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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Gairdner v. Young [1874] ScotLR 12_140 (10 December 1874)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1874/12SLR0140.html
Cite as: [1874] ScotLR 12_140, [1874] SLR 12_140

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 140

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Thursday, December 10. 1874.

12 SLR 140

Gairdner

v.

Young.

Subject_1Proof
Subject_2Conjunct probation
Subject_3Proof in replication.
Facts:

A Sheriff in a cause allowed “to both parties a proof of their respective averments, in so far as not expressly admitted on record, and to the pursuer a conjunct probation.” Evidence was led by both parties, and then the pursuer led his conjunct proof, in which he went minutely into various questions raised by him on record, but which he had not touched in his proof. Held that the defender was entitled to a proof in replication.

Headnote:

The pursuer John Gairdner, wood merchant, Newton on Ayr, raised an action in the Sheriff-court of Ayrshire against the defenders Messrs J. & T. Young, Engineers, also at Newton on Ayr, to obtain payment for an account of wood furnished.

The defenders admitted that the account sued for was due and resting-owing by them, with the exception of a small sum of £1, 10s. 7 1 2d., which they averred that the pursuer had agreed by writing under his own hand to deduct as an overcharge. But they claimed payment of a contra account due by the pursuer to them for machinery and other articles furnished, and pleaded compensation.

The pursuer, in answers to the defenders' statement of facts objected to the various items of the defenders' account as overcharged.

The Sheriff (N. C. Campbell) on appeal, allowed “both parties a proof of their respective averments, in so far as not expressly admitted on record, and to the pursuer a conjunct probation,” and remitted to the Sheriff-Substitute.

The pursuer, his account generally being admitted, tendered himself as a witness merely to explain the circumstances connected with the allowance of a deduction averred by the defenders, and then closed his proof in chief.

The defenders thereupon adduced two persons in their own employment, and three men of skill, and examined them generally as to the quality of the articles furnished, and the reasonableness of their charges, and closed their proof.

The pursuer then led his conjunct proof, adduced eight witnesses, and entered with great minuteness into the questions of material, workmanship, and price, and also into the question of the efficiency of the article in working.

On the pursuer's conjunct proof being closed, the defenders moved for a proof in replication, which the Sheriff allowed on the particular points specified, and by the witnesses named in a minute put into process.

After the defenders' proof in replication was led, the Sheriff found generally in favour of the defenders in the action.

The pursuer appealed to the Court of Session.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—The first thing to be determined in this case is whether proof in replication was properly allowed to the defender. I cannot say that this process has been well conducted. From first to last the proceedings have been faulty, and the blame attaches equally to all parties concerned. The original allowance of proof was made in the interlocutor of the Sheriff Principal, of 4th June 1869, “Allows both parties a proof of their respective averments, in so far as not expressly admitted on record, and to the pursuer a conjunct probation.” It seems to me that under that order for proof it was the duty of the pursuer to lead evidence on all the points raised by him on record. He was not entitled to confine himself to the particulars of his own account. He had raised the question whether the defender had overcharged the items contained in his contra account, and if he did not lead proof of his averments on this point he was really leaving that proof till his own anticipated conjunct proof came to be led. Such a method of conducting his case was quite unjustifiable. It was depriving the defender of any reply to his proof of the real matter in dispute between them. The pursuer was quite wrong in not entering upon this subject in his proof in chief. Very naturally the defender was not very careful in leading evidence on this point, for he had nothing to meet but the pursuer's averments on record, which had not yet been supported. He contented himself with adducing two of his own people, and two men of skill. But then comes the pursuer's conjunct probation, in which, for the first time, he enters upon a very large question, judged at least by the mass of evidence. He goes minutely into a question of overcharge, and assails not only the material and the workmanship, as well as the price of the article supplied by the defender, but also the effectiveness of the article when put in use. And there, according to the terms of the Sheriff's interlocutor, the proof should have ended. But the Sheriff very naturally said, “Looking to the way in which the pursuer has conducted his proof, he has exposed the defender to a great disadvantage, and a proof in replication must therefore be allowed.” I cannot say that he was wrong in this conclusion. It was very wrong that the case should ever have come into such a position as to require a proof in replication. But under the circumstances I think the Sheriff was entitled to grant it.

We must therefore enter on a consideration of all the evidence that has been led.

Page: 141

Lords Deas, Ardmillan, and Mure concurred.

The Court pronounced the following interlocutor:—

“Find that pursuer's (appellant's) account sued for is admitted by the defenders (respondents) with the exception of £1, 10s. 7 1 2d.; Find that the pursuer agreed to abate the said £1, 10s. 7 1 2d. from his account, and rendered his account to the defenders bearing the said deduction on the face of it: Find that the articles contained in the defenders' contra account were furnished by the defenders to the pursuer: Find that it is not established in evidence that the said account is overcharged: Therefore refuse the appeal, and decern; find the appellant liable in expenses; Allow an account thereof to be given in, and remit the same, when lodged, to the Auditor to tax and report.”

Solicitors: Agents for Pursuer— Fyfe, Miller, Fyffe, & Ireland, S.S.C.

Agents for Defenders— Miller, Allardice, Robson, & Innes, W.S.

1874


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