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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Watson v. Wilson and Others (Alexander's Trustees) [1867] ScotLR 5_196 (24 January 1867) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1867/05SLR0196.html Cite as: [1867] SLR 5_196, [1867] ScotLR 5_196 |
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Page: 196↓
A creditor of a beneficiary entitled to the fee of certain heritable subjects vested in trustees adjudged these subjects in payment; held that adjudication in implement at his instance, con-concluding for an heritable and irredeemable conveyance from the trustees was competent.
Strachan v. Whiteford, M. “Adjudication” App. No. 7, commented on.
This was an action of adjudication in implement of a decree of adjudication in payment, dated 15th May 1866, obtained by the present pursuer against John Craik, grocer in Penicuik, the only surviving brother and nearest and lawful heir-at-law and of conquest of the deceased Joseph Craik, baker in Dunse, whereby certain heritable subjects in Dunse, to which Joseph Craig was entitled under the trust-disposition and settlement of Mrs Fanny Russell or Alexander, of date 5th August 1830, were adjudged to the pursuer for payment and satisfaction of a debt of £40 due by Joseph, and constituted against John Craik, as his heir, by decree of constitution dated 22d November 1865. The defenders were the trustees of Mrs Alexander, who, in consequence of the endurance of a liferent in the heritable subjects, had not denuded in favour of Joseph Craik. The liferenter died on 24th March 1865, predeceased by Joseph Craik, the fiar, who died intestate on 22d August 1863, and it was not disputed that John Craik, as Joseph's heir, was now in right ef the fee. He had not, however, called upon the trustees to denude in his favour, and had allowed the decrees of constitution and adjudication in payment above-mentioned to pass against him in absence. He was not called, and did not appear in the present action. The conclusion of the summons was that the heritable subjects in Dunse, in which the trustees were infeft in virtue of a precept of sasine contained in Mrs Alexander's trust-disposition, “ought and should be adjudged from the defenders as trustees foresaid, and from all others having or pretending to have right thereto, and decerned and declared to pertain and belong to the pursuer and to her assignees and disponees, heritably and irredeemably, in implement and satisfaction to her of the said decree of adjudication obtained against the said John Craik as heir foresaid, and obligations therein contained.” The pursuer
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averred (Condescendence, art. 13), “In virtue of said decree, the pursuer has frequently called upon the defenders, as trustees foresaid, to denude in favour of her, and convey and make over to her the said heritable estate, but they decline to do so, and therefore this action is necessary. The pursuer now comes in place and right of John Craik, the heir of Joseph Craik, the fiar under the said trust-deed.” To which the defenders answered (Ans. 13), “Admitted that the pursuer has called upon the defenders, as trustees foresaid, to denude in her favour, and to make over to her heritably and irredeemably the said estate. Admitted that they have declined to do so. It is explained that there are various creditors of the said Joseph Craik other than the pursuer; that expenses have been incurred in the management of the trust-estate, which is now composed solely of the heritable subjects sought to be adjudged in the present action. Explained also that these heritable subjects are of small value, although of considerably greater value than the amount of the pursuer's claim. Quoad ultra denied.” The Lord Ordinary ( Ormidale), by interlocutor dated 16th February 1867, sustained the defender's first plea in law, which was that “the alleged right of the pursuer under the decree of adjudication, of date 15th May 1866, in the subjects libelled being a redeemable right, adjudication thereof heritably and irredeemably in implement of the said decree is incompetent,” and dismissed the action. The following note was appended to the interlocutor:—“That the decree of adjudication of 15th May 1866, referred to in the interlocutor, being one for payment and satisfaction of debt, the legal time of which has not yet expired, constitutes nothing more than a right in security was conceded by the pursuer at the debate, and at any rate is clearly established by authority that cannot be impugned— Cochrane v. Bogle Co., 2d March 1849, 11 D. 108, and Macdougall and Others v. Blackie, 28th Feb. 1863, 1 Macph. 503. That being so, it seems to the Lord Ordinary necessarily to follow that the pursuer has no warrant or authority for converting, as she attempts to do in the present action, her redeemable right into an irredeemable one, and therefore that the action is incompetent. This appears to have been one of the points discussed and decided, as the Lord Ordinary has now decided it, in Strachan v. Whiteford, 9th Feb. 1776, M. “Adjudication,” App. No. 7.”
The pursuer reclaimed.
Gifford, for the reclaimer, argued—Adjudication in implement is the proper form of action to make real the pursuer's right under the adjudication in payment. The conclusion for adjudication in her favour heritably and irredeemably is the right form of conclusion. If there is a right of reversion, it is in John Craik, and the defenders have no title or interest to oppose the pursuer's claim to an irredeemable conveyance, as they would admittedly be bound to convey irredeemably to John Craik.
Mackay, for the defenders, replied— The summons concludes for adjudication heritably and irredeemably not only against the trustees, but also against all others having or pretending to have right to the subjects. It was not admitted in the Outer-house that there would be a reversion in favour of any person, and the terms of the summons do not admit of being construed as reserving any reversion. Now the adjudication in payment on which the pursuer founds was undoubtedly a redeemable right. ( Cochrane v. Bogle, 2d March 1849, 10 D. 108.) It is contrary to principle, therefore, that an irredeemable right should now be given to the pursuer in subjects of much greater value than her debt to the exclusion of all the other creditors of Craik. Stachan v. Whiteford was an authority in favour of this contention. In any event the defenders have a right of retention for the expenses incurred by them in the management of the trust-estate.
At the suggestion of the Court, Gifford, for the pursuer, lodged a minute, in which he stated “that she consented that any decree which may be pronounced in the present action should be without prejudice to any other reservation of the whole rights, whether of reversion or of any other description competent to John Craik, heir of the deceased Joseph Craik, both designed in the record, or to any person or persons claiming through the said John Craik.”
The Court unanimously recalled the Lord Ordinary's Interlocutor.
At advising—
On principle, then, I am clearly of opinion that the pursuer here had acquired a personal right which entitled her to adjude in implement. As to
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The
Lord Justice-Clerk and
“The Lords having heard counsel on the reclaiming note for Jane Watson, against Lord Ormidale's interlocutor of 16th February 1867, recal the interlocutor submitted to review: Find that the pursuer, as vested in the right of the deceased Joseph Craik, or of John Craik, failing his obtaining from the defenders a disposition of the heritable subjects mentioned in the summons by the adjudication led by her against the said John Craik, is entitled to insist in the present process of adjudication in implement, and to obtain decree therein, subject to any claim which may be competently stated and established for retention or payment of sums said to be due to the defenders in respect of advances made by them in the administration of the trust, and decern; and, with these findings, remit to the Lord Ordinary to inquire into the said claims, and to proceed further in the cause as shall be just.
Solicitors: Agent for Pursuer— R. Davidson, S.S.C.
Agent for Defenders— Alexander Howe, W.S.