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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Feuars of kersland v Hamilton Blair of Blair. [1763] 5 Brn 626 (00 January 1763) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1763/Brn050626-0763.html Cite as: [1763] 5 Brn 626 |
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[1763] 5 Brn 626
Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION. reported by ALEXANDER TAIT, CLERK OF SESSION, one of the reporters for the faculty.
Subject_2 TEINDS.
The Feuars of kersland
v.
Hamilton Blair of Blair
1763 .January .Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
Certain heritors in the parish of Dalry having pursued a valuation and sale of their teinds, a question occurred betwixt them and Hamilton Blair of Blair, whether he had right to their teinds as titular or patron. By charters under the Great Seal, as far back as 1605, Mr Blair and his predecessors had right to the lands of Blair, and also ad advocationem, donationem, et jus patronatus ecclesiæ parochialis et parochiæ de Dalry; rectoriæ et vicariæ ejusdem, cum mansa ac gleba, domibus, ædificiis, decimis, fructibus, redditibus, et emolumentis eidem spec-tan. et pertinen. jacen. in dicto baliatu de Cuningham, et vicecomitatu nostro de Ayr, antedict.” &c. The charter contained a novodamus, an erection of the whole into one tenandry; and in these clauses, as also in the tenendas and reddendo, the grant of the patronage of Dalry, with the teinds, was repeated in the same terms. Notwithstanding whereof, the heritors contended, that, by the above, the patronage of Dalry only was granted, and that the words “cum decimis” were only exegetical thereof; and, 4th August 1762,” the Lords, as commissioners of teinds, found so, and that Blair had only right to the teinds of the pursuers' lands qua patron.” Hamilton Blair reclaimed: he set forth, that his author was the Earl of Eglinton; that, as to the Earl, he had right to the patronage of Dalry, on the resignation of Mr William Melvil, who had right to it, by Grant from James the Sixth, in these terms:—“Una cum advocation, donatione, et jure patronatus ecclesiæ parochialis et parochiæ de Dalry, rectoriæ et vicariæ ejusdem;” without any mention of manse, glebe, teinds, fruits, rents, or emoluments thereto belonging. As to the teinds, he had right to them also, by a separate clause in said charter, whereby the King dissolves the tithes, and grants them to the Earl, in these words:—“Ecclesiam de Dalry, rectorias et vicarias ejusdem, cum mansa, gleba, integris fructibus, redditibus, decimisq. garbalibus, et aliis casualitatibus et divoriis quibuscunq. eidem pertinen.” From these clauses, Mr Blair argued, that the first conveyed to the Earl of Eglinton the patronage of Dalry; the second conveyed the teinds of the parish of Dalry; and that the clause in the grant from the Earl, in favours of his predecessors' in the year 1605, evidently comprehended both, and was compounded of the style of both; first, of the patronage, next, of the teinds. Further, it was clear, that the words, “eidem spectan. et pertinen.” referred to the parish of Dalry, not to the patronage, especially as it was described as
situated within the bailiary of Cuningham and county of Ayr, a description which applied to the parish of Dalry, but could not well apply to the right of patronage, which, being a right incorporeal, could not be said to lie in any bailliwick. The Lords altered their interlocutor, and found that Hamilton Blair had right to the teinds of the pursuers' lands as titular.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting