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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> James Hope in Peebles, v Fowlis of Ratho. [1715] Mor 2152 (4 February 1715) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1715/Mor0502152-076.html Cite as: [1715] Mor 2152 |
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[1715] Mor 2152
Subject_1 CAUTIONER.
Subject_2 SECT. VIII. Cautioner in a Suspension.
Date: James Hope in Peebles,
v.
Fowlis of Ratho
4 February 1715
Case No.No 76.
Cautioners in suspension fall not under the intendment of the act of Parliament 1695, limiting cautionary obligations.
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Fowlis of Ratho having become cautioner in a suspension, at the instance of Dalmahoy and Maleney, against the said James Hope, and the suspension not being discussed in seven years; afterwards a decreet being obtained against the principals, and a charge given to the cautioners; in a suspension of that charge, the question being, Whether cautioners in suspensions, fall under the act 1695 ?
It was alleged for the charger, That Ratho's bond did not fall under this act, because the law relates only to such as were bound and engaged for, and with another, conjunctly and severally, in any bond or contract for sums of money, but cautioners in suspensions are not in that manner bound; besides, that such cautionry would otherways be elusory, and most of such cautioners would escape, which the creditor could not prevent, seeing discussing of suspensions requires a course of time, frequently exceeding seven years, nor can the creditor use any kind of diligence against such a cautioner, till he first obtain decreet against the principal debtor: 2do, Esto they fell under the act, yet the septennium could only be reckoned from the date of the decreet, seeing before that time no diligence could be used against the cautioner.
Answered for the suspender, That he was founded on the very letter of the law, narrating, That men are easily induced to become cautioners for others, which allegeance holds with greater reason in cautioners in suspensions than others, because they are the more easily engaged, where they have some hope of liberation by the event of a process. And the law, in the statutory part, does not distinguish, whether they be bound for another judicially or extrajudicially.
Replied for the charger, That in all laws, especially such as are correctory, the narrative, which is the legislators' motive, is much larger than the statutory part. And it is ridiculous to pretend prescription here, from the date of the principal bond, or the bond of cautionry, when the cautioner is neither bound conjunctly nor severally for the principal sum; not hath a clause of relief in the principal bond, nor a separate bond of relief apart intimated to the creditor, (all which are required in the act) since this was indeed no less than to explain the act, contrary to the express tenor thereof.
The Lords found, That the cautioners in suspensions fall not under the act of Parliament 1695.
Act. Sir James Nasmyth. Alt. Sir Walter Pringle. Clerk, M'Kenzie. See This case by Dalrymple, voce Prescription, Septennial.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting