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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Scottish Legal Burial and Loan Society v. Leitch [1870] ScotLR 8_8_1 (21 October 1870)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1870/08SLR0008_1.html
Cite as: [1870] ScotLR 8_8_1, [1870] SLR 8_8_1

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 8

Court of Session Inner House Second Division

Friday, October 21. 1870.

8 SLR 8_1

The Scottish Legal Burial and Loan Society

v.

Leitch.

Subject_118 and 19 Vict., c. 63, § 40
Subject_2Appeal
Subject_3Finality.

18 and 19 Vict., c. 63, § 40
Subject_4Finality — Review — Decision of the Dispute.

18 and 19 Vict., c. 63, § 40 — Sheriff —Sheriff-court.
Facts:

Section 40 of 18 and 19 Vict., c. 63, enacts—“every dispute between any member or members of any society established under this Act, or any of the Acts hereby repealed, or any person claiming through or under a member, or under the rules of such society, and the trustee, treasurer, or other officer, or the committee thereof, shall be decided in manner directed by the rules of such society, and the decision so made shall be binding and conclusive on all parties without appeal.” Leitch, the representative of a deceased member of a friendly society, sued the society and the agent of the society at Greenock. The Sheriff-Substitute dismissed the action, in respect that the secretary of the society had not been made a defender. The Sheriff-Principal having recalled this interlocutor, thereafter decerned in favour of Leitch for the amount of his claim. Appeal against this interlocutor to the Court of Session dismissed as incompetent.

Held that the finality of judgments pronounced under the above Act extended only to judgments on the merits, i.e., “decisions of the dispute;” and that it was competent to appeal judgments of the Sheriff-Substitute upon questions of procedure, &c., to the Sheriff-Principal.

Opinions per Lords Justice-Clerk and Cowan, that the word “Sheriff” in the above section meant “Sheriff-court;” and that judgment on the merits was reviewable by the Sheriff.

Headnote:

This action was raised in the Sheriff-court of Greenock at the instance of the respondent, as executor of his mother, to recover the amount for which the deceased had insured her life with the appellants' society. The defence was a denial of the resting-owing, on the ground of misrepresentation as to the deceased's age at the time of effecting the insurance, but an offer to pay what would have been due in respect of the premium really paid, and calculating the deceased's right upon her real age and not her age as represented.

The Sheriff-Substitute ( Tennent) sustained the second plea in law for the defender, which was that the secretary of the society had not been made defender in terms of section 7 of 21 and 22 Vict., c. 101, and dismissed the action. The action had been directed against the society and its agent at Greenock. On appeal, the Sheriff recalled this interlocutor, and remitted to the Substitute to proceed with the cause. Thereafter the Sheriff-Substitute

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having allowed a proof of the defender's statements, the pursuer appealed. The Sheriff-Principal pronounced this interlocutor:—

Edinburgh, 14 th April 1870.—The Sheriff having considered this process, sustains the appeal for the pursuer; recalls the interlocutor appealed against; repels the third and sixth pleas for the defender: Finds that the now deceased Janet Leitch was a contributor to the Scottish Legal Burial and Loan Society: Finds that she died on 4th June 1868: Finds that on her death her executors were entitled to receive from the defenders, in respect of said contributions, the sum of £34: Finds that the pursuer has been decerned by the Commissary of Buteshire executor-dative qua one of the next of kin to the defunct: Therefore grants warrant, and ordains the clerk of court to pay over to the pursuer the sum of £10, 6s. in his hands, with any interest that has accrued thereon; and decerns against the defenders for the balance of the sum concluded for, being £23, 14s., with interest thereon as concluded for: Finds the pursuer entitled to expenses; allows an account thereof to be lodged; and remits the same to the auditor to tax and report.

Note.—The only remaining points in this case not disposed of are the third and sixth pleas stated by the defender. These pleas are untenable. The twelfth rule says, ‘if at any time it be proved, to the satisfaction of a majority of the committee, that any person or persons gained their admission by giving a false account of their age or state of health, or having any disease on them at the time of their entry, and not making the same known, they shall be expelled, and forfeit all monies paid.’ The punishment here to be applied is to the contributor himself. He is to be expelled from the society, and he is to forfeit all the monies paid. The rule is inapplicable to the case of an executor after the contributor is dead. A penal clause like this ought to be rigidly construed. It is clearly implied that the contributor himself, who has been held to have done wrong, is to have an opportunity of proving his innocence to the satisfaction of the committee, which in very many cases an executor would have no means of doing.”

The defenders appealed to the Court of Session.

Millar, Q.C., and Campbell, for respondent Leitch, objected to the competency of the appeal, in respect that by rule 19 of the society the decision of the dispute by the Sheriff was final. That rule is as follows:—“Every dispute between any member or members and the executors, administrators, nominee or assignee of a member, and the treasurer or other officer, or the committee of the society, shall be referred to and decided by the Sheriff of the county, or two Justices of the Peace, in the manner provided for by sections 5, 6, and 7 of 21 and 22 Vict., c. 101.”

The clauses of 21 and 22 Vict., c. 101, referred to, embody section 40 of 18 and 19 Vict., c. 63, which is as follows:—“Every dispute between any member or members of any society established under this Act, or any of the Acts hereby repealed, or any person claiming through or under a member, or under the rules of such society, and the trustee, treasurer, or other officer, or the committee thereof, shall be decided in manner directed by the rules of such society, and the decision so made shall be binding and conclusive on all parties without appeal.”

Trayner, in answer, admitted that there was no appeal on the merits under the statute; but this appeal was directed against the judgment of the Sheriff, which it was not within his competency to pronounce. The word “Sheriff” in the statute included Sheriff-Substitute ( Fleming v. Dickson, 19th December 1862); and as the Sheriff-Substitute had pronounced a judgment which by the statute was final and without appeal, the judgment now complained of was null. The respondent could only get the judgment of the Sheriff-Principal by an appeal under the Sheriff-court Act of 1853. But such appeal was equally excluded as an appeal to the Supreme Court by the Friendly Societies Act.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Cowan—Having regard to the important general questions argued in this case I dont regret the time occupied in the discussion, but I have little difficulty in disposing of the objection taken to the competency of the appeal to this Court. I consider it well founded. The contrary view was ably argued, and undoubtedly the question is difficult and requires a consideration of principles for its solution. It is an action by a representative of a member of a Friendly Society for payment of a sum alleged to be due on the death of that member, and it was brought before the Sheriff-Substitute in the ordinary course. The Sheriff-Substitute sustained the second plea of the defender, which was not a plea upon the merits of the claim, and dismissed the action. This judgment was appealed to the Sheriff Principal and recalled. Thereafter the Sheriff-Substitute having ordered a proof, the Principal recalled this interlocutor and granted decree in terms of the conclusion of the summons. Now this is the first decision which had been pronounced on the merits of the case in the Sheriff-court. It is in fact “the decision of the dispute.”

The question for us to consider is whether any appeal was competent after the first decision of the cause by the Sheriff-Substitute. I would first observe that the words of the statute are only to the effect that the decison of the dispute shall be conclusive and without appeal. I am of opinion that all the intermediate interlocutors upon procedure were appealable from the Sheriff-Substitute to the Principal. The nature of the finality of jurisdiction is that the judgment on the merits by the Sheriff of the county, acting according to the rules of his Court, shall be final. No final judgment can be reached except by the ordinary procedure of the Sheriff-court. In my opinion the word “Sheriff” means “Sheriff-court,” and the decision of the “Sheriff” is the decision on the merits of the question arrived at by the ordinary procedure of the Sheriff-court.

There is a more limited view, which is sufficient for the disposal of the case, viz., that the Sheriff-Substitute has pronounced no interlocutor on the merits, and therefore that the only decision of the dispute is contained in the judgment of the Sheriff-Principal, and that judgment is final.

Lord Benholme—The best answer to the objection that this appeal is incompetent is, that the decision appealed against was pronounced by the Sheriff-Principal on appeal from the Sheriff-Substitute, and that such an appeal was incompetent under the statute. I do not think that a good answer, however, because the only finality is that attached to a decision of the dispute. The first judgment of the Substitute, viz., that dismissing the case, was an avoidance of a decision; and the other, viz., that allowing a proof, was a preparation only for a decision. Therefore the judgment of

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the Sheriff-Principal is the only decision of the dispute, and it is final. As regards the larger question, whether a judgment on the merits by the Substitute would have been appealable to the Principal, I reserve my opinion.

Lord Neaves was of the same opinion as Lord Benholme, and reserved his opinion on the question whether a judgment on the merits by the Substitute was reviewable by the Principal.

The Lord Justice-Clerk was of opinion that it was the judgment of the Court, and not of the particular Judge, which was declared final. No limitation seemed to be put upon the ordinary procedure of the Sheriff-court. He was doubtful whether it was safe to say that finality was attached only to decisions on the merits. There was an exclusion of every court but the Sheriff-court, and if they held that decisions on procedure were appealable, it might be possible that they would be appealed here. This he thought was not competent, and he therefore concurred in the view of Lords Neaves and Benholme.

Appeal dismissed.

Solicitors: Agents for Pursuers— Campbell & Smith, S.S.C.

Agents for Defender— Neilson & Cowan, W.S.

1870


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