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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Finlayson v Kinloch. [1629] Mor 2923 (13 January 1629)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1629/Mor0702923-001.html
Cite as: [1629] Mor 2923

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[1629] Mor 2923      

Subject_1 CONDICTIO INDEBITI.

Finlayson
v.
Kinloch

Date: 13 January 1629
Case No. No 1.

Action of repetition found competent to an assignee against an arrester, whose arrestment was posterior to the intimation of the assignation, but who had obtained payment on a decree of furthcoming.


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Kinloch being made assignee by Robert Finlayson, to the mails of a house pertaining to him, and the assignation being intimate to the possessor, and another creditor to Robert Finlayson having arrested the said mails, after the said intimation, for satisfying a preceding debt, decerned against the said Robert, and upon the arrestment recovering sentence, and upon the sentence going to poind, for eschewing thereof the possessor having payed; the Lords, notwithstanding of the said sentence and payment, found that the assignee, who first intimate before the arrestment, ought to be preferred; albeit the arrester alleged, that nothing had followed upon the said intimation, nor no diligence done thereupon by the assignee, while this present pursuit moved by him against the said possessor, which was not intented until after his sentence and payment, so that his prior diligence qui sibi vigilavit, was alleged, ought to be preferred to the assignee, who did nothing by the space of a year, or little less, after his intimation; even as when many arrestments are made by sundry creditors, not the first arrester, but the first doer of diligence upon his arrestment, is to be preferred; so not the first intimation, which is of no greater force than an arrestment, but the diligence ought to be repelled; notwithstanding whereof the first intimation was preferred.

Act. Lermonth. Alt. Mowat. Clerk, Scot. Fol. Dic. v. 1. p. 186. Durie, p. 413.

The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting     


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