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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Ballandene v Turner [1835] CA 13_636 (7 March 1835)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1835/013SS0636.html
Cite as: [1835] CA 13_636

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SCOTTISH_Shaw_Court_of_Session

Page: 636

Ballandene

v.

Turner
No. 197.

Court of Session

1st Division

March 7 1835

Lord President, Lord Mackenzie, Lord Gillies, Lord Mackenzie, Lord Gillies.

Mrs Lilias Ballandene,     Pursuer. William Ainslie Turner ( Tait'S Trustee)     Defender.— Cuninghame.

Subject_Expenses—Jury Trial—Tender.—

Circumstances in which it was held, after advising with the whole Judges, that the full amount of a taxed account of expenses must be awarded in favour of a pursuer who had made a random claim of £2000, in name of real damage to property, although he got a verdict for £88 only, and although the defender; while making up the record, had tendered £25 with expenses.

Mrs Ballandene, of Wester Pitgober, raised a summary action before the Sheriff of Perthshire, against Turner, the trustee on the sequestrated estate of Harvieston, and others, complaining of an unwarrantable cut which had been made in an embankment on her ground, by which part of her lands had been overflowed, and she had lost the use of it; and concluding for £100 sterling, less or more, in name of damages. The Sheriff found that the trustee (or his constituent) had acted unwarrantably; and, in an advocation, the Lord Ordinary remitted simpliciter. In the mean time Mrs Ballendene raised an action of damages on account of the injury sustained by her property, and concluded for £2000 of damages. The defender objected, that this claim of damages should have been disposed of in the first process; but the pursuer, besides stating it to be doubtful whether such a claim could be enforced under a summary complaint, insisted on her right to make a demand which would not be of so limited a kind as had been inserted in that complaint, in the inferior court. The Lord Ordinary repelled this preliminary objection, and a record was made up, in the course of which the trustee tendered £25, in name of damages, and also the previous expenses, protesting that “if a sum lower, or not greater, than £25, be ultimately awarded by a jury, the pursuer will be liable in all future expenses to the defender.” The tender was rejected.

In the issue which went to trial, the damages were laid at £2000; and at the trial the pursuer still insisted for high damages, and was stated to have substantially claimed £500 or £600 before the jury. The jury awarded £88; and the pursuer having moved for expenses, the Court ordered the account to be taxed. It amounted to £286, 17s. 7d. The defender opposed the motion for expenses, contending that as the whole claim of damages might have been cheaply disposed of in the Sheriff-process; and as this was not a case of injury to the feelings or character, but real damage to property, which admitted of being estimated with tolerable accuracy; and no counter-offer had been made by the pursuer, at rejecting the tender of £25 by the defender; but, on the contrary, the full sum of £2000 had been inserted in the issue, and high damages had been claimed from the jury; while only £88 had been awarded; the expenses should not be allowed to the pursuer, or at least they should be greatly modified.

The pursuer answered, that it had been already decided she was entitled to go on with her action of damages, notwithstanding the prior process in the Sheriff Court; and it was the universal practice to state a random sum of damages, as had been done here; and nothing could have rendered it unnecessary for the pursuer to go on with her action, but a tender by the defender of at least as large a sum as the jury ultimately awarded. Such tender had not been made, and thus the defender, whose wrongous act rendered the process necessary, had never made such an offer of redress as could alone have stopped farther proceedings. A substantial award of damages had been given, and the defender must bear the expenses of the proceedings thus occasioned by himself. Such was the invariable rule in Jury causes.

The Court ordered minutes of debate, and afterwards advised with the other Judges.

Lord President.—After consulting with all the Judges in this case, I find that the great majority of their Lordships are of opinion, that the full expenses as taxed by the Auditor must be awarded in favour of the pursuer. It is not material that a large random sum of damages was claimed in the summons, as that is the ordinary course of present practice. The Judges were also moved by the circumstance that the defender, in making a tender of £25, did so under protest, that, if the jury awarded no larger sum of damages, the defender should not be subjected in expenses. This almost amounted to an admission by him, that if the jury awarded a larger sum, expenses must follow of course. And the jury awarded the sum of £88. But the Judges were farther inclined to think, that, in all cases where a tender was made and refused, the other party should be called on to depart from his random demand, and make a specific counter tender, and say what he would accept of; and thereafter, expenses should be determined with reference to these mutual offers, and awarded against the party who is eventually proved by the verdict to have been the most unreasonably in the wrong.

Dean of Faculty.—I beg to submit to the Court whether it is in your Lordships' power to compel such counter tender.

Lord Mackenzie.—If the defender makes a tender, which is refused, he can put in a minute calling on the pursuer to make a counter-offer, and the Court will then decide how far it can compel the pursuer to do so, or what shall be the consequence of his refusal.

Lord Gillies.—I cannot refrain from saying, that the position of parties in the Jury Court seems, at present, a very odd one. A pursuer here claims damages to the amount of £2000. The claim is resisted, and the jury award only £88. The Judge who tried the case thinks no expenses should be given; and yet the Court hold that the fall expenses, amounting to near £300, must go against the defender.

Lord Mackenzie.—Where the injury, for which reparation is claimed, is one affecting character or feeling, such as an insult, a kick, or a blow, I should not readily call on a pursuer to put any accurate pecuniary estimate upon it. But in a case of real damage to property, the amount of which in general is best known to the pursuer, he ought in fairness to be laid under some obligation to assess his claim of damages more accurately than at present. But even in a case of real damage, the majority of the Court think that a large random claim will not defeat the pursuer's right to his expenses. I cannot concur in that opinion.

Lord Gillies.—Nor I.

The Court awarded the taxed expenses, amounting to £286, in favour of the pursuer.

Pursuer's Authority.—Heriot, 29th Nov. 1833, (ante, XII. 145).

Defender's Authorities.—Hill, Jan. 22. 1822 (ante, I. 264, and 248, New Edit.); Greig, Feb. 2. 1822 (ante, I. 289, and 268, New Edit.); Hyslop, 1 Murr. 55; Faterson, 2 Murr. 188; Scott, Nov. 26. and Dec, 16. 1834 (ante, p. 89 and 202).

Solicitors: Wotherstoon and Mack, W. S.— R. Rutherford, W. S. Agents.

SS 13 SS 636 1835


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