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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Stuarts v Stuart. [1678] Mor 3052 (29 January 1678) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1678/Mor0703052-005.html Cite as: [1678] Mor 3052 |
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[1678] Mor 3052
Subject_1 CONQUEST.
Subject_2 SECT. I. Clauses of Conquest, how far extended.
Date: Stuarts
v.
Stuart
29 January 1678
Case No.No 5.
A bond granted as the price or composition of a succession, found not to fall under conquest.
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Umquhile Walter Stuart, in his contract of marriage with his second wife, provides 20,000 merks to the heirs or bairns of the marriage, and obliges himself that what lands or annualrents he shall acquire during the marriage, to take the same to himself, and the heirs or bairns of the marriage, one or more. Of this marriage there was a son and five daughters. The said umquhile Walter
did secure 20,000 merks, due to him by Blackhall, to himself, and the heir of the marriage. The five daughters do now pursue their brother to denude himself in their favour, as bairns of the marriage; because the bond bears borrowed money, and of a date during the marriage, which was always sufficient probation of conquest during the marriage. If was alleged for the defender, 1 mo, That this clause of conquest must be understood, not of all the bairns of the marriage, but the heirs of the marriage, at least it bearing bairns or heirs, it must be interpret as an alternative obligation, either to provide to the heirs or bairns of the marriage; and the father being debtor, and having made his election, by securing the heir of the marriage in this sum, the bairns are excluded nam in alternativis electio est debitoris. 2do, Clauses of conquest were never extended to rights, in which the contractors do succeed, and are not acquired by their own industry; for such clauses are to encourage wives to be diligent in acquiring, which cannot relate to accidental succession. And it is offered to be proven, that albeit this bond bears, borrowed money during the marriage, yet the true cause thereof was this, that David Stuart, the defunct's younger brother, by a second marriage, having died without issue, in a land estate, the same befel to the defunct as heir of conquest; and, by transaction, this bond was granted to the defunct for his right, whereupon he did denude himself in favours of Blackhall his eldest brother; so that this bond being either the price or composition for his succession to his brother, falls not under the clause of conquest, and therefore was warrantably taken in favours of himself and the heirs of the marriage, and not of the bairns. The Lords found, that, by the clause of the contract, all the bairns of the marriage were heirs of provision in the conquest, and that heirs or bairns was not alternative, but exegetic; and that the father, being debtor in the clause, could not effectually alter the clause of conquest in favours of one of the bairns; but found, that clauses of conquest did not extend to rights falling by succession, even though the defunct was heir of conquest; for conquest, as to heirs, is in opposition to heritage. But in these clauses of conquest, albeit the right was conquest to the first defunct David, yet was not so to Walter, succeeding as heir to David, but he did succeed to his brother therein; and therefore the allegeance was found relevant to be proven by the oaths of the witnesses, and communers in the agreement betwixt Walter and his brother and Black hall, that this sum was either the price or composition for the defunct's succession to his brother David.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting