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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Breadalbane's Trustees v. Campbell [1866] ScotLR 2_66 (6 June 1866) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1866/02SLR0066.html Cite as: [1866] ScotLR 2_66, [1866] SLR 2_66 |
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Held (alt. Lord Ormidale) that the executors of an heir of entail, who had expended certain sums of money in improvements, were entitled to recover the statutory portion thereof from the succeeding heir of entail, although the account of the sums expended during the twelve months preceding the term of Martinmas were not subscribed by the expending heir within four months after the term, this having become impossible by reason of his death three days before it. Held further, that the proper parties to
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subscribe the account in these circumstances were the executors.
This was an action of declarator and payment raised by the trustees and executors of the late Marquess of Breadalbane against John Alexander Gavin Campbell of Glenfalloch, heir of entail succeeding in the entailed lands and estate of Breadalbane, concluding (1) for declarator, that between the term of Martinmas 1861 and the 8th November 1862 there was expended by the late Marquess in improvements upon the said entailed estate of Breadalbane, in terms and of the nature contemplated by the Act 10 Geo. III., c. 51, sums of money amounting in all to £3891, 17s. 1d., three-fourth parts of which being £2918, 17s. 9
d., should be declared to be a debt existing against the succeeding heirs of entail; and (2) for payment of the said sum of £2918, 17s. 9 3 4 d., with interest from the terms at which the defender's right to the said entailed lands commenced, and in all time thereafter during the not-payment. 3 4 The late Marquess having died on the 8th November 1862, three days before the term of Martinmas of that year, the accounts relative to the said improvements (Nos. 45 and 46 of process) were lodged and subscribed by the pursuers as his trustees and executors on the 7th March 1863; and the defenders founding on that fact, pleaded (5) that as neither of these accounts was signed by the late Marquess as required by the Act 10 Geo. III., c. 51. no liability attached to him as heir of entail foresaid, for or in respect of outlay on any of the alleged improvements or operations specified or referred to in either of these accounts.
The Lord Ordinary (Ormidale) pronounced the following interlocutor:—
Edinburgh 14th November 1865.—The Lord Ordinary having heard counsel for the parties, and considered the argument and whole proceedings—Finds, in point of fact, that the accounts of alleged improvements, Nos. 45 and 46 of process, on which the present action is laid, are not subscribed by the late Marquess of Breadalbane, in terms of the Statute 10 Geo. III., cap. 51; and therefore, in point of law, finds that the defender's fifth plea in law is well founded, and sustains the same accordingly; assoilzies the defender from the conclusions of the summons, and decerns: Finds the defender entitled to the expenses of process, allows him to lodge an account thereof, and remits it, when lodged, to the Auditor to tax and report.
R. Macfarlane.
Note.—Both parties concurred in asking the Lord Ordinary at once to dispose of the defender's fifth plea in law, which, if well founded, is sufficient of itself to entitle the defender to absolvitor.
The fifth plea referred to, now sustained by the Lord Ordinary, involves a question of importance, and is one which does not appear to have been hitherto decided.
The question, whether the plea referred to has been properly sustained, depends upon the statute 10 Geo. III., cap. 51, sec. 12, which requires that the proprietor of an entailed estate who lays out sums in improvements, “with an intent of being a creditor to the succeeding heir of entail,” shall annually during the making such improvements, within four months after the term of Martinmas, lodge an account of the sums expended by him in such improvements “during twelve months preceding that term of Martinmas subscribed by him, with the vouchers,” &c. The accounts in question in this action, and which relate to improvements made in the course of the twelve months preceding Martinmas 1862, were never subscribed by the late Marquess of Breadalbane, who died on the 8th November of that year, but were afterwards subscribed and lodged by the pursuers as his executors. No doubt the late Marquess' rights, as well as his obligations, passed on his death to his representatives; but, first, the terms of the statute make it imperative that he should himself have subscribed the accounts in question; and, secondly, these accounts never having been subscribed by him, the statutory right in them as against the succeeding heirs of entail never was in any way constituted or vested in the Marquess, and consequently there was no right to pass from him to the pursuers as his executors. It is impossible with certainty to say that the late Marquess, however long he might have survived, would have subscribed the accounts. In this view, and for the reasons thus briefly adverted to, the Lord Ordinary has felt himself obliged to sustain the defender's fifth plea-in-law.
The case of Hopkins, 11th March 1851, 13 D. 958, was referred to in the course of the argument, but as the disposal of it was entirely of consent of the parties, it is of no importance as a precedent.
R. M'F.
The pursuers thereupon reclaimed.
At advising,
The Lord President—This action has reference to the improvements made during the year preceding Martinmas 1862, by the late Marquess of Breadalbane. And an objection has been raised against the demand for having the provisions of the Montgomery Act applied to that expenditure, on the ground that the accounts were not signed by the late Marquess, but were signed by his trustees and executors. The question is whether all power of recovery of any portion of that expenditure is cut off by reason of the non-signing of these accounts by the late Marquess. That comes to be an important question when viewed with reference to the circumstances under which that occurred. The provision of the Act on that matter is contained in section 12, which enacts “that the proprietor of an entailed estate, who lays out money in making improvements upon his entailed estate, with an intent of being a creditor to the succeeding heirs of entail in the manner above expressed, shall annually, during the making of such improvements, within four months after the term of Martinmas, lodge with the Sheriff or Steward-Clerk of the county within which the lands and heritages improved are situated, an account of the money expended by him in such improvements during twelve months preceding that term of Martinmas, subscribed by him, with the vouchers by which the account is to be supported when payment shall be demanded or sued for.” And the objection taken turns on the words “subscribed by him.” It is limited to that objection. The accounts were lodged subscribed by the trustees and executors, and the question comes to be whether, the Marquess having died upon the 8th November, being three days before Martinmas, the accounts not having been subscribed by him, there is an end to the right in his executors to recover. It is to be observed that, according to the provisions of the Act, the accounts to be subscribed by the party are accounts for the twelve months preceding Martinmas, and lodged within four months after Martinmas. Therefore the provisions of the Act are not complied with if these are lodged before Martinmas; they must be lodged after Martinmas. It follows from that that the period at which the accounts were to be lodged had not arrived at the date of the
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Their Lordships accordingly recalled the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary, and repelled the fifth plea-in-law for the defender.
Solicitors: Agents for Pursuers— Davidson & Syme, W.S.
Agents for Defender— Adam, Kirk, & Robertson, W.S.