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Equity and Trusts rob on 10 Jul 2007
Controller of family trust unable to give up control
A Queensland Supreme Court application on whether a family trust controller had successfully replaced himself before his death has been decided in the negative. In
“The Trustee may by Deed revoke add to release or vary all or any of the Trusts declared or any Trusts declared by any variation, alteration or addition made from time to time and may by the same or any other Deed declare any new or other trusts or powers concerning the Trust Fund but so that the Trustee shall not have any power to revoke add to or vary any of the Trusts so that the Settlor may acquire a beneficial interest in the Trust Fund or any part of it nor to effect [sic] the beneficial entitlement of any Beneficiary to any amount applied for him prior to the date of revocation or alteration and any other person or persons upon whom any power or powers so conferred on him or them. Upon this exercise of any release and revocation pursuant to this clause the power so released and revoked shall be absolutely and irrevocably determined.”
Mr. Jenkins, the original trust controller, relied on the clause to exercise power as trustee to amend the trust schedule to remove himself and install his only surviving child (Ellett – the respondent) as controller. After Mr.
Ellett’s counsel relied heavily on the Property Law Act 1974 which provides:
“205 Disclaimer etc. of powers
(1) A person to whom any power, whether or not coupled with an interest, is given, may by deed disclaim, release or contract not to exercise the power, and after such disclaimer release or contract shall not be capable of exercising or joining in the exercise of the power.
(2) On such disclaimer, release, or contract, the power may be exercised by the other person or persons or the survivor or survivors of the other persons to whom the power is given unless the contrary is expressed in the instrument creating the power.”
Jenkin’s counsel argued the power of the controller to remove and appoint trustees was entrenched and that it would be self-defeating to allow a trustee to get around that by amending the deed to remove the controller.
Douglas
“In all cases, the scope of the relevant power is determined by the construction of the words in which it is couched, in accordance with the surrounding context and also of such extrinsic evidence (if any) as may be properly admissible. A power of amendment or variation in a trust instrument ought not to be construed in a narrow or unreal way. It will have been created in order to provide flexibility, whether in relation to specific matters or more generally. Such a power ought, therefore, to be construed liberally so as to permit any amendment which is not prohibited by an express direction to the contrary or by some necessary implication, provided always that any such amendment does not derogate from the fundamental purposes for which the power was created. Thus, a power of amendment will undoubtedly be capable of making amendments which are essentially ancillary to, and for the better execution of, such fundamental purposes, e.g. so as to substitute an easier form of communication or service for the one originally stipulated, or so as to make other powers exercisable in writing rather than by deed, or, indeed, introduce other amendments which are not simply administrative or managerial in nature. It does not follow, of course, that the power of amendment itself can be amended in this way. Indeed, it is probably the case that there is an implied (albeit rebuttable) presumption, in the absence of an express direction to that effect, that a power of amendment (like any other kind of power) cannot be used to extend its own scope or amend its own terms. Moreover, a power of amendment is not likely to be held to extend to varying the trust in a way which would destroy its ‘substratum’. The underlying purpose for the furtherance of which the power was initially created or conferred will obviously be paramount.”
Douglas J went on to notice that “this Trust” was defined in the deed to include the schedule (where the controller is named) but the power to amend clause referred to “the Trusts declared”. The difference between the singular and plural limited the power to amend to the trusts created in the document, not the document itself. Douglas
Less convincing was Douglas