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SCOTTISH_Court_of_Session_Shaw

Page: 1158

016SS1158

Borthwick

v.

Hilson

No. 226

Court of Session

1st Division B

June 16 1838

Ld. Cuninghame, Lord Gillies, Lord Mackenzie, Lord Corehouse, Lord Mackenzie.

Janet Borthwick,     Pursuer.— Counsel:
A. Wood— Horn.
George Hilson (Elliot's Trustee),     Defender.— Counsel:
G. G. Bell.

Subject_Provision to Children—Bankrupt—Competition.— Headnote:

A father, at his death, left, ample effects to pay all his debts, and his provisions to his younger children; his eldest son was infeft in his heritage, consisting of a tenement of houses, and intromitted with his whole moveable estate; he eventually became insolvent, through debts of his own contracting; after the lapse of eight years from his father's death, he granted security over the above tenement to a creditor of his father whose debt (for which it was understood when contracted that heritable security should be given) was still unpaid; one of the younger children, a daughter, as creditor for her provision, challenged the security on the act 1696, c. 5: Held that the pursuer, being a legatee of her father, could not compete with the defender, who was a creditor of her father, or question a security granted to him over property descended from her father; that, in the special circumstances, it must be held that there was an implied postponement, by the father, of the pursuer's provision, to the debt, and to the security, of the defender; and, therefore, defender assoilzied.


Facts:

The late George Borthwick, merchant in Jedburgh, and the late Richard Robison, were appointed trustees under the settlement of Elizabeth and Agnes Waugh, executed in 1792, which directed them to convert the trust estate into money and to lend out and secure the proceeds for behoof of Gavin Elliot in liferent, and his heirs in fee. Borthwick and Robison accepted and acted. The trust-funds, amounting to upwards of £1100, were realized and lent on heritable security. Richard Robison having died, George Borthwick assumed James Robison into the trust in 1816. The debtors in the heritable bonds paid them up in 1817. The sum of £500 was immediately reinvested on heritable security. William Borthwick, the son of George Borthwick, and his partner in business, got possession of the remainder of the trust-funds. A state of these funds was prepared on March 3, 1818, which bore that £661, 14s, 3d, were “in William Borthwick's hands at 23d September, 1817.

“Whereof to be lent Mr John Robison on heritable security, bearing interest from 23d September,

£400 0 0

To be lent William Borthwick on ditto, bearing interest from same date,

230 0 0

In the hands of William Borthwick of interest subsequent to the 15th May, 1816, which either has or will fall to be accounted for by him to Gavin Elliot,

£661 14 3”

This state was signed by George Borthwick and James Robison, the two trustees.

The person mentioned as John Robison was a brother of James the trustee. The document containing the above state also contained, subjoined thereto, a “State between John Robison and William Borthwick, respecting the foregoing.” It purported to be an arrangement between William Borthwick and John Robison, bearing that, of the £400 to be lent to John Robison, £300 had already been advanced, and a bill was to be granted by William Borthwick for the balance. It was signed by William Borthwick and John Robison, William Borthwick retained the sum of £230, but without granting heritable security. The arrears of interest were duly paid to Gavin Elliot, and the subsequent interests were also paid.

George Borthwick, besides moveable property, possessed also a tenement of houses in Jedburgh. At the marriage of his son, William, in 1809, George Borthwick became a party to the contract of marriage, and conveyed the whole estate, heritable and moveable, that should belong to him at his death, and particularly the above tenement, to William Borthwick and his spouse, and the longest liver of the two in liferent, and to the children of the marriage; whom failing, the heirs of William Borthwick, in fee. George Borthwick farther, in the contract, appointed William Borthwick his executor, and declared him bound to pay all his debts, and also four provisions of £250 to each of his daughters. George Borthwick reserved his liferent of the whole estate, with full power of disposal, and also of altering the provisions of his daughters. He subsequently, in 1811, restricted the provision of his daughter Jenny to £200, not payable till one year after his death. He died in 1822, leaving considerable personal property besides the tenement of houses already mentioned. His estate was sufficient to have paid all his debts even if these included the £230 of trust-funds lent to William Borthwick; and also to have satisfied the provisions to his children, and to have still left a considerable surplus to William, who now took infeftment under the marriage-contract and entered on the management of the estate, and had universal intromission. The estate was, at his death, immediately tangible and available to that extent. * He proceeded to pay off his father's ordinary debts, and the provisions of the other younger children, excepting Jenny. After a few years he got into pecuniary embarrassments, and ultimately became bankrupt. James Robison, the co-trustee of George Borthwick, under the Waugh trust, died in 1822, or 1823, and no trustee was appointed in their room until 1828, when George Hilson, senior, manufacturer in Jedburgh, was appointed, apparently in virtue of powers conferred on Gavin Elliot, in the event of all the trustees deceasing. In 1830, William Borthwick granted to Hilson a bond and disposition in security of the debt of £230, already mentioned, over the tenement in Jedburgh which had belonged to his father. The deed narrated that a state of trust-funds had been made up in 1818; that John Robison held £400 of the balance of trust-funds, “for which he engaged to grant heritable security; and that I, the said William Borthwick, held £230 sterling, the remaining part of said capital, for which I also then agreed to grant heritable security; and seeing that the said sum of £230 sterling, with interest from Whitsunday last, is still resting unpaid by me, and that I have not hitherto granted the security stipulated,” &c.; therefore he now bound himself to pay £230 to Hilson, as trustee, and in security thereof granted the disposition in question.

In 1836 Jenny Borthwick, daughter of George Borthwick, alleging that she had never received payment of her provision of £200, and that

_________________ Footnote _________________

* In the Inner House, the case was expressly pleaded on this footing; and the record bore, in substance, the same thing.

William Borthwick was a bankrupt at the date of granting the security, raised a reduction of it on the act 1696, c. 5, as granted in security of a prior debt, to the prejudice of his just creditors.

Hilson, besides other defences, stated as his second plea, that as George Borthwick was “responsible for the sum secured by the disposition challenged, the pursuer, as a legatee or gratuitous creditor of George or William Borthwick, could not compete with the defender, or question any security granted for the defender's claim, over the property which descended from George Borthwick.” The defender stated as his third plea, that “George Borthwick's consent to the arrangement, and agreement under which William Borthwick granted the heritable security in question, was an implied exercise of George Borthwick's power or faculty under the contract of marriage, and the pursuer's provision being thereby postponed to the defender's claim, and heritable security provided for said debt, the pursuer cannot now compete with the defenders, or challenge their security.”

In making up a record, the pursuer alleged that there had been negligence on the part of Waugh's trust in not sooner demanding payment or security while William Borthwick was still solvent.

The defender answered, that negligence was more properly imputable to the pursuer, in not taking payment of her provision; and that as the trust had remained without a trustee in consequence of the failure of George Borthwick and his co-trustee to assume trustees, the pursuer could not found on any plea of mora against the trust-estate.

After the record was closed, the pursuer pleaded—

1. The late George Borthwick left an ample estate to meet all his debts, and liabilities, besides satisfying the provisions to younger children. William Borthwick, the eldest son, took up the whole estate, and became debtor to the pursuer, and other younger children, for their provisions. In so far as Hilson was a creditor merely of William Borthwick, the pursuer, being equally a creditor of his, was entitled to challenge the security. And the late George Borthwick was not debtor to the Waugh trust in the sum for which the security was granted. He and his co-trustee had agreed to lend that sum to William Borthwick, and had done so. William Borthwick was, therefore, the sole debtor to the Waugh trust; and though he had failed to grant heritable security during the lifetime of his father, George, still he alone had received the money, and was debtor for the amount.

2. But even if George Borthwick had been debtor to the trust-estate for the sum in question, still, after the lapse of three years from his death, the trust-estate lost all right of preference in competition with the creditor-proper of the son. By the son's infeftment in the heritage, and intromitting with the moveables, the whole estate which had been his father's became his own. In order to claim against that estate, the beneficiary under the trust must have first constituted the debt against the son, and then, as creditor of the son, have proceeded to attach the estate. To preserve any preference for such a creditor, in competition with the creditor-proper of the son, the act 1661, c. 24, was passed; but it limited the preference to three years. After the son had been for three years fully vested in the estate and effects which had been his father's, no such preference remained, and all his creditors, whether they were creditors-proper, who had never been creditors of his father, or whether they had also been creditors of his father in his lifetime, stood on an equal footing. The whole estate of the son, whether derived from his father, or otherwise acquired, formed one blended estate, upon which all his creditors, of every class, ranked pari passu. Therefore, as the pursuer must have been entitled to compete pari passu with any of the creditors-proper of William Borthwick, and these, after the three years, must have been entitled to compete pari passu with any of the creditors of the father, it necessarily followed that the pursuer must have the same right to challenge a security granted to create a preference to a creditor of the one class, as of the other. These views were supported by the case of Remington and Company, 1 Dec. 10, 1829, which applied a fortiori, as the eventual defalcation there occurred in the proper estate of the father, which, before being realized, was insolvent. The subsequent case of Bruce, 2 June 9, 1831, was no precedent of a contrary tendency, as it was there expressly stated in the note of the Lord Ordinary (Moncreiff), which was adopted by a majority of the Court, that the whole estate of the father (or its proceeds) were still extant; that the question did not arise out of the bankruptcy of the heir; that the widow and children were not creditors of the heir; and that there was no question on the act 1661. And in the case of Wallace, it did not appear that the father's estate had ever been solvent. 3

3. There was nothing in the special circumstances to support the plea that George Borthwick had bound himself that the special security over the tenement in Jedburgh should be granted; or that it was an implied condition in the provisions to younger children, that these should be postponed to the granting of the security in question. He left ample funds for payment of these provisions, and meeting all other liabilities, and was therefore entitled to consider that his younger children would become creditors of William for their provisions, and would possess every right and privilege of any other creditor-proper of William.

Pleaded by the Defender

1. George Borthwick was debtor for the sum in question, as well as his son. After uplifting the trust-funds, George and his co-trustee authorized them to be lent to the amount of £230, the sum in question,

_________________ Footnote _________________

1 Ante, VIII. 215.

2 Ante, IX. 695.

3 See Observations on Bench, in Wallace, May 16, 1821 (ante, I. 13; or I. 9, new ed.)

to William Borthwick, the son and co-partner of George, on condition of heritable security being granted for it. George, however, allowed William his son, and partner, to uplift and retain it, without granting the security, and undoubtedly became liable himself for the amount.

2. But as George Borthwick was debtor in this sum, and as part of the estate of George Borthwick was still extant, the defender had a preferable claim against it, to any which could be advanced by the pursuer, who was merely a legatee of the debtor. And this preference was inherent in the nature of their respective rights, so as not to be affected by the lapse of three years from the death of the party who was a debtor quoad the defender, but a mere gratuitous testator quoad the pursuer. These views were supported by the case of Bruce and Others, June 9, 1 1831, which expressly took away the authority of the previous case of Remington 2 and Company, December 10, 1829; and they were also supported by the case of Wallace. 3

3. In the special circumstances, as there was only one heritable subject, the tenement in Jedburgh, in which William Borthwick had any interest, and as that interest arose to him under George's disposition in the marriage-contract 1809, it must be held that it was in the contemplation of both George and William, at the date of lending the trust-funds to William, that the security stipulated from William was to be granted over that tenement. It was only specific implement of that obligation which William had ultimately made, and it could not be challenged by the child and legatee of George, who was bound to see it fulfilled. George retained, while he lived, full power to alter the provision to the pursuer; and thus it became, in the circumstances, an implied condition of her provision, that it should be postponed to the granting of that security for the debt to the Waugh trust,

The Lord Ordinary pronounced this interlocutor:—“Finds, 1mo, That the debt for which the security under reduction was granted, arose from the bankrupt, William Borthwick, having received, at or prior to 1818, from his father, George Borthwick, and James Robison, as trustees under the trust-settlement of Elizabeth and Agnes Waugh, now under the administration of the defender, the sum of £230 sterling, which sum could only have come into his (William's) hands by the prior receipt and intromission of the said George Borthwick and his co-trustee. 2do, That the trustee, the said George Borthwick, by being a party to, and subscribing the State, dated 3d March, 1818, must be held to have acknowledged and agreed, in 1818, that heritable security was to be given for the said sum by his son, the said William Borthwick. 3tio, Finds, that in March 1818, the said William Borthwick was a co-partner in trade with his father. 4 to, Finds it admitted, that the said William Borthwick

_________________ Footnote _________________

1 Ante, IX. 695.

2 Ante, VIII. 215.

3 Ante, I. 13. See also F.C.

was possessed of no other property at the date of the said State in March 1818, over which he could grant an heritable security, except the property in Jedburgh, over which the security under reduction was granted by William Borthwick in 1830, which property was then held by William Borthwick under a conveyance previously granted by his father, the said George Borthwick, as a party to his son William's contract of marriage, under reservation of his own (George's) liferent, and of a full power to alter and dispose of the subjects as specified in Article 1st of Condescendence. 5to, Finds it presumable, from the fact stated in the preceding finding, that the said George Borthwick directed, or consented that the security intended for Waugh's trust-money, was to be given by himself or his son over the very property now in question. 6to, Finds that George Borthwick, the trustee, having lived for upwards of four years subsequent to the date of the said State, without getting any heritable security prepared and completed by his son and co-partner, while he allowed the money, during all that time, to remain in that party's hands unsecured, must be held as having become personally liable to the trust-estate for the said fund, and that the same had become an onerous debt of George Borthwick's prior to his death: Therefore, and in respect that the pursuer's sole title is founded on a provision stipulated in her favour in the marriage-contract of William Borthwick, dated in 1809, to which his father, the said George Borthwick, was a party, whereby the latter obliged the said William Borthwick, after satisfying and discharging the granter's debts, to pay the pursuer (the granter's daughter) a provision of £200 at his death, but alterable and revocable by him at pleasure; and in respect that the pursuer, as a legatee under such a deed, cannot compete with, or challenge the right of the defender, as an onerous creditor of the said George Borthwick: And further, in respect that the said George Borthwick subscribed the said State, dated 3d March, 1818, Sustains the second and third pleas in defence stated for the defender, and assoilzies the defender from this action, and decerns: Finds it unnecessary, in hoc statu, to give any judgment on the other pleas: And finds the defender entitled to expenses.” *

_________________ Footnote _________________

* “ Note.—The grounds on which the preceding judgment is founded, being articulately set furth in the interlocutor, require no illustration. Of course, if the facta are in any respect misapprehended, this will affect the conclusion. Upon the supposition that George Borthwick became indebted to the Waugh trust for the defender's debt, it is thought that the preference of the defender over George Borthwick's property is clear in law, as in competition with the pursuer, a mere legatee. The pursuer, no doubt, in a very able argument, pleaded that she was an onerous creditor, at least of William Borthwick; and as the term specified in the act 1661 had long ago elapsed, she was entitled to rank pari passu with the creditors of the ancestor. In support of this plea, reference was made to the case of Remington and Crawford Bruce (10th December, 1829, Shaw's Reports). But the present case differs from that in the most essential points. In the case of Bruce, the children had bonds of provision, on which infeftment was taken after the death of the ancestor. The Court held that equivalent to the heir giving payment. There was not only no such specialty here; but the very provision of the pursuer was payable under a deed, the primary purpose and condition of which was, that the disponee should pay the debts of the deceased. The pursuer was thus postponed to the debts of the granter, by the very deed on which the pursuer claims.

“The facts founded on in support of the 3d plea might, in an ordinary case, be thought insufficient to infer the exercise of a reserved faculty to alter or burden a subject, previously disponed to a son; but, when the very peculiar circumstances of this case are considered, it seems due to George Borthwick himself, to draw the conclusion adopted in the interlocutor. Here he was a trustee, acting for parties at a distance, and apparently unable to control him; in that situation, he gave his son and co-partner a portion of a trust-fund under his charge, and set forth, in a regularly docqueted state, that the son was to give heritable security; while the only heritable estate which his son was then possessed of, was that property which George had reserved a power to burden; in such a case, the Judge seems to be driven to the alternative of holding, either that the father meant to deceive and cheat his co-trustee and constituents, by allowing his son to bold the money without any security, or that he truly intended and agreed to burden the property himself, or at least to consent to his son (who had got the money) granting the security, as he afterwards did. The latter conclusion is supposed to be that which is most consistent, both with law and with a charitable consideration of the motives and character of the deceased.”

The pursuer reclaimed, and the Court, after hearing counsel, considering the case to be attended with difficulty, delayed giving judgment for a few days.

The following opinions were thereafter given.

Lord Gillies.—After having attended very carefully to this case, I concur entirely with the Lord Ordinary, and think his interlocutor ought to be adhered to. It does not appear to me that the two decisions of Remington and Company, and Bruce and others, which have been referred to, affect this cause either one way or other.

Lord Mackenzie.—I have felt great difficulty in this case. I had hoped to discover some decision which might afford a precedent, but have been unable to do so. There is one case reported in the Faculty Collection, in May, 1821, the case of Wallace, which bears on the question, but does not, as reported, come up to this case. The general rule is perfectly clear that legacies out of the estate of a defunct are only good, deductis debitis. But I do not think that any aid can thence be derived to support the interlocutor under review. For it is plain in this case, that, after deducting all the debts of the testator, enough remained to satisfy the legacies. The defunct had a surplus to leave, and he left estate enough to make a good and valid legacy to the pursuer after paying all his debts. Even assuming that there was still an inherent preference in his creditors upon that estate, over his legatees, which preference might be made apparent if any unexpected short-coming was afterwards occasioned, still I feel great difficulty in holding that that preference continued after the whole debts and estate of the defunct had come to be the debts and estate of the heir, and the estate was held by the heir on the footing that his own proper creditors and his ancestor's creditors must rank pari passu upon it. The pursuer was undoubtedly a creditor of the son, William Borthwick, for her provision, The creditors of the father, George Borthwick, and the proper creditors of the son, must all have ranked pari passu on the estate after the lapse of three years from the death of George. The period of separation between the one estate and the other was then at an end. And in this particular case the creditors of William eventually came and carried off great part of the effects held by William, thereby creating the deficiency which arose. The deficiency arose in consequence of the debts of William, not of his father. Therefore I feel great difficulty in seeing any ground on which a preference could continue in favour of the creditors of the father, after his estate and debts had become blended with the estate and debts of the heir. It seems to me to be very difficult to postpone the legatee of the father, who was the creditor of the heir, to the creditors of the father, after the estate had completely become the estate of the heir. I do not see any statute, or any decision, which goes so far as this. The legatee of the ancestor, being creditor of the heir, would undoubtedly rank pari passu with the other creditors of the heir. But these other creditors of the heir would rank pari passu with the creditors of the ancestor. And how then can the legatee of the ancestor be still postponed to the creditors of the ancestor? I do not see how this ranking could be extricated. Unless it is to be held that after the creditors of the ancestor, and the creditors of the heir are all ranked pari passu with each other, the legatee of the ancestor who is thereby the creditor of the heir is to rank pari passu also, I do not see any consistent principle on which a judgment can be rested. In the absence of any decision, I should therefore come to the conclusion that the pursuer was not to be postponed to the defender, merely as being a legatee of the ancestor; but I could have wished to see a fuller account of the case of Wallace, before deciding the present case.

Lord Corehouse.—I think the case is attended with great difficulty, and I feel strongly impressed with the view now stated by Lord Mackenzie, which, at first sight, appears to be irresistible. But I incline, notwithstanding, to adhere to the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary. On the death of the father George Borthwick, his legatee the pursuer became a creditor of William Borthwick the heir. And it is not easy to escape from the conclusion, that, after the lapse of three years, the pursuer should be on precisely the same footing with all other creditors of the heir, even in questions with creditors of the ancestor. But on looking to the decisions, particularly the principles laid down by Lord Moncreiff in the case of Bruce and others, June 9, 1831 (though not precisely a precedent to this case), and farther to the judgment in the case of Wallace, I think the legatee of the ancestor should be postponed. This is not a question between an ordinary creditor of the heir, and a legatee of the ancestor. It is a question between a legatee of the ancestor, and a creditor of that same ancestor. There is property of that ancestor still extant; property of the party who was debtor quoad the defender, and not debtor, but merely a gratuitous testator quoad the pursuer. Now, although the statute 1661, c. 24, has, after a certain period, destroyed all preference as between the creditors of the heir and those of the ancestor, it has not affected the preference of the ancestor's creditors, or creditors and legatees inter se. I consider that the case of Remington and Company, Dec. 10, 1829, may be laid out of view. But if I understand the case of Wallace, which is too briefly reported in the Faculty Collection, it is an authority in support of the interlocutor under review. The interlocutor pronounced in the case of Wallace, will be found quoted in the report of the case of Remington 1 and Company. (His Lordship read it.) It would appear that the three years had elapsed, and that the younger children of the deceased, though they had become direct creditors of his heir, were still held to be postponed to the creditors of the father. I thought at first that there might have been a distinction between that case and the present, by there having been a bankrupt succession there, whereas a solvent estate was left in this case by George Borthwick. But I see it was expressly averred in that case that the succession was ample. It is true that that was denied. But the Court must have held the circumstance to be immaterial, as they did not allow a proof of it. Unless there were some specialty in that case which I cannot discover, not having had access to the Session papers, it appears to me to sanction the principles generally laid down by Lord Moncreiff in the case of Bruce, that where the proper creditors of the father come into competition with the legatees of the father, the same rule must determine their respective preference as if the act 1661, c. 24, had never been passed, That statute was not meant to affect such a question of competition, and the lapse of time from the death of the father is immaterial in such a case. I think also that there is another ground on which the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor may be supported. The father, George Borthwick, who made this provision on the pursuer his daughter, subject to a power of alteration, afterwards agreed with his co-trustee under Waugh's trust, that the sum of £230 should be lent to his son on condition that his son should grant heritable security. The only heritable subject that could be looked to, was the house over which the security was afterwards granted by the son. And, in the circumstances, I think it may be fairly viewed as part of the transaction under which the trust-funds were lent, and as being the true meaning of the testator, that his daughter should not have her legacy until after that security was granted to Waugh's trust. That seems to have been an implied condition of the pursuer's right. It would have been different if, in the circumstances of this case, the heir had paid the legacy to the pursuer. I should have doubted whether she could have been liable in repetition. But that is not the species facti. On the whole, I consider the case to be attended with great difficulty, and my opinion would be shaken if I saw any complete distinction between the case of Wallace and this. I should also have inclined to alter the interlocutor, if it had been made out that there was blameable negligence on the part of the creditor in seeking security. But as that does not appear, I incline, though not without much difficulty, to adhere to the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary.

Lord President.—I am of the same opinion. But I have never felt any question to be more puzzling. I am chiefly influenced by the consideration, that the father, George Borthwick, seems to have contemplated all along that security over this specific heritable subject should be given, and that it was an implied condition in the legacy to his daughter, that it must be postponed to that security.

Lord Mackenzie.—Assuming the case of Wallace to be a precedent in point, which it rather seems to be from the interlocutor which has been read by Lord Corehouse, I also incline to adhere.

The Court then adhered, but found no expenses due.

Solicitors: W. Marshall, W.S.— Bells and Rutherfurd, W.S.—Agents.

_________________ Footnote _________________

1 Ante, VIII. 217—See also ante, I. 9, new ed.

SS 16 SS 1158 1838


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