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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Henry v. Morrison [1881] ScotLR 18_438 (19 March 1881)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1881/18SLR0438.html
Cite as: [1881] SLR 18_438, [1881] ScotLR 18_438

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 438

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Saturday, March 19. 1881.

[ Lord Adam, Ordinary.

18 SLR 438

Henry

v.

Morrison.

Subject_1Jurisdiction
Subject_2Appeal from Sheriff
Subject_3Value of Cause
Subject_4Competency.
Facts:

An action ad facturn prcsstandum, viz., for delivery of certain I 0 U's, is competent in the Court of Session, though the sum contained in them is under £25.

Headnote:

Mr Henry, S.S.C., raised an action against D. A. Morrison, the only conclusion of the summons (besides that for expenses) being for delivery of fifteen I 0 U's for small sums therein specified, the total sum contained in them amounting to £16, 18s. 6d. It appeared that the defender, who was at one time cashier and book-keeper to the pursuer's firm, had obtained possession of these I 0 U's, which bore to be granted by Mr Scott, the pursuer's partner, and had raised an action in the Sheriff Court against Mr Scott, which was still in dependence, for payment of their contents.

The pursuer pleaded—“The documents libelled being the property of the pursuer, and the defender having illegally taken them away from the pursuer's office, and continuing wrongfully to retain possession thereof, the pursuer is entitled to decree in terms of the conclusions of the summons.”

The defender pleaded—“(1) The action is incompetent.”

The Lord Ordinary ( Adam) repelled the defender's first plea, and added the following note:—“The first question in this case is, Whether the action is incompetent under the 28th section of

Page: 439

50 Geo. III. cap. 112, in respect that its value does not exceed £25?

It lies upon the defender, who seeks to oust the jurisdiction of the Court, to prove the affirmative of that proposition, and in order to do so he cannot travel beyond the record in the action, and, it may be, not beyond the conclusions.

The action is an action for delivery of fifteen I 0 U's of small amount, amounting in all to £16, 18s. 6d. There are no pecuniary conclusions.

The action is therefore purely an action ad factum prcestandum, and is brought by the pursuer for the purpose of recovering possession of certain articles, viz., I 0 U's, which he alleges are his property. It is said, however, that it appears ex facie of the articles sought to be recovered, that their value is under £25, and that therefore that action is incompetent.

The Lord Ordinary thinks that the question is a delicate one, but he thinks that the action is competent.

It is clear on the authorities that where the action is solely for delivery of an article of property it does not matter, as regards the competency of the action, how trivial the value of the article may be, and such an action only becomes incompetent where the pursuer himself estimates the pecuniary value to him of the article, and therefore of the action, by inserting an alternative pecuniary conclusion showing that the value of the action is under £25.

In this case there are no pecuniary conclusions, and it does not appear to the Lord Ordinary necessarily to follow that the value of the I 0 U's to the pursuer is simply the pecuniary value which they represent. It is clear enough that the action is not brought in respect of the pecuniary value of the I 0 U's to the pursuer, but for the purpose of aiding his partner Mr Scott in his defence to the action raised against him in the Sheriff Court by the present defender. That may or may not be a legitimate object, but it may give them a value in the pursuer's estimation much beyond the sum of £16, 18s. 6d., which they represent. It is not difficult to imagine a case brought for the recovery of certain pieces of the current coin of the realm which would be by no means met by the tender of coins of equal value. A pursuer may have a pretium affectionia even for a crooked sixpence, and if he can show it is his property wrongfully withheld from him be is entitled to recover it. The Lord Ordinary therefore thinks that this action is not incompetent. Purges v. Brock, 9th July 1867, 5 Macph. 1003; Shotte Iron Company v. Kerr, 6th Dec. 1871, 10 Macpb. 195; Aberdeen v. Wilson, 16th July 1872, 10 Macph. 971.”

The defender reclaimed, and argued—The action was incompetent and should be dismissed. An action ad factum prcestandum was not competent for a subject of less value than £25, unless there were adventitious circumstances giving it a higher value. The conclusions of the summons, though the first and most obvious, were not the only test of the value of a cause. There was nothing here to show that pursuer had any other object than to obtain the money contained in the I O U's.

Authorities—(Besides those quoted by the Lord Ordinary) Cameron v. Smith, 24th Feb. 1857, 19 D. 517; Inglis v. Smith, 17th May 1859, 21 D. 822; Dobbie v. Thomson, 2, 2d June 1880, 7 R. 983.

Judgment:

At advising—

Lord President—I cannot say that I participate in the Lord Ordinary's doubts on this question, for I think it is a very clear case. This is an action ad factum prcestandum; there is no pecuniary conclusion, and it is quite impossible for the Court to estimate what the value of the cause really is. The value may far exceed the sum contained in these I 0 U's, delivery of which is sought, and the real object of the action may be something quite different from the recovery of the money. The object, for instance, might be to vindicate the pursuer's character in an action not now before us, or to prove that the documents were forged, or by the signature upon them to prove the forgery of some writing not now in Court. The pursuer is not bound to disclose his object; if he can instruct that the documents are his property he is entitled to have delivery of them, and it is no matter what the value of the sum contained in them may be. I am therefore of opinion that this action is not incompetent in respect of its value being ascertained to be under £25.

Lord Deas—It was for long a vexed question how the jurisdiction of this Court in causes which fell under these statutes was to be ascertained, but I hold it to be perfectly settled now that the party objecting to the jurisdiction must show on the face of the summons and record that the value of the cause is under £25. The onus of proof is on him, and failing that the jurisdiction must be sustained. If we were to go back on that now, we should unsettle what has been settled by much litigation and discussion Now, if that be correct, I think it is conclusive of this case. There is nothing to show that the value of this action is under the statutory amount. I should not be prepared to hold an action for delivery of a crooked bawbee incompetent. The bawbee may have a value far greater than the mere coin—for instance, there might have been a private marriage, and that the pledge of it, and the coin might be important in proving the marriage; or again, a ring may have a value set on it by its proprietor far beyond its market value, and what good would it be to prove that you could buy it for a pound or less? or take the case your Lordship put, of forgery—would it matter, if the documents were five £1 notes, that they did not amount to the statutory value? I think the rule is quite settled, and a sound one. We cannot go back upon it now, and I see no room for doubt on the matter.

Lord Mure—The conclusion in the summons is ad factum prcestandum, and I think the matter stands very clearly upon the authorities, and that the Lord Ordinary has read these rightly when he holds that this action is not incompetent. In the cases of Aberdeen and the Shotte Iron Company, though the leading conclusion was for delivery, there was an alternative pecuniary conclusion for a sum less than £25, but that is not the case here.

Lord Shand—I confess I think this case might very suitably have been tried in the Sheriff Court, and I regret to see such actions brought here and the expense of a proof in the Court of Session incurred. But that question is not before us, and on the matter of competency I think the authorities are quite clear. The conclusion of the summons is ad factum prwstandum, and there is nothing to show that the value of the cause is necessarily limited to the sum contained in the I O U's of which delivery is sought.

The Court adhered.

Counsel:

Counsel for Pursuer (Respondent)— D.F. Kinnear, Q.C.— Jameson. Agents— Dove & Lockhart, S.S.C.

Counsel for Defender (Reclaimer)— Kennedy. Agent— D. Howard Smith, Solicitor.

1881


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