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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Sir Gilbert Elliot of Stobbs, v James Atchison Merchant in Edinburgh. [1724] Mor 11209 (18 February 1724) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1724/Mor2611209-383.html Cite as: [1724] Mor 11209 |
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[1724] Mor 11209
Subject_1 PRESCRIPTION.
Subject_2 DIVISION XIII. Contra non valentem non currit Prsæcriptio.
Subject_3 SECT. III. Whether a woman under coverture is to be considered as non valens agere. - The effect where there is a medium impedimentum to bar pursuit.
Date: Sir Gilbert Elliot of Stobbs,
v.
James Atchison Merchant in Edinburgh
18 February 1724
Case No.No 383.
Objected to an adjudication, that it was prescribed, no diligence having been done on it for 40 years Answered, Prescription could not run, because the adjudger was non valens agere, the subject being liferented for an aliment the whole of that time, and the adjudger thereby exeluded from the mails and duties.
Found that the prescription did not run.
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In a multiplepoinding raised by the tenants and possessors of five tenements of land in Edinburgh and Canongate, a competition did arise betwixt Sir Gilbert and Mr Atchison.
Mr Atchison's right was a disposition to the subjects by John Murray, who had acquired right by progress to an apprising dated in May 1668; and Sir Gilbert's interest was an adjudication led against the said John Murray, for a debt of his father's, dated in July 1680.
Atchison objected to Sir Gilbert's adjudication, That it was prescribed, there having been nothing done upon it since March 1681, that the Magistrates were charged as superiors.
It was answered for Sir Gilbert, 1mo, That prescriptions could not run against his adjudication, because he was non valens agere, in respect that in the very right adjudged from his debitor the relict had a right of liferent in the subject, which excluded him from the mails and duties during her lifetime, and that he intented process within a few months after her decease, 2do, That Sir Gilbert having by his diligence denuded the heir of his debitor of all right competent to him upon the fee of the tenements in question, the liferentrix her possession did thereby become his, especially after the adjudication came to be an irredeemable right by the expiration of the legal; so that Sir Gilbert's right was clothed with the positive prescription.
I was replied for Atchison, That the defence of non valens agere was not relevant; for albeit the the relict's right did not extend to the whole tenements,
yet de facto she was only possessed of two; so that Sir Gilbert was not in the exception, since he did not condescend how he was debarred from the possession of the other three. 2do, Though the liferentrix's possession might preserve the right of fee to the heirs of the fiar, or perhaps to singular successors who had got dispositions from them, yet her possession could not support the adjudication with which her right was not connected, and upon which it did not depend, and she neither did nor could acknowledge the adjudger. It was duplied for Sir Gilbert, That since it was acknowledged that the relict had a right to the liferent of the whole tenements, the exception of non valens agere was not competent to him, although she possessed but a part of them; because the exception takes place where the possessor of a right cannot agere cum effectu, which is the doctrine of the civil law and of our own, as in the case of deliberation, where no part of that time was ever imputed in the prescription, and as appears from my Lord Stair in the last Division of the 27th § title Prescription. 2do, The distinction betwixt the heir of the fiar and the adjudger could not serve in the present question; for although Sir Gilbert did not grant the liferent-right himself, yet he having by his legal diligence denuded the heir of the fee, with all the burdens thereof, he could plead every thing that was competent to the heir.
The Lords found, That the prescription did run against the adjudger during the time that the subject was liferented.
Reporter, Lord-Forglen. For Sir Gilbert, Jo. Elpbinstone. Alt. Ja. Colvill. Clerk, Hall.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting