[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Copland v Brogan [1915] ScotCS CSIH_3 (15 December 1915) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1915/1916_SC_277.html Cite as: 1916 SC 277, 1916 1 SLT 13, [1915] ScotCS CSIH_3 |
[New search] [Help]
15 December 1915
Copland |
v. |
Brogan. |
With regard to the English authorities which have been quoted, I have difficulty in accepting them as being in conformity with the law of Scotland, and I do not agree that the same rule of law as applies to gratuitous obligations under English law can be held as applying in this case. According to Bell's Principles, there is an obligation on the depositary to “keep the thing with reasonable care,” and the editor of the last edition of that work states that reasonable care in the case of a gratituitous depositary means “such care as a man of common prudence generally exercises about his own property of like description.” Now, the packet having gone astray while it was in the defender's custody, the onus, in my opinion, rests on him to explain how this happened or at least to show that he exercised the necessary reasonable care. Here the explanation given did not, in my opinion, sufficiently discharge the defender of responsibility for the loss of the packet. The consequences would be most unfortunate if we were to hold that it did. On the defender's own statements, and on the other evidence in the case, there is enough to shew that the defender, in executing his commission, did not exercise the care which a prudent man would have taken with regard to a valuable packet of this kind. Accordingly I think that we ought to pronounce an interlocutor in the following terms. [His Lordship read the interlocutor printed infra.] It is right that I should add that there is nothing to warrant any imputation of dishonesty on the part of the defender.
The permission for BAILII to publish the text of this judgment
was granted by Scottish Council of Law Reporting and
the electronic version of the text was provided by Justis Publishing Ltd.
Their assistance is gratefully acknowledged.