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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Foulis v. Downie and Others [1871] ScotLR 9_18 (27 October 1871) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/09SLR0018.html Cite as: [1871] ScotLR 9_18, [1871] SLR 9_18 |
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Page: 18↓
Where a reduction was brought of the minutes of meeting of creditors held for the election of a trustee, together with all the deliverances of the Sheriff thereon, upon the ground that the said minutes were not the true minutes of meeting of the creditors held as appointed for the election of a trustee, whereas certain other minutes produced were— held that the rival minutes, and the facts connected therewith, having been before the Sheriff, it was clearly within the competency of his jurisdiction to determine between them, in proceeding to decide which party was trustee-elect, and that his judgment was final under § 71 of the Act of 1856.
Opinion, that even if it had been a question of competency, the proper procedure for the pursuer was by appeal under § 170; and that in the ordinary case reduction was incompetent.
This was an action of reduction at the instance of Mr Foulis, a creditor on the sequestrated estates of Messrs M'Cartney & Bairnsfather, oil manufacturers, Eskside, Musselburgh, seeking to reduce the minutes of meeting of creditors held, as appointed by the Lord Ordinary, on Monday, 26th December 1870, for the purpose of electing a trustee on the said sequestrated estates, together with all that followed thereon—namely, the interlocutors or deliverances of the Sheriff-Substitute, declaring the election of the trustee, confirming him in his office, and granting act and warrant in his favour.
The circumstances, as stated by the pursuer, were, that at the said meeting there were present Mr Kilgour, as mandatory for the pursuer, and also certain other creditors; that the pursuer was creditor to the extent of £650, while the whole debts of the other creditors only amounted to about £240; that at the said meeting Mr Kilgour, as mandatory for the pursuer, and on the principle that the preses and clerk of the meeting shall be elected by the majority of the creditors in value, proceeded to nominate himself preses of the meeting, and Andrew Morrison, writer in Edinburgh, as clerk thereof. Whereupon, and on the said Mr Kilgour maintaining that he was entitled to act as preses of the meeting, and have the minutes written out by the clerk nominated by him, Mr M'Caul, a mandatory for certain other creditors and at the same time law agent for the bankrupts, suggested to the meeting to adjourn into another room. That the rest of the creditors present did go into another room, where they proceeded to elect the defender Mr Downie as trustee on the estate, and to approve the said James M'Caul as his cautioner. Minutes of the said pretended adjourned meeting were written out, and lodged with the Sheriff-clerk in due form. In the meantime Mr Kilgour proceeded to elect Mr Wm. Mackay to be trustee on the sequestrated estates of the bankrupts, and to approve of Mr James Barton as his cautioner. Minutes of the meeting were written out by the clerk appointed by Mr Kilgour, and also lodged with the Sheriff-clerk in due form. That when parties came to be heard before the Sheriff on these rival minutes, he “was pleased, most erroneously and contrary to law, to proceed on said pretended minutes, and he accordingly pronounced, on 30th December last, an interlocutor, in which he declared the defender the said Alexander Downie to have been duly elected trustee on said sequestrated estates, in terms of the statutes. Further, on or about 30th December last, the said Sheriff-Substitute, in respect of a bond of caution, in terms of the said pretended minutes, and of the statutes, having been lodged for the said defender, as trustee on the sequestrated estates, confirmed the election of the said defender as trustee, and allowed an act and warrant to go out and be extracted accordingly, and which act and warrant was accordingly extracted.”
The pursuer's pleas in law were, inter alia—“(1) The said pretended minutes, setting forth that the defender the said Alexander Downie had been elected trustee on said sequestrated estates, and that the other defenders had been elected commissioners thereon, not having been the minutes of the meeting appointed to be held by said interlocutor or deliverance of 15th December 1870, and advertised in the Edinburgh and London Gazettes as aforesaid, they ought to be reduced. (2) The said interlocutors or deliverances of the Sheriff-Substitute, declaring and confirming the defender the said Alexander Downie as said trustee, and the said act and warrant in his favour as such trustee, and the said interlocutor or deliverance declaring the election of the said other defenders as said commissioners, having proceeded on said pretended minutes, they ought also to be reduced.”
Page: 19↓
The Lord Ordinary ( Mure), on 3d June 1871, pronounced the following interlocutor:—“Finds that the action is excluded by the provisions of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act, 1856; therefore dismisses the action, and decerns.
Note.—During the debate, and when afterwards examining the record in this case, the Lord Ordinary was at first disposed to think that he would not be warranted in holding, without enquiry into the facts alleged in the record, that the Court of Session had not jurisdiction to entertain the present action, because, ex facie of the pursuer's allegations, the proceedings tend to shew that on the occasion in question the majority in number of the creditors present, by adjourning to another room than that in which they first assembled, succeeded, at a meeting from which the pursuer was excluded, in preventing him from exercising his vote as the alleged largest creditor in value.
On further consideration, however, of the record and documents lodged to satisfy the production, the Lord Ordinary has come to the conclusion that, as what is sought to be established under the conclusions of the action amounts substantially to a review of the interlocutors of the Sheriff, declaring and confirming the appointment of the trustee and commissioners in a sequestration, which are expressly declared to be final, ‘and in no case subject to review in any Court, or in any manner whatever,’ the jurisdiction of the Court is excluded from dealing with the case.
The matter in dispute between the parties, viz., which set of the minutes is the minute of the meeting appointed to be held in Dowell's Rooms for the election of trustee, was one which it was, in the opinion of the Lord Ordinary, competent for the Sheriff to deal with; and it appears, as well from the averments on record as from the terms of the interlocutor of the Sheriff under reduction, that the question now raised was duly submitted to his consideration, and dealt with by him without objection as one which he had jurisdiction to dispose of. In these circumstances, the Lord Ordinary does not see how he can entertain the present action without disregarding the very clear and express provisions of the statute as to the finality of the Sheriff's judgment declaring the election of trustees, which have been inserted for the first time in the Act of 1856, and seem to proceed upon the footing that it is for the interest of all parties in such cases that the decision of the Sheriff, in the matter of the election of trustee and commissioners, should not, as in the Act of 2 and 3 Vict. cap. 41. be subject to review.”
Against this interlocutor the pursuer reclaimed.
Scott and Grant for him.
Orphoot for the defenders and respondents.
Authorities— Rankine v. Douglas, 19 July 1871, 8 Scot. Law Rep. p. 696; Brown v. Lindsay, 7 Macph. 535; Buchan v. Bowes, 1 Macph. 922.
At advising—
Now, there came before the Sheriff on 30th December 1870 Mr Alexander Downie, C.A., Edinburgh, who produced what he alleged to be the minutes of the meeting of creditors, which bore that he had been unanimously elected trustee. Then came also before the Sheriff a Mr Kilgour, and he produced other minutes of meeting, which he alleged to be the minutes of the meeting of creditors held in terms of the above mentioned interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary, and which bore that a Mr Mackay had been elected trustee. The Sheriff heard parties upon the question, which of these two minutes were in law the minutes of meeting of creditors; and he decided in point of law in favour of Mr Downie's minutes, and accordingly proceeded to declare Mr Downie himself duly elected trustee. Mr Downie, as trustee-elect, immediately found caution, and then came back to the Sheriff and obtained confirmation in common form. The Sheriff's act and warrant, subsequently issued on being entered in the Register of Sequestrations, became Mr Downie's title as trustee to all the bankrupts' estate, and as such is to be received in all courts of law in the United Kingdom. Then, on a subsequent day, 15th February 1871, the Sheriff declared certain persons to have been duly elected commissioners on the sequestrated estates, all in terms of the Bankruptcy Statutes. There was then, as far as I can see, a complete sequestration in full working order, and the trustee in that sequestration was duly vested with the bankrupts' estate. But before the last interlocutor mentioned, the present action was raised, and the proposal of the pursuer of it is to set aside all these deliverances of the Sheriff, and the minutes of meeting upon which they proceed. And the ground on which he proposes to do this is, that the minutes, which set forth that the defender the said Alexander Downie had been elected trustee on said sequestrated estates, were not in truth the minutes of the meeting held for the purpose of such election, the true minutes of such meeting being those which bore that Mr Mackay had been elected trustee. Now, the Sheriff has rejected these latter and preferred Mr Downie to the trusteeship. The question before us is, therefore, whether this action is maintainable at all? I am clear in my own mind that it is quite incompetent. The deliverance of the Sheriff declaring a party to be duly elected trustee is by the 71st section of the Act of 1856 made final, and that in very strong and distinct terms. Whenever, therefore, the Sheriff, acting under that statute, declares a person elected trustee, and does nothing in that deliverance except what it was competent for him to do, no appeal lies from him in any form to any court whatever. But it is said that this deliverance was not within the competency of the Sheriff, because there was no proper competition before him, and no proper question of personal objection, and it is contended that the only questions on which the Sheriff's deliverance is final are questions of competition and personal qualification of the trusteeelect. Now, I can find no such limitation in the statute. On the contrary, I think the Sheriff has
Page: 20↓
It is a totally different thing when it can be alleged that the Sheriff is not deciding something within the competency of his own jurisdiction. It may be added that the present action of reduction comes in questionable shape and at a questionable time. For the matter is allowed to go beyond the mere election of the trustee; the Sheriff is allowed to go on and complete the title of the trustee, and set the sequestration going in full working order, and then this proceeding is brought, truly to reverse the original decision as to the trustee's election. I am quite satisfied therefore that the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor should be adhered to.
Solicitors: Agent for the Pursuer— James Barton, S.S.C.
Agent for the Defender— John Auld, W.S.