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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> James and George Leslies v Mr George Abercrombie. [1776] Hailes 727 (27 November 1776) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1776/Hailes020727-0429.html Cite as: [1776] Hailes 727 |
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[1776] Hailes 727
Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by SIR DAVID DALRYMPLE, LORD HAILES.
Subject_2 HUSBAND AND WIFE.
Subject_3 A minister's bond to the widow's fund and his arrears of taxes not deducted from the goods in communion in an accounting with his wife's nearest kin.
Date: James and George Leslies
v.
Mr George Abercrombie
27 November 1776 Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
[Faculty Collection, VII. p. 304; Dict., App. I., Husb. and Wife, No. 3.]
Monboddo. From the nature and constitution of the debt, the bond did not bear interest to the wife or to her husband; and therefore I would adhere.
Covington. If the petitioner, Mr Abercrombie, prevails, he cuts down the branch on which he stands; for he has taken one part of the debt, jure mariti. How can he hold that part, if he will not allow the jus relictæ to take place as to the other?
Kaimes. Here is a conditional debt, which therefore would fall to the husband's heir, and yet it does not fall under the jus mariti. This is singular, yet still I think the interlocutor right.
Gardenston. As to the general point, the Ordinary has found, upon clear principles, that what was vested in the son fell to the father, that is, corpora mobilium, but he has not found so as to nomina debitorum. Perhaps this may be disputed. The Court has gone so far as to find that possession is sufficient; that confirmation, even of the smallest particle, is sufficient to give a title. Why not find so as to the possession of bonds and bills?
Hailes. Why not go one step farther, and abolish the jurisdiction of commissaries in the matter of confirmation?
Covington. The Court has gone far enough already: The farthest was in the case of Pringle and Veitch; but there the nearest in kin was himself the
debtor to the defunct; and the Court thought it unnecessary, and indeed anomalous, to oblige a debtor to take decreet against himself. Monboddo. If possession is held equivalent to confirmation as to nomina debitorum, there is an end put to confirmation; for there is nothing easier than for a nearest in kin to take possession, brevi manu, of the bills and bonds of the defunct.
Kaimes. It is necessary that there be an aditio hæreditatis; that the heir may not be overtaken, or understood to mean to be heir, when he did not. Confirmation is aditio hoereditatis in mobilibus. When any one article, however insignificant, is confirmed, it is enough; because such confirmation shows the animus of representing.
On the 27th November 1776, “The Lords found that the bills and bonds of the mother did not vest ipso jure in the son, and do not belong to the defender, as his son's legal successor; that the sum of L.250, payable at the death of Elizabeth Chalmers, falls to be added to the goods in communion; that the bond for L.30, payable to the widow's fund, is no burden on the goods in communion; and that the window-light duties are not to be deduced from the goods in communion; the pursuers always finding caution to indemnify the defender, if these duties shall be exacted;” adhering to Lord Covington's interlocutor.
Act. R. M'Queen. Alt. A. Crosbie.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting