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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Bank of England v The Bank of Scotland and Others. [1780] Hailes 870 (12 December 1780)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1780/Hailes020870-0547.html
Cite as: [1780] Hailes 870

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[1780] Hailes 870      

Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, reported by SIR DAVID DALRYMPLE, LORD HAILES.
Subject_2 BANKRUPT-RIGHT IN SECURITY.
Subject_3 Act 1696, c. 5.

Bank of England
v.
The Bank of Scotland and Others

Date: 12 December 1780

Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy

[Faculty Collection, VIII. 72; Dictionary, 14,121.]

Monboddo. Upon reading the heritable bond, a doubt occurred to me that the heritable bond was not granted for a precise sum, but for a security as to bills discounted, or to be discounted to the amount of L.160,000. It now appears indeed, that, at the time of granting the bond, L.160,000 was advanced by the Bank of England; but that does not appear from the bond itself.

Covington. The words of the Act 1696 relate to debts posterior to infeft-ments. The Bank of England cannot change its mode of proceeding: and if its security is not good, it will never interfere again to support Scots credit. The argument charges Mr Alexander with a direct fraud, in deluding the Bank of England by a security of no value. No one can suppose that Mr Alexander was to have repaid the sum of L.160,000 sterling in the space of two months. That the security was good for the original money advanced is clear, even from the words of the statute 1696. There is no novum debitum here; nor is there any collateral security in any other sense than as every heritable bond is a collateral security; for such bond always begins with a personal obligation. The question is, Whether is the debt paid? I think not: the mere changing of the bills was not payment.

Braxfield. On considering this security, according to a liberal interpretation of the Act 1696, it should appear that the security was good, as being contracted for debts prior to the sasine. Before the Act 1696, general burdens were understood to be valid, even against creditors and singular successors. The statute was calculated to prevent frauds, by circumscribing that practice; but, since that time, the law has undergone a considerable and proper alteration by the judgment in the case of the creditors of M'Lellan, which found that general burdens were not good. I have a great doubt how far security is good when granted for debts not above a certain extent: for ought that appears, the whole of the sum might have been advanced after the date of the heritable bond. If the nature of this security had been understood, the Bank of England would not have advanced the money; for their manner of dealing is not very consistent with feudal securities. Besides, I doubt whether new bills can be construed to be the same on which the security was granted.

Elliock. The Act 1696 has nothing to do with this case,—for the money was advanced. It is said that the money was repaid: I deny that. The debt still subsists. An indefinite burden cannot be valid: but that is not the case here; the burden is defined.

Gardenston. The purpose of the Act 1696 was to prevent uncertain burdens; but there is no uncertainty here more than in every heritable bond. I see in the record a burden which cannot become greater than it is, although it may become less by intromissions of creditors; which appears not on any record. The whole debt was due at the date of the infeftment.

Kaimes. There is nothing in the question as to general burdens; for an ultimatum, is named in the bond: neither is there any objection on the Act 1696; for the sum was really advanced. As to the objection of novatio debiti, there is a difficulty; for it is not the original document on which the claim is made,—it is a new obligation instead of the old one.

President. All equity is in a question with strangers: the L.160,000 was advanced long prior to the bond and infeftment. As to the novatio debiti, I must consider the nature of the transaction appearing ex facie of the bond, which required a renewal of the bills from time to time on money already advanced. There never was a new loan: had there been such, the infeftment would not have reached it.

On the 12th December 1780, “The Lords repelled the objection to the interest of the Bank of England.”

Act. D. Rae. Alt. A. Wight. Reporter, Justice-Clerk.

Diss. Monboddo, Braxfield. Non liquet, Kaimes.

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


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