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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Thomas Tweedie and Others v Henrt Gibson. [1782] Mor 11125 (5 March 1782) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1782/Mor2611125-327.html Cite as: [1782] Mor 11125 |
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[1782] Mor 11125
Subject_1 PRESCRIPTION.
Subject_2 DIVISION X. Sexennial Prescription.
Date: Thomas Tweedie and Others
v.
Henrt Gibson
5 March 1782
Case No.No 327.
Liberal interpretation of the act 1772, which introduced the sexennial prescription of bills.
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Gibson, in April 1772, granted to Ewart, of whom Tweedie and others were executors, a bill for L. 102, payable ninety days after date. In June 1778, within six years from the term of payment, Tweedie and the other executors sued Gibson for the contents of this bill.
Pleaded for the defender; By act 1772, § 37. it is declared, “That no bill of exchange, or inland bill, or promissory note, executed after the 15th May 1772, shall be of force, or effectual to produce any diligence or action, in that part of Great Britain called Scotland, unless said diligence shall be raised thereon within the space of six years from and after the terms at which the sums in said bills or notes became exigible.”
And with respect to bills or notes granted before the said 15th May 1772, it is by § 38 enacted, “That these should not be of force, or effectual to produce any diligence or action, unless such diligence has been raised, or action has commenced thereon, before the expiration of six years from and after the said 15th day of May 1772.”
Thus it is evident, that this statute has made only one distinction respecting the period when the prescription commences, which is that between bills prior and those posterior to 15th May 1772; the period of commencement being in the former that date, and in the latter the term of payment. This distinction is laid down free from any ambiguity; nor is a court of law at liberty to depart from such a clear and distinct enactment. Now, as the bill in question was granted previously to 15th May 1772, and when the present action was instituted, six years after that date had already elapsed, it is clear, from the above
cited section 38, that it was then precluded by the statutory limitation, notwithstanding the term of payment did not arrive till afterwards. Answered; It follows immediately from the general nature of prescription, that its course cannot begin against a creditor till after the term of payment, because then only the obligation becomes exigible. It is likewise an undoubted rule, that every statute ought to be interpreted in consistency with itself, tota lege perspecta. Now, as the object of the statute in question, which is apparent from section 37, was to limit the endurance of the obligation created by bills to six years, but to no shorter a period; and as it is plain, that this limitation cannot take place before the debt becomes due, so section 38 is to be interpreted agreeably to section 37, and in such a manner as to permit six years to elapse after the term of payment of bills granted before May 1772, as well as of those posterior to that period.
Observed on the Bench; The present case, that of a bill granted before the period mentioned in the act, but not payable till afterwards, has not been provided for by the statute.
The Lords repelled the defence founded on the statute above mentioned.
Lord Ordinary, Braxfield. Act. Maclaurin. Alt. Ilay Campbell. Clerk, Menzies.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting