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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Forfar County Road Trustees v. Perth County Road Trustees [1884] ScotLR 21_730 (10 July 1884)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1884/21SLR0730.html
Cite as: [1884] SLR 21_730, [1884] ScotLR 21_730

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 730

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

[Sheriff of Perthshire.

Thursday, July 10. 1884.

21 SLR 730

Forfar County Road Trustees

v.

Perth County Road Trustees.

Subject_1Road
Subject_2Repair of Public Road
Subject_3Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878 (41 and 42 Vict. c. 51), secs. 3 and 57
Subject_4Extraordinary Expenses in respect of Excessive Traffic — County Road Trustees.
Facts:

By the Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878 the authorities liable to repair a highway are entitled to recover from any person by whose order excessive weight has been passed over the highway the expense occasioned by the extraordinary repairs thereby rendered necessary. “Person” is defined in the Act so as to exclude county road trustees. The road trustees of one county having sued the road trustees of another to recover the cost of extraordinary repairs under the Act— held that the defenders were not liable.

Headnote:

The Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878 provides by section 57—“Where by the certificate of their surveyor or district surveyor it appears to the authority which is liable to repair any highway, that, having regard to the average expense of repairing highways in the neighbourhood, extraordinary expenses have been incurred by such authority in repairing such highway by reason of the damage caused by excessive weight passing along the same, or by extraordinary

Page: 731

traffic thereon, such authority may recover in a summary manner, before the Sheriff (whose decision shall be final), from any person by whose order the excessive weight has been passed, or the extraordinary traffic has been conducted, the amount of such extraordinary expenses, as may be proved to the satisfaction of the Sheriff to have been incurred by such authority by reason of the damage arising from such excessive weight or traffic as aforesaid.”

The interpretation clause of the Act (sec. 3) provides—“‘Person’ shall include corporation, incorporated company, commissioners, or trustees (not being county road trustees).”

The County Road Trustees of the county of Forfar presented this petition in the Sheriff Court of Perthshire in order to have the County Road Trustees of the county of Perth ordained to pay them the sum of £33, 8s. 1d., being the amount of extraordinary expenses, certified by the district surveyor, incurred in repairing that part of the highway from Dundee to Coupar—Angus which extends from Tullybaccart Quarry, in the county of Forfar, northwards to the march of the county of Forfar with the county of Perth at Stoneye Bridge. The action was laid on section 57 of the Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878.

The pursuers averred that the repairs had been rendered necessary by reason of the damage caused to their roads by the excessive weight of the waggons and traction-engine employed by the defenders in conveying stones from Tullybaccart Quarry into Perthshire for the repairs of the roads in the eastern district of that county.

They pleaded—“The extraordinary expenses incurred by the pursuers in repair of said highway having been incurred by reason of the excessive weight passed along said highway by the defenders, the pursuers are entitled to recover the same from the defenders, in terms of the statute.”

The defenders in answer founded on the fact they were county road trustees, and on the interpretation clause of the Act above quoted as exempting them from liability for the expenses sued for.

They pleaded—“The defenders being county road trustees, the pursuers are not entitled under the statute to recover from them the alleged extraordinary expenses, and the action should be dismissed, with costs to defenders.”

The Sheriff-Substitute ( Grahame) found that by the interpretation clause of the Act, the word “person” which is therein used to denote the party liable for such extraordinary expense, expressly excluded county road trustees, and that the pursuers were therefore not entitled to recover from the defenders payment of the extraordinary expenses now sued for, and therefore assoilzied them from the conclusions of the action.

Note.—Whatever may have been the intentions of the framers of The Roads and Bridges (Scotland) Act 1878, I do not think that the interpretation clause can be construed as including county road trustees among the persons whom it makes liable for the payment of such extraordinary expenses as are alleged to have been caused by the defenders’ excessive traffic over the pursuers’ road. The plain meaning of the interpretation clause is that county road trustees are thereby expressly excluded from any such liability. The exception expressed in the clause parenthetically (‘not being county road trustees’) is otherwise of no signification. If this exception is taken as applicable only to the trustees of the road on which the excessive traffic has been carried on, the exception has no meaning, for the trustees are thus only made liable to themselves for the excessive traffic which they themselves have occasioned. In the present case the pursuers may reasonably complain that there is a hardship in their not being able to recover from the defenders the expenses occasioned by their excessive traffic, but unless the excluding parentheses be held to be pro non scripto, which view I do not feel justified in taking, there seems to be no means of affording a remedy to them.”

The pursuers appealed.

They argued—There was no community of purse or interest between the two counties, and the spirit of the Act would be best complied with by making the ratepayers of one county contribute to the expenses of damage caused by their operations to the other. The exception contained in the interpretation clause was meant only to apply to the trustees of the particular county on whose road the excessive traffic was carried on.

The defenders replied—To give effect to the pursuers' contention led to the result that the Act made the trustees liable to themselves for the excessive traffic which they themselves had occasioned. The plain meaning of the interpretation clause was that county road trustees were thereby expressly excluded from liability. The Legislature was only following out what it had provided for before under the 37th section of the Turnpike Roads (Scotland) Act (1 and 2 Will. IV., cap. 43), which exempted them from toll.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Young—This is a puzzling question, and has the aspect of a very general question, but is in truth one the interest of which is limited to this individual case, and to a comparatively small sum of money. It appears that the Perthshire Road Trustees in getting stones for the repair of their roads, resort to a quarry in Forfarshire, and make use of a Forfarshire road for the purpose of their traffic, putting the Forfarshire Trustees to some extra expense in upholding it; and the latter accordingly sue them under clause 57 of the Roads and Bridges Act of 1878 before the Sheriff, to recover in a summary manner the extra cost of keeping the road so used in repair, in respect of their extra use of it. If the use had been by anybody else, whether inside or outside the county of Forfar, there is no doubt the action would have been a good action, successful or not according to whether the evidence had established or not that the extraordinary use alleged had occasioned the extraordinary cost of repairing and upholding the road; and it seems a reasonable, and certainly a very intelligible, provision of the Act which abolished tolls, so that the users of the road within a county do not pay anything for keeping them in repair, they being maintained and repaired by the proprietors and occupiers within the county by the assessments imposed on them—that any extraordinary use should be paid for in this extraordinary manner. I was not, therefore, prepared at first sight to expect an exemption of the road trustees of the adjoining county

Page: 732

from liability for what all others were bound to pay for. But undoubtedly the interpretation clause of the statute exempts county road trustees, according to the ordinary meaning of the words, so that if the persons taking an extraordinary use, occasioning an extra cost, are county road trustees, they are not liable to be assessed as other people are. But Mr Gloag has pointed out that county road trustees were formerly exempt from all contributions for roads not only within their own county but from payment of tolls elsewhere; they had not to pay tolls without their own county when bringing materials to make their roads. Matters were changed in 1878, and after that no tolls were payable by anybody, the roads being maintained by assessments; but undoubtedly the policy of the Legislature had been to enable them to use for such a purpose the roads of another county without contributing to the cost of them by paying tolls like other people; and that does prepare one to expect an exemption in their favour in this Act. Therefore I am not prepared to dissent from the view taken by the Sheriff-Substitute, that these county road trustees are exempted from the provision on which the action was rested. I am of opinion that the appeal ought to be dismissed.

Lord Rutherfurd Clark and Lord M'Laren concurred.

The Lord Justice-Clerk and Lord Craighill were absent.

The Court dismissed the appeal and affirmed the judgment.

Counsel:

Counsel for Pursuers (Appellants)— J. P. B. Robertson— Hay. Agents— J. & A. Peddie & Ivory, W.S.

Counsel for Defenders (Respondents)— Gloag— Graham Murray. Agents— Watt & Anderson, S.S.C.

1884


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