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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Queen's Advocate v Todrig. [1565] Mor 12650 (30 June 1565)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1565/Mor3012650-557.html
Cite as: [1565] Mor 12650

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[1565] Mor 12650      

Subject_1 PROOF.
Subject_2 DIVISION V.

Proved, or not proved.
Subject_3 SECT. III.

Forgery. - Bribery.

The Queen's Advocate
v.
Todrig

Date: 30 June 1565
Case No. No 557.

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Gif ony officiar, or messinger, executis ony letter befoir twa witnessis, and it happin the officiar, with ane of the witnessis, to deceis, the samin executioun or indorsatioun may be impreivin as false and feinzeit, gif the uther witness on life passis fra the samin.

Fol. Dic. v. 2. p. 265. Balfour, (Of Improbatioun.) No 12. p. 384. *** Maitland reports this case:

1565. July 18.—In an action of improbation of an execution of an arrestment, moved by the young Laird of Niddrie against George Todrig, burgess of Edinburgh, alleging the said instrument to have been feigned; and took to prove the same; and one of the two witnesses inserted in the indorsation deponed, that he was never at the said execution nor arrestment making. The officer deponed, that the execution was of a long time, and he could not remember thereof, without he saw his own hand-writing and indorsation, which then was away, because this execution was in processu, which was drawn forth of the official books of Lothian; the other witness being dead, and no more witnesses being but two in the indorsation. The pursuer alleged, It was improved; because the one witness falsified the same. It was answered, That the officer denied not the same, and so improved not; and the other witness being dead, the indorsation or execution ought to make faith; because, the officer being a public person, with one witness, was sufficient to make faith against one witness. It was found by the Lords, that the execution was not improved, and so assoilzied from the pains; but decerned that the said execution should make no faith; nor yet, if the same had been an instrument, one witness improving, the notary and other witness, will not make the instrument to have faith; because a notary must have two witnesses at the least.

Maitland, MS. p. 202.

The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting     


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1565/Mor3012650-557.html