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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Murray v. Campbell [1879] ScotLR 16_690 (2 July 1879)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1879/16SLR0690.html
Cite as: [1879] SLR 16_690, [1879] ScotLR 16_690

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 690

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

[Sheriff of Argyleshire.

Wednesday, July 2. 1879.

16 SLR 690

Murray

v.

Campbell.

Subject_1Lease
Subject_2Shootings
Subject_3Wooden Building
Subject_4Where Landlord agreed to take “any Dwelling-house or Offices” off Tenant's Hand.
Facts:

In the lease of an arable and grazing, farm, which also included the shootings, it was stipulated that “should the tenant build any dwelling-house or offices for his accommodation, the same shall be taken up from him at the expiry of his tenure at their then value, not exceeding £200.” The tenant built a cottage containing a kitchen and a bedroom, and erected against the gable of the cottage a wooden structure which contained no fireplace, and was used for the accommodation of summer visitors and for sporting purposes. Held that the landlord was liable under the above stipulation in payment of the value of the wooden erection.

Headnote:

By lease dated April 1857 Duncan M'Iver Campbell of Asknish let to Captain John H. Murray, R.N., the farm of Carricks, Argyleshire, for a term of nineteen years from Whitsunday 1857. The farm was both arable and pasture, and it was also “contracted that the said John Haliburton Murray is during the term of this lease to have the exclusive right to preserve the game, and the

Page: 691

exclusive right to shoot over the said lands.” It was further provided that “should the tenant build any dwelling-house or offices for his accommodation on the said lands, the same shall be taken up from him at the expiry of his tenure at their then value, not exceeding £200 sterling, which valuation, within the limits of the said sum, when ascertained by parties mutually appointed, the proprietor binds himself and his foresaids to repay to the said John Haliburton Murray at his removal.” During the lease Captain Murray built a stone and lime cottage containing a kitchen and bedroom, and subsequently he erected a wooden apartment against the gable of this cottage and connected with it by a covered passage. This wooden structure contained no fireplace, and was used for the reception of summer visitors and for sporting purposes. Valuators, to whom the Sheriff-Substitute subsequently remitted the case, were of opinion that “the wooden erection attached to the stone and lime building does not add to its value as a farmer's residence, owing to the perishable material it is constructed with, the expense of upholding it, and the want of fireplaces, rendering it uninhabitable in winter.” At the end of the lease the landlord admitted liability for the stone cottage under the above-quoted provision, but declined to pay anything for the wooden erection, and in consequence this action was raised. The Sheriff-Substitute ( Home) found the landlord liable. He added this note—

Note.—It is provided for by the lease between the parties that the petitioner should be at liberty to build a house and office on the lands which he leased from the respondent, and that the respondent should be bound to take any house or office he should build off his hands at a price not exceeding £200. The petitioner built a cottage of stone and lime, and added afterwards a wooden chalet. The respondent is willing to pay for the stone and lime building but not for the wooden one, as not being the sort of house contemplated by the lease or suited to the climate, and a remit was asked to a man of skill to examine the building and to report.

The Sheriff-Substitute does not however see his way to do this. The respondent pretty much admits his liability in his letter of 26th January 1876. The lease says in very broad terms ‘any house’ which the petitioner might build was to be taken off his hands, and the price to be paid by the respondent does not appear to the Sheriff—Substitute to be that of any very solid or permanent structure unless of a very small size. It may be true that the wooden chalet may be of very little use; in that case the valuators will naturally value it at very little. There is no dispute that a certain house has been built in terms of the lease which will have to be valued; it may even be that the valuators may hold that the rest of the building has no value, but if it does add to the value of the building at all, it seems to the Sheriff-Substitute that the respondent is bound to pay for it; of course in estimating this the valuators will take into account its suitability as a dwelling-house in climate, and as a residence upon the farm.“…

The Sheriff ( Forbes Irvine) adhered, and added this note—

Note.—… As regards the buildings the expression in the lease ‘any dwelling-house or offices for the accommodation of the said lands’ is wide and comprehensive. There is no stipulation, such as is often found in similar contracts, that the houses shall be built of stone and lime or of other specified materials. This being so, and no decision of the Courts having fixed the legal meaning of the term dwelling-house, recourse must be had to the ordinary use of the word, which according to the recognised authorities means a place of residence or abode framed or built for shelter or protection, of any size and of any materials, such as wood, brick, or stone.

In the present case it is not unimportant to observe that the lease gives to the tenant the right of shooting on the lands, and a class of buildings may there be appropriate which might scarcely fall within the class of ‘meliorations’ under an agricultural holding pure and simple. Cases may no doubt arise of buildings so extravagant in cost or so unsuitable in character as to be outside the bounds even of a description so general as that given in the lease; but these cases must be judged by their own circumstances, and in the present instance any question of extravagant cost seems excluded by the moderate limit specified as the utmost value for which the landlord is to be liable.” …

The landlord appealed, and argued—This was primarily a sheep farm, and for the purposes of a sheep farmer this wooden building was useless—the landlord therefore ought not to be compelled to pay for what he never would have thought of erecting for himself.

Argued for the respondent—This was not merely a lease of the grazings; it also included the shootings; and the building in dispute plainly was of use for purposes of sport, and therefore to the landlord, who might let it to a new tenant. Indeed, he seemed to contemplate doing so. It was thus equitable that he should pay for it, and it certainly was within the terms of the lease.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—The lease between the parties here is a lease both of grazings and shootings. It is no doubt over the same land, but it is impossible not to keep in view the various clauses which imply that the shootings were a material part of the subject to which the tenant acquired right for the full period of the lease. Now, it is by no means unusual in entering into a lease of shootings, even in combination with the grazings, to allow the tenant to build a house for the purposes of the shootings; but I must say I never saw a provision of this kind so extremely loose in its stipulation as that which we have here, and one which leaves it so entirely to the will of the tenant to decide what he is to do. He is to “be at liberty to erect a dwelling-house and offices for his accommodation on the said lands,” and it is further provided that “should the tenant build any dwelling-house or offices for his accommodation on the said lands, the same shall be taken from him at the expiry of his tenure at their then value, not exceeding £200 sterling.” Now, it is not stipulated here that the tenant is to build under the superintendence of the landlord. Any buildings which he may consider suitable for his own accommodation are to be taken over by the landlord at a valuation, and they may be built at any period during the lease—from the first to the last year—for aught that there is to the contrary in

Page: 692

the lease. Further, the buildings may be on any scale which the tenant may choose to adopt, provided that the sum which he asks the landlord to pay does not exceed £200. Lastly, and most important, the buildings may be of any materials, for there is not one word settling what are the materials of which the houses are to be built.

Now, that being so, it would be extremely difficult to sustain almost any objection taken by the landlord when the lease comes to an end. But what is the objection here? I do not see any, except that part of the structure is built of wood and contains no fireplace. The appellant says that he “is not bound and declines to pay the price or value of the wooden structure or chalet subsequently erected against the gable and walls of the said stone and mortar structure;” and he says further, that the petitioner found “the wooden apartment which he had raised against the gable of the said cottage for the reception of summer visitors and sporting purposes deficient and inconvenient.” It was for the reception of summer visitors and sporting purposes that this lease was entered into. That is the statement of the appellant himself. Then he goes on—that for the purposes of convenience “he conceived the idea of making an extensive wooden covered-way, called a lobby, 33 feet in length and 7 feet broad, for no other purpose than securing a dry and sheltered passage from the chalet to a small kitchen and bedroom, which is all the accommodation the stone cottage contains, while the chalet has no vent or fireplace.” Now, where a man makes a wooden structure such as this as an addition to a building containing nothing more than a bedroom and a fireplace, it is rather an unreasonable construction to hold that the wooden structure is not within the provision of the lease. I cannot hesitate to agree with the Sheriff. It appears to me impossible to deny that this wooden building was a part of the house which the tenant was entitled to erect at what was in fact his own caprice.

Lord Deas—I am not prepared to say entirely “at his own caprice,” but there is very considerable latitude. My difficulty is that we do not know what was erected. The whole matter is in the dark. We do not know what was the number of sheep upon the farm, or what proportion the buildings bore to the size of the farm. But we get a good deal of light from the letter of Mr Campbell to Mr Murray, in which he says—“I had always looked upon the chalet as your exclusive property, and it was my intention that the incoming tenant was to take the chalet and its adjuncts at valuation from you.” From this it is very clearly to be understood that the chalet falls within the lease, for I do not think that these buildings could be passed on to the incoming tenant if they could not be passed on to Mr Campbell himself.

Lord Mure — As I read the interlocutors of the Sheriffs, they hold these wooden buildings to be “offices.” That is a wide word, and I am not prepared to differ, but I think the case a narrow one.

Lord Shand—I see no reason to differ from your Lordships. The determining elements are these—that this was a lease of the shootings as well as of the grazings, and that there is no limit as to the character of the house or as to the materials of which the tenant may build it. Therefore it may be merely such a house as a shooting tenant desires, and then wooden building comes up to that requirement.

The Court adhered.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Petitioner (Appellant)— Kinnear— J. P. B. Robertson. Agents— M'Neill & Sime, W.S.

Counsel for the Respondent— Dean of Faculty (Fraser)— Pearson. Agents— Murray, Beith, & Murray, W.S.

1879


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1879/16SLR0690.html