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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Colonel Abercromby v James Gordon, Banffshire [1753] 2 Elchies 364 (23 February 1753) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1753/Elchies020364-054.html Cite as: [1753] 2 Elchies 364 |
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[1753] 2 Elchies 364
Subject_1 MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT.
Date: Colonel Abercromby
v.
James Gordon, Banffshire
23 February 1753
Case No.No. 54.
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Colonel Abercromby complained of James Gordon of Ardmellie, who was enrolled as apparent-heir to Archibald his elder brother, who in 1733 was infeft on the Crown's charter on the resignation of Peter Gordon the father, but reserving not only the father's liferent, but also power to him to sell, annailzie, or burden the lands as he thought fit. The father last summer renounced his liferent, and those powers and faculties, to his son James, (Archibald being dead) who in two days lodged his claim to be enrolled as the act 16th Geo. II. directs, and was accordingly enrolled. The complainer objected, That Archibald had no title to be enrolled because of the father's reserved powers, and therefore though the son, now that these powers were renounced, might indeed be enrolled were he infeft, but he could not be enrolled as apparent-heir to his brother. Answered, That notwithstanding the reserved powers, Archibald as fiar had a title to be enrolled, for his right was not a redeemable right in terms of the act 12mo Annæ. 2db, Though Archibald could not, yet James can, as now these reserved powers are extinguished. 3tio, An apparent-heir may conjoin his predecessor's rights and his own to make his vote good, as if the predecessor had L.200 valuation, and himself L.200; and quoted a case in the county of Lanark. Hamilton
of Airdrie's, (1745, No. 25.) where we found that a husband could conjoin the valuation of his own lands, and of those wherein his wife was infeft. And 4to, Observed, That by the complainer's argument the vote would not be good even were the father dead, and so he should be in a worse case than if the father had still retained the right of the lands. The Lords sustained the objection, and ordered Mr Gordon to be expunged out of the roll, for they thought he could not be enrolled as apparent-heir, unless the predecessor's infeftment entitled them to it without acquiring any new right; and they thought that Archibald's infeftment was only the figure of a fee during the father's life, though upon his death without altering, it would have become simple and absolute; and therefore Archibald upon his death might have been enrolled, but not during his life; and no more could James upon his infeftment alone, without acquiring that renunciation, which is another right; so an infeftment or an adjudication is a title to be enrolled after the legal, but not during the legal; and therefore should such adjudger die within the legal, the apparent-heir may be enrolled after the legal is expired, and that on his predecessor's infeftment without any further right, but not before the legal is expired; and should he acquire a renunciation of the reversion, yet he could not during the legal be enrolled as apparent-heir, because that right was not in his predecessor; and I doubted whether an apparent-heir could conjoin the valuation of his predecessor's lands and his own, because of the express words of the act 1681. (See Dict. No. 177. p. 8801.)
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting