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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> William Nairn, Advocate, v Sir Thomas Nairn. [1757] 5 Brn 858 (10 March 1757) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1757/Brn050858-1051.html |
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Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, collected by JAMES BURNETT, LORD MONBODDO.
Subject_2 COMPLAINT FORM STIRLINGSHIRE.
Date: William Nairn, Advocate,
v.
Sir Thomas Nairn
10 March 1757 Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
[Kilk. eodem die; and Fac. Coll. II, No. 24.]
The question here was, Whether a remoter substitute in an entail could, upon a summary application to the Lords, get the entail, which had fallen into his hands, recorded ? The heir in possession appeared, and contended that this could be done only by way of process, and that such had been the form for many years past; and that it had been so decided in a controverted case, when Mr Forbes and Arniston were upon the bench; since which time it was thought to be a fixed point. But the Lords were all of opinion that it could be recorded upon a summary application, except my Lord Kaimes, who said he had a very great doubt whether an entail could be at all recorded after the death of the maker, except by the heir in possession, who could record the entail made by his predecessor, for the same reason that he could make a new one. He said he thought that the recording of an entail was necessary to complete it, and make it an entail, in terms of the statute, that is, an entail against creditors and purchasers, as much as the inserting irritant and resolutive clauses was; and the one could be no more supplied, after the death of the maker, than the other: Without both it might be a good deed intra familiam, but it was not a statutory entail. This point was argued in presence, about ten years ago, in the case of the entail of Kinaldy, and informations ordered upon the pleading, but it was transacted and never came to a decision; and it was said that the late President Arniston was clear of opinion against the registration, and Elchies was doubtful; but, at any rate, Kaimes said, if it could be registered at all, it must be by a process, in which the heir in possession would be heard upon any defences that he might have against the registration; such as that it was revoked by a posterior deed, or that it was nonsensical and unintelligible; upon which account it was said that in one case the Lords had refused to registrate an entail. But it was answered, that the registration of the entail would neither make it better nor worse; and, in the meantime, while the process was going on, the estate might be sold.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting