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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> James Leitch Lang v. Glasgow Court House Commissioners [1871] ScotLR 8_514 (26 May 1871) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/08SLR0514.html Cite as: [1871] ScotLR 8_514, [1871] SLR 8_514 |
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Page: 514↓
Held (by a majority of the Judges, Lord Deas reserving his opinion), that where the promoters of an undertaking are empowered to take lands by compulsory sale, sec. 40 of the Lands Clauses Consolidation (Scotland) Act 1845 (which requires ten days' notice in writing of the time and place of inquiry to be given by the promoters to the party claiming compensation), is imperative, and not merely directory, and applies to the case where a special jury is summoned as well as to the case of a common jury; but held unanimously that a claimant, who was present and took part in the proceedings before the Sheriff at which the trial was fixed, who examined havers under an interlocutor fixing the time and place of trial, and who successfully resisted a subsequent motion by the promoters to have the trial postponed, had waived his right to notice.
The complainer Mr Lang is lessee of certain premises in Glasgow. On the 28th December 1870 he was served with a notice from the Glasgow Court House Commissioners, intimating that under a local Act they required to enter upon the said premises, and requesting a statement of his interest and claims. Mr Lang claimed as compensation £1825, with £25 per cent, as additional, as for compulsory sale; and intimated his desire to have the amount determined by a jury. The secretary to the Commissioners on the 5th January 1871, on their behalf, tendered £150 to Mr Lang as compensation; and intimated that in case of his declining to accept of the same the Commissioners would present a petition to the Sheriff to summon a jury to settle the amount. Mr Lang declined the tender, and a petition was accordingly presented on 17th January 1871 by the Commissioners, praying the Sheriff to summon a special jury for the purpose of fixing the compensation. In terms of section 53 of the Lands Clauses Consolidation (Scotland) Act the Sheriff summoned both parties to appear before him on 25th January. On that day, in the presence of both parties, he nominated a special jury, and appointed the 31st January for reducing the number of the jury to twenty. On the 31st January both parties again appeared before him. The proceedings are embodied in the following interlocutor, pronounced by the Sheriff of that date:—
“ Glasgow, 31 st January 1871.—The Sheriff have-heard parties' procurators, and they having alternately suggested eight names each to be struck off the list of special jurors, so as to reduce the same to twenty— strikes out and reduces accordingly, the names so struck off being as follow— viz. (here follows list); Farther appoints Wednesday, the fifteenth day of March next, at ten o'clock forenoon, for proceeding with the trial for ascertaining and
Page: 515↓
awarding the compensation due by the petitioners, within the Justiciary Court-Hall, foot of Salt Market Street, Glasgow, with continuation of days; and grants warrant to and authorises the Clerk of Court to issue a precept at the instance of the petitioners for citing the Jurors as reduced to attend at said diet: Farther, grants diligence at the instance of both parties for citing witnesses and havers to compear, time and place foresaid; as also, on the mutual craving of parties, grants diligence at the instance of both parties for recovery of Writings, and commission to Robert Frame, writer in Glasgow, to take the depositions of the havers and receive their exhibits; said commission to be reported, along with the exhibits, on or before the said 15th day of March next.” Mr Lang, under this interlocutor, called upon the Commissioner named to examine havers with a view to trial, and havers were accordingly examined before him. On the 11th March the promoters moved the Sheriff to postpone the trial which had been thus fixed for 15th March. Mr Lang, through his procurator, refused to consent to the trial being delayed, and the Sheriff pronounced an interlocutor refusing the motion. On the same day Mr Lang lodged a minute in the following terms:—“The respondent James Leitch Lang states that the petitioners have failed to comply with the fortieth section of the ‘Lands Clauses Consolidation (Scotland) Act 1845,’ in so far as they have failed to give to him or his known agent not less than ten days' notice in writing of the time and place of the inquiry, and that the petition and the whole proceedings under the same have therefore become inept and fallen; and the petitioners are liable to pay to the said respondent the amount of compensation claimed by him, for which, with the costs, the said James Leitch Lang will immediately raise an action in a competent court. And the said James Leitch Lang protests that he shall not, by continuing to appear in the present proceedings, and citing and examining and cross-examining witnesses, and addressing the Court and jury at the trial, be held as in any way abandoning or departing from his objection to the said proceedings, or his right under the statute to sue for and recover the full sum claimed by him, with costs, in any competent court.”
On the 13th March Mr Lang presented to the Lord Ordinary on the Bills a note of suspension and interdict against the trial proceeding on the 15th, on the ground that the promoters had failed to give to him ten days' notice of the time and place of inquiry, as required by section 40 of the Lands Clauses Consolidation (Scotland) Act.
Interim interdict having been granted, and the case debated, the Lord Ordinary ( Mure) pronounced the following interlocutor;—
“1 st April 1871.—The Lord Ordinary having heard parties' procurators, and considered the note of suspension, answers, and productions, recals the interim interdict, and refuses the note of suspension; Finds the respondents entitled to expenses, of which appoints an account to be given in; and remits the same, when lodged, to the auditor to tax and report.
Note.—The Lord Ordinary is not satisfied that the 40th section of the Lands Clauses Act, founded on by the complainer, has any direct application to trials before a special jury. It occurs in that part of the statute which relates almost exclusively to proceedings preparatory to trial by common jury, which are ex parte at the instance of the promoters of the undertaking, and in which it was therefore necessary to make provision that notice should be given to the opposite party of the day fixed for trial, in order that he might have due time to prepare for the trial.
Trials by special jury, on the other hand, are from the first quasi judicial, if not judicial, in their character, in which the Sheriff is appointed to summon both parties before him for the purpose of nominating and reducing the number of the special jury for the trial to which the proceedings relate. Now, this seems necessarily to imply the fixing of the day of trial, as was done in the present case, in presence of both parties, and with reference to which there was consequently no more reason why the promoters should be required to give notice of trial to a claimant than that the claimant who stands pursuer of the issue should give notice to the promoters. There is accordingly no provision as to notice specially applicable to trials by special jury. And the presumption in these circumstances seems to be that the Legislature thought that the fixing of the day of trial in such proceedings would of itself be sufficient notice; and that it might be safely left to the judicial discretion of the Sheriff to see that the trial was fixed at a time convenient for both parties, just as other matters relative to the nominating of the special jury are left to be dealt with by him in the manner in which such matters are regulated by the laws for the time being.
But even if the 40th section of the statute were to be held applicable to the case of trial by a special jury, the provision is not, in the opinion of the Lord Ordinary, of so imperative a character that the omission of it must necessarily have the effect of creating a nullity, and thereby irritating the whole previous proceedings, as seems to be contended for by the complainer; it is directory merely, and one which a claimant may, it is thought, be held to have waived or dispensed with; whereas here, he was not only quite well aware of the fact that the trial was fixed by the Sheriff to take place on a particular day, but was actually a party to the proceedings before the Sheriff at which the trial was so fixed, and the interlocutor of the 31st of January 1871, by which the day of trial was fixed, in order to recover evidence to be used at the trial; and so late as the 11th of March 1871, resisted a motion made by the respondents to have the trial postponed. In these circumstances, which are fully borne out by the proceedings, a copy of which has been produced, it humbly appears to the Lord Ordinary that the complainer is barred from maintaining that he had not received notice of the time of trial; and that the suspension must on that ground also be refused.”
Mr Lang reclaimed.
Watson and Balfour for him.
Shand and Macdonald for respondents.
At advising—
Page: 516↓
There remains the question, whether the complainer has not in effect dispensed with notice. For there is no doubt that even a statutory notice can be dispensed with by the party for whose benefit it is required. The petition was presented on the 17th January. On the 25th the parties met before the Sheriff, when a special jury was nominated in terms of section 53. By the same section the Sheriff appointed parties to appear before him on the 31st January, for reducing the jury. The parties met accordingly on the 31st, and reduced the jury. If no further proceedings had been taken there would have been nothing to prevent the application of section 40. The claimant would have been entitled to his ten days' notice. But a good deal more was done. It was reasonable and natural that the parties, present as they were before the Sheriff, should then adjust the time and place of the inquiry, as matter of arrangement. Accordingly it is conclusively established that it was made matter of arrangement that the trial should take place on a certain day. The interlocutor of the Sheriff, after striking the jury, proceeds to appoint the time and place of the trial—“10 o'clock, Wednesday the 15th March, within the Justiciary Court Hall, foot of Salt Market Street, Glasgow.” But the parties want something more still, viz., diligence against havers, preparatory to the trial. That diligence is granted on the mutual cravings of parties; a commissioner is named, who is to report on or before the said 15th March. Mr Lang proceeded to act on this interlocutor. He went to the commissioner named, and examined havers before him. The question comes to be, whether, after all this, he can be allowed within ten days of the time fixed on to plead want of notice? I consider that there is quite sufficient to instruct that on the 31st March he dispensed with notice. And on this last ground I concur with the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor.
The Court adhered, with additional expenses.
Solicitors: Agents for Complainer— Maclachlan & Rodger, W.S.
Agents for Respondents— Webster & Will, W.S.