning is being contended for, the advocate and thereafter the court should express this in specific words, if not necessarily words in all respects suitable for insertion in the enactment."[5]
(3) The Applicant's approach cannot be derived from section 9(1) of the 1927 Act even accepting that accumulation was at the heart of the provision. The section goes further than dealing with accumulation of income. The "directions" deriving from the instrument that are referred to in the opening words of the section relate not just to accumulating income but also to (a) property and income being held in trust and (b) the period of accumulation. The former is of particular importance. Where the section validates "the directions" it must refer back to the directions (plural) at the outset of the section. The Applicant's construction relies on only the direction to accumulate being validated; and the final words of the section prevent not just a transfer of the accumulations but also the property and income of the fund.
(1) the Deed does not show a paramount charitable intention but rather was a gift for particular purposes;[6] and
(2) there was no reasonable prospect of the object of the gift being carried into effect; that there was initial impossibility or impracticability.[7]
(1) The question of whether a paramount charitable intention was present is a question of objective construction of the Deed in its context. It is clear that the Applicant has some prospect of success on this point.
(2) As to initial impossibility or impracticability, it is unnecessary to go further than the report of HM Attorney General's expert, Professor Portes, who opines that the prospect of the benefactor's donation becoming sufficient to extinguish the National Debt was "in retrospect … hopelessly optimistic, but it was perhaps not implausible at the time …". [my emphasis] The Applicant wishes to call his own expert on this subject. However, it is clear that he has at least some prospect of success.
(1) Section 9 of the 1927 Act has not been considered by the court in any previous case (as far as the parties are aware).
(2) The fund is very substantial.
(3) At an earlier stage of the claim, Zedra was willing to contemplate the possibility of persons who might be able to claim that the gift failed. The direction made by the court is only explicable on this basis.
(4) It is preferable that the court has the benefit of submissions about whether the gift failed by a party who has a real interest in seeking that outcome.
Representation order
(1) The circumstances of each other donor could differ on the issues of impracticability and general charitable intention;
(2) There is no way of knowing whether the Applicant would have the support of other donors and those who benefit under their estates; and
(3) The provisions of sections 63, 64(2) and 66 of the Charites Act 2011 could reduce the class of persons who would be affected by the claim but would fall outside the scope of a representation order limited to persons interested in the estate of the benefactor.
Costs
(1) The court should not make a prospective costs order unless it is satisfied that the judge at the trial "… could properly exercise his jurisdiction only by ordering the applicant's costs to be paid out of the fund": per Hoffmann J in McDonald v Horn [1995] 1 All ER 961 at 971j to 972a. This principle is expressed slightly differently in Lewin on Trusts 19th ed. at 27-150 where it is said that a prospective costs order will not be made "unless the judge at trial would inevitably, or almost inevitably, make an order for costs in favour of the beneficiary seeking the order." [my emphasis]
(2) The court will not usually make a prospective costs order unless the litigation falls within Buckton category 1 or 2: see Lewin on Trusts 19th ed. at 27-150 and 27-151 and Re Buckton[8].
"The application is necessary for the administration of the trust, and the costs of all parties are necessarily incurred for the benefit of the estate regarded as a whole."
"There is yet a third class of cases differing in form and substance from the first, and in substance, though not in form, from the second. In this class the application is made by a beneficiary who makes a claim adverse to other beneficiaries, and really takes advantage of the convenient procedure by originating summons to get a question determined which, but for this procedure, would be the subject of an action commenced by writ, and would strictly fall within the description of litigation. It is often difficult to discriminate between cases of the second and third classes, but when once convinced that I am determining rights between adverse litigants I apply the rule which ought, I think, to be rigidly enforced in adverse litigation, and order the unsuccessful party to pay the costs of the trustees …".
(1) Tudor on Charities at 16-127:
"There is an increasing recognition that in essentially non-hostile litigation [i.e. Re Buckton category 1 and 2 litigation] where questions have to be determined for example as to the validity and effect of wills or trusts, where representative defendants, including the Attorney General … are required in order to bind their interests and to assist the court in coming to an appropriate decision, that the representatives should not be out of pocket as a result of their participation and that, accordingly, if they have acted reasonably and properly, they should be awarded their costs on the indemnity basis [from the fund]." [Mr Richardson's emphasis]
(2) Lewin on Trusts 19th ed. 27-198:
"Claims by or through settlor based on failure or revocation of express trusts
Questions commonly arise whether express trusts fail in whole or in part as a matter of construction or law, for example by reason of the operation of the rule against perpetuities, and whether in consequence the trust fund is wholly or partially undisposed of by the express trusts so as to become held by way of resulting trust for a settlor or his estate or a testator's next of kin. In this kind of case there is no challenge to the trust, irrespective of whether or not the express trusts can take effect according to their terms, but rather a claim that the express trusts fail in whole or in part with the consequence that a resulting trust takes effect… In the ordinary course the trustees will seek the determination by the court of the validity or otherwise of the express trusts … and the proceedings will in substance and in form fall within Buckton category (1), though they may fall within the fourth category with the consequence that the claimants to the beneficial interest, though not the trustees, are at risk as to costs."
Directions
The benefactor
Note 1 See section 49(2) Senior Courts Act 1981. [Back] Note 4 Bennion 24.12 and 24.13 [Back] Note 6 See In re Wilson [1913] Ch 314 [Back]