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!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Commissioners of the Border v Elliots. [1681] 2 Brn 277 (25 February 1681) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1681/Brn020277-0558.html Cite as: [1681] 2 Brn 277 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
[1681] 2 Brn 277
Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by SIR JAMES DALRYMPLE OF STAIR.
Date: The Commissioners of the Border
v.
Elliots
25 February 1681 Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
The Commissioners of the Border having apprehended Robert Elliot upon an accusation of theft, there were two Elliots gave bond to present him to the Border-court, at Jedburgh, the 25th April 1676, or at any other time or place thereafter the Commissioners of the Borders pleased, under the pain of 5000 merks, upon six days warning, allenarly. And, in 1680, they summoned them, upon six days, to produce him again at Jedburgh; and, upon their failyie, decerned them in 5000 merks. And having obtained letters of horning upon the said decreet, by deliverance of the Lords, and having therewith charged the said cautioners, they gave in a bill of suspension. And the Lords having appointed the cause to be heard upon the bill, before report, there was an address made to the council, that the council would, by their act, prohibit the meddling with the sentence of the Commissioners of the Border: they being a commission of many eminent persons and having their commission under both the Great Seals of Scotland and England, and being a supreme criminal court, not subordinate to the Justice-General,—the Lords of Session, who have no criminal jurisdiction, could not meddle with their sentence, but should refuse all bills of advocation or suspensions thereanent.
The matter being debated in council sharply enough, it was shown, That the Lords of Session were the King's ordinary council in matters of right, as the
council were in matters of state and public peace; and therefore they might, and did supply the defect of any criminal court; and therefore letters of horning did pass upon the Lords' deliverance upon all pecunial sentences of the justice-court; and no other could suspend these sentences, even upon obedience. Likeas, the Lords have advocated causes even from the justices, when the justices were concerned in the cause before them as a party, or had near relation to the parties, or was in enmity with either of them; though the Lords could not judge these causes, as being criminal, in name of unsuspected judges. For that cause, much more might they suspend the letters given out by themselves upon a pecunial matter of the Commissioners of the Border. And though there was a commission by the King, under the Great Seal of Scotland, to so many Scots and English, and under the Great Seal of England, to the same persons, yet they did not become a third kind of judicatory from both kingdoms: but, when they sat in Scotland, they sat by the Great Seal of Scotland; and even the English were become Commissioners of Scotland; and, when they sat in England, the Scots were Commissioners of England, and behoved to keep the laws of either kingdoms that they sat in, though they might keep the fits and customs of the Border. Whereupon the Privy-Council did not concur in that motion; but recommended it to the Lords of Session to be tender of discouraging the Commissioners of the Border.
And now, the cause being called, the Elliots repeated their reason of suspension, That the decreet of the Commissioners of the Border was most unjust and unwarrantable, having decerned the suspenders in the failyie of 5000 merks for not producing of Robert Elliot upon six days' warning, when they were out of the kingdom, and therefore no less days were requisite than sixty; for even charges of horning upon bonds bearing a charge of six days only, must proceed upon sixty days against persons out of the country: and Robert Elliot himself was not cited.
It was answered, 1mo. That, albeit sixty days be required to cite and charge persons who are notourly out of the kingdom, yet that cannot be extended to the inhabitants upon the Border, who may pass the Border oft-times every day; and therefore a citation at their dwelling-house must be sustained, unless it were notour in the country that they had been long absent out of the kingdom. And it would exceedingly retard the commission, if citations at the market-cross of Edinburgh were requisite upon sixty days. 2do. Though there had been any informality, decerning the penalty to be incurred, yet, it being a liquidate penalty in the suspender's bond, it is incurred upon the cautioners not presenting Elliot at Jedburgh the 25th April 1676. For, albeit it be subjoined to their bond, “or at any other time or place the commissioners pleased, upon six days' warning,” that did not import an alternative obligation in the option of the cautioners, but was absolutely in the option of the commissioners, when they pleased; and, therefore, Robert Elliot, having neither been offered at Jedburgh the 25th day of April, or any time since, the Lords, in justice, ought to find the letters orderly proceeded for the liquidate penalty.
The Lords found this answer relevant, and therefore found the letters orderly proceeded; but had not the occasion to determine the other point, concerning the days of the charge requisite on the Border.
Vol. II, Page 868.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting