BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Agnes Stewart and Husband v. Christian Heron [1749] UKHL 1_Paton_432 (30 June 1749)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1749/1_Paton_432.html
Cite as: [1749] UKHL 1_Paton_432

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]


SCOTTISH_HoL_JURY_COURT

Page: 432

(1749) 1 Paton 432

REPORTS OF CASES ON APPEAL FROM SCOTLAND.

No. 82.


Agnes Stewart and Husband,     Appellants

v.

Christian Heron,     Respondent

30th May, 1749.

Subject_Personal and Real. — Bona et mala fides.—

An onerous singular successor is not affected by a latent and personal ground of challenge, to which his author's right is subject.

Elchies voce Fraud, No. 21, Mor. 1705.]

The entail of the lands of Physgill having been set aside as being contra fidem tabularum nuptialium, ( supra No. 71), and Agnes Stewart, the heir under the marriage contract, having been found entitled to the estate, and having entered into possession of it, the present question arose between her and her husband (the appellants) on the one part, and Christian Heron (the respondent) widow of the heir of entail, whose right had been set aside, on the other. During the lifetime

Page: 433

of her husband, and while the feudal title which he had made up to the lands of Physgil under the entail of 1719, remained unchallenged, the respondent had been infeft by him in a liferent annuity out of these lands, in virtue of an obligation contained in their marriage contract.

In order to establish her right to this annuity, upon the death of her husband, the respondent raised an action of poinding the ground before the Sheriff of the county, against the tenants of the lands, upon her liferent infeftment, which, having been removed into the Court of Session, was converted into an action of mails and duties against Agnes Stewart and her husband, and the tenants. The Lord Ordinary (Kilkerran) reported the case to the Court, and their Lordships found, (9th February 1749) “That the obligation entered into by John Coltraine, (afterwards John Stewart of Phisgill,) in the marriage settlement betwixt him and the pursuer, whereby he was bound to settle upon her a liferent provision to the extent of L.50 Sterling yearly, was onerous on the part of the said pursuer, and rational upon the part of the said John Coltraine; and that, he having implemented the same, by granting the liferent infeftment to that extent, when he was in the right of the fee and property of the estate of Phisgill, and his right subject to no challenge from any thing that did or could appear on the records; That infeftmentf was likewise just and onerous, and does subsist in her person, notwithstanding of the reduction afterwards brought against the right and title of the said John Coltraine, upon the latent personal obligation contained in the contract of marriage entered into, Anno 1668, betwixt

Page: 434

John Stewart, writer in Edinburgh, and Agnes Stewart his spouse, whereby he was bound to settle the estate he should acquire in favour of the heir whomsoever of the marriage, and notwithstanding the decree obtained in that reduction, setting aside the right of the said John Coltraine, which the Lords found cannot hurt the said onerous liferent settlement made to the pursuer by her said husband, while he stood in the full right of property of the estate conform to the infeftments and investitures thereof.” The Court adhered (22 Feb.)

Entered, March 2, 1749.

The appeal was brought from these interlocutors of 9 and 22 Feb. 1749.

Pleaded for the Appellants:—The claim of the respondent is barred, re judicata, in consequence of the judgment in the former action, John Coltraine her husband having urged in her right, as well as in his own, the same arguments which are now maintained: At all events, the judgment in the former cause is a strong precedent upon the point in dispute in the present question. The entail 1719, which is the foundation of the respondent's claim, being reduced and set aside, as fraudulent, and contra fidem tabularum nuptialium, all subsequent rights dependent thereon must fall according to the rule, resoluto jure dantis resolvitur jus accipientis.

John Stewart (the entailer) being infeft in his wife's estate, upon the disposition contained in their contract of marriage, 1668, and his infeftment being duly recorded in the proper register, every person contracting upon the faith of these records must thence have discovered, that the estate was limited and secured to the heir of the marriage,

Page: 435

and consequently, that John Stewart was thereby disabled from granting any voluntary gratuitous deed, to the prejudice, and in fraud of that marriage settlement.

Therefore the respondent's claim as a bona fide purchaser, upon the faith of the records, is without any proper foundation. The entail 1719, was her husband's only title to the estate; that was plainly a gratuitous voluntary deed of settlement by John Stewart, without any just or necessary cause, in fraud of his own marriage contract. John Stewart's infeftment 1668, proceeding upon the marriage contract, did clearly point out the limitations he was under in favour of the heir of that marriage, and it is an established point, that the most onerous purchaser from one whose right appears ex facie, or is by law presumed to be gratuitous, (as in deeds between conjunct and confident persons,) can be in no better case than the person from whom he purchases.

Pleaded for the Respondent:—John Coltraine, the respondent's husband, at the time of granting the liferent provision to her, was in full possession of the estate, and had the property thereof legally and completely vested in him, so that in point of law nothing can be clearer, than that, notwithstanding any previous latent obligations, he might have sold the estate to a purchaser for a valuable consideration, and would have forfeited the same in case he had been guilty of any act, incurring a forfeiture.

The respondent was truly a purchaser of her liferent provision for a full and valuable consideration, without any notice of the said contract of 1668.

Although the entail was reduced by reason of

Page: 436

the contract of 1668, yet, that personal contract cannot affect the right of a purchaser, not having notice of it, who claims under a deed executed by a subsequent heir of entail, while he was in the undisputed possession of the estate, under a title then unimpeached; and which appeared, from all the entries upon record, to be liable to no objection.

Judgment, 30 May 1749.

After hearing counsel. “It is ordered and adjudged, &c. that the interlocutor complained of be affirmed.”

Counsel: For Appellants, W. Murray, A. Lockhart, C. Maitland.
For Respondent, A. Hume Campbell, C. Erskine.

1749


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1749/1_Paton_432.html