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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Lord Cathcart v Stewart Nicholson Shaw. [1755] Mor 15558 (31 January 1755) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1755/Mor3515558-114.html Cite as: [1755] Mor 15558 |
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[1755] Mor 15558
Subject_1 TAILZIE.
Subject_2 SECT. V. Contravention.
Date: Lord Cathcart
v.
Stewart Nicholson Shaw
31 January 1755
Case No.No. 114.
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A person having entailed his estate in his son’s contract of marriage, reserving a power to the heirs to grant feus, at the rate of a certain feu-duty for each fall of houses, &c. he himself granted a large feu, and discharged the subjects of thirlage, minister’s stipend, cess, and public burdens, irritancy ob non solutum canonem, and the duplication of the feu-duty at the entry of heirs. A declarator of irritancy being brought, it was urged in defence, That before the entail, the defender being absolute fiar, had a power to feu as he pleased. In the entail he reserved a power to feu, under a, limitation, that the feu-duty should be of a certain extent; he has observed that limitation; and his original power, in other respects, is the same as before the entail. The Lords found no irritancy incurred.
This entail reserving a power to the heir to let tacks for nineteen years, he let the tack of the rents of a Barony, many of the tenants of which had tacks for terms to run. Objected, That the reserved faculty was only meant to empower the heir to let the farms which were unlet, but not to grant a general tack of the rents. The Lords sustained the tack.
This reserved faculty, however, was found not to entitle the heir of entail to grant a tack of the mansion-house, gardens, and pleasure ground.
*** This case is No. 33. p. 15399
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting