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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Lord Louthian v The Town of Jedburgh. [1665] 2 Brn 418 (20 June 1655)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1665/Brn020418-0687.html

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[1665] 2 Brn 418      

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

Lord Louthian
v.
The Town of Jedburgh

Date: 20 June 1655

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The Lord Louthian against the Town of Jedburgh, and they against him: there being mutual declarators by other of thir parties against others, to hear and see some lands lying contigue to the said town, belonging in property to my Lord, as a part of his barony of Ancrum, declared free of any jurisdiction the town could pretend over them: And, on the other hand, the town contending they belonged to their jurisdiction, in so far as it was offered to be proven that, in their charter of erection, they have all the privileges of a free burgh royal, granted to them within their town, and parts and pertinents thereof; and it is offered to be proven that thir lands now controverted are parts, &c. of their town, in so far as they have been in use to hold courts, fine and imprison the inhabitants of these lands, as burgesses; likeas the whole inhabitants thereof are burgesses, and enjoy the hail privileges of burgesses, and the crafts and merchants dwelling there have been in constant use to subject themselves to the town deacons; and in all things, either active or passive, competent to burgesses of burghs royal, they have enjoyed them these 40 or 50 years: All which is sufficient in law to induce a right of jurisdiction over them.

Answer,—Thir lands being a part of his barony, wherein he stands infeft, holden of the king, and the inhabitants being his tenants, he has been in possession of jurisdiction there, by virtue of his infeftment, past memory of man; and any use or possession his tenants have had of making themselves burgesses there, and subjecting themselves to their jurisdiction, cannot prejudge him, nor yet can his connivance at that subjection hinder him to seek this declarator for the future against the said town; especially seeing thir lands do not hold burgage of the burgh, nor are they expressed in their charter of erection. And it is inconsistent both with law and reason that Jedburgh should have jurisdiction when they have neither property nor superiority; which is in effect to make accidens sine subjecto, since imperium inhæret territorio.

Alleged,—It is no new thing to see a burgh royal have jurisdiction where they have neither property nor superiority; and a burgh of barony and royal are consistent, as in Dysart. This was to be heard in presentia.

Act. Cunyghame. Alt. Lockhart and Wedderburne. Advocates' MS. folio 54.

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/1665/Brn020418-0687.html