Harries v Church Comrs for England

Harries v Church Commissioners for England
Court High Court
Decided 25 October 1991
Citation(s) [1992] 1 WLR 1241, [1993] 2 All ER 300
Keywords
Duty of care, ethical investment

Harries v The Church Commissioners for England [1992] 1 WLR 1241 is an English trusts law case, concerning the possibility to invest ethically. It tempers the decision in Cowan v Scargill to show that trustees can make investments, guided by ethical considerations, if it can be shown that overall financial performance would not be harmed, but also if it would be consistent with the purpose of the trust.

Facts

Richard Harries, Bishop of Oxford, challenged the Commissioners to change their investment policy. 85% of the fund provided income for stipends for serving clergy, pensions for retired clergy and housing for both. Harries argued that investments should not be selected that were incompatible with ‘the promotion of the Christian faith through the Church of England’ even if it involved financial detriment. The Commissioners argued their policy was fine, of regarding non-financial considerations so far as it did not ‘significantly jeopardise or interfere with accepted investment principles’. Evidence showed not investing in South Africa meant not investing in 24% of listed companies.

Judgment

Sir Donald Nicholls, V.-C. held that the Commissioners policy was sound. He went on to say that one can invest ethically if otherwise there would be a conflict with the trust’s objects.

See also

  • Buttle v Saunders [1950] 2 All ER 193
  • Cowan v Scargill [1985] Ch 270
  • Liverpool and District Hospital for Diseases of the Heart v Attorney General [1981] 1 All ER 994

References

  • JH Langbein and RA Posner, ‘Social Investing and the Law of Trusts’ (1980–1981) 79 Michigan Law Review 72, 88
  • Donald Nicholls, ‘Trustees and their broader community: where duty, morality and ethics converge’ (1995) 9(3) Trusts Law International 71
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