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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Watson v Fleming. [1666] Mor 2817 (6 February 1666)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1666/Mor0702817-055.html
Cite as: [1666] Mor 2817

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[1666] Mor 2817      

Subject_1 COMPETITION.
Subject_2 SECT. X.

Assignation to Mails and Duties, with other Rights.

Watson
v.
Fleming

Date: 6 February 1666
Case No. No 55.

Assignation out of the first and readiest of the teinds of several lands in security and payment of a debt, was not found good against a posterior apprising of the lands and teinds.


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There being an infeftment of annualrent granted out of lands and teinds, and an assignation to the teind duties, in so far as extended to the annualrent, the teinds and lands were thereafter apprised from the common author before the annualrenter had obtained possession, by his real right, of the annualrent, but only by his assignation to the teind duties. It was alleged by the appriser, That the assignation to the teind duties could give no longer right than the property thereof remained in the cedent's person; which ceasing by the apprising, the assignation ceased therewith, as is ordinarily and unquestionably sustained in assignations to mails and duties of land. It was answered, That there was great difference betwixt lands which require infeftment to transmit the same, and teinds which require none, but are conveyable by an assignation; for, if this had been by an assignation to the tack of teinds, pro tanto, it would have been unquestionably valid; and therefore being an assignation to the teind duties, it is equivalent as a disposition to lands, which would carry the right of a reversion, though not exprest, and though there were no more to dispone but the reversion only. It was answered, That if the assignation had been to the teinds, that is to the right, or if it had been to the full teind duty in the tack, or of certain lands, then the case might have been dubious; but being not of the teind duties of any particular lands, but out of the first and readiest of the teinds of several lands, it was not habilis modus.

Which the Lords found relevant.

Fol. Dic. v. 1. p. 181. Stair, v. 1. p. 348.

The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting     


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1666/Mor0702817-055.html