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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> John Gordon of Grange v The Earl of Galloway. [1708] 4 Brn 705 (15 June 1708) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1708/Brn040705-0202.html |
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Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by SIR JOHN LAUDER OF FOUNTAINHALL.
Subject_2 I sat in the Outer-House this week.
Date: John Gordon of Grange
v.
The Earl of Galloway
15 June 1708 Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
John Gordon of Grange, having borrowed 2000 merks from the Earl, gives him an infeftment in a part of his lands for his security, redeemable always upon payment of the foresaid sum; and the Earl having entered to the whole lands, there is a declarator raised by John Gordon, that the Earl is overpaid by his intromissions, and therefore ought to repossess him, and pay in the balance.
The Earl proponed this defence, That he was debarred and kept out of the possession by a preferable right, granted by this same Grange to the Viscount of Kenmuir, for 2900 merks, whereon infeftment clad with possession followed, prior to the right he made to the Earl: and, for proving thereof, he produced the heritable right granted to Kenmuir, with a seasine and, decreet of poinding of the ground.
Objected, 1mo,—That right to Kenmuir was never a delivered evident, but consigned in Provost Coltrain's hand, till William Gordon should deliver up to Grange some bonds he had of his; and this appeared by an instrument taken by Kenmuir against Provost Coltrain, and his oath in an exhibition.
Answered,—Nullo modo relevat against my Lord Galloway, a singular successor, who now produced the said right in his own hands; and was not concerned in any depositation, which, however it might meet Kenmuir, it can never militate against him.
2do, Grange objected,—That, esto this were a preferable right, yet, I having put you in possession, you ought not to have quit it, unless removed by a sentence, and legally dispossessed; especially seeing you were obliged, by a clause in the bond, to have defended against that right; and though they would have prevailed, yet you should have bidden a process, ere you had quit the possession.
Which the Lords found, and therefore decerned against the Earl. For though a man is not bound to cast out unnecessary expenses, in opposing a clear uncontroverted right, yet here he had bound himself to it, and was to have allowance of his expenses he should ware out in defending against it.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting