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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Lauchlan Duff v William Innes of Sandside. [1771] Mor 11059 (7 March 1771)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1771/Mor2611059-253.html
Cite as: [1771] Mor 11059

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[1771] Mor 11059      

Subject_1 PRESCRIPTION.
Subject_2 DIVISION. VIII.

Quinquennial Prescription.
Subject_3 SECT. II.

Mails and Duties.

Lauchlan Duff
v.
William Innes of Sandside

Date: 7 March 1771
Case No. No 253.

Quinquennial prescription of the act 1669, c. 9. pleadable by the cautioner of the tenant.


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Lauchlan Duff, factor for Lord and Lady Fife, as executor of the Earl of Caithness, pursued Innes of Sandside for payment of a certain sum of money, in consequence of two obligatory missives, granted by Sandside's father. Sandside, in defence, pleaded, That these missives being cautionry obligations for mails and duties, owing by tenants removed from the land, and the debt against the tenants being cut off by the quinquennial prescription of the act 1669, his obligation, which was only an accessory, must also be extinguished.

The Court having sustained this defence, Duff, in a reclaiming petition, pleaded;

The act 1669, c. 9. established a prescription only as to the mean of proof; bygone rents might still be pursued for after five years, if the claim could be established, either by writing or the oath of party; so that as, in the present case, the obligation was proved by an explicit writing, the act of Parliament did not apply.

It was not a fair view of the case, to consider Sandside as a cautioner for payment of these rents. He did not bind and oblige himself, that the tenants should pay their arrears, but became bound himself to pay them. He took his chance of operating his relief from the tenants' effects; and as, in regard to the landlord, he substituted himself in place of the tenants, and was, in effect, not cautioner, but principal debtor, the act 1669, in no shape, applied to the obligation founded on.

Sandside answered;

The obligation, in the present case, was unquestionably that of a cautioner. In one of the missives, he expressly binds himself as cautioner; and, in the other, he says he will see the debt paid; and it was a general rule of law, that every exception, competent to the principal debtor, was competent to the cautioner. No demand could be made effectual against the principal, as, unless it could be shown, according to the method prescribed by the act, that these rents were still owing, the statute itself was as valid a discharge as the most formal deed that could be devised, and must, of course, be equally effectual in extinction of the accessory obligation as of the principal; June 1681, Home against Lockhart, No 1. p. 2072.; 1735, Haliburton against Lockhart, No 3. p. 2073.; 19th December 1695, Doul against Home, No 2. p. 2072.

The Court adhered, (7th March 1771;) it being still competent to prove, by the oath of the tenants, that the debt was due.

Lord Ordinary, Stonefield. For Duff, Cosmo Gordon. For Innes, D. Armstrong. Clerk, Ross. Fac. Col. No 87. p. 259.

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/Mor2611059-253.html