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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Young v Darroch's Trustees. [1835] CA 13_305 (23 January 1835)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1835/013SS0305.html
Cite as: [1835] CA 13_305

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SCOTTISH_Shaw_Court_of_Session

Page: 305

Young

v.

Darroch's Trustees.
No. 100.

Court of Session

2d Division

Jan. 23 1835

Lord Jeffrey R.

W. Young and A. Rodger,     Pursuers.— D. F. Hope— Cuninghame. Darroch's Trustees,     Defenders.— Skene— Shaw Stewart.

Subject_Bankruptcy—Stat. 1621, c. 18—Fraud.—

1. Circumstances in which an averment that a deed had been obtained by fraud and essential error, was repelled. 2. A father conveyed all his moveable funds and unentailed property to trustees, with directions to vest the money in land, and entail the whole on a certain series of heirs, and with power to give or withhold possession from his only son, according as they were satisfied with his conduct; and the son, after his father's death, raised an action against the trustees for a half of his father's moveable estate as legitim, but afterwards renounced this claim under an arrangement with them, whereby they put him in possession of the trust-estate—Held, in a question with his creditors after his death, in a state of alleged insolvency, that the trustees were not conjunct and confident persons in the meaning of the act 1621, so as to warrant a reduction under it.

The late Duncan Darroch of Gourock, by trust-deed of settlement conveyed to trustees all his property, heritable and moveable (excepting an estate which he had previously entailed), directing them to lay out the money in land; and, in the event of their being satisfied that his only surviving son, the late Angus Darroch, was reclaimed from dissipated habits, into which he had fallen, to convey to him the land so acquired, with the estates disponed to them in trust, under the fetters of an entail similar to that of the property previously entailed. Duncan Darroch died in 1823, and in 1824 and 1825, his trustees expended £49,000 in the purchase of land. In January, 1827, Angus Darroch, whom the trustees had not seen cause to put in possession of the trust properties, advanced a claim to one-half of his father's moveable estate as legitim, and raised an action against the trustees for enforcing it. They gave in a defence, rested on the allegation that his claim of legitim had been excluded by the contract of marriage between his father and mother, and that he himself had homologated his father's settlement. Before any proceedings were had, however, in the action, an arrangement was, in May, 1827, concluded between him and the trustees, whereby they agreed to put him in possession of the trust-estates, to be conveyed under the fetters of an entail, as directed by his father's settlement, and to pay over to him the outstanding balance of trust funds unappropriated to the purchase of lands—he, on the other hand, renouncing all claim of legitim, and discharging the action he had raised. Of the same date with the execution of the minute of agreement, Angus Darroch received £1000 to account of these funds, and he was thereafter put in possession of the trust-estates. Shortly afterwards, however, and before a regular conveyance of the estates was executed, he died considerably in debt; and the pursuers, Young and Rodger, as assignees for his creditors, having obtained themselves confirmed executors creditors, raised an action against the trustees, concluding for reduction of the agreement whereby Angus Darroch had renounced his claim of legitim, and for payment thereof, on the grounds, 1. That Angus Darroch had been deceived as to the amount of unappropriated funds; or, at all events, that the agreement was entered into under essential error as to that matter; and, 2. That at the time of executing the agreement, he was insolvent, and that it was therefore challengeable, under the act 1621, as a conveyance to conjunct and confident persons in prejudice of prior creditors. The first ground of reduction was not in any degree established by the evidence adduced in support of it; and in defence against the second, it was pleaded, that the trustees could in no sense be deemed conjunct and confident persons in the meaning of the statute.

The Lord Ordinary pronounced this interlocutor, adding the subjoined note. *

_________________ Footnote _________________

* “The charge of fraud, or wilful misrepresentation, was abandoned at the debate; and the question came to be, whether there was any proof of such erroneous statements on one side, and such radical misapprehension on the other, as should get aside a transaction deliberately entered into by a man of full age, and concluded with the advice and assistance of more than one respectable man of business? The Lord Ordinary is humbly of opinion that there is no such proof.

“It is needless to say any thing here of Mr Darroch's claim for legitim, and of the defences against that claim, founded either on the terms of the marriage-contract of his parents, or on the strong and repeated acts of homologation alleged against himself by the trustees. It is enough to say, that there was debateable matter enough in that question, strongly to recommend to both parties the expediency of an amicable adjustment; and there was also a discretionary power in the trustees, though certainly not to be used in an arbitrary or oppressive manner, to exclude Mr Darroch from the enjoyment of the purchased lands till they were satisfied that he could be safely trusted with their possession.

“In these circumstances, it was proposed that Mr Darroch should abandon his claim for legitim, and that the trustees, in return, should instantly admit him to possession of the purchased lands, and at the same time make over to him all the trust funds which remained unappropriated in their hands. A settlement was accordingly effected, after long negotiations by agents, and repeated consultations of counsel on these terms; and the question is, whether this is now to be opened up at the instance of Mr D.'s creditors (he himself being dead), on the ground that he believed, when he entered into it, that there was a much larger amount of unappropriated funds than has turned out to be the case? They say he had reason to expect from £4000 to £5000, whereas he received little, if any thing, more than £1000.

“The Lord Ordinary's impression of the case is, that there certainly was such an expectation at the beginning of the negotiation, and that it is not improbable that it may have continued to some extent, though with very considerable abatement, down to its conclusion. But what he goes upon, in rejecting this ground of reduction, is, simply, that the trustees, instead of encouraging any such sanguine expectations, seem to have done all they well could to repress it, by positively refusing to guarantee any sum whatever, as the amount of the free or unappropriated funds, and that the matter plainly ended by Mr Darroch being advised to execute the agreement without any such guarantee, and to take his chance as to this particular of the result.

“It seems impossible to hold that Mr M'Intyre's report (which, after all, only shows a balance of less than £2900 in April, 1826, being £4916, liable to a deduction of £2000, with two years’ interest) was offered or received as a complete or responsible statement of the free fund in April, 1827, both because it bears date about a year before, and evidently includes only what had passed through the hands of the professional agent and cashier for the trust.

“But the decisive evidence of the case is to be found in the correspondence of Darroch's agent with the agent for the trustees, and in the terms of the concluded agreement, compared with those of the draft first prepared by the former.

“On the 23d April, 1827, Mr Young, W. S., as agent for Mr Darroch, writes to the trustees’ agent (having formerly pressed him to specify the amount of the free fund), that ‘the proposal for the settlement (which he encloses) is made upon the understanding that the clear fund in the hands of the trustees is not less than £4500.’ Mr Clason answers, that many particulars in the letter require consideration, and that for the present he can make no other answer. On 4th May, Mr Young writes again to Mr Clason, enclosing a draft of the heads of agreement, which he says he was instructed by Mr Darroch to submit to the trustees, the 6th article of which is, that ‘Mr Darroch, in consenting to this agreement, does so on the understanding that the clear funds in the trustees’ hands, alluded to in the first article, do not amount to less than £4000.’

“No written answer seems to have been made to this communication. But on the 11th May, Mr Young states in his accounts, that ‘he went to Greenock at the request of Mr Darroch and Mr Lade (another agent of Mr D. and his brother-in-law) to be present at the settlement with his father's trustees. Meeting with him and you, arranging as to the settlement, and revising the discharge granted by Mr Darroch; three days absent.’ And accordlngly, on the 12th of May, the heads of agreement are regularly executed, Mr Lade, being one of the instrumentary witnesses, and being at all points conformable to the draft forwarded by Mr Young, on the 4th, with this remarkable exception, that every word of the 6th article, already recited, as to the amount of the unappropriated funds, is entirely omitted. Considering the urgency with which such a specification had been previously pressed, the Lord Ordinary considers the omission thus deliberately consented to, as complete evidence that the trustees finally refused to guarantee any sum whatever, beyond what they were then to pay over, or even to sanction Mr Darroch's understanding that any farther sum would be paid; and observing that the pursuers do not now offer any evidence of what passed at the meeting to obviate this conclusion, he holds it decisive of this part of the question.

“As to the act 1621, it may well be doubted whether its provisions are at all applicable to such a case as the present, or whether the averment of Darroch's insolvency, at the time of granting the discharge, is legally sufficient. But it seems enough that the trustees, to whom it was granted—total strangers to his blood, and so far from being objects of his favour, that the only relation in which he ever contemplated them was that of adverse parties in litigation—could not, without manifest absurdity, be considered either at conjunct or as confident persons in the sense of that statute.”

“1. In respect that both parties declare that they have no further evidence of importance to offer, on the alleged misrepresentation, con cealment, or error in substantialibus, which form the leading reasons of reduction, and concur in asking the judgment of the Lord Ordinary on the documentary evidence, and recorded admissions as to that part of the case: Finds, that there is no sufficient evidence to support the reasons of reduction now specified, and repels those reasons, and sustains the relative defences accordingly. 2. In regard to the reasons of reduction founded on the act 1621, c. 18: Finds, that, independent of other objections, which might require additional proof, it is impossible to hold that the trustees, to whom the discharge sought to be reduced was granted, were either conjunct or confident persons with the granter thereof, and that the provisions of the act are consequently inapplicable to the case; and, therefore, repels those reasons of reduction also, and sustains the relative defences, and, on the whole, sustains the defences, assoilzies the defenders from all the conclusions of the conjoined actions, and decerns: Finds the defenders entitled to expenses, allows an account thereof to be given in, and remits the same, when lodged, to the auditor for taxation.”

Young and Rodger reclaimed, but the Court adhered.

Solicitors: Wm. Young, W.S.— A. Clason, W.S.—Agents.

SS 13 SS 305 1835


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