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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Fleming v. Burgess and Roles [1867] ScotLR 4_89 (12 June 1867) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1867/04SLR0089.html Cite as: [1867] SLR 4_89, [1867] ScotLR 4_89 |
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Page: 89↓
A party who had acquired right to a lease in security of a debt, and applied, by petition, to the Sheriff to be put in possession under the Registration of Leases Act, was offered payment of his debt in full by the debtor's trustee on condition of his granting an assignation of the lease to him. He was willing to grant a discharge, but refused to grant the assignation, on the ground that he held the subjects in security of another debt, to which he had acquired right after the date of the sequestration and of his application to be put in possession. Held that he was bound in equity to grant the assignation, and that he could not plead counter-equity as applicable to a debt acquired pendente lite, and after judicial demand for the assignation was made.
Burgess had granted to Fleming an assignation of a lease of heritable subjects in security of a debt. Burgess afterwards became bankrupt in 1864. Fleming presented the present petition to the Sheriff of Inverness, under the Registration of Leases Act 1857, craving to be put in possession of the subjects of lease. Subsequent to the sequestration, the petitioner acquired right to another debt, secured by a decree following upon an adjudication which had been led against the same subject in 1862. Roles, the trustee in the sequestration, offered payment of the first debt, which was preferable, upon assignation of the security; but the petitioner maintained that the trustee must be satisfied with a simple discharge. He said that it would be to his prejudice to grant the assignation asked by the trustee, because he was entitled to hold the lease as preferable security for both debts. The Sheriff-substitute ( Thomson) and the Sheriff ( Ivory) held that the petitioner was not bound to grant the assignation, holding that the trustee had no higher right than Burgess had, who would not have been entitled to claim the assignation; and that the assignation of the decree of adjudication in favour of the petitioner was of itself a sufficient answer to the respondents' demand for an assignation; for no creditor can be compelled to assign a right to his own prejudice. The trustee advocated. The Lord Ordinary ( Barcaple) recalled both these interlocutors, holding that, the petitioner not having acquired right to the decree of adjudication until after he presented his petition, he could not thereby pendente lite deprive the trustee of his right to demand an assignation of the lease, in the interest of the other creditors, upon his making full payment of the debt.
The respondents reclaimed.
A.R. Clark and H. Smith for them.
Watson and Trayner in answer.
At advising—
Page: 90↓
The right to demand an assignation rests entirely upon considerations of equity as to the position of parties. A discharge is all that, in strict law, can be demanded; but where an assignation in favour of a third party who advances the money necessary to pay the debt, while it benefits the debtor, does no harm to the creditor, and the creditor is insisting upon implement of his obligation, the Court will intervene in the debtor's favour. The same considerations of equity which cause the strict law to be varied in favour of the debtor, precludes its application in cases where the creditor would suffer injury. A creditor receiving payment of his debt is not held to be under any obligation to assign, if the assignation shall be to his prejudice. He cannot, of course, be called upon by a debtor who himself pays his debt, to grant any such deed.
The demand for an assignation here is met by two answers. In the first place, it is urged upon us that the trustee is truly no more than a representative of the debtor, and reference is made to the case of Ewart and Latta, and to the opinion of Lord Westbury, who says in that case, that the trustee can maintain no higher ground in reference to his demand than the debtor himself could do.
The trustee does no doubt represent the bankrupt in a certain sense, but he is, in virtue of his confirmation, an adjudging creditor. The right of all adjudger in implement, and the right of an adjudger for debt, warrant legal reversion. He is administrator of the estate for the interest of all the creditors, and an assignation would plainly be an auxiliary in his administration. In the case of Latta, the observation of Lord Westbury was made in reference to a state of the fact in which a trustee claimed an assignation on payment, not of the debt due, but of 7s. 6d. in the pound of that debt. The assignation was offered by the creditor if his whole debt was paid; the argument was, that the debtor could not, on payment of 7s. 6d. in the pound, have asked an assignation; and a trustee could not exercise a privilege in reference to a partial payment. I do not think that this objection is good.
The creditor farther pleads that he has a second debt and security, and that the assignation of his right to the first security will prejudice his remedies under that security. Had that security been held by the creditor anterior to the sequestration, I should have been disposed to think the objection valid. It would present some difficulty if the acquisition had been made subsequent to the sequestration. It seems to me to present none at all, seeing that it was acquired after the application was made for entry into possession, and simultaneously with an order for condescendence. It is, I think, impossible for us to hold that a party can plead against a demand judicially made—a prejudice arising from the voluntary acquisition of the debt, in reference to which debt so acquired prejudice is averred pending the litigation. The only prejudice which he can plead as to this debt, and the circumstances of its acquisition, seem to me to exclude all equity in reference to it. To the equitable demand of the trustee he must show counter-equity, and if all the equity which he can urge is the effect to be produced upon a debt to which he had no right until the judicial demand for an assignation was made and actually under discussion, I cannot see that he presents any case for our equitable interference. I do not think that he can be heard to plead prejudice to a right only acquired plainly for the very object of raising the plea. I therefore agree with the Lord Ordinary, with whose views, as expressed in his note, I generally concur.
The other Judges concurred.
The interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary was accordingly adhered to.
Agents for Reclaimer— Hagart & Burn Murdoch, W.S.
Agents for Respondents— Murdoch, Boyd, & Co., W.S.