BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> James Winram, Commissary Clerk of Lauder, v Commisaries of Edinburgh. [1739] 5 Brn 213 (12 December 1739) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1739/Brn050213-0202.html Cite as: [1739] 5 Brn 213 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
[1739] 5 Brn 213
Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by LORD KILKERRAN, ADVOCATE.
Date: James Winram, Commissary Clerk of Lauder,
v.
Commisaries of Edinburgh.
12 December 1739 Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
This case is shortly noticed in Lord Kilkerran's reports, p. 314. The following note of what passed on the Bench, is written upon one of the papers.
“December 12, 1739.—Found that the Lords had jurisdiction to appoint an interim commissary in case of a vacancy, and appointed accordingly.
It having been observed by some of the Lords, that in all cases where they exercise such jurisdiction, it is ex necessitate for explicating their own jurisdiction. Thus, they appoint interim sheriffs, on application of parties that want to have inventories registered of their predecessor's effects, being to serve cum beneficio; which they could not do till a clerk be appointed, whose office fell by the sheriff, his constituent's death, &c. To which it was answered, that though here there is no private party applying for immediate relief, yet there is an application ; and it is as necessary there be a commissary, who may confirm the moveables of defuncts, as that there should be a sheriff in the county; for without such confirmation, the effects cannot be transmitted from the dead to the living ; nor poinded for the debts of the person who may have right to make up titles. And as it was unnecessary to put every private party to an application to have an officer appointed for his case only, so upon such application, the sheriff, or other officer, is not appointed for the particular end for which he is applied for, but is appointed to continue in such office till recalled, or another be appointed in his room, for the service of all the lieges that then have, or thereafter may have, occasion for him. And as to the alleged practice of the commissaries, not any one instance came up to the case. True, there was a probability that in some of these instances, the commissaries had confirmed the testaments of persons dying within another commissariot during a vacancy in that other commissariot; but, quid inde? It's believed the commissaries will hardly refuse to confirm any man's testament where applied for. Let the applier see to that, whether it be the proper commissariot; and, therefore, no regard could be had to instances as evidence, unless it could be said that application had been made to the commissaries of Edinburgh, setting forth that the commissary of such and such a district being dead, and no new one appointed, whereby the testament of such a person dying within such commissariot could not be got confirmed there, and praying the commissaries of Edinburgh to do it, which cannot be pretended. Wherefore, as it was true there was no instance wherein the Lords of Session had named an interim commissary, so there was really no proper instance of the commissaries of Edinburgh confirming in such a case ; and that it was plain they had no such power by the law, their powers being defined by the Act of Parliament. It was farther observed, that had the commissaries been in use to appoint an interim commissary, which had been a more regular method of increasing their super-eminent jurisdiction, the Lords would probably not have meddled with it. But as that was not pretended ever to have been practised, and that for the reason above, this was to be considered as a new case, wherein there was no certain evidence that the commissaries had been in use in such case, to confirm the testaments of persons not within their own district; at least, on that account that the
commissariot of the district wherein the defunct died, was vacant. The Lords, therefore, sustained their own jurisdiction. “Arniston took a particular crotchet in this case; though he voted with the majority for the Lords' jurisdiction, yet he proposed a second vote, whether the Lords should in this case exerce it ? And it also carried they should. Few entering the reason of his difficulty, for which he gave no other, but that they had not done it this hundred years.”
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting