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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Anne and Margaret Baynes, Heirs-portioners of Thomas Ruthven, and their Husbands, for their interest, v Colonel Thomas Graham. [1796] Mor 2904 (16 February 1796)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1796/Mor0702904-104.html
Cite as: [1796] Mor 2904

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[1796] Mor 2904      

Subject_1 COMPETITION.
Subject_2 SECT. XV.

Annualrenters; - Adjudgers; - Inhibiters; - Assignees, &c.

Anne and Margaret Baynes, Heirs-portioners of Thomas Ruthven, and their Husbands, for their interest,
v.
Colonel Thomas Graham

Date: 16 February 1796
Case No. No 104.

In a competition arising in a multiple-poinding between an arrestment on a depending action, in which the pursuer afterwards obtained decree, against which an appeal was in dependence, and two posterior arrestments, the one on a bill, and the other on a decree, the users of the two last found not entitled to a decree of preference over the funds arrested, which were ordered to remain in medio till the discussion of the appeal.


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Andrew Straiton held a farm belonging to Colonel Graham, on a lease, by which an additional rent was stipulated for every acre the tenant should have in tillage beyond a certain number.

Colonel Graham brought an action against him for exceeding the given number; and, on its dependence, in January 1790, used an arrestment in the hands of David Kinloch, a debtor of Straiton.

In August 1790, Thomas Ruthven, a creditor of Straiton, by bill, likewise arrested in the hands of Kinloch; and in 1793, Anne and Margaret Baynes, heirs of Ruthven, constituted, by decree, another debt due to him by Straiton, and used a second arrestment in Kinloch's hands.

In the action at Colonel Graham's instance against Straiton, The Court, in May 1794, ‘found the defender liable for the additional rents stipulated in the lease, and remitted to the Lord Ordinary to ascertain the extent thereof.’

Against this judgment Straiton appealed to the House of Lords.

Before the appeal was discussed, a multiple-poinding was brought in the name of Kinloch, in which Anne and Margaret Baynes contended, that the arrestments used at Ruthven's and their instance, although posterior to Colonel Graham's, were preferable to it, in respect that it proceeded on a depending action, on which a decree for a liquidated sum had not been obtained; and

Pleaded: An arrestment is of itself merely a prohibitory, and consequently an incomplete species of diligence. It is the decree of furthcoming which transfers the property to the arrester; Stair, b. 3. tit. 1. § 42. An action of furthcoming cannot, however, be brought on an arrestment which proceeds on a depending action, till an extracted decree for a liquidated sum be obtained in it. But Colonel Graham has obtained no such decree. On the contrary, even the general finding of the Court in his favour may be altered by the House of Peers, and cannot therefore prevent the complete diligence of other creditors from having immediate effect. As a posterior arrestment on a debt presently due, is preferable to a prior one proceeding on a debt in diem; Ersk. b. 3. tit. 6. § 18. and 21.; Watkins against Wilkie, No 170. p. 820.; Charters against Neilson, No 157. p. 811.; so, a fortiori, ought the arrestments of Mr Ruthven and his heirs to be preferred to that of Colonel Graham.

Before Colonel Graham appeared in the multiple-poinding, the Lord Ordidinary had preferred Margaret and Anne Baynes to the funds in medio; but on the production of his interest, his Lordship found, ‘That before Margaret and Anne Baynes, and their Husbands, can draw in consequence of the preference they have obtained in the multiple-poinding by the former interlocutor, they must find caution to make the money furthcoming to Colonel Graham, whenever his claim against Andrew Straiton shall be ultimately ascertained in his favour.’

On advising a reclaiming petition for Margaret and Anne Baynes, against this interlocutor, it was

Observed on the Bench: As the extent of Colonel Graham's debt would have been long since settled, had it not been for Straiton's appeal, it is that circumstance alone which prevents him from obtaining a decree of preference in the multiple-poinding. But, as the appeal unavoidably stops that action as to him, equity requires that his competitors should not be allowed to proceed in it. If they were, the precedent would be dangerous; as, on many occasions, it would give rise to collusion and undue advantage.

The Lords found, that the funds arrested must remain in medio till the discussion of the appeal†.

Lord Ordinary, Aukerville. For the Petitioner, Dickson. Clerk, Sinclair. Fac. Col. No 203. p. 485.

† The reporter understands this to have been the judgment of the Court; but he has not been able to see the interlocutor in the record. See Appendix.

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/1796/Mor0702904-104.html