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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Learmont's Trustees v. Shearer [1866] ScotLR 1_199 (3 March 1866) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1866/01SLR0199.html Cite as: [1866] SLR 1_199, [1866] ScotLR 1_199 |
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Page: 199↓
Circumstances in which held that a fund arrested was heritable, and the arrestment of it therefore inept. Decree of forthcoming following thereon suspended.
The question involved in this case was the competency of an arrestment and a forthcoming. The charger, Margaret Shearer, had a claim against the common debtor, John Learmont, which she constituted in 1863 by obtaining decree in absence against him. Having used an arrestment on the dependence in the hands of the trustees named in Learmont's father's settlement (under which he had right to a sixth share of the residue of his father's estate), she thereafter raised an action of forthcoming against the trustees, and obtained decree in absence, upon which they were charged. The trustees then brought a suspension of this decree in absence, which was passed in terms of the Act 1st and 2d Vict., cap. 86, sec. 5, and a record was made up in the suspension. After a proof had been allowed and taken, the Lord Ordinary (Ormidale) found as matter of fact, that at the date when the arrestment was used in the hands of the trustees, they were not indebted and resting-owing to the common debtor in any sum of money, and, for that reason, that in point of law the decree of forthcoming was not well founded and could not be maintained. He therefore suspended the decree and charge thereon, “reserving the effect otherwise of said arrestment, and in particular its effect, if any, in attaching the jus crediti pertaining to the common debtor in the trust-estate of his father.” The Lord Ordinary referred in support of his judgment to the case of Cunninghame v. Cunninghame, 28th February 1837 ( 15 S. 687).
The charger reclaimed, and moved that the action of forthcoming should be sisted until that portion of the trust-estate which was heritable was sold off and the sum due to the common debtor was ascertained. She had also made this motion before the Lord Ordinary, who refused it. The Court to-day adhered to the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor, holding that the arrestment was inept. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Page: 200↓
The defenders moved for expenses, which, after discussion, they were allowed, but subject to substantial modification, in respect (1) they had allowed decree in absence to pass against them; and (2) they had not pleaded the invalidity of the diligence on the ground now adopted by the Court.
Counsel for Charger— Mr C. Scott. Agent— Mr James Barton, S.S.C.
Counsel for Suspenders— Mr G. H. Pattison and Mr Alexander Blair. Agent— Mr John M'Cracken, S.S.C.