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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1837/016SS0289.html
Cite as: [1837] CS 16_289

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SCOTTISH_Court_of_Session_Shaw

Page: 289

016SS0289

Clason

v.

Campbell

No. 69.

Court of Session

2d Division

Dec. 21 1837

Ld. Moncreiff., Lord Glenlee, Lord Justice-Clerk, Lord Medwyn, Lord Meadowbank .

Andrew ClasonW. S.,     Pursuer.— Counsel:
Wood.
John Campbell, and Others,     Defenders.— Counsel:
A. M'Neill.

Subject_Citation — Process. — Headnote:

Objection of no process sustained to an action of wakening and transference against different parties, all the other defenders not being specially named and designed in the execution of citation returned against the objector.


Facts:

Andrew Clason, W. S. raised an action of wakening and transference against John Campbell, late of Craignure, and other parties. The pursuer, Clason, and the defender, Campbell, were both sufficiently named and designed in the execution of citation returned against Campbell; but a number of the other defenders called by the summons were not named and designed at all in this execution, which was not indorsed on the summons, but written on a separate sheet of paper, only connected with it by stitching.

Campbell, in defence, objected to the action,—No process, in respect the parties thereto are not designed in terms of law in the execution of citation. 1

The Lord Ordinary sustained this preliminary defence, adding to his interlocutor the note subjoined. *

_________________ Footnote _________________

1 1 Act 1672, c. 6.

* “It is certainly with much reluctance that the Lord Ordinary pronounces this interlocutor; but looking to the terms of the Act 1672, c. 6, and the decisions in the case of Stewart, 1January 13, 1831; Creichtons, 2November 16, 1832; and Collier, 3June 3, 1834, especially the two last, he thinks that he has no alternative. The statute is imperative, that ‘all executions of summonses shall expressly bear the names and designations of the parties, pursuers and defenders, and that it shall not be sufficient that the same do relate generally to the summons, otherwise the execution shall not be sustained,’—and although a relaxation has been admitted where the execution is written wholly or partly on the same paper with the summons, the decisions have settled the point, that if any execution he written entirely on a sheet separate from the summons, and only connected with it by stitching, it cannot be sustained, unless it names and designs the parties. The only question, therefore, in the present case is, whether the execution does bear expressly the ‘names and designations of the parties, pursuers and defenders.’ The Lord Ordinary is of opinion that the pursuer, Mr Andrew Clason, is sufficiently named and designed, and that the reference to the summons does not hurt this. He further thinks that the only defender objecting, Mr Campbell, late of Craignure, is also sufficiently named and designed. But the point of difficulty is, that in the execution against him, a number of the other defenders called by the summons are not named and designed at all. The Lord Ordinary is afraid that this cannot be held to be a compliance with the statute, the object being to let the party cited know precisely what the summons is, and who are the parties to it, on which he is cited to appear. It is said that there is practice in conformity to the course here adopted. But the Lord Ordinary does not think that he can safely proceed on that, against so positive a statutory rule.”

1 Ante, IX. 261.

2 Ante, XI. 30.

3 Ante, XII. 674.

The pursuer reclaimed, contending that no objection lay to the execution in question on the act 1672, c. 6, and that it was the practice, and sufficient in law, to name and design only those defenders against whom the executions were returned. He also referred to the case of Donaldson, 1 Nov. 29, 1750, where, in an action of exhibition, an objection of no process, in respect that the execution against the objector did not contain the names of the other defenders, was repelled.

_________________ Footnote _________________

1 Kilkerran, p. 169 (3746).

Lord Glenlee.—I am inclined to think the interlocutor right, and am confirmed in this by the decision quoted in favour of the other idea. That was a case of an exhibition pursued against different parties who had no necessary connexion with each other, and the process could have gone on against one, and not against the others. The reporter, Lord Kilkerran, says—“The act 1672 requires that the execution should contain the names and designations of all the defenders; and where parties, pursuers or defenders, are so connected that the process cannot proceed if any one of them be wanting, as, for example, in reductions of elections of burghs, it has been found a nullity in the execution that any of the parties’ names were omitted to be expressed in it; but that in every case where more parties are called in one summons, the execution should be void for not bearing the names and designations of all the parties, has no foundation in the statute, in practice, or the reason of the thing, which in no case can he more apparent than in that of a common exhibition.” This seems to point out clearly that, unless it be made out that the process could proceed against the one defender while the others are awanting, all the defenders must be specially named and designed in the execution returned against him. So, in the present case, the Lord Ordinary says in his note, that the omitting to name and design the other defenders is not a compliance with the statute, “the object being to let the party cited know precisely what the summons is, and who are the parties to it, on which he is cited to appear.” And after all, the statutory provision is not so absurd, for if a man is permitted to form a judgment as to who the parties are who are called to appear, he may consider whether he himself shall appear or not. Upon the whole, I think it safer to adhere to the judgment, that there is no process competently before the Court; and really the calamity is not very great, for it is easy to mention in an execution the names of all the defenders.

Lord Justice-Clerk concurred.

Lord Medwyn acquiesced.

Lord Meadowbank was absent.

The Court accordingly adhered, finding additional expenses due.

Solicitors: A. Clason, W. S. — Campbell. and Tait, W. S. — Agents.

SS 16 SS 289 1837


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