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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Earl of Lauderdale v My Lord Yester and George Seton of Barns. [1710] Mor 12170 (2 February 1710)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1710/Mor2912170-311.html
Cite as: [1710] Mor 12170

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[1710] Mor 12170      

Subject_1 PROCESS.
Subject_2 SECT. XIV.

Wakening.

Earl of Lauderdale
v.
My Lord Yester and George Seton of Barns

Date: 2 February 1710
Case No. No 311.

Instance where a process was found to be sleeping as to one defender, while going on as to another.


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The Earl of Lauderdale having raised a summons against the Lord Yester and Seton of Barns, concluding against my Lord Yester as heir of line to the Duke of Lauderdale, that the pursuer, as heir-male to the Duke his uncle, has good and undoubted right to an apprising led against the estate of Dumfermline, and also that the apprising is affectable for his relief of the Duke's debts; and concluding against Barns, as representing Charles Earl of Dumfermline, that he ought to be personally liable for the sums contained in the apprising:

Alleged for my Lord Yester; The pursuer may constitute his relief as accords against the heir of line, and adjudge in common form; but to declare the apprising affectable for his relief, is to go out of the common road of diligence; 2do, Such a conclusion cannot be indulged, unless the grounds of debt had been libelled and produced; seeing a right cannot be declared affectable with a nonens; and the pursuer might as well carry on an adjudication, or pursue a forthcoming, without producing his debt.

Alleged for Barns; The process as to him is sleeping, not having been insisted in for a whole year after it was called by course of the roll; and therefore must be wakened.

Replied for the pursuer; 1mo, There is no necessity to libel or produce the debts in this process, which concludes not payment, but only that the apprising belonging to the Duke should be declared affectable by his debts; 2do, The process was kept waking against Barns by the continued prosecution against the Lord Yester upon the same active title, libel, and grounds of debt; against whom it was necessary for the pursuer to insist primo loco, to remove all prejudicial exceptions against his title; as in an action against heirs of line and tailzie, the latter could not pretend that the process quoad him could sleep during the time of insisting against the heir of line who must be first discussed.

Duplied for Barns; Perinde est whether different parties be called in one, or in separate summonses, where the conclusions are different. The reason why a process doth not sleep against an heir of provision, while the creditor is discussing the lineal heir, is, because the action resolves in a competition betwixt these, which of them should be liable to the debt; whereas there is no such thing in this case, and therefore the parallel doth not hold.

The Lords declared the apprising affectable for the pursuer's relief of the Duke of Lauderdale's debts; and found that the process is sleeping as to Barns.

Fol. Dic. v. 2. p. 202. Forbes, p. 393.

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/1710/Mor2912170-311.html