Perpetuities: miscellaneous
Section 11: Powers of appointment
60.The Act refers at various points to powers of appointment, special powers of appointment and general powers of appointment. Section 11 defines when a power of appointment is a “special power of appointment” for the purposes of the Act. The definition has substantially the same effect as section 7 of the 1964 Act, which does not apply by virtue of section 16. Powers of appointment not falling within the section 11 definition are classed as general powers; these are tantamount to outright ownership.
61.A power of appointment may be given so as to be exercisable in a variety of ways. The Act divides these into three categories.
62.Subsections (1) and (2) define when a power is a special power of appointment for the purposes of a power exercisable otherwise than by will. All such powers are special powers unless they are exercisable by one person only and that person (being of full age and capacity) could transfer all the property subject to the power to himself or herself without having to obtain consent from anyone else and without complying with any other condition.
63.Subsections (3) and (4) make analogous provision in relation to special powers exercisable by will.
64.Subsections (5) and (6) apply to powers exercisable by will or otherwise. In such cases, the power is a special power of appointment if it satisfies either subsection (2) or subsection (4).
