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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> John Hope of Hopeton v George Young and The Earl of Winton. [1679] 3 Brn 495 (00 January 1679) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1679/Brn030495-0744.html Cite as: [1679] 3 Brn 495 |
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[1679] 3 Brn 495
Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by SIR JOHN LAUDER OF FOUNTAINHALL
Subject_2 SUMMER SESSION.
1679, 1680, and 1684 .John Hope of Hopeton
v.
George Young and The Earl of Winton
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See the prior part of this case, Dictionary, page 15,718.
1679. February 26.—John Hope of Hopeton pursues a declarator of fraud and circumvention against the Earl of Winton and George Young, for reducing the said George his rental and prorogation of some lands in Winchburgh. (Vide 17th July 1678.) Alleged,—You Hopeton can never quarrel this, because you have taken the disposition with the burden of this right of George Young's, and have expressly excepted it, that it shall not be leisome for you to quarrel it upon any ground, but only not payment of the tack-duty.
Replied,—The reason of that was, because the Earl alleged he would be liable in warrandice to George if it were not excepted. Now this was a circumvention; for the rental was to my Lord's own behoof.
This being reported, the Lords repelled the reason of reduction, in respect of the clause in græmio of Hopeton's own disposition.
Then Hopeton gave in a bill, craving my Lord's oath, and of the communers at the bargain, on this,—if he did allow Hopeton to quarrel that rental, providing the warrandice should not recur against him; and that it was not a true date, and was not then delivered.
The Lords ordained the Earl to depone thereon, in presence of the communers if they pleased; which he did before Sir John Dalrymplc, Sir Walter Seton, Mr Archibald Hope, and Doctor Livingston, and denied it: which being advised, the Lords assoilyied from the reduction.
Some Lords were of opinion, that, being a circumstantial circumvention, it was both just and necessary the Lords should have examined the communers; but the Lords dispensed with this, (which in other cases they would have done,) from their deference to my Lord Winton.
1680. February 24,—In Hopeton's suspension against the Earl of Winton, (26th Feb. 1679;) the Lords found, that Hopeton having bought Winchburgh, &c, by a rental, and at the tail of it having declared himself satisfied therewith, he could not now retain of the price either upon the account that he offered to prove that some acres were twice charged, or that there were some called 14 acres, which after measure would not be 10, seeing in these cases caveat emptor, and he may gain as much upon the measure of other acres. And they would not burden the Earl to prove they were commonly holden and reputed so many acres.
1684. January 24.—The Laird of Hopeton's case against George Young in Winchburgh, being reported by Kemnay, the Lords adhered to their former interlocutor, dated the 17th July 1678, finding the duty contained in the rental
and prorogation to be for both stock and teind; the defender proving his use of payment, and the Earl of Winton's receiving of that duty.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting