The rule in Re Rose
Re Rose (1952)- Reccomended
Case: Transferor purported to both gift some shares to his wife and to put some shares on trust by transfering to trustee in March. He completed the necessary documents and delivered them to the company where shares were held. Transfer registered by company in June. Transferor had by then died.
If transfer had been effective in March estate duty would not have been payable on the transfers by the transferor’s estate, but duty would have been payable by the estate if the transfers were effective in June.
Decision:
Midland Bank v Rose (1949) NB: different case to Rose 1952, just conincidence that same name.
Case: T wished to give H shares. He had executed the share transfer docs in accordance with the co’s regulations to transfer them to H, and gave him the share certificate.
BUT by the time of T’s death the shares had not been registered in H’s name by the co.
Decision: Because testator had done all he needed to do to vest the title in H, equity should treat the vesting of title as having occurred while T was living (because if he the shares had not vested in H they would have gone to others under his will)
Re Paradise Motor Co 1968
Re Rose- Transferor of shares considered to have done all that was necessary for shares to be transferred even though he had not signed the transfer document, because this was considered a mere irregularity, and not essential.
Re Fry [1946]
Contrast with Paradise Motor.
Case: Donor, who lives abroad, needed to obtain HM Treasury consent to transfer shares. Though he had applied for this consent, it had not been obtained.
Rule: Not sufficient if settlor’s further input needed. Consent of Treasury needed, which might have required settlor to provide further information or answer questions
Is Fry reconcilible with Re Rose?
Mascall v Mascall [1984]
Case: Father intened to gift son house. Gave him certificate and made transfer doc. Son just needed to take it to Registry for approval but before he did F and S fell out and F sought to have gift set aside as void.
Decision:
3. it was usual for the donee to seek registration.
Pennington v Waine [2002] - Required- Facts and decision
Extending Re Rose.
Case: Donor wanted to give her nephew 400 shares in a co. She wanted him to be its director, for which he needed to hold at least 1 share under the arts.
The auditors informed the nephew of the transfer and asked him to complete consent forms. Both he and the donor (his aunt) signed, but she died before the auditor had delivered the consent form to the co.
In donor’s will she made specific gifts of the balance of her shareholding, but made no mention of the 400 shares. The executors of her estate (residuary beneficiaries of the will) claimed there had been no valid transfer because it had not been completed before death.
Decision:
4. Rule- Equity will not insist donor has completed all the necessary steps if it would be ‘unconscionable’ for donor to recall the gift.
Pennington v Waine [2002] - Arden on policy on maxims.
1. No consistent single policy consideration. Could be:
(a) Ensuring donors do not by acting voluntarily act unwisely in a way they may subsequently regret; furthered by permitting donors to change their mind at any time before constitution.
- parernalistic and can oughtweigh the respect to be given to the donor’s original intention as gifts are often held by the courts to be incompletely constituted despite the clearest intention of the donor to make the gift.
(b) To safeguard the position of the donor if discovered insolvent- to make sure gift didn’t defeat rights of creditors.
- I do not consider that this need concern the court to the exclusion of other considerations as in the event of insolvency there are other potent remedies available to creditors.
(c) legal certainty- but tempering means there isnt any.
2. Policy considerations against the maxims
Equity should perfect an imperfect gift because this would:
A. effectuate, rather than frustrate, the clear and continuing intention of the donor
B. Prevent the donor, or her personal representatives, from acting unconscionably by revoking the gift.
Pennington v Waine [2002]- Required- How the maxims have been tempered
1. By Re Rose- difficulty with this exception- it assumes there is a clear answer to the Q ‘when does an equitable assignment of a share take place?’. Q is actually circular. The equitable assignment clearly occurs at some stage before the shares are registered- but does it occur when share is delivered to transferee or when transfer is lodged for registration?
-If by handing transfer form to auditors the donor completed the gift and the shares were thus assigned in equity, then N is able to bring an action to recover the shares, and equity will not perfect an imperfect gift.
2. Equity will not assist a volunteer- tempered the maxim by finding a CT in Re Rose cases and deathbed cases.
Pennington v Waine evaluation
Virgo on unconscionability
“Whenever the word ‘unconscionable’ is used as the basis for a test in Equity, there are genuine concerns about lack of certainty and principle”
Halliwell, ‘Perfecting imperfect gifts and trusts: have we reached the end of the chancellor’s foot?’ (2003)
“While this writer has continually argued for the recognition of the role of unconscionability in Equity, it must be based on principled reasoning.
Pennington v Waine represents the situation of a court according itself unfettered discretion with possibly far-reaching consequences for voluntary dispositions of property.”
Curtis v Pulbrook [2011]
Later cases retreat from Pennington and always seek to distinguish it.
Briggs
Case: D had been the director and substantial shareholder in a company and he was trustee of three family settlements. In 2009 the beneficiaries were awarded equitable compensation against him for breach of trust and obtained an interim charging order over the shares in the company that they believed were registered in his name and beneficially owned by him.
D however claimed that he had in 2007 given 300 of his shares to his wife and 14 to his daughter, so that these could not be subject to the final charging order.
Decision:
Luxton 2012
In Curtis v Pulbrook, Briggs treated Pennington as a case of detrimental reliance. This is a desirable limitation, as unconscionability underlies many equitable doctrines including estoppel and the constructive trust but is too uncertain in meaning to be the sole criterion for equitable intervention.