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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Blackwood v. Ruickbie [1881] ScotLR 19_76 (14 November 1881) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1881/19SLR0076.html Cite as: [1881] SLR 19_76, [1881] ScotLR 19_76 |
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Page: 76↓
[Sheriff of Peebles.
Accretion — Author's Title.
A person standing on the assessor's list as at July 31, 1881, as “proprietor of house and garden,” founded on two unstamped missives of sale dated December 31, 1880, and a formal and probative disposition to the said subjects dated April 15, 1881. Objections having been taken, the Court held that the subsequent granting of the probative disposition made it competent to go back to the unstamped missives of sale in order to instruct a title of “proprietor” within the statutory period.
Objections to the effect that the claimant's author had no formal title to the subjects disponed till 11th March 1881, and that therefore the claimant had no earlier written title on which to found his title as “proprietor,” repelled, on the ground that his author's title being admittedly of that date, accrued to him as at the date of the missives of sale.
Andrew Ruickbie stood on the assessor's list of voters for the county of Peebles as “proprietor of dwelling-houses and garden.” William Blackwood objected to the entry. The facts were that on the 31st December 1880 the said Andrew Ruickbie, by letter addressed to William Renwick, offered to purchase the subjects from him for the sum of £260, the feu-duty to be £1 sterling per annum; and of the same date William Renwick, by letter addressed to Ruickbie, accepted that offer; that both of those letters were unstamped, and that on the 15th April 1881 William Renwick granted a disposition of the said subjects to Ruickbie, in which the term of entry was declared to have been 1st January 1881, and in which the said William Renwick was said to have acquired right to an area of ground, of which area the subjects conveyed to Ruickbie formed a part, by disposition from the Rev. James Clapperton, dated 11th March 1881; that Ruickbie had been in possession of the subjects since 31st December 1880.
The question of law arising upon these facts was—“Whether the said Andrew Ruickbie had been for a period of not less than six calendar months next preceding the last day of July 1881 the proprietor of the said subjects?”
The Sheriff ( Orphoot) held in point of law—“(1) That a probative deed having been executed subsequent to the date of the missives, the requirements of the Stamp Acts were satisfied; and for that reason, as well as because the term of entry under the disposition was referred back to the day after that on which the missives had been exchanged, it was competent to look at these missives to ascertain what was the true date of the contract of sale. (2) That under the authority of the cases of Stewart v. Flett, December 19, 1868, 7 Macph. 294, and Meldrum, Cay 156, the missives, with the disposition founded on, constituted a title sufficient to qualify. (3) That it was incompetent to dispute the validity of the title of Ruickbie's author, and that in any view the narrative in the disposition in favour of Ruickbie only showed that his author had no formal title till 11th March 1881, and did not exclude, but rather implied, a preceding contract of feu, which, from the date of Ruickbie's entry and of the missives, must be presumed to have been completed prior to 31st December 1881.” Therefore he repelled the objection.
Blackwood took a Case, and argued—(1) It was not competent to refer to the missives of sale for evidence of the true date of the contract of sale. These missives were unstamped, and therefore improbative. Skeete v. Turnbull, Nov. 7, 1871, 7 R. 14, was only one among a host of decisions to this effect. The Sheriff was wrong
Page: 77↓
in holding that the execution of the subsequent and probative disposition satisfied the requirements of the Stamp Acts. It could not cover the missives. The true test was, what value would these missives, in their unstamped state, have had in a court of law between 15th April 1880 and 1st Jan. 1881. (2) As it appeared from the disposition in favour of Ruickbie that William Renwick's title was not granted till 11th March 1881, the offer and acceptance passing between Ruickbie and Renwick on 31st December 1880 could confer no right of property on Ruickbie, and until then, the granting of the disposition in Ruickbie's favour on 15th April 1881, or, at all events, till the passing of the disposition in Ruickbie's favour on 11th March 1881, Ruickbie had no written title, and was not in law proprietor. Ruickbie replied—That it was perfectly competent to found on the missives of sale to show the date of the contract of sale. It was pars judicis to see that the documents relied on as constituting the title, and which required to be stamped, bore the stamps prescribed by law; otherwise they could not be looked at. Where, however, the document was unstamped when executed, the objection on that ground might be removed either by getting it stamped or by referring to it in a probative and stamped deed executed at any time before the Sheriff considered the claim. (2) It was incompetent to dispute the validity of the title of Ruickbie's author. This being so, it was sound law to say that the disposition here covered the missives of sale—Nicholson on Elections, 69; Cay's Scottish Reform Act, 154, 155; 33 and 34 Vict. cap. 97, secs. 15 and 16; Balfour v. Lyle, July 23, 1822, 10 S. 855.
At advising—
The Court therefore sustained the appeal.
Counsel for Appellant— Darling. Agent— John Gillespie, W.S.
Counsel for Respondent— Brand. Agent— W. Archibald, S.S.C.