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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> MACLAINE v MACLAINE. [1807] Mor 35_42 (23 June 1807)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1807/Mor35TAILZIE-014.html
Cite as: [1807] Mor 35_42

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[1807] Mor 42      

Subject_1 TAILZIE.
Subject_2 APPENDIX

PART I.

MACLAINE
v.
MACLAINE

Date: 23 June 1807
Case No. No. 14.

An effectual prohibition against altering the order of succession.


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ARCHIBALD MACLAINE of Lochbuy executed, of this date, (31st May 1776,) an entail of his estates, written by himself, containing this prohibitory clause:

“And it is hereby specially provided and declared, that it shall at no rate be allowable for the heirs-male to be procreate of my own body, or to any others of the heirs of tailzie above mentioned, to sell off or dispose of any part of the above lands or estates, nor to contract debt, or to do any other deed whereby it may be adjudged or evicted from the succeeding members, or their hopes of succession thereto in any measure evaded; and if they do in the contrary, it is declared, in the first place, that the deeds of contravention shall be absolutely void and null, and of no manner of strength or effect whatsoever; and, in the second place, that the contravener, and the descendants of his body, shall, ipso facto, forfeit the benefit of the succession to which they are called by the present settlement, and the same shall forthwith accresce to the next heir in the substitution, who immediately on the back of the contravention, may commence a declarator thereof, and serve heir to the person who died last invested with the estate, passing by the contravener without representing him, or being any way liable to fulfil his obligation.”

Upon his death, his cousin Murdoch Maclaine succeeded, and in May 1785, made up titles under this entail, upon which he was infeft.

He again was succeeded by his son Murdoch, who, after possessing for some time under the entail, raised a process of declarator against the substitute heirs, to have it found, that there is no prohibition against altering the order of succession, and therefore that he was entitled to hold the estate in fee-simple.

The Court considered whether there were distinct and specific words applicable to the case of altering the order of succession: It is not necessary that they be technical, provided they be precise. Now, here the entail contains, 1st, A direct prohibition against selling, “that it shall at no rate be allowable for the heirs-male to be procreate of my own body, or to any others of the heirs of tailzie above mentioned, to sell off or dispose of any part of the above lands or estate.” It contains, 2dly, A clause against contracting debt, in these words :

“Nor to contract debts,’ but it also contains, 3dly, A prohibitory clause against doing any deed whereby the estate may be evicted from the preceding heirs, ‘ or their hopes of succession thereto in any manner evaded.”

The Court considered this prohibition sufficiently, specific for preventing an alteration of the order of succession ; although it was contended, that this was merely a relative clause for prohibiting deeds whereby indirectly the selling or contracting debt may take place ; and that in order to be descriptive of these indirect methods, it specifies them as those by which the estate may be carried off from the succeeding heirs, and their hopes of succession evaded.

The question was reported to the Court by the Lord Ordinary, when a hearing in presence was ordered.

Afterwards, this interlocutor was pronounced, (21st Jan. 1807:) ‘ The Lords, in respect of a hearing in presence in the question touching the estate of Roxburghe, wherein the arguments bearing on this case, have been fully stated, dispense with hearing counsel on this cause, in terms of their former interlocutor ; and having resumed consideration of the mutual informations for the parties, and advised, the same, sustain the defence, assoilzie the defenders, and decern.

To which the Court (23d June 1807) adhered, by refusing a reclaiming petition, with answers.

Lord Ordinary, Cullen. Act. Lord Advocate Colquhoun, Fletcher. Agent, Jo. Campbell, W. S. Alt. Cathcart, J. A. Murray. Agent, Wm. Whyte. Clerk, Mackenzie. Fac. Coll. No. 286. p. 655.

The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting     


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