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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Barclay v Stevenson. [1629] Mor 7183 (18 March 1629) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1629/Mor1707183-012.html Cite as: [1629] Mor 7183 |
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[1629] Mor 7183
Subject_1 IRRITANCY.
Subject_2 SECT. I. Legal Irritancy ob non solutum canonem.
Date: Barclay
v.
Stevenson
18 March 1629
Case No.No 12.
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A creditor having obtained infeftment of his debtor's lands, and having set? a back-tack again to him, during the not redemption, with a clause irritant, that if the duty of the back-tack be unpaid two years, the same and the reversion should expire; upon the which failzie, declarator being sought, another creditor compearing alleged absolvitor, because the years libelled, whereon the failzie alleged was committed, the pursuer's self possessed an house of the lands set in back-tack; the mail of which house, as was used to be paid therefor the years before the pursuer's occupation, extended yearly to L. 10, whereby the pursuer must be counted to have received payment of a part of the said back-tack duty, and a part being paid for the years libelled, the failzie cannot be counted to have been committed, seeing the whole duty rested not owing. This exception of partial payment, and this manner of payment, viz. by occupation, was found relevant to elide the declarator; and also, it was found relevant to be proved by witnesses, and nowise necessary to be proved by writ.
Clerk, Hay. *** Kerse reports this case: 1630. July 22.
Found that payment of a part years excludes a clause irritant for not payment of the tack-duty. Item, Find compensation of a part extending to L. 10, offered now of the sub-tack of a part of the tenement bruiked by the wadsetters relevant to exclude, albeit the tack-duty was——years.
*** Auchinleck reports the same case: Alexander Barclay is infeft in a tenement in Stirling by one Stevenson, redeemable upon the sum of L. 1000. Alexander sets back the tenement to Stevenson for payment of L. 100 per year. There was a clause irritant contained in the back-tack, that if two terms run in the third, both the reversion and the back tack should expire. After failzie is committed, Alexander Barclay pursues a declarator of the expiring of the reversion and the back-tack; compears another creditor, who likewise was infeft in the said tenement, and to stay the declarator, alleges the reversion and back-tack could not have been declared to have fallen by the alleged failzie, because the pursuer had a tack of a fore-booth of the said tenement set to him by Stevenson before the wadset for payment of L. 5 termly, whereof he was in possession; and seeing the said mail of the fore-booth was unpaid and retained by the pursuer as a part of the
duty of the back-tack, all the terms wherein the failzies are alleged to have been omitted, he cannot seek declarator of the failzie, seeing a part of the back-tack duty was paid termly by the said mails of the fore-booth, which the Lords found relevant.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting