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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Bain v. The Countess-Dowager of Seafield [1884] ScotLR 22_41 (6 November 1884)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1884/22SLR0041.html
Cite as: [1884] SLR 22_41, [1884] ScotLR 22_41

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 41

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

[Bill Chamber.

Thursday, November 6. 1884.

22 SLR 41

Bain

v.

The Countess-Dowager of Seafield.

Subject_1Church
Subject_2Churchyard
Subject_3Mausoleum
Subject_4Burial Grounds (Scotland) Act 1855 (18 and 19 Vict. cap. 68), sec. 11.

Glebe — Churchyard, Conveyance of — Dispositive Clause — Personal Bar.
Facts:

Held that the erection of a mausoleum upon private property is not an appropriation of ground for a burial-ground, or an addition to a burial-ground, within the meaning of sec. 11 of the Act 18 and 19 Vict. cap. 68.

A presbytery, with consent of the parish minister, excambed the site of the church, the churchyard, and a portion of the glebe to the proprietor of the contiguous lands, on the narrative that they were to be conveyed with a view to their being planted and improved. No condition was inserted in the dispositive clause. The minister thereafter sought interdict against proposed operations on the portion of the glebe excambed. The Court refused the interdict craved, on the grounds that the conveyance was absolute in its terms, and that whether the conveyance by the presbytery was effectual or not, the minister was barred, in respect of his concurrence in the disposition, from objecting, in the process of interdict, to the validity of the conveyance of the portion of the glebe.

Observed, that so far as regarded the churchyard and site of the church the conveyance was quite ineffectual.

Headnote:

By deed of excambion, dated 3d, 5th, and 6th May 1882, entered into between the Earl of Sea—field and the Presbytery of Abernethy, with consent and concurrence of the Rev. James Bain, minister of the parish of Duthil in the presbytery of Abernethy and county of Inverness, on the narrative “that the said Earl of Seafield sometime ago signified to the Reverend James Bain his desire to acquire part of the lands forming the glebe of Duthil, lying to the east and north of the churchyard, and extending to about one acre and one-half of an acre, with a view to plant and improve the said ground, which is in the immediate vicinity of the burying-ground of the family of Grant, and the said Reverend James Bain had expressed his readiness, subject to the sanction of the presbytery of the bounds, and on receiving an equivalent therefor, to concede for the object in view the said parcels of ground, and also that the said Earl should at the same time acquire right to the ground occupied by the church and churchyard of the said parish, to the exclusion of the right of the said Reverend James Bain and his successors in the said cure, to graze with cattle or sheep the said churchyard,” the said presbytery, with consent of the said Reverend James Bain, disponed to the Earl of Seafield “All and Whole the following pieces of ground forming parts of the present glebe lands of Duthil, and consisting of three small parcels, the first forming the triangle between the Grantown and Carr Bridge Road, the road from Duthil Mill to Grantown, and the churchyard, and extending to two roods and two poles or thereby; the second forming a triangle, and lying between the said Grantown and Carr Bridge Road, the north wall of the churchyard, and a straight line between the said road and the churchyard, the said straight line being a continuation of the boundary of the churchyard on the west, and extending to about thirty-two poles; and the third bounded on the west by a continuation of the said straight line last mentioned, extending to the plantation fence, on the south by the said Grantown and Carr Bridge Road, and on the north and east by lands belonging to the said Earl of Seafield, and extending to three roods and thirty-nine poles or thereby; as also the ground forming the churchyard of Duthil, and the site of the parish church thereof, extending to three roods and one pole or thereby; and the land occupied by the Grantown and Carr Bridge Road so far as it traverses the said glebe of Duthil, extending to two roods ten poles or thereby, making in all three acres and four poles imperial measure or thereby, all as delineated and coloured red on the foresaid plan hereto annexed, and signed as relative hereto; together with all right, title, and interest which the said presbytery of Abernethy or the said Reverend James Bain or his successors in the said cure had, have, or any wise might claim or pretend thereto in all time coming, and specially including the right of the minister of the said parish to graze with cattle or sheep the said churchyard, which right is hereby for ever renounced and discharged, the said Earl of Seafield and his foresaids being by acceptance hereof bound to cut the grass in the said churchyard, and to keep it in the order in which it has hitherto been kept by the minister.” In return for this disposition the Earl of Seafield disponed to the presbytery a piece of ground extending to three acres and four poles imperial measure or thereby.

This was a note of suspension and interdict at the instance of the Rev. James Bain against the Countess-Dowager of Seafield, who succeeded her son in the estates of Seafield, to have the respondent interdicted from—(2) Erecting or constructing a mausoleum, family vault for burial of the dead, or any such building or erection, in or upon any part of said ground; (3) using or devoting any part or portion of the said ground for extending the area of the churchyard of the parish of Duthil; and (4) devoting the said ground, or any part or portion thereof, to any other use or purpose than that set forth in the said contract of excambion—viz., planting and so improving the same.

The complainer averred that he “only consented to the said excambion on the express condition that the portions of the ground conveyed to the Earl of Seafield should be used solely for planting and for the purpose of improving the amenity of the manse and the privacy of the churchyard;” but that since the respondent succeeded to the Seafield estates she had, “in breach of the arrangement condescended on, resolved to use the ground for building purposes, and was now cutting down trees of old standing and uprooting plants of a few years' standing in the triangle between Grantown Road and the

Page: 42

road leading to the manse called the ‘Old Mill Road,’ and bounded on the west by the churchyard wall, with a view to extend the area of the churchyard and build a mausoleum thereon.”

The complainer founded on the Statute 18 and 19 Victoria, chapter 68, entituled “An Act to amend the Laws concerning the Burial of the Dead in Scotland,” section 11 of which enacts that “any burial-ground may be provided under this Act either within or without the limits of the parish for which the same is provided, but no ground not already used as or appropriated for a cemetery shall be appropriated as a burial-ground or as an addition to a burial-ground under this Act, nearer than one hundred yards to any dwelling-house, without the consent in writing of the owner, lessee, and occupier of such dwelling-house.” He averred that the ground which the respondent proposed to devote to the extension of the area of the churchyard was within sixty yards of his manse, which was his dwelling-house, and that he had not consented to the extension; further, that the mausoleum which it was intended to build was within sixty yards of the manse; that he and his family had suffered in health from the proximity of the graveyard, and specially of the then existing mausoleum of the family of Grant, which was situated within forty yards of the manse.

The respondent pleaded—“(1) The note ought to be refused, in respect that, on a sound construction of the contract of excambion, the ground on which the respondent proposes to erect the mausoleum is her own absolute property; and, separatim, that the said erection is in no way inconsistent with the purpose for which the said ground was acquired. (2) The Burials Ground (Scotland) Act 1855 has no application to the present question, inasmuch as the respondent's operations do not involve the appropriation of ground for a burial-ground, or addition to a burial-ground, under the Act; and, separatim, the ground in question is farther from the complainer's manse than the churchyard of Duthil.”

On 4th August 1884 the Lord Ordinary on the Bills ( Lord Lee) refused the note.

The complainer reclaimed, and argued—The deed of excambion was inept, because the conveyance by the presbytery, with concurrence of the minister, was a non domino. On the narrative of the deed the improvement of the land was made a condition of the conveyance; the proposed erection of a mausoleum was a violation of that condition; and was also in contravention of section 11 of the Act 18 and 19 Vict. cap. 68, above quoted.

The respondent answered—(1) The conveyance was absolute in its terms. Moreover, the proposed erection was quite in consistence with the narrative of the deed. (2) The complainer was barred from maintaining his demand for interdict because the respondent had every title he could give her. The Burials Act of 1855 had no application, because the proposed operations did not involve the appropriation of ground for a burial—ground, or an addition to a burial-ground.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—The deed on which both parties here found is certainly a very extraordinary piece of conveyancing, but I do not desire to say more than this, that so far as regards the conveyance of the churchyard and the site of the church the deed is quite ineffectual. That part of the deed never could have any effect. How far it is otherwise open to objection I do not propose to determine. The deed is open to any challenge brought in an action of reduction, and even the minister may have a good title to insist in such an action. But that can only be done in a proper process. In the present proceeding the minister must be held bound by the deed which he has executed, so far as it is not against public law. By that deed he put into Lord Seafield's hands a portion of his glebe, including that particular portion of the glebe on which he now complains that Lady Seafield proposes to erect a mausoleum. The mausoleum is not to be erected in the churchyard, but on a portion of the glebe which was conveyed, and I can find nothing in the terms of the deed to justify our granting interdict against this proceeding. This portion of the glebe was conveyed in absolute property, and there was no restriction as to the use which was to be made of it. It is certainly said that the deed recites that the lands were to be conveyed with a view to their being planted and improved by Lord Seafield. That may have been the intention of Lord Seafield, and may also have been the expectation of the minister. But in the conveyance itself there is no such qualification, and therefore the recital cannot avail. Even if it could, I very much doubt whether it would form a good objection to what is now proposed to be done. The erection of a mausoleum upon what is said to have been a piece of waste ground appears to be of the nature of an improvement, but I do not think it is necessary to enter upon that as I think the words of conveyance exclude such an inquiry.

As regards the argument founded on the statute of 1855, I think that the respondent's second plea-in-law makes a good answer to that, and it is this—“2. The Burials Ground (Scotland) Act 1855 has no application to the present question, inasmuch as the respondent's operations do not involve the appropriation of ground for a burial-ground, or addition to a burial-ground, under the Act.” I think that is a good plea. I am therefore for adhering.

Lord Mure concurred.

Lord Shand—If the operation here complained of was the erection of a mausoleum on the ground of the old churchyard, in virtue of a right of property acquired by Lord Seafield, I should have no difficulty in holding that the complainer was entitled to interdict, for it is quite clear that the grantors of this deed could not convey any right of property to the church and churchyard, and it would not have made the conveyance any better if the heritors had concurred, for there was no proposal to substitute another church and churchyard.

But the question is quite a different one when the ground on which the erection is to be made was part of the glebe, and never was part of the churchyard. I do not say that the title to that is good; I think it may be represented to be a bad title; but it must be taken as good in a question with the minister. He was a party to the deed, and obtained advantage from it, for he held the

Page: 43

ground given in exchange since the date of the deed. I think he cannot challenge the transaction as it now stands. Moreover, if the words of the narrative were contained in the dispositive clause, and if there was a declaration that the conveyance was granted merely for the purpose of planting and improving, even then I am not satisfied that the complainer would be entitled to succeed.

There might then have been an inquiry as to the use of the ground now, as compared with the use formerly, in order to find out whether it has been improved within the meaning of the deed. But it is not necessary to give an opinion on that point, for whatever there may be in the narrative of the deed, the dispositive clause is absolute in its terms, and there is no restriction as to the use to be made of it.

On that ground alone I am clearly of opinion that we must refuse this note.

Lord Deas was absent.

The Court adhered.

Counsel:

Counsel for Complainer— Lang— M'Keehnie. Agent— H. W. Cornillon, S.S.C.

Counsel for Respondent— Mackintosh— Darling. Agents— Mackenzie, Innes, & Logan, W.S.

1884


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