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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Experno Ltd v. Banks [2007] ScotSC 27 (14 June 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2007/27.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotSC 27

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SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLAND AND ISLANDS AT ABERDEEN

 

SA700/06

JUDGEMENT

 

of

 

SHERIFF PRINCIPAL SIR STEPHEN S T YOUNG Bt QC

 

in the cause

 

EXPERNO LIMITED

 

Pursuers and Appellants

 

against

 

MARK BANKS

 

Defender and Respondent

 

 

 

Act: Mr M G Ferrier, authorised lay representative

Alt: Mr Scott Banks, solicitor, Banks Devlin & Co, Paisley

 

 

Aberdeen: 14th June 2007

 

The sheriff principal, having resumed consideration of the cause, answers the question of law in the stated case in the negative, allows the appeal and recalls the decree pronounced by the sheriff on 9 February 2007; finds the defender and respondent liable to the pursuers and appellants in the expenses of the hearing before the sheriff on 9 February 2007 and of the appeal as the same may be fixed by the sheriff clerk in terms of rule 21.6(9) of the Small Claim Rules 2002; quoad ultra remits the cause to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

 

 

 

 

Note

 

[1] On 5 January 2006 at Arbroath Sheriff Court the pursuers and appellants raised an action (SA1/06) by way of a small claim against the defender and respondent for payment of the sum of £750. The details of the claim in short were that the defender had leased a property in Aberdeen from the pursuers and that as at 31 December 2005 there was a balance of unpaid rent due. This exceeded the sum of £750 but the sum sued for was restricted to this amount.

 

[2] On 18 April 2006 at Arbroath Sheriff Court the pursuers raised a second action (SA86/06) against the defender by way of a small claim for payment of the sum of £750. The details of this claim were again that the pursuers had leased the property in Aberdeen to the defender. But on this occasion it was said that he had left the property without settling his liabilities under the lease agreement, that these liabilities were principally administration fees and cleaning costs and that the sum sued for was restricted to £750.

 

[3] On 24 April 2006 there was a hearing before the sheriff at Arbroath. It appears that the purpose of this hearing was to consider a minute for recall of decree in terms of rule 22.1 of the Small Claim Rules 2002 in the action SA1/06, decree in absence having previously been granted against the defender. On that occasion the pursuers were represented, as they have been throughout the proceedings, by an authorised lay representative, namely Mr M G Ferrier. The defender was represented by a local agent who appeared on behalf of his principal agent in Paisley. It seems that in the course of this hearing Mr Ferrier indicated to the sheriff that the pursuers would be seeking payment to them by the defender of the administration fees and cleaning costs which had been claimed in the action SA86/06. This was evidently reported by the local agent to the defender's principal agent, and this explains why in the note of defence in the action SA1/06 which was lodged on 2 May 2006 the defender not only asserted that all rent due by him to the pursuers had been paid (which was all that had been claimed) but also added a second paragraph in which he denied liability for payment of the administration fees and cleaning costs.

 

[4] A supplementary note of defence was lodged on behalf of the defender in the action SA1/06 on 4 May 2006. In this it was said in short that the court at Arbroath did not have jurisdiction in the matter and that the action should have been raised in Aberdeen Sheriff Court.

 

[5] On 9 May 2006 a document signed by Mr Ferrier was lodged in the court at Arbroath on behalf of the pursuers. It purported to be their response to the two notes of defence which had been lodged on behalf of the defender in the action SA1/06. In paragraph 3 of this document it was admitted that all rent due by the defender had been paid by him prior to termination of the lease. In paragraphs 4 and 5 details were given of the pursuers' claims for administration fees and cleaning costs respectively. It appears that Mr Ferrier thought it necessary to add these two paragraphs in light of the second paragraph in the original note of defence.

 

[6] A note of defence in the action SA86/06 was lodged at the court on 18 May 2006. In this the defender, inter alia, denied any liability for payment of the administration fees and cleaning costs.

 

[7] A response signed by Mr Ferrier to this last note of defence had previously been lodged by the pursuers at the court on 17 May 2006. I can only assume from the fact that the response was lodged before the note of defence itself that a copy of the latter must have been sent to Mr Ferrier before the principal was lodged at court. For present purposes the important point to notice is that paragraphs 3 and 4 in this response referred to the administration fees and cleaning costs respectively and were in identical terms to paragraphs 4 and 5 in the pursuers' response which had previously been lodged in the action SA1/06 on 9 May 2006.

 

[8] There was a preliminary hearing in the action SA86/06 on 29 May 2006. On that date the sheriff fixed a further hearing on 16 June 2006 which was the date which had previously been fixed for the hearing of the action SA1/06. It was thus that both actions were called before the sheriff at Arbroath on 16 June 2006. The pursuers were represented by Mr Ferrier and the defender by his principal agent.

 

[9] The action SA1/06 was called first. Notwithstanding the terms of the pursuers' response which had been lodged on 9 May 2006 it appears that the summons in the action SA1/06 had not formally been amended in terms of rule 12.1 to incorporate the claims for administration fees and cleaning costs. Technically therefore all that was sought in this action was payment of the sum of £750 in respect of unpaid rent. I was informed that Mr Ferrier had advised the sheriff that he was no longer pursuing this claim, that the defender's agent had then moved that decree of absolvitor should be granted in favour of the defender and that Mr Ferrier had consented to this. The sheriff therefore absolved the defender in the action SA1/06 and granted decree for payment of expenses of £75 against the pursuers.

 

[10] The action SA86/06 was then called. The defender's agent apparently invited the sheriff to dismiss this action on the basis that it ought to have been raised, not at Arbroath, but at Aberdeen, the defender being resident in the sheriff court district of Aberdeen. Mr Ferrier proposed that, rather than dismiss the action, the sheriff should transfer it to Aberdeen, and this the sheriff did in terms of his interlocutor dated 16 June 2006.

 

[11] Upon its transfer to Aberdeen, the action SA86/06 was given a new number (SA700/06) but for the present I shall continue to refer to it by its original number.

 

[12] Various procedural steps ensued in the action, the details of which are not of significance. Eventually the action was called before the sheriff at Aberdeen on 9 February 2007 for a hearing. What happened then is narrated in the stated case as follows:

 

3. There was no evidence heard as the defender raised a preliminary matter. He stated that the matter was res judicata.

4. The defender's agent maintained that on 16 June 2006 at Arbroath Sheriff Court decree of absolvitor had been granted with expenses in favour of the defender in an action under case reference SAl/06 in which the same parties and the same issues had come before the court there. He referred me to Inventory for Productions for defender and in particular production 6. This bears to be a copy extract decree of absolvitor in an action between the same parties under reference SAl/06. He invited me to dismiss the action with expenses in favour of the defender.

5. In response to questioning by me Mr Ferrier agreed that the parties in the actions were the same as were the issues. He submitted that as no evidence had yet been heard in the present action I should not grant dismissal as moved for by the defender's solicitor. He agreed that the defender's production was a copy extract decree of absolvitor.

6. Based on that information and as there was no suggestion that the decree of absolvitor granted at Arbroath on 16 June 2006 was under appeal I deemed the matters raised in the present action to be res judicata and accordingly granted the defender's motion for dismissal with expenses.

 

[13] The single question of law in the stated case reads:

 

Based on the information made available to me was I entitled to dismiss the action on the Defender's plea of res judicata?

 

[14] In both the note of appeal and his submissions at the hearing of the appeal itself Mr Ferrier maintained that the sheriff should not have sustained the defender's plea of res judicata since the sheriff at Arbroath had exceeded his jurisdiction in pronouncing decree of absolvitor in the action SA1/06 and since in any event the subject-matter and media concludendi of the two actions were not the same. It was submitted that the present appeal should therefore be allowed and the decree pronounced by the sheriff on 9 February 2007 recalled.

 

[15] The defender's solicitor submitted that on the basis of the information given to the sheriff at the hearing on 9 February 2007 as recorded in the stated case the question of law should be answered in the affirmative and the appeal dismissed. In any event he submitted that the subject-matter of the two actions had been the same with the result that the sheriff had been correct to sustain the defender's plea of res judicata.

 

[16] In response Mr Ferrier challenged the statement in the first sentence of paragraph 5 of the stated case to the effect that he had agreed that the parties in the two actions were the same as were the issues. According to him, what had happened at the hearing before the sheriff was that he had made a short statement at the outset after which the defender's solicitor had addressed the sheriff at some length on the legal technicalities of the case. Thereafter the sheriff had held up the extract of the decree of absolvitor which had been pronounced by the sheriff at Arbroath on 16 June 2006 and had asked him (Mr Ferrier) whether he accepted that that was indeed the decree which the sheriff had granted at Arbroath. Mr Ferrier had done so and the sheriff had then explained that he could not look beyond the extract.

 

[17] The defender's solicitor explained that the narrative of events in the stated case coincided with his own recollection of what had transpired at the hearing on 9 February 2007. In normal circumstances I think that I should have been bound to accept this narrative as accurate. But its accuracy had previously been challenged by Mr Ferrier in the adjustments which he had proposed to the sheriff's draft stated case. In these adjustments he had stated that he had not agreed that the issues in the two actions were the same, and he had gone on to draw attention to the differences between them. In the stated case the sheriff records that he refused this proposed adjustment "as it did not accord with my recollection of what took place at the original hearing of the case on 9 February 2007".

 

[18] I have come to the conclusion, albeit with some hesitation, that I cannot be confident that in paragraph 5 of the stated case the sheriff has correctly recorded Mr Ferrier as having agreed that the parties in the two actions were the same as were the issues. I say this for three reasons in particular. In the first place, in paragraph 2 of the draft stated case the sheriff recorded that the defender had represented himself at the hearing on 9 February 2007 and in paragraph 4 he recorded the submissions which are now said to have been made by the defender's agent as having been made by the defender. It is not in dispute that at the hearing before sheriff the defender was represented by his solicitor (as is now recorded in the stated case as a result of an adjustment to this effect proposed by the defender), and I think it is legitimate to ask to what extent the sheriff's recollection of the events of the hearing can be relied upon if, when he came to draft his stated case, he initially appeared to think that the defender had represented himself.

 

[19] This in turn has an important bearing on the reason given by the sheriff for having rejected the adjustment to the stated case proposed by Mr Ferrier. Had I been in the position of the sheriff I think that, given the significance of the point, I should probably have questioned Mr Ferrier closely to make sure precisely what he was agreeing about the issues in the two actions and I should then have made a specific note of the concession which he had made. If the sheriff had done this and had then stated that he had rejected the adjustment because it did not accord with his note of what had been said, I do not think that there would have been any room for argument on the point. But, since his own recollection has already been shown to have been at fault, I am doubtful whether the sheriff's reason for refusing the adjustment can be considered to be altogether sound.

 

[20] In the third place I am bound to say that it seems to me to be inherently improbable that Mr Ferrier would have conceded at the hearing before the sheriff that the issues in the two actions had been the same. I can readily understand that he would have conceded that the defender's production was an extract of the decree of absolvitor pronounced by the sheriff at Arbroath on 16 June 2006. But it is I think perfectly clear that in the view of Mr Ferrier the focus of the action SA1/06 was the recovery of unpaid rent whereas the focus of the action SA86/06 was the recovery of administration fees and cleaning costs. If the issues in the two actions had been the same, it would not have made sense for him at the hearing at Arbroath on 16 June 2006 to have consented to decree of absolvitor in the action SA1/06 and at the same time sought the transfer to Aberdeen of the action SA86/06. So I am at a loss to understand why at the hearing before the sheriff on 9 February 2007 he should have agreed that the issues in the two actions were the same.

 

[21] I did not understand the defender's solicitor to dispute the contention of Mr Ferrier (founded on Macphail's Sheriff Court Practice at paragraphs 2.107 and 2.108) that for a plea of res judicata to succeed both the subject-matter and the media concludendi of the two actions must be the same. The sheriff thus had to be satisfied that both the subject-matter and the media concludendi of the two actions SA1/06 and SA86/06 were the same and I do not consider that the concession made by Mr Ferrier (if indeed it was made as narrated in paragraph 5 of the stated case) was by itself apt to support this conclusion. On the contrary, I think that before sustaining the plea the sheriff would have had to confirm with Mr Ferrier that, in making his concession, he was acknowledging that both the subject-matter and the media concludendi of the two actions were the same.

 

[22] Turning to the defender's alternative submission, I have already explained what the two actions were originally about and the circumstances in which they came to be disposed of by the sheriff at Arbroath on 16 June 2006. In my opinion it is perfectly clear that the subject-matter of the two actions was indeed different. In short the action SA1/06 was about unpaid rent whereas the action SA86/06 was about administration fees and cleaning costs. Indeed, if there had been any substance in the defender's plea, one would have expected his solicitor to have advanced it before the sheriff at Arbroath on 16 June 2006 as soon as decree of absolvitor had been granted in the action SA1/06.

 

[23] On the whole matter I am persuaded that the sheriff ought not to have sustained the defender's plea of res judicata. I have therefore recalled his decree and remitted the cause to him to proceed as accords. In this context I should mention that the defender's agent drew attention to rule 23.3(4)(c) and suggested that it would not be competent for me to remit the cause to the sheriff. If the purpose of the remit had been to have further evidence led I think that this would have been correct. But in this case the purpose of the remit is to have evidence led, not further evidence.

 

[24] Mr Ferrier submitted that I should find the pursuers entitled to expenses and I am satisfied that this would be appropriate.

 

[24] For the sake of completeness, I should perhaps record that, given that he had consented to it, I was not impressed by Mr Ferrier's submission that the defender's plea of res judicata ought to have been repelled on the basis that the sheriff at Arbroath had exceeded his jurisdiction in granting decree of absolvitor in the action SA1/06.


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