''Morice v Bishop of Durham''
EWHC Ch J80is an English trusts law">805
EWHC Ch J80is an English trusts law case, concerning the policy of the ''beneficiary principle''.
Facts
General Mordaunt Cracherode (died 20 June 1773, or in 1768 by some accounts) was appointed Lieutenant Governor of Fort St. Philip, Menorca, in 1753 and as a lieutenant-colonel was commanding officer of the marines during
George Anson's voyage round the world.
His son,
Clayton Mordaunt Cracherode, was an important benefactor to the
British Museum
The British Museum is a Museum, public museum dedicated to human history, art and culture located in the Bloomsbury area of London. Its permanent collection of eight million works is the largest in the world. It documents the story of human cu ...
. Despite leaving them his large collections of books, prints and other artworks, his home-made will left his sister Ann his land and residual fortune; she was then 79, and without children or close relations. Clayton's friend,
Shute Barrington
Shute Barrington (26 May 173425 March 1826) was an English churchman, Bishop of Llandaff in Wales, as well as Bishop of Salisbury and Bishop of Durham in England.
Early life
Barrington was born at Beckett Hall in Shrivenham in Berkshire (n ...
,
Bishop of Durham
The bishop of Durham is head of the diocese of Durham in the province of York. The diocese is one of the oldest in England and its bishop is a member of the House of Lords. Paul Butler (bishop), Paul Butler was the most recent bishop of Durham u ...
descended upon her, and after exercising what many later felt was undue influence, persuaded her to make a new will, in which he was named sole executor, with wide power over the disposition of the funds. After bequests, some £30,000 was left for the executor to spend on "such objects of benevolence and liberality as the trustee in his own discretion shall most approve of" – perhaps equating to £2.1 million in modern terms. After Ann died in 1802 the will led to the case being litigated when her cousins Anne and William Morice sued to overturn the will. William had already been bequeathed £16,000 in the will.
The key legal point was that "The testator purported to make a trust for ''such objects of benevolence and liberality as the trustee in his own discretion shall most approve of.''"
Judgment
Court of Chancery
Sir William Grant held that the will could not amount to a charity, and so the money had to return to the next of kin.
High Court of Chancery
Lord Eldon LC, on appeal, also found that the trust could neither be valid as a private trust, because it lacked beneficiaries.
[(1805) 10 Ves 522, 539 and 542-3]
See also
*
English trusts law
English trust law concerns the protection of assets, usually when they are held by one party for another's benefit. Trust law, Trusts were a creation of the English law of English property law, property and English contract law, obligations, a ...
Notes
References
*
Further reading
*Getzler, Joshua, in Mitchell, Charles, Mitchell, Paul (eds.), ''Landmark Cases in Equity'', pp. 157–203, 2012, Bloomsbury Publishing, {{ISBN, 1847319742, 9781847319746
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English trusts case law
1805 in case law
Court of Chancery cases
1805 in British law