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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Thomas Crawford v Town of Edinburgh. [1666] Mor 3410 (31 July 1666) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1666/Mor0803410-007.html Cite as: [1666] Mor 3410 |
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[1666] Mor 3410
Subject_1 DECLARATOR.
Subject_2 SECT. II. Gift of Ultimus Hæres, and of Bastardy.
Date: Thomas Crawford
v.
Town of Edinburgh
31 July 1666
Case No.No 7.
Found as above.
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Thomas Crawford, having gift of ultimus hæres of a person, to whom the Town of Edinburgh was debtor, pursues for payment thereof. The defender alleged no process, till the gift were declared. The pursuer answered, no necessity of a declarator in this case, more than in a gift of recognition and ward, and that there was no person that could be particularly cited.
‘The Lords found the defence relevant, that this gift behoved to be declared albeit it were but upon a citation generally against all and sundry at the market cross.’
*** Newbyth reports the same case: Thomas Crawford having obtained a gift of ultimus hæres of one Oliphant, pursues the Town of Edinburgh, as they who were debtors to the defunct in the sum of 2400 merks, for payment thereof. It was alleged for the Town, no process for payment of the money to the pursuer upon this gift, because it was not declared. To this it was answered, no necessity of a declarator of a gift of ultimus hæres quoad mobiles and sums of money; 1mo, Because the Kind's right, as last heir, is founded super jura coronæ, and that the King, upon the decease of any person, dying without agnate or cognate, may, brevi manu, intromit with the moveables belonging to the defunct, and is only liable to restore si verus hæres appareat; and such gift cannot be declared otherways nor by pursuits againt the defunct's creditors by payment; for the defunct having no relations of blood, there can be no person competent to be called, against whom the declarator can be intented. The Lords found there was a necessity of a declarator, and therefore found no process.
*** Dirleton also reports this case: A donatar, by a gift of ultimus hæres, having pursued for a moveable debt due to the defunct, the pursuit was not sustained, because the gift was not declared.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting