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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> King's Advocate and Lo. Yester v Lo. Buccleugh. [1624] Mor 2242 (10 February 1624)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1624/Mor0602242-123.html
Cite as: [1624] Mor 2242

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[1624] Mor 2242      

Subject_1 CITATION.
Subject_2 SECT. XXVII.

Citation in Incident Diligences.

King's Advocate and Lo Yester
v.
Lo Buccleugh.

Date: 10 February 1624
Case No. No 123.

In the case of a party's craving an incident for recovering of writs called for to be improven, the Lords found that the Lord Advocate, as being a necessary party, behoved to be summoned, because he being a party in the principal summons, could not be left out in the incident.


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In an action of improbation pursued at the King's Advocate's instance, and the Lo. Yester, against the Lo. Buccleugh, an incident being used at the Lo. Buccleugh's instance, for proving of an exception admitted to his probation against the improbation; the Lords found, that the incident could not be sustained, because the Advocate, at whose instance the principal cause of improbation was pursued, was not summoned in the incident; seeing they found that no incident could be granted in any case, except where all the pursuers in the principal cause, wherein incidents are to be used, ought specifice to be summoned in these incidents; and this was found; albeit it was alleged for the party user of the incident, that where the principal parties pursuers are warned apud, acta in the principal process, by the act of litis-contestation, in that case they needed no other citation in the incident, they being warned by the act for the term assigned to the defender, for proving of his exception, and for proving whereof now the incident is used; and also, that it was alleged, that seeing the direct and principal party was summoned by the incident, the same ought not to be rejected for not summoning of the King's Advocate, who was not a principal party, and who could neither tine nor win thereby, but who was only party for his interest, ratione officii; which allegiances were repelled.

Act. Nicolson et Stuart. Alt. Hope et Scot. Clerk, Hay. Fol. Dic. v. 1. p. 142. Durie, p. 108. *** Spottiswood reports the same case:

In an incident raised by the Earl of Buccleugh for recovering of certain writs, sought to be improven by my Lord Yester, it was alleged, 1mo, No incident for such and such writs; for which it was alleged by the pursuer of the incident in the production, that no certification should be granted, because he offered him to prove, by witnesses, that they were in the pursuer's own hands; because he having an ordinary way of probation for proving the having of them, could not take him to an extraordinary also.—The Lords found that one might very well use both the manner of probation by writ and witnesses, and that they were not incompatible, as the probation by oath is indeed with either of them. Next it was alleged, That the incident in whole could not be sustained, because the Advocate was not summoned, who was a necessary party; for he being a party in the principal summons, could not be left out in the incident. Answered, That it was sufficient in an incident to warn the parties havers only, and that the Advocate had no interest therein whereby he should be summoned; at the farthest that it was sufficient to warn him apud acta. Nevertheless the Lords found the allegeance relevant, and refused the incident.

Spottiswood, p. 172.

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/1624/Mor0602242-123.html