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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Hally v. Lang [1867] ScotLR 4_146_1 (27 June 1867)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1867/04SLR0146_1.html
Cite as: [1867] SLR 4_146_1, [1867] ScotLR 4_146_1

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 146

Court of Session Outer House First Division.

Thursday, June 27 1867.

Lord President Lord Curriehill Lord Deas Lord Ardmillan

4 SLR 146_1

Hally

v.

Lang

Subject_1Landlord and Tenant
Subject_2Summary Application
Subject_3Removing
Subject_4Ejection—Vicious and precarious possession.
Facts:

An application presented to a Sheriff-court for summary ejection of parties in possession of house and lands held to be incompetent, there being no allegation that the possession was either vicious or precarious.

Headnote:

This was an advocation from the Sheriff-court of Dumbartonshire. George Hally, trustee on the sequestrated estate of George Lang, cattle dealer and flesher at Baillieston, in the county of Lanark, presently residing at Blackmailing, in the county of Dumbarton, presented a petition in the Sheriff-court of Dumbarton, against the said George Lang and his son Robert; Mrs Elizabeth Lang, widow of the deceased Robert Lang; John Lang, son of the deceased Robert Lang; and Mary, Elizabeth, and Ann Lang, daughters of the deceased Robert Lang, setting forth that he, as trustee, was heritable proprietor of the lands of Blackmailing by virtue of act and warrant of the Sheriff and disposition by George Lang;that the respondents George and Robert Lang presently occupied and possessed the whole of the said lands of Blackmailing, except a dwelling-house and garden occupied and possessed by the other respondents; that he, as trustee, was about to sell the lands and others, but the respondents refused to remove from the premises. He prayed for a warrant for summary ejection and removal of the respondents. Condescendence and answers were ordered by the Sheriff. The petitioner, in his condescendence, narrated his title as trustee for behoof of George Lang's creditors, and the disposition by George Lang in his favour; alleged that the respondents, the widow and daughters of the deceased Robert Lang, and his son John Lang, ocpied the dwelling-house and garden at Blackmailing; that he, as trustee, was about to sell the said lands with immediate entry to the purchaser, but the respondents refused to quit the premises. He then stated that the titles of Blackmailing consisted of a precept of clare constat by the commissioners of the late Lord Blantyre in favour of the deceased Robert Lang, dated in 1793; sasine thereon in favour of Robert, recorded in 1855; Robert's infeftment had been reduced in 1863;George, passing over his father, completed a title to his grandfather

Page: 147

in February 1865, and then conveyed the lands to the petitioner. The petitioner then stated that Robert Lang at his death had left a settlement whereby the lands of Blackmailing, which he possessed on apparency, were destined to George Lang, the bankrupt, burdened with annuities and liferents in favour of his widow and daughters to nearly the annual value of the lands, and his whole personal and moveable estate was bequeathed to the same respondents. The answers put in for the widow and daughters of Robert Lang, narrated the possession of the subjects since Robert Lang's death in 1858, under the provision in his settlement, and stated that the respondents had never been warned to remove. John Lang denied that he mas or had been in possession. No appearance was made for the other respondents.

The Sheriff-substitute held that George Lang must be held to have incurred a personal responsibility for the onerous debts and deeds of his father, who possessed on apparency, in terms of the Act 1695, c. 24; that the provisions to Robert's widow and daughters were onerous, and fell to be sustained in this action; and assoilzied these respondents. He assoilzied John Lang on the ground stated in John Lang's defence. The Sheriff adhered.

The trustee advocated.

Mackenzie and Thoms for him.

A. Moncrieff (with him Solioitor-General Millar).

Judgment:

Lord President—There is a very clear ground of judgment in this case. The facts of the case necessary for our consideration are simple. Robert Lang, the proprietor of Blackmailing, died in 1858. He left a trust-disposition and settlement, by which he conveyed to trustees his lands of Blackmailing. His widow, and daughters, so long as they were unmarried, were to have a liferent of the house and garden at Blackmailing; and, on the extinction of the liferent, the lands were to be conveyed to the eldest son of the truster, George Lang, who was to have right to the remaining or unliferented part of the lands on payment of certain provisions to the mother and sisters. There can be no doubt that by this deed, if it is to receive effect, the eldest son of the truster is to have the estate of Blackmailing, subject to the liferent of the dwelling-house in favour of the truster's widow and daughters. It is now to be taken as conceded that the truster was possessing on apparency only. But George Lang having made up a title by writ of clare constat, in which he was recognised as heir of his grandfather George Lang, passing over his father Robert, the consequences in law are, that if George Lang had been solvent he would have been liable to fulfil this provision in favour of the widow and daughters. In these circumstances, it turns out that George Lang had been sequestrated four years before his father's death, in 1854, but the trustee in the sequestration, so far from interfering with the provision in the deed of Robert Lang, allowed the possession of the widow and daughters to continue undisturbed, in virtue of this deed of Robert Lang, for about seven years. Whether it was for more than seven years is of very little moment. That possession is had under the settlement from Whitsunday 1858 until the presentation of this petition in 1865. At that time the trustee appears to have taken a fit of unusual activity. He first got the bankrupt to make up his title by clare constat in February 1866, and then to execute a disposition in his favour; and that disposition is made effectual by registration on 25th March 1865, two days before the petition was presented. So that, down to March 1865, the trustee never thought of disturbing the possession of the widow and daughters under the trust-disposition and settlement. He recognised that trust-disposition and settlement as a good title of possession down to that time. But then, by this petition on 27th March, he seeks to eject them summarily. In these circumstances one would demand from a petitioner a most distinct statement of the grounds on which he asks such a summary ejectment. But here there is no allegation of the petitioner's grounds whatever. It is not said here that the respondents are possessing without a title. It is not said that they are vicious or precarious possessors. Nothing but that there is a title to Blackmailing in the person of the petitioner, and that the respondents are in possession of the dwelling-house and garden; and, from that, the conclusion is deduced that they should be ejected therefrom. That is utterly incompetent. It would be so under any circumstances, but still more clearly under those here. Mr Hunter, in his “Landlord and Tenant,” has justly observed that there is a good deal of confusion of language about summary removing; and that summary removing and ejection have been mixed up, so that it is difficult to keep them apart. Summary ejection can only be had in certain well defined cases. I don't propose to enumerate all the cases, for there are some very special cases not coming under the general category; but generally the proper ground is, either that the possession is vicious— i.e., obtained by force or fraud; or that it is precarious— i.e., held by the mere tolerance of the proprietor of the estate. But here there is no allegation of either in the petition; and when an opportunity for stating such is given by ordering a condescendence, which was indulgently ordered by the Sheriff, so far from stating it, all he says is (1)that he is trustee on the estate of George Lang; and (2) that the respondents are in possession. The rest, to the 7th article, have nothing to do with the question of possession, but refer to his own title, and in the 7th article he says that on the death of Robert Lang a pretended settlement by him was alleged to have been found; that, by that settlement, the lands of Blackmailing, which he possessed on apparency, were destined to George Lang, the bankrupt, burdened with annuities and liferents in favour of the widow and daughters. Anything more loose in stating a case I cannot imagine, and I am the less concerned to do anything to avoid an objection of incompetency when the petitioner does not avail himself of the opportunity of stating his real ground of action. The plain ground of judgment for us is, that the petition is incompetent, as not founded on an allegation of vicious or precarious possession, or any other relevant averment.

Lord Curriehill—The question is, Whether this is a competent remedy? I think it is not. I think that all the argument overlooked the nature of that proceeding which we call an ejection. We must not confound that with an action of ejection. That is an action competent to a party unlawfully ejected against the party ejecting him. An ejection such as that here is not a proper action at all. It is a kind of legal diligence provided by the law for carrying into execution an action of removing. That is plainly stated by Erskine, who says, that “if a tenant, or other possessor, who is decreed to remove from or quit possession of lands, shall forcibly oppose the execution of the decree, or shall obstinately

Page: 148

refuse to give obedience to it, notwithstanding a charge given him upon letters of horning, the obtainer of the decree may procure letters of ejection, issuing from the Signet, and directed to the Sheriff, who is required to dispossess him, and to put the pursuer in the possession; or, if the decree be pronounced by a Sheriff, he himself may grant a precept of ejection, directed to his own officer, for the same purpose” (iv, iii, § 17). Here we have an application at once for the diligence of law, without any removing applied for. On that ground, I think this petition is altogether incompetent. Whether even an action of summary removing would have been competent, it is not necessary to inquire. I think it would not have been competent; because the party had been seven years in possession without challenge. In an action of removing, that might have been a good defence. But I find it sufficient here to rest my judgment on the ground that the remedy hero sought was incompetent.

Lord Deas—I arrive at the same result. I think there are grounds on which we must dismiss this petition apart altogether from the merits of the question. I am disposed to think there are three grounds, any one of which would be sufficient. The first is that on which your Lordship in the chair mainly went—that there is not set forth here any such ground of action as, according to the forms of process in the Sheriff-court, will warrant an ejection. An ejection is only competent when a party is either a vicious possessor or a precarious possessor, in the sense of having no title at all. These are the cases in which a summary ejection is competent, and a party asking it must set forth something ex facie to support his allegation. There is nothing here setting forth that the case comes under either category. The facts set forth in the petition may be all true, and yet be no warrant for summary ejection. It is not said that the respondents are either vicious or precarious possessors. It is quite consistent with all in the petition that the party was in possession on a good right of liferent. There might be a well constituted burden of liferent under which the widow might possess all her life. I doubt if a defect of that kind in the petition could be remedied by a condescendence. A condescendence is an exceptional proceeding. The parties were heard before the condescendence was ordered, and the petition might have been disposed of at once. But the condescendence, after it was put in, does not, any more than the petition, set forth a good ground for summary ejection. Secondly, the case, if you go beyond the petition and look at the condescendence, does not fall under the provisions of the Act of Sederunt—whereby you can only have such a summary petition in a case requiring extraordinary dispatch. The title of the trustee has been the same as it is now during the whole period of possession. When a party allows peaceable possession for years, the law refuses to consider that as a case requiring extraordinary dispatch. That is different from the preliminary objection arising on the petition itself. But when the nature of the action was seen by the Sheriff, it was quite competent for him to send it out of court as not requiring such dispatch. Thirdly, even if this mere an action of removing, it is a question if this is not a case where the possession would entitle the party to a possessory judgment on an ex facie valid title. Possession has been had for more than seven years in the time of the trustee on a deed of conveyance ex facie good. Moreover, the heir who granted it had been infeft on a clare constat long unchallenged, and it was only in 1865 that that was reduced, on the ground, then discovered, that the granter had died before infeftment. If that had not been done, the title would have been good. Apart from that, to show that the disposition was not a good conveyance to the liferentrix would require the whole of the elaborate argument we have had from the advocator. The benefit of a possessory title is, that it requires discussion to make out the title to be bad. On all three grounds, either of which is sufficient, the petition is incompetent.

Lord Ardmillan concurred.

Counsel:

Agents for Advocator— Lindsay & Paterson, W.S.

Agents for Respondent— M'Ewan, & Carment, W.S.

1867


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1867/04SLR0146_1.html