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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dr Douglas v Ainslie. [1761] Mor 4269 (7 July 1761) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1761/Mor1004269-058.html Cite as: [1761] Mor 4269 |
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[1761] Mor 4269
Subject_1 FIAR.
Subject_2 DIVISION II. In questions between parents and children, who understood to be fiar.
Subject_3 SECT. IV. Whether it is expressed, that the Father is Liferenter only.
Date: Dr Douglas
v.
Ainslie
7 July 1761
Case No.No 58.
When lands are disponed to a father in liferent, and to the children of the marriage nascituri in fee, the father is fiar, and may sell the lands.
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Ainslie sold his lands of Harkerse by public roup, and they were purchased by Dr Douglas. Ainslie, by the articles of roup, was bound to deliver a good and sufficient progress, and to clear all bygone and public burdens and incumbrances. Dr Douglas being charged for the price, offered a bill of suspension for the following reason.
The lands in question are disponed to Ainslie by his uncle in liferent during all the days of his life; which failing, to the children procreated or to be procreated of his body in fee; which failing, to the granter's heirs and assignees, reserving to the granter a power to alter. At this time Ainslie was married; and therefore it is clear, that the intention of the granter was to provide for his children. Had not this been his intention, there was no occasion for any disposition, because Ainslie was heir at law to the granter; and accordingly, infeftment has been taken to Ainslie in liferent, and his children in fee; and as he has no children alive, he had no power to sell the lands.
Answered for Ainslie; That nothing is better established in the law of Scotland, than that when lands are disponed in the present terms, the father is fiar, and that the children can only take as heirs of provision. The infeftment taken in their name is good for nothing; because, though Ainslie had died in possession of the estate, they behoved to serve themselves heirs of provision and be infeft again. The fee of an estate cannot be in pendente, otherwise many absurdities would follow. If a superiority was disponed in such terms, there would be no superior, and the vassals could not be entered. If the dominium utile was disponed, the superior could have no vassal. If a former proprietor of an estate under such circumstances had contracted debt, his creditors could not affect it; because there would be no person from whom it could be adjudged. In short, if the father was not understood to be fiar in such cases, we would have property without a proprietor; than which nothing can be more absurd. This doctrine is firmly established by the following decisions; 25th November 1735, Creditors of Frog contra his Children, No 55. p. 4262.; 24th February 1741, Lillie contra Riddel, No 56. p. 4267.; and 3d June 1748, Gordon contra Sutherland, voce Fiar Absolute and Limited.—Provisions to Heirs and Children.
‘The Lords refused the bill of suspension.’
For Ainslie Montgomery. Clerk, Gibson.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting