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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> James, Earl Fife, and Others v Alexander, Duke of Gordon and Others. [1774] Hailes 593 (18 January 1774) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1774/Hailes010593-0339.html Cite as: [1774] Hailes 593 |
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[1774] Hailes 593
Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by SIR DAVID DALRYMPLE, LORD HAILES.
Subject_2 MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT.
Subject_3 Found, in conformity with Ross against M'Kenzie, 10th March 1774. Found likewise that valuations, long acquiesced in and acted upon, ought not to be called in question.
Date: James, Earl Fife, and Others
v.
Alexander, Duke of Gordon and Others
18 January 1774 Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
[Faculty Collection, VI. 301; Dictionary, 8665.]
Auchinleck. I would repel the objection as to title. Every heritor has an interest, however remote, that the cess be rightly proportioned on every tenement. For example, a man has a stone quarry and a considerable estate: he procures the cess to be laid on his stone quarry, and he excepts his lands. The stone quarry is wrought out: the other heritors must pay that cess which ought to have been laid on his lands.
Coalston. The interest arising to any freeholder, from there being few freeholders on the roll, cannot be estimated by pounds, shillings, and pence; yet it is an interest which every man must feel.
[It is the interest whether I and my son and one more shall elect a Member of Parliament, or whether I and my son, and a hundred more shall elect a Member of Parliament.]
Kennet. The objection, independent of the title, is not the same as that in the case of Hog of Newliston. There the division had never been approved of. The objection here is, that all parties having interest were not called, particularly Sir Robert Gordon, who had an unquestionable interest. No tract of time can ratify this omission.
Hailes. I think that there was an original error in the proceedings which has accompanied them from first to last. The defenders, sensible of this, have entrenched themselves in preliminary objections, which are strong as to Mr Arthur Duff, but insufficient as to Sir Robert Gordon.
On 18th January 1774, the Lords repelled the objections as to the title, and sustained the reasons of reduction.
Act. R. M'Queen, &c. Alt. H. Dundas, &c. Reporter, Hailes. 1774. June 16. The following opinions Were delivered:—
Coalston. The division 1752 is essentially erroneous, for various reasons, and so we must have found had the challenge been recently made. Had the objection been only as to a point of form, the defence, that the challenge was not recently brought, would be good. That all parties having interest were not called, or that the division was made by a committee, are objections which taciturnity might remove. But the question is, Whether has any thing happened
to exclude a challenge on iniquity? I think that there has not. Mills are a proper subject of valuation, and yet they were omitted. The question here is merely political, but the same thing might have occurred in the division of a common. Kaimes. I do not like the complexion of this cause. After so long a silence, It may be presumed that there were good grounds for omitting the mills: they may not have existed at the time of the valuation. Here a party asks to have an additional burden imposed on him.
Coalston. In one sense it is a burden; in other views, a high valuation is a benefit.
Gardenston. This is an odd sort of challenge. A man complains that he has not been high enough taxed. Of Lord Kaimes's opinion.
Hailes. At first sight this seems strange, but the bringing of the action shows that the party considered the commodum as greater than the incommodum. In some cases it certainly is. Suppose that, as matters stand at present, there were just three-fourths of the valued rent for disjoining the parish and making a new charge, and that Mr Duff was against this measure, by increasing his valuation he would disappoint the new erection, and might save more stipend than the difference of land-tax. It is said that the Sherriffmill may not have existed in Charles II's. days, and consequently was not valued. This is impossible; Sherriffmill is a corruption of Shiremill, or the mill of the division. This meaning of Shire was obsolete before the general valuation, and consequently could not have been applied to a mill which did not exist till after the general valuation.
Justice-Clerk. I observe, with regret, the multiplicity of divisions. I see a plan laid for excluding a gentleman of great property from any vote at all. At this rate the right of voting will depend on the craft and subtlety of lawyers. Here there was a fair and candid valuation. I should have liked this cause better if Mr Duff had attempted a new division, and shown the iniquity of the present one. As to the valuation of mills, I admit that they may be valued, but it does not follow that they always were. We must suppose that the commissioners took them under consideration originally. The cess-books must be the rule, unless set aside, and consequently they entitle to a valuation in possessorio.
Alva. We are not now judging what Mr Duff should do hereafter: he is doing all that he can at present by seeking to reduce the old valuation. Taciturnity has great weight, but that is in matters of form.
Kennet. The division 1752 was certainly irregular, yet divisions made in such a manner were frequent and without injustice, because in former times no man desired to be overrated. Still intrinsic errors in the valuation may be corrected. It is doubtful whether mills ought to be valued; but I think that of no moment here, because of the acquiescence. As to the excambion, a small excambion is of no consequence. The subject indeed of this excambion was considerable, but the parties themselves do not object.
Auchinleck. Mills are a subject of valuation, for they were extended in ancient times; but the difficulty arises from the long acquiescence tempore pacis, from which a better judgment of things can be formed than from any thing that passes tempore belli.
On 16th June 1774, “the Lords adhered as to title, but altered as to the merits, and repelled the reasons of reduction.”
Act. Ilay Campbell, &c. Alt. H. Dundas, &c. Diss. Alva, Coalston, Hailes.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting