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!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Mitchell v Burnet and Mouat. [1746] Mor 4468 (11 December 1746)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1746/Mor1104468-028.html
Cite as: [1746] Mor 4468

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]


[1746] Mor 4468      

Subject_1 FOREIGN.
Subject_2 DIVISION V.

Effect, in Scotland, of personal Obligation executed in a Foreign country, according to the Law of the place.

Mitchell
v.
Burnet and Mouat

Date: 11 December 1746
Case No. No 28.

A person lodged goods in the ware-house of a foreign factor, which belonged to a third party. The factor advanced cash to the person who lodged the goods, supposing them to be his property. By the custom of that country, the factor had a right of retention till payment. He was found accordingly, in an action here, entitled to payment of principal and interest, before delivery of the goods to the proper owner.


Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy

Skinner and Simpson of London having commission from Mitchel of Aberdeen to send certain East India goods to Campvere, whence they were to be relanded in Scotland, they took the occasion of Sinclair of Aberdeen's having, when at London, purchased from them a quantity of the like goods in the like view; and without distinguishing between the bales which were Mitchel's, and those that were Sinclair's, the bill of loading was taken for the whole in the name of Sinclair, deliverable to him or his assignees, who, upon his arrival at Campvere, lodged the whole in the ware-house.

Sinclair having re-shipped the bales that belonged to himself for Scotland, but, on an occasion unnecessary to be mentioned, left those that were Mitchel's without acquainting Burnet and Mouat, in whose ware-house the goods were, that they were another man's property, and in the interim his circumstances becoming suspected, Burnet and Mouat, to whom he was debtor in above L. 200 of a former debt, and L. 57 at this very time advanced to him, refused, when required by Mitchel, to deliver up the said goods, till they were paid off what Sinclair owed them.

And arrestments having been also used in Burnet and Mouat's hands by other creditors of Sinclair, in a multiplepoinding by Burnet and Mouat, they pleaded 1mo, From certain circumstances, that the property of the goods was in Sinclair; 2do, That they had been by him impignorated to them for security of what he owed them.

But the circumstances by them alleged, not appearing sufficient to instruct either, the Lord Ordinary ‘Found it instructed, that the goods in question were the property of Mitchel, and found the impignoration neither proved nor relevant to incumber Mitchel's property.’

Upon advising petition and answers, it appeared to be the opinion of the Court, that the interlocutor had gone too far in finding the impignoration not relevant, at least so far as concerned the L. 57 then advanced to Sinclair upon the credit of the goods; for, that however at common law a man's property can only be affected by his own deed, and that the presumption of property from possession cedit veritati, yet the expediency of trade and commerce requires, that wherever any person is vested in the nominal property by a bill of loading, third parties contracting with him as proprietor, whether by sale or pledge, should be safe: But as there was no proof of such impignoration, there was no occasion to give judgment upon this point.

Mean time, a new allegeance being made for Burnet and Mouat, that, by the custom of Holland, where a factor gives credit to any person possessed of goods, and lodged by him in the factor's custody, the factor can detain those goods so lodged in his ware-house till he is paid, if, when the credit was given, the factor believed the goods to be really the possessor's, although it should afterwards appear that the property of the goods belonged to a third party; the Lords ‘Remitted to the Ordinary to enquire, Whether or not, by the practice of merchants in Holland, a person coming from foreign parts possessed of a parcel of goods, and having a bill of loading in his name, and lodging those goods in a factor's ware-house, which were intended to be carried to another market, and the factor giving credit in goods or money to the person possessed of these goods in the belief of the goods being really his, the factor can detain the goods so lodged in his ware-house until he is paid off the goods or money so given credit for, though it should appear after the consigner has left the country, that the goods lodged in the factor's ware-house were the property of a third party, and that there is no evidence that the factor got any right to, or explicit pledge of these goods from the consigner; with power to determine or report.’

And the Ordinary having taken the oaths of four of the most noted merchants of Edinburgh, who deposed the practice of Holland to be such as described in the remit, he found ‘the defenders had right to detain the goods lodged in their hands by Sinclair, until they were paid off the said sum of L. 57 advanced to Sinclair, and annualrents thereof.’

The pursuer acquiesced as to the principal, but reclaimed as to the annualrents; but the Lords ‘adhered.’

Kilkerran, (Foreign.) No 3. p. 205.

The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting     


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1746/Mor1104468-028.html