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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 >> Earl of Mansfield - Shadwel - Murray v. James Wright, Esq. - Warre - Abercromby [1824] UKHL 2_Shaw_104 (17 March 1824) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1824/2_Shaw_104.html Cite as: [1824] UKHL 2_Shaw_104 |
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Page: 104↓
(1824) 2 Shaw 104
CASES DECIDED IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS, ON APPEAL FROM THE COURTS OF SCOTLAND, 1824.
2 d Division.
No. 14.
Subject_Churchyard — Sepulchre. —
A clergyman and one of his sons having been buried in a spot adjacent to, and in front of, the parish church, where the minister had his burial-place; and the church having been transported to another part of the parish; and the area, with the burial-place, having been excambed and conveyed to one of the heritors, who included them in his pleasure-grounds;—Held, (affirming the judgment of the Court of Session), That a son of the clergyman was entitled to insist on having the graves protected by a fence; and that he and the other near relations were entitled to visit the graves at all proper times.
Prior to 1784 the parish-church of Scone stood on the Moot-Hill, near the old palace or abbey of Scone. The churchyard was placed at the distance of 200 or 300 yards from it; but the minister of the parish had his burial-ground close by the church itself. In the above year the appellant's predecessor, David Viscount of Stormont, being desirous to extend his pleasure-grounds, and include within them the Moot-Hill, and to remove the church and churchyard, applied to the Presbytery of Perth for authority to do so, and to rebuild a new church in a more convenient situation. This was agreed to by the Presbytery; and an excambion was executed, whereby the area on which the church stood was exchanged for a piece of ground belonging to Lord Stormont, on which the new church was to be built; but it did not appear that any excambion was made in regard to the churchyard, which accordingly remained as formerly. In consequence of this arrangement a new church was built, and around it there was a piece of ground enclosed by a wall, which, it was alleged by the appellant, was the property of Lord Stormont. In 1793 the Rev. Mr Hunter, the then clergyman of the parish, died, and was buried in this piece of ground, and in front of the new church. He was succeeded by the Rev. John Wright, whose son Charles having died in 1794, was buried, as a member of the clergyman's family, in the same piece of ground; and Mr Wright himself having also died about the end of the same year, was buried close by his son.
In 1804 the appellant, who had succeeded Lord Stormont, applied to the Presbytery for authority to remove the new church to another part of the parish, which was granted, and confirmed by a decree of the Court of Teinds. This decree, however, gave no authority to interfere with the churchyard, or any burial-place.
Page: 105↓
In the meanwhile, the family of Mr Wright had removed to Edinburgh; but the respondent, his son, having visited Scone in 1817, and finding the graves of his father and brother unprotected, requested to be allowed to erect a fence around them, so as to prevent them from being intruded upon, and stated, that he conceived that he had a right to visit these graves at any time he thought fit. The appellant declined to allow the graves to be fenced round, but offered to place grave-stones or slabs upon them, and to grant permission to the respondent, or any of the family, to visit them, on leave being first asked. This, however, not being satisfactory to the respondent, he presented a petition to the Sheriff of Perthshire, in which he prayed him “to ordain his Lordship to rebuild the walls of the churchyard of Scone, in which the petitioner's father and brother were buried, and to restore the churchyard, with the gate and necessary access, in all respects, to the state and situation in which they were in the year 1794; or otherwise to grant warrant to, and authorize the petitioner, at his own expense, to erect and build an enclosure, with a gate in it, around the two graves of his late father and brother; and to ordain Lord Mansfield to give at all times free and open access thereto.” Answers having been lodged, the sheriff-depute pronounced this interlocutor:—
“Finds, that in the year 1794, when the church was removed from its then site, an excambion took place under the sanction of the Presbytery, by which a portion of the grass glebe belonging to the minister was conveyed to the Earl's father, the Viscount of Stormont, for the purpose of erecting a new church, and making a new churchyard, fit to accommodate the parish: Finds it admitted by the Earl, that though the old churchyard remains as the burying-ground for the parish, that in the ground surrounding the new church some persons were interred, and, amongst others, that the Rev. Mr Wright and his son were interred in that ground in the year 1795; but finds it not alleged that a purchase was made from the heritors of any part of this ground as the burying-ground, or that it was enclosed with a wall or rail, or in any way
Page: 106↓
separate from the rest of the burying-ground: Finds, that although every person dying within any parish is entitled to be buried within the churchyard belonging to the parish, yet this confers no right on the relations of the deceased to enclose the ground, or appropriate it exclusively to the use of the body so interred; but the interest of relations in that case extends no further than to see that the churchyard shall not be applied to any ordinary use: Finds, that the petitioner, as not being resident within the parish, neither claims, nor has a title to claim, any right to bury in the said burying-ground: Finds, in the year 1804 the church of Scone was again, by a decree of the Commissioners of Teinds, removed to its present situation; and that the ground around the former church, used as a burying-ground, occupied by the bodies of the Rev. Mr Wright and his son, and included in the respondent's policy, was protected from cattle, and never appropriated to tillage: Finds it averred by the Earl, and not denied by the petitioner, that the former offered to the petitioner to allow him, even at this distance of time, to cover the graves of his father and brother with slab-stones: Finds, under these circumstances, the application was unnecessary; therefore dismisses the petition, assoilzies the defender, and decerns.”
The respondent having then brought an advocation, the Lord Ordinary remitted “to the sheriff, with this instruction, that he ordain the Earl of Mansfield, at sight of the sheriff, to enclose with a stone fence or railing, as may be agreed upon, the ground in which the remains of the late Mr Wright and his son are deposited, and to allow the relations of the deceased access to such enclosure.” The appellant having represented, his Lordship adhered, “with this explanation, that access is to be allowed to the enclosed spot at all reasonable times, and on notice, if required, being given to the servants of the Earl, or others to whom the charge of the pleasure-ground may be intrusted by him. Against these judgments the appellant reclaimed to the Inner-House; and when the case came to be advised, there was a difference in the statements at the Bar as to the number of persons who had been interred in the churchyard erected in 1784. But
The Lord Justice-Clerk, on consulting with the other Judges, stated, that it was sufficient for the Court, without inquiring more minutely into the fact, to know, that the Rev. Mr Hunter, and the Rev. Mr Wright and his son, were interred in that churchyard.
Page: 107↓
The Lord Justice-Clerk stated, That when the petition was moved in May 1819, he gave his reasons for refusing it without an answer; but some of their Lordships then thought, that as it was a new and interesting case, it should receive a more solemn consideration.
Page: 108↓
Page: 109↓
Their Lordships, therefore, on the 8th of June 1820, adhered, and found the appellant liable in expenses. *
The appellant then entered an appeal to the House of Lords, and maintained,—
1. That as the ground in which the graves were situated belonged in property to him, and as they were situated in a place where they were as little liable to be intruded upon as in any churchyard, and as he had offered to cover them with grave-stones or slabs, the respondent was not entitled to insist on having them enclosed and fenced round. And,
2. That if the ground was to be regarded as a burial-place or churchyard, then it was incumbent, not upon the appellant, but upon the whole heritors of the parish, to erect that enclosure; and that, in the prayer of the respondent's own petition, he had offered to make it, whereas the appellant had been ordained to do so by the judgments of the Court of Session.
On the other hand, it was pleaded by the respondent, —
That from time immemorial the clergymen of the parish, and their families, had been buried close to the church, and not in the ordinary churchyard, which was at a distance from the church; —that accordingly Mr Hunter, and the respondent's father and brother, were so buried, and therefore the ground was to be regarded as a proper burial-place, and as such it had been enclosed, but the wall had been taken down by the appellant;—that such being the case, the respondent had a right to see the ground protected in the same manner as any other churchyard, so that the remains of his relations might not be disturbed, which would not be accomplished by covering the graves with slab-stones; and that he ought not to be impeded in having access to the graves.
The House of Lords “ordered and adjudged that the appeal be dismissed, and the interlocutors complained of affirmed.”
The
_________________ Footnote _________________
* Not reported.
Page: 110↓
Appellant's Authorities.—1597, ch.232.; Heinec. Instit. 1. 2. t. 1. § 323.; 1. Craig, 15. 11.; Lithgow, Jan. 15. 1697, (9637.); 2. Ersk. 1. 8.; Spence, Dec. 1. 1808, (F. C.); Connel on Parishes, 167. 179.
Respondent's Authorities.—1. Craig, 15. 2.; 2. Bank. 8. 184.; 1. Bank. 3. 12.; 2. Ersk. 1. 8.
Solicitors: Spottiswoode and Robertson— J. Campbell, —Solicitors.
(Ap. Ca. No. 19. )