BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Beresford's Trustees v. Gardner [1877] ScotLR 14_570 (13 June 1877) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1877/14SLR0570.html Cite as: [1877] ScotLR 14_570, [1877] SLR 14_570 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Page: 570↓
Ante, p. 134.
A entered into an agreement with B to give him a lease of certain subjects on certain terms. A formal lease was executed, and B entered into possession. Thereafter A reduced the lease on the ground that it had been fraudulently represented to him as being in terms of the agreement, whereas it was not so. On A's seeking to remove B, B pleaded that he should be allowed to remain in possession, on the footing that he was still entitled to a lease in terms of the agreement. A replied that the agreement was improbative, and pleaded locus penitentiœ.— Held that B's possession, which had commenced on a fraudulent title, must be put an end to, and that it lay on him to prove that he was entitled to begin a new possession under the agreement.
This was an action of reduction at the instance of the late Sir George Beresford's trustees, appointed under a deed of direction and declarator of trust dated 9th November 1870, against James Gardner, concluding for reduction of a lease of certain slate quarries at Ballachulish, granted to Gardner by the pursuers of date 1st and 14th November and 2d December 1873, on the ground of fraud. The action was tried before the Lord President and a jury at the Spring sittings, when the jury found for the pursuers. They now moved to apply the verdict, and asked the Court (1) to reduce the lease in question; (2) to remove the tenant. Previous to the trial the defender had added a plea in law to the record, viz.—“(3) The pursuers are not entitled to decree of removing as concluded for, in respect that, in the event of the lease under reduction being set aside, the defender will be entitled to obtain a lease from the pursuers in terms of the agreement of 7th June 1873, or otherwise in terms of the agreement set forth in the condescendence,”—and now opposed the pursuer's motion on that ground. The agreement referred to was an agreement to adjust a lease for fifteen years, the lease which the defender fraudulently obtained having been for a much longer period. It consisted of several sheets, and bore to be initialed by Lady Beres-ford, one of the pursuers, on each sheet, signed by the defender on each sheet, and signed on the last sheet by both Lady Beresford and the defender. The testing clause had not been filled up until the closing of the record.
The argument to a considerable extent was directed to the execution of this deed of agreement, the pursuer maintaining that it was not probative, not being properly subscribed, and the testing clause not having been timeously filled up. As the Court in delivering judgment did not find it necessary to decide that question, the authorities quoted on either side are not given.
Gardner resisted the motion for decree of removing, on the ground that he was entitled to possession under the agreement referred to. This had never been reduced. Indeed, it was because of its disconformity to that agreement that the lease for thirty-five years had been set aside. The pursuers themselves all through the record speak of the defender as their tenant, who had doubtless, as the jury has found, obtained a lease on terms different from what was intended, but still had a right to a lease for fifteen years. The proper course, therefore, was for the Court to remit to some qualified person to prepare a lease in terms of that agreement.
The pursuer argued—There was here a contract which required to be reduced. Had the lease been ab initio null, then the defender's argument, that the agreement had revived, might have some foundation. But since there was here error induced by fraud, and that of the kind quod tantum in contraclum incidit, there was a second contract taking the place of the first, and so when the second was reduced there was nothing left—Stair, i. 9, 9; Bell's Com. i. pp. 242, 289, 297 (5th ed.); in M'Laren's ed. 262, 309, 316. On the principles laid down in Stewart's Trustees v. Hart, Dec. 2, 1875, 3 Ret. 192, the terms of the contract actually concluded could not be modified by reference to any other transactions between the parties. Besides, the defender here is asking the Court to replace him against his own fraud.
At advising—
The first conclusion is for reduction of a lease, which is dated in November and December 1873, of the slate quarry of Ballachulish; the second conclusion is for the removing of the tenant who has taken possession under that lease; and the third and only remaining conclusion of the summons is for a count and reckoning by the defender of his intromissions, not only as tenant, but also as creditor in possession of the estate under an absolute disposition with an explanatory agreement. Now, the pursuer avers in the 13th article of his condescendence that “after the lease in question was executed, the defender entered into possession of the quarries under the said lease at the term of Whitsunday 1874;” and that is admitted by the defender. It is now established by the verdict of the jury that this lease was obtained from the pursuer by fraud, and it falls to be set aside. It is the only title of possession that the defender ever had, and it is the title under which he obtained, and now holds, possession of the slate quarries of Ballachulish. It seems to me to follow as a necessary consequence that when that title is set aside on the ground of fraud the fraudulent possession which has followed upon it must come to an end also. If I at all understand the nature of an action of reduction, a decree in terms of the reductive conclusion of the summons operates as an entire restitution of the pursuer against the fraud which has been practised upon him, and consequently that, as the summons itself expresses it, they are
Page: 571↓
Now, what is the plea maintained here by the defender? It is that “the pursuers are not entitled to decree of removing as concluded for, in respect that, in the event of the lease under reduction being set aside, the defender will be entitled to obtain a lease from the pursuers in terms of the agreement of the 7th of June 1873, or otherwise in terms of the agreement set forth in the condescendence”—that last being a fraudulent arrangement. Now, I need not say a word about this last alternative. The only thing that can seriously be maintained—if indeed even that can be maintained seriously—is that the defender is entitled to remain in possession notwithstanding the reduction of this fraudulent title, because he has another title under which he may obtain a lease to be executed; and that is all the length that the plea goes. Now, supposing the writing of 7th June 1873 to be a probative instrument, I think this would be a bad plea, because all that that paper binds the parties to do is to adjust a lease under which the defender might obtain possession of the quarries; but according to the true construction of that instrument, in my view, he is not entitled, unless with consent of the pursuers, to enter into possession under that document. As the document is expressed, I think he was bound to have the terms of the lease adjusted before the term of Whitsunday 1874, so as to enable him to enter into possession then, and if the lease was not adjusted by that time, in my opinion he was not in law entitled to possession then. But over and above that, the document is, to say the least of it, not clearly a probative document; and how is it set up here? It is mentioned incidentally and historically by the defender in his record as a paper that was made for the purpose merely of a memorandum of terms verb-ally agreed to; that is all that is said about it in this record, and so far as the pursuers are concerned they have had no opportunity whatever of saying one word about it on record. And before we could therefore consider what in law are the rights of the defender under this paper of the 7th of June 1873 the first thing we should be bound to do is to have a record made up on the subject, and then when that record is considered, if it be found relevant, we should then be bound to allow the parties a proof, for certainly without proof here this document can never be set up. Now, in these circumstances, I think this plea in law which was added to the record under the interlocutor of 9th January 1877 is irrelevant; and therefore I am for granting the motion of the pursuers, decerning in terms of the reductive conclusion of the summons, and also the conclusion for removing. Of course, if the defender thinks that be can set up a fresh title to the possession of this subject under the document of 7th June 1873, there is nothing to prevent him from attempting to do so in the proper manner.
Page: 572↓
The Court pronounced this interlocutor:—
“The Lords having heard counsel on the motion for the pursuers, No. 1224 of process, Apply the verdict, and in respect thereof reduce, decern, and declare in terms of the reductive conclusions of the summons: Further, repel the third plea-in-law stated by the defender, and decern in terms of the conclusion for removing: Find the pursuers entitled to expenses since 15th December 1876, the date of closing the record; and remit to the Auditor to tax the account of said expenses and report to the Lord Ordinary: And remit to his Lordship to proceed with the conclusions for accounting, and with power to decern for the said expenses when taxed.”
Counsel for Pursuer — Balfour—Robertson— Murray. Agents— Tods, Murray, & Jamieson, W.S.
Counsel for Defender — Kinnear — Asher — Lorimer. Agents— Adamson & Gulland, W.S.