BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Sir Thomas Nicolson v The Laird of Philorth. [1667] Mor 11233 (18 December 1667) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1667/Mor2711233-412.html Cite as: [1667] Mor 11233 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
[1667] Mor 11233
Subject_1 PRESCRIPTION.
Subject_2 DIVISION XV. Interruption of the Negative Prescription.
Subject_3 SECT. I. What diligence sufficient. - Effect of partial interruption.
Date: Sir Thomas Nicolson
v.
The Laird of Philorth
18 December 1667
Case No.No 412.
Negative prescription is saved as to the whole, the creditor doing diligence against any one of the principals or cautioners, or receiving annualrent from either.
Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
Philorth elder, being pursued as representing his grandfather for payment of a debt due upon bond granted by the Earl Marischal and his grandfather as cautioner; it was alleged, That the bond being dated above 40 years ago, was prescribed. It was replied, That interruption had been made by payment of the annualrents by the principal debtor. It was answered, It was prescribed as to the cautioner, there being no interruption by any document or pursuit against him, or payment by him.
The Lords repelled the defence in respect of the reply; and found that the ground of prescription as to personal actions being odium and negligentia non petentis, that it doth not militate in this case, the creditor having gotten annualrent; so that he cannot be said to be negligent.
Act. Lockhart. Alt. Cunningham. *** Stair reports this case: Umquhile Sir Thomas Nicolson having pursued the Laird of Philorth before the late Judges, as representing his grandfather, who was cautioner in a bond for the Earl Marischal, there being an interlocutor in the process, Sir Thomas dying, his son transfers the process and insists. The defender alleged, That the bond was prescribed as to his grandfather, by the act of Parliament King James the VIth, anent prescription of obligations, bearing that if no pursuit were moved, nor document taken within 40 years, that these bonds should prescribe; ita est, there was no pursuit nor document against the defender's grandfather by the space of 40 years, and therefore as to him it was prescribed. The pursuer answered, That he opponed the act of Parliament, and interlocutor of the Judges in his favours, and offered him to prove that the annualrent was paid by the principal debtor, within these 40 years, and his discharge granted thereupon, which was sufficient document; and the pursuer not having been negligent, nor at all bound to pursue or seek the cautioners, when he got ananualrent from the principal, the obligation of both stands entire. The defender answered, That the principal and cautioners being bound conjunctly and severally, albeit in one writ, yet the obligations of each of them was a distinct obligation, and as the cautioner might be discharged, and yet the principal obligation stand, so the prescription is a legal discharge, presuming the creditor past from the cautioner, seeing he never owned him for 40 years, which is most favourable on the part of cautioners, who otherwise may remain under unknown obligations for 100 years. The pursuer answered, That albeit there might have been some appearance of reason, if the persons obliged had been all co-principals, or bound by distinct writs; yet where the writ and obligation
is one, and the cautioner's obligation thereby but accessory, and the creditor no way negligent, there is no ground of such a presumption, that the creditor past from any party obliged; and the obligations mentioned in the act of Parliament, are not to be meant according to the subtilty of distinction of different notions of obligations, but according to the common style and meaning of obligations, whereby one writ obliging principal and cautioners, is always accounted an obligation, which is sufficiently preserved by payment obtained from the principal. “The Lords adhered to the former interlocutor, and repelled the defence of prescription in respect of the reply, of payment made of the annualrents made by the principal.”
*** A similar decision was pronounced in the case Earl of Marchmont against Earl of Home, 23d February 1714. No 354. p. 11154.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting