Declaration & Constitution of Express Trusts Flashcards
What are the three certainties every valid private trust must satisfy?
Certainty of intention
+
Certainty of subject-matter
+
Certainty of object
What is the effect of uncertainty of intention in the declaration of a trust?
The trust fails & the ‘trustee’ takes absolutely as a gift
What is certainty of intention?
Did the settlor intend to create a trust?
Look at WORDS (eg. imperative language, command) & CONDUCT (eg. separating funds in commercial context)
‘In full confidence that she will do what is right’
Is there certainty of intention?
No
(Same for eg. ‘hoping she will give’, ‘trusting she will give’)
There would be certainty of intention if it said ‘in full confidence’ + must go to eg. nieces
A mail order company pay customer money into a separate account to prevent them ranking as unsecured creditors
Is there certainty of intention?
Yes
Was held that separating funds showed an intention to create a trust (Re Kayford)
(Nb. difference between family & commercial)
Can intention to create a trust be inferred from conduct?
Yes
Eg. In Paul v Constance, Mr C was separated from his wife (but not divorced). Had arranged for his new partner, P, to withdraw money from his bank account with his permission. They had paid joint winnings into the account & he often told P the money was ‘as much yours as mine’
–> HELD: enough to infer that C had made declaration of trust of money in the account. P entitled to half the money in the account (estranged Mrs C to the other half)
What is certainty of subject-matter?
The property subject to trust must be certain
(trust property itself + beneficial entitlement)
What is the effect of uncertainty of subject matter?
If the property is uncertain, the trust fails
If the beneficial entitlement is uncertain, there will be a resulting trust (ben = LT; when die, reverts to settlor’s estate)
If gift + ‘trust’, the donee takes absolutely (‘£300 for my husband, at his death whatever is left to my siblings’ - husband takes absolutely)
What happens if the trust property is uncertain?
The trust fails
What happens if the beneficial entitlement is uncertain?
There will be a resulting trust
(the beneficiary will be a life tenant - when they die, reverts to settlor’s estate)
Does ‘bulk’ satisfy certainty of subject-matter?
No - will be certain if objectively defined (eg. ‘50%’)
If it is subjective (‘bulk’, ‘some’ etc), will be insufficiently certain
If the trust property is not segregated, how can you tell if there is certainty of subject-matter?
Depends on whether it is tangible or intangible
Unsegregated tangible = always uncertain (even if identical)
(eg. wine bottles)
Unsegregated intangible = certain if identical (eg. shares of same class, value, rights, responsibilities)
Will there be certainty of subject matter if the trust property is unsegregated tangible property?
No - will always be uncertain
Will there be certainty of subject matter if the trust property is unsegregated intangible property?
Yes if it is IDENTICAL
(eg. shares of same class, value, rights & responsibilities)
What is the rule about beneficial entitlement to satisfy certainty of subject-matter?
The beneficial entitlement must be certain (Boyce v Boyce)
There must at least be a mechanism for ascertaining
What is certainty of object?
Must be certain who the beneficiaries are (beneficiary principle)
What is the beneficiary principle?
There must be someone in whose favour the court can decree performance
What test must be satisfied for certainty of object in creating a fixed trust?
The complete list test
The trustee must be able to make a complete list of the beneficiaries
What is a fixed trust?
Settler fixes in place who the beneficiaries are & what the beneficial entitlements will be
(eg. ‘£300 to X, Y & Z in equal shares’)
What is a discretionary trust?
Settlor defines the class & directs the trustee to choose shares. Trustee must choose.
(eg. ‘£300 to such of X, Y & Z, as T shall select’)