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Cite as: [1838] CS 16_1065b

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SCOTTISH_Court_of_Session_Shaw

Page: 1065

016SS1065b

Wallace

v.

Robertson

No. 190.

Court of Session

1st Division

May. 31 1838

Jury Cause. Lord Corehouse, Lord Gillies, Lord Mackenzie, Lord President, Lord Gillies.

George Wallace,     Pursuer.— Counsel:
Robertson—G. G. Bell.
Alexander Robertson and Others,     Defenders.— Counsel:
D. F. Hope— Thomson.
Robert Gray and Others,     Defenders.— Counsel:
More.

Subject_Jury Trial—Church—Contract—Proof.— Headnote:

1. The Judge presiding at a jury trial, interpreted a final interlocutor in the cause, so as to exclude certain grounds of liability which ought, by a just interpretation, to have gone to the jury; a verdict being found for the defenders, a bill of exceptions by the pursuer was allowed, and a new trial granted, but no expenses were awarded. 2. Opinions delivered, respecting the liability which is incurred by Members of a dissenting Congregation, for the expenses of erecting a Chapel under a contract with or for the congregation, whether such persons be admitted “Members,” according to all the ecclesiastical rules of their own body, or not. 3. A pursuer tendered as a witness a party standing on the record as a defender, against whom he held a decree in absence; he offered to discharge the witness of all claim at his instance; the witness was rejected as inadmissible, and an exception against that judgment was disallowed.


Facts:

Sequel of the case reported ante, XIV. 205, 541, and 720, which see. George Wallace, wright and builder in Portobello, raised an action for payment of an alleged balance due to him for the price of erecting a chapel, and executing repairs on a temporary meeting-house at Portobello. The missives of agreement founded on by Wallace were exchanged between him and the “Committee of management of the Portobello United Associate Secession Congregation.” The action was directed against a numerous body, comprising the members of the committee—their alleged constituents—the alleged members of the congregation, the hearers, communicants, &c. In making up a record, Wallace averred, in Art. 1. “That, about the beginning of the year 1824, it was resolved by a number of the inhabitants of the village of Portobello and its vicinity, to take measures for forming a society or congregation, in connexion with the United Associate or Burgher Secession, and also for procuring a clergyman, and erecting a chapel or meeting-house for the use and accommodation of said proposed congregation.” The answers to this article stated, inter alia, that “the present congregation was formed, because it was understood that they could be accommodated with the chapel, on the usual terms of paying seat-rents, and affording any other voluntary support that might be convenient.” Wallace stated, in Art. 2, that “the said society or congregation was formed or constituted by the mutual consent of the persons agreeing to become members thereof, who were likewise congregated or united by two clergymen of their own sect, Dr Jamieson and Mr Brown.” The answers admitted, “that such a congregation was formed as here mentioned.” After the record was closed, an interlocutor was pronounced on March 11, 1831, by the Lord Ordinary (Corehouse), which was allowed to become final, and which was prefixed, as follows, to the subjoined issues which went to trial before a jury.

“It being found by an interlocutor of Lord Corehouse, dated 11th March, 1831, ‘That all the members of the committee of management of the Portobello United Associate Secession congregation, from the period when the pursuer was employed to fit up the temporary meetinghouse, or who became members of the committee between that period and the time when the new chapel was taken possession of by the congregation—and all persons who were not merely hearers or communicants in the meeting-house, or the chapel, but were members of the said United Associate Secession congregation during the said period—are liable to the pursuer in payment of the work, duly and properly executed by him in terms of his agreements or contracts with the committee.’

“1st, Whether, in the year 1824 and 1825, the pursuer was employed to erect, and did erect, a chapel at Portobello, in the county of Edinburgh, for the United Associate Secession congregation, at the price of £1733, to be paid by instalments; and whether the defenders, or any of them, are indebted and resting-owing to the pursuer in the sum of £388, as the balance of the expense of erecting the said chapel, and of the sum of £46, 6s. 4 1 2d. for extra work, or any part of the said sums, with interest on the said sum or sums.

“2d, Whether, in the year 1824, the pursuer was employed to fit up, and did fit up, a temporary place of worship for the congregation aforesaid; and whether the defenders, or any of them, are indebted and resting-owing to the pursuer in the sum of £11, 3s. 4d., or any part thereof, with interest thereon, as the expense of fitting up the said place.”

At the trial, Wallace tendered as a witness, Alexander Brown, vintner, Portobello, who was described as the clerk to the congregation, and the keeper of their minutes. Brown had been called as a defender, and decree bad been obtained in absence against him. The defenders objected that he was inadmissible, being a defender on the record, and there being a decree against him. The pursuer offered “to discharge Brown of all claim he had against him.” The Lord President, who tried the case, found Brown to be inadmissible, and Wallace took an exception against the judgment.

In the course of the trial, Wallace led evidence to prove that the defenders were “members” of the said congregation, including minutes of proceedings relative to the business of the chapel, at meetings which were attended by some of the defenders; a call to the minister of the congregation, subscribed by some of the defenders, which, in the preamble, specially set forth the subscribers as “members” of the said congregation, &c. The defenders, on the other hand, led evidence to prove that, according to the rules of the Secession Church, it was necessary for them to be disjoined from one congregation, by a regular “certificate of disjunction,” before they could become “members” of a new congregation; and that, according to this and other rules of their church, they were not proper ecclesiastical members of the congregation in question. They maintained, that, according to the true interpretation of the interlocutor of March 11, 1831, which was now final, they were therefore to be held exempted from liability. The Lord President, in charging the jury, delivered a direction in point of law, which was thus stated in the subsequent bill of exceptions: “that, under the said interlocutor of the said Lord Corehouse, it was necessary for the pursuer, in order to establish his case as against all and each of the defenders, to prove that they respectively were, within the period mentioned in the said interlocutor, members of the foresaid congregation, duly and regularly admitted, according to the form and rules of the Secession Church, of which the said congregation formed a part. And further, that if the jury believed it to have been proved in point of fact, on the part of certain of the defenders, that they were members of another congregation during the time aforesaid, and could not, according to the ecclesiastical rules of the foresaid Secession Church, be ecclesiastically constituted members of the said congregation of Portobello, until they were loosed and released from the other congregation of which they were members, then that the said Jury was bound to hold in point of law, that persons so ecclesiastically disqualified from being members of the congregation in question, could not, under the sound and just construction of the said interlocutor of Lord Corehouse, Ordinary, be held as members of the said congregation civilly responsible to the pursuer, and liable under the said issues.”

A verdict was found for the defenders, and Wallace presented a bill of exceptions, 1st, against the rejection of Brown's evidence, and 2d, against the direction above quoted, and, on this subject Wallace, as stated in the bill of exceptions, “did maintain that the pursuer was not bound to establish that the foresaid defenders had been duly admitted members of the said congregation, according to the rules of the said Secession Church; and that any ecclesiastical irregularity in the admission of, or ecclesiastical disqualification affecting all or any of the defenders as members foresaid, did not relieve them from their civil responsibility to the pursuer, and was insufficient in law to deprive him of the benefit of a verdict under the said issues against such defenders.”

Parties were first heard under the bill of exceptions, before Lord Corehouse came into the Inner House. The case then stood over, and, after his Lordship became one of the Judges of the Inner House, one counsel on each side was again heard. On this latter occasion, the argument was confined entirely to the second exception. The following opinions were then delivered.

Lord Corehouse.—The only question now is, what is the true import of the interlocutor pronounced by me in March, 1831. That is a final interlocutor. It must receive effect according to its genuine import, as it stands; and it is immaterial to refer to the views by which I was influenced in pronouncing it, excepting to the limited effect of thence deriving such aid as they may be legitimately fitted to give, towards a correct construction of its terms. It is only to that limited effect that I shall now make use of them. The case was that of an action by a builder for the balance remaining due, of the price of a chapel erected by him. It was fully pleaded before me in the Outer House. There were various classes of defenders, in various situations. First, there were the committee of management who had contracted for the building, and it appeared to me that their only relevant defence was an allegation that the contract had not been duly fulfilled, and that the Chapel had not been made a sufficient building. That defence of course involved a proof. But, in the second place, there was another class of defenders, not members of the committee, but their constituents. These were the individuals who had collected together with a view to form a Congregation, and have a Chapel; who voted in the nomination of the committee of management, and homologated the proceedings of the committee. These individuals appeared to roe to be just as liable as the members of the committee themselves. The pursuer, however, carried his claim much farther than these two classes of persons. He maintained that there were many others of the defenders who had sat at the Communion table within the Chapel, and who had got the benefit of stated religious ordinances there; and that all the hearers, or communicants, were liable. I thought that this was going too far. In the Church of Scotland it is well known that when a sacrament is dispensed within a parish, individuals often assemble from various quarters, and if they bring testimonials with them, or are personally known, they will obtain tokens, and be admitted to the Communion table. It appeared to me that the mere participation in religious ordinances, or being admitted as communicants within the Chapel in question, afforded no ground for subjecting parties civilly in the cost of its erection. There was still a fourth class of defenders, who took a seat in the Chapel for a month, or for six months perhaps, such, for instance, as an inhabitant of Portobello who might find himself not strong enough to go to his parish church at Duddingston, and who took a seat in the Chapel that he might there hear the gospel preached. I thought that neither the circumstance of his taking a seat, or attending the Chapel, was any sufficient ground for subjecting him in the cost of its erection.

In regard to the description of the defenders as given on the record, it will be observed that the pursuer, in the first article of his condescendence states that, “about the beginning of the year 1824, it was resolved by a number of the inhabitants of the village of Portobello and its vicinity, to take measures for forming a society or congregation, in connexion with the United Associate or Burgher Secession, and also for procuring a clergyman, and erecting a Chapel or meeting-house for the use and accommodation of said proposed congregation.” As to the members of that “society or congregation,” which was formed for the purposes there specified, I thought that they were liable, including the committee of management and their constituents. The fact whether an individual was, or was not, one of the constituency of the committee, was a fact which evidently might be ascertained and proved in various ways. I did not, at the time, inquire whether persons were admitted ecclesiastically as members of the congregation, but only as members, or constituents of the “society or congregation” above referred to. The interlocutor accordingly does not express any thing about ecclesiastical members. If a man who was an Episcopalian, for example, was either a member of the committee of management, or was one of the constituents of that committee, I should undoubtedly have held him liable, though he was no ecclesiastical member of the congregation. Who, then, were the constituents of the Committee ? Those who, as set forth in the article which I have quoted, “took measures for forming a society or congregation,” one of the objects of which was to have the Chapel erected. In regard to the latter part of my interlocutor, my object was to exclude from liability those who were mere hearers or communicants. I never thought of going through the form of inquiry whether individuals were admitted members of the congregation, according to all the ecclesiastical forms of the Secession Church, as if these should affect this question of civil liability. In using the phrase “members of the said United Associate Congregation,” I merely adopted the title which they had taken for themselves. If any one was a member of the civil association, or “society” formed for the purpose of building the Chapel, then he was liable; but he was not so, by merely being a hearer or communicant. And that was what my interlocutor, in the latter branch of it, was intended to express. In the condescendence the terms society and congregation, with reference to the purpose of erecting the Chapel, were used as synonymous, or convertible with each other. There was nothing pleaded before me, as to the distinction between them, or as to the distinction between members who were admitted according to the ecclesiastical rules of the body, to be members of the congregation in a strict ecclesiastical sense, and persons who might, to all civil effects, be members of the society for building the Chapel, and yet not regularly admitted members of the congregation, according to their own ecclesiastical rules. Had any such distinction been pointed at, I should at once have said that there was nothing but a civil interest before the Court, and that strict ecclesiastical membership was not the question.

But it remains to be inquired whether the interlocutor, framed in reference to the record and pleadings to which I have adverted, has been so expressed as to be incompatible with the views which I have now stated. In the first branch of it, that interlocutor finds that “all the members of the committee of management of the Portobello United Associate Secession Congregation, from the period when the pursuer was employed to lit up the temporary meeting-house, or who became members of the committee between that period, and the time when the new chapel was taken possession of by the congregation” were liable. Nothing is said there, whether the members of committee were regular ecclesiastical members of the congregation or not. The second branch of the interlocutor finds, “that all persons who were not merely hearers, or communicants in the meeting-house or the chapel, but were members of the said United Associate Secession Congregation during the said period,” were liable. How far then does this go in support of the charge excepted against ? It excludes mere hearers or communicants from liability; but neither its express words, nor its genuine import, exclude those who were neither hearers, nor communicants, if nevertheless evidence was led to instruct liability against them on other grounds. Suppose that an individual was neither a hearer nor a communicant, but had contracted liability on other grounds, such, for instance, as by signing a paper expressly empowering the committee to subscribe a contract with the pursuer, such an individual would be clearly liable. He would be liable equally whether he was a hearer and communicant or not, his liability being quite independent of that circumstance. And it seems to me that it is only by putting a strained interpretation on the interlocutor, which is not warranted either by its words or its meaning, that any opposite view can be at all supported. And, in the same manner, I consider, in the present case, that as to the defenders who pleaded exemption from liability, in respect they were not regular ecclesiastical members of the congregation, the pursuer was entitled to adduce all facts and circumstances against them, tending to instruct their liability on other grounds. Whether there is sufficient proof against the defenders, to imply their liability or not, is not the question here. The question is whether the interlocutor of March 1831, in fair construction, excludes the ground of liability of a party's having been associated with those who authorized the building—his having been a member of the Civil Association, described in Art. I., already referred to, as “a Society or Congregation,” of which one of the main objects was there stated to be, to get a chapel erected “for the proposed congregation.” I do not hold such person to be excluded from liability. The association or society was entered into before the congregation was actually formed; but a third party was not to be affected by that circumstance, as he knew nothing of the ecclesiastical rules of the religious body to which the congregation belonged. I think, therefore, that the second exception which has been taken ought to be allowed unless the interlocutor of March, 1831, is to be subjected to a more narrow construction than appears to me to be necessary, although I am sensible that it has been so framed as to create, at least at first sight, a difficulty in disposing of this question.

Lord Gillies.—I think the question, which has been raised, is attended with great difficulty, but, after full consideration, I concur in holding that the second exception should be allowed. I see that in the Call which was addressed to the minister of this congregation, the subscribers expressly designed themselves “members” of the congregation. That is one of the circumstances in the case which strikes me very forcibly. Is a party who has subscribed the Call, and expressly designed himself “member” of the congregation, to be afterwards allowed to plead that he had not been admitted a member according to all the ecclesiastical rules of the United Associate Secession Church; and, therefore, that a tradesman who contracted with him on the faith of his being a member of the congregation, is to be cut off from a claim which would have otherwise been good against him ? Though he may never have obtained his “certificate of disjunction” from another congregation of which he previously was a member, yet if he did ostensibly, and de facto disjoin himself from it, by attending regularly as a member of the new congregation, and positively designing himself a member of it, a third party was not bound to know whether he was ecclesiastically and regularly a member of the new congregation or not.

Lord Mackenzie.—I have felt much doubt and difficulty in forming my opinion in this case; but I have come to the conclusion that the second exception ought to be allowed. I hold the law to be, that when a chapel is built by contract with, or for, a congregation, the contract binds all who then are acting as members of the congregation, and enjoying the privileges of members. It is not limited to those alone who, according to strict sectarian accuracy, may be the regular ecclesiastical members. The public do not know, and are not bound to know, the private laws of the sect; and after a contract has been made with or for the congregation, the third party so contracting is not to be stopped in his action under the contract, by a disclosure of the laws of the sect, and a proof that any, or it may be all, of the defenders were not, according to such laws, regular ecclesiastical members of the congregation. In truth, the opposite rule admits very obviously of the reductio ad absurdum, because an error might have been committed in the admission of members which affected the entire congregation, ecclesiastically speaking; and thus the result would be, that a third party who built a chapel for a congregation, and under a contract with the congregation, might be told that he had got nobody at all for his debtor, because there was not one member in the whole congregation who had been admitted with strict sectarian propriety. I hold that all who acted as members of the congregation, with and for whom the contract was made while they were so acting, were liable. Holding that to be the law, I am of opinion that the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary does not decide any point contrary to it. It certainly does not expressly do so; and there would be no safety in holding that it impliedly does so. It does find that persons who were not mere hearers or communicants, but who were “members” of the congregation, were liable; but it does not find that all persons who were not admitted members with perfect ecclesiastical correctness, are free. I regard the finding in the same light as if it had declared that all the partners of a certain company were liable; but such a finding would not free a defender, in a question with a third party, if he had been acting as a partner, and enjoying the privileges of a partner, though he could prove that, according to the private rules of the company themselves, he had not been regularly admitted. If a defender is to be held an actual member, he must be liable, though he may not have been admitted with the strictest sectarian propriety. I am of opinion that the second “exception” ought to be allowed.

His Lordship was understood to add, that, even if the interlocutor of March, 1831, were to be otherwise construed, still the terms of the issues as to restingowing were general, and the Judge presiding at the trial would have been warranted in allowing any ground of liability to go to the Jury, which was fairly within the case, and not barred by surprise.

Lord President.—From the opinions now expressed by the Court, the second exception must be allowed, and a new trial must be granted. But it should be kept in view that the interlocutor prefixed to the issues required to be read just as if it were recited and engrossed in both and each of them; so that any grounds of liability, which, according to the just construction of that interlocutor, were shut out of the case, could not be allowed to go to the Jury. But the Court now holds, that, according to its just construction, there were grounds of liability which I, adopting a different construction, had held to be excluded, and therefore a new trial must be granted.

Dean of Faculty for Defenders.—The Court will observe the law that is laid down in the Bill of Exceptions as that which should have been stated to the Jury. I trust it is not understood that the Court mean to sanction the law so stated.

Lord Gillies.—If the opinions which have been delivered by the majority of the Court are correct, I do not perceive that there is any thing objectionable in that statement of the law.

The Court then allowed the second exception, but found no expenses due. Their Lordships, at the same time, disallowed the first exception.

Solicitors: Ferrie and Jamieson, W.S.— W. A. G. and A. Ellis, W.S.— Hotchkis and Meiklejohn, W.S.—Agents.

SS 16 SS 1065 1838


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