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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Scot v Langton. [1669] Mor 12316 (19 June 1669) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1669/Mor2912316-083.html Cite as: [1669] Mor 12316 |
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[1669] Mor 12316
Subject_1 PROOF.
Subject_2 DIVISION I. Allegeances how relevant to be proved.
Subject_3 SECT. III. What Proof relevant to take away Writ.
Date: Scot
v.
Langton
19 June 1669
Case No.No 83.
The oaths of a superior and of the witnesses inserted in a gift of liferent, taken to ascertain that the gift was antedated and simulate.
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John Graham of Gillesby having wadset certain lands to James Langtoun, he did thereafter (with consent of Earl Annandale, superior) eik 1200 merks to the reversion, and the Earl ratified the former wadset; and Graham, with his consent, of new disponed again the lands for the sums in the first wadset and eik, and added some other clauses; the first wadset was before the act between debtor and creditor, and by virtue thereof the wadsetter was in possession; the second wadset was after the said act; the superior consented only to the second wadset, and of the same date gave a gift of Graham's liferent to Robert Scot, whereupon Robert, having obtained general declarator, pursues now special declarator for the mails and duties of the wadset lands, as failing under the liferent of Graham, the granter of the wadset. It was alleged for Langtoun the wadsetter, That he ought to be preferred to the donatar, not only for the first wadset, which was constituted before the rebellion, but for the second wadset, comprehending the eik, because the superior by his consent to the second wadset, without any reservation, had communicated all right in his person, and consequently the liferent escheat of Graham, the granter of the wadset, in the same manner as if he had given the wadsetter a gift thereof, and so no gift, not being anterior to the other, could prejudge the wadsetter. It was answered for Scot the donatar, That the allegeance is no way relevant to exclude his gift, unless the wadsetter could allege a deed denuding the superior anterior to the pursuer's gift; but here the superior's consent is not anterior, but of the same day's date, and may be posterior, and therefore the gift, which is the habilis modus, must be preferred unto the superior's consent to the wadset, which is but indirect, and consequential to infer the right of liferent; at least both must be conjoined, and have equal right, as done simul et semel. It was answered for the wadsetter, That the superior's gift must not be preferred to the consent, though of the same date, because he was then in possession of the wadset lands, and needed no declarator; and the gift is but imperfect, until a general declarator, which is the intimation thereof, no declarator being requisite to the consent of the superior to the wadsetter, and so is preferable.
The Lords preferred the wadsetter.
It was further alleged for the donatar, That the wadsetter must restrict himself to his annualrent, and be countable to him for the surplus, seeing now he makes an offer to find the wadsetter caution, and so he must either quit his
possession, or restrict conform to the act betwixt debtor and creditor. The wadsetter answered, That his second wadset bearing not only a ratification of the first wadset in all points, but a disposition of the same lands, falls not within that clause of the said act of Parliament, which regulates only wadsets prior to that act; and the new disposition makes the old wadset as extinct and innovate. The donatar answered, That there being a jus quæsitum, conform to the act, as to the former wadset, the posterior ratification cannot derogate therefrom, or take it away, unless it bad been expressed, and in meritis causæ, it was alleged that the wadsetter had near the double of his annualrent. The Lords preferred the donatar as to the surplus, more than the annualrent of the first wadset, and ordained the wadsetter to restrict.
The wadsetter further alleged, That the gift was antedated and simulate to the rebel's behoof, and so accresced to the wadsetter; which the Lords sustained, and found the simulation probable by the oath of the superior, and the witnesses inserted in the gift.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting