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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Lady Mary Lindsay Craufurd - Warre - Adam v. Col. W. C. Campbell - Kea - John Campbell [1826] UKHL 2_WS_440 (26 March 1826) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1826/2_WS_440.html Cite as: [1826] UKHL 2_WS_440 |
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Page: 440↓
(1826) 2 W&S 440
CASES DECIDED IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS ON APPEAL FROM THE COURTS OF SCOTLAND, 1826.
1 st Division.
No. 33.
Subject_Jurisdiction.—Exhibition.—Peerage.—
Held (reversing the judgment of the Court of Session) that a party who had been served heir of provision under a charter conveying lands and the dignity of a peerage, but whose right to the peerage had not been ascertained or recognized by the Crown, was not entitled to insist in an action against another party having right to the lands, concluding for exhibition and delivery of all titles relative to the peerage as his own proper writs.
John Earl of Craufurd and Lindsay, Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, lived during the middle of the 17th century. On the 28th of April 1648, he obtained a charter, said to have been granted under the sign-manual of Charles I., proceeding on a resignation in the hands of the Crown of the estates and honours of the family of Craufurd and Lindsay, and by which his Majesty reconveyed them to the Earl in liferent, “et Gulielmo Domino Parbroath ejus filio legitimo maximo et hæredibus masculis de suo corpore suo legitimè procreandis; quibus deficientibus Patricio Lindsay filio legitimo secundo dicti Comitis et hæredibus masculis de suo corpore legitimè procreandis; quibus deficientibus hæredibus masculis quibuscunque dicti Comitis de suo corpore legitimè procreandis; quibus deficientibus natu maximae hæredum femellarum procreandæ de corpore prefati Gulielmi Domini Parbroath illa omnimodo habente alicui cognominis Lindsay qui assumet cognomen et insignia domus et familiæ de Craufurd Lindsay et hæredibus masculis de corpore dictae filiæ dictum cognomen et insignia de Lindsay gerentibus.” The charter was recorded in the register of the great seal, and infeftment passed on it in June of the same year. The dignities and family estates descended through males to George Earl of Craufurd and Lindsay, who died without lawful issue in 1808.
In 1800, a new entail of the estates was executed, in virtue of which Lady Mary Lindsay Craufurd, sister of the last Earl, and heir of line of the Treasurer's youngest son, succeeded to the estates. Several competitors then appeared for the honours, and in 1820, the respondent, Colonel William Claud Campbell, founding on a copy of the above charter, (extracted from the register of the great seal,) as heir male and of line of Lady Mary Campbell, his grandmother, the nearest heir-female of the body of the eldest son of the Treasurer, obtained
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Thereafter, Colonel Campbell raised in the Court of Session, an action of exhibition and delivery against Lady Mary Lindsay Craufurd, stating in the libel his service as heir of provision under the charter of 1648, and that, as such, he was entitled to call for exhibition and delivery of all writings and titles in which he had any interest under that charter; and concluding, that Lady Mary should be decerned and ordained to exhibit and produce certain writings there enumerated, and all other writings, rights, and titles, in her possession and custody, relating to the transmission of the honours, dignities, and estates of the Earldom of Craufurd and Lindsay, which should be condescended on by him in the course of the procedure to follow. In defence Lady Mary contended, that if the exhibition were required with a view to claim the family estates, the pursuer had no right to the estates, or to demand production of the deeds relating to them (a point settled in a former process); that if it was for the purpose of making out a claim to the peerage, the Court of Session was not the competent court; and that the deed 1648 was not under the sign-manual of Charles I., who was at its date a prisoner in Carrisbrook Castle, but had been granted by the Barons of Exchequer, and so was not capable of bestowing honours. Colonel Campbell then amended his libel, by restricting his demand of exhibition and delivery to the writings specified in his summons, in so far as they related to the honours and dignities—concluding, “that such of the said writs as relate only to honours and dignities, should be decerned and ordained to be given and delivered up to the pursuer, to be used and disposed of by him as his own proper writs and evidents; and such of them as relate to the estates, as well as honours, ought to be made forthcoming to him on all necessary occasions, on receipt and obligation for re-delivery within a certain time, under a suitable penalty.”
The deeds called for were—Patent in favour of Ludovic Earl of Craufurd, 12th October 1641, or January 1642,— Ratification of the entail recited therein by Charles I. in Parliament, 1641,—Mutual entail or contract between Ludovic and John Earl of Lindsay,—Instrument of resignation thereon, —Decreet of forfeiture by Parliament of Scotland against the Earl of Craufurd, dated 25th July 1644,—Ratification by the Scotch Parliament in favour of Earl of Lindsay, anent his right or patent of Earl of Craufurd, 25th July 1644,—Parliamentary ratification in favour of John Lord Lindsay, of his patent of Earl
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The
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The Court, therefore, on the 9th July 1823, sustained the amendment, and before further answer, “remitted to Sir Robert Dundas, Mr Macdonald Buchanan, or Mr Colin Mackenzie, (Clerks of Court,) or either of them, to examine Lady Mary
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Lady Mary having presented a petition against this judgment, and answers having been ordered and thereafter advised,—
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The Court, therefore, on the 25th of February 1824, adhered. *
Lady Mary appealed.
Appellant.—The Court, before deciding on the respondent's right, have exposed the appellant's charter-chest and other repositories, containing the family muniments, to be broken open, rummaged, and made patent to all the world. It is no answer to say that if she refuses exhibition the Clerks have only to report that fact,—for she would thereby be guilty of a contempt, —to avoid which she must open, or allow to be forced open, any place or spot where they may even suspect the deeds to be. Even in the case where the production of the deeds is necessary, the party making the requisition must show that he has a positive interest in the writings called for. But, prior to 1648, female succession had no place in this family, either as to estates or honours. The charter of that year did not pass under the royal sign-manual, and can be of no avail to the respondent as to honours. If it do exist, it is a title to the appellant's estates, in which the respondent has no interest. Even if he had an interest, he should betake himself to the usual remedy, and not arm himself with what is equivalent to a general search-warrant. Besides, these deeds being movables, do not descend to the heir.
Warren.—We deny that there is. The order of which we complain is altogether different from the conclusions of an usual action of exhibition. The respondent's object is quite different. He claims the property of the deeds, not the mere access to them.
_________________ Footnote _________________
* See 2 Shaw and Dunlop, No. 678.
Page: 446↓
Respondent.—This is a substantive action for recovery of deeds, on the ground of the respondent's right of property in them. It is an action known in the Scotch Law, and is the competent process recognised in practice. The deeds are not to be regarded as mere parchment and wax, and so excoutry, hut as patents of nobility, and the property (sole, or in common, according as they do or do not include title to the lands) of the respondent. It is a mistake to say that the respondent could force open the repositories.—Doors cannot be opened without letters of ‘open doors.’ Even messengers-at-arms must have that diligence. If Lady Mary, when asked, declares that she has not the deeds—or refuses access to them, or will not give them up—the Clerks can only so report. If the Court considered this a contempt, they may proceed in the way they think proper; but under this order, the premises cannot be forced. The Clerks have no such powers. If refused admission they must withdraw. Their power may be compared to a mandamus, with a return to the day named in the order. It is a danger common to all actions of exhibition that the supposed custodier may deny the possession. The respondent asks nothing unreasonable; if he be entitled to production, and eventually to delivery, it is the same to him in what mode the order is to be executed. It is not the respondent or his agent who goes to make the search, but the Court, represented by their officers. The respondent's interest is undeniable—and the appellant does not pretend any right to the honours of the family. If the Court of Session were not competent to entertain the question, the respondent has no other tribunal from which to require redress. Besides, this is truly an abstract point involving a civil right of property, and must be judged of by the Court below. In the Court of Session, the appellant never complained of the manner in which the order was worded—but merely that the respondent had no interest to seek exhibition.
Campbell.—But his Lordship rested that opinion on the ground that there could be no property in the title-deeds—not that there was anything informal in the shape of the proceedings, if the respondent had an interest. We maintain that a right belonging to the respondent flows from, and is dependent on this charter of 1648, whose production we seek. The respondent is not a stranger, but the party interested. A committee of privileges could not enforce the delivery.
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Campbell.—Therefore the committee of privileges could not decide on any question of property. Recourse must be had to the Court of Session. A prima facie evidence of right is sufficient to warrant the conclusion in an action of exhibition. If, on the death of a Peer, his heir were deprived of his patent, could not the heir institute an action to recover it? Aware of this, the appellant maintains that the respondent cannot make out a prima facie case; and alleges that the charter 1648 bears date at Edinburgh, where his majesty was not; and that the resignation was made not in his hands, but in the hands of the Barons of Exchequer (according to the office copy), and therefore cannot bear the royal sign-manual, nor confer honours. But when the time for entering on that point arrives, the respondent will show that the charter does convey the peerage, and that he is entitled to the honours.
Keay.—In the register of the great seal, there is lodged only an office copy of the charter. The original is not left. The copy we have had access to, has been somewhat injured by time; and we have an interest to have inspection of the original, to see whether it is open to any objections, before incurring any expense of further procedure. The charter is the common property of both parties.
Keay.—The charter 1648 is not an original grant. It proceeds on a resignation; but we are entitled to see the right of the Earl to make the resignation. We must see the original charter.
The House of Lords ordered and adjudged, that “the said interlocutors complained of in the said appeal be, and the same are hereby reversed, and that the defender be assoilzied.”
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My Lords, Lady Mary Craufurd put in defences to this action, in which she alleged that “If the pursuer calls for the titles narrated in the summons, with a view to substantiate a claim to the estates of the family, he has no right to demand the exhibition. The defender is infeft in these estates, conform to a precept issuing from Chancery, and upon a destination totally different from that contained in the charter 1648, and no previous entail existed to prevent the estates being settled in that manner; her right to them was ascertained by the judgment of the Court of Session in 1771, and the pursuer has no title whatever either to these estates, or to demand production of the title-deeds relating to them; and if the titles called for are intended to enable the pursuer to make out a claim to the Peerage, then his demand is incompetent in the Court of Session; the title of any claimant to honours and dignities must be established in the House of Peers, the only Court competent to try questions of that description, and the demand for the production of papers which are to establish it must be made before the same tribunal.”
After this the respondent amended his summons. Your Lordships will perceive that by the original summons he called upon Lady Mary
Page: 449↓
To this amended summons Lady Mary Craufurd put in a defence stating, that if Colonel Campbell claimed those deeds on the ground that he was entitled to the dignity of Earl of Craufurd, that till he had established the right to that dignity, he could have no right to the deeds, and if they were called for to support his claim, then she contended that that would come before your Lordships’ House, and that the Court of Session could have no jurisdiction upon the subject.
The matter coming before the Lord Ordinary, he reported it on informations, when the Court pronounced this interlocutor, which has been admitted at the bar to be one for which no instance or authority can be found : “Having advised the informations for the parties, with the amendment of the libel and additional defences, they sustain the said amendment; and before further answer, remit to Sir Robert Dundas, Mr M‘Donald Buchanan, or Mr Colin Mackenzie, or either of them, to examine Lady Mary Lindsay Craufurd's charter-chest, or other repositories containing the family papers, for the deeds called for by the pursuer in his information, and to select the same if found,”—so that the Court delegated an authority to one or other of these three gentlemen, to examine the charter-chest and repositories of Lady Mary Craufurd at their pleasure, and to any extent, and to select from those repositories the deeds in question, if they were there to be found.
My Lords, Lady Mary Craufurd complained of this finding by a petition to the Court, and on the case again coming before them, the Judges differed materially—the extreme injury to Lady Mary Craufurd, by having her deeds examined by any gentleman whatever, being strongly, represented. However, the majority appear to have been of opinion that the interlocutor upon the whole was a right interlocutor, and they adhered to it, and in consequence of that an appeal has been brought to your Lordships' House.
I have stated that I would call your Lordships' attention to the nature of this action and of other actions, for the exhibition of deeds in Scotland. It appears that there are two kinds of actions of this description, one founded upon a right of possession, or right of property in the subjects themselves,
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Counsel: Respondent's Authorities.—Sutherland Case, p. 61.—1 Stair, 7.14.—4 Ersk. 1. 52.— Lady Mary Campbell v. Earl of Craufurd, Aug. 8, 1783 (3973).— Earl of Hume v. Johnson, July 4, 1623. (Haddington.)—Earl of Bredalbane, Feb. 21, 1741. —1 Ersk. 3.18.—Dunbar, Feb. 2, 1790 (7395).—MS. Index to Decisions of Hope, Durie, and Spottiswood, Ad Lib.—Ker, July 7, 1804 (7984).—Robertson's Ap. Cases, p. 400.—Kames' Hist. Law Tracts, p. 227.
Solicitors: J. Richardson— J. Campbell, Solicitors.