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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Tailors of the Canongate v the Tailors of Edinburgh. [1708] 5 Brn 47 (16 June 1708) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1708/Brn050047-0042.html |
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Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by SIR ALEXANDER GIBSON, OF DURIE.
The Tailors of the Canongate
v.
the Tailors of Edinburgh
1708 .June andNovember 16 ,27 .Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
The town of Edinburgh granted to the tailors there a seal of cause, in the year 1531, ratified by King James V. and another in the year 1584, ratified by King James VI. bearing “That the tailors of Edinburgh were heavily hurt and pre
judiced by unfreemen dwelling in the Cannongate, Potterraw, and other suburbs, their taking clothes out of Edinburgh, to be wrought within their own freedoms, for the use of inhabitants in Edinburgh; and, therefore, ordaining, That if any person, not burgess freeman of the said burgh, be apprehended taking out or bringing in any such work, shapen or unshapen ; it shall be lawful to the deacon or masters, or any of them, with the concurrence of an officer, to seize and keep the said work, till payment be made of forty shillings by the workmen, and as much by the owners, for giving work to be wrought without the freedom of the burgh.” The tailors of Edinburgh having been in use, in consequence of these seals of cause, to seize unfreemen's work; the question of right and privilege came to be debated betwixt them and the Cannongate tailors, in mutual declarators before the Lords. Alleged for the Cannongate Tailors,—No act of the town council of Edinburgh could, by such extraordinary clauses, without calling or hearing the tailors of the Cannongate, and others interested, deprive them of their liberties and privileges. For this, upon the matter, is, jus dicere extra territorium ; and acts of Parliament were found necessary to entitle some manufactures to such privileges, which yet are salvo jure cujuslibet. Nor can the sovereign grant a monopoly, except for the encouragement of a new invention; and a novodamus upon a party's resignation containing a bounding, doth not prejudice meiths and marches. Now, what may be the consequence of such a mighty power in the town of Edinburgh ? All ranks of people, from every corner of the nation, who come to reside and spend their fortunes there, might come to find themselves abridged and deprived of the free disposal thereof, for meat and drink, as well as clothing; craftsmen might impose upon them, by setting extravagant prices upon their work ; men would be provoked to buy clothes from others than merchants of Edinburgh. 2. Burgesses dwelling in Edinburgh cannot be subjected to such thraldom more than the rest of the lieges ; for a burgess is only subject to such regular orders of the town council as are ordinary and necessary for the government of the place, without surrendering his common liberty and property, which he enjoys as any subject; and the Lords of Session have often rescinded town-council-acts, putting unreasonable restraints upon their own burgesses. 3. The tailors of the Cannongate have also their seal of cause, with full liberty to work to all the lieges ; and bear burden as well as the tailors of Edinburgh.
answered for the TAILORS of Edinburgh,—All burghs being in use to grant such seals of cause to their respective incorporations, for maintaining of their liberties, in recompense of the burdens they bear of stent, watching, warding, and other services authorized by princes and parliaments ; how can these be thought to encroach upon the liberties of the subject ? True, in some respect, they restrain (as all privileges do) the liberty of others: but for the good of the nation ; and so all men ought to comply with them. Seeing strangers coming to Edinburgh can be as well served within the burgh, what necessity is there to encourage their employing unfreemen, against the privilege of incorporations ? Which privilege is both agreeable to reason, and countenanced by Acts of Parliament, particularly the 154th Act, Parl. 12. James VI. discharging and suppressing the exercise of crafts in the suburbs of royal burrows, as prejudicial to craftsmen bearing burden within burgh. 2. The tailors of Edinburgh are far from pretending to break into the shops of tailors in the Cannongate, or any ways to invade their just privilege
of working to all the lieges ; but only to hinder them to steal, as it were, the meat out of their neighbours' mouths in Edinburgh, by working within their freedom, or taking out and bringing in work there. The tailors of the Cannongate have privileges, for any burden they bear, in which the Edinburgh tailors do not offer to wrong them ; but it is certain that the tailors of the Cannongate are liable to no such burden of stent, watching, or warding, as those of Edinburgh are. Replied for the Cannongate Tailors,—They do not deny the town's power of granting seals of cause, with reasonable and ordinary clauses; but only controvert such as are extraordinary and exorbitant. The cited Act of Parliament is only against vagabond unfreemen, who fled from their masters in Edinburgh, and drew the work of the town to the suburbs, where they set up booths without being made free there: and to extend it against the Cannongate tailors, who have their own seal of cause, and particular freedom, were to besiege and shut them in from all employment.
The Lords found, that the seal of cause granted to the tailors of Edinburgh is an effectual restraint as to burgesses, and such as bear scot and lot there; and assoilyied them quoad these from the Cannongate tailors' declarator of immunity.
Thereafter, 27th November, 1708, the Lords found, that the said tailors of Edinburgh had no right to seize any work brought into the town, and made by the Cannongate tailors, belonging to strangers or others residing in Edinburgh, without bearing scot and lot.
Page 252.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting