Sprange v Barnard
Sprange v Barnard (1789) 2 Bro CC 585 is an English trusts law case, concerning the certainty of subject matter to create a trust. It is an example of a court concluding that the words of a testament being interpreted to mean, in essence, that a gift was intended rather than a trust.
Sprange v Barnard | |
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Court | Court of Chancery |
Citation(s) | (1789) 2 Bro CC 585 |
Keywords | |
Trusts, gift |
Facts
The testatrix left £300 worth of annuities to her husband ‘for his sole use; and at his death, the remaining part of what is left, that he does not want for his own wants and use to be divided between’ a number of beneficiaries.
Judgment
Sir Richard Arden, Master of the Rolls held that no trust arose, and the husband took all the property beneficially. Making a gift was the dominant intention, not to bind the husband with a trust.
See also
Notes
References
External links
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