72
38 & 39 Vict. Cap. 60, s. 15.
(4.) Distribution of sums not exceeding fifty pounds.—If
any member of a society [or branch] entitled from the funds
thereof to a sum not exceeding fifty pounds, dies intestate
and without having made any nomination under this Act
which remains unrevoked at his death, such sum shall be
payable, without letters of administration, to the person
who appears to a majority of the trustees, upon such evi
dence as they may deem satisfactory, to be entitled by law
to receive the same.
(5.) Payments to persons apparently entitled valid.—When
ever the society [or branch], after the decease of any mem
ber, pays any sum of money to the person who at the time
appears to the trustees to be entitled under this section, the
payment is valid and effectual against any demand madeirpon
the trustees or the society [or branch] by any other person.
(6.) When trustees are absent, <Scc., registrar may order
stock to be transferred.—When any person, being or having
been a trustee of a society [or branch], and whether ap
pointed before or after the legal establishment thereof, in
whose name any stock belonging to such society [or branch]
transferable at the Bank of England or Bank of Ireland is
standing, either jointly with another or others, or solely, is
absent from Great Britain (a) or Ireland respectively, or be
comes bankrupt, or files any petition or executes any deed
provision will be found of great benefit to depositors in savings
banks and members of friendly societies, particularly with refer
ence to the easy and comparatively inexpensive mode of now
obtaining, by personal application at the Court of Probate,
London, or at the office of the district registrar in the country, a
probate or letters of administration.
By 36 & 37 Vict. c. 52, administration to the estate of an
intestate not exceeding £100 may be obtained by his widow or
children through the county court for a small fee in England or
Ireland; and by 38 & 39 Viet. c. 41, confirmation in Scotland
for an estate not exceeding £150 may be obtained from the com
missary clerk for a small fee. Further relief from trouble and
expense, in the case of small estates, is contemplated by a bill
now before parliament.
By 38 & 39 Vict. c. 27, the benefits of the Act 36 & 37 Vict.
c. 52, are extended to the children of a widow dying intestate.
(a) “ England ” in the Act of 1875. The correction to “ Great
Britain” is introduced by s. 10 of the Act of 1876.