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Cite as: [1838] CS 16_1038

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SCOTTISH_Court_of_Session_Shaw

Page: 1038

016SS1038

Fyffe

v.

Fergusson

No. 182

Court of Session

1st Division

May 25 1838

Ld. Fullerton. B, Lord President, Lord Mackenzie, Lord Corehouse, Lord Gillies,

David Fyffe, and Mrs Eliza Fyfee or Kerr (Fyffe's Executors'),     Pursuers.— Counsel:
D. F. Hope.
John Hutchinson Fergusson     Defender.— Counsel:
Marshall.

Subject_Foreign—Accounting—Interest—Exchange—Partnership.— Headnote:

A mercantile company, established at Calcutta, who held the funds of F in their hands, rendered an account which embraced a long term of bypast years, and was balanced annually on 30th April, coming down to 30th April, 1810; in that account they, at the close of each year, debited themselves with Indian interest, and carried forward the balance, composed of principal and interest (under deduction of one per cent for commission), as one sum bearing Indian interest in the next year; the balance thereby exhibited against the company was 17, 346 sicca rupees; a docquet was subjoined, to the effect that the balance was to bear interest at nine per cent; a letter from one of the partners accompanied the account, and acknowledged the same balance; about 20 years afterwards, the representatives of F, now deceased, raised action against a partner of the company, who had for above 10 years been retired from the company, and living in Great Britain; the company had, in the mean-time, been dissolved: Held, that the defender was liable for the sum of 17, 346 sicca rupees, converted at the rate of exchange current in Calcutta, by the latest accounts, together with interest at nine per cent, accumulated annually at the same rate, from 30th April, 1810, to the date of citation; and that this rate of interest was not affected either by the circumstance of the defender's, retiring from the company, or coming to reside in Great Britain, or the dissolution of the company; that he was liable for interest on the accumulated balance, also at nine per cent, from the date of citation to the date of final decree, and for interest, at the British legal rate, on the accumulated balance, from the date of final decree until payment; but that he was entitled to deduction from the annual accumulations of interest, of one per cent for commission, and farther, to deduction of the necessary expense of remitting the money to this country.


Facts:

The late Dr Charles Fyffe, surgeon, H. E. I. C. S., had an account with the Company of Fergusson and Fairlie, afterwards Fairlie, Reid, and Co., of Calcutta, which continued from 1786 to 1793, when Dr Fyffe became affected with insanity. The account was balanced annually on 30th April; and in 1793, the balance in his favour, in account with the Company, was 4207 sicca rupees. In 1793, John Hutchison Fergusson, of Trochrigg and Monkwood, became a partner of the Company. On 30th April, 1795, one of the partners withdrew, another partner was assumed, and the business was carried on by the new Company under the firm of Fairlie, Gilmore, and Co. On 30th April, 1810, another change of some of the partners took place, and the new Company carried on the business under the firm of Fairlie, Fergusson, and Co., till 30th April, 1818, when a similar change occurred, and the new firm was Fergusson, Clark, and Co., which continued till 30th April, 1820. At that date, John Hutchinson Fergusson, who had been a partner of all the firms since 1793, retired, and the business was subsequently carried on under the firm of Fergusson and Co.

Dr Fyffe died on May 9, 1810. In 1812, James Fyffe, residing in Glasgow, a near relation of his, applied to the late William Fairlie, one of the partners of Fairlie, Fergusson, and Co., and of the previous firms, for a state of the account of Dr Fyffe with the Company. James Fyffe alleged that he received an answer, dated March 23, 1812, stating—“I beg that you will inform the relations of Mr Charles Fyffe, that the balance of his account, with Messrs Fairlie, Fergusson, and Company, upon the 30th of April, 1810, was sicca rupees 17,346.5. They will continue to advise me how this balance may stand with them. The interest of money has fallen greatly in Bengal, and seven per cent is now the highest rate which is allowed.” This letter was not produced, and Fergusson did not admit it. On July 5, Fairlie. furnished a state of the account of Dr Fyffe, which had been obtained from India, and was made up from the Company's books. He at the same time wrote to James Fyffe—“I now enclose you Mr Charles Fyffe's account from its commencement, which I received some time ago from Calcutta; the balance, on the 30th April, 1810, was rupees 17, 346.5, chiefly arising, you will observe, from the high rate of interest allowed upon it.” It did not appear that the death of Dr Fyffe was, at this time, known to any of the parties.

The account went back to 1786, and was stated on the footing of annually accumulating the interest with the principal, and carrying forward the joint amount as a capital bearing interest in next year's account. This was done under deduction of one per cent per annum, in name of commission. The same mode of making up the account was continued after the period of Dr Fyffe's insanity, as before it; but the whole details of the account came then to consist merely of an annual accumulation of interest with principal, as no operations were made on it by any party for Dr Fyffe. The rate of interest for several years after the period of Dr Fyffe's insanity was nine per cent; but from 1799, till the last entry of the account in 1810, the rate was ten per cent. The account stopped at 30th April, 1810. The account bore a docquet in these terms:—“To balance in his favour with Fairlie, Fergusson, and Company, to bear interest at nine per cent per annum, sicca rupees 17, 346, 5.” The whole was signed by the firm of Fairlie, Fergusson, and Company.

In 1833, David Fyffe of Smithfield, and Mrs Fyffe or Kerr, who were decerned executors-dative qua next of kin of the deceased Dr Fyffe, and alleged they were also interested under a holograph will left by him, raised an action against John Hutchinson Fergusson, as a partner of the firm of Fairlie, Fergusson, and Co., and liable for their obligations. The summons, as amended, concluded for payment of the balance stated as due by that firm in the above account, the same being converted into a sum of money, “sterling, at such rate of conversion as should be determined in the course of the process; “together with interest at the rate of nine per cent on the foresaid sum from 30th April, 1810, till paid.” The defender alleged that the word “nine,” as denoting the rate of interest in the docquet at the account, was written on an erasure, and could make no faith; and independently of this, he pleaded inter alia, that there was no sufficient evidence of the debt being due by Fairlie, Fergusson, and Co.; that the debt being illiquid, it was necessary to call the representatives of all the partners of that firm 1 before the action could proceed against the defender; and that the debt, if it had even been due, was cut off by the English statute of limitations. To these pleas the pursuers answered, that the docqueted account, signed by Fairlie, Fergusson, and Co., and the relative letter by a partner of the firm, amounted to an actual liquidation, and written constitution of the debt, and proved Fairlie, Fergusson, and Co. to be directly bound for the amount; that, the debt being constituted, it was not necessary to call any other partner or his representatives; 2 and that the English statute of limitations did not apply.

_________________ Footnote _________________

1 A. v. B., Feb. 26, 1741 (14560)—Reid, June 11, 1814 (F. C.)—Geddes, June 2, 1827 (ante V. 747; or 697, new ed.)—Dewar, Feb. 23, 1831 (ante IX, 487).

2 Stark on Partnership, 229, 230, and authorities there referred to.

The Lord Ordinary, on November 26, 1835, “repelled the defences; found that the pursuers are entitled to the sum of 17, 346.5 sicca rupees, contained in the docqueted account of the 1st of May, 1810, converted, at the present rate of exchange, into sterling money, with interest at the rate of nine per cent on said sum of sicca rupees, as so converted, from the 30th day of April, 1810, till decree; and decerned for the same accordingly, with the legal interest on the sum so decerned for, until payment; and ordained the pursuers, within fourteen days, to give in a state of their claim, made up in terms of this interlocutor; and found the pursuers entitled to expenses.”

In the state which was given in, under this interlocutor, the pursuers, who stated the debt due at 30th April, 1810, at little more than £1700, now claimed a sum of £15,732, as having arisen out of annual accumulations of interest, which they alleged to be allowed according to the practice in such accounts, as was exemplified in this account itself from the commencement of it in 1786. The defenders not only denied the practice, as to such an account as the present, but pleaded that both the summons and the record were so prepared as to embrace no conclusion or plea except for simple interest, and to contain no averment as to practice.

The Lord Ordinary, “in respect that the interlocutor of the 26th of November last, decerned for the interest only, without accumulations, and that it is incompetent for the Lord Ordinary to alter that interlocutor; refused the claim so made, and appointed the state to be rectified accordingly.” *

_________________ Footnote _________________

* “ Note.—The summons in this case was amended in regard to the article of interest, and as so amended, it concludes for interest at nine per cent from the date of the docqueted account, without any mention of accumulations. The condescendence neither claims accumulations from that date, nor does it aver the facts, such as the practice of India, &c., on which, as it now appears, the claim rests. Nothing was said on the point at the debate. The Lord Ordinary, in pronouncing the interlocutor on avizandum, certainly intended to confine the deceraiture to the interest, without accumulations; and the state was ordered only for the purpose of enabling the parties to adjust the rate of exchange, by which the sum in sterling money was to be finally ascertained. Indeed, as the interlocutor was originally written out, blanks were left for the rate of exchange, and the special sums to be decerned for, without any order for a ‘state.’ In these circumstances, and whatever may be the competency in the general case of enforcing such a claim under a summons, and a record framed like the present, of which the Lord Ordinary, notwithstanding the cases referred to, entertains great doubt, he holds himself to be absolutely foreclosed by his own interlocutor, construed agreeably to the meaning which he intended it to bear, from entertaining any further question on the subject.”

The defender reclaimed against the first of these interlocutors, and the pursuers reclaimed against them both, in so far as refusing to allow annual accumulations of interest. The pursuers also raised a supplementary summons, which expressly concluded for a balance, computed on the principle of annual accumulations of interest. This action was reported to the Court. A case was then allowed to be laid before English counsel, whose opinion instructed, inter alia, that the English statute of limitations did not, in the circumstances, apply; and that the account and docquet, signed by Fairlie, Fergusson, and Co., together with the letter of William Fairlie, dated July 5, were sufficient to establish, by the law of England, “that the firm of Fairlie, Fergusson, and Co., became directly bound to Dr Fyffe, and his representatives, to pay to them the debt therein mentioned.”

The Court afterwards “conjoined the original and supplementary actions, and appointed mutual cases to be prepared on the points not embraced in the opinion of English counsel.”

In these cases, the chief point argued related to the accumulation of interest. The pursuers stated they were not aware of the death of Dr Fyffe until recently before raising their action. The defender stated that the firm of Fairlie, Fergusson, and Co. were not aware of Dr Fyffe's death, and had no occasion to be so.

In the case for the pursuers, they referred to various decisions as being completely in point, 1 and as containing evidence of the practice of allowing accumulated interest.

_________________ Footnote _________________

1 Palmer and Co.'s Assignees, January 24, 1835 (ante XIII., 309), and Session papers in said case, Minutes for Pursuer, p. 13; for defender, p. 15 and 19—Keble, July 21, 1820 (4 W. and S., Appeals, 166).

The defender pleaded (1.) that the present case was different from any of those referred to. Dr Fyffe died on May 9, 1810, a few days after the firm of Fairlie, Fergusson, and Co. was formed. His account had ceased to be an operative or current account from the date of his insanity in 1793. Whatever might be the practice as to current accounts, where an annual balance was necessarily struck, which, of course, included interest, the case was different where there was merely a dead balance allowed to lie in the hands of a Company. In these circumstances, the intimation contained in the docquet, which was added to the account ending 30th April, 1810, should be viewed as tantamount to a statement that the balance there set forth should in future bear simple interest, just as if a bond of corroboration had, of that date, been granted by the Company. 1

_________________ Footnote _________________

1 Wilkinson, June 28, 1821 (ante I., 90; or 91, new ed.)—Maxwell, Hislop, and Co., June 16, 1824 (2 Shaw's Appeals, 451)—Keble, July 21, 1820 (4 W. and S., Appeals, 166.)

This view was strengthened by the circumstance, that although the account was rendered by William Fairlie as late as 5th July, 1812, it did not contain any accumulation of interest subsequent to 30th April, 1810, nor did the communication of the parties then refer to any such accumulation. (2.) At least the rate of interest, so far as allowed on accumulations of interest, should not be so high as nine per cent, but should only be at the fluctuating rate of the Indian market for the time, which was lower. (3.) The word “nine” in the docquet, stating the rate of interest to be “nine per cent,” was written on an erasure; and although that docquet was intended to state a fixed rate of interest, it was some rate lower than nine, such as seven or five; as the market rate subsequently fell as low as these, and it appeared from the alleged letter of William Fairlie, dated 23d March, 1812, and quoted by the pursuers, that interest had then fallen greatly, and “seven per cent is now the highest rate which is allowed.” But whatever word might originally have been there, the word nine, which was there, was written on an erasure; it could make no faith, but must be held pro non scripto, and the common market-rate of Indian interest, as it fluctuated from time to time since the date of the docquet, was all that should be allowed. (4.) That, separatim, when the defender withdrew from the company of Fergusson, Clark, and Company, in 1820, he had quitted India, and had since lived in Great Britain. From that date, therefore, the debt, if due by him, was not an Indian debt, bearing Indian interest, but a British debt, bearing British interest. (5.) The debt should bear only British interest from the date of citation in the present action: at least all accumulation of interest should cease from that date.

The pursuers answered (1.) that the cases referred to were parallel with the present. In particular, the circumstance that the account had not been actively operated on, did not affect the question, as it had ceased to be so from 1793, and yet the account was regularly carried down by Fairley, Fergusson, and Company, and the previous firms to 30th April, 1810, accumulating interest annually. And although no accumulation was stated of a subsequent date, when the account was rendered on 5th July, 1812, that was because the account had been sent from India before the 30th April, 1811, had arrived, as appeared from the copy of the letter of Fairley of 23d March, 1812, which was founded on by the defender, if it could be at all regarded, as that letter stated that he had then received the account. (2.) The same rate of interest ought to be allowed on the accumulations of interest, as on any other part of the account. If accumulation was allowed at all, it necessarily amalgamated past interest and l principal into one capital, all bearing interest alike. This was according to the practice; and in the previous statement of this same account by the defender's firm, that principle had been adopted. (3.) The erasure in the word “nine” was not admitted; and the account (the pursuers alleged) was in the same state as when it was rendered;—but the effect of the erasure was not material, even if there was an erasure. In particular, as the market rate, down to the date when that account ended, was never lower than nine per cent, no lower figure could have been intended to stand there. (4.) The defender's removal to this country did not liberate him from his obligations, or modify them. (5.) The rate of interest must continue to be nine per cent till the date of decree in this action; but it was admitted that farther accumulation of interest must cease from the date of citation.

It was agreed by the parties that the just expense of remitting the balance to this country was to be deducted by the defender, in terms of the case of Keble, in settling with the pursuers.

When the consideration of the cause was resumed, the pursuers urged, viva voce, at the bar, that as the defender must have had an opportunity of ascertaining the state of the whole company books in India, as to this account, since the action was raised, he should have been ready to condescend on what rate of interest was meant to be inserted in the docquet in place of “nine,” if there had been any different rate, and also whether the account had ever been made up at a lower rate than nine per cent since 1810.

Lord President.—The account rendered by the firm of Fairlie, Fergusson, and Company, to 30th April, 1810, was meant to be a final account, and it concluded by the express statement, “To balance in his favour with Fairlie, Fergusson, and Company, to bear interest at nine per cent per annum, sicca rupees, 17,346,” The defender now alleges that the word was not “nine” per cent, but he admits that the intention was to state some fixed rate, and he does not specify what the rate is which should be read in place of “nine.” On looking at the account, which goes back through a long term of years, I perceive that, though the rate of interest was often higher than nine, it never was lower. And I see no ground for holding that a lower rate should be read in that docquet. As for the docquet itself, I look on it just as if a bond had been granted for the amount there stated. And I am of opinion, though I at one time felt doubt on the subject, that the same rate of nine per cent should be allowed on accumulations of interest, as on the rest of the sum due.

Lord Mackenzie.—I concur. As to the effect of the erasure, there is no allegation that the docquet is a forgery altogether. It is not disputed that it was intended to fix a specific rate of interest. But in these circumstances, if the defender says it was not nine per cent, he should at least have been able to tell what rate it was to fix. He was absolutely bound to condescend on some rate. It might have been higher than nine, as well as lower. Therefore, although there is something like an erasure where the word nine is written (which rather appears, however, to be in the same handwriting), I see no sufficient ground to proceed on any other footing than that the rate is validly stated in the docquet to be nine per cent. And if it were to be held that this was to be treated as a common erasure, I am not sure that we should be safe in dealing with it, which is an erasure in an Indian account, just as we would have done in regard to an erasure in a similar document in Scotland. I think we should have required farther information as to the effect of such an erasure. As it is, I consider that we must deal with the docquet as stating a rate of nine per cent; and I think the effect of it was to maintain the interest permanently at that rate all along.

The next question is, whether there should be annual accumulations of interest. On that point I am unable to get over the previous cases, finding that such accumulations must take place on Indian debts. It is not perhaps so dear, that the same rate should be held due on the accumulations of interest. But I incline to think that it must be allowed, in reference to the practice; and although, at first sight, it appears to be a case of great hardship to subject a party in so high a rate of interest, as in this case, the hardship may not be so great in reality, because the high rate of interest is allowed just in consequence of the great profit which can be made by the use of the money.

Lord Corehouse.—Had it been alleged that the entire docquet was improbative, as being erased and vitiated, I should have proposed that the opinion of English counsel be taken on the subject. But no such allegation is made. The defender only says it is improbative as to the rate of interest, while he admits that it was intended to fix a permanent and specific rate. Had there been any averment on the record, that, at the date of that document, the ordinary rate of interest was lower than nine per cent, I should have proposed to allow a proof of it. But there is no such averment. It is only said that the rate of interest afterwards fell. That is quite an immaterial circumstance in determining what was the rate specified in the docquet at the time. When the rate of interest did fall, if the Company, who were acting as the bankers of Dr Fyffe and his representatives, had notified to them to call up their money, or take a lower rate of interest, the Company would have thereby got the benefit of the fall in interest, unless the money had been taken out of their hands. But no such notice was given, and the rate of interest which was fixed by the docquet continued the same. As to the point of accumulations, that would have been more difficult, had it not been fixed by previous decisions. But I think the point is fixed, and that there must be annual accumulation. Had there been any specific averment made, that, in practice, the rate of interest on accumulations was different from the rate allowed on the principal sum, it would have been material. But there is neither proof nor averment of this. Therefore I think interest must be allowed at the same rate of nine per cent on accumulations. The case of the pursuers appears to me to be sufficiently made out; and although there may be hardship suffered by the defender, in consequence of the heavy amount which has been run up by these annual accumulations of Indian interest, it could not have occurred but for the fault of the defender himself, or his firm, in allowing the account to run up as they did.

Lord Gillies.—I concur in the opinions which have been delivered.

The parties agreed that, in regard to the cost of remittance, the same rule should be adopted as was laid down in the case of Keble.

The Court pronounced this interlocutor:—“Find that the pursuers are entitled to the sum of £17, 346, 5s. sicca rupees, being the balance due on the docqueted account, converted at the rate of exchange current in Calcutta, by the latest accounts, together with interest on the said sum so converted, at the rate of nine per cent per annum, and accumulated annually at the same rate from the 30th day of April, 1810, to the date of citation in this action; and with interest on the accumulated balance, at the aforesaid rate, from the date of citation to the date of final decree; and interest on the accumulated balance from the date of final decree until payment, at the legal rate of interest; Find, that the defender is entitled to deduction, from the annual accumulations of interest, of one per cent for commission; and that he is further entitled to deduction of the necessary expense of remitting the money from India to this country; Find neither party entitled to expenses in this process: And alter the Lord Ordinary's interlocutors of 26th November and 15th December, 1835, and repel the whole defences so far as at variance, or inconsistent, with the above findings, and decern.”

Solicitors: Pearson and Robertson, W.S.— Hunter, Campbell, and Co., W.S.—Agents.

SS 16 SS 1038 1838


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