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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Gordon's Trustees v. Melrose [1870] ScotLR 7_574 (25 June 1870) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1870/07SLR0574.html Cite as: [1870] ScotLR 7_574, [1870] SLR 7_574 |
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Page: 574↓
A summary application by the trustees of a landlord to the Sheriff to have a remit made to men of skill to ascertain the existing state of the fences, &c., on a farm, for preservation, with the view to a settlement of questions under the lease between the landlord and the out-going tenant, held competent.
This is an appeal from the Sheriff-court of Peebleshire. The case originated by a petition presented to the Sheriff by Gordon's trustees against Robert Melrose, lately tenant of the farm of Stoneypath, in the county of Peebles, and now residing at West Baldridge near Dunfermline. The petition set forth :—“(1) That by conditions of set entered into between the said Richard Gordon, then accountant in Edinburgh, on behalf of Charles Ferrier, Esq. of Badingsgill, and the said Robert Melrose, then residing at Grayknowe, parish of Lasswade, and subscribed by them the 14th day of March 1849, there was set to the said Robert Melrose the farm of Stoneypath, in the parish of Linton and county of Peebles, then belonging to the said Charles Ferrier, now deceased, and that for nineteen years, commencing at Whitsunday 1849 as to the houses and grass, and separation of that year's crop as to the arable land. The said farm was disponed by the said trust-disposition and settlement to the petitioners, as trustees foresaid, and they are now proprietors thereof. The said Mrs Catherine Montgomery Ferrier or Gordon died on the 23d day of May 1867. (2) It was stipulated and agreed to by the said conditions of set that the fences then on the farm should be put into proper order, the same to be maintained during the currency, and left at the termination of the said lease in the like good order; and that such further subdivision fences on the lands contemplated to be in crop should be made for the more commodious occupation of the same as the said Robert Melrose, the tenant, might require, he paying 5 per cent, on the outlay occasioned thereby; and as to which fences it was conditioned that the obligations on his part before stipulated should likewise apply. There was reserved ground for a strip of plantation, extending to 140 feet or thereby in breadth, running north and south between the lands contemplated to be arable and the grazing land to the north and south of the burn between Old and New Stoneypath, also a roundel containing about two Scotch acres on Old Stoneypath for the same purpose; and the fencing of those intended plantations was to be made and afterwards maintained by the landlord, but one-half of the expense of the said after maintenance was to be paid by the tenant. (3) It was further conditioned and agreed by the said conditions of set that the house and steading should be put by the proprietor in habitable and tenantable repair, at the sight of Charles Lawson, mason, and Archibald Ritchie, wright, and that they should be maintained and left by the tenant in proper habitable and tenantable condition. (4) The respondent entered into possession of the said farm, and occupied the same for the said period of nineteen years, under and in virtue of the said conditions of set, and he was allowed by the petitioners to continue tenant of the said farm by tacit relocation as under said conditions for one year after the expiration of the said period of nineteen years. The respondent removed from the houses and grass of the 6aid farm of Whitsunday 1869, and from the arable land at the separation of that year's crop from the ground. (5) The petitioners, on and subsequent to the 21st day of May 1869, acting by their agents, have repeatedly desired and required the respondent to concur with them in appointing two arbiters to inspect the state of the fences, and of the house and steading on the said farm, and to report whether or not they are in the state in which he was bound to leave them by the said conditions of set, prolonged as the same were as aforesaid to Whitsunday 1869, and the separation of that year's crop from the ground, and if not in that state, which the petitioners aver they are not, then to report what sum or sums are requisite to put them into that state, excepting always from such inspection and report the line of old buildings in the court, and reserving all other questions between the petitioners and the respondent entire. The respondent, however, refused, and still refuses, to concur with the petitioners in having the said fences and houses inspected and reported on in any manner of way. The petitioners therefore find it necessary to make the present application to your Lordship.” And the petition concluded with the following prayer :—“May it therefore please your Lordship to remit to a person or persons of skill to visit the said farm of Stoneypath, and to inspect the fences and the house and steading thereon (excepting said line of old buildings in the court), and to report what is necessary to put the same respectively into the state mentioned in the said conditions of set as aforesaid, and the probable expense thereof; and thereafter, on considering the report or reports of such person or persons, to approve thereof; and in the event of the respondent entering appearance and opposing this application, to find him liable in expenses, and to decern therefor; or to do otherwise in the premises as to your Lordship shall seem proper, reserving all other questions between the petitioners and the respondent entire.”
Condescendence and answers were lodged.
The petitioners pleaded:—“(1) The petitioners are entitled, at their expense and under reservation of all questions, to have the state of said houses and fences judicially ascertained, as prayed for. (2) The application is well founded in fact and in law, and should be granted. (3) The defender is not justified in entering appearance and opposing the prayer of the petition, and therefore he should be found liable in all expenses occasioned by his appearance. (4) The petitioners have set forth sufficient title and interest, and made sufficient averments, to warrant the prayer of the petition. (5) The pleas of the respondent are irrelevant in this action, and, besides, are ill-founded in fact and in law.”
The respondent answered:—“(1) The petitioners have no title to raise the present proceedings, and have no title to follow out the same, and
Page: 575↓
they have neither founded on nor produced any such, in respect there is no evidence produced to establish the state of repair of the fences and buildings on the farm of Stoneypath at the respondent's entry—Hunter's Landlord and Tenant, vol. ii, page 210, and authorities therein referred to. (2) The petition is incompetent, no written lease being therein founded on in support of the petitioner's title and contention. (3) The writing produced with the petition, and marked No. 2 of process, although not referred to in it, is not a lease or missive of lease. It is neither holograph nor tested, and is unstamped, and cannot be referred to or founded on or recovered in evidence. (4) The petitioners are not entitled to approbate and reprobate. (5) The fences, houses, and steading not having been put into a state of repair by the landlord, or by those acting for him, in terms of the agreement between the parties, the respondent has a good claim of damages against the petitioners, in consequence of which action is hereby reserved— Burrell v. Gebbie, 18th December 1868, Scot. Law Rep., vol. vi., p. 186.” The Sheriff-Substitute ( A. C. Lawrie) pronounced the following interlocutor:—“The Sheriff-Substitute having considered the closed record, and having heard parties' procurators—Remits to Robert Tod, Cardrona Mains, and to George Mills, Horsbrugh Castle, to visit the farm of Stoneypath, in the parish of Linton, and to inspect the fences and houses thereon (excepting the line of old buildings in the court), and to report as soon as possible what is the present condition of the fences and buildings, and what would be the probable cost of putting the fences in good order, and the said buildings in proper habitable and tenantable condition: And ordains the said Robert Tod and George Mills to give notice to the agents for the petitioners and respondent, by post, at least four days before-hand, of the day and hour at which they intend to make the inspection: To this extent sustains the competency of the petition, and repels the first and second pleas in law stated by the respondent in so far as these are inconsistent with the above remit: Reserves entire all pleas of parties or claims which they may have respectively against each other.”
“ Note.—The respondent refused to concur in the above remit, and opposed the petition to the last.
The Sheriff-Substitute has not granted a remit in the terms prayed for. The petition asks for a report on ‘what is necessary to put the fences and buildings into the state mentioned in the conditions of set, and the probable expense thereof.’ Now, as the tenant's obligation was not an absolute one to leave the fences and buildings in good order, but only to maintain and leave them in the state in which the landlord bound himself to put them, no one, by a simple inspection in 1870, could determine whether these were in the state mentioned in the conditions of set. To determine that a proof would be necessary. The Sheriff-Substitute hopes that the reporters will report only on the existing state of the fences and buildings, without reference to their past condition or to the stipulations in any lease, whether past or present.
It is obvious that, if the claims of the petitioners shall ever be the subject of litigation, there are questions between them and the respondent which will require proof. The Sheriff-Substitute consequently felt considerable doubt whether this was a case in which he should make any remit. But he has come to be of opinion that the whole circumstances, and especially the averment that the fences and buildings must immediately undergo alterations under the lease to a new tenant, warrant the qualified remit which he has made. The cases of Fraser v. Mackay, 13th February 1833, 11 Sh., p. 391; Halyburton V. Blair, 1st June 1836, 14 Sh., p. 859; Hall v. M'Gill, 14th July 1847, 9 D. 1557; and Macintosh v. Welsh, 19th July 1851, 23 Jur. 65; to which he may add the interlocutor in the case of Irvine v. Scott, 27th June 1856,—seem to the Sheriff-Substitute to justify the course which he has adopted.”
The Sheriff ( G. Napier) altered, and dismissed the petition with expenses. The Sheriff added the following note to his judgment:—
“ Note.—The Sheriff concurs with the Sheriff-Substitute's observation that the remit granted by him was not in the terms prayed for. He also concurs in the grounds upon which the Sheriff-Substitute seems to have held that a remit in the terms prayed for should not be granted. But however desirable in the circumstances referred to, the qualified remit made by the Sheriff-Substitute, and now appealed against by the respondent, may appear to be for the interests of all concerned, the Sheriff is of opinion that, in the face of the respondent's opposition, it was not competent to grant such remit under the prayer of the present petition.
“Independent altogether, however, of the above grounds for dismissing the petition, a new objection has occurred to the Sheriff, of a character which it is always pars judicis to take up when observed, and which of itself appears to him to be fatal to the present petition, namely, that the petition is not framed in the short form prescribed by section 7 and relative schedule (E) of the Sheriff Court Act, 16 and 17 Vict., cap. 80, but sets forth in full detail, and in a series of separate articles, the whole averments in support of its prayer, precisely in the manner previously in use, but expressly superseded by the imparative terms of the section referred to, instead of reserving such averments for a condescendence when ordered, as in the case of an ordinary action.”
The petitioners appealed to the Court of Session.
Millar, Q.C., and Macdonald for them.
Balfour in answer.
At advising—
Page: 576↓
The other Judges concurred.
Agents for Appellants— W. & J. Burness, W.S.
Agent for Respondent— A. Gifford, S.S.C.