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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Donald v. Nicol (Ante, vol. iii, p. 103.) [1867] ScotLR 5_97 (11 December 1867)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1867/05SLR0097.html
Cite as: [1867] ScotLR 5_97, [1867] SLR 5_97

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 97

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Wednesday, December 11. 1867.

5 SLR 97

Donald

v.

Nicol

(Ante, vol. iii, p. 103.)


Subject_1Compensation
Subject_2Property
Subject_3Road Trustees
Subject_4Interest.
Facts:

The defender, in 1853, took land from the pursuer for the formation of a new road, on an agreement to pay the compensation that might be found due by the Road Trustees. The road was constructed, but through the delay of the defender the compensation was not ascertained till 1867. In 1867 the Road Trustees took over the new road, and paid £50 to the pursuer for the ground taken. The pursuer claimed interest from the defender from 1853, and an annual sum for failure to fence the ground. Claim sustained.

Headnote:

The pursuer in this action was Mrs Jane Ro—bertson or Donald, residing at Bishopston, in the parish of Banchory-Devenick, and county of Kincardine, relict of the deceased James Donald; and the defender was James Dyce Nicol, Esq. of Badentoy, M.P. The summons concluded that the defender should be ordained to make payment to the pursuer of £82, 10s., with interest from Whitsunday 1853, the time at which the defender entered upon possession of certain ground then occupied by the pursuer, for the purpose of forming a new road through the lands of Bishopston, to be used in place of another road proposed to be shut up; that the defender should be ordained duly to fence the lands of Bishopston so far as necessary by their intersection by the new road; and that he should pay £1 a-year as the expense of herding cattle on Bishopston, rendered necessary by the intersection of the lands and the defender's failure to fence them, from Whitsunday 1854 yearly until the lands were sufficiently fenced.

It appeared that the deceased Mr Donald had possessed the lands of Bishopston, adjacent to Badentoy, the property of the defender, and to Auchlunies, the property of Mr Duguid. The defender and Mr Duguid desired to have a road which ran through their estates shut up, and a new road opened through the lands of Bishopston, and they obtained the consent of Mrs Donald and her son and his tutors to this proposal, on the footing that the defender was to pay them the amount of damages that might be found due by the Commutation Road Trustees. The proposed road was

Page: 98

constructed, but the defender did not prosecute his application to the Road Trustees to have the old road shut up and the new road opened. The pursuer accordingly built a wall across the road. The defender caused it to be removed, and applied for an interdict. After various procedure in the interdict and in this action, the Court, on 12th December 1866, recalled an interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary, in which his Lordship had assoilzied the defender on the ground that the road in question had never been adopted by the road trustees, and that the pursuer had resumed possession of the ground on which the road was formed; held that the action was well brought by the pursuer for the purpose of compelling the defender to go on to get the amount of compensation ascertained; and superseded the case till January to give the defender an opportunity of stating what he proposed to do in the way of obtaining the judgment of the Commutation Road Trustees on the amount of compensation or damages to be paid to the pursuer in respect of the land occupied by the road in question, or otherwise in respect of the said road having been made through the lands of Bishopston. In January last a minute was lodged for the defender, in consequence of which the cause was again superseded until May, before which time a meeting of the Road Trustees would be held. At a meeting of the Trustees on 30th April, a petition was presented by the defender, which, after setting forth the proceedings instituted in the Court of Session between the petitioner and Mrs Donald, and narrating the steps taken by the Trustees at their meetings on 30th April 1853, 4th October 1864, 1st May 1865, and 3d October 1865, craved that the trustees, after such procedure and inquiry as to them might seem right, would take steps for determining the amount of compensation or damages to be paid to Mrs Donald in respect of the land occupied by the new line of road between the Badentoy and Auchlunies roads, and passing partly through the lands of Bishopston belonging to her, or otherwise in respect of the said new road having been made through these lands, and thereafter to sanction and adopt the said new line of road, and to include the same in the schedule of the parish of Banchory-Devenick, through which it passes, and to provide for its repair as a portion of the recognised commutation roads; as also to grant authority to shut up the tracks or old road between the said Badentoy and Auchlunies roads. The petition was remitted to a committee. Arbiters were appointed on behalf of the Trustees and the pursuer. At a subsequent meeting of the Trustees on 1st October, the committee gave in a report, including the following revised notes by the arbiters, Mr J. F. Beattie and Mr A. Smith:—

“We have considered the representations to our proposed notes of findings, submitted of the 10th ultimo, and now find—(1) That Mrs Donald is entitled to compensation for loss of land by the road made through her lands of Bishopston, including space for a connecting road from the same to her houses, and value for manures, crops, &c., on the ground, so occupied, in the sum of £24, 10s.; (2) That Mrs Donald is entitled to compensation for the severance and opening up of the fields, &c., in the sum of £25, 10s.; in all £50, due and payable at Michaelmas, the 30th September next, to cover all claims against the Road Trustees.

James F. Beattie. Alexander Smith.

Aberdeen, 6 th August 1867.”

Note.—In respect that the road was made in 1853, we are of opinion that Mrs Donald is entitled to compensation for the occupation of the land and other damages incurred from 1853 to Michaelmas 1867, in the farther sum of £50, 12s.

J. F. B., A. S.”

Aberdeen, 30 th September 1867.—We adhere to the findings contained in our revised notes of date the 6th of August last, and find farther, that Mrs Donald is entitled to be paid by the Commutation Road Trustees her agent's account of expenses under the submission, as per account taxed by us of this date, to the sum of £11, 18s. 4d., and that Mr Brown is entitled to a fee of £7, 7s., as clerk under the submission, and to be allowed the amount of his outlays besides.

James F. Beattie. Alexander Smith.”

The committee of the Road Trustees thought they had no power to deal with the matter of the arrears; but they recommended that the new road should be adopted, and that a remit should be made to the district trustees with instructions that on Mr Nicol exhibiting to them receipts for the £50 above mentioned and the expenses of the arbitration, and on their receiving from the surveyor a report that the road was in sufficient repair for the public accommodation, into which condition the petitioner should be bound to bring it if necessary, the district trustees should adopt and recognise the road as a commutation road. They recommended that the old road should be shut up and should belong to the defender so far as passing through his lands. These recommendations were adopted by the Road Trustees.

The case came again before the Court, the pursuer claiming interest on the £50 from 1853, and an annual sum for herding.

Judgment:

Trayner ( Watson with him) for pursuer.

Adam ( Clark with him) for defender.

The defender put in a minute holding the sum claimed by the pursuer for herding to be a reasonable sum, if the Court should hold anything to be due by the defender under that conclusion of the summons.

Lord President—It appears that the Road Trustees have made payment to the pursuer of the £50 which has been ascertained in proper form under their Act of Parliament to be the amount of compensation due to the pursuer for the land taken and other injuries sustained by her in consequence of making the road, and the pursuer accepted that as full payment of the principal sum of compensation due to her. The Road Trustees, who have made payment, were not bound to pay until the time when the road was made over for behoof of the public; and, of course, the pursuer could not expect to get more from them than that sum in terms of the statute. But this summons included a claim beyond that. The claim against the defender was for compensation, with interest on the sum from Whitsunday 1853, and the pursuer says that she is still entitled, as against the defender, to the interest on that sum now ascertained, and I think she is so entitled. That part of the claim on the defender is previous to any claim against the Road Trustees. It is in respect of what the defender did before the trustees took over the road. The defender took the road in 1853, and kept possession of it, and would not go on with his proceedings before the Road Trustees so as to get the compensation awarded. I think he has most fairly subjected himself in payment of interest, and therefore

Page: 99

I am for decerning against him for payment of the legal interest of that sum. But farther, the second conclusion of the summons demands payment of £1 per annum during the time that this road is kept in an unfenced state. The road being now in the hands of the trustees, we may suppose it either has now been or will be duly fenced. The defender admits that if anything is due by him under this conclusion, the amount claimed is not unreasonable, and accordingly I am for decerning against the defender for this also.

The other judges concurred.

Expenses were given to the pursuer since 12th December last, at which date she was found entitled to the previous expenses of the cause.

Solicitors: Agent for Pursuer— W. N. Fraser, S.S.C.

Agent for Defender— J. C. Baxter, S.S.C.

1867


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