Requirements of Express Trusts Flashcards

1
Q

Requirements for express trusts

A
certainty of intention
certainty of subject
certainty of objects
beneficiary principle
perpetuity rules
properly constituted (title vested)
formalities
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2
Q

3 certainties requirement

A

Knight v Knight

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3
Q

Certainty of intention

A
Objective intention (Challioner v Juliet Bellis)
from the view of an objective, reasonable person (Byrnes v Kendle)
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4
Q

Nature of intention

A

Not general, equity will not help a volunteer (Richards v Delbridge)

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5
Q

How to determine

A

Look at the whole document if any (Re Adams and Kensington Vestry)
Words and conduct (Paul v Constance)

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6
Q

Freedom to mix up trust property with own property

A

No intention (Henry v Hammond)

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7
Q

Requirement for intended trustee

A

Consent needed (Robinson v Pett) but won’t fail for want of trustee (Harris v Sharp)

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8
Q

Trustee vs settlor

A

Trustee’s intention < settlor’s intention (Hallows v Lloyd)

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9
Q

Duties

A

Must take on everything, not just pick and choose (Re Lysaght)

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10
Q

Self-assuming trustee

A

Not possible (Jasmine Trustees v Wells & Hind)

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11
Q

Consent from beneficiaries

A

Required (Standing v Bowring, Hardoon v Belilios)

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12
Q

Certainty of subject for tangible property

A

Objective construction (Palmer v Simmonds - ‘bulk’ X, Re Golay’s - ‘reasonable outcome’ Yes)

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13
Q

Issues of identification for tangible property

A

2 of my 10 (no certainty) versus 20% of my 10 (certainty, whole pool included)

Re London Wine Co
Re Goldcorp Exchange

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14
Q

Certainty of subject for intangible trust property

A

Indistinguishable and fully capable of satisfying the trust, no issue of identification (Hunter v Moss, Pearson v Lehman Brothers)

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15
Q

How to reconcile rules for tangible vs intangible trust property

A

Segregation always necessary
Segregation unnecessary, based on circumstances
Different rules for different types
No certainty of subject mater problem for intangible assets

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16
Q

Certainty of object

A

Different rules for different types of trusts

17
Q

Certainty of object for fixed trusts

A

Complete list (IRC v Broadway Cottages Trust), unless the trust is subject to a condition precedent (Re Barlow’s Will Trusts)

18
Q

Certainty of object for discretionary trusts

A

“Is or is not” test (Re Baden’s No.1), with conceptual and evidential certainty elements
Application varied in Re Baden’s No.2
Stamp - strict
Sachs and Megaw - less strict

19
Q

Varied approaches in Re Baden’s No.1

A

Stamp: ‘relatives’ and ‘dependents’ too wide, no degree of evidential uncertainty possible (complete survey)

Sachs: conceptual certainty ok, evidential certainty is a ‘question of fact’ with burden on the claimant

Megaw: conceptual certainty ok, evidential certainty fulfilled once ‘substantial number of objects’ identified

20
Q

Resolution of uncertainty (Curing uncertainty)

A

Conceptual uncertainty: question of law (Re Wynn), cannot be cured by the trustee, but later can be delegated (Re Tuck’s), again rejected (Re Wright’s)

Evidential uncertainty: question of fact (Re Coxen) where trustees’ decision can be sufficient

21
Q

Uncertainty in terms of administrative unworkability

A

R v District Auditor ex p West Yorkshire Metropolitan CC

Criticism: why large size is relevant factor (see Re Baden’s No.2)
McKay: Re Baden’s = flexibility

22
Q

Beneficiary principle

A

The court must be able to enforce a trust, and there must be ascertainable persons in whose favour the court can decree performance

23
Q

Exception to beneficiary principle

A

Charitable purpose trusts

24
Q

Status of non-charitable purpose trusts

A

Void (Leahy v AG for NSW)

25
Q

Beneficiary principle vs enforcer principle

A

Beneficiary with equitable proprietary interests vs party with a right to hold trustees accountable and bring case to court

26
Q

Arguments for beneficiary principle

A

No beneficiary principle = trustee duties are an illusion

Easy to shield assets (tax fraud)

27
Q

Arguments for enforcer principle

A

Follow off shore jurisdictions, make UK appealing to settlors

28
Q

Essence of the trust

A

Beneficiaries’ rights (Matthews) vs holding of property subject to equitable duties (Hayton)

29
Q

Exceptions to rule for non-charitable purpose trusts

A

Anomalous testamentary private purpose trusts (e.g for foxhunting)
Absolute gift of property with a motive (Re Sanderson’s, Re Abbott’s, Re Osoba)
Rule in Re Denley’s (class of individuals with strong interest)

30
Q

Saunders v Vautier rule

A

A beneficiary of full capacity that has a vested interest in the trust propety can call for a transfer of legal title from the trustees, irrespective of settlor’s intention

31
Q

Application of Saunders v Vautier

A

Cannot be used by fluctuating class

Applies to several beneficiaries separately as long as share can be severed (Stephenson v Barclays Bank)

32
Q

Soundness of the rule (Langbein vs Matthews)

A

a) protective purpose
b) ease of evasion
c) ‘dead hand’ of the settlor
d) role of trusteeship to mediate between settlor and beneficiary interests
e) donor’s intention > donee
f) contract element of the trust

33
Q

Difference between varying and ending the trust

A

Liew and Mitchell: yes there is a difference

  • unfair to rewrite the deal between settlor and trustee
  • rule only to end the trust, not to vary it
  • if there is cooperating T, can collaborate and change
  • if no cooperating T, S.19-21 of TOLATA can require trustee to retire
  • law is very pro-beneficiary

Nitikman: yes
Waters: no

34
Q

Perpetuity rules

A

a) rule against remoteness of vesting (for persons)

b) rule against inalienability (for non-charitable trusts)

35
Q

Rule against remoteness of vesting

A

Common law: ‘relevant life + 21 years’, to be determined definitely when the trust is created

Perpetuities and Accumulation Act 2009: perpetuity period no more than 125 years, s.7 wait and see rule

36
Q

Rule against inalienability

A

Void trust if possible that by end of perpetuity period there will not be someone with vested interest (Re Hooper)