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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> James Forbes and Attorney v The York-Buildings Company. [1800] Mor 1_23 (25 February 1800) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1800/Mor01ADJUDICATION-010.html Cite as: [1800] Mor 1_23 |
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[1800] Mor 23
Subject_1 PART I. ADJUDICATION.
Date: James Forbes and Attorney
v.
The York-Buildings Company
25 February 1800
Case No.No. 10.
An adjudication on an English penal bond, without a decree of constitution, pronounced for the principal and interest, and one-fifth of the principal as penalty, found ineffectual as to the latter.
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In 1734, Richard Scarr led an adjudication against the estates of the York-buildings Company, for 350 bonds, which he held in trust against them. These bonds were in the usual English form, the debtor being bound to pay the principal and interest at 4 per cent. or the penal sum of double the principal.
Scarr did not take decrees of constitution on them; and this omission was afterwards found not to be fatal to the adjudication; see 31st January 1783, No. 23. p. 228.
He adjudged, not for the penal sums in the bonds, but for the principal and interest due at the date of the decree, with one-fifth of the principal in name of penalty.
Among the bonds adjudged for, were two for £100 each, which the Governor and Company bind themselves to pay, “with interest after the rate of
4 per cent. per annum, on the 7th day of April 1732, for the true payment whereof they bind themselves and their successors in the penal sum of £.200.” On these two bonds, the sum adjudged for, was,
Principal and interest,
£264
19
3
Penalty,
40
0
0
£304
19
3
On this sum, with interest accumulated from 1779, in terms of a previous interlocutor in the ranking, James Forbes and attorney, who had afterward acquired a right to the two bonds, claimed to be ranked on the Company's funds, and obtained a dividend of £85 per cent. along with the great body of the creditors, who had by this time entered into a compromise with the Company, by which £10,000 of the funds was given up to the latter.
James Forbes, who was no party to this transaction, claimed the balance due to him, out of the fund from which the great body of the creditors were thus excluded.
The Company, inter alia, objected to the adjudication, in so far as it related to the £40 of penalty; that the creditor might have adjudged either for the penal sums in the bond, which would afterward have been restricted to principal, interest, and expense, or for the principal and interest, but not for both; and, having chosen the latter, he had no authority, without a decree of constitution, to add a penalty, more than if he had adjudged for a bill or other document containing none. Even if the adjudication had proceeded on a decree of constitution, awarding one-fifth more in name of penalty, it would have been restricted to the expense of the adjudication, which in the present case would have been a mere trifle. Adjudications are frequently led on revenue bonds in the English form, but penalties are never included in them; 7th July 1754, Creditors of Burnett against Receiver-General, No. 25. p. 7873.
Answered: If the adjudication had proceeded on a ground of debt, containing no penalty, or upon a decree of constitution awarding one-fifth more in name of penalty, the objection would have been well founded. But here the whole penal sum had become due before the adjudication was led. It was an indulgence to the Company that the claim was restricted, and which would not have been done, if the loss from dead interest had been foreseen; 31st January 1783, Smith, &c. against Martha Grove, &c. No. 23. p. 228.
The Lord Ordinary reported the cause on Memorials, when much doubt was expressed of the propriety of the decision last mentioned.
The Court adopted the argument of the Company, and unanimously sustained the objection.
Lord Ordinary, Meadowbank. For Forbes, Mat. Ross. Montgomery, Ar. Campbell, jun. Alt. Lord-Advocate Dundas, Jo. Clerk. Clerk, Colquhoun.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting