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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Byres v Johnston. [1626] Mor 8405 (16 December 1626) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1626/Mor2008405-015.html Cite as: [1626] Mor 8405 |
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[1626] Mor 8405
Subject_1 LOCUS POENITENTIAE.
Subject_2 SECT. II. Locus pćnitentić until the Writ be perfected.
Date: Byres
v.
Johnston
16 December 1626
Case No.No 15.
A bond of alienation was subscribed and delivered to a writer for behoof of the purchaser. It was got back by the seller under promise to return it. Found there was still locus pćnitentić.
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James Johnston having subscribed a letter of alienation of some lands to John Byres of Cotes, which letter was delivered by the said James to Mr Francis Hay writer, to the behoof the said John Byres, to the effect that charters might be formed thereupon in favours of the said John; and after the said charters were written out, the said James having come to the said Mr Francis, and borrowed from him the said letter of disposition, to the effect he might confer the same with the charters, promising to re-deliver the same; and that diverse times since, the said James promised to the said John to re-deliver the same, and to fulfil the whole conditions thereof; the said John Byres pursues the said
James for re-delivery thereof, and refers the summons, being of this tenor above written, to his oath. This summons was not found relevant by the Lords, notwithstanding of the whole particular circumstances and points above written therein contained, seeing it was not libelled therein, that the foresaid letter of alienation was either delivered to the pursuer's self, or to the said Mr Francis Hay, to be delivered by him to the pursuer; albeit it bore, that the bond was subscribed by the defender, and delivered to the writer, to the behoof of the pursuer, and to form charters thereupon in his favours, and there-after borrowed out to confer with the charters, upon promise to render the same back again. And albeit the summons bore promise made by the defender diverse times since, to re-deliver the same and to fulfil it, yet all this was not relevant, except the same bore the bond to have become the pursuer's evident, by delivery thereof to himself, or to some other to be delivered to him; which not being libelled, nor yet replied, the Lords found, that the defender might resile from the bargain, and that he was not obliged to stand to the same, seeing it was not perfected by tradition, as was necessary to the perfection thereof, and the promise since to perfect was sicklike not obligatory, seeing the defender had place to repent; for as the pursuer might upon his part resile from the bargain if he pleased, there being nothing extant which could compel him to pay the price thereof, seeing the letter of alienation granted the receipt of the money and price thereof from the pursuer, albeit in effect the same was not paid, but granted paid on trust, so the like liberty ought to be permitted to the defender to resile. This is conform to the civil law, where licet pænitere, nec est emptio ante confectionem scripturæ, ubi in scriptis facienda est, yet it appears, that if the money had been delivered, non erat locus pænitentiæ. See Proof.—Writ. Act. ——. Alt. Hope et Belshes. Clerk, Gibson.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting