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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> M'Gregor v. Buchanan (Liquidator of the Ballachulish Slate Quarries Co., Ltd) [1907] ScotLR 9 (16 October 1907) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1907/45SLR0009.html Cite as: [1907] SLR 9, [1907] ScotLR 9 |
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Page: 9↓
(Single Bills.)
A creditor having presented a petition for an order for the winding-up of a company, and the company, which had on the day when the creditor's petition was presented resolved on a voluntary winding-up, having through its liquidator presented a petition for a supervision order, the Court continued the voluntary liquidation subject to supervision, but granted the petitioning creditor his expenses “as these may be taxed” out of the company's estate.
Held that the petitioning creditor's expenses were rightly taxed as between agent and client.
On August 13, 1907, John M'Gregor, colliery agent, Dunblane, a creditor of the Ballachulish Slate Quarries Company, Limited, presented a petition for an order for the winding-up of that company. On the same date, at an extraordinary meeting, a resolution for the voluntary winding-up of the company was adopted by its shareholders, and John Hamilton Buchanan, C.A., Edinburgh, was appointed liquidator. The company and liquidator lodged answers to the creditor's petition, and petitioned for the continuance of the voluntary winding-up subject to supervision. On August 29, 1907, the Lord Ordinary on the Bills ( Kinnear) continued the voluntary winding-up, under the supervision of the Court, refused the prayer of the petitioning creditor's petition, and found “the petitioner and the respondents entitled to their expenses as these may be taxed by the Auditor … and directs these expenses to be expenses in the liquidation.”
Page: 10↓
The Auditor having taxed the petitioning creditor's expenses as between agent and client, the liquidator lodged a note of objections maintaining that such expenses, there being nothing to the contrary in the interlocutor, must be as between party and party.
In the Single Bills counsel for the petitioning creditor moved for decree for the expenses as taxed. Counsel for the liquidator resisted, and the Court intimated that the Auditor would be communicated with.
At advising—
That is a perfectly ordinary proceeding and the usual interlocutor, and the reason of it is of course plain enough, that even although the Court in its discretion may hold that the better form of winding-up is not a compulsory winding-up but a winding-up under the supervision of the Court, the Court is still entitled, indeed bound in proper cases, to give the petitioner who comes into Court with a petition for compulsory winding-up, his expenses, as having brought the matter into Court, the view being that the whole parties concerned have the benefit of his initial proceedings in the liquidation which is then instituted.
Now, the expenses were taxed, and they were taxed by the Auditor upon the scale of agent and client, and the present question has arisen upon the objection taken by the liquidator that, inasmuch as the interlocutor does not in terms mention agent and client, the expenses ought to be taxed as between party and party. As to the general rule in ordinary actions upon this matter there can be no doubt. “Expenses” without any more being said means taxation upon the scale of party against party, and anyone who wishes taxation on another scale must take care that it is mentioned in the interlocutor. As to that there is no doubt. But upon inquiry there seems to be as little doubt as to the rule in the present case. The finding of expenses here really means taxation as between agent and client, because there is in the proper sense of the word no question of party against party. The petitioner here was not found entitled to expenses because he had been in any sense successful against his only opponent, the liquidator. As a matter of fact, so far from being successful, he was really unsuccessful, because while he contended that the order should be for compulsory winding-up, the liquidator contended, and with success, that it should be a supervision order. He was not found entitled to expenses as having been the victor in a litigation against another party. He was found entitled to expenses because it was his petition that initiated the whole matter and really formed the true basis of the liquidation, although technically it was found in this particular instance convenient to write on the other petition.
Now in this case the truth is there is no question of party against party to whom the rule is to apply. Accordingly, I think the Auditor here has done according to the ordinary practice and according to the right practice in allowing this petitioner the expenses he has incurred so far as reasonable, that is, his expenses taxed as between agent and client.
The Court repelled the objections and approved of the Auditor's report.
Counsel for the Petitioner— A. A. Fraser. Agent— William Calder, Solicitor.
Counsel for the Respondents— J. A. T. Robertson. Agents— Inglis, Orr, & Bruce, W.S.