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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> James Paterson v William Taylor. [1771] Mor 12485 (23 January 1771)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1771/Mor2912485-338.html
Cite as: [1771] Mor 12485

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[1771] Mor 12485      

Subject_1 PROOF.
Subject_2 DIVISION II.

Single Witness, in what cases sustained.
Subject_3 SECT. III.

Administrator's Oath, if relevant against his Constituent?

James Paterson
v.
William Taylor

Date: 23 January 1771
Case No. No 338.

Oath of the wife competent to prove furnishings made to herself or the family.


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Paterson pursued Taylor for payment of an account of furnishings to Taylor's wife and daughter, and to other persons, it was said, in consequence of express orders from Mrs Taylor. Taylor pleaded prescription; upon which the pursuer offered to instruct the furnishing by Mrs Taylor's oath; which the Lord Ordinary found to be a relevant mode of proof.

In a reclaiming petition, Taylor maintained,

That no relevant proof was offered; Mrs Taylor could not be referred to on oath as a party, and it was incompetent to adduce her as a witness against her husband; Erskine, B. 4. T. 2. § 22.; Lord Stair, B. 4. T. 43. § 7.; Fountainhall, 23d July 1700, Erskine of Pittodry, voce Witness.

The pursuer answered,

That the oath of the wife was good proof against the husband, and sufficient to subject him in payment of such furnishings as were made to the wife, either when they were of such a nature as to fall under the presumed præpositura negotiis domesticis of the wife, or in matters where she acted in consequence of the express order or direction of the husband; as to which she must be considered as a party; Bankton, v. 1. p. 125.; Erskine, B. 1. T. 6. § 15.—See Husband and Wife, Div. VI.

The Lords pronounced the following interlocutor: “Find it relevant for the pursuer to prove the articles of the account libelled, so far as the same were furnished to the defender's wife and his family, by the oath of Mrs Taylor; but find that, in hoc statu, the other articles of the account must be proved aliunde.”

Lord Ordinary, Gardenstone. For Paterson, Elphinston. For Taylor, Boswell. Clerk, Ross. Fac. Col. No 67. p. 199.

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/1771/Mor2912485-338.html