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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> James Grant v William Philp, Margaret Maclauchlane, and - Brown. [1663] 2 Brn 315 (3 December 1663)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1663/Brn020315-0603.html

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[1663] 2 Brn 315      

Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by SIR JOHN LAUDER, LORD FOUNTAINHALL.

James Grant
v.
William Philp, Margaret Maclauchlane, and - Brown

Date: 3 December 1663

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Duncan Philp in Comrie parish in Pearthshire, begets on Margaret Maclauchlane a child, called William Philp, whose name he puts in a bond of 400 merks, addebted to him by James Brown in Balichargie. This William dying, the said sum was found to pertain to the king, as being fallen in his hands by reason of bastardy, escheat, or last heir; the said William having been born a bastard, and so deceasing without bairns lawfully procreated of his own body, or any lawful assignation or disposition of the said sum made by him to any, during his lifetime, or at least because the said William has none to succeed to him within the tenth degree of his generation. James Grant, servitor to William, Duke of Hamilton, in anno 1663, gets the gift of the said bastardy from the king, under his Highness' privy seal, and so with concourse of the king's advocate, raises summons of declarator against the said bastard's mother, as nearest of kin, and against the son and heir of the said James Browne, granter of the bond: summoning them to compear and hear it found and declared by the Lords, that the said bond is fallen in the king's hands, gift, and disposition, by reason of bastardy; and so that it appertains now to James Grant, this pursuer, as his majesty's donator; and that he ought to be answered, paid, and obeyed thereof.

The Lords decerned and ordained the same to belong and appertain to this pursuer, conform to the desire of the summons, because of the letter of gift under the privy seal produced.

And albeit, it was alleged by the defender's procurators, that no process could be sustained upon the foresaid gift of bastardy, because he offered him to prove that Margaret Maclauchlane, the alleged bastard's mother, was married to his father; at least, that he cohabited with her many years as his wife, and were habiti et reputati as married folks; and so the said William cannot be held a bastard:—Whereto it was replied by the pursuer's procurator, that the said allegeance was noways relevant, unless he would offer to prove that they were married, and that they cohabited and dwelt together as married:—

Notwithstanding of which reply, the Lords found the allegeance made by the defender relevant, and therefore assigned him a day for proving the same; also granted him letters for summoning witnesses, or leading any such like probation, or documents to that effect; which he failyieing to do at the day assigned, the term was circumduced against him, and decreet given furth in manner above written.

Sir John Fletcher compears personally.

Act. James Abernethy. Alt. Mr. Jo. Rollo. Signet MS. No. 18, folio 6.

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


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1663/Brn020315-0603.html