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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Anderson's Trustees v. James Donaldson & Co., Ltd (in Liquidation) [1907] ScotLR 26 (26 October 1907)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1907/45SLR0026.html
Cite as: [1907] SLR 26, [1907] ScotLR 26

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 26

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Saturday, October 26. 1907.

[ Lord Mackenzie, Ordinary.

45 SLR 26

Anderson's Trustees

v.

James Donaldson & Company, Limited (in Liquidation).

Subject_1Company
Subject_2Winding up by Order of the Court
Subject_3Superior's Action of Sequestration for Feu-Duty
Subject_4Preference — Companies Act 1862 (25 and 26 Vict. c. 89), secs. 163 and 87.
Facts:

The Companies Act 1862, sec. 163, enacts—“Where any company is being wound up by the Court or subject to the supervision of the Court, any attachment, sequestration, distress, or execution put in force against the estate or effects of the company

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after the commencement of the winding-up shall be void to all intents.”

Held that an action of sequestration of moveables for arrears of feu-duty at the instance of a superior against his vassal, a company in liquidation, was not an “attachment, sequestration, distress, or execution” within the meaning of the section, and might consequently proceed though raised after the commencement of the winding-up.

Athole Hydropathic Company, Limited in Liquidation v. Scottish Provincial Assurance Company, March 19, 1886, 13 R. 818, 23 S.L.R. 570, followed; Allan v. Cowan, November 15, 1892, 20 R. 36, 30 S.L.R. 114, distinguished.

Headnote:

The Companies Act 1862, section 87, enacts—“When an order has been made for winding up a company under this Act, no suit, action, or other proceeding shall be proceeded with or commenced against the company except with the leave of the Court, and subject to such terms as the Court may impose.”

Section 163 is given in the rubric.

The trustees of the late James Anderson, in the liquidation of James Donaldson & Company, Limited, presented a note, under section 87 of the Companies Act 1862, craving the Court to grant them leave to proceed with and prosecute to judgment an action of sequestration of the moveables upon a certain piece of ground of which they were the superiors and James Donaldson & Company the vassals, the ground of the action being the refusal of the liquidator to pay the feu-duty.

The presenters of the note stated, inter alia—“Upon 1st June 1907 an order was pronounced by the Court for winding up James Donaldson & Company, Limited, registered and incorporated under the Companies Acts, and having its registered office at No. 157 Great Junction Street, Leith, and appointing J. Maxtone Graham, Chartered Accountant, Edinburgh, as liquidator. Upon 4th June 1907 the compearers raised an action of sequestration in the Sheriff Court at Edinburgh against, inter alios, the said James Donaldson & Company, Limited, in liquidation, praying for sequestration of the whole moveables on … [ the ground described], … and the Sheriff having on 4th June 1907 granted warrant to cite and sequestrated, the petition and deliverance thereon were duly served on 5th June 1907, and the moveables were of that date inventoried by the sheriff officer. The present liquidator had not extracted his appointment at that date, and the petition was not served upon him, but it was served upon William Home Cook, Chartered Accountant, Edinburgh, the former liquidator. The compearers are the superiors of the area of ground referred to, and as the liquidator declines to pay the half-year's feu-duty of £107, 10s., due at Whitsunday last, and to give security for the current year's feu-duty of £215, it is necessary, in order to give effect to the superiors' hypothec upon the moveables on the ground, to proceed with the said sequestration. At the time when said action was raised the compearers did not know whether the limited company claimed any interest in the goods attached, but in a letter by the liquidator's agents to the compearers' agents on 12th June 1907 the present liquidator expressly claimed that the whole goods attached are the property of the company.”

Answers were lodged for the company and liquidator.

On 25th July 1907 the Lord Ordinary on the Bills ( Mackenzie) pronounced an interlocutor refusing the prayer of the note.

The trustees of the late James Anderson reclaimed, and argued—The Lord Ordinary's interlocutor should be recalled, and leave to proceed with the action granted. Admittedly if it fell under section 163, leave could not be granted under section 87 (although upon this point the Courts in England had taken a different view)— Allan v. Cowan, November 15, 1892, 20 R. 36, 30 S.L.R. 114; Radford & Bright, Limited v. D. M. Stevenson & Company, February 20, 1904, 6 F. 429, 41 S.L.R. 330. The question therefore was, did it fall under section 163? It did not. The superior, quâ superior, had, prior to and independently of the liquidation, a preferential right of security by virtue of his infeftment—Bell's Com. vol. ii, p. 26, 27; Yuille and Others v. Lawrie & Douglas, January 24, 1823, 2 S. 155 (N.S. 140). The case of Athole Hydropathic Co., Limited, in Liquidation v. Scottish Provincial Assurance Company, March 19, 1886, 13 R. 818, 23 S.L.R. 570, decided that section 163 only applied to cases where the creditor attempted to acquire a preference not already his, and did not strike at the case of a creditor only seeking, as here, to make effectual a preference he already had. In Athole, moreover, the creditor was a heritable creditor pursuing an action of poinding who was in a less favourable position than a superior pursuing an action of sequestration for feu-duty. Athole had been followed in Holmes Oil Company in Liquidation, 8 S.L.T. 360, and the ratio of Athole had been approved and explained in Allan v. Cowan, cit. sup. There was no inconsistency between the cases of Athole and Allan v. Cowan. In the latter, the rate collector who was asking leave to proceed had no absolute antecedent preference such as a superior has for his feu-duty; he had merely a statutory preference which might come into competition with similar statutory preferences, and these preferences were therefore appropriate to be worked out as a matter of ranking in the liquidation. Further, however, and in any event, the word “sequestration” in section 163 was not applicable to a superior's action of sequestration for feu-duty—Bell's Dictionary, p. 976; Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1856, sections 3, 7, 107. The fact that in the Bankruptcy Acts certain rights and remedies of superiors and heritable creditors were expressly reserved, whereas there was no such reservation in the Companies Acts, was explained by the fact that, there being automatic vesting in the trustee in bankruptcy, such express reservation was necessary in order to save

Page: 28

those rights. There being no automatic vesting in the liquidation, no such reservation was necessary. The fact that the action had been commenced without the leave of the Court was no bar to leave being now granted— D. M. Stevenson & Company v. Radford & Bright, Limited, and Liquidator, June 4, 1902, 10 S.L.T. 82.

Argued for the respondent—The Lord Ordinary was right, and leave should be refused. The action for sequestration fell under section 163. The word “sequestration” was expressly employed in the section, and even if it could be shown that sequestration for feu-duty was not “sequestration” in the precise sense of the word as employed in the section, its language was otherwise so comprehensive as to include every kind of diligence— In re Wanzer, 1891, 1 Ch. 305. The only difficulty in the way was the case of Athole, cit. supra. But that case, even if rightly decided, was not really an adverse authority. It dealt with something different, viz., a poinding of the ground, and was not applicable to the superior's hypothec, which was not really a pre-existing and independent right of security depending wholly upon his infeftment, but a right which had to be made real by the diligence of sequestration—see Erskine, ii, 6, 56, and 62. The present action of sequestration was therefore really an attempt to obtain a new security, and was not struck at by Athole, but fell under Allan v. Cowan, cit. sup. If, however, the cases of Athole and Allan were inconsistent, the latter was to be preferred. For no good reason could be suggested for putting a heritable creditor or a superior in a more favourable position than a creditor to whose debt a preference had been given by Act of Parliament. It was further significant that whereas the Bankruptcy Act of 1856 saved the remedies of superiors and heritable creditors, the Companies Acts contained no such provisions. In any event leave to proceed should be refused, the action having been commenced in breach of section 87. The case of Stevenson, cit. sup., relied upon by the appellant in this connection, was quite different, as it did not deal with the question of diligence, which was strictissimi juris.

Judgment:

Lord Low—I am of opinion that the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary on the Bills must be recalled. I think the only question is, whether the present case is ruled by the judgment in the Athole Hydropathic case or that in the case of Allan. I think it is conceded that there is no substantial difference between the position of the creditor here and the creditor in the Athole Hydropathic case. There the creditor was an heritable creditor infeft in the lands, who was seeking, by the diligence of poinding, to make good the security which he had over the moveables upon the land. In this case the creditor is the superior, who is seeking to make good, by the diligence of sequestration, the security which he has of the moveables upon the land for arrears of feu-duty. It seems to me that for the purposes of this question the position of these two creditors was identical, because both of them had a right of security in regard to certain moveables, and in both cases what they were attempting to do was to make that right of security effectual by attaching the moveables. In the Athole Hydropathic case it was found that such a proceeding did not fall within the meaning of the 163rd section of the Companies Act of 1862. I recognise that the question raised in that case was one of very considerable difficulty, upon which different views might very well be held. But the case was fully argued in the First Division, and the judgment that was given was a considered judgment of Lord President Inglis, of Lord Shand, and of Lord Adam—a tribunal of unquestionably high authority—and the view which they took has been held to rule the law ever since its date, some twenty years ago.

It is said, however, that the more recent decision of the same division in the case of Allan really is not consistent with the view which was taken in the Athole Hydropathic case. As it happened, I was the Lord Ordinary in the case of Allan, and it seemed to me that it was ruled by the case of the Athole Hydropathic. But a different view was taken, and I am now satisfied was rightly taken, by the First Division, because the creditor in the case of Allan was the collector of the county assessments, and he founded upon a statutory provision to the effect that the debt for the assessments should be a preferable debt. I think that I was perhaps misled to some extent by the way the case had been put in the Athole Hydropathic case, when it was said that the creditor was only seeking to make effectual a preference which he already had. But, as I have indicated, when that case is examined, the ground of judgment was that he was seeking to make effectual, not a preference in the sense of having a preferable debt, but a preference in the sense of having a security for his debt. Now, in the case of Allan the creditor had no security for his debt whatever. He had merely a statutory declaration that in the event of bankruptcy his debt should be dealt with as a preferable debt. I am therefore satisfied that the First Division were quite right in holding that the case of Allan was not ruled by the previous case of the Athole Hydropathic.

I therefore think that the interlocutor reclaimed against should be recalled, and leave granted to the superior to proceed with the sequestration notwithstanding the liquidation of the debtors.

Lord Stormonth Darling—I entirely agree. I think that this case is precisely ruled by the judgment twenty years ago of the First Division in the Athole Hydropathic case.

Lord Justice-Clerk—I am of the same opinion. I must say that no two cases could be nearer to one another than the Athole case and this case. I think the one is practically the same as the other.

Page: 29

And as regards the case of Allan, it distinguishes very clearly between such a case as we have at present and the case with which the Court were then dealing. It does so absolutely, and the decision in Allan's case in no way affects the decision of the First Division in the case of the Athole Hydropathic.

Mr Constable stated a very ingenious argument to the effect that if the decision to be given in this case was to be in accordance with the case of the Athole Hydropathic, certain logical consequences would follow in other cases. I do not know whether that is so or not, nor do I think it necessarily follows. But if it be true that certain logical consequences would follow, that is a matter for the Legislature to deal with and not for this Court. Therefore although the argument of Mr Constable was very ingenious we cannot go behind the case of the Athole Hydropathic.

Lord Ardwall was not present.

The Court pronounced this interlocutor—

… “Find the sequestration at the instance of the reclaimers competent: Authorise them to proceed therewith, and decern,” &c.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Compearers— G. Watt, K.C.— C. H. Brown. Agents— W. & T. P. Manuel, W.S.

Counsel for the Respondents— Constable. Agents— Davidson & Syme, W.S.

1907


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