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 >> Westlands v. Pirie [1887] ScotLR 24_536 (1 June 1887) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1887/24SLR0536.html Cite as: [1887] SLR 24_536, [1887] ScotLR 24_536 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Page: 536↓
[
In 1886 an action for the recovery of inlying expenses, and aliment for thirteen years, was raised by the mother of an illegitimate male child born in 1863. The defender admitted the paternity, but alleged that he had paid inlying expenses at the time of the birth, and, for four years thereafter, had paid aliment, to the pursuer's father, in whose house the child was maintained; that in 1867 he had made an offer to the grandfather to take the child to live with him, which was refused; and that subsequently he had ex gratia sent from time to time to the grandfather money for the child's aliment. The child lived with the grandfather until he was seventeen, when he went to live with his mother, who was then married. No claim was made against the defender until just before the action was raised. The Court ( rev. Lord M'Laren) assoilzied the defender.
This was an action raised in 1886 at the instance of John Westland, carter, residing at 4 B Block, Holyrood Square, Edinburgh, and Elizabeth M'Arthur or Westland, his wife, against George Pirie, carrier and contractor, 63 Loch Street, Aberdeen, concluding for (1) the sum of £2, 2s., being the defender's proportion of inlying expenses attendant on the birth of an illegitimate male child on or about 12th June 1863, of whom the female pursuer was the mother, and the defender the father; and (2) aliment for the said child at the rate of £10 per annum from 12th June 1863 until the child attained the age of 13 years complete.
The facts of the case were these—The defender admitted the paternity. At the time the defender had connection with the female pursuer she was a domestic servant at Old Deer, Aberdeenshire, and the defender was a farm-servant in the neighbourhood. Immediately after the birth of the child—which took place in the house of James M'Arthur, Mrs Westland's father—the defender paid to M'Arthur £3 for inlying expenses and aliment, and during the next four years he from time to time paid him further sums of aliment. During these years the female pursuer had two other illegitimate children by other men. The child was maintained by the female pursuer's father, and continued to live in his house until he was seventeen, when he went to live with the pursuers. The defender wrote in 1867, after he was married, to M'Arthur, offering to take the child to live with him, and to provide for it free of expense to its mother or grandfather. This offer was declined, and the defender stated that though he considered that he had thus discharged any legal obligation incumbent on him, he yet continued
Page: 537↓
ex gratia to send money to James M'Arthur from time to time for the boy's aliment. The present claim was first intimated to the pursuer in 1886.
The pursuers pleaded—“(1) The defender being admittedly the father of the female pursuer's illegitimate son, was bound to contribute to his support till he was fourteen years of age. (2) Never having contributed anything, the defender is due to the female pursuer the sums sued for, which are moderate and reasonable, with interest as concluded for.”
The defender pleaded—“(2) The said child not having been maintained by the female pursuer or her husband during the period when he was unable to support himself, the pursuers have no title to sue, and separatim they have no title to sue for future aliment. (3) The action is barred by mora, taciturnity, and abandonment. (4) In respect of the offer to provide for the said child, and the other circumstances libelled on, the defender is entitled to absolvitor.”
After a proof, the import of which is stated above, and in the opinions of the Judges infra, the Lord Ordinary pronounced this interlocutor—“Finds that the defender, as the father of the illegitimate child, is liable for his aliment; and finds that after making allowance for some payments' made to account thereof there remains a balance still due of £50, for which sum decerns against the defender, with interest thereon from the date of citation till paid: Finds the defender liable in expenses,” &c.
“ Opinion.—In this case I am inclined to give a good deal of weight to the statements made by the parties in their record—the record being always before the judge where the case is investigated by a proof without a jury. The defender admits the paternity of the child for whom aliment is claimed, and he says that immediately after the child was born he paid James M'Arthur, the pursuer's father, £3 for inlying expenses and aliment. During the next four years he from time to time paid him further sums for aliment. Then he explains that in 1867—that is, at the end of the four years, he wrote to James M'Arthur offering to take the child to live with him, and to provide for it free of expense to its mother or grandfather; and, passing over the next sentence, he says that, while he considered that he had thus discharged any legal obligation incumbent on him, nevertheless, he continued ex gratia to send money to James M'Arthur from time to time for the boy's aliment.‘The defender and James M'Arthur were throughout on friendly terms, and the latter never asked the defender for more money.’ Then the defender says it was well understood that M'Arthur was to maintain the boy gratuitously as one of his family, and that he had no claim against the defender in respect of such maintenance. I read these statements as averring that during the first four years of the boy's life the defender had fulfilled his legal obligation to maintain the child, but that thereafter he considered that had come to an end. Any sums he had given ex gratia I conclude must have been small, because he says it was well understood on both sides that M'Arthur was to maintain the boy gratuitously, and that statement is quite inconsistent with the idea that the defender continued to aliment him on the footing of a legal obligation.
“Now, the statement on record is not inconsistent with the evidence which the defender has given in Court; because, while he speaks positively as to his contribution during the infancy of the child, his statements of what he did after the first three or four years are very vague. He cannot mention any sums, except payments which he made by arrangement with his father and the pursuer's father; he sent what he thought right—what he could spare—through his father to the pursuer's father, which he. understood went to the aliment of the boy. All that is extremely vague. If he had regularly, during the period of fourteen years, or whatever the period is, paid a fixed sum at periodical times, I should have given great weight to the argument that the mother's claim was satisfied; because when a claim like this is made so many years after the event, if any precise statement is made about it being discharged, I should be inclined to receive such a statement with great favour, there being no explanation of the cause of delay in making the claim. But taking the defender's evidence as amounting merely to evidence of casual payments, the amount of which he is unable to state, and the only corroboration being by his brother, whose evidence has reference to one payment during all that time, I have to set against it the positive evidence of the pursuer Mrs Westland and her sister and son, who all say that they know nothing of any such payments having been made by the defender. Their belief was that the boy was maintained by his maternal grandfather. Therefore I cannot hold that the defender has either averred or proved such payments in discharge of his legal obligation as would entitle him to be absolved from this action.
“With regard to the sum for which I have to give decree, that must be dealt with on the footing of approximation. Looking to the statements that have been made as to the rate of aliment allowed in the Sheriff Court, which has varied from £4 to £8, according to the place and the time, I am inclined to hold that aliment is due at the rate of £6, 10s. a year, which is a fair intermediate rate. And then as to the reduction to be made from it, I think that I shall allow no aliment for the first four years. The aliment for the remaining nine years would be, I think, about £58, 10s. Then I really cannot take off much for the gratuities which the defender is said to have given to the pursuer's father. I think, in all the circumstances, the claim may be fairly met by a payment of £50, and I shall give decree for that sum, but without interest.”
The defender reclaimed, and argued—The pursuers had no title to sue. The female pursuer did not sue as executor of the grandfather, who alone maintained the child. She herself expended nothing on the child's upbringing. If she made this claim as for a debt due to her as her father's representative, then her claim was barred by the triennial prescription— Ligertwood v. Brown, June 21, 1872, 10 Macph. 832. The pursuer's claim was barred by taciturnity, as she had acquiesced in the arrangement made in 1867, and had not made any further claim on the defender as the father of the child— Arbuthnot v. Symon, May 15, 1834, 12 S. 590. The defender
Page: 538↓
had offered to take the child in 1867 and support it at his own cost. That proposal extinguished all future claim for aliment— Oorrie v. Adair, February 24, 1860, 22 D. 897; Shearer v. Robertson, November 29, 1877, 5 R. 263; Weepers v. Heritors and Kirk Session of Kennoway, June 20, 1844, 6 D. 1166. The respondent argued—The pursuers had a title to sue. The mother kept the child in her father's house, but she either gave her services in the house or sent money when she was in service elsewhere as her contribution to the support of the child, while the father had not provided his share. The custody of the child remained in the mother. Grant v. Yuill, February 29, 1872, 10 Macph. 511. The claim for aliment of an illegitimate child could not be affected by the triennial prescription— Thomson v. Westwood, February 26, 1842, 4 D. 833. It could not be barred by mora or taciturnity, as the claim always existed against the defender. Here the female pursuer had never acquiesced in any arrangement with him— Moncriejf v. Waugh, January 11, 1859, 21 D. 216. The offer by the father could not be held as a bar to the claim, as the child was only four years old when it was made, and it was settled law that no offer by the father of an illegitimate child to take and support the child in his own home could be held to be a bar to claims for future aliment, unless the child was seven years old— Corrie v. Adair, supra cit.
At advising—
The facts as they come out are these. The child for whom aliment is claimed was born in 1863. He was taken by his maternal grandfather, and brought up by him until he was seventeen years of age. Two daughters of the grandfather lived in the same house, one of whom was the female pursuer, the mother of the child, and the evidence is that they worked as servants in their father's house, unless they were engaged in service elsewhere, and apparently for six or seven years they were at home on alternate years. The boy was brought up by his grandfather. He is now twenty-four years of age, and a claim for aliment for him is brought against the defender.
The defender does not deny the paternity of the child, but says that he was brought up by his maternal grandfather, and farther, that he had paid his share of the expenses. There seems no doubt that he did contribute to the support of the child for a few years, and that then he made an offer to take the boy and bring him up himself, and that that offer was rejected when the boy was between four and five years of age. After that offer had been made and rejected no farther claim for aliment was made. Now, a case of this sort is not entitled to much favour when the facts are left so obscure as the pursuers have chosen to leave them. No claim was made until after the grandfather had been dead for some years. It is said that the mother did contribute to the support of the child by her service in her father's house. I do not think that her presence there was as a servant entitled to wages, although the evidence is not quite clear as to what was her footing in the house. But there is evidence that after the defender had made payments for the child's aliment for three or four years he made an offer to take the child and provide for him, that that offer was rejected, and that afterwards no farther claim was made upon him. If the mother had been living in her own house, supporting herself by her own industry, and perhaps been of a more reputable character, that offer might not have been judged sufficient to bar all future claims of the mother against the father for aliment of the child, but looking to her character and the whole circumstances of the case, I am of opinion that the offer was a good one, and that it does not fall under the category of offers which, if made, do not bar a future claim for aliment on the ground that the child is too young to be taken away from the mother at the time when the offer is made. I think that in the circumstances the fact that the defender made the offer he did is sufficient to relieve him of all claims for aliment.
The pursuer Mrs Westland says that she wrote in 1865 to the defender, and that she got a letter from him offering to take the child and keep him himself. She says—“I had written to the defender before leaving my father's house, and he wrote me a letter in 1865, when the child was two years old, saying that he would take him. I never answered his letter offering to take the child.” And then—“I never asked aliment from the defender till I put the matter into the hands of a law-agent. I instructed Mr Barclay to write him for aliment in February 1886. That was
Page: 539↓
In these circumstances I am of opinion that the grounds of action are not proved, and that the evidence here does not satisfy me either that any debt was due to the grandfather who brought up the child, and who has been dead for some years, or to the mother, who does not seem to have paid anything for its maintenance. I think, therefore, we should find that the averments of the pursuers have not been established, and assoilzie the defender.
The Court recalled the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary, and assoilzied the defender, with expenses.
Counsel for Defender (Reclaimer)— Kennedy. Agent— J. D. Macaulay, S.S.C.
Counsel for Pursuers (Respondents)— Rhind— A. S. Paterson. Agent— Abraham Nivison, Solicitor.