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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Thomas Garden Merchant in Dundee, and John Donaldson Writer there, his Assignee, v John Pilmore Writer in St Andrews and John Lindsay Merchant there. [1724] Mor 3519 (30 January 1724) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1724/Mor0903519-058.html Cite as: [1724] Mor 3519 |
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[1724] Mor 3519
Subject_1 DILIGENCE.
Subject_2 SECT. VII. Diligence Prestable by Factors and Mandataries.
Date: Thomas Garden Merchant in Dundee, and John Donaldson Writer there, his Assignee,
v.
John Pilmore Writer in St Andrews and John Lindsay Merchant there
30 January 1724
Case No.No 58.
A person gave a mandate to his agent to arrest a ship. He having got a bill for the debt, neglected to use the arrestment. The Lords found him liable in the debt.
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Robert Balfour skipper in St Andrews was debtor to Thomas Garden in L. 40 Sterling per bill; for security of which he gave to Garden a bill of bottomry, and also a vendition of five eighth-parts of his ship.
Balfour's ship having come into the harbour of St Andrews, Garden left the bill of bottomry and vendition in Mr Pilmore's hands, to be given up to Balfour, upon his payment of the L. 40, or finding security; and Garden being to go abroad, committed the inspection of that affair to David Brisbane writer in Dundee.
Brisbane wrote two pressing letters to Pilmore, to take out an admiral precept, and arrest the ship till good security should be got for the L. 40, and Pilmore in return to these letters wrote to Brisbane, that he had got a bill drawn upon and excepted by John Lindsay merchant in St Andrews for L. 40, and that thereupon he had sent back the precept unexecuted.
Garden and his assigneee brought an action against Pilmore upon his said letter, either to deliver up Lindsay's bill, or pay the L. 40. Pilmore pretended, that the bill was in John Stark writer in St Andrews his hand; and having got a diligence for recovering it, Stark at exhibiting deponed, that it was deposited by Lindsay in his hands as his doer, not to be delivered up to Garden, until he should make over to Lindsay the security he had from Balfour, both with regard to his person and the ship, for his relief of the sum in the bill.
Compearance was made for Lindsay, who pleaded, that the bill could not be given up, nor any sentence passed thereon against him, because it was never a delivered evident, but had been deposited in his own doer's hands upon the above mentioned condition, which was now become imprestible, by reason that the ship had since perished.
It was pleaded for Pilmore, that the bill being out of Lindsay's hand, he behoved to prove that it was a depositate deed otherwise than by Stark's oath, and that being once proven, Stark's oath would indeed prove the terms of the depositation. 2do, Even taking it on the footing of Stark's oath, it was evident that Lindsay had bought Garden's right, and therefore he ought to pay the bill, upon Garden's conveying the same; nor could Lindsay be liberate from the bargain, upon pretence that the ship was now perished, because periculum rei venditæ, etiam ante traditionem, pertinet ad emptorem. In the next place, Whether Lindsay be liable or not, he Pilmore had done his duty sufficiently; for he could do no more than take such a security as he did, because he had no power from Garden instantly to convey his right, nor could it be expected that Lindsay would give a simple bill till he got such a conveyance for his relief: And further, that Garden had approved of his management, in so far as he took up his papers from him, and gave him a gratification for his service.
It was pleaded for the pursuers, that they were not to enter into the question, whether Lindsay was liable upon a bill so clogged, at least in the management of it, for which Pilmore was to blame: But surely if Lindsay was not liable, Pilmore was; because he had not duly executed the mandate given him by Brisbane, who was Garden's trustee in his absence, namely, to arrest the ship, or, to get good security for the sum; for by good security must be understood not only what is taken from a responsal person, but also what affords parata executio. And it is but an affected excuse, that Lindsay would not give his bill in other terms; for if he would not engage purely and absolutely, Pilmore's instructions were plain, to arrest the ship: Garden was under no obligation to Balfour, further than to cancel and deliver up his bill of bottomry and vendition of the ship, which Pilmore could have done (since he had them in his hands) upon getting payment or security for the L. 40. It was Balfour's business to find out the security, and if he could not prevail with Lindsay to engage simply, then the ship was to be detained by arrestment. In the next place, though Garden was obliged to take up his papers from Pilmore, in order to commence this process, and did pay his account, because he would not otherwise part with them; yet he at the time objected to the article for his pains, and was so far from approving his management, that he protested at the very time against him for cost, skaith, &c. because of his not duly executing the commission to arrest the ship, as appeared from an instrument in Process.
1723. July 16.—‘Upon report of the Lord Polton, the Lords found it proven, That Lindsay's bill to Garden the pursuer was depositate in the hands of Stark till the pursuer should make over to Lindsay the debt due by Balfour the
skipper, and corroborative security of bottomry: And found, That Pilmore did accept of a commission to arrest and secure Balfour's ship at St Andrews, or to procure to Garden the pursuer a sufficient security of the debt; and that not having secured the ship, nor intimate to the pursuer or his doer that the bill taken in the pursuer's name was depositate, he has not duly execute his commission, and thereby is become liable for the pursuer's debt; the pursuer always making over to him the debt against Balfour, and any claim of right he might have to Lindsay's bill, that he might operate his relief either against the original debtor or against Lindsay, as accords.’ Pilmore reclaimed, and insisted, That Lindsay should be found liable on his bill for the L. 40 upon the topics formerly mentioned; and because he had, by granting the said bill, obtained his main end, viz. liberty for the ship to sail, which was of great value to him, because he was chiefly concerned in the freighting of her, so that Lindsay bought two things, first the ship's freedom to sail, and next Garden's right affecting her, and the price of these was his bill. The liberty of sailing he got; nor was he any loser by not getting a transmission of Garden's right, for that would not have hindered the ship to perish; nor could he pretend that ever Garden refused, or was in mora to grant it, or that he Lindsay had a mind to sell that right to any other person; and therefore he was equally liable as if he had got it.
It was answered for Lindsay, That the bill was properly never delivered, being still in his own doer's hand; and the quality in Mr Stark's oath could not be separated from the exhibition, because it was by Mr Stark's oath only that it appeared the bill was ever out of the granter's hand; and, therefore, if Pilmore founded on the oath for that purpose, he could not both approbate and reprobate it, especially in iis quæ sunt partes ejusdem negotii. 2do, The maxim, that Periculum rei venditæ et non traditæ pertinet ad emptorem was disputed even among the civilians; it was contrary to Cujacius's opinion, ad l. 33. ff. locati; and it did not hold in our law, as appears from the Lord Stair, p. 128 (134) of his Institutions. But further, in the present case, there was no venditio, but only an offer, not obligatory till Garden should accept; and supposing it was a sort of sale, it was at least pendent, upon the condition of Garden's being willing to convey his right; and in such a case, pendente conditione rei interitus venditori nocet. Voet ad tit. de peric. et commer. &c. Further, the present case falls more properly under the head of a debt to have been innovated by delegation, which is a species of novatio; and Voet determines the precise point in § 7. of his Commentary on the title de novationibus. 3tio, It was a fallacious argument, that because Lindsay purchased liberty for the ship to sail, therefore he should run the risk of her perishing, because he purchased that liberty, by entering into a bargain pendent upon a condition, before the existence of which the ship sailed upon the risk of its proper owner, or those who had right in her.
The Lords adhered to their former interlocutor, with the following alterations; found Pilmore liable, upon the pursuer's making over to him the debt
against Balfour, that he may operate his relief against the common debtor; but found Lindsay not liable, and that the pursuer is not to assign against him. For Garden and Donaldson, Arch. Murray. For Lindsay, Alex. Garden. And for Pilmore, Jo. Ogilvie.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting