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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> James Lindsay Carnegie v George Robertson Scott. [1796] Mor 8858 (26 February 1796) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1796/mor218858-234.html |
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Subject_1 MEMBER of PARLIAMENT.
Subject_2 DIVISION V. Procedure in the Court of Freeholders.
Subject_3 SECT. III. Powers of the Court of Freeholders.
Date: James Lindsay Carnegie
v.
George Robertson Scott
26 February 1796
Case No.No 234.
Where an objection is pal-pable, and can be verified instanter by documents produced, it is incumbent on the free-holders to reject the claim. Thus it is a competent objection in a court of free-holders, that the sasine of a claimant proceeds on an exhausted precept.
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Miss Isabella Scott was infeft in 1773, upon a Crown charter, in lands in Forfarshire, which afford a freehold qualification.
It having been discovered, after the death of the notary who took the infeftment, that he had omitted to sign the 2d, 4th, 6th, and 8th pages of the sasine, (which consisted in all of 14,) she, in 1789, took infeftment a second time, on the same precept, and a second instrument of sasine was made out. Both sasines were duly recorded.
Mr George Robertson having married Miss Scott, he claimed to be put on the roll of freeholders, as her husband, and produced, as his title, the charter above mentioned and sasine 1789.
Mr Lindsay Carnagie objected, that a former sasine having been taken on the chatter, that produced by the claimant was null, as proceeding upon an exhausted precept.
The Court of freeholders having repelled the objection, Mr Carnegie presented a petition and complaint, along with which he produced an extract of the sasine 1773.
In defence, Mr Robertson Scott
Pleaded; 1mo, The sasine 1789 is ex facie legal and regular; and it is an established rule of election law, that freeholders are not entitled to refuse enrolment upon any objection, which, like the present, requires extrinsic evidence to support it; Wight, p. 222; 26th February 1745, Dunbar, No 220. p. 8844; 5th February 1760, Campbell, &c. against Muir, No 8. p. 7783; 28th July 1761, Stewart, No 18. p. 8579; 9th January 1755, Forrester, No 137. p. 8755; 17th February 1779, Burn, No 230. p. 8852.
But, 2do, The sasine 1789 is in fact unexceptionable; for, although two valid sasines in fee cannot be taken on the same precept, yet, where the first is inept, the second will be effectual. Now, the act 1696, c. 15. (which appears from the act of sederunt, 17th January 1756, to extend to sasines) directs every page to be signed by the notary; and such accordingly is the invariable practice. The sasine 1773 was therefore null, four of its pages not being signed by him.
Answered; 1mo, The objection stated to Mr Scott's enrolment did not require the aid of extrinsic evidence; for the sasine 1773, being part of the claimant's own titles, could not be so considered. Besides, any written evidence by which a nullity in the title is proved, is competent to be judged of by the freeholders; and new evidence may even be received in this Court. See Wight, p. 143.
2do, The sasine 1773 is in every respect legal and valid. The act 1696 regulated the subscription of securities only. The mode in which notaries must subscribe sasines, was previously settled by 1686, c. 17, which declares it lawful to write sasines by way of bock, ‘each leaf being signed by the notary and
witnesses,’ an enactment which was strictly complied with in the sasine 1773; and that the statute 1686 is altogether independent of, and was not repealed or qualified by the act 1696, is clear from the latter only requiring that the witnesses should subscribe the last page of the deed, whereas the former ordains that the witnesses to a sasine shall sign every page of it; a form which is at this day indispensable. The act of sederunt 1756 is inaccurate, in supposing that the act 1696 regulates the subscription of sasines.
The Court, on the grounds stated for the complainer, “found the respondent was not entitled, in virtue of his titles claimed upon, to be enrolled in the roll of freeholders for the shire of Forfar; and therefore granted warrant to, and ordained the Sheriff-clerk of the said shire to expunge his name from the said roll.”
For the Complainer, Lord Advocate Dundas, Solicitor-General Blair, Geo. Fergusson, Arch. Campbell, jun. Alt. H. Erskine, Hay, Mat. Ross, Ad. Gillies, Geo. Robertson Scott. Clerk, Home.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting