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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dick v. Waddell [1865] ScotLR 1_50_7 (2 December 1865)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1865/01SLR0050_7.html
Cite as: [1865] ScotLR 1_50_7, [1865] SLR 1_50_7

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 50

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

1 SLR 50_7

Dick

v.

Waddell.

Headnote:

Alexander Dick claimed to have his name entered on the register of voters, in respect that he was tenant of the dwelling-house at Bellmont, Helensburgh, for the year from Whitsunday 1864 to Whitsunday 1865. The rent of the house unfurnished would have been £85, but he took it as a furnished house, and paid a rent of £132. On the 15th May 1865 he took it again as a furnished house for three months, and on the expiration of that time he took it for two months more, and during the currency of these two months he took it for one month more, and he understood that his possession must expire in November 1865, at which time the proprietor was to take possession. The Sheriff rejected his claim; but the Court reversed his judgment, and admitted the qualification of the claimant.

Judgment:

Lord Ormidale observed that although the dwelling-house in respect of which the voter put in his claim was held in tenancy by different contracts, there was nothing in section 9 of the Reform Act to show that such fragmentary occupancy was beyond the scope of the statute. If there had been any allegation of fraud in this case such an occupancy might not do. But there was no room for suggesting that here; and looking to the meaning of the expression “yearly value” in connection with long leases under the Act, we must hold that “yearly rent,” in cases such as the present, must be interpreted not as a stated sum payable by the year, but as the gross amount paid by the tenant during the year.

Lord Kinloch concurred with his Lordship's remarks. This was not a question of successive occupancy in the sense in which that word was generally used. Successive occupancy meant the occupancy of different premises. But here the party had possessed the same premises for a good deal more than the requisite statutory period; and he could not think that the claimant's right could be affected by the successive acquirements under which this occupancy took place.

1865


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1865/01SLR0050_7.html