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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Hunter of Polmuid v Hay of Haystoun. [1681] Mor 11294 (1 July 1681)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1681/Mor2711294-463.html
Cite as: [1681] Mor 11294

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[1681] Mor 11294      

Subject_1 PRESCRIPTION.
Subject_2 DIVISION XVI.

Interruption of the Positive Prescription.

Hunter of Polmuid
v.
Hay of Haystoun

Date: 1 July 1681
Case No. No 463.

Effect of possession in interrupting prescription.


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Hunter of Polmuid pursues Hay of Haystoun for obtaining a change of the holding for certain lands, from ward to feu, and the delivering of the pursuer's evidents, conform to a decreet-arbitral betwixt the pursuer and the defender's goodsir. The defender alleged absolvitor, because the decreet arbitral was in anno 1637, and so all action thereupon is prescribed. It was answered, That prescription is always interrupted by possession, and the pursuer hath possessed the land, although he got no feu-infeftment; yet certainly Haystoun hath had an obligment on the superior for it; for the superior received the feu-duty from the pursuer for many years; and if the defender had obtained a disposition or charter of the feu, his possessing thereby would exclude prescription. It was replied for the defender, That in this case the pursuer neither did, nor could possess, by virtue of the decreet-arbitral, but did possess by his own ward-right; but if the decreet-arbitral, or any obligement, had proceeded from the superior for a feu, his possession might be ascribed thereto, but not to a third party's, obligment.

The Lords sustained the defence of prescription, in respect the possession could not be attributed to the decreet-arbitral; and found the obligment for delivery of the evidents by the decreet-arbitral was also prescribed but not the obligation of delivery, if he had the writs, or fraudfully put the same away within these 40 years.

Stair, v. 2. p. 885.

The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting     


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1681/Mor2711294-463.html