Supreme Court of Canada
Diocesan
Synod of Fredericton v. Perrett, [1955] S.C.R. 498
Date: 1955-05-24
In re HUGHSON
The Diocesan Synod Of Fredericton (Defendant)
Appellant;
and
C. Wallace Perrett and Nellie Perrett (Executors of
the Estate of George Miles Hughson) (Plaintiffs), New Brunswick
Protestant Orphans Home, The Maritime Trust Co., Ada A. Fitzgerald and Bessie
Carloss (Defendants) Respondents.
1955: February 28, March 1; 1955: May 24.
Present: Rand, Kellock, Cartwright, Fauteux and Abbott JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW BRUNSWICK, CHANCERY
DIVISION, WITH LEAVE OF THE APPEAL DIVISION
Will—Ademption—Devise to executors for sale with
direction to pay net proceeds into Trust Fund—Sale by testator—Proceeds
deposited in bank—Subsequent withdrawals—Effect on legacy.
A testator by his will directed his executors to sell and
convert into money all the assets of his estate and after the payment of debts
and a legacy to the Flower Fund of a church "to pay the net proceeds from
the sale of my automobile, furniture and Adelaide Street property in the said
city of Saint John" to the appellant upon certain trusts, to pay certain
other pecuniary legacies; and the residue to the respondents FitzGerald and
Carloss. He finally directed that "Should the net proceeds of my estate at
the time of my death be insufficient to pay the aforesaid legacies in full then
I direct that they should be paid pro rata but that the gift for the
Flower Fund and of the net proceeds of the sale of my automobile, furniture and
real estate shall be paid in full." Prior to his death the testator sold
the three last mentioned items and deposited the proceeds in his bank account.
He later drew against the account but at his death the balance in the account
was greater than the net proceeds arising from the sale.
Held (Cartwright J. dissenting): that the principle of
ademption did not apply: the phrase "net proceeds of the sale" meant
the means of determining the amount of a pecuniary bequest; there was no
specific property. The testator by providing that in the event "the net
proceeds of my estate at the time of my death" should be insufficient for
the payment of "the aforesaid legacies in full" indicated that he
intended his net estate, whatever it might be at the date of his death, should
be employed in payment of all his legacies, priority to be given that of the
appellant. Hicks v. McClure 64 Can. S.C.R. 361, referred to.
Per Cartwright J. (dissenting): The words of the clause
in question are indistinguishable from those in Hicks v. McClure
(supra) and must accordingly be construed as a gift not of the Adelaide
Street property but of the proceeds of the sale thereof so long as those
proceeds
[Page 499]
retained a form by which they could be identified as such. For
the reasons given by the judge of first instance, such proceeds had lost their
identity at the date of the testator's death and the legacy was adeemed. Re
Stevens [1946] 4 D.L.R. 322 followed.
APPEAL per saltum by leave of the Supreme Court of
New Brunswick, Appeal Division, from the judgment of Harrison J. of
the Chancery Division, by which he determined certain questions arising with
respect to the administration of the estate of George Miles Hughson, deceased.
J. F. H. Teed, Q.C. for the appellant.
Norwood Carter for the respondents.
Rand J.:—This
appeal concerns the interpretation of a will. The instrument was made in
September, 1950. At that time, as well as at his death, the testator was a
widower with no living issue. He then owned a home on Adelaide Street, Saint
John, and had money on deposit in the Bank of Nova Scotia. In the late Fall of
1951, he went to live elsewhere. In February, 1952, he sold the property,
together with his furniture and automobile, for $10,000 in cash which, on
February 9th, was deposited in his savings account in the bank. At that time
the account showed a credit of $8,469.72 to which was added the deposit. It
appears also that on December 21, 1951, the testator issued a cheque to Ada A.
Fitzgerald, one of the respondents and a legatee, for the sum of $5,000, the amount
of a bequest in the will. Between the 9th of February and the 20th of May,
1952, when he died, he withdrew from the savings account the sum of $1,656.96
which did not relate to the house or other property sold.
By the will, he devised and bequeathed to his executors
"all my property both real and personal for the following purposes".
The debts were first to be paid and following a legacy of $100 to the Flower
Fund of Saint Luke's Church in Saint John the executors were
to sell and convert into money all of the assets of my
estate, and to pay the net proceeds from the sale of my automobile, furniture
and real estate situate at No. 180 Adelaide Street in the said City of Saint
John to the Diocesan Synod of Fredericton, to be invested in a Memorial Fund in
my name, and with the income therefrom to be, used and applied by the Bishop of
Fredericton in such terms and conditions as he and his successor
[Page 500]
in office shall from time to time determine toward grants to
a student or students selected by the Bishop for the purposes of assisting such
student or students who undertake a course in Divinity Studies; preference at
all times being given by the Bishop to students whose homes are in the area
served by St. Luke's Church in the said City of Saint John, and if there be no
such students in any given year, the Bishop shall be entitled to apply such
income to the Divinity Scholarship Account of the Diocese of Fredericton.
Four legacies followed:—
To pay the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000) to the New
Brunswick Protestant Orphans' Home;
To pay the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000) to the
Maritime Trust Company for certain charitable purposes;
To pay the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000) to Ada A.
Fitzgerald (who apparently had rendered services in caring for him);
To pay the sum of Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000) to Bessie
Carloss.
The residue was given to Ada A. Fitzgerald and Bessie
Carloss in equal shares. The last clause is in these words:—
Should the net proceeds of my estate at the time of my death
after the payment of my said debts, funeral and testamentary expenses, be
insufficient to pay the aforesaid legacies in full, then I direct that they
should be paid pro rata but that the gift for the Flower Fund, and the
gift of the net proceeds of the sale of my automobile, furniture and real
estate shall be paid in full.
The question is whether the gift to the Diocesan Synod of
Fredericton was adeemed by the sale of the property mentioned.
It will be seen that the gift is not of the property itself;
the executors are to pay "the net proceeds". The word
"proceeds" here means the net amount of money, not in specie, which
the property should bring on its sale, i.e. it was the means of determining the
amount of a legacy. The direction is to sell "all" the property
belonging to him; the total proceeds so realized were to constitute one mass or
fund, on which the legacy was made a first charge. It was, in short, a
pecuniary bequest in the amount of the net sum realized from the sale. The
property was sold by the testator most likely because he was no longer living
in it and because of what he considered a good price: but whatever the reason,
it clearly was not intended to affect the bequest. Ademption carries the sense
of taking from another to one's self: but the circumstances exclude any such
purpose or intention.
This construction is strikingly confirmed by the last
paragraph, which puts beyond doubt the fact that he envisaged
[Page 501]
the payment of all the legacies out of the total realized
moneys, including those already in the bank. But the gifts to the Church and to
the Synod were not to abate: they were to be paid in full first. The latter
was, therefore, as the others, a general bequest of so much money.
It was argued that the gift was specific, not of the money
realized in specie but, in some sense not very clear to me, specific as to some
converted form of the property. Assuming it to be specific, which seems here to
mean only that the property must be sold by the executors, there would have been
no abatement at law and the precaution taken in the last clause is referable
only to its having been intended to be of the general character.
That the courts lean strongly against specific legacies has
long been settled. In Williams, vol. 2, p. 610, par. 932. it is said that
Courts do not favour construing a bequest or devise in a
will as being specific, and will not do so unless the intent of the testator to
give a specific bequest or devise is clearly so expressed.
and at p. 611, par. 934:—
The courts in general are averse to construing legacies to
be specific; and the intention of the testator, with reference to the thing
bequeathed, must be clear.
Jarman, 8th ed., vol. 2, p. 1041, puts it:—
But in construing wills the court leans very strongly
against specific legacies so that in a case of doubt the more probable view is
that that legacy is not specific.
But here, without that general tendency, the circumstances
leave no doubt of what the testator intended. It is indicated in the ademption
by payment of the legacy to Miss Fitzgerald. The sale of the property was a
mere incident in the administration of his estate by the executors. The
predominant purpose was that out of that estate reduced to money these payments
should be made, in the case of the Synod, with the preference expressly
provided.
I would, therefore, allow the appeal and dispose of the
costs as proposed by my brother Kellock.
The judgment of Kellock, Fauteux and Abbott JJ. was
delivered by:—
Kellock J.:—The
testator gave, devised and bequeathed all his property, real and personal, to
his executors, in the first instance, to pay debts, funeral and testamentary
[Page 502]
expenses, and in the second place, to provide for a legacy
of $100 to the Secretary-treasurer of the Flower Fund of Saint Luke's Church in
the City of Saint John to be used for the purchase of flowers from time to time
for use in the Church. He then directed his executors:
I To sell and convert into money all of the assets of
my estate, and to pay the net proceeds from the sale of my automobile,
furniture and real estate situate at No. 180 Adelaide Street in the said City
of Saint John.
to the appellant upon certain trusts, the detail of
which is not relevant.
After providing for other legacies and for the division of
the residue of his estate between the respondents Ada A. Fitzgerald and Bessie
Carloss, the testator further directed:
II Should the net proceeds of my estate at the time
of my death after the payment of my said debts, funeral and testamentary
expenses, be insufficient to pay the aforesaid legacies in full, then I direct
that they should be paid pro rata but that the gift for the Flower Fund,
and the gift of the net proceeds of the sale of my automobile, furniture and
real estate shall be paid in full.
The appellant contends that the learned judge of first
instance was in error in his conclusion that by reason of the realization of
the property described in the paragraph I have numbered I, in the
lifetime of the testator and the deposit of the proceeds to the testator's
account in the bank and the subsequent dealings with that account, brought
about an ademption of the gift.
In my opinion, it is not arguable but that the gift of the
"net proceeds of the sale" in the above paragraph means exactly what
it says and does not constitute merely a gift of the enumerated items of
property as such. In Hicks v. McClure , a testator
directed his executors to sell his farm and to divide the "proceeds"
in a certain way. The testator had himself sold the farm and taken a mortgage
for part of the purchase price and this mortgage formed part of his estate at
his death. It was held that the trust declared by the will with respect to the
proceeds of the sale of the farm applied to the mortgage. Sir Lyman Duff thus
laid down the principle applicable at p. 364:
Has the testator manifested his intention that his gift is
not of the particular property only but of the proceeds of the property so long
as the proceeds retain a form by which they can be identified as such?
[Page 503]
Anglin J., as he then was, with whom Davies, C.J.C., agreed,
in holding that there was enough in the language of the will to indicate an
intention that "the funds representing the property dealt with should go
to the beneficiary in whatever form they might be found at the testator's
death", said at p. 364:
Morgan v. Thomas , shews that in a
case such as this a broad and even a lax construction of the terms of the will
should prevail if thereby effect will more probably be given to the testator's
intention.
Were there nothing else in the will it would be necessary to
consider whether or not the proceeds of the assets here in question were still
identifiable as such at the date of the death of the testator. In view of the
later paragraph, which I have numbered 77 above, however, I do not find it
necessary to embark on that inquiry.
If the gift in paragraph I is to be regarded for all
purposes as purely a specific legacy and was so regarded by the testator, there
would have been no need whatever for paragraph II. If at the date of his
death there were no identifiable "proceeds" of the enumerated items,
the gift would simply fail. If there were proceeds, there was equally no reason
for paragraph 77, as a specific legacy does not abate with general legacies for
the purpose of rateable payment.
Paragraph II is not to be regarded as meaningless if
a rational meaning can be given to it. In my opinion, the testator has
indicated by this paragraph that in his mind the gift of proceeds was not
specific in a technical sense but that he was giving a pecuniary legacy equal
in amount to that which should be realized from the sale of the itemized
property. Paragraph 77 is perfectly clear. It provides that in the event that "the
net proceeds of my estate at the time of my death" are insufficient
for the payment of debts, funeral and testamentary expenses and "the
aforesaid legacies in full", the legacies other than the two mentioned are
to abate rateably. Those two are to be paid in full. In my view, this is
the clearest indication that the testator intended his net estate, whatever it
might be at the date of his death, to be employed in payment of all his
legacies, priority being given to the two mentioned.
I would accordingly allow the appeal. All parties should
have their costs out of the estate, those of the executors as
[Page 504]
between solicitor and client. In the payment of costs regard
shall be had to the priority given by the will to the gifts for the benefit of
the appellant, and in the event of a resulting abatement of the other legacies,
any costs to which the respondent Ada A. Fitzgerald would otherwise be entitled
shall be reduced by such sum as her legacy of $5,000 would have abated
had it not been paid to her in the lifetime of the testator and the assets of
the testator at his death included such amount.
Cartwright J.
(dissenting): This is an appeal, brought per saltum by leave of the
Supreme Court of New Brunswick, Appeal Division, from a judgment of Harrison J.
determining certain questions as to the interpretation of the will of the late
George Miles Hughson, hereinafter referred to as the testator.
Several questions were raised before Harrison J. but this
appeal relates to only one of these which is as follows:—
Whether the legacy and benefits given to The Diocesan Synod
of Fredericton by and under Paragraph 3 of the said Will are adeemed by reason
of the sale by the Testator George Miles Hughson in his lifetime of his
automobile, furniture and real estate at No. 180 Adelaide Street, Saint John,
New Brunswick, and the depositing of the proceeds from such sale in Savings
Account No. 1843 in The Bank of Nova Scotia, Main Street, Saint John, New
Brunswick, which account contains other deposits and withdrawals which are
without relation to the subject matter of such bequest.
The relevant facts are undisputed. The testator died on May
20, 1952, leaving a will dated September 25, 1950 of which probate has been
granted. The relevant provisions of the will are as follows:—
I, GEORGE MILES HUGHSON, of the City of Saint John in the
County of the City and County of Saint John and Province of New Brunswick,
retired Canadian National Railway employee, do hereby make, publish and declare
this to be my Last Will and Testament.
I nominate, constitute and appoint C. WALLACE PERRETT of the
said City of Saint John, Electrician and NELLIE PERRETT his wife, or the
survivor, Executors of this my Last Will.
I give, devise and bequeath all my property both real and
personal to my said Executors or to the survivor for the following purposes:—
1. To pay all my just debts,
funeral and testamentary expenses.
2. To pay the sum of One Hundred Dollars ($100) to the
Secretary-treasurer of the Flower Fund of Saint Luke's Church in the said City
of Saint John to be used for the purchase of flowers from time to time for use
in the said Church.
3. To sell and convert into money all of the assets of my
estate, and to pay the net proceeds from the sale of my automobile, furniture
and real estate situate at Number 180 Adelaide Street
[Page 505]
in the said City of Saint John to
the Diocesan Synod of Fredericton, to be invested in a Memorial Fund in my
name, and with the income therefrom to be used and applied by the Bishop of
Fredericton in such terms and conditions as he and his successor in office
shall from time to time determine towards grants to a student or students selected
by the Bishop for the purpose of . assisting such student or students who
undertake a course in Divinity Studies; preference at. all times being given by
the Bishop to students whose homes are in the area served by St. Luke's Church
in the said City of Saint John, and if there be no such students in any given
year, the Bishop shall be entitled to apply such income to the Divinity
Scholarship Account of the Diocese of Fredericton.
4. To pay the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000) to the
new Brunswick Protestant Orphans' Home.
5. To pay $5,000 to the Maritime Trust Company (on trusts
for a Protestant Home for aged persons, the terms of which are not material).
6. To pay the sum of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000) to Ada
A. Fitzgerald, wife of Eaven Fitzgerald at present of 22 Kennedy Street, Saint
John, New Brunswick, said sum to be inclusive of any amount to which she may be
entitled for care, services and expenses which she has or may hereafter incur
for me or on my behalf.
7. To pay the sum of Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000) to
Bessie Carloss at present of 378 Haymarket Square in the said City of Saint
John.
All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate I give and
bequeath to the said Ada A. Fitzgerald and the said Bessie Carloss share and
share alike, or to the survivor, should either predecease me.
Should the net proceeds of my estate at the time of my death
after the payment of my said debts, funeral and testamentary expenses, be
insufficient to pay the aforesaid legacies in full, then I direct that they
should be paid pro rata but that the gift for the Flower Fund, and the
gift of the net proceeds of the sale of my automobile, furniture and real
estate shall be paid in full.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I the said George Miles Hughson have
hereunto set my hand and seal this 25th day of September, A.D. 1950.
At the date of this will the testator was living at 180
Adelaide Street. He owned this property and the furniture in it and an
automobile. Nothing turns on the fact that two of these items of property are
personalty and one realty and, as a matter of convenience, I will hereinafter
refer to the three items collectively as "the Adelaide Street
property". Late in the year 1951 the testator left 180 Adelaide Street and
went to live in the home of the respondent Ada A. Fitzgerald. In. February 1952
the testator sold 180 Adelaide Street together with the furniture and his
automobile, and conveyed the same to the purchasers by deed and bill of sale
dated February 9, 1952.
[Page 506]
The purchasers paid for the said real and personal property
the sum of $10,000. This $10,000 was deposited to the credit of the testator in
the Bank of Nova Scotia, Main Street, Saint John, N.B., on February 9, 1952.
Only two withdrawals from this bank account were made after the deposit of the
$10,000. These totalled $1,656.96, and the amount on deposit in this account at
the date of the death of the testator was $16,811.76. The remainder of the
estate consisted of a Dominion of Canada Bond $100, and two deposits in other
banks totalling $3,230.82. The total value of the Estate according to the
inventory amounted to $20,142.58.
The learned judge was of opinion that the legacy to the
appellant was a specific legacy not of the Adelaide Street property but of the
proceeds arising from the sale thereof, that the proceeds of the sale had lost
their identity prior to the death of the testator and that, consequently, the
legacy was adeemed.
For the appellant it is first argued that the legacy is not
specific but is a general legacy of a sum of money equal in amount to the net
proceeds of the sale of the three items of property. In support of this it is
pointed out that there is no gift of the Adelaide Street property by
designation and no specific direction to sell it by designation and that the
testator deals with his assets, both in the gift to the executors and in the
direction to convert, as a totality. It is argued that the words of the will
shew the intention of the testator to be that his whole estate should be
converted into one mass of money which he then proceeds to distribute among his
beneficiaries.
I am unable to agree with this submission. The words of
paragraph 3 of the will appear to me to indicate that the testator contemplated
that among his other assets the Adelaide Street property would come into the
hands of his executors, that they were to sell and convert such property and
(having done so) to pay the net proceeds of the sale thereof to the appellant.
The word "and" and the word "my" in the phrase "and
to pay the net proceeds from the sale of my automobile, furniture
and real estate situate at Number 180 Adelaide" are significant. Pausing
here, I would have thought that there was a great deal to be said for the view
that as at the date of his death the testator had
[Page 507]
parted with the Adelaide Street property the legacy to the
appellant was adeemed and further inquiry was unnecessary, but I agree with the
learned judge of first instance that the case of Hicks v. McClure is
indistinguishable from the case at bar and requires us to construe the words of
clause 3 as a gift not of the Adelaide Street property but of the proceeds of
the sale thereof so long as those proceeds retain a form by which they can be
identified as such.
Turning then to the question whether the proceeds of the
sale of the Adelaide Street property were identifiable at the time of the
testator's death, for the reasons given by the learned judge of first instance
I agree with his conclusion that they were not. I do not find it necessary to
review the numerous authorities dealing with the effect of the proceeds of the
sale of a specific item of property being commingled with other moneys in the
bank account of the vendor. A number of them are discussed in the judgments of
the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia on appeal in re Stevens , which, in my
opinion, was rightly decided. I would like to adopt the following statement
from the judgment of Doull J. (at page 335) as correctly stating the law and as
applicable to the facts of the case at bar:—
The law seems to be that if at a testator's death, the thing
answering the description is not in existence, there must be something else
which can be identified as taking its place or there is ademption. In this case
the something is "the proceeds" of the sale of the property, and the
weight of authority is that the failure to keep such fund separate from other
funds works such a change in the thing bequeathed that there is no longer
anything upon which the gift can act. In the present case, a sum of money
greater than "the proceeds" is in existence but its amount and form
and substance have changed, and in my opinion there has been an ademption.
I have not overlooked the argument based on the direction in
the concluding paragraph of the will that "the gift of the net proceeds of
the sale of my automobile, furniture and real estate shall be paid in
full". This paragraph does not appear to me to be of assistance in
determining whether or not ademption has taken place. The testator is assuming
that there will have been no ademption, and providing, ex abundanti cautela,
that this legacy should not abate.
[Page 508]
For these reasons I would dismiss the appeal. As the
majority of the Court are of the opinion that the appeal succeeds, nothing
would be gained by my expressing my view as to the order which should have been
made as to costs had the appeal failed.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Teed & Teed.
Solicitor for the Executors: H. O. McLellan.
Solicitors for New Brunswick Protestant Orphans Home,
respondent: Inches & Hazen.
Solicitor for Bessie Carloss, respondent: R. G.
Fair-weather.
Solicitors for The Maritime Trust Co., respondent: Norwood
Carter.
Solicitor for Ada A. FitzGerald, respondent: G. T.
Clark.