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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dent and Others v. North British Railway Co. [1880] ScotLR 17_368 (4 February 1880)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1880/17SLR0368.html
Cite as: [1880] ScotLR 17_368, [1880] SLR 17_368

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 368

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Wednesday, February 4. 1880.

[ Lord Rutherfurd Clark, Ordinary.

17 SLR 368

Dent and Others

v.

North British Railway Company.

Subject_1Process
Subject_2Proof
Subject_3Jury Trial
Subject_46 Geo. IV. cap. 120 (Judicature Act 1825), sec. 28 – 29 and 30 Vict. cap. 112 (Evidence (Scotland) Act 1866), sec. 4 — Mode of Trial of Case of Collision at Sea.
Facts:

In an action for damages for collision at sea both parties desired trial by proof before a judge, and not by jury. The Lord Ordinary having ordered issues to be adjusted, parties reclaimed. Held that under sec. 4 of the Evidence (Scotland) Act 1866 the question of the mode of trial must be left entirely to the discretion of the Lord Ordinary.

Headnote:

John Dent junior, shipbroker, Blyth, and others, owners of the steam-tug or trawler “Integrity,” sued the North British Railway Company for £1000 damages, on the ground that on 7th October 1879 the “Integrity” had been run down and sunk in the Firth of Forth by the steamship “John Stirling” belonging to the Railway Company.

Both parties desired to have the case tried by proof before the Lord Ordinary, and not by jury.

The Evidence (Scotland) Act 1866 (29 and 30 Vict. cap. 112) enacted (section 4) that—“If both parties consent thereto, or if special cause be shown, it shall be competent to the Lord Ordinary to take proof in the manner above provided in section first hereof, in any cause which may be in dependence before him, notwithstanding of the provisions

Page: 369

contained in the Act passed in the sixth year of the reign of His Majesty King George the Fourth, chapter one hundred and twenty, section twenty-eight, and the provisions contained in the Act passed in the thirteenth and fourteenth year of Her present Majesty, chapter thirty-six, section forty-nine; and the judgment to be pronounced by him upon such proof shall be subject to review in the like manner as other judgments pronounced by him.”

The Lord Ordinary ( Rutherfurd Clark) however pronounced an interlocutor assigning a day for adjustment of issues, and granting leave to either party to reclaim.

The North British Railway Company reclaimed.

Authorities— Nicol v. Britten & Owden, Jan 19, 1872, 10 Macph. 351; Hume & Others v. Young, Trotter, & Co., Jan. 19, 1875, 2 R. 338.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—This is one of those causes which were well known in former times as the enumerated causes “under the Judicature Act (6 Geo. IV. cap. 120, sec. 28), and with reference to these it is provided by section 4 of the Evidence (Scotland) Act 1866 that—[ reads the section]. This is a case in which both parties consent to that course being adopted, or rather they apply to the Lord Ordinary to have the cause tried without a jury. That being the state of matters, it is competent to the Lord Ordinary to order the case to be so tried, but it is not compulsory, and the statute leaves it in the discretion of the Lord Ordinary to do what he thinks right in the circumstances. I am of opinion (and I believe your Lordships are so also) that in these circumstances it is not desirable to interfere with the discretion of the Lord Ordinary. He ought to be left to determine in which way the cause shall be tried, under the power given to him under the 4th section of the Evidence Act 1866.

Lord Deas and Lord Mure concurred.

Lord Shand—I am of the same opinion, but I must add, that so far as I am concerned, I think that if as Lord Ordinary in the cause I had to exercise the discretion, I should have yielded to the desire of the parties. The parties and their advisers are, I think, quite capable of judging for themselves as to the comparative advantage of a trial before a judge alone and a trial before a judge with a jury, and if both parties say that they desire to have a case of this kind tried before a judge alone, it appears to me there should be strong reasons against it to induce the judge or the Court to refuse their joint request. As to this particular class of cases, we know that for some years they have been almost invariably tried by a judge sitting alone, and as the parties desire it in this case, I should have thought it a proper exercise of discretion to have yielded to their desire. It is said sometimes that a judge alone is not a suitable tribunal for such questions. In that view I do not agree, and I can only say that if it were sound it would appear to strike very deeply at the whole system of the administration of justice in Sheriff Courts in Scotland, in which questions, sometimes of large importance, and questions of this very class, are tried invariably by a judge sitting alone. But while that is my view as to the course which I think should have been adopted in this case, I quite agree with your Lordships that it was entirely in the discretion of the Lord Ordinary, and I am not prepared to interfere with that discretion or to undo what he has done.

Lord President—I ought to mention that we have taken this course after conferring with the Judges of the Second Division, who are of the same opinion, that the discretion is in the Lord Ordinary. But I may say that I do not think the circumstance of the Lord Ordinary having by this interlocutor assigned a day for the adjustment of issues would preclude the parties from making their motion to his Lordship again.

The Court adhered.

On the motion being renewed before the Lord Ordinary, his Lordship pronounced an interlocutor dispensing with the adjustment of issues and allowing the parties a proof of their respective averments. He added this note—

Note.—When this case came before the Lord Ordinary both parties moved for a proof. The Lord Ordinary was not unwilling to accede to the motion. But the Court have on more than one occasion very strongly disapproved of mere questions of fact being tried by a judge, and therefore the Lord Ordinary conceived that he was bound to order issues.

The parties reclaimed, and the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary has been affirmed, on the ground that the form of the trial was a matter within his discretion, with which the Court would not interfere. But while the Court affirmed the interlocutor, one of the Judges plainly said that the Lord Ordinary had exercised his discretion wrongly, and the Lord President intimated that notwithstanding of the judgment the parties were not precluded from moving for a proof—an intimation which the Lord Ordinary can only construe to mean that he should accede to the wishes of the parties. None of the Judges said that the Lord Ordinary was right, and in abstaining from any expressions of approval they must have desired to indicate that the Lord Ordinary was wrong.

The Lord Ordinary regrets that the Court have not more explicitly decided that questions of fact shall be tried in the form which the parties desire when no exceptional reason exists to the contrary. The discretion of the Lord Ordinary is subject to the discretion of the Court, and the Lord Ordinary finds it difficult to understand why the Court have not explicitly told him whether he was right or wrong. But in the absence of any approval, and in the presence of expressions or intimations of disapproval, he can draw no other inference than that though his interlocutor was affirmed it really was wrong. He conceives, therefore, that he obeys the wishes of the Court in dispensing with issues and ordering a proof.”

Counsel:

Counsel for Pursuers — Trayner— C. S. Dickson. Agents — Beveridge, Sutherland & Smith, S.S.C.

Counsel for Defenders (Reclaimers)— Lord Advocate (Watson)— Balfour— Pearson. Agent — Adam Johnstone, Solicitor.

1880


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