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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dickson of Kilbucco, and Dickson of Whitslide, v Margaret Tweedie John and James Jamesons, Tenants in Whitslide. [1736] Mor 13880 (18 February 1736)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1736/Mor3213880-122.html
Cite as: [1736] Mor 13880

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[1736] Mor 13880      

Subject_1 REMOVING.
Subject_2 SECT. IX.

Effect of an obligation to remove without warning.

Dickson of Kilbucco, and Dickson of Whitslide,
v.
Margaret Tweedie John and James Jamesons, Tenants in Whitslide

Date: 18 February 1736
Case No. No 122.

An intimation or charge previous to the issue of a tack found necessary, although the tenant had obliged himself to remove, without any warning, intimation or charge. See No 117.


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Whitslide having disponed his estate to Kilbucco in trust, he, with Whitslide's consent, set, for the space of nine years, a lease of the houses and lands of Whitslide to the said tenants, in which they oblige themselves to remove at the expiry of the tack, (Whitsunday 1735) without any warning or legal intimation made to them, or process of law against them; towards the end of this lease, (Kilbucco being denuded of his trust) Whitslide signed a precept of warning, which was said to be executed in common form, against Margaret Tweedie, &.; as also he raised a horning upon the tack, both in his own and Kilbucco's name; in virtue whereof these tenants were charged, on the 15th day of May 1735, to remove from the said lands, &c. at Whitsunday next to come.

The tenants suspended, and pleaded, That they had never received any warning, without which, or an intimation, or charge previous to the term, they were not bound to remove, notwithstanding of the stipulation in the tack; for though the case of tenants bound to remove at the issue of their tack without warning, may not fall under the state 1555, yet some antecedent warning, or charge, is surely necessary, otherwise the design of that excellent law might be frustrated, which was made to provide against tenants being put unawares to seek their habitationsat unseasonable times, agreeable so Lord Stair's sentiment, p. 321. (333.) and 624. (646.) Neither can the charge on the 15th day of May be considered as an intimation antecedent to the term; on the contrary, as the term was come before they were charged, they behoved to have the benefit of tacit relocation, more especially as the charge was not given to remove at Whitsunday 1735, but at Whitsunday next to come, which the suspender understood to mean Whitsunday 1736; and indeed a charge, given upon the 15th day of May to remove that day, would have been inept; because the tack, which was the ground thereof, consented only to a charge upon six days notice.

Replied for the chargers; That, where a tack is set for a certain number of years, the tenant cannot be removed without a warning in terms of the statute, seeing the omission thereof imports, in the construction of law, a new agreement for another year's tack; but, where the tenant is expressly bound to remove, without warning or intimation, it is impossible that the neglecting to use such can imply a renewal of the lease; as the obligation supersedes the necessity thereof, agreeable to what Craig delivers, L. 2. D. 9. § 9. And in Friesland, where they have the like statute with ours, Sande, L. 3. T. 6. defin. 1. lays down the same doctrine; so that, unless there was some law annulling such a paction, or that it were contra bonos mores, it ought to take effect.

In the next place, granting that some intimation, &c. were necessary, it has been complied with in the present case, for a warning was delivered to them, as they formerly acknowledged. It is true that several objections were made thereto, which were altogether unnecessary; as the chargers did insist upon it as a legal warning, in regard they were not bound to execute a formal one, the stipulation in the tack having superseded the necessity thereof; but still it ought to serve as a sufficient notification to them, that the chargers did not pass from the obligation in the tack whereby they were obliged to remove without warning.

And, as to the pretence, that the charge commands them to remove at Whitsunday next, which, it is alleged, was understood to mean Whitsunday 1736, it is by no means solid; seeing, by the tack, they are bound to remove at Whitsunday 1735, the will of the letters is to remove in terms thereof, and the charge refers to the letters, therefore Whitsunday next must be Whitsunday 1735.

The Lords found the letters orderly proceeded, superseding execution till Whitsunday next, and without violent profits.

C, Home, No 20. p. 43.

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/1736/Mor3213880-122.html