BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Globe Insurance Co v Tait's Trustee [1835] CA 13_873 (5 June 1835)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1835/013SS0873.html
Cite as: [1835] CA 13_873

[New search] [Help]


SCOTTISH_Shaw_Court_of_Session

Page: 873

Globe Insurance Co

v.

Tait's Trustee
No. 267.

Court of Session

2d Division

June 5 1835

Ld. Moncreiff.

Globe Insurance Company Trustees     Pursuers.— Rutherfurd. William Ainslie Turner (Tait's Trustee)     Defender.— D. F. Hope— Sol. Gen. Cunninyhame— Speirs.

Subject_Bankruptcy — Sequestration — Right in Security. —

Held, that a creditor having a catholic heritable security over an estate, cannot be made liable for expenses of management incurred by the trustee under a sequestration, unless in so far as such expenses have been beneficially incurred for his behoof.

In 1817, the late Mr Tait of Harvieston, with a view to the payment of his debts, executed a trust conveyance of his whole heritable and moveable property in favour of Mr Claud Russel. In 1825, Mr James Scott was substituted as trustee in room of Mr Russel. At the same time, as the estate was burdened with debt to a great amount, in order to simplify the management, and pay off the other heritable creditors, a sum of £125,000 was borrowed from the Globe Insurance Company of London, for which Mr Tait granted a bond and disposition in security over his whole heritable property, in favour of trustees for the company. It was provided in the bond that the money borrowed should not be called up for fifteen years, provided the interest were regularly paid.

In 1828, Mr Tait's estate was sequestrated under the bankrupt act, and Mr Scott was appointed trustee, in which office he was succeeded, upon his death, in 1830, by the defender, Turner. Turner, as trustee, incurred the necessary expenses incidental to the management of the estate. In 1829, and subsequent years, the property was repeatedly exposed to sale, by public roup; and a portion was sold, and the proceeds made over to the Insurance Company. Interest was regularly paid to the Company, first by Scott and then by Turner, down to the term of Candlemas, 1831. After that term, regular payments ceased to be made; Turner, however, continuing to draw the rents and feu-duties.

An action of declarator, count and reckoning, and payment, was then raised, at the instance of the trustees for the Globe Insurance Company, and of Sir James Gibson-Craig, their commissioner, concluding to have it declared that the Company were not parties to Mr Tait's trust or sequestration, and that Turner was merely trustee for the creditors claiming under the sequestration; that he had no right to apply the rents towards payment of the expenses of managing the property; and that he should be ordained to exhibit a state of his intromissions, and make payment to the pursuers of the amount thereof.

In opposition to these conclusions the defender maintained, generally, that the action was unnecessary and groundless; that the pursuers were liable for the expense of the sales effected, and ought to be charged with the necessary expenses of managing the estate, and protecting it from dilapidation.

The Lord Ordinary pronounced the following interlocutor, issuing, at the same time, the subjoined note. *

_________________ Footnote _________________

* “The Lord Ordinary is of opinion, that, after the decisions in the three cases of Brock v. Brown's Trustees, March 8, 1825 ; Maclean v. Robertson, &c., November 20,1825 ; and Gibson v. Stephenson, &c., June 26,1832, it is not at all possible now to hold that an heritable creditor can be made liable for any part of the expenses of a sequestration of his debtor's estate. Even though he were a party claiming in it, this could not be held consistently with the decisions ; but still less could it be so, where, as in the present case, the pursuers confessedly were not claimants at all.

“ Neither does it appear to the Lord Ordinary, that the special circumstances founded on by the defender in the debate, can have any effect to take this case out of the general rule of law. The pursuers were not even in the ordinary situation of heritable creditors, who may proceed at any time on their bonds. By the terms of their bond, they had no right to require payment of the principal debt for fifteen years, provided the interest was paid in the terms stipulated. That they knew of the trust and sequestration, and of the trustee's possession and management of the estate, would be of no relevancy in any case, to subject such heritable creditors to any expenses of the proceedings or management in the sequestration contrary to the established principle; and still less can it be relevant where, not only by the statute, the heritable creditors could take no part in the proceedings, but by the terms of the bond itself, the creditor had no power to do any thing. Notwithstanding this, the pursuers had an evident interest to attend to what was done; and the trustee, in behalf of the personal creditors, had a plain interest also to keep them informed of his proceedings; but the Lord Ordinary has no idea that there is any thing in this which can require a departure from the general law in the present case. Indeed it appears to him to be a case in which it applies a fortiori.

“The Lord Ordinary conceiving the law to this extent to be fully settled, and its application to the present case to be very clear, thinks it his duty, with reference to the pleas maintained before him, to give his judgment to that effect before making any remit to an accountant, in order that the limits of the enquiry may be so far fixed, and that the accountant may not proceed on the supposition that any doubt is entertained of the application of the law to the case. Though the defender's counsel said that they did not controvert the first conclusion of the summons, the Lord Ordinary thinks that the pursuers are entitled to have declarator in terms of it, in respect of the very particular entry in the Sederunt-book, referred to in the letters in March, 1832, on the second and third pages of the printed correspondence, and because of the general scope of the pleas maintained against them. He thinks that the second, third, and fourth findings of the interlocutor are rendered indispensable by the course which the debate took. For, after he had supposed that the general principles of the law were admitted by the opening counsel for the defender, he was led to think that the same full concession was not given by the senior counsel in his concluding reply; and, in particular, he understood it to be broadly maintained, that if the heritable creditor leaves the management of the estate with the trustee (and this even in a case where he had no power by his bond to do otherways), he must be liable for all the expense of such management, at least if prudent and beneficial, even although there were a reversion for the personal creditors. The Lord Ordinary understands the law to be settled otherways: And the reversal of the judgment in Cuthbertson v. Gardner (Sh. App. Cases, II., p. 291), though proceeding on a specialty, takes away all authority from that judgment, and has led to the subsequent departure from the principle both of it and the case of Godwin v. Brown.

“ But though the Lord Ordinary has no hesitation in going thus far to lay down the principles applicable to the case, he is sensible that a possible state of the case may arise of a more doubtful nature. If it should turn out that the price to be got for the heritable estate is not equal to this heritable debt, or will leave no reversion, it may be a serious and somewhat doubtful question, whether the expense of the ordinary management of it, in so far as that management may be shown and held to have been beneficial not generally, but specially for the heritable creditor, should be defrayed from such price, or in other words, should be borne by the heritable creditor, or should fall either on any other funds in the hands of the trustee, if there are such funds, or on the creditors who have ranked in the sequestration The Lord Ordinary does think, that before giving any judgment on that question hypothetically, it is desirable to see distinctly, in the report of an accountant, what the particular expenses are, for which the defender now claims credit in the first instance against the heritable creditor, in an accounting for rents intromitted with, and as far as possible to be informed, to what extent such management was necessary, and directed to the special benefit of the pursuers, as distinguished from any expected benefit to the creditors claiming in the sequestration. Such information may supersede a great deal of discussion, and enable the Court to see more definitely the precise point on which any question of law to arise may hinge. He has, therefore, after the general findings, made the remit before answer on the pleas of the parties in this part of the case.

“The accountant's name is not filled up, because it is a particular case. If the parties agree about that, it will be so settled. If they differ, the Lord Ordinary will name.”

“Finds, decerns, and declares, in terms of the first conclusion of the summons: Finds, that the defender, as trustee, is bound to render to the pursuers a full account of his intromissions with the rents of the estate, covered by their heritable bond, since the 2d day of February, 1831: Finds, that in rendering such account, the defender is entitled to take credit, in the first instance, for such expenses as may have been incurred in the actual sales of parts of the heritable subjects, in so far as such expenses were laid out beneficially for the pursuers: Finds, that he is not entitled to take credit generally, for any of the expenses of the sequestration, or for any commission to himself as trustee under it; but, before answer as to the claim for allowance of expenses incurred in the ordinary management of the estate over which the heritable security extends, in so far as it may ultimately appear that such expenses have been laid out beneficially for the pursuers, and that there is no reversion of the price after satisfying the debt of the pursuers, remits the states of accounts produced by the defender to with instructions to him to report quamprimum the just and true state of the accounts, giving effect to the above findings; and also to report, so far as the materials in process, or to be furnished to him, will enable him, whether any or what part of the expenses of management of the said estate, for which the defender at present takes credit in his accounts, has been laid out beneficially for the pursuers, as preferable heritable creditors, with power to him to call for all necessary vouchers of the said accounts, and for all information or explanations which may appear to him to be calculated for enabling him to answer fully the objects of this remit; and in the meantime reserves all question of expenses.”

The defender reclaimed, but

The Court, “in respect that the remit to the accountant, before answer, does not preclude any claim for remuneration on account of trouble incurred by the defender in the sale, or attempts to sell, the estate in question, or other expenses beneficially incurred for the pursuer,” refused the reclaiming note, and adhered to the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary, with expenses, since its date.

Solicitors: Gibson-Craigs, Wardlaw, and Dalzell, W.S.— Robert Rutherford, W.S.—Agents.

SS 13 SS 873 1835


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1835/013SS0873.html