Jersey & Guernsey Law Review –
October 2011
SHORTER ARTICLES
NOTHING UP MY SLEEVE
Paul Matthews
Sometimes there
is less to mistake than meets the eye. Where a power arising under a trust is
purportedly exercised by someone who in fact does not have the power, it is too
easy to say that there is a mistake and the power has not been validly
exercised, subject only to the application of appropriate equitable remedies,
such as rectification. But where (as often happens) the person actually having
the power, but not realising it, has also executed the instrument, at the least
approving what the other has purported to do, then Jersey law, like English
law, ought to hold this in itself a sufficient execution of the power, thus
obviating the need for the other remedies.
Introduction
1 Suppose that a power arising under a trust
is to be exercised, perhaps a trustee is to be appointed, or one is to be
removed. Everyone concerned thinks that, under the terms of the trust, A has
the requisite power. A therefore duly executes the instrument purporting to
exercise that power, along with B, C and D as other persons interested. Perhaps
they are the principal beneficiary, the trustees, maybe even the settlor of the
trust. It does not matter. They all want it to happen.
2 Unfortunately everyone is mistaken, and in
law A does not have the requisite power. A’s execution of the instrument
does not have the desired effect. Or even worse: A does not exist and although
he is referred to in the instrument he obviously cannot sign (and no-one
notices his absence). Or worse still: A is a company that used to exist but has since been dissolved, and those signing on
A’s behalf have no power to bind a non-existent person. These three
scenarios raise the same problem, namely a common mistaken belief, implemented
and relied on, as to who has power under a trust to do an act. What, if
anything, can be done?
3 Well, you might think, it all depends. The
Royal Court
on two recent occasions has separately invoked the remedies of (i) rectification and (ii) ratification to solve the problem. First,
in Re A, A v B, the scenario which
occurred was the second of the three above, and the court applied
rectification. Then, in Re BB, Re D
Retirement Trust, it was the third of them,
and the court applied ratification. (I suppose it is too late now to halt the
slide of Jersey trust case-law into the
alphabet soup that is now our daily diet, but all the same it is starting to
get a bit tricky sometimes to work out which
“Re A” or “Re B Trust” is being referred to.)
Rectification
4 In Re
A, A v B,
the original trustee purported to retire in favour of K, then subsequently K
retired in favour of L, and finally L retired in favour of A. It was A who
noticed that the power to appoint a new trustee was actually vested in the
first instance in the protector of the settlement, and only in default in the
trustees for the time being. The appointment of K as trustee was purportedly
made by an instrument in which the protector was described as “the Appointor”.
But in fact there was no protector at the time and the identity of “the
Appointor” was left blank in the instrument. As the Royal Court observed—
“6. As no protector had been appointed
to the settlement, the power of appointment in fact vested in the retiring
trustee, J, and there should have been no reference to the protector being the
Appointor.
7. As a result of these errors, it would
appear that K was not validly appointed by the … instrument
…”
5 The Royal Court was asked to and did
rectify the instrument of appointment by deleting the reference to the
protector and describing J, who was after all a party to the instrument, as “the
Appointor”. J was a company which had since these events been dissolved,
and therefore its reinstatement as a trustee, unlicensed
and without assets, was not feasible. The court said—
“18. We agreed that rectification, which
is retrospective in effect, was the only practical remedy which should, in the
exercise of our discretion, be granted.”
6 As is well known, rectification is a
doctrine allowing the court, satisfied that the intentions of the parties have
been misrecorded in a document, to rectify the document so as to make it accord
with those intentions. It is interesting to note that, beyond a bare reference to
J’s intention to retire as trustee of the settlement in favour of K, the court did not discuss
the question of the parties’ intentions in executing the instrument at
all in the judgment. In particular, the court did not discuss whether J
intended to exercise the power to appoint K as trustee, which intention was
then not properly recorded in the instrument. The significance of this will
become apparent later.
Ratification
7 A similar point arose in Re BB, Re D Retirement Trust. Here, the original trustee
of the trust as set up was G. The “principal employer”, D, a
limited company, had the power under the trust to appoint new and additional
trustees. In 1996 D was put into liquidation and dissolved. But in 1997 the
existing trustee G, having overlooked the dissolution of D, purported to give
to D under the trust instrument one month’s notice of resignation as
trustee. If D had existed, this would have triggered an obligation under the
trust on D to appoint a new trustee to replace him. An instrument was then
executed by G and (apparently) D, under which G purported to retire and D
purported to appoint A as trustee in his place. The corporate seal of D was
placed on the instrument and two corporate signatories executed it, all
seemingly in ignorance of the fact that D had already been dissolved the
previous year. Two months later, a further instrument was executed under which
D in the same way as before purported to appoint two others as additional
trustees. The non-existence of D at these critical times was noticed only in
2009. The question was what to do about it.
8 Upon advice, the three persons who had up
till then considered themselves to be the current trustees of the trust (namely
A and the two others) brought these proceedings seeking inter alia a declaration or at least
confirmation of the validity of their appointments as trustees. The purportedly
retired trustee, G, was convened, and its lawyers questioned whether the court
had any power to confirm the appointments retrospectively
(obviously the court could appoint them prospectively). Those lawyers suggested
instead an application for rectification
of both instruments of appointment of trustees, following the case of Re A, mentioned above. In the event such
an application in respect of the first instrument was made at the hearing, but
by G rather than by the representors. The latter rested on the wisdom of the
court, but, if the court saw fit to make the rectification, sought in relation
to the first instrument, applied for the same relief in relation to the second.
9 The Royal Court was clear that the
instruments as they stood were invalid—
“16. D did not exist at the time the first and
second appointments were entered into. It was not in issue therefore that those
appointments were invalid and we so declare.”
10 In relation to rectification, G argued
that, since there was no principal employer in existence at the relevant time G
itself was able to appoint a successor trustee under what was then art 13(1) of
the Trusts (Jersey) Law 1984 as amended. Since
G had executed the instrument with the intention of divesting itself of the
trusteeship in favour of A, it could be rectified by deleting the references to
D and showing G as the appointor.
11 The court could not immediately accept
the argument. It had first to get over the fact that art 13(1) in terms applied
only “where the terms of the trust contain no provision for the
appointment if a new or additional trustee …” This trust instrument
did contain a provision conferring such power on the principal employer. However,
in Re Royal Trust (BVI) Ltd &
Baptiste,
the court had given a generous interpretation to the words of art 13(1), in
effect construing it as meaning “where the terms of the trust contain no
provision capable of being exercised in the circumstances for the appointment
if a new or additional trustee …” The court in the present case
agreed with that approach.
12 The court then turned to rectification,
and had to grapple with the question of intention—
“27. The first part of the test for rectification
requires the Court to ascertain the true intentions of the parties. Whilst it
is clear from the face of the instrument that G intended to
resign as trustee, did it intend to exercise the power to appoint the new
trustee? There was no discussion in the judgment in Re A as to the extent to which, in rectifying a document, the Court
can impute to a party an intention it may not have had.”
Whatever the position might have been in Re A, here, as the court said—
“it is difficult to say that it was G’s true
intention to do anything other than to retire. As for A, its intention, again
from the face of the instrument, was to be appointed trustee by D and to give
indemnities to G”.
13 This and other difficulties led the court
to consider whether there was any other practical remedy for the situation in
which the parties now found themselves. It concluded that there was. The court
could (and did) appoint the would-be trustees as the trustees for the future,
and ratified their actions for the
past as in effect trustees de son tort.
It said:
“43. The definition of a trustee in Article 2 of
the Trusts Law is wide enough to encompass a trustee de son tort and
therefore the Court would have jurisdiction to make orders in relation to the
representors under Article 51 of the Trusts Law. That article makes no express
reference to ratification of past acts of trustees but if there is any doubt as
to the Court’s power to ratify the past actions of the representors under
Article 51, then in our view, the Court has an inherent jurisdiction to do so.”
This seems to be the first case in Jersey
law of such ratification.
14 Accordingly it was not necessary to
rectify the instruments of appointment, even if the requirements for that
remedy had been met, and the court reached no concluded view on that issue. As
for G, who had unbeknownst to itself continued as trustee when it thought it
had retired, the court was prepared to relieve it from any breach of trust
under art 45(1) of the 1984 Law. All’s well that ends well.
“Will there be
anything else, sir?”
“Well, yes, actually, there will. What about the
elephant in the room”?
“The
elephant in the room, sir? Good Lord,
sir! How did that get in here?”
15 Who knows? But
let’s explain it anyway. Here’s the problem. Everyone thinks that,
under the terms of the trust, one person has the necessary power. That person
therefore duly executes (or doesn’t execute) the instrument purporting to
exercise that power, along with others. But they are all wrong. That person
doesn’t have the power. Someone else does. But suppose that the “someone
else” also executes the
instrument. Approving it, wanting it to happen. So—just doing a bit of
blue sky thinking for a moment—if the right
person executes the instrument intending to make the right thing happen, wanting the right thing to happen, why
do we get so pernickety just because the instrument is also executed by the wrong person?
16 Good question. What does Jersey law say about this? Not much (but we will come back
to that). Well, what about English law, then? A bit more. Actually, quite a
lot. Indeed, English law says, in broad terms, that if the right person
executes the document, intending the document to take effect, let’s not
get too fussed if they thought someone else had the power, at least where there
is no indication that the right person didn’t want it to happen. After
all, if the mistake had been discovered at that point, and the right person
identified as having the power in question, wouldn’t the right person
still have executed it nonetheless? That’s the trouble with English law,
you may think. All substance and no form. Most civilians would be foaming at
the mouth by now.
17 There are lots of English cases on this
point. But in Re Ackerley Sargant, J summarised the
principle in this way—
“I should prefer to state the rule thus namely,
that in order to exercise a special power there must be a sufficient expression
or indication of intention in the will or other instrument alleged to exercise
it; and that either a reference to the power or a reference to the property
subject to the power constitutes in general a sufficient indication for the
purpose.”
18 So the rule concentrates on a sufficient
indication of intention to exercise the power, but regards that as satisfied in
either of two situations: (i) where
there is reference to the power, and (ii) where there is reference to the
property subject to the power. As to the former limb, even an indirect
reference to the power will suffice. Thus, in Re Farnell’s Settled Estates, an executor and trustee
of a will trust had the power to appoint new trustees. The estate included a
renewable lease. It expired, and was renewed by the lessor in favour of four persons who had not otherwise been appointed as trustees
of the will, but were described as “the present trustees of the
will”. The surviving executor and trustee was a party to that lease. North,
J accepted that the execution of the lease by the executor operated as an
implied appointment by him of the four persons as trustees.
19 As to the latter limb, this is important
in practice because there are often cases where there is no reference, even
indirect, to the power whose exercise is in question. In Davis v Richards & Wallington Industries Ltd, Scott, J, after
discussing the relevant cases, said—
“A disponor (A) purports to make a disposition of
property. The disposition cannot be effective unless associated with the
exercise of a power vested in A and that A could properly have exercised in
order to make the disposition. The disposition makes no mention of the power
and does not purport to be an exercise of it. The effect of the principle and
cases to which I have referred is that A’s intention to make the
disposition justifies imputing to him an intention to exercise the power,
provided always that an intention not to exercise the power cannot be inferred.
If the requisite intention can be imputed, the court will treat the disposition
as an exercise of the power.”
20 In that case this meant that a power conferred
on an employer under an interim trust deed to remove trustees was exercised
when a trustee had indicated his intention to retire and the definitive trust
deed was executed by the employer and the two remaining trustees, and even
though no reference was made in the deed to the exercise by the employer of the
power to remove trustees.
21 It will be seen that here, then, is the
answer to the question about intention quite properly raised by the Royal Court
in Re BB, Re D Retirement Trust. The employer intended to
make the definitive trust deed. It could not as a matter of law be made without
the concurrence of all the trustees. Therefore, in order for the definitive
trust deed to have effect, the retiring trustee had to be removed. The employer
had the power of removal. There was no intention shown not to exercise that power. Therefore the court was justified in
imputing to the employer the intention to remove.
Jersey trust law
22 That is English law. But the reader may
ask why the Royal Court
should accept this (on one view) generous approach to intention? Actually, it
already has. In Re Representation Epona
Trustees Ltd, Re T 1998 Discretionary Settlement, there were three trustees
of an English law trust, two Jersey and one
English. The English trustee purported to retire by deed executed by her but
not by the Jersey trustees (although on the
evidence it was clear that they agreed with it). A few months later the
remaining trustees executed various deeds as part of a refinancing scheme, in which
they were described as “the trustees” of the trust. The English
trustee would have been a necessary party to these deeds had she still been a
trustee. The Royal Court
received expert evidence of English law, which required that the English
trustee’s retirement could not take effect without the consent by deed of the continuing trustees.
23 That expert evidence dealt also with the
principle of imputed exercise of powers discussed above, and in its application
to the facts of the case was summarised by the court in this way—
“33. … In counsel’s opinion the
doctrine embodied in the cases referred to above applied so that the Release
and the Assignment, both of which were executed by [the Jersey trustees] as
deeds, must be taken to have embodied an exercise of their power to consent to
[the English trustee]’s retirement and to the vesting of the trust
property in them alone and to have perfected her discharge as a trustee. The
fact that they were not conscious that they were so consenting is immaterial. Their
intention to effect the transactions embodied in the Release and the Assignment
as the trustees (and the only trustees), of the Trust was sufficient.”
24 The court accepted this evidence, and
declared that the English trustee had properly retired, because—
“the execution by [the Jersey
trustees] of the Release and the Assignment on 25th July 2001 was effective to
constitute the giving of their consent by deed to [the English trustee]’s
discharge as a trustee and to the vesting of the trust property in themselves
alone.”
25 That case, of course, concerned an
English law trust. But plainly the Jersey
court was not so shocked by the English law approach to ascertaining the
intentions of those who executed trust instruments that it
felt unable to give effect to it. And, in any event, in private international
law matters of evidence and fact-finding are for the forum rather than the lex causae.
26 If, therefore, the English approach
exemplified by Davis v Richards &
Wallington Industries Ltd may properly be adopted by the Royal Court in relation to Jersey
trust cases, it appears to supply a simple answer to the range of scenarios
envisaged at the outset of this note. Certainly it would have met the needs of
the trusts in Re A, A v B, and Re BB, Re D Retirement Trust. Where there is a common
mistaken belief, implemented and relied upon, as to who has power under a trust
to do an act, and the wrong person executes the instrument, but so does the right person, then, in
the absence of any expressed objection by the right person to executing the
power, the right person may have imputed to him, her or it the intention to
exercise the power, and, because there is therefore no problem to be solved,
there is no need for rectification, ratification or any other remedy.
Paul Matthews is a consultant solicitor at Withers
LLP, London, a visiting professor at King’s College London, and of the
Institute of Law, Jersey, a deputy master of the High Court, Chancery Division,
and HM Coroner for the City of London.