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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Sawers v. Kinnair [1897] ScotLR 35_85 (4 November 1897) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1897/35SLR0085.html Cite as: [1897] SLR 35_85, [1897] ScotLR 35_85 |
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[Sheriff-Substitute of the Lothians and Peebles.
The tenant of a shop under a lease for five years ending Whitsunday 1900 became bankrupt on 14th May 1897. The judicial factor on his sequestrated estates paid the rent due on 15th May, but did not intimate abandonment of the lease till 28th May. The landlord on 21st May presented a petition for sequestration in security of the rents payable at Martinmas 1897 and Whitsunday 1898. Interim sequestration was granted, but was recalled in respect of consignation on 27th May.
Held that under the Removal Terms (Scotland) Act 1886, sec. 4, the year for which the rents sought to be secured were payable did not begin till noon on 28th May 1897, and that the landlord had no right of hypothec over the tenant's effects for these rents until the year for which they were payable had begun to run— Thomson v. Barclay, February 27, 1883, 10 R. 694 (interpreting the practically identical provision in sec. 3 of the Removal Terms (Burghs) (Scotland) Act 1881) followed.
This was a petition for sequestration in security of rent presented in the Sheriff Court at Edinburgh by Mrs Henrietta Lauder or Sawers against William Kennoway Kinnair, dressing-case maker, Edinburgh, and Charles J. Munro, C.A., Edinburgh, judicial factor on his sequestrated estates. The pursuer prayed the Court in common form for sequestration of the furniture, goods, and effects in the premises leased by him from the pursuer in security and for payment of £17, being the half-year's rent due at Martinmas 1897, and of the further sum of £17, being the half-year's rent due at Whitsunday 1898.
The pursuer averred—“(Cond. 1) The pursuer is heritable proprietrix of the premises and others situate at No. 13 South
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Frederick Street, Edinburgh, and the defender, the said William Kennoway Kinnair, is the tenant of the said subjects under missives of lease, dated 25th and 26th March 1895, entered into between him and Thomas White, Solicitor before the Supreme Courts of Scotland, Edinburgh, on behalf of and as duly authorised by the pursuer. Under the said missives, which are herewith produced, the said subjects were let to the defender, the said William Kennoway Kinnair, for the period of five years from the term of Whitsunday 1895, with a break in favour of the said defender at the term of Whitsunday 1898, at the yearly rent of £34 sterling per annum, payable by equal proportions at the terms of Martinmas and Whitsunday in each year. (Cond. 2) The defender entered into the occupancy of the said subjects at the said term of Whitsunday 1895. On 14th May 1897 the estates of the defender William Kennoway Kinnair were sequestrated, and the said Charles J. Munro was appointed judicial factor thereon. At Martinmas 1897 there will be due the half-year's rent of £17, and at Whitsunday 1898 the further sum of £17 will be due. (Cond. 4) The pursuer has received reliable information by the defenders that the goods and effects in the premises are to be at once fraudulently removed therefrom and sold with the view of defeating the landlord's right of hypothec.” The defenders averred—“(Ans. 2) Admitted that the estates of the said William Kennoway Kinnair were sequestrated on 14th May 1897. Explained that the rent due at Whitsunday 1897 has been paid, and that the trustee in the sequestration has intimated that he does not intend taking up the lease. On 27th May 1897 the sequestration for rent granted on 21st May was on consignation recalled, and the whole furniture, goods, and effects were removed from the pursuer's premises before 28th May.”
The pursuer pleaded—“The pursuer's said right of hypothec being in danger of being defeated, she is entitled to sequestration warrant in security, and decree as craved.”
The defenders pleaded, inter alia—“(1) The pursuer not having a right of hypothec over the effects inventoried is not entitled to decree as craved. (2) The furniture, goods, and effects in question having been removed from the pursuer's premises before 28th May last, they are not in any way subject to the pursuer's right of hypothec.
The Removal Terms (Scotland) Act 1886 (49 and 50 Vict. cap. 50) enacts as follows:— Section 4. “Where under any lease entered into after the passing of this Act, the terms for a tenant's entry to or removal from a house shall be one or other of the terms of Whitsunday or Martinmas, the tenant shall in the absence of express stipulation to the contrary enter to or remove from the said house (any custom or usage to the contrary notwithstanding) at noon on the twenty-eighth day of May if the term be Whitsunday, or at noon on the twenty-eighth day of November if the term be Martinmas, or on the following day at the same hour where the said terms fall on a Sunday.” Section 3.… “‘House’ shall mean a dwelling-house, shop, or other building, and their appurtenances.” …
The Removal Terms (Burghs) Scotland Act 1881, section 3 of which was practically identical with section 4 of the Removal Terms (Scotland) Act 1886, except that the former enactment only applied to “houses within the limits of any burgh,” was repealed by section 2 of the Removal Terms (Scotland) Act 1886.
There was no averment oh the record with regard to the date upon which the judicial factor abandoned the lease, but counsel for the pursuer stated at the bar that the intimation of abandonment was sent to the pursuer on 28th May and was received on the following day.
The petition was presented on 21st May 1897, and of that date the Sheriff ( Rutherfurd) granted interim sequestration.
On 27th May the Sheriff-Substitute ( Maconochie) “in respect of consignation by the defender Charles John Munro as trustee within mentioned of the sum of £34,” recalled the sequestration for rent granted on 21st May.
On 1st July the parties by minute renounced further probation.
On 2nd July the Sheriff-Substitute issued the following interlocutor:—“Finds that the defenders have not stated a relevant defence, repels the defences, and, in respect of the consignation of the rent due under the lease founded on at the terms of Martinmas and Whitsunday next, continues the cause: Finds the defenders liable in expenses,” &c.
Note.—“The Sheriff-Substitute is of opinion that under a lease for a term of years the landlord's right of hypothec subsists continuously from the beginning to the end of the lease, and is not affected by the provisions of the Terms Removal (Scotland) Act. The Sheriff-Substitute therefore holds that the case of Thomson v. Barclay, 10 R. 694, which counsel for the defenders specially founded on, does not apply here.”
The defenders appealed to the Second Division of the Court of Session, and argued—In virtue of the Removal Terms (Scotland) Act 1886, section 4, the term ending Martinmas 1897 did not begin till 28th May. This was ostensibly a petition for sequestration currente termino in security of rent not yet payable. Such a petition could not be granted if presented before the term to which it applied had begun, as was the case here. This case was ruled by Thomson v. Barclay, February 27, 1883, 10 R. 694. If the rent is paid before 28th May as was the case here, there was no rent still remaining due for the period between the date of payment and 28th May. Sequestration was competent for payment of rent due and unpaid, and sequestration was also competent currente termino for current rent. What was sought here was neither of these, for all the rent due at the date of the presentation of the petition had been paid, and the next term had not yet begun to run. It was entirely incompetent to use sequestration
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in security for a rent which had not begun to become due, and before the commencement of the term for occupation during which it would become due. In the case of Donald v. Leitch, March 17, 1886, 13 R. 790, referred to by the pursuer, the petition was not presented till 2nd June, as appeared from the report at page 791. The pursuer's only claim was for damages in respect of breach of contract, but she had no right of hypothec, and consequently no right to sequestration in security for the purpose of securing payment of such a claim. Argued for the pursuer—If the defenders' contention was correct, then the right of hypothec was practically in obeyance between 15th and 28th May in each year. It was not intended by the Removal Terms (Scotland) Act to effect any such result. The Act was passed for the sole purpose of doing away with the inconvenience due to there being different removal terms in different parts of the country, and it did not alter the rights of the landlord as regards hypothec and sequestration for rent. The rent for the term ending Martinmas 1897 began to become due immediately after 15th May, and consequently sequestration in security of that rent was competent on 21st May, when this petition was presented. See Donald v. Leitch, cit. The case of Thomson v. Barclay was distinguished, for there the tenant's lease came to an end on 28th May, and a new lease began on that date, Although the tenant was the same person it was none the less a new lease, and what was attempted there was to sequestrate the effects of the old tenant in security of the rent which would become due by the new one, which was obviously incompetent. Bankruptcy did not ipso facto terminate a lease. The lease did not come to an end until the judicial factor intimated that he proposed to abandon it. When this petition was presented the judicial factor had not intimated abandonment. The Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1856, section 119, enacted that nothing in that Act should affect the landlord's right to hypothec.
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The Sheriff-Substitute in his note refers to the case of Thomson v. Barclay, February 27, 1883, 10 R. 694, in which it was held that 28th May was to be taken to be the term day, both with respect to entry and removal and also with respect to the right of hypothec, and that goods might be removed from the premises at any date prior to 28th May without the landlord having right to demand their return to secure payment of the rent current between Whitsunday and Martinmas. Now, here the bankruptcy occurred on 14th May, which is before the expiry of the term current between Martinmas 1896 and Whitsunday 1897, whether that term is held to end on 15th or on 28th May, and I think that thereupon the bankrupt ceased to be tenant of the premises in question. In that view the Removal Terms (Scotland) Act, 1886 and the decision in the case of Thomson, do not affect this case, but I think it proper to state that not only do I feel bound by that decision, but also that I think it unanswerably right. The provision of the statute is as follows [ his Lordship read section 4]:—I must therefore read the expression “term of Whitsunday” as meaning 28th May, and I must hold that the term ending Martinmas 1897 did not begin till 28th May in that year. In my opinion, therefore, the term for which rent would have been exigible at Martinmas, and in security of the rent for which sequestration was here sought, did not begin till 28th May, and I should have been prepared to make that the ground of my judgment if it had been necessary to do so. But, as I have said, I do not think it is necessary to determine that question in deciding this case, because the bankruptcy took place on 14th May, which was not only before the 28th, but also before the 15th.
But I feel bound by the case of Thomson v. Barclay, which, as I read it, decides that the term of entry fixed by the statute—viz., 28th May—affects other incidents of a lease, and in particular, must be held as regulating the landlord's right to sequestrate. For instance, I understand it to decide that for the current rent of any given year—Whitsunday to Whitsunday—the landlord's right of hypothec only affects the furniture which was on the premises after 28th May of that year. Now, I am unable to distinguish that case from the present. It is true that the original lease in that case was a lease for a year, Whitsunday 1881 to Whitsunday 1882, But the tenant had agreed to continue the tenancy from Whitsunday 1882 to Whitsunday 1883. The tenant having failed to pay the rent on 15th May 1882 the landlord sequestrated on 23rd May. On 24th May the tenant removed his furniture from the premises. It was held that as the furniture was not in the premises after 28th May it could not be attached for the rent of the year—Whitsunday 1882 to Whitsunday 1883.
The lease in the present case is a lease for years, but that does not appear to me to affect the question. The question is the same, viz.—to which year does the interval between 15th and 28th May belong? If to the latter year—in this case Whitsunday 1897 to Whitsunday 1898—the landlord is right, because the tenant's sequestration did not affect his right of hypothec, and the furniture was in the premises after 15th May; if to the previous year—viz., Whitsunday 1896 to Whitsunday 1897—he is wrong. Now if, as has been decided, the terms of entry and removal fixed by the statute affect at all the enforcement of the landlord's right of hypothec, I think they must be held to do so whether the lease in question is a lease for years or the renewal of a lease for a year.
If then the rent in security of which the landlord used sequestration was the current rent of a year which only began on 28th of May the landlord's claim is bad, because the furniture in question was removed from the premises before that date. On the authority of Thomson v. Barclay, and on that ground alone, I think the Sheriff-Substitute's judgment must be recalled.
The Court pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“Sustain the appeal, recal the interlocutor appealed against, Sustain the first plea-in-law for the defenders and assoilzie them from the conclusions
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of the action: Grant warrant to the Clerk of the Sheriff Court to deliver up to the defender Charles John Munro the sum of £34 with all interest due thereon, being the amount consigned by him on 27th May last, and decern: Find the defenders entitled to expenses in this and in the inferior court,” &c.
Counsel for the Pursuer and Respondent— Cullen. Agent— Thomas White, S.S.C.
Counsel for the Defenders and Appellants— W. Campbell— A. M. Anderson. Agent— James Skinner, S.S.C.