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The Incorporated
Council of Law Reporting for England and Wales was a company limited by
guarantee and its primary object was:
"The preparation and publication
... at a moderate price, and under gratuitous professional control, of reports
of judicial decisions of the superior and appellate courts in England."
By its memorandum of association all property and income was applicable
solely for the promotion of the council's objects and no portion could be paid
by way of profit to its members. The memorandum authorised the payment of
remuneration to editors, reporters and other persons for services rendered.
In 1966 the council applied under section 4 of the Charities Act 1960 for
registration as a charity. In 1967, on refusal of the Charity Commissioners for
England and Wales to register it as a charity, the council appealed under
section 5 (3) of the Act of 1960 joining as parties the Commissioners of Inland
Revenue and the Attorney-General. Foster J. allowed the appeal and granted a
declaration that the council was entitled to registration, on the grounds that
publication of law reports to enable judge-made law to be properly developed and
administered by the courts was a purpose beneficial to the community. On
appeal by the Commissioners of Inland Revenue:- Held, dismissing the
appeal, (1) that the council was established for exclusively charitable
purposes since its purpose was to further the development and administration of
the law and to make it known or accessible to all members of the community,
which was a purpose beneficial to the community and of general public utility
and came within the equity of the Statute of Elizabeth I (post, pp.
87E-F,88G-H,95A-C,D-E,104E-G); that it was immaterial that publication also
supplied professional men with the tools of their trade (post, p. 87E); and that
the trade or business carried on by the council was not inconsistent with a
charitable character in its objects since its profits were not payable to its
members and the element of unselfishness was an important and well-recognised
aspect of charity (post, pp. 86C-D,104B-C). Income Tax Special Purposes
Commissioners v. Pemsel [1891] A.C. 531, H.L.(E.) applied. (2) (Russell L.J.
dissenting) That the council's purposes were charitable as being for the
advancement of education since the purpose of the law reports was to provide
essential material for the study of the law, which was a learned profession and
a science, and that remained its substantially exclusive purpose even though
professional men used the knowledge acquired to earn their living (post, pp.
92B-C,93E-F,94B-D,102A-B,C,103E-G). Decision of Foster J. [1971] Ch. 626;
[1971] 2 W.L.R. 550; [1971] 1 All E.R. 436 affirmed.
The following cases
are referred to in the judgments:
Attorney-General v. Heelis
(1824) 2 Sim. & St. 67. Beaumont v. Oliveira (1869) 4 Ch.App.
309. Bowman v. Secular Society Ltd.[1917] A.C. 406, H.L.(E.).
British School of Egyptian Archaeology, In re[1954] 1 W.L.R. 546;
[1954] 1 All E.R. 887. Cranston, In re [1898] 1 I.R. 431.
General Medical Council v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, (1928) 44
T.L.R. 439, C.A. General Nursing Council for England and Wales v. St.
Marylebone Borough Council[1959] A.C. 540; [1959] 2 W.L.R. 308; [1959] 1
All E.R. 325, H.L.(E.). Hunter v. Attorney-General[1899] A.C. 309,
H.L.(E.). Income Tax Special Purposes Commissioners v. Pemsel[1891] A.C. 531, H.L.(E.). Inland Revenue Commissioners v. City of Glasgow
Police Athletic Association[1953] A.C. 380; [1953] 2 W.L.R. 625; [1953] 1
All E.R. 747, H.L.(Sc.). Keren Kayemeth Le Jisroel Ltd. v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners[1931] 2 K.B. 465, C.A.; [1932] A.C. 650, H.L.(E.).
Lopes, In re[1931] 2 Ch. 130. Morice v. Bishop of Durham
(1804) 9 Ves. 399; (1805) 10 Ves. 522. Royal College of Nursing v. St.
Marylebone Borough Council[1959] 1 W.L.R. 1077; [1959] 3 All E.R. 663, C.A.
Royal College of Surgeons of England v. National Provincial Bank
Ltd.[1951] Ch. 485; [1951] 1 All E.R. 494, C.A.; [1952] A.C. 631; [1952] 1
All E.R. 984, H.L.(E.). Scottish Burial Reform and Cremation Society Ltd.
v. Glasgow Corporation[1968] A.C. 138; [1967] 3 W.L.R. 1132; [1967] 3 All
E.R. 215, H.L.(Sc.). Smith v. Incorporated Council of Law Reporting for
England and Wales[1914] 3 K.B. 674. Smith v. Kerr[1900] 2 Ch. 511; [1902] 1 Ch. 774, C.A. Tennant Plays Ltd. v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners [1948] 1 All E.R. 506, C.A. Thomson v. Trustees of the
Honourable Society of the Inner Temple(unreported), May 30, 1967.
Westminster City Council v. Royal United Service Institution [1938] 2
All E.R. 545, D.C. Wedgwood, In re[1915] 1 Ch. 113, C.A.
The
following additional cases were cited in argument:
Attorney-General
v. Brown (1818) 1 Swan. 265. Attorney-General v. National Provincial
& Union Bank of England[1924] A.C. 262, H.L.(E.). Chartered
Insurance Institute v. London Corporation[1957] 1 W.L.R. 867; [1957] 2 All
E.R. 638, D.C. Delius, decd., In re[1957] Ch. 299; [1957] 2 W.L.R. 548; [1957] 1 All E.R. 854. Foveaux, In re[1895] 2 Ch. 501.
Geologists' Association v. Inland Revenue Commissioners (1928) 14
T.C. 271, C.A. Hall v. Derby Sanitary Authority(1885) 16 Q.B.D. 163,
D.C. Hoare v. Osborne (1864) 33 L.J. Ch. 586. Incorporated
Council of Law Reporting for England and Wales, In re Duty on the Estate of(1888) 22 Q.B.D. 279, D.C. Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Falkirk
Temperance Cafè Trust (1926) 11 T.C. 353. Inland Revenue
Commissioners v. Forrest(1890) 15 App.Cas. 334, H.L.(E.). Jones v.
Williams (1767) Amb. 651. Kendall v. Granger (1842) 5 Beav. 300.
London University v. Yarrow (1857) 1 De G. & J. 72.
Macduff, In re[1896] 2 Ch. 451, C.A. National
Anti-Vivisection Society v. Inland Revenue Commissioners[1948] A.C. 31;
[1947] 2 All E.R. 217, H.L.(E.). Nightingale v. Goulbourn (1847) 5
Hare 484; (1848) 2 Ph. 594. Oppenheim v. Tobacco Securities Trust Co.
Ltd.[1951] A.C. 297; [1951] 1 All E.R. 31, H.L.(E.). Williams'
Trustees v. Inland Revenue Commissioners[1947] A.C. 447; [1947] 1 All E.R.
513, H.L.(E.). Wokingham Fire Brigade Trusts, In re[1951] Ch. 373;
[1951] 1 All E.R. 454.
APPEAL from Foster J. The Incorporated
Council of Law Reporting for England and Wales ("the council"), a company
limited by guarantee and not having a share capital, was incorporated on July
28, 1870, under the Companies Acts 1862 and 1867. Among the objects of the
council set out in clause 3 of the memorandum of association were the following:
"1. The preparation and publication in a convenient form, at a moderate
price, and under gratuitous professional control, of reports of judicial
decisions of the superior and appellate courts in England. 2. The issue,
periodically or occasionally, of any subsidiary or other publications relating
to legal subjects which it may be considered expedient to combine with the
publication of such reports, including the statutes of the realm, or any part
thereof, if deemed expedient. 3. The continuation (in furtherance of the above
objects) of the series of reports called 'The Law Reports' ... under their
present or any other name ... and the issue periodically or occasionally of any
legal digests or other publications connected with 'The Law Reports' or
subsidiary thereto ... and the acquiring by purchase or otherwise ... the
copyright of any (rival or) other publications of law reports ... and the making
of any agreement or arrangement for the purpose of procuring the discontinuance
of such reports, or the publishing thereof ... 4. The doing all such other
lawful things as are incidental or conducive to the attainment of the above
objects."
By clause 4:
"The income and property of the
association, whencesoever derived, shall be applied solely towards the promotion
of the objects of the association as set forth in this memorandum of
association, and no portion thereof shall be paid or transferred, directly or
indirectly, by way of dividend, bonus, or otherwise howsoever by way of profit,
to ... members of the association ... Provided that nothing herein shall prevent
the payment, in good faith, of remuneration of any editors, reporters,
secretaries, officers or servants, of the association, or to any member of the
association or other person in return for any services actually rendered to the
association."
By letters dated December 1, 1966, and June 14, 1967, the
council applied to the Charity Commissioners for England and Wales (the
commissioners) for registration as a charity under section 4 of the Charities Act 1960, on the ground that its main object was the advancement of the
administration of the law by the provision, without gain to members of the
council, of a reliable series of reports, an object which was charitable both as
being analogous to a gift for the building of a sessions house (a purpose
accepted as charitable) and also because it was within the spirit and intendment
of the Charitable Uses Act 1601, as providing a benefit, which, while not
ejusdem generis with the purposes recited in the preamble thereto, was
charitable in the same sense. By a letter dated December 6, 1967, the
commissioners rejected the council's application on the ground that, while it
was not disputed that the advancement of the administration of the law was a
charitable purpose, the work of the council could not be said to be for the
advancement of the administration of the law in a way that was charitable and
any contribution made by the council to the administration of law was too
indirect and remote. By an originating summons dated September 24, 1969,
pursuant to R.S.C., Ord. 108, r. 4, against the Attorney-General the council
sought a declaration by way of appeal under section 5 (3) of the Act of 1960
that it was entitled to be registered as a charity under section 4 of the Act on
the ground that its purposes consisted exclusively of all or any of the
following purposes: (1) a purpose beneficial to the community, namely, the
advancement of the administration of the law; (2) a purpose beneficial to the
community, namely, the exposition of the law; (3) the advancement of education.
The Commissioners of Inland Revenue were joined at their own request. Foster J.
granted the declaration holding that the council was established for purposes
beneficial to the community and was charitable within the spirit and intendment
of the preamble to the Charitable Uses Act 1601. The Commissioners of Inland
Revenue appealed on the grounds that there was no warrant for the implicit
finding of the judge that the council was established exclusively for the
purpose of enabling judge-made law to be properly developed and administered by
the courts; and that, in any event, to enable judge-made law to be properly
developed and administered by the courts was not a purpose that was within the
spirit and intendment of the preamble. The council sought to affirm the judge's
decision on the additional ground that the council was established for the
advancement of education in a manner which was charitable at law.
H.
E. Francis Q.C. and Peter Gibson for the Commissioners of Inland
Revenue. [Reference was made to sections 4, 5, 45 and 46 of the Charities Act 1960.] The judge's approach was fundamentally erroneous. The court has to look
at the memorandum of association alone to determine what the objects of the
council are. Reliance is placed upon Tennant Plays Ltd. v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners [1948] 1 All E.R. 506 and Royal College of Nursing v. St.
Marylebone Borough Council[1959] 1 W.L.R. 1077. Then the court has to
decide as a matter of law whether those objects are charitable: see Hunter v.
Attorney-General[1899] A.C. 309. It is not permissible to look at the
motives and intentions of the founders or promoters of the council, nor at the
manner in which the objects are in fact carried out: see Keren Kayemeth Le
jisroel Ltd. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners[1931] 2 K.B. 465; affirmed
[1932] A.C. 650, H.L.(E.). In the memorandum it is not stated that the purpose
of the council is to advance the administration of the law, and it was clearly
not established for that charitable purpose. It is not necessary to look at
extrinsic evidence to see what the council in fact does, because its purposes
are clear from the memorandum. It was established to carry on the trade or
business mentioned in its memorandum: see In re Duty on the Estate of
Incorporated Council of Law Reporting for England and Wales(1888) 22 Q.B.D. 279. It is still a trade although profits cannot be distributed to members.
Alternatively if it is permissible to look at extrinsic evidence to
determine whether or not the objects stated in the memorandum are charitable,
the judge was wrong in finding that the only main purpose of the council was to
enable judge-made law to be properly developed and administered by the courts.
His conclusion was limited to the use made of The Law Reports in court, and
overlooked the fact that they play an essential role as part of the professional
equipment of practising lawyers. A major purpose for which the council was
established was to serve the interests of members of the legal profession by
providing them with an essential tool of their trade, and, accordingly, the
council was not established exclusively for charitable purposes. The memorandum
shows that the publication of reports was to be under the control of the legal
profession, and that is inconsistent with the council being a charity because if
it is it would be under the control of the Charity Commissioners or of the
court. The objects stated in the memorandum are not clearly charitable.
Although the availability of accurate law reports is essential to the due
administration of justice in the courts, more use is made of them outside the
courts. They are constantly used by practising lawyers for matters which never
reach court. Even in the courts the reports perform a professional function
because they enable advocates to fulfil their duty. The main purpose of the
council is to benefit the legal profession: see Smith v. Incorporated Council
of Law Reporting for England and Wales[1914] 3 K.B. 674, per
Scrutton J. at p. 681, and the report of Lord Simond's Law Reporting Committee
appointed in 1940. To benefit members of a profession is not charitable: see
General Medical Council v. Inland Revenue Commissioners (1928) 44 T.L.R.
439; General Nursing Council for England and Wales v. St. Marylebone Borough
Council[1959] A.C. 540 and Royal College of Surgeons of England v.
National Provincial Bank Ltd.[1951] Ch. 485, C.A.; [1952] A.C. 631,
H.L.(E.). The council has several purposes, but providing the legal profession
with reliable law reports, which are an essential part of the professional
equipment is one of its main purposes. It is not disputed that publication
of The Law Reports is for the public benefit, but it does not fall within the
spirit and intendment of the preamble to the Charitable Uses Act 1601. Not
everything which is for public benefit is charitable. It must also be within the
spirit and intendment of the preamble. To promote the proper development and
administration of the law is not charitable. If it had been stated in the
memorandum that the object of the council was to advance the proper development
and science of the law by specified means, that would have been the sole primary
object, and the actual publication and dissemination of The Law Reports would be
the means of carrying out that t object. Tho position is different if no such
primary object is stated. Assisting the administration of the law is the result
of the council's activities, and is not the purpose for which it was
established. If Foster J. was right in finding that the council was
established for the purpose of advancing the administration of the law, such a
purpose although for the benefit of the community is not within the spirit and
intendment of the preamble: see Scottish Burial Reform and Cremation Society
Ltd. v. Glasgow Corporation[1968] A.C. 138. It is impossible to say that
to advance the administration of the law falls naturally and in its own right
within the spirit of the preamble. It can only be brought within on the basis of
analogy. To supply members of a profession with the tools of their trade is not
a sufficiently wide benefit to come within the spirit of the preamble.
[Reference was made to Tudor on Charities 6th ed. (1967), p. 84]. To
advance the administration of the law would be a purpose essentially political
in character, because that is a function of the government or state. It is not a
matter which should be left to charity. The law is not only concerned with the
preservation of law and order, but also with trade, preservation of property and
citizens' rights, and other matters outside the realms of charity. The contents
of the preamble do not have any relation to the administration of law as such.
The construction of a court house would come within the general heading of
public works, and would therefore be charitable because it would benefit the
community in a physical sense. Gibson following. The purposes of the
council are not exclusively charitable. It is remarkable that the council so
many years after its incorporation should now claim for the first time to be a
charity. Prima facie it would have made a difference if in the memorandum the
council's object was stated as the promotion of the study of the science of the
law, though Geologists' Association v. Inland Revenue Commissioners(1928)
14 T.C. 271 shows that even if the objects stated in the memorandum are prima
facie charitable the court must still find what the true purposes are and must
have regard to the persons who are intended to benefit. The court is entitled to
take account of the fact that the legal profession gathered together to do
something for its own benefit, although it might also benefit the public.
The claim that the administration of justice is within the scope of charity
is a novel one for which there is no precedent. The administration of justice is
a function of government and at the time of Elizabeth I it would not have been
regarded as a function of charity. Raymond Walton Q.C. and Spencer
G. Maurice for the council. Foster J. was correct in holding that the
council was a charity within the fourth category in Income Tax Special
Purposes Commissioners v. Pemsel[1891] A.C. 531, 583. Alternatively it ranks
as an educational charity under the second category. The council's objects
are those stated in clause 3 of its memorandum of association, which has to be
construed. The vital question is whether what the council does in furtherance of
its objects is something which can be classified as being of public utility and
therefore charitable. Clause 3 is not ambiguous, but background evidence is
admissible. The court can have regard to the situation at the time of
incorporation and is entitled to look at the results of the activities which are
carried on in order to determine if what the council was established to do is
beneficial to the public. The council in fulfilling its objects and the hopes
and intentions of its founders is thereby furthering the administration of
justice. The public makes use of the services it provides. Publication of
reports by the council assisted the development of the judicial doctrine of
binding precedents: see Radcliffe and Cross, The English Legal System,
4th ed. (1964), pp. 365-367. That is for the public benefit because it
facilitates knowledge of and certainty in the law. The council has only one
main purpose, namely the publication of The Law Reports at a moderate price
available for everyone. General Medical Council v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners, 44 T.L.R. 439; Royal College of Surgeons of England v.
National Provincial Bank Ltd.[1952] A.C. 631; Royal College of Nursing
v. St. Marylebone Borough Council[1959] 1 W.L.R. 1077 and Geologists'
Association v. Inland Revenue Commissioners,14 T.C. 271 can be distinguished
from the present case, because in those cases there were two main objects, one
benefiting members of the body or profession and one benefiting the public, and
the question in each case was which was the dominant object. An essential
feature here is that members of the council derive no benefit from the
association. The fact that the immediate beneficiaries from the council's
activities are members of the legal profession, who take advantage of The Law
Reports for the benefit of their clients, does not prevent its purposes from
being charitable. Reliance is placed upon Inland Revenue Commissioners v.
Forrest(1890) 15 App.Cas. 334. If it is right that the council fulfils
a public benefit in disseminating The Law Reports, which further the advancement
of the law, the question is whether that is a charitable purpose within Lord
Macnaghten's fourth category in Pemsel's case [1891] A.C. 531, 583.
The fourth category has developed by analogies: see Chitty J. in In re
Foveaux[1895] 2 Ch. 501, 504, and Lord Reid in the Scottish Burial
Society's case [1968] A.C. 138, 146. The purpose of assisting the
administration of the law is analogous to the establishment of a sessions house,
which is charitable: see Duke on Charitable Uses, ed. 1676, p. 109. Lord
Eldon L.C. in Attorney-General v. Brown (1818) 1 Swan. 265, 297 refers to
Duke as a high authority, and Leach V.-C. in Attorney-General v.
Heelis(1824) 2 Sim. & St. 67, 76 treated a sessions house as a decided
case. Accordingly, if an analogy is required a sessions house is sufficiently
analogous for the advancement of the law by the publication of The Law Reports
to be within the spirit and intendment of the preamble. It is too narrow a
construction of the Statute of Elizabeth I to say that a sessions house is a
public work analogous to the repair of bridges, because a sessions house is
built to be used for a particular purpose and it must be part of the decision
that the carrying out of that purpose is charitable. The supply of The Law
Reports is part of the machinery of the advancement of the law, and is also
directly analogous with houses of correction. In addition it is analogous to
maintaining the efficiency of the army and police, and the preservation of
order: Inland Revenue Commissioners v. City of Glasgow Police Athletic
Association[1953] A.C. 380. The subject is equally interested in all
aspects of the law whether connected with public order or not, and it is to the
advantage of the public as a whole that the law should be properly and
impartially administered from accurate and up to date source material.
Alternatively, if there is not a sufficient analogy, the proper test for the
fourth category is that the activities claimed to be charitable are of general
public utility, as qualified by Lindley L.J. in In re Macduff[1896] 2 Ch. 451, 467, and need not necessarily come within the spirit and intendment of
the preamble. The purpose must be a general purpose, and must profit persons who
would not be profited without the activity in question: see Attorney-General
v. National Provincial & Union Bank of England[1924] A.C. 262. It must
be for the benefit of the public and not merely of individuals, and the utility
must be beneficial to the community at large or a sufficient section of it.
[Reference was made to Jones v. Williams (1767) Amb. 651;
Attorney-General v. Heelis (1824) 2 Sim. & St. 67; Kendall v.
Granger (1842) 5 Beav. 300; Nightingale v. Goulbourn (1847) 5 Hare
484, affirmed (1848) 2 Ph. 594; London University v. Yarrow (1857) 1 De
G. & J. 72; Pemsel's case [1891] A.C. 531; In re Cranston
[1898] 1 I.R. 431; In re Wedgwood[1915] 1 Ch. 113; Inland Revenue
Commissioners v. Falkirk Temperance Cafè Trust (1926) 11 T.C. 353 and
In re Wokingham Fire Brigade Trusts[1951] Ch. 373.] Making judge-made
law available is a general utility of benefit to the community. Those cases show
that direct analogy with the Statute of Elizabeth I is not necessary. In re
Foveaux[1895] 2 Ch. 501 was overruled by National Anti-Vivisection
Society v. Inland Revenue Commissioners[1948] A.C. 31. Reliance is placed
upon the Scottish Burial Society's case [1968] A.C. 138, 156. The
legal profession as a whole would constitute a sufficient section of the
community to satisfy the public nature of the benefit. Oppenheim v. Tobacco
Securities Trust Co. Ltd.[1951] A.C. 297 can be distinguished. Reliance is
placed upon Hall v. Derby Borough Sanitary Authority(1885) 16 Q.B.D. 163. The other possibility is that the activities of the council fall within
the second category in Pemsel's case [1891] A.C. 531, 583. Smith v.
Kerr[1900] 2 Ch. 511; [1902] 1 Ch. 774 shows that law can be the proper
subject of an educational charity. The main object of the council is to
disseminate information as to the latest state of the science of the law, and
that is therefore an educational purpose. There is a distinction between an
educational purpose involving public dissemination of educational material, and
pure learning which is not necessarily charitable. Reliance is placed upon In
re British School of Egyptian Archaeology[1954] 1 W.L.R. 546. The
practitioners of any science are always learning and are continuously
instructing themselves. There is an element of learning in the citation of
authorities in court, because the court is being instructed in the extent and
scope of the material available from which to decide the particular case. There
must be a contribution to the common stock of human knowledge. The publication
of The Law Reports furnishes the profession with the opportunity to make itself
more learned, and that applies to academic scholars, practising lawyers and
everyone concerned with the law. N. Browne-Wilkinson for the
Attorney-General addressed the court on the basis of the interests of charity as
a whole, and did not support either side. The relevant question is whether the
body is established for purposes exclusively charitable. Despite the word
"established" in section 45 (1) of the Charities Act 1960, it is not correct to
look at the position at the date when the council was incorporated, because the
court must determine at the date of the application for registration for what
purposes the body is then established. The motives and purposes for the
establishment of the particular body are irrelevant: see Hoare v. Osborne
(1864) 33 L.J.Ch. 586 and In re Delius, decd.[1957] Ch. 299. To decide
whether the council's purposes are charitable regard must be had solely to its
objects as stated in clause 3 of its memorandum of association. In construing
clause 3 the ordinary rules of construction apply. The main object is the
publication of The Law Reports, and since the charitable nature of the object is
not clearly apparent the court must see if performance of it is necessarily
exclusively charitable. Accordingly, if performing the objects stated in clause
3 must necessarily achieve a charitable purpose, the council is established for
an exclusively charitable purpose. In cases under the fourth category the court
in considering the authorised activity must inform itself of the impact on the
public of the performance of the activity. The council must show that
publication of The Law Reports can only have a charitable result, and evidence
is admissible as to the effect of publication. That evidence shows that the
necessary result of the council's activities is for the public benefit. It is
immaterial that members of the legal profession also benefit, because only if
benefit to the body itself is one of its objects is the charitable nature
vitiated: see Royal College of Nursing v. St. Marylebone Borough Council[1959] 1 W.L.R. 1077. Benefit to the legal profession is not one of the
council's objects but is merely incidental to the objects stated in clause 3.
Making the law known is for the public benefit, and the fact that some members
of the public benefit more than others does not prevent that object from being
charitable. The purposes of the council are analogous to those stated in the
preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth I. In all cases falling within the fourth
category the court must find that the activities come within the spirit and
intendment of the preamble: see Williams' Trustees v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners[1947] A.C. 447. If a specific public service is being
provided that is necessarily within the spirit and intendment of the preamble.
The purposes must be of a type which would fall within the spirit and
intendment, and it is not necessary to find a precise analogy. [Reference was
made to Tudor on Charities, 6th ed., p. 74.] Reliance is placed upon the
approach of Lord Wilberforce in the Scottish Burial Society's case [1968] A.C. 138, 156. There is no ease in which the provision of a non-commercial
specific public utility beneficial to the public at large has failed as not
falling within the spirit and intendment of the preamble. The purposes of
the council are not exclusively educational, because a major function of The Law
Reports is their use in the courts as the raw material by which the law is made
in court, and that is not educational. However if that view is too narrow the
submissions made on behalf of the council are supported. Francis Q.C.
in reply. The words "at a moderate price" in clause 3 of the memorandum of
association are important. They show that the business of the council is to be
conducted by way of trade. The council makes a profit, and is not merely a
benevolent or philanthropic organisation. There is no difference between the
business conducted by the council, and that of the publishers of the All England
Reports. The fact that there is a prohibition in the council's memorandum of
association against distributing profits to members does not make the council's
activities charitable. In all cases in which benefit to a profession has
been held to be incidental to the benefit to the public, in the constitutions of
the institutions objects were stated which were clearly charitable: see
Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Forrest15 App.Cas. 334; Royal College
of Surgeons of England v. National Provincial Bank Ltd.[1952] A.C. 631 and
Royal College of Nursing v. St. Marylebone Borough Council[1959] 1 W.L.R. 1077. The fact that the activities of the council result in benefit to
the public or advance some charitable purpose does not mean that it was in fact
established for that purpose. The objects for which an institution was
established must be distinguished from the consequences flowing from the
performance of those objects: see General Medical Council v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners, 44 T.L.R. 439. The question here is whether carrying out
the objects stated in the memorandum results exclusively in the advancement of
the administration of justice. or of education, or of both, and the use made of
The Law Reports by practising lawyers is not a use for charitable purposes. Any
professional skill and knowledge derived from study of The Law Reports is used
by practising lawyers for the benefit of their clients and not for the benefit
of the public. Clients are not a sufficient section of the public because they
are identified solely by their nexus with the lawyers. The service given by the
lawyers is professional and not charitable. The purpose of the council is not to
educate lawyers, but to supply The Law Reports for practising lawyers who use
them to provide a professional service for reward. Practising lawyers are not
engaged in the administration of the law, although they may assist in the
administration of justice by the courts. The Law Reports are used in ways which
do not advance the administration of the law at all. The mere publication
and sale of The Law Reports does not serve an educational purpose. The Law
Reports are only useful to trained lawyers and students, and it is not for the
public benefit for everyone to have The Law Reports and to be able to read them.
The use of The Law Reports by judges in court is not educational, because they
merely have regard to them to assist in reaching a correct decision. Activities
designed to benefit a particular profession by enabling members to perform their
profession are not educational: see Chartered Insurance Institute v. London
Corporation[1957] 1 W.L.R. 867. In so far as The Law Reports increase the
knowledge of members of the legal profession, that is an incidental result and
not a purpose of the council. The council sells The Law Reports to subscribers
and is not concerned with the use they make of them, and therefore it would be
difficult to say that the council is concerned to promote education.
Cur. adv. vult.
October 14. The following judgments were read.
RUSSELL L.J.The
question raised in this appeal is whether a company limited by guarantee
incorporated on July 28, 1870, under the Companies Acts 1862 and 1867 entitled
the Incorporated Council of Law Reporting for England and Wales (hereinafter
called "the association") is a corporate institution which is established for
purposes which are exclusively charitable according to the law of England and
Wales and is subject to the control of the High Court in the exercise of the
court's jurisdiction with respect to charities. If it is such, then it is a
charity within the Charities Act 1960 (see sections 45 (1) and 46); and it is
entitled to be entered as such on the register of charities to be maintained by
the Charity Commissioners under section 4 of the Act of 1960. The association
applied to be so registered: the Commissioners of Inland Revenue objected on the
ground that the association was not a charity: the Charity Commissioners upheld
the objection and declined to register the association: the association appealed
to the High Court by the appropriate procedure, joining as parties to the appeal
the Commissioners of Inland Revenue and the Attorney-General. Foster J. ([1971] Ch. 626) allowed the appeal on the ground that the association was a charity
within the fourth of the categories in Income Tax Special Purposes
Commissioners v. Pemsel[1891] A.C. 531, 583, this contention of the
association being supported by the Attorney-General: but he did not accept the
additional or alternative contention of the association that it was an
educational charity, a contention which was not supported by the
Attorney-General. From this decision that the association was a charity
entitled to registration as such the Commissioners of Inland Revenue appeal, and
the association seeks to support the decision on the additional or alternative
ground of education. In order to see for what purposes the association was
established and whether those purposes are exclusively charitable, attention
must be focused upon its memorandum and articles of association, bearing in
mind, of course, that purposes merely ancillary to a main charitable purpose,
which if taken by themselves would not be charitable, will not vitiate the claim
of an institution to be established for purposes that are exclusively
charitable. Hereunder the objects clause in the memorandum must plainly play the
leading role. That is in the following terms:
"The objects for which the
association is established are: 1. The preparation and publication, in a
convenient form, at a moderate price, and under gratuitous professional control,
of reports of judicial decisions of the superior and appellate courts in
England. 2. The issue, periodically or occasionally, of any subsidiary or other
publications relating to legal subjects which it may be considered expedient to
combine with the publication of such reports, including the statutes of the
realm, or any part thereof, if deemed expedient. 3. The continuation (in
furtherance of the above objects) of the series of reports called 'The Law
Reports' (now in course of publication by the present Council of Law Reporting)
under their present or any other name, and either in their present form and
according to the present system or subject to any alterations of form or system
that may be considered conducive to the promotion of the above objects; and the
issue periodically or occasionally of any legal digests or other publications
connected with 'The Law Reports', or subsidiary thereto, or which may be
considered likely to increase the utility thereof; and the acquiring by purchase
or otherwise, on such terms or conditions as shall be considered expedient, the
copyright of any (rival or) other publications of law reports which may now or
shall hereafter exist or be in course of publication, and the making of any
agreement or arrangement for the purpose of procuring the discontinuance of such
reports, or the publishing thereof, or the discontinuance of preparing reports
for any such publication by any other persons. The taking over and assuming all
the assets and liabilities of the existing Council of Law Reporting. 4. The
doing all such other lawful things as are incidental or conducive to the
attainment of the above objects."
Clause 4 of the memorandum is in the
following terms:
"The income and property of the association,
whencesoever derived, shall be applied solely towards the promotion of the
objects of the association as set forth in this memorandum of association, and
no portion thereof shall be paid or transferred, directly or indirectly, by way
of dividend, bonus, or otherwise howsoever by way of profit, to the persons who
at any time are or have been members of the association, or to any of them, or
to any person claiming through any of them: Provided, that nothing herein shall
prevent the payment, in good faith, of remuneration to any editors, reporters,
secretaries, officers or servants of the association, or to any member of the
association, or other person in return for any services actually rendered to the
association."
The signatories to the memorandum were five of Her
Majesty's counsel and two solicitors. By the articles of association membership
of the council was limited to 20 in number. Eligibility for membership of the
association was confined to (a) "nominated persons" (up to two nominated
by each of the four Inns of Court and the Law Society), (b) up to two
more members nominated: or selected by or with the approval of the council of
management of the association ("the council") - called "elected members,"
(c) the Law Officers and President of the Law Society - called "ex
officio members," and (d) (since 1951) any other persons up to five in
number nominated by the council - called "co-opted members." Provision was made
for retirement by rotation and resignation of membership of the association.
Article 34 provided that membership of the association should ipso facto confer
and be a requirement of membership of the council. By article 39 the management
of the affairs of the association is vested in the council which (article 37)
may appoint an executive committee of the council to which supervision of the
day-to-day management of the association's affairs are delegated. I do not think
that any other reference to the articles is needed. There are some matters
which require no proof. The making of the law of this country is partly by
statutory enactment (including therein subordinate legislation) and partly by
judicial exposition in the decision of cases brought before the courts. It
cannot be doubted that dissemination by publication of accurate copies of
statutory enactments is beneficial to the community as a whole: and this is not
the less so because at least in many instances the ordinary member of the public
either does not attempt to, or cannot by study, arrive at a true conclusion of
their import, or because the true understanding is largely limited to persons
engaged professionally or as public servants in the field of any particular
enactment, or otherwise interested in that field. The fact that to perhaps the
majority of those who acquire and study a copy of (for example) a Finance Act it
constitutes what might be described as a tool of their trades or professions or
avocations in no way lessens the benefit to the community that results if
accurate versions of that Finance Act are published and not kept like a cat in a
bag to be let out haphazard. The same is to be said of the other source of our
law, judicial decisions and the reasons therefor, especially in the light of our
system of precedent. It is in my view just as beneficial to the community that
reliable reports of judicial decisions of importance in the applicability of the
law to varying but probably recurrent circumstances, or demonstrating
development in the law, should be published; and all the more so if the
publication be supervised by those who by training are best qualified to present
the essence of a decision correctly and to distinguish the ephemeral from the
significant. To state that the publication also supplied many professional men
with the tools of their trade does not seem to me in any way to detract from the
benefit that accrues to the community from the fact that the law does not remain
locked in the bosom of the judiciary.2 Now the first contention of
the Commissioners of Inland Revenue is shortly stated. When the stated objects
of the association are considered they amount to no more (it is said) than to
carry on the trade of publishers and sellers of law reports: there is (it is
said) no difference between the objects of the association and the objects of
the publishers of the All England Reports with the one exception that the
association is to make no profit from its trade that is not to be applied in the
production and publication of law reports - i.e. the association is in that
sense non-profit-making. This short contention does not supply the answer to the
case. The fact that the association carries on a trade or business is admittedly
not inconsistent with a charitable character in its objects. The difference
between the two cases is in my view a vital distinction. The element of
unselfishness is well recognised as an aspect of charity, and an important one.
Suppose on the one hand a company which publishes the Bible for the profit of
its directors and shareholders: plainly the company would not be established for
charitable purposes. But suppose an association or company which is
non-profit-making, whose members or directors are forbidden to benefit from its
activities, and whose object is to publish the Bible; equally plainly it would
seem to me that the main object of the association or company would be
charitable - the advancement or promotion of religion. It was next contended
for the Commissioners of Inland Revenue that a main purpose, even if not the
only main purpose, of the association is to advance the interests of the legal
profession by supplying it with the tools of its trade. Reference hereunder was
made to the fact that the association and its unincorporated predecessor were
brought into being by members of the legal profession: to the fact that it is to
be supposed that the main body of "consumers" would be such members: to the fact
that Scrutton J. in Smith v. Incorporated Council of Law Reporting for
England and Wales[1914] 3 K.B. 674, 681 (very much by the way) remarked that
the association "publish The Law Reports for the benefit of the profession": and
to the fact that Lord Simonds' Law Reporting Committee appointed by Viscount
Caldecote L.C. in 1940 contained this reference to the aims of the association:
"No other purpose was to be served than to produce the best possible
reports at the lowest possible price for the benefit of the profession and of
the public at large."
To this may be added the comment of Professor
Goodhart, a member of that committee, that the committee recommended continuance
of The Law Reports in their established form "as they perform an essential
function for the legal profession." I am not persuaded of the validity of this
contention. It seems to me that if the publication of reliable reports of
decisions of the courts is for the benefit of the community and of general
public utility in the charitable sense, it is an inevitable and indeed necessary
step in the achievement of that benefit that the members of the legal profession
are supplied with the tools of their trade. I do not see how the benefit to the
public, assuming it to be a charitable object, could otherwise be achieved. So
it would be if there were a non-profit-making association under gratuitous
professional supervision for the production at moderate expense of pure medical
drugs or efficient surgical instruments. But the only main object or purpose in
such case would be, it seems to me, the relief of the sick. We were in this
connection referred to a number of cases, some on one side of the line and some
on the other, where the question was whether a main object was the promotion of
the interests of a professional body or organisation. I do not find these
helpful. Here the association consists of members who as such can derive no
conceivable benefit from their gratuitous supervision of the activities of the
association. Nor to my mind is the contention now under consideration fortified,
as was I think at least at one stage in argument suggested, by the fact that
clause 3 of the memorandum of association does not open with the words: "The
objects for which the association is established are to advance and promote the
proper development of law by the following means:". Accordingly I reject the
contention that the association is not established for purposes which are
exclusively charitable in so far as that contention is based upon the submission
that a main purpose or object is to supply members of the legal profession with
tools of their trade. I come now to the question whether, if the main
purpose of the council is, as I think it is, to further the sound development
and administration of the law in this country, and if, as I think it is, that is
a purpose beneficial to the community or of general public utility, that purpose
is charitable according to the law of England and Wales. On this point the
law is rooted in the Statute of Elizabeth I, a statute the object of which was
the oversight and reform of abuses in the administration of property devoted by
donors to purposes which were regarded as worthy of such protection as being
charitable. The preamble to the Statute listed certain examples of purposes
worthy of such protection. These were from an early stage regarded merely as
examples, and have through the centuries been regarded as examples or guideposts
for the courts in the differing circumstances of a developing civilisation and
economy. Sometimes recourse has been had by the courts to the instances given in
the preamble in order to see whether in a given case sufficient analogy may be
found with something specifically stated in the preamble, or sufficient analogy
with some decided case in which already a previous sufficient analogy has been
found. Of this approach perhaps the most obvious example is the provision of
crematoria by analogy with the provision of burial grounds by analogy with the
upkeep of churchyards by analogy with the repair of churches. On other occasions
a decision in favour or against a purpose being charitable has been based in
terms upon a more general question whether the purpose is or is not within "the
spirit and intendment" of the Statute of Elizabeth I and in particular its
preamble. Again (and at an early stage in development) whether the purpose is
within "the equity" or within "the mischief" of the Statute. Again whether the
purpose is charitable "in the same sense" as purposes within the preview of the
Statute. I have much sympathy with those who say that these phrases do little of
themselves to elucidate any particular problem. "Tell me", they say, "what you
define when you speak of spirit, intendment, equity, mischief, the same sense,
and I will tell you whether a purpose is charitable according to law. But you
never define. All you do is sometimes to say that a purpose is none of these
things. I can understand it when you say that the preservation of sea walls is
for the safety of lives and property, and therefore by analogy the voluntary
provision of lifeboats and fire brigades are charitable. I can even follow you
as far as crematoria. But these other generalities teach me nothing." I say
I have much sympathy for such approach: but it seems to me to be unduly and
improperly restrictive. The Statute of Elizabeth I was a statute to reform
abuses: in such circumstances and in that age the courts of this country were
not inclined to be restricted in their implementation of Parliament's desire for
reform to particular examples given by the Statute: and they deliberately kept
open their ability to intervene when they thought necessary in cases not
specifically mentioned, by applying as the test whether any particular case of
abuse of funds or property was within the "mischief" or the "equity" of the
Statute. For myself I believe that this rather vague and undefined approach
is the correct one, with analogy, its handmaid, and that when considering Lord
Macnaghten's fourth category in Pemsel's case [1891] A.C. 531, 583 of
"other purposes beneficial to the community" (or as phrased by Sir Samuel
Romilly (then Mr. Romilly) in argument in Morice v. Bishop of Durham
(1805) 10 Ves. 522, 531: "objects of general public utility") the courts, in
consistently saying that not all such are necessarily charitable in law, are in
substance accepting that if a purpose is shown to be so beneficial or of such
utility it is prima facie charitable in law, but have left open a line of
retreat based on the equity of the Statute in case they are faced with a purpose
(e.g. a political purpose) which could not have been within the contemplation of
the Statute even if the then legislators had been endowed with the gift of
foresight into the circumstances of later centuries. In a case such as the
present, in which in my view the object cannot be thought otherwise than
beneficial to the community and of general public utility, I believe the proper
question to ask is whether there are any grounds for holding it to be outside
the equity of the Statute: and I think the answer to that is here in the
negative. I have already touched upon its essential importance to our rule of
law. If I look at the somewhat random examples in the preamble to the Statute I
find in the repair of bridges, havens, causeways, sea banks and highways
examples of matters which if not looked after by private enterprise must be a
proper function and responsibility of government, which would afford strong
ground for a statutory expression by Parliament of anxiety to prevent
misappropriation of funds voluntarily dedicated to such matters. It cannot I
think be doubted that if there were not a competent and reliable set of reports
of judicial decisions, it would be a proper function and responsibility of
government to secure their provision for the due administration of the law. It
was argued that the specific topics in the preamble that I have mentioned are
all concerned with concrete matters, and that so also is the judicially
accepted opinion that the provision of a court house is a charitable purpose.
But whether the search be for analogy or for the equity of the Statute this
seems to me to be too narrow or refined an approach. I cannot accept that the
provision, in order to facilitate the proper administration of the law, of the
walls and other physical facilities of a court house is a charitable purpose,
but that the dissemination by accurate and selective reporting of knowledge of a
most important part of the law to be there administered is not. Accordingly
the purpose for which the association is established is exclusively charitable
in the sense of Lord Macnaghten's fourth category. I would not hold that the
purpose is purely the advancement of education: but in determining that the
purpose is within the equity of the Statute I by no means ignore the function of
the purpose in furthering knowledge in legal science. I would dismiss the
appeal.
SACHS L.J.The right of the Incorporated Council of Law Reporting
for England and Wales to be registered as a charity under section 4 of the Charities Act 1960 depends on whether it is one "which is established for
charitable purposes": see the definition of "charity" in section 45 (1). By
section 46 "charitable purposes" is defined as meaning "purposes which are
exclusively charitable according to the law of England and Wales." For the best
part of four centuries the question whether the purposes of any given trust or
institution are charitable has been decided by reference to the preamble to the
Charitable Uses Act 1601 - "the Statute of Elizabeth I." Since 1891 the courts
have followed the guidance given in the classic speech of Lord Macnaghten in
Pemsel'scase [1891] A.C. 531, 583 where it is stated that "'Charity' in
its legal sense comprises four principal divisions": in every case since then
the issue has been whether the purposes of any given trust or institution fell
within one of those divisions. The result of the present case depends on whether
the purposes of the council fall within the second - "trusts for the advancement
of education," or alternatively within the fourth - "trusts for other purposes
beneficial to the community" not falling within any of the other heads. To
come to a conclusion whether those purposes fall within either of the two above
divisions - and, in particular, whether it falls within the fourth - it is
necessary to have regard to what since the judgment of Sir William Grant M.R. in
Morice v. Bishop of Durham (1804) 9 Ves. 399, 405 has been termed the
"spirit and intendment" of the above preamble. words commonly regarded as having
the same meaning as "the equity of the statute." It so happens that there are
available to us through judgments given in open court the contents of two
documents substantially contemporaneous with the Statute of Elizabeth I which
throw useful light both as to the spirit and intendment of that Statute in
relation to administration of the law in general and to the word "education" in
reference thereto: the charters of an Inn of Chancery (Clifford's Inn) and an
Inn of Court (Inner Temple) dated respectively 1618 and 1608. It is, however,
preferable first to approach each of the questions that arise in the instant
case apart from what can be learnt from these documents. Before considering
more closely what are the answers to these questions with the aid of the
education to be derived from studying the judgments in the 41 reports cited to
us and the mass of learning shown to have been devoted, at any rate over the
last two centuries, to the relevant problems, it is convenient at the outset to
mention some points which have often been repeated in those judgments.
First, the word "charity" is "of all words in the English language ... one
which more unmistakeably has a technical meaning in the strictest sense of the
term, ... peculiar to the law" (per Lord Macnaghten in Pemsel's
case [1891] A.C. 531, 581), one that is "wide, elastic" (per Lord
Ashbourne C. in In re Cranston [1898] 1 I.R. 431, 442), and one that can
include something quite outside the ordinary meaning the word has in popular
speech (compare Lord Cozens-Hardy M.R. in In re Wedgwood[1915] 1 Ch 113,
117). It is thus necessary to eliminate from one's mind a natural allergy,
stemming simply from the popular meaning of "charity," to the idea that law
reporting might prove to be a charitable activity. Secondly, it is clear that
the mere fact that charges on a commercial scale are made for services rendered
by an institution does not of itself bar that institution from being held to be
charitable - so long, at any rate, as all the profits must be retained for its
purposes and none can enure to the benefit of its individual members: compare
Scottish Burial Reform and Cremation Society Ltd. v. Glasgow Corporation[1968] A.C. 138. Thirdly, that there have, over at any rate the past century,
been a number of references to the oddity that the tests by which the courts
decide whether an institution is charitable depend entirely upon the preamble to
the Statute of Elizabeth I. The most recent is one opining that this state of
affairs was "almost incredible to anyone not familiar with this branch of the
English law": per Lord Upjohn in Scottish Burial Reform and Cremation
Society Ltd.'s case at p. 151. To this I will return later. Turning now
to the points of substance argued before us, there came in limine the question
as to what material we were entitled to look at to determine whether the
purposes of the council were charitable. Mr. Francis contended that in substance
the court could and should only look at clause 3 of the memorandum of
association and in particular at its important first sub-paragraph:
"The
objects for which the association is established are: (1) the preparation and
publication, in convenient form, at a moderate price, and under gratuitous
professional control, of reports of judicial decisions of the superior and
appellate courts in England."
This contention involved the proposition
that we could neither look at any of the facts to which Foster J. [1971] Ch. 626, 639 referred under the heading of "the historical background," nor at any
available evidence as to what at any time since July 1870 had been the use to
which The Law Reports are put. That in effect would mean looking at clause 3 (1)
as if it were situate in a vacuum. That cannot be right. Moreover he went on
to submit that (a) the courts cannot look at the motives of the founders in
order to show the purposes of an institution - at any rate, when those purposes
as otherwise ascertained might be shown not to be charitable, and (b) the
absence in the opening phrase of clause 3 of general words such as "for the
purpose of the advancement and promotion of the science of law" was fatal to the
council's claim even if on the facts it was shown that that was the exclusive
purpose of their activities and that that purpose was charitable. Whilst the
first of those submissions was correct, (see Keren Kayemeth Le Jisroel Ltd.
v. Inland Revenue Commissioners[1931] 2 K.B. 465, perLawrence L.J.,
at p. 484), the second was not. The courts look at the substance of what is
being effected. A further question discussed was whether the use of the
words "is established" in the section 45(1) definition of "charity" is to bind
the court to look only at facts as existing at the date the Act of 1960 came
into force, or whether the court could or should look only at the facts as at
the date of the incorporation of the council. It makes no practical difference
in the present case whether one looks at-the circumstances of 1870 or of 1960,
but to my mind it is the foundation date that matters when considering whether
an institution is established for charitable purposes. Whilst appreciating
what has been said as to the courts not being permitted, where plain language is
used in a charter or memorandum, to admit extrinsic evidence as to its
construction, it is yet plain from the course adopted by the courts in many
cases that-they are entitled to and do look at the circumstances in which the
institution came into existence and at the sphere in which it operates to enable
a conclusion to be reached on whether its purposes are charitable. Such matters
were likewise regularly taken into account over the 117 years of the operation
of the Scientific Societies Act 1843, when the issue was whether buildings
belonged "to any society instituted for purposes of science, literature or the
fine arts exclusively." The necessity for this course is all the more
obvious when the purposes of an ancient institution become the subject of
examination, remembering that if it started as a charity it so remains. An
example of the above approach is to be found in Smith v. Kerr[1900] 2 Ch. 511; [1902] 1 Ch. 774 (the Clifford's Inn case) where at first instance
Cozens-Hardy J. fully examined the circumstances affecting Clifford's Inn, and
Sir Richard Collins M.R. on appeal followed the same course, to ascertain the
purpose to which the funds were to be applied. (The question whether in fact it
has applied or is applying some of its funds to non-charitable purposes is, of
course, a separate issue which arises when tax or rate exemptions are under
consideration.) As to the circumstances in which the council came into
existence and the sphere in which it has since operated, the facts are admirably
marshalled in the affidavit of Professor Goodhart with the accustomed lucidity
of that eminent jurist. Reference can also be made to the report in 1853 of the
Society for Promoting the Amendment of the Law, an extract from page 4 of which
is aptly cited by Foster J. [1971] Ch. 626, 640. In the main the relevant
circumstances and sphere are within judicial knowledge and need no detailed
exposition in this judgment. The kernel of the matter is the vital function of
judge-made law in relation not only to the common law and to equity, but to
declaring the meaning of statutory law. No one - layman or lawyer - can have
reasonably full knowledge of how the law affects what he or his neighbours are
doing without recourse to reports of judicial decisions as well as to the
statutes of the realm. What in that state of affairs is the purpose of law
reports? There is in substance only one purpose. To provide essential material
for the study of the law - in the sense of acquiring knowledge of what the law
is, how it is developing and how it applies to the enormous range of human
activities which it affects. At this juncture it is apposite to recall that
the profession of the law is a learned profession. It was one of the earliest to
be recognised as such - well before the Statute of Elizabeth I: to establish
that point there is no need to have recourse to examples of this recognition
such as the traditional House of Commons appellation "honourable and
learned" to members of the profession. Similarly it is plainly correct to
speak of law as a science and of its study as a study of science in the same way
as one speaks of the study of medicine or chemistry. If further exemplification
were needed of the categories of learning and science the pursuit of which have
been held to be charitable, one can turn to the names of the institutions listed
in Tudor on Charities, 6th ed. (1967), p. 29: there one finds such divers
names as the Royal Literary Society, the British School of Egyptian Archaeology
and the Institution of Civil Engineers That the law is such a science happens to
be illustrated by Sir Frederick Pollock's celebrated essay on The Science of
Case Law (1882): but this merely provides from within the profession an
authoritative view which plainly accords in principle both with the decisions
affecting the above cited institutions and that under the Scientific Societies Act 1843 in Westminster City Council v. Royal United Service Institution
[1938] 2 All E.R. 545, 549. It may at this point be of relevance to note that
Lord Macnaghten's phrase "advancement of education" has consistently been taken
to be an enlargement of the phrase "advancement of learning" used by Sir
Samuel Romilly for his second division of charities in Morice v. Bishop of
Durham (1805) 10 Ves. 522, 531: in other words, there can be no question but
that the latter is included in the former, as is illustrated by the authorities.
Against that background I turn to the question whether the council's
purposes are educational. It would be odd indeed and contrary to the trend of
judicial decisions if the institution and maintenance of a library for the study
of a learned subject or of something rightly called a science did not at least
prima facie fall within the phrase "advancement of education," whatever be the
age of those frequenting it. The same reasoning must apply to the provision of
books forming the raw material for that study, whether they relate to chemical
data or to case histories in hospitals: and I can find no good reason for
excluding case law as developed in the courts. If that is the correct approach,
then when the institution is one whose individual members make no financial gain
from the provision of that material and is one which itself can make no use of
its profits except to provide further and better material, why is the purpose
not charitable? On behalf of the Attorney-General the only point taken
against this conclusion was that the citation of the reports in court cannot be
educational - in part, at any rate, because of the theory that the judges are
deemed to have complete knowledge of the law. For the Commissioners of Inland
Revenue the main contention was that the use by the legal profession of the
reports was in general (not merely when in court) a use the purpose of which was
to earn professional remuneration - a use for personal profit: and that it
followed that the purpose of the council was not charitable. Taking the
latter point first, it is, of course, the fact that one of the main, if not the
main, uses to which law reports are put is by members of the legal profession
who study their contents so as to advise clients and plead on their behalf.
Those reports are as essential to them in their profession as the statutes:
without them they would be ill equipped to earn professional fees. Does it
follow, as submitted by Mr. Francis, that a main purpose of the reports is the
advancement of professional interests and thus not charitable? The argument put
thus is attractive, not least to those who, like myself, are anxious not to
favour or to seem to favour their one-time profession. But the doctor must study
medical research papers to enable him to treat his patients and earn his fees;
and it would be difficult indeed to say that because doctors thus earn their
emoluments the printing and sale of such papers by a non-profit making
institution could not be held to be for the advancement of education in
medicine. Where the purpose of producing a book is to enable a specified
subject, and a learned subject at that, to be studied, it is, in my judgment,
published for the advancement of education, as this, of course, includes as
regards the Statute of Elizabeth I the advancement of learning. That remains its
purpose despite the fact that professional men - be they lawyers, doctors or
chemists - use the knowledge acquired to earn their living. One must not confuse
the results flowing from the achievement of a purpose with the purpose itself,
any more than one should have regard to the motives of those who set that
purpose in motion. As to the point that the citation of reports to the
judiciary is fatal to the council's claim, this, if independent of the
contention concerning professional user to earn fees, seems to turn on the
suggestion that as the judges are supposed to know the law the citations cannot
be educative. That, however, is an unrealistic approach. It ignores the fact
that citation of authority by the Bar is simply a means by which there is
brought to the attention of the judge the material he has to study to decide the
matter in hand: in this country he relies on competent counsel to quote the
extracts relevant to any necessary study of law on the points in issue, instead
of having to embark on the time consuming process of making the necessary
researches himself. Indeed, it verges on the absurd to suggest that the
courteous facade embodied in the traditional phrase "as, of course, your
Lordship knows" can be used to attempt to conceal the fact that no judge can
possibly be aware of all the contents of all The Law Reports that show the
continuing development of our ever changing laws. The Law Reports (including
volume 1 of the Weekly Law Reports) for 1970 alone contain some 5,200 pages:
incidentally, if one confined one's views solely to the three volumes of the
Weekly Law Reports there would still remain over 4,000 pages. For my part I feel
no diffidence in expressing my indebtedness to counsel in the instant case, as I
have done in other cases this term dealing with other subjects, for educating me
in the law of charitable purposes by the citation of the 41 authorities
previously mentioned. For these reasons I reject the contentions that the
user of The Law Reports by the legal profession for earning fees of itself
results in the purposes of the council not being charitable and thus return to
the question whether they are charitable on the footing that their substantially
exclusive purpose is to further the study of the law in the way already
discussed. Such a purpose must be charitable unless the submission that the
advancement of learning is not an advancement of education within the spirit and
intendment of the preamble is upheld: but for the reasons already given that
submission plainly fails. Accordingly, having regard to the fact that the
members of the council cannot themselves gain from its activities, its purposes
in my judgment fall within the second of Lord Macnaghten's divisions.
Despite the above conclusion, it seems desirable to consider as compactly as
is practicable whether had the council's purpose not fallen within the second
division it would none the less have come within the fourth as being beneficial
to the community. The Charity Commissioners, after a year's consideration of the
council's application to be registered as a charity, wrote a letter dated
December 6, 1967, which contained the following phrase, "the commissioners did
not dispute that the advancement of the administration of law was a charitable
purpose." The Attorney-General supports that view: the Commissioners of Inland
Revenue oppose it. Foster J. [1971] Ch. 626 rejected the contention of the
Commissioners of Inland Revenue. Being myself convinced that the correct
approach is that which Foster J., at p. 647, referred to as "Lord Wilberforce's
wider test" (see the Scottish Burial Society case [1968] A.C. 138, 156) -
a test that clearly also attracted Lord Reid (see pp. 146-147) with whom Lord
Guest agreed, at p. 148 - I do not propose to consider the instant case on the
basis of analogies. The analogies or "stepping stones" approach was rightly
conceded on behalf of the Attorney-General not to be essential: its
artificiality has been demonstrated in the course of the consideration of the
numerous authorities put before us. On the other hand, the wider test -
advancement of purposes beneficial to the community or objects of general public
utility - has an admirable breadth and flexibility which enables it to be
reasonably applied from generation to generation to meet changing circumstances:
it has thus such patent advantages that for my part I appreciate the wisdom of
the legislature in refraining from providing a detailed definition of charitable
purposes in the Act of 1960 and preferring to allow the existing law to be
applied. Any statutory definition might well merely produce a fresh spate of
litigation and provide a set of undesirable artificial distinctions. There is
indeed much to be said for flexibility in such matters. The first question
to be considered in relation to the wider test is whether the advancement of the
administration of the law in its broad sense (which would include the
elucidation, proper application and betterment of the law) is something
beneficial to the community. To pose that question to one whose function it is
to administer the law provokes unease and a tendency to lean over backwards to
avoid giving an affirmative reply. But such a mental posture is no more
conducive to a balanced view than to elegance. Looking at the issue squarely and
attempting to use the eyes of the generality of subjects of either Elizabeth I
or Elizabeth II there is, however, manifestly only one answer - of course it is
beneficial to the community. The answer being eminently a matter of first
impression derived from an overall view of the preamble coupled with the general
trend of some centuries of decisions, no useful purpose can be served by
citation of specific authorities. It is an impression formed without reference
to the contents of either of the two previously mentioned charters, to which I
will, however, return. Next comes the question whether the particular
purpose of the council's activities sufficiently contribute to that advancement.
Does it benefit a sufficiently wide section of the community? As satisfactory
administration of the law in practice depends on there being a proper system of
law reporting, it can well be said that the whole community benefits from the
purposes of the council: but even if the benefits were confined to those who
have to make judicial decisions and to the members of the legal profession
advising clients and appearing for them in court, none the less a sufficiently
large section of the community would derive the relevant benefits. Adopting
the test propounded by Russell L.J., I next turn to consider whether there is
any reason for excluding these benefits from the range of those that are capable
of being classified as charitable, and can find no such reason. Finally as
regards this head comes the question whether the contribution is made in a
charitable manner. This point having been fully discussed in the judgments of my
brethren to an effect with which I agree, it is not necessary to go over the
ground again. The way in which the council operates qualifies it for inclusion
amongst charities as defined by the Act of 1960 once it is shown that its
purposes can properly be said to be charitable if operated in a charitable
manner. Accordingly if, contrary to my view, the purposes of the council do
not fall within the second division, they are none the less charitable because
they would then fall within the fourth. In conclusion it seems appropriate
to return to the contents of the two charters granted within a score of years of
the enactment of the Statute of Elizabeth I. On the footing that it is
permissible to refer to them - and quite rightly, to my mind, no objection was
taken before us to this being done - we are in the same position as was this
court in Smith v. Kerr[1902] 1 Ch. 774, where Sir Richard Collins M.R.
said, at p. 778:
"we are not left to speculation, nor have we to look
for obscure hints from remote times, because it so happens that we have a most
authoritative contemporary record "
There he referred to Lord Coke's
account of the functions of Clifford's Inn: here we can look at the accounts in
two royal charters of what was regarded as beneficial to the "Commonwealth" and
"Realm of England." Rather than merely cull selected extracts from these two
charters, it has seemed best to append to this judgment a full note of so much
of them as has been set out and discussed in the respective judgments of Collins
M.R. in Smith v. Kerr and of the deputy judge of the Mayor's and City of
London Court in Thomson v. Trustees of the Honourable Society of the Inner
Temple (unreported), May 30, 1967. The passages in the Clifford's Inn
charter sidelined 1, 2 and 4 and the Inner Temple charter 5 and 8 speak for
themselves: not least the last mentioned reference to "the welfare of this Realm
of England flourishing for so many ages by the administration of the said Laws."
Taken as a whole these documents of themselves provide compelling and perhaps
conclusive evidence that advancement of the administration of the law was
regarded as beneficial to the community in the first quarter of the seventeenth
century. Though the contents of these charters have been cited primarily in
relation to Lord Macnaghten's fourth division, they also may be said to provide
material touching the second. The references in the Inner Temple charter
(sideline 10) to the "Entertainment and Education of the Students and
Professors of the Laws" when coupled with the earlier passages (sidelines 6 and
7) and phrases in the Clifford's Inn charter such as the "furtherance of the
Practisers and Students of the Common Law" (sideline 3) are in point, having
regard to the fact that "professors" appears to mean "those who profess the
law." Accordingly I would dismiss this appeal.
APPENDIX
Charters of Clifford's Inn and the Honourable Society of the Inner
Temple as set out and discussed in (a) Smith v. Kerr[1902] 1 Ch. 774 and
(b) Thomson v. Trustees of the Honourable Society of the Inner
Temple(unreported), May 30, 1967, in the respective judgments of Collins
M.R. and the deputy judge of the Mayor's and City of London Court: (a)
Clifford's Inn. In Smith v. Kerr[1902] 1 Ch. 774, 776, Sir
Richard Collins M.R. said: "The material words are these. After naming the
parties, Lord Cumberland and Lord Clifford being the two grantors, it witnessed
that the grantors
'having an honourable intent and care that the capital
messuage commonly called Cliffords Inn before mentioned, with the appurtenances
thereto belonging being the ancient inheritance of the said Earl and Lord
Clifford and of their ancestors, and which hath been for many years heretofore
by the allowance of the said Earl and his ancestors the Earls of Cumberland and
Lord Cliffords used and employed as an Inn of Chancery (1) for the
furtherance of the study and practice of the Common Laws of this His Majesty's
Realm of England, and during all that time hath been ordered and governed by
the Principal and Rules of the said House for the time being in very good sort
and with great (2) discretion both to the good of the Commonwealth and to
the honour of the said Earl and Lord Clifford and their ancestors, may now upon
the humble suit and earnest desire of the said Principal and Rules and others
the Practisers and students of the said Society be assured estated and settled
as' - I think that means 'so as' - 'the same shall and may for ever hereafter
continue and be employed as an Inn of Chancery for the furtherance of
the (3) Practisers and Students of the Common Laws of this Realm
as aforesaid And that the Principal Rules and other the gentlemen of the said
society may from henceforth be assured of a certain estate therein Do
principally for that purpose intent and consideration and for and in
consideration of the sum of 600 l to them by' - here follow the names of 13
persons - 'for and on behalf of themselves and the rest of the gentlemen of the
same Society of Clifford's Inn aforesaid at or before the sealing and delivery
of these presents well and truly satisfied contented and paid' -
here
follows a receipt and a provision for a common recovery to the uses, intents,
and purposes thereafter in the deed mentioned, and a grant of the premises, with
certain exceptions, to be held by two trustees who are named and their heirs for
ever to the only and proper use and behoof of the trustees named and of their
heirs for ever -
'To the intent and purpose aforesaid To be holden of
the Chief Lord and Lords of the Fee and Fees thereof by the rents and services
heretofore due and of right accustomed and yielding and paying therefore yearly
for ever unto the said Francis Earl of Cumberland and Henry Lord Clifford their
heirs and assigns the yearly rent of four pounds.'
Then it goes on:
'After the said recovery and recoveries fine and fines or any or either
of them shall be had acknowledged and suffered executed entered and recorded as
aforesaid to the use and behoof of' the 13 gentlemen first named 'and of their
heirs for ever according to the intent and true meaning of the present indenture
and to the intent that the said Earl and Lord Clifford their heirs and assigns
shall and may for ever hereafter levy-receive perceive and take up the said
yearly rent of four pounds.' Then it goes on: 'And it is further agreed by and
between the said parties to these presents and the true intent and meaning
hereof and of all the said parties is that the said capital messuage now called
by the name of Clifford's Inn shall for ever hereafter retain and keep the same
usual and ancient name of Clifford's Inn, and shall for ever hereafter be
continued and employed as an Inn of Chancery for (4) the good of the
gentlemen of the Society and for the benefit of the Commonwealth as aforesaid
and not otherwise, nor to any other use intent or purpose.'"
(b) The
Honourable Society of the Inner Temple. In Thomson v. Trustees of the
Honourable Society of the Inner Templethe deputy judge said: "The
recitals and expression of intention of (King James I) contained in the letters
patent are important and are as follows:
'Whereas our Realm of
England, having been for so many ages exceedingly prosperous in the arts of
peace and war, and having (5) by the singular providence of God in his own
time devolved upon us by hereditary right, is sensible that great part of its
welfareis justly owing to the ancient and proper Laws of the Realmtried
through a long series of ages, and particularly adapted to that populous and
warlike nation, and approved by constant experience And whereas the Inns of the
Inner and Middle Temple, London, being two out of those four Colleges the
(6) most famous of all Europe, as always abounding with persons devoted
to the study of the aforesaid Laws and experiences therein, have been by the
free bounty of our progenitors, Kings of England, for a long time dedicated
to the use of the Students and (7) Professors of the said Laws, to
which as to the best seminaries of learning and education very many young men,
eminent for rank of family and their endowments of mind and body, have daily
resorted from all parts of this Realm, and from which many men in our own times,
as well as in the times of our progenitors, have by reason of their very great
merits been advanced to discharge the public and arduous functions as well of
the state as of justice, in which they have exhibited great examples of prudence
and integrity, to the no small honour of the said Profession, and adornment of
this Realm, and good of the whole Commonwealth, as is to us so abundantly
manifest; Know Ye Therefore, that we, being desirous of perpetuating, as far as
in us lies, the welfare (8) of this Realm of England, flourishing
for so many ages by the administration of the said Laws, and compassing not
so much the continuance of the ancient renown of the said Inns as an accession
of new honour, and to leave upon record to all posterity a testimony (9) of
our good will and manificence to the Profession and to the Professors of the
said Laws, have of our special Grace, certain knowledge, and mere motion,
given and granted, and by these Presents for ourselves our heirs and successors
do give and grant to our well-beloved and faithful Councillor Sir Julius Caesar
...'
The recitals demonstrate the nature and stature of the Inns at the
time and the words 'being desirous of perpetuating, as far as in us lies, the
welfare of this Realm of England' are an indication of the purpose of the gift.
... the property is described, and the words 'Halls, Houses, Edifices,
Cloisters, Buildings, Chambers, Gardens, Courts,' further down with the words
'Church, Edifices and Buildings of the Church ... commonly called the Temple
Church' ... present a picture which is familiar today. The habendum clause after
the words appropriate to convey the fee simple proceeds as follows in the
translation:
'Which said Inns, Messuages, Houses, Edifices, Chambers and
other premises we will, and by these presents for ourselves, our heirs (10)
and successors, strictly command, shall serve for the Entertainment and
Education of the students and Professors of the Laws aforesaid,residing in
the same Inns for ever.'
The Latin words from 'strictly command' onwards
are
'mandamus pro hospitacione & educacione studencium &
professorum legum predictarum in eisdem hospitiis perpetuis t [sic] temporibus
futuris commorantium deservive.'
It has been suggested by counsel on
both sides that the word 'hospitacione' would be better translated as
'accommodation,' using that word in its widest sense, rather than
'entertainment,' and that the words 'professorum legum' would be better
translated as 'those who profess the laws' rather than 'professor of the laws';
while the word 'commorantium' would be better translated as 'abiding' rather
than 'residing.' It appears to me, though I make no pretence of Latin
scholarship, that these suggestions are correct and I accept them."
BUCKLEY L.J.The question for determination in this case is whether the
Incorporated Council of Law Reporting for England and Wales is a body
established for exclusively charitable purposes. If it is, the council is
entitled to be registered as a charity under the Charities Act 1960: otherwise,
it is not so. The council was incorporated in 1870 under the Companies Acts
1862 and 1867 as a company limited by guarantee, the word "limited" being
omitted from the name by licence of the Board of Trade. The first object for
which the council was incorporated was and still remains the preparation and
publication in a commercial form at a moderate price and under gratuitous
professional control of reports of judicial decisions of the superior and
appellate courts in England. All of the other objects stated in the council's
memorandum of association, which have already been read, should as a matter of
construction, in my opinion, be regarded as subsidiary to the council's first
object, which is, I think, not only a primary purpose but the primary purpose
for which the council was established, which the other stated purposes subserve.
It has therefore been proper that the argument has been concentrated upon the
first object. To ascertain for what purposes the council was established one
must refer to its memorandum of association and to that alone. It is irrelevant
to inquire what the motives of the founders were, or how they contemplated or
intended that the council should operate, or how it has in fact operated: see
Hunter v. Attorney-General[1899] A.C. 309; Bowman v. Secular Society
Ltd.[1917] A.C. 406; Keren Kayemeth Le Jisroel Ltd. v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners[1931] 2 K.B. 465; [1932] A.C. 650 and Tennant Plays Ltd.
v. Inland Revenue Commissioners[1948] 1 All E.R. 506. But in order to
determine whether an object, the scope of which has been ascertained by due
processes of construction, is a charitable purpose it may be necessary to have
regard to evidence to discover the consequences of pursuing that object. It
would be immediately evident that a body established to promote the Christian
religion was established for a charitable purpose, whereas in the case of a body
established to propagate a particular doctrine it might well be necessary to
consider evidence about the nature of the doctrine to decide whether its
propagation would be a charitable activity. In the present case no problem
arises about the meaning of the council's objects. The question is whether their
pursuit should be regarded as charitable. In this respect it is proper to have
regard to evidence about the purposes which the pursuit of those objects will
serve. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue contend that the council's
objects are not charitable, because, as they say, their purpose is to serve the
interests of the legal profession, providing an essential tool of the practising
lawyer. They admit that this may be beneficial to the community, but they say
that it is not a purpose within the "spirit and intendment" of the preamble to
the Statute of Elizabeth I. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue point out
that the initiative in setting up the unincorporated Council of Law Reporting,
which was the precursor of the council, and in procuring the incorporation of
the latter body was that of members of the legal profession; that the
incorporated council is by the terms of its memorandum of association a body
controlled by members of the legal profession; and that its publications
constitute an essential part of the professional equipment of every practising
lawyer in this country, not merely to enable him to take part in the trial of
causes and the administration of justice but to enable him also to advise his
clients in non-litigious matters and to provide those expert services, such as
draftsmanship, which a practising lawyer offers. They contend that the
advancement of the interests of members of the legal profession per se is not a
charitable purpose: see General Medical Council v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners (1928) 44 T.L.R. 439 and General Nursing Council for
England and Wales v. St. Marylebone Borough Council[1959] A.C. 540. On
the other hand, if a body is established for a charitable purpose, it will be
not the less a charity because the pursuit of that purpose will or may confer
incidental benefits upon the members of a profession: see Royal College of
Surgeons of England v. National Provincial Bank Ltd.[1952] A.C. 631 and
Royal College of Nursing v. St. Marylebone Borough Council[1959] 1 W.L.R. 1077. For the council it is argued that its objects are charitable
upon the ground that they fall within the scope either of purposes for the
advancement of education, using that term in a broad sense, or of the fourth
head of Lord Macnaghten's celebrated enumeration of charitable purposes in
Pemsel's case [1891] A.C. 531, 583 as being purposes beneficial to the
community, which fall within the spirit and intendment of the Statute of
Elizabeth I. It is emphasised that the members of the council, who are not more
than 20 or so in number at any one time are precluded by the council's
constitution from obtaining any profit or benefit as members from its
activities. The council's publications can be bought by the general public and
are, as the evidence shows, bought by a wide variety of users, including
academic bodies, commercial and industrial bodies (including public utility
undertakings), public authorities, government and public departments and
offices, trade unions, and a wide variety of libraries, professional institutes
and miscellaneous bodies, as well as a great many bodies and persons concerned
with the administration and practice of the law, and all of these not merely in
this country but also in many other countries within the Commonwealth and
elsewhere. These circumstances, it is said, demonstrate that the council's
publications constitute a general public purpose or, to use Sir Samuel Romilly's
language in argument in Morice v. Bishop of Durham (1805) 10 Ves. 522,
531, an object of general public utility, and that this falls within the spirit
of the preamble. In this connection Mr. Walton, for the council, has referred us
to Duke on Charitable Uses, ed. 1676, p. 109, where it is said that the
building of a sessions house for a city or a county has been held to be
charitable: see also Attorney-General v. Heelis (1824) 2 Sim. & St.
67, 76, per Leach V.-C. We were also referred to Inland Revenue
Commissioners v. City of Glasgow Police Athletic Association:[1953] A.C. 380, where Lord Normand, at p. 391, Lord Morton of Henryton, at p. 400, and Lord
Reid, at p. 402, all expressed the view that the promotion of the efficiency of
the police would be a charitable purpose. By analogy it was contended that the
advancement of the administration of justice is a charitable purpose and that
the objects of the council are charitable on this ground. Alternatively the
council has contended that its objects are educational in that they result in
dissemination of information about the latest state of and development in the
science of the law and so are educational in a broad sense. In this connection,
we were referred to Smith v. Kerr[1902] 1 Ch. 774, relating to the funds
of Clifford's Inn, and to In re British School of Egyptian Archaeology[1954] 1 W.L.R. 546. Foster J. declined to accept the view that the
council's objects are educational, mainly, I think, upon the ground that in many
respects they are not used for instructional purposes. He did, however, take the
view that they are charitable on the ground that the purpose of the publication
of The Law Reports is to enable judge-made law to be properly developed and
administered by the courts, a purpose beneficial to the community and within the
spirit of the preamble. What then does the evidence establish about the need
for reliable law reports and the reasons for publishing them? As the
uncontradicted evidence of Professor Goodhart makes clear, in a legal system
such as ours, in which judges' decisions are governed by precedents, reported
decisions are the means by which legal principles (other than those laid down by
statutes) are developed, established and made known, and by which the
application of those legal principles to particular kinds of facts are
illustrated and explained. Reported decisions may be said to be the tissue of
the body of our non-statutory law. Whoever, therefore, would carry out any
anatomical researches upon our non-statutory corpus juris must do so by research
amongst, and study of, reported cases. Professor Goodhart recalls that Sir
Frederick Pollock in his paper entitled The Science of Case Law published
in 1882 pointed out that the study of law is a science in the same sense as
physics or chemistry are sciences, and that the material with which it is
concerned consists of individual cases which must be analysed and measured as
carefully as is the material in the other sciences. At about the same time the
"case system" of teaching law was introduced at the Harvard Law School, which
has since become generally adopted. Accurate and authoritative law reports are
thus seen to be essential both for the advancement of legal education and the
proper administration of justice. As Professor Goodhart says: "Accuracy in The
Law Reports is, therefore, as important for the science of law as is the
accuracy of instruments in the physical sciences." The legal profession has
from times long past been termed a learned profession, and rightly so, for no
man can properly practise or apply the law who is not learned in that field of
law with which he is concerned. He must have more than an aptitude and more than
a skill. He must be learned in a sense importing true scholarship. In a system
of law such as we have in this country this scholarship can only be acquired and
maintained by a continual study of case law. I agree with Foster J. in
thinking that, when counsel in court cites a case to a judge, counsel is not in
any real sense "educating" the judge, counsel performing the role of a teacher
and the judge filling the role of a pupil; but I do not agree with him that the
process should not be regarded as falling under the charitable head of "the
advancement of education." In a number of cases learned societies have been
held to be charitable. Sometimes the case has been classified under Lord
Macnaghten's fourth head, sometimes under the second. It does not really matter
under which head such a case is placed, but for my own part I prefer to treat
the present case as falling within the class of purposes for the advancement of
education rather than within the final class of other purposes for the benefit
of the community. For the present purpose the second head should be regarded as
extending to the improvement of a useful branch of human knowledge and its
public dissemination. In Beaumont v. Oliveira (1869) 4 Ch.App. 309,
bequests to the Royal Society and the Royal Geographical Society were held to be
charitable. The object of the Royal Society is "improving natural knowledge."
That of the Royal Geographical Society is "the improvement and diffusion of
geographical knowledge." Of these two bequests Selwyn L.J. said, at p. 315:
"In the case now before us, both the bequests are bequests to
corporations, the objects and purposes of which are the diffusion and
improvement of particular branches of knowledge. They subsist for these purposes
and no others, therefore for public purposes - therefore, for the advancement of
objects of general public utility - therefore for purposes analogous and similar
to those mentioned in the statute of Elizabeth - therefore for charitable
purposes; ..."
This puts the two bequests squarely under the fourth head
of charity. In Royal College of Surgeons of England v. National
Provincial Bank Ltd.[1952] A.C. 631 the question arose whether the college
was a charity. It was held, at p. 632, that its object was the due promotion and
encouragement of the study and practice of the art and science of surgery. Lord
Normand said, at p. 641:
"The words 'the study and practice of the art
and science' of surgery do not, in my opinion, mean 'the academic study and
professional practice of the art and science of surgery'; they signify rather
the acquisition of knowledge and skill in surgery both by abstract study and by
the exercise of the art in the dissecting room and the anatomy theatre, and they
are capable of covering both the discovery of new knowledge, which is the fruit
of research, and the learning of existing knowledge either by students who are
qualifying or by qualified surgeons desirous of improving their knowledge and
skill. On that construction the professed objects of the college all fall into
the categories of the advancement of science or of the advancement of education,
and are charitable."
Lord Normand thus classified the college as a
charity within Lord Macnaghten's second head. Lord Morton of Henryton, at p.
654, said that the object of the college might be regarded as being directed to
the relief of human suffering or to the advancement of education or science or
to all these ends. In In re Lopes[1931] 2 Ch. 130, the Zoological
Society of London, the objects of which are defined in its charter as being "the
advancement of zoology and animal physiology and the introduction of new and
curious subjects of the animal kingdom," was held to be a charity. Farwell J.
said, at p. 135:
"Its first object is 'the advancement of zoology and
animal physiology.' That is clearly educational, for the advancement of
scientific knowledge, and therefore charitable."
This treats the case as
falling within the second head. Finally, in In re British School of
Egyptian Archaeology[1954] 1 W.L.R. 546, an association the objects of
which included conducting excavations, discovering and exhibiting antiques,
publishing accounts of its activities and training students, was held by Harman
J. to be an educational charity. Harman J. said, at p. 551:
"I cannot
doubt that this was a society for the diffusion of a certain branch of
knowledge, namely, knowledge of the ancient past of Egypt; and that it also had
a direct educational purpose, namely, to train students in that complicated
branch of knowledge known as Egyptology. In my view this is clearly a charity
from the educational aspect,"
The council was established for the
purpose of recording in a reliably accurate manner the development and
application of judge-made law and of disseminating the knowledge of that law,
its development and judicial application, in a way which is essential to the
study of the law. The primary object of the council is, I think, confined to
this purpose exclusively and is charitable. The subsidiary objects, such as
printing and publishing statutes, the provision of a noting-up service and so
forth, are ancillary to this primary object and do not detract from its
exclusively charitable character. Indeed, the publication of the statutes of the
realm is itself, I think, a charitable purpose for reasons analogous to those
applicable to reporting judicial decisions. The fact that the council's
publications can be regarded as a necessary part of a practising lawyer's
equipment does not prevent the council from being established exclusively for
charitable purposes. The practising lawyer and the judge must both be lifelong
students in that field of scholarship for the study of which The Law Reports
provide essential material and a necessary service. The benefit which the
council confers upon members of the legal profession in making accurate reports
available is that it facilitates the study and ascertainment of the law. It also
helps the lawyer to earn his livelihood, but that is incidental to or
consequential on the primary scholastic function of advancing and disseminating
knowledge of the law, and does not detract from the exclusively charitable
character of the council's objects: compare Royal College of Surgeons of
England v. National Provincial Bank Ltd.[1952] A.C. 631 and Royal
College of Nursing v. St. Marylebone Borough Council[1959] 1 W.L.R. 1077.
The service which publication of The Law Reports provides benefits not only
those actively engaged in the practice and administration of the law, but also
those whose business it is to study and teach law academically, and many others
who need to study the law for the purposes of their trades, businesses,
professions or affairs. In all these fields, however, the nature of the service
is the same: it enables the reader to study, and by study to acquaint himself
with and instruct himself in the law of this country. There is nothing here
which negatives an exclusively charitable purpose. Although the objects of
the council are commercial in the sense that the council exists to publish and
sell its publications, they are unselfregarding. The members are prohibited from
deriving any profit from the council&s activities, and the council itself,
although not debarred from making a profit out of its business, can only apply
any such profit in the further pursuit of its objects. The council is
consequently not prevented from being a charity by reason of any commercial
element in its activities. I therefore reach the conclusion that the council
is a body established exclusively for charitable purposes and is entitled to be
registered under the Act of 1960. It is consequently unnecessary for me to
consider whether the judge was right in his view that enabling judge-made law to
be properly developed and administered by the courts is a charitable purpose. It
may well be so, but I should, I think, myself find difficulty in reaching the
conclusion that the council is a body established exclusively for that purpose.
If this ground were to be relied upon, it would, I think, be necessary to
consider what other purposes are served by the council's activities besides the
administration of law in the courts and whether all those other purposes are
charitable. The reasons, however, which I have stated, for which I would dismiss
this appeal, embrace all the council's activities, so that it is unnecessary to
consider them individually. Russell L.J. in the judgment which he has just
delivered, has preferred to base himself upon a wider ground, as I understand
it, that the publication of accurate reports of judicial decisions is beneficial
to the community not merely by assisting the administration and development of
the law in the courts but by making the law known, or at least accessible, to
all members of the community, including professional lawyers whose advice on
legal matters other members of the community are likely to seek, thus making a
sound knowledge and understanding of the law more available to all. I agree that
on this basis also the council is to be regarded as a body established for
charitable purposes and, indeed, for exclusively charitable purposes as falling
under Lord Macnaghten's fourth head. Such an activity is clearly properly
described as of general public utility and as beneficial to the community. In
the absence of any ground for holding that such an activity is not within the
spirit of the preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth I, and I think that there is
no such ground, it should be held to be charitable.
Appeal dismissed with costs of council. No order in respect
of costs sought by Attorney-General. Leave to appeal refused.
Solicitors: Solicitor of Inland Revenue; Linklaters & Paines;
Treasury Solicitor.
S. S.
1Charities Act 1960, s. 4: "(1) There shall be a register
of charities which shall be established and maintained by the commissioners and
in which there shall be entered such particulars as the commissioners may from
time to time determine of any charity there registered." S. 5: "(3) An
appeal against any decision of the commissioners to enter or not to enter an
institution in the register of charities, ... may be brought in the High Court
by the Attorney-General, or by the persons who are or claim to be the charity
trustees of the institution, ..." S. 45: "(1) In this Act, except in so far
as the context otherwise requires, - 'charity' means any institution, corporate
or not, which is established for charitable purposes and is subject to the
control of the High Court in the exercise of the court's jurisdiction with
respect to charities; ..." S. 46: "In this Act, except in so far as the
context otherwise requires, - ... 'charitable purposes' means purposes which are
exclusively charitable according to the law of England and Wales; ..."
2 See The Speeches of the Rt. Hon. Edmund Burke in the House
of Commons and in Westminster Hall, ed. 1816, vol. 4, pp. 201-202, on the
report of the Committee of Managers on the causes of the duration of Warren
Hasting's trial: "... the English jurisprudence has not any other sure
foundation, nor consequently the lives and properties of the subject any sure
hold, but in the maxims, rules, and principles, any juridical traditionary line
of decisions contained in the notes taken, and from time to time published
(mostly under the sanction of the judges), called reports. ... To give judgment
privately is to put an end to reports; and to put an end to reports, is to put
an end to the law of England."