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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Baird v Baird. [1662] Mor 12630 (9 January 1662) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1662/Mor2912630-527.html Cite as: [1662] Mor 12630 |
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[1662] Mor 12630
Subject_1 PROOF.
Subject_2 DIVISION IV. Private Deed, how far probative.
Subject_3 SECT. VI. Extrajudicial Declarations, Certificates, &c.
Date: Baird
v.
Baird
9 January 1662
Case No.No 527.
Confession to the church, and standing a year, was not found to prove adultery to infer the party's escheat.
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Baird, in St Andrews, having taken the gift of his brother's escheat, upon his adultery, pursues declarator thereupon. The defender alleged no process, till the crime were cognosced in the Criminal Court, or at least he were declared fugitive and denounced, for then by the horning his escheat would fall, but there is no law nor statute making the penalty of adultery to be the adulterer's escheat; for Queen Mary's statute anent adultery is only making notour adultery capital, but nothing as to other adulteries. The pursuer answered, That custom had made the penalty of adultery to be the single escheat; and for probation of the adultery, in this case, the defender had publicly confessed it, and had stood in sackcloth for it a year, and had taken remission from the King. The defender answered, That confession in the kirk was necessary to purge scandal, when such probation was adduced, as churchmen allowed to infer confession, which is but extrajudicialis confessio, and cannot prove ad civiles aut criminales effectus, neither can the taking of the King's remission instruct these crimes, seeing remissions are frequently taken to prevent accusations or trouble.
The Lords found the libel not relevant, and that no declarator could pass, unless the defender had compeared judicially in a criminal court, and there confessed, or had been condemned by probation, but that the confession in the church, or taking remission, was no sufficient probation.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting