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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Scott Plummer, Petitioner [1885] ScotLR 22_901 (18 July 1885)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1885/22SLR0901.html
Cite as: [1885] ScotLR 22_901, [1885] SLR 22_901

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 901

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Saturday, July 18. 1885.

[ Lord Trayner, Ordinary.

22 SLR 901

Scott Plummer, Petitioner.

Subject_1Entail
Subject_2Entail Amendment Act 1848 (11 and 12 Vict. c. 36), sec. 4
Subject_3“Such and the like Consents.”
Facts:

Sec. 4 of the Entail Amendment Act 1848 provides that an heir of entail in possession of an entailed estate may sell, alienate, dispose, charge with debts or incumbrances, &c., “with such and the like consents” as would enable him to disentail the estate. Held that an heir in possession may avail himself of the provisions of sec. 4 though he is in a position to disentail without consents.

Headnote:

This was a petition, under section 4 of the Rutherfurd Act, presented by Charles Henry Scott Plummer, heir of entail in possession of the lands and estates of Middlestead, &c., to charge the estates with a debt or incumbrance of £6000.

Section 4 of the said Act provides—“That it shall be lawful for any heir of entail, being of full age, and in possession of an entailed estate in Scotland, with such and the like consents as by this Act would enable him to disentail such estate, to sell, alienate, dispone, charge with debts or incumbrances, lease and feu such estate, in whole or in part, and that unconditionally, or subject to conditions, restrictions, and limitations according to the tenor of such consents, the authority of the Court of Session being always obtained thereto in the form and manner hereinafter provided; and such heir of entail shall be entitled to make and execute, at the sight of the Court, all such deeds of conveyance and other deeds as may be necessary for giving effect to the sales, dispositions, charges, leases, or feus so made and granted.”

The petitioner held the estates under a deed of entail dated 21st October 1799, and was born in October 1859. He was therefore entitled, under sec. 2 of the same Act, to disentail without any consents, being an heir of entail born after 1st August 1848, of full age, and holding under an entail dated before 1st August 1848.

The Lord Ordinary ( Trayner) remitted to Mr H. B. Dewar, S.S.C., to inquire into the proceedings. Mr Dewar in his report doubted whether, seeing that sec. 4 only enabled heirs to avail themselves of the powers thereby conferred, “with such and the like consents” as would by the Act enable them to disentail, the petitioner could avail himself of the provisions of sec. 4, as he was in a position to disentail without any consents.

The Lord Ordinary thereafter pronounced this interlocutor—“Having heard counsel for the petitioner, appoints the petition, with this interlocutor and note, to be boxed, with the view of reporting the same to the Judges of the First Division of the Court, and grants warrant to enrol.

Note.—The petitioner, who is the heir of entail in possession of the lands of Middlestead, &c., seeks the authority of the Court to charge the estate with a debt or incumbrance of £6000. The entail is dated and recorded in the year

Page: 902

1799, and the petitioner was born in October 1859. He is therefore an heir of entail born after 1st August 1848, is of full age, and possesses under an entail dated before 1st August 1848. In these circumstances the petitioner would be entitled under the provisions of the Rutherfurd Act (11 and 12 Vict. cap. 36, sec. 2) to acquire the entailed estate in fee-simple by executing, under the authority of the Court, an instrument of disentail, without the necessity of obtaining any consent from other heirs of entail. He is, however, not desirous of disentailing the estate, but seeks, as I have said, to burden it with a debt, and he maintains that he is entitled, under the authority of the Court, to burden the estate, as he could certainly have disentailed it, without the consent of any of the next heirs of entail.

By section 3 of the Rutherfurd Act provision is made for disentailing lands by the heir in possession with certain consents; and section 4 provides that ‘it shall be lawful for any heir of entail, being of full age, and in possession of an entailed estate in Scotland, with such and the like consents as by this Act would enable him to disentail such estate, to sell, alienate, dispone, charge with debts or incumbrances,’ &c. &c. The question therefore arises, whether under section 4 just quoted an heir of entail can burden the entailed estates without any consent whatever when he is in circumstances which enable him to disentail without consents?

It appears to me that sections 3 and 4 were not originally intended to apply to cases where the heir in possession was in a position to take advantage of the provisions of section 2, it probably not having been anticipated that an heir who could disentail would content himself with merely burdening the estate. If this had been anticipated, the words of section 4 would probably have run thus, ‘with such and the like consents, if any,’ or ‘if necessary,’ &c. But although section 4 (under which alone authority to burden is provided for) appears from its language to contemplate the necessity of some consent, I am humbly of opinion that the petitioner's application may be granted without requiring any consent from the next heir or heirs. The greater power of disentailing the estate without consents seems to me to include the lesser power of burdening without consents. Besides, when the Act provides that ‘such and the like consents’ must be had to authorise an incumbrance on the property, as are needed to disentail, and also provides that no consents whatever are necessary to disentail, I think it follows that no consent is necessary to burden, or otherwise the consent to burden would be something different, and not ‘such and the like’ as is required for a disentail. If any consent is necessary it is scarcely possible to discover from the Rutherfurd Act whether the consent of the next heir would be sufficient, or whether the consent of the three next heirs would be required. I understand that this question has never arisen before, and I have therefore deemed it right to report it to the Court for authoritative decision.”

Argued for the petitioner—The words “if any” were implied in sec. 4. There was no reason why an heir should not do directly what he could do indirectly by disentailing, charging, and reentailing.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—By the first three sections of the Rutherfurd Act certain powers of disentailing are given to heirs of entail, and according to the position in which any heir stands; the power is given subject to a number of conditions. There is one case under section 1 in which an heir is entitled to disentail without any consents, another under section 2, and another under section 3. Under all these sections there are also cases in which consents are required, and in these cases the consents vary according to circumstances.

Now, I cannot help thinking that section 4 was intended to apply to all the cases that are dealt with by the three preceding sections. The 4th section is not happily expressed, for there is an omission of words which would make the meaning of the section quite clear. But I agree that the fair meaning of the section is that stated in the opinion of the Lord Ordinary. The opposite view would lead to this very anomalous result, that there would be three cases of heirs under sections 1, 2, and 3 very highly favoured in respect of their power of disentailing, which they can do without any consents, who would be deprived altogether of availing themselves of the provisions of section 4. I say altogether deprived, for I do not see how one could extract from section 4 alone, or from section 4 in combination with the previous sections, any statements as to the consents which would enable these most favoured heirs to exercise the powers conferred by section 4. If consents are necessary in order to enable an heir in the most favoured position to avail, himself of the provisions of section 4, the question arises what consents must be got to entitle him to burden. He cannot find that from the statute, for no consents are required in the case of an heir in his position with regard to disentailing.

I think the interpretation suggested by the reporter would lead to this very anomalous result, that an heir of entail in such a position would be altogether deprived of the benefit of section 4, which I think is entirely against the scope and meaning of that section.

Lord Mure—I concur, and on this broad ground, that the plain object of the 4th section of the statute was to enable all heirs of entail who could disentail to do the other things mentioned in the section, on the same conditions as they could disentail, and these words even as they stand do not, I think, exclude that construction.

Lord Shand—On a fair construction of section 4 I think the words “if any” are clearly to be implied. If consents require to be given in order to disentail the estate, then the consents required by the preceding sections are to be obtained, but if no consents are required to disentail the estate, then the heir of the estate can burden the estates without any consents.

Lord Adam—If you take the case which is also provided for by section 4, of leasing and feuing, I think it brings the matter to a reductio ad absurdum if you are to say that an heir must disentail and re-entail in order to grant these leases or feus.

Page: 903

The Court pronounced this interlocutor:—

“Find that the petitioner is entitled under the 4th section of the Entail Amendment Act 1848 to charge the entailed estate with debt as proposed without any consents, and remit to the Lord Ordinary to proceed in accordance with the above finding.”

Counsel:

Counsel for Petitioner— Pearson— Kermack. Agents— Mackenzie & Kermack, W.S.

1885


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