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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Alexander M'Kenzie of Fairburn v Robert Clerk, Merchant, Linlithgow. [1785] Hailes 981 (4 August 1785)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1785/Hailes020981-0648.html
Cite as: [1785] Hailes 981

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[1785] Hailes 981      

Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by SIR DAVID DALRYMPLE, LORD HAILES.
Subject_2 ARRESTMENT.
Subject_3 A debt due by bond to a party resident in England, having been arrested by a creditor of that party: found, that on his obtaining decree of preference in a furthcoming, the arrestee was bound to pay without being entitled to demand delivery of the document of debt, which was beyond the jurisdiction of the Court.

Alexander M'Kenzie of Fairburn
v.
Robert Clerk, Merchant, Linlithgow

Date: 4 August 1785

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Alexander M'Kenzie was creditor to John Birtwhistle, drover at Skipton in Yorkshire, in a bill for L. 253: 10s., in security of which he arrested a debt due by bond to Birtwhistle by the defender. In a furthcoming, at the instance of the pursuer, (M'Kenzie's representative,) decree was pronounced in his favour. In a process of multiplepoinding raised by the arrester, in which the pursuer claimed to be preferred to the amount of his debt, the defender admitted the debt due by himself to Birtwhistle, but contended that he was entitled to insist that his bond should be delivered up to him before he could be compelled to pay.

The Lord Ordinary found, “That Robert Clerk is not bound to make payment of the sums in his hands, without delivery of the bond due by him, or a sufficient security that he shall not be brought to any future trouble for want of it.”

And a diligence was granted to the pursuer to enable him to recover the bond out of the hands of Birtwhistle.

In a petition against this interlocutor, the pursuer pleaded,—That having obtained decree in the furthcoming, and neither Birtwhistle nor any competitor appearing in the multiplepoinding to oppose his claim, the raiser of the multiplepoinding had neither title nor interest to oppose it: that he is in perfect safety to pay under authority of the Court, without production of the bond, which is not in the pursuer's power to produce: Birtwhistle resides beyond the jurisdiction of the Court: That, at any rate, such production is unnecessary, seeing a decree of preference in a forthcoming and multiplepoinding is a judicial assignation to the subject arrested, in favour of the arrester, to the extent of his debt. Bank. 3, 24, 52, and 4, 24; Ersk. 4, 3, 23; Campbell against Beaton, 23d November 1665.

Answered,—The arrestee would not be obliged to pay the debt to the common debtor himself without getting up the bond; and an arresting creditor can be in no better situation. An onerous assignee could not demand payment without producing the bond, and therefore, supposing the decree of furthcoming to be a judicial assignation, the petitioner must do the same. Stair, 3, 1, 24.

The Court altered the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor.

The following opinions were delivered:—

Braxfield. A decreet of furthcoming is a legal transfer. It would be hard to make the arrester produce the grounds of debt: it very often happens that he cannot do it; and it may happen that he has not a right to do it. For example, that debt in which he has an interest, may be no more than fifty pounds out of a bond for a thousand: Why find caution when a man has a clear right?

Eskgrove. When the debtor does not object, judgment passes in a furthcoming, all parties being in the field; that is a sufficient security, and the arrestee is in safety to pay.

On the 4th August 1785, “The Lords repelled the defences, and decerned;” altering the interlocutor of Lord Alva.

Act. Al. Elphinston. Alt. Adam Rolland.

The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting     


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