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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Roderick Macleod of Cadboll, v George Mackenzie of Inchcoulter. [1725] Mor 15905 (10 February 1725) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1725/Mor3615905-043.html Cite as: [1725] Mor 15905 |
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[1725] Mor 15905
Subject_1 TERM LEGAL AND CONVENTIONAL.
Date: Roderick Macleod of Cadboll,
v.
George Mackenzie of Inchcoulter
10 February 1725
Case No.No. 43.
Found that a party who survived the legal term of Martinmas, although not the conventional term of payment, had been liable for the half year's rent.
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The Earl of Cromarty, with a view to the more easy payment of his debts, in January 1718, set a tack of his lands and baronies of Strathpeffer, Aird, and others, to Æneas Macleod of Cadboll and the defender conjunctly and severally, for the space of nine years,, commencing from Whitsunday 1718, for a certain tack-duty payable for the crop 1718 at Candlemas 1720, and so forth yearly during, their possession: The tack contained. this provision, “That in case of the decease of either of the said tacksmen, the tack was to subsist in the person of the svrvivor, the party deceasing being only liable for such years of the tack-duty as should be run during his life; and if both the tacksmen should die within the years of the tack, the same was to expire and become void.”
Cadboll died 20th December 1719, and Inchcouter took upon him to intromit with and dispose of the victual of crop 1719, upon which Cadboll's son and executor pursued Inchcoulter to account for the profits of the crop 1719, his father having survived both the legal terms of that year, which regulates the interests of temporary rights ceasing by death, as was found in the case betwixt Trotter, a liferenter, and Rochead an executrix, 12th January, 1681, No. 33. p. 16899.
It was answered for Inchcoulter: That Cadboll having died before the term of payment of the tack-duty, viz. Candlemas 1721, for crop 1719, as well as the term of payment of the tenants' rents, which being mostly victual, were only payable between Yule and Candlemas 1720, his representatives could have no share or interest in the rents of the crop 1719, especially seeing Inchcoulter had all the trouble of receiving and selling the victual; and as to the case between a life-renter and executor, it was very different from the present between two tacksmen.
The Lords found, That Cadboll having survived Martinmas 1719, the legal term for payment of the rents by the tenants, he was liable for his share of the tack-duty that year; and therefore found the defender liable for the half of the profits for that year.
Act. Ja. Graham, senior. Alt. Jo. Forbes. Reporter, Lord Cullen. Clerk, Macknzie.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting