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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Patrick Calder of Redford, and William Anderson, Surgeon v. Mary Provan [1744] UKHL 1_Paton_359 (12 January 1744) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1744/1_Paton_359.html Cite as: [1744] UKHL 1_Paton_359 |
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Page: 359↓
(1744) 1 Paton 359
REPORTS OF CASES ON APPEAL FROM SCOTLAND.
No. 70.
Subject_Pactum Illicitum. — Bill of Exchange.—
Action sustained upon a gratuitous bill which had been granted by a man in security of a promise of marriage, the marriage not having taken place.
Subject_Costs.—
£40, given to Respondent.
[Elchies voce Bill of Exchange, No. 25; Rem. Dec. II. No. 30; C. Home, No. 193; Mor. Dict. 9511.]
Mary Provan raised an action against Calder and Anderson, concluding for restitution and payment of a bill for L.100, which had been granted to her
Page: 360↓
The Lord Ordinary allowed a joint proof, from which it appeared, that Calder, being in a public house in company with some other persons, and considerably intoxicated, conversed much with Mary Provan, (the servant maid,) expressing a great fondness for her; that in the course of the evening they retired together into another apartment, where they remained shut up for about an hour, (but it was not pretended that any unlawful intercourse passed between them); that Provan afterwards came into the room where the company were, and shewed them a paper, which she said was given her by Calder for promising to marry him, or (according to one witness) as a proof of the sincerity of his intention to marry her; but Anderson, and another person, upon examining it, told her it was a bad bill; and then she carried it back to Calder, who wrote and delivered to her another bill, which they told her was a good bill, for L.100, payable at Whitsunday then next; that at Anderson's desire she wrote her name upon the back of it, and left it in his hands upon his promising to be answerable for it, or to pay her the L.100, &c.
Page: 361↓
The Lord Ordinary (8th July, 1741) found “that there is no evidence that any sinister method was used by the pursuer to obtain the bill in debate, nor that the same was granted in the way of a joke or drunken frolic; and finds it proven, that the same having been granted after a long conversation between the pursuer and Calder, and after a former bill, which was objected to as void, was, as is presumed, retired, and the bill now pursued on granted in place thereof, the bill is to be presumed to be the result of a lawful transaction between the pursuer and defender Calder; and finds this is supported by the declaration the pursuer made of the cause of granting the bill, as mentioned in the evidence adduced, and therefore finds that the same was binding upon him, the said Calder; and finds it proven that the defender Anderson did receive the bill upon the sole account of the pursuer, and that he did wrong in delivering the same up to Calder; and therefore repels the defence that the bill was gratuitous, and finds the defenders conjunctly and severally liable for the sum of L.100 Sterling, and annual rent thereof, from the term of payment.”
This interlocutor was altered by the Court, who sustained the defences, and assoilzied; but upon advising another reclaiming petition, (23d July, 1721) they again altered, and decerned in favour of the pursuer, and to this judgment they afterwards adhered.
Entered, 25 Jan. 1743.
The appeal was brought from the interlocutors of 8 July 1741, 23 and 31 July 1742, and 7 January 1743.
Pleaded for the Appellants:—It is apparent from the whole circumstances of the case, that the
Page: 362↓
But supposing the bill to have been obtained by her seriously, still she cannot be entitled to recover upon it in a court of justice. It is admitted that it was given gratuitously; and when it is considered that it was so given by a drunk man to the servant girl in a public house, whom he never saw before, the circumvention must be obvious. That there was any consideration ex turpi causa, is not pretended; but if there was, it would only make the respondent's case worse; for all securities obtained by women of that sort, even though deliberately, and from men knowing what they do, are in courts of equity set aside.
Pleaded for the Respondent:—It cannot be held that the bill in question was obtained by any unfair practices on the part of the respondent, whose character was perfectly unblemished. On the contrary, the whole transaction was a scheme on the part of the appellants to inveigle and delude the respondent, whom they have treated in the most fraudulent manner.
Bills granted either in consideration of secret services, or in recompence for a breach of a
Page: 363↓
Judgment, 12 January, 1744.
After hearing counsel, “it is ordered and adjudged, &c. that the several interlocutors complained of be, and the same are hereby affirmed; and it is further ordered, that the appellants do pay, or cause to be paid to the respondent, the sum of L.40, for her costs in respect of the said appeal.”
Counsel: For Appellants,
R. Craigie,
W. Murray.
For Respondent,
Will. Hamilton,
C. Erskine.