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 >> Janet and Mary Russels, and their Husbands, v Rachel Russel, and her Husband. [1745] Mor 5211 (23 January 1745) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1745/Mor1305211-015.html Cite as: [1745] Mor 5211 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
[1745] Mor 5211
Subject_1 HEIR and EXECUTOR.
Subject_2 SECT. II. Mutual Relief.
Date: Janet and Mary Russels, and their Husbands,
v.
Rachel Russel, and her Husband
23 January 1745
Case No.No 15.
A disposition of heritage, with burden of debts, does not preclude the heir from being relieved by the executor.
Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
David Russel, surgeon in Kennoway, having no children, settled his small land-estate upon Mr William Dall, the husband of his eldest sister Rachel, in liferent, and on Thomas Dall their son in fee, and the heirs-male of his body, whom failing, &c, with and under the reservations, burdens, conditions and faculties after exprest, viz. reserving his own liferent and power to alter, sell, or burden without consent of the heirs of tailzie; and then followed a clause in the following words:
“And I hereby expressly burden this right and disposition, not only with the payment of my funeral charges, but also with the payment of my three sisters german, their portions yet resting by me to them, and with payment of all the just and lawful debts that shall be resting by me the
time of my death, to whatever person or persons, by bond, bill, contract, decree, or any other manner, of way.” And after a clause, obliging the heirs to carry his name and arms, followed a provision, “That it should not be in the power of the said Thomas Dall, or of any other of the heirs substituted to him, to contract debt, sell, wadset, or dispone the said lands,” (with an iritancy in case of contravention) “except in the case aftermentioned, viz. that it shall be in the power of the said Thomas Dall, or of the remanent heirs mentioned in the foresaid substitution, to contract as much debt on the foresaid lands, and to grant security therefor affecting the said lands, as will satisfy and pay the said debts that shall be resting the time of my death, with and under which reservations, provisions, &c. these presents, and the resignation to follow hereon are granted, and shall be accepted by the said hail heirs, &c. and no otherways.”
Upon the death of David Russel, his sister Rachel, and Mr William Dall her husband, having confirmed executors to him qua nearest of kin, and amongst other subjects having given up in inventory two bills due to the defunct, and another debt of L 2000, whereof the term of payment was not yet come, a process was brought against them at the instance, of the other two sisters, to account to each of them for a third of the executry, and particularly, to assign and transfer to each of them a third of the moveable debts still outstanding.
Alleged for the defenders; That there were more moveable, debts than exhausted the executry.
Replied; That the defunct had, by the disposition foresaid, laid the burden of all his debts upon his land-estate, whereby his moveables were left free to his executors.
Duplied; That as, by the clauses in the disposition, the debts were not made real burdens, these clauses imported no more than an anxiety in the defunct to secure his creditors, but by no means an intention to lay his moveable debts ultimately on his heir, and to bar him from the relief competent to him in law from the moveable estate: And that the circumstances of the case strongly concurred to support this construction; for as the estate did not exceed 1800 merks a-year, and was affected by two liferents, one of the defunct's mother, the other of his wife, extending-together to about 1200 merks, one of which still subsisted; as the moveable debts amounted to 15,000 merks, and the executry to near that sum; it was not to be conceived, that when he tailzied his estate, he at the same time meant to exhaust it by debts, and leave a free subject to go to his executors.
The Lords, ‘ in respect it was not denied by the pursuers, that the moveable debts due by the defunct, did exceed the moveable estate belonging to him, repelled the claim made by the pursuers for the said moveable estate.’
The circumstances of the estate in this case were a strong indication, that it could not be the intention of the granter to burden the tailzied estate with the debts. But laying aside those circumstances, it was the general opinion, that
the rule is, that a clause in a disposition of a land-estate, burdening the disponee with the payment of the granter's debts, does not exclude the disponee from relief of the moveable debts from the executry. *** D. Falconer reports the same case: David Russel, surgeon in Kennoway, entailed his estate upon Thomas Dall, son to Mr William Dall, minister of the gospel at Barry, and Rachel Russel his eldest sister, by a deed containing this clause, “I hereby expressly burden this right and disposition, not only with the payment of my funeral charges, but also with the payment of my three sisters-german their portions, yet resting by me to them, and with the payment of all the just and lawful debts that shall be resting by me at the time of my death, to whatsoever person or persons, by bond, bill, contract, decreet, or any other manner of way, and likewise with the payment of the liferent-provisions provided to Rachel Thomson my mother, and to Rachel Wilson my wife;” with prohibition to sell or contract debt, except that it is in the power of the heirs of tailzie to sell as much as will satisfy the burdens abovementioned: They are also bound to carry his name and arms, and the whole is fenced with an irritancy.
Mr William Dall, and Rachel Russel his wife, upon David Russel's death, were confirmed executors gua nearest of kin to him; and being pursued by the other two sisters and their husbands, to account for the executry, made this defence, that there were more moveable debts than exhausted it. To which it being replied, That the defunct had laid the burden of his debts upon his land-estate, the Lord Ordinary, 22d December 1744, ‘in respect it was not denied by the pursuers, that the moveable debts due by the defunct did exceed the moveable estate belonging to him, repelled the claim made by the pursuers for the said moveable estate.
The Lords refused a reclaiming bill, and adhered.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting