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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> James Halyburton of Fodderance, v Mr James Cook of Ardlaw. [1713] Mor 9994 (10 December 1713)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1713/Mor2409994-017.html
Cite as: [1713] Mor 9994

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[1713] Mor 9994      

Subject_1 PAYMENT.

James Halyburton of Fodderance,
v.
Mr James Cook of Ardlaw

Date: 10 December 1713
Case No. No 17.

Circumstances inferring payment.


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James Halyburton of Fodderance sold a piece of land to Mr James Cook, who, 1st February 1707, granted bond to Fodderance for 33,500 merks as the price, with this provision, that whatever sums Mr Cook had advanced, either to him, conform to his bills, bonds, or receipts, or paid to his creditors by his order or warrant, should be allowed in part payment. Mr Cook being charged upon this bond, suspended; and, at discussing of this suspension, had paid not only 7,500 merks to Fodderance himself, but also to Turnbull of Smiddiehill, his creditor, L. 1000 secured by an heritable bond and infeftment, and L. 220 by another heritable bond, and to one Jack, another creditor, 1000 merks; of all which, the suspender craved allowance, and produced discharges to vouch the payments.

Alleged for the charger; The discharges granted by Smiddiehill and Jack bear receipt of the money from Fodderance himself.

Answered for the suspender; The discharges being in hand, presume that the payments were made by him, and he fortified this presumption by a probation of witnesses, clearing that he had given his own bonds and bills in lieu of the discharges.

Replied for the charger; The discharges bearing the money received from him by Turnbull and Jack, cannot be redargued but by his writ or oath, conform to the Lords interlocutor, 26th July 1711 (see Presumption); because, 1mo, Writ is not regularly to be taken away by witnesses, which general rule in this case is fortified by the 25th act of the Parliament 1696, appointing declarators of trust to be vouched by writ or oath of party; and, by a special clause in the bond charged on, that the suspender should have allowance only of debts paid to the charger's creditors by his order or warrant, which the suspender hath not to justify his pretended payments to Turnbull and Jack; 2do, The sums contained in these discharges ought not to be allowed as separate articles of payments from the other receipt of 7,500 merks granted by the charger to the suspender in a few days after; for, though a posterior greater receipt might not be presumed to include a prior smaller receipt still extant in the hands of the payer, yet here, where the instructions of the anterior payments are conceived simply and directly in the charger's own favours, the suspender can never be heard to found thereon as made by himself, there being nothing more ordinary than for one man to discharge another man's money and take receipt thereon in the other's name; which, though in the payer's hand, would never be a ground of action or exception to him against the person in whose name it is conceived; which is conform to the decisions betwixt Gordon of Troquhen and M'Ghie of of Balmagie, 27th November 1711, voce Prsumption, and betwixt Nisbet of Dirleton and Johnston, 26th July 1711, Ibidem.

Duplied for the suspenders; Though writ be not regularly taken away by witnesses, it is elided in some cases, not only by witnesses, but by presumption, arising from the tenor of receipts: In so far as, 1mo, He being debtor to Fodderance for the price of the lands, and the payments made to the creditors by heritable bonds, he, Mr Cook, had a proper interest to disburden his purchase; 2do, Had the money been paid by Fodderance, or included in the general discharge of 7,500 merks, it cannot be thought that the receipts would have remained in the suspender's hands, but the charger would certainly have gotten them up; 3tio, The suspender hath also proved, by witnesses, that he actually paid the money, or gave security to the original creditors in lieu of the discharges. Now, albeit the simple having of a writ will not infer that the haver paid the money contrary to the tenor thereof; yet a person, obliged or concerned to pay another's debt, having the instructions retired, is presumed to have paid it. Trust, again, in a general sense, might be extended to all cases where there is any trust as to obligations betwixt tutors and pupils, constituents and factors, merchants and correspondents, clients and their doers. But, it cannot be thought, that here the Parliament 1696, making a correctory statute, (which is to be strictly interpreted) meant to comprehend such cases. It concerns only deeds of trusts made use of to found action of declarator of trust, and not the present case, where the suspender is defending himself via exceptionis. The clause in the bond for allowing only debts paid by Fodderance's warrant, imports only that he may object, if he can, against any debts paid without his order, that they are not good debts. Besides, the probation adduced, clears that the payments were made by his order. The practique of Troquhen and Balmagie doth not meet; for the taking one receipt, bearing simply from himself and a second bearing partly from himself, partly from another, and the correus not having any of the other's effects are circumstantiate differences; besides that exception is more favourable than action. Though the other case betwixt Dirleton and Johnston, is as little to the purpose, because there the payment was officious without any warrant, and it doth not appear that the tenant was debtor to the master in the equivalent of the sums paid. Nor were the debts paid, cesses or minister's stipend, which affected the subject of the tenant's possession, as the debts paid by the suspender did his purchase.

The Lords found that the discharges by Smiddiehill and Jack, produced by Mr Cook the suspender, who was debtor to the charger, are not in the case of the 25th act of the Parliament 1696, anent blank bonds and trusts; and found that those receipts are not presumed to have been included in the general discharge of 7,500 merks, and therefore allowed the sums contained in these receipts, except the charger offers to prove by the suspender's oath, that they were therein included. The Lords also found it proved, that, notwithstanding the narrative of the controverted discharges, bearing the payments to be made by Fodderance's money, yet the payment was made out of the remaining price due by Cook to Fodderance, after purchasing the lands from him, unless Fodderance would redargue the same by Cook's oath.—See Haliburton against Cook, voce Presumption.

Forbes, MS. p. 10.

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


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