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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Grant v. Fleming [1881] ScotLR 19_190 (10 December 1881) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1881/19SLR0190.html Cite as: [1881] SLR 19_190, [1881] ScotLR 19_190 |
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Page: 190↓
[Sheriff of Forfar.
In an action brought under the Debts Recovery Act for the amount of disbursements made more than three years previously by the pursuer in discharging a cargo on the defender's mandate, the Court repelled pleas (1) to the effect that the debt fell under the expression “ Merchants' Accounts” as used in the Triennial Prescription Act of 1579, and was therefore prescribed; and (2)— dub. Lord Young—that if the Act of 1579 did not apply, then neither did the Debts Recovery Act.
David Grant, potato merchant, Dundee, presented a petition in the Sheriff Court of Forfar against Alexander Gilruth Fleming, Manager of the Scottish Banking Company, Dundee, for the purpose of having him ordained to make payment of the sum of £46, 8s. 8d. sterling, as the amount of disbursements made by the pursuer on his account in discharging a cargo of potatoes.
The defender pleaded—“(1) Prescription. (2) If it was held that triennial prescription did not apply, action was incompetent in the Debts Recovery Court. (3) On the merits, no employment—the pursuer's brother John Grant, now deceased, being the party employed with the work, and he having been settled with.”
After a proof the Sheriff-Substitute ( Cheyne) found in fact—“(1) That in the end of the year 1877 the defender, who was then a bank-agent in Dundee, imported a cargo of potatoes, consisting of 148 tons or thereby, in a ship called the ‘Olympus;’ (2) that at the defender's request, the pursuer, who was a potato merchant in Dundee, and a customer of defender's bank, and to whom the defender had rendered some friendly services, agreed to see to the discharging, storing, and dressing of said cargo; (3) that in carrying out said agreement, and in connection with said cargo, the pursuer made disbursements amounting to £40, 8s. 8d., which sum included no charge for personal trouble; and (4) that no part of said disbursements had been repaid to the pursuer by the defender: Found in law, on these facts, that the defender was liable in the amount of said disbursements, and three years' interest (amounting to £6) thereon: Therefore decerned against the defender for payment to the pursuer of the sum sued for, being £46, 8s. 8d. sterling, and for the further sum of £6, 8s. 1d. sterling of expenses,” &c.
He added this note:—“The case of Saddler v. M'Lean, 1794, M. 11, 119, and other cases cited
Page: 191↓
in Dickson on Evid., section 487, are sufficient authorities for holding the plea founded on the triennial prescription inapplicable here, where the claim arises out of the contract of mandate. With regard to the plea that the action is not competently brought under the forms of the Debts Recovery Act, more doubt may be felt; but, on the whole, looking to the opinions delivered in the case of Sandys v. Lowden & Rowe, 1874, 2 R. (Just. Cas.) 7, and remembering that the Act is to be liberally construed, I have come to the conclusion that I ought to refuse to sustain it.” Upon the merits his Lordship was of opinion that the pursuer's claim was just.
The defender appealed, and argued—The account sued for was three years and eight months old at the raising of the action. It was struck at, then, by the Triennial Prescription Act of 1579, cap. 83, which ordained that “all actions of debt for housemaids, men's ordinars, servants' fees, merchants' compts, and other the like debts that are not founded upon written obligations, be pursued within three years, otherwise the creditor shall have no action except he either prove by writ or oath of his party.” But (2) if it was held that triennial prescription did not apply, the action was incompetent under the Debts Recovery Act 1867.
The pursuer replied—(1) The Act of 1579 only struck at accounts as between merchant and customer, or employer and employee. No accounts arising out of the contracts of mandate or negotiorum gestio were considered to be among “the like debts” to accounts by a merchant against his customer—Dickson on Evidence, section 487; Drummond v. Stewart, February 19, 1740, M. 11,103; Saddler v. M'Lean, November 18, 1794, M. 11,119; Donaldson v. Ewing, December 10, 1819, Hume's Decisions 481. (2) The action was competently brought under the Act of 1867, on the authority of Sandys v. Lowden & Rowe, November 26, 1874, 2 R. 7 (Just. Ca.).
At advising—
But guarding myself against sanctioning the inapplicability of the Act of 1579 to cases of that sort, and limiting my views to this, that the Sheriff has, on evidence which we must consider sufficient, held that there were outlays made substantially under the mandate of the defender, I think the action should take an end, and I do not dissent.
Page: 192↓
The Lords therefore dismissed the appeal, and affirmed the judgment.
Counsel for Appellant— G. Smith— Rhind. Agent— Robert Menzies, S.S.C.
Counsel for Respondent— M'Kechnie— Kennedy. Agent— John Macpherson, W.S.