A DMC is a gift of property made by a donor in contemplation of their death within the near future.
If you receive a claim that a gift is a DMC, obtain all the
necessary facts and refer to Technical Group (TG) for advice.
The requirements for a DMC, as laid out in the case of Sen v
Headley (1991) and other case law, are
The property must be capable of passing by donatio
In general, anything capable of transfer by mere delivery may
be the subject matter of a DMC. Land, bonds and insurance policies
can be possible subject matter, but building society shares cannot
(Re Weston 1902)
The gift must be made in contemplation of impending
death
The donor must have contemplated their death at the time of
the gift. This is a subjective test and must be decided from the
facts.
The gift must be conditional on the donor’s
death
The gift must be completed only on the death, being revocable
in the lifetime. It is ineffective if the donor not does not die.
Delivery is essential
Delivery is effected by delivery of the actual property and
must be made to the donee, or someone on their behalf. The donor
must part with control and not merely physical possession of the
property.
In Sen v Headley it was held that a delivery of title deeds
(kept in a steel box, the key to which had been given by X to Y
during her visits to the hospital during X’s illness)
amounted to X’s parting with control over the house.
In Woodward v Woodward (1992), A’s terminally ill
father, B, told A to keep the keys to B’s car, which A used
regularly. It was held that there had been effective delivery.
In Scots law there are three essentials for a DMC
There is as in the case of donation inter vivos a presumption
against donation which has to be overcome. See the Stair Memorial
Encyclopaedia Vol 8 para 607.
A DMC basically performs the same function as a legacy. Both
are revocable in the granter's lifetime, both are postponed to the
claims of the deceased's creditors if the funds of the deceased are
insufficient to meet his debts in full; neither affects the claims
of a surviving spouse or civil partner (
IHTM11032) to jus relictae or of the
children to legitim and the property gifted of course remains an
asset of the estate for Inheritance Tax purposes at death.
Any claim that a gift is a DMC in Scotland should be referred
to TG.