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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Robert Jamieson, Trustee for the Creditors of West Digges Comedian, v Coutts, Brothers, and Company, and Others. [1763] Mor 1216 (16 November 1763)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1763/Mor0301216-251.html
Cite as: [1763] Mor 1216

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[1763] Mor 1216      

Subject_1 BANKRUPT.
Subject_2 DIVISION IV.

Disposition by a Bankrupt in favour of his whole Creditors.

Robert Jamieson, Trustee for the Creditors of West Digges Comedian,
v.
Coutts, Brothers, and Company, and Others

Date: 16 November 1763
Case No. No 251.

A concert among the creditors at large of a comedian, who assigned a proportion of his emoluments, supported by the Court, in opposition to the separate measures of particular creditors.


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West Digges comedian having contracted many debts, found himself under the necessity of leaving this country, in order to shun the diligence of his creditors.

By this retreat, the creditors were deprived of every prospect of recovering payment of their debts; and, being sensible that it was their interest to allure him back again, some of them resolved to offer him a supersedere, on the condition of his returning to this country, and conveying to a trustee, for the behoof of all his creditors, equally, a certain proportion of the weekly allowance he should receive from the managers of the theatre.

Mr Digges embraced this offer; and Robert Jamieson, writer to the signet, being pitched upon as trustee, the whole of the creditors whom Mr Digges was able to recollect were immediately informed of the intended measure, and approved of it; particularly, Mr David Beatt, who wrote a letter to Mr Jamieson from Newcastle, upon the 6th of October 1759, agreeing, that it was the only way left for the creditors to get payment of their debts.

In pursuance of this scheme, Mr Digges, upon the 2d of November 1759, executed a trust deed, in which he made over to Mr Jamieson, as trustee for his creditors therein named, four guineas, weekly, out of his salary, and the whole profits of his second benefit, each winter-season, until his creditors should be compleatly paid; and left any of them should have been omitted in the narrative of this assignment, it was declared, that it should be lawful to the trustee, with consent of the major part of the creditors, or any committee to be named by them, to assume any person not therein contained, to the benefit of the trust, who should afterwards appear to be entitled to the same.

A supersedere was, at the same time, made out, upon the narrative of the trust-right, superseding all diligence against Mr Digges's person and effects, so long as he should continue employed at the theatre of Edinburgh, and the sums assigned by him should be regularly paid to the trustee. This supersedere was signed, at different times, by many of the creditors, but Mr Beatt, notwithstanding the letter he had written to Mr Jamieson, approving of the measure, declined to put his name to it.

In January 1760, Mr Jamieson brought an action before the Sheriff against Messrs Beatt and Love, the managers of the theatre, for payment of the sums already due to Mr Digges, and which should thereafter fall due to him, at the rate of four guineas per week, and obtained a decreet accordingly.

It happened, however, that Mr Digges, in the list he gave in of his creditors, had forgot four, to whom he was owing very trifling sums; and these four creditors having thought proper to strike out against the general measure, used arrestments in the hands of the managers; and Mr Beatt having joined with them, he assigned over his debt to a trustee, who thereupon used an arrestment in his, Mr Beatt's, own hands.

In consequence of these arrestments, a multiple-poinding was brought by Messrs Beatt and Love, which was conjoined with Mr Jamieson's process before the Sheriff.

In this process, Mr Jamieson contended, That the whole creditors ought to be ranked pari passu, in terms of the trust-right: The arresting creditors, on the other hand, maintained, That the trust-right was void or reducible upon the act 1696; and the Sheriff pronounced an interlocutor, finding it proved, that Mr Digges was bankrupt at the time of granting the trust-deed, and therefore preferring the arresting creditors, according to the priority of their diligence.

Mr Jamieson obtained an advocation; and, besides insisting upon the common topics in favour of trust-deeds executed for the behoof of creditors in general, he further pleaded, as a circumstance of considerable weight, That the sum in dispute did not exist at the date of the trust-deed, and therefore was not subject to the diligence of creditors, and that it was created by means of the trust-deed and supersedere, and owed its being and existence thereto.

The Lord Auchinleck, Ordinary, after pronouncing some interlocutors, took the cause to report, and the following judgment was pronounced:

‘The Lords having considered the terms of the trust-disposition; the particular state of the funds assigned depending entirely on the creditors acting in concert; and David Beatt's letter; they prefer Mr Jamieson on the trust-right, he being accountable to the whole creditors of Digges, pari passu; and decern in the preference, and against the raisers of the multiple-poinding accordingly.’

For the trustee, Walter Stewart. For the arresting creditors, David Rae Clerk, Home. Fol. Dic. v. 3. p. 65. Fac. Col. No 120. p. 280.

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/1763/Mor0301216-251.html