24th and 25th March,
1938.
Appeal from judgment of Supreme
Court.
Claim
by married woman as devisee and
legatee under a will against
Executors and Trustees thereof
and her husband for execution of
the trusts of such will, for
administration of the estate by
the Court (if necessary), and
for accounts and enquiries into
unlawful expend1:ture of trust
money. Counterclaim for
possession of land and mesne
profits.
Held: (i) The lands having been
limited in trust for the wife in
fee for her separate use the
trustees must convey the legal
estate according to her
direction;
(ii) The wife being a tenant in
common in fee had unity of
possession with the other
tenants in common;_
(iii)
Appeal therefore dismissed.
There is no need to set out the
facts.
S. J. Barlatt for Appellants.
E. F. Luke
for Respondent.
On 16th May, 1938, the following
joint judgment was delivered :-
KINGDON, C.J., NIGERIA,
PE'l'RIDES, C.J., GOLD COAST,
AND WEBB, C.J., SIERRA LEONE.
By the will of Josiah Byron
Macaulay, deceased, a plot of
land in Freetown was devised to
his trustees" upon trust for my
children Joseph Festus, Caleb
and Rachel their heirs and
assigns as tenants in common",
and the will contained the
following provisions: -
"I hereby direct that my said
trustees shall during the
minority of each of the devisees
herein named rent the premises
devised to each of them for the
best rent obtainable and pay the
profits arising therefrom after
deducting all expenses for
reasonable
repairs and improvements to the
guardians of each of such
devisees to be applied towards
his or her maintenance education
and support
And I hereby
further direct and declare
that all the devises contained
in this my will or which shall
devolve upon any female shall be
held and enjoyed by such female
Nichols devisee as her sole and
separate property independent of
the debts engagements or
liabilities of any husband." _
At the death of the testator in
1918 there was a partialy
completed building on the plot;
the trustees procured funds,
& Webb, completed the building
and let it to tenants. In 1932
Rachel (the respondent), who was
thirteen years of age in. 1918,
went into possession of portion
of the premises and since 1935
she has been
in receipt of the rents of the
remainder. Dispute having arisen
between her and the trustees she
brought this action against them
claiming (inter aha) a
declaration that they were not
entitled to reimburse themselves
for any unauthorised outlay on
the premises, a conveyance of
her undivided share therein, an
account of the rents and profits
received by the trustees since
the death of the testator and
payment of her share of whatever
should be found due upon taking
the account. The trustees (the
present appellants) pleaded that
the rents collected by them had
not yet been sufficient to
discharge the liabilities
incurred by them in the
completion of the buildings and
the maintenance and education of
the beneficiaries, and they
counterclaimed for possession of
the premises and for mesne
profits.
The learned Judge held that the
appellants were not justified in
completing the building on the
plot devised to plaintiff and
her brother and were not
entitled to be reimbursed for
the moneys expended thereon, at
the same time he refused the
respondent's claim for an
account of the rents and profits
of the premises. So that in
effect the appellants are in the
position, at all events as
against the respondent, of being
able to set off the rents and
profits which they have received
against such expenditure. From
these portions of the judgment
no appeal has been taken.
The learned Judge decreed that
the respondent should have a
conveyance of her interest in
the premises and he dismissed
the counterclaim with costs. The
appellants have appealed against
this portion of the judgment.
So far as regards the claim for
a conveyance to the respondent
of her interest in the premises
the law is thus stated in
Williams Real Property 22nd
Edition p. 320 :-" Not only the
income, but also the corpus
of any property, whether
real or personal, might be
limited to the separate use of a
married woman. And in the year
1865 it was finally settled that
a simple gift of real estate for
a wife's separate use, either
with or without the intervention
of trustees, was sufficient to
give her the power to dispose by
her own act
inter vivos
or by will, without the consent
or concurrence of her husband,
of the whole equitable estate so
limited to her. The same rule
had long been established with
respect to personal estate. And
where lands were limited on
trust for a wife in fee, for her
separate use, she had the right
of every
cestu'i que trust
in similar case, to require her
trustees to convey the legal
estate therein according to her
direction.
(A.ppleton v. Rowley
L.R. 8 Eq. at p. 142)." It is
therefore clear that the
decision of the learned Judge on
this point was correct.