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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> William Reid, Eldest Son of the deceased Robert Reid, his Tutors and Curators, and the Acceding Creditors of the deceased Robert Reid, v Stephen Ronaldson and William Cuninghame, Creditors of the deceased Robert Reid. [1771] Mor 2_5 (5 February 1771)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1771/Mor02ARRESTMENT-002.html
Cite as: [1771] Mor 2_5

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[1771] Mor 5      

Subject_1 PART I.

ARRESTMENT.

William Reid, Eldest Son of the deceased Robert Reid, his Tutors and Curators, and the Acceding Creditors of the deceased Robert Reid,
v.
Stephen Ronaldson and William Cuninghame, Creditors of the deceased Robert Reid

Date: 5 February 1771
Case No. No. 2.

The estate of a debtor, a minor, having been sold auctore prætore, the arresters of the price, in the hands of the purchasers, preferred upon their diligence to the other creditors.


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Robert Reid died in 1766, possessed of sundry heritable subjects, having, before his death, made a nomination of tutors and curators to his children, but no other settlement. His affairs being in confusion, the tutors served the heir cum beneficio inventarii, and thereafter brought a process into Court, in order that they might be authorised to sell the heritable subjects for payment of the debts. The Court found the expediency and necessity of a sale sufficiently instructed, and accordingly authorised it. The subjects were sold; but before the price was paid, Stephen Ronaldson and William Cuninghame raised actions of constitution against the heir and Mrs. Reid the executrix; and having used arrestments in the hands of the purchasers, claimed a preference to the other creditors. The heir, his tutors and curators, alongst with the purchasers, brought a process of multiple-poinding, in which they called all the creditors to debate their preference. The Lord Ordinary, upon advising memorials for all the parties, on the 21st July 1770, found “the said Stephen Ronaldson and William Cunninghame, the arresting creditors, preferable on the price of the subjects which belonged to the said Robert Reid.”

The pursuers, in a reclaiming petition, pleaded:

An heir entering cum beneficio was in a very different situation from another heir; he was liable only for the value of the succession, and was accordingly considered, in the eye of law, as a trustee for the creditors. He was regarded as holding the estate chiefly and primarily in trust for their behoof; and on that idea had been found obliged to communicate cases and other advantages acquired to the other creditors. Aikenhead contra Rusel, No. 10. p. 5342. and No. 11. p. 5344. An heir standing in this character, must be accountable precisely in the same manner as an ordinary trustee was to the creditors for whose behoof he held the estate in trust, who could only claim a rateable proportion of the trust-funds effeiring to the extent of their debts. Though an heir cum benficio might no doubt pay primo venienti, so that those who did not come forward were, by their supine negligence, cut out; yet when this was not the case, and the subjects still continued in medio, the creditors who appeared and insisted for payment would all be intitled to draw a rateable proportion; and of consequence, when the funds were not sufficient, the same rule of distribution must be observed.

The case here was similar to that of an executor confirmed, who was truly a trustee for the creditors, who could have no preference upon the funds by arrestment or other diligence; and there was the same reason why this rule should hold in the case of heirs cum beneficio, particularly as it seemed to be pointed out by the statute 1695, that both were to stand upon the same footing. In the present case, as the sale was expressly made under authority of the Court, for the special purpose of paying the creditors, there were still stronger grounds than usual for holding the heir to be a trustee for their behoof, and only therefore accountable to all and each of them for a rateable proportion of the funds, similar to a sale brought by an apparent heir upon the act 1695, where that rule of equality was observed.

Answered:—It was an established rule in law, that an heir by entry represented the defunct both active and passive; he became proper debtor to the creditor, and as such, every species of diligence was competent to be used against him by those creditors for recovery of their debts. Previous to the act 1695, the heir had no defence against payment, even after the succession was exhausted; but this was corrected by that statute which rendered the heir liable only secundum vires inventarii. This was the sole object of the statute; but as to the measures the creditors were entitled to use for recovery of their payments, the act made no alteration, but left the law as it formerly stood, giving a preference to priority of diligence.

This was agreeable to the civil law, from whence we had borrowed our own regulations. L. 22. § 3. 4. et seq. Cod. De jure deliberandi. Ever since the act 1695, it had been the invariable practice, that an heir cum beneficio might pay primo venienti; and if diligence was used by any of the creditors, the same rules of law, as to their preference over each other, took place in this as in any other common case. Lord Bankton, B. 3. T. 4. § 15. Erskine, B. 3. T. 8. § 68. Scott contra Burnet of Leys, No. 7. p. 5336. 28th Nov. 1738, Creditors of Crichton, No. 17. p. 5348.

There was no analogy betwixt an executor confirmed and an heir cum beneficio: The office of an executor inferred no representation; nor in that case was there at common law any pari passu preference among the creditors, which had only been introduced by the act of sederunt 1662. The estates being sold by authority of the Court could make no alteration; and as the sale confessedly was not brought according to the regulations of the statute 1695, it was absurd to suppose that the rules incident to that enactment could be held as applicable.

The Court unanimously adhered to the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor.

Lord Ordinary, Kennet. For Reid, &c. Macqueen. For Ronaldson, &c. G. Ogilvie. Fac. Coll. No 13. p. 213.

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


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1771/Mor02ARRESTMENT-002.html