Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Equity & Trusts: The Three Certainties
- Certainty of Object
- 'Objects' means beneficiaries
- Fixed trusts
- E.g. £10,000 to be divided equally between my two nephews, Joe and Bill.
- When the settlor specifies the shares of the beneficiaries.
- E.g. My residuary estate on trust for my wife during her lifetime and then to my children in equal shares.
- Called a successive interest fixed trust.
- Rule for CoB: the list principle/class ascertainability test
- Must be possible to draw up a complete list of all beneficiaries.
- Conceptual certainty
- No linguistic or semantic ambiguity
- E.g. 'my friends', 'useful employees', 'good customers' aren't conceptually certain
- Not capable of different interpretations
- Evidential certainty
- Should be possible to prove who the beneficiaries are.
- Discretionary trusts
- E.g. £10,000 on trust for such of my siblings in such shares as my trustees shall decide
- Don't have to give something to every beneficiary
- Old rule was the same as that for fixed trusts
- List/ascertainability test
- IRC v Broadway Cottages Trust
- New test introduced in 1970s
- McPhail v Doulton
- House of Lords
- Appropriate test is the 'Is or is not test' or 'individual ascertainability test'.
- Must be able to say with certainty whether an individual is or is not in the class
- Test for certainty of objects for Powers
- Re Gestetner
- Re Baden No.1
- Lord Wilberforce: Conceptual certainty is most important factor
- Re Baden No.2
- Sachs LJ agreed with Lord Wilberforce about conceptual certainty
- Administrative unworkability
- When class of possible beneficiaries is too large for trustees to adequately survey and select from it
- R v District Auditor ex parte West Yorkshire MC
- Trust will fail
- Gift with a condition precedent
- E.g. '£100 to each of my nephews with a NUFC season ticket'
- Viewed as a series of gifts rather than a trust.
- Re Barlow
- Correct test is 'one person test'
- Class description must be sufficiently clear so it is possible to identify at least one person who falls within the class
- Re Tuck is another example of the application of this test
- Lack of certainty of objects creates a resulting trust of the property back to settlor
- Certainty of Subject Matter
- Property subject to the trust must be clearly defined
- Description used to identify property must be clear and unambiguous
- Shouldn't be subjective
- Only means something to the settlor
- Re Kolb's WT
- Re Golay
- 'reasonable income' is sufficiently certain
- Remainder provisions
- E.g. A gift to A, and anything that is left to B'
- Palmer v Simmonds
- 'The bulk' is too uncertain to create a trust
- Not clear which part should be passed on
- Resulted in an absolute gift to the husband
- E.g. To A for life, remainder to B'
- Known as a 'successive interest trust'
- If drafted correctly this will create a trust
- In the Estate of Last
- Trusts over unallocated assets
- Rule: subject matter must be segregated from general stock
- Tangible Property
- Re London Wine Company
- No trust, wine not segregated
- Re Goldcorp
- Intangible property
- Hunter v Moss
- Involved shares in a limited company
- Intangible property need not be specified as long as all items are identical
- Beneficial interests in the property must be ascertainable and clear
- 'In equal shares'
- Valid
- Fixed trust
- 'In such shares as the trustees will decide'
- Valid
- Discretionary trust
- Problems caused by other methods of ascertainment
- Boyce v Boyce
- One sister had to choose which property she wanted but died before she could do this.
- Gift failed as court could not make the decision for her.
- Contrast with Re Knapton
- Right of selection followed order beneficiaries were named in the will
- Court applied a practical solution
- Effect of uncertainty of Subject Matter
- Property would fall into residuary estate of testator OR
- Property would be an absolute gift to first person named in clause OR
- Property may never leave the settlors estate.
- Certainty of Intention
- Courts scrutinise the words used
- Orally or verbally
- Word 'trust' need not be used
- Paul v Constance
- Contrast with Jones v Lock
- 'Loose conversations of this sort' didn't constitute intention.
- Case concerning cheque for a baby
- 'The money is as much yours as mine'
- Milroy v Lord
- Failed transfer to third party trustees
- Equity looks at substance rather than form
- Clear, unambiguous language showing a trust is intended
- Precatory words are not sufficient
- Lambe v Eames
- E.g. I hope, I wish, I desire
- Re Adams v Kensington Vestry
- 'In full confidence'
- Held: Did not demonstrate intention
- Comiskey v Bowring Hanbury
- 'In full confidence' were the words used
- Provision went on to give additional instructions
- Known as a 'gift over in default'
- Held: A trust was intended
- Increase in cases in a commercial context
- Re Kayford
- Mail order company in financial difficulty
- Placed customer money deposits in 'The customers trust deposit account'
- Held: Express trust created
- Freeman v Commissioners for Customs and Excise
- Restriction placed on how money is used
- Express trust created in favour of transferor
- Intention must be genuine
- Midland Bank v Wyatt
- Sham trusts not acknowledged by courts