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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Earl of Hoptoun v Earl of Rosebery [1835] CA 13_685 (11 March 1835)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1835/013SS0685.html
Cite as: [1835] CA 13_685

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SCOTTISH_Shaw_Court_of_Session

Page: 685

Earl of Hoptoun

v.

Earl of Rosebery
No. 213.

Court of Session

2d Division F.

Mar 11 1835

Ld. Mackenzie, Lord Justice-Clerk, Lord Glenlee, Lords Balgray, Gillies, Corehouse, Fullerton, Moncreiff, Jeffrey, Cockburn.

Earl of Hopetoun,     Pursuer.— D. F. Hope— H. J. Robertson— C. Hope. Earl of Rosebery,     Defender.— Skene— Moir.

Subject_Patronage.—

Two benefices, A and B, the latter being of small value, belonging to the same individual, but held by separate feudal titles flowing from different authors, under different superiors, and with different destinations, were united by decree of the commission, 1617, without any mention of the exercise of the right of presentation, it being thereby declared that B should be “united and annexed” to A as “a part and pendicle of that parish.” The proprietor having subsequently disponed the two patronages to different disponees, in terms of the titles as they existed before the union—held, 1. That the disponee to the patronage of A had not the exclusive right of presentation to the united parish; and, 2. That the disponee to the patronage of B had an equal vice therein.

By the act 1617, c. 3, whereby authority was given to commissioners, inter alia, “to unite sick kirks, ane or ma, as may conveniently be unite where the fruits of any ane alone will not suffice to entertain ane minister,” it is provided, as to the patronage, as follows:—“In the which case of union of sick kirks, gif it fall out that necessity offer to unite kirks belonging to presentation of diverse patrons, the presentation of the ministers sall be appointed by the saidis commissioners to pertain to the patrons (alternatis vicibus), to the which commissioners his majesty and the estates does recommend and refer to consider and appoint farder sick solid order as may be maist convenientlie taken and stand with the least prejudice of any of the patrons, and as they shall be found to have more or less interest in the kirks to be so united.”

Prior to the date of this statute, the first Earl of Haddington, then Lord Binning, had acquired, under regular feudal titles, from different authors, the barony of Dalmeny, with the kirk-lands and patronage of the parish of Dalmeny holding of the crown, and destined to heirs-male and assignees whatsoever, and the lands of Auldcathy holding feu of the Dukes of Hamilton, and destined to heirs and assignees whatsoever, with the patronage of the parish of Auldcathy, which adjoined Dalmeny, but was a separate and independent parsonage.

Dalmeny was a benefice of respectable value, but that of Auldcathy was of small amount; and, on the latter becoming vacant, in 1607, Lord Haddington presented to it the minister of Dalmeny, and thereafter obtained from him, with his own consent, as patron, a tack of the teinds in favour of his eldest son, for his lifetime, and two nineteen years, reserving as a tack-duty a stipend to the minister of £40 Scots. In 1607, a summons was raised at instance of the King's advocate and the procurator for the church, to have Auldcathy united to Dalmeny, and under it the commissioners, in 1618, pronounced decree of union in the following terms:—“Find that the said kirk of Auldcathy, and fruits thereof, is not sufficient of itself to furnish and provide ane minister thereat; and therefore, and in respect of the small number of the persons indwellers in the said parish of Auldcathy, and ewest and nearness of the samen to the kirk of Dalmeny, they find and declare, that, it is expedient and necessary that the said kirk of Auldcathy be united and annexed to the said kirk of Dalmeny, to be ane part and pendicle of that parish in all time coming; and therefore, according to the power and warrant given to them by the said act of Parliament to unite kirks, the said commissioners above named, all in ane voice, with ane uniform consent, has united and annexed, and unites and annexes the foresaid kirk and parish of Auldcathy to the said kirk and parish of Dalmeny, and ordains the same to be served by ane minister present at the said kirk of Dalmeny, and who shall hereafter be minister thereat; and decerns and ordains the same to be and remain ane conjunct parish-kirk in all time coming, to be called the parish-kirk of Dalmeny; to the whilk parish-kirk of Dalmeny ordains the haill parishioners of Auldcathy to resort and repair, as their own parish-kirk, to be served thereat by the said Mr John Gibbison, present minister at Dalmeny, and his successors, ministers thereat, as ane pendicle of Dalmeny, now and in all time to come.”

Nothing was said in this decree, of the patronage of the parishes united, and, subsequent to its date, three successive Earls of Haddington made up separate titles to the lands of Dalmeny, with the patronage of the parish-kirk thereof, and to the lands of Auldcathy, with the patronage of the parish-kirk thereof, respectively, exactly in the same terms as before the annexation. In 1646, the then Lord Haddington sold and conveyed the lands of Auldcathy, with the “advocation, donation, and right of patronage of the kirk of Auldcathy,” to one Monteith, who was duly infeft therein; and, in 1662, his Lordship sold and conveyed to Sir Archibald Primrose, clerk-register, ancestor of the Earls of Rosebery, the lands and barony of Dalmeny, with the patronage of the parish-kirk of Dalmeny, which have been regularly transmitted to the defender, the present Earl. In 1721, Monteith of Auldcathy sold these lands, with the right of patronage, as expressed in the early titles, to Charles, Earl of Hopetoun, but no infeftment was taken till 1784, when his son James, Earl of Hopetoun, completed his titles under a charter of resignation from the Duke of Hamilton.

From the decree of annexation in 1618 till 1775 no occasion offered for the exercise of the right of presentation to the united parish, the only vacancies having taken place during the abolition of that right in the periods between 1649 and 1660, and between 1690 and 1712. On the vacancy which occurred in 1775, the then Earl of Rosebery presented the late Rev. Thomas Robertson, who was inducted accordingly, a protest having been, however, taken and recorded in the books of the Presbytery by the Earl of Hopetoun, on the ground of his alleged right under the titles to the patronage of Auldcathy,

Mr Robertson died in 1800, and Lord Rosebery again presented, Lord Hopetoun, as on the previous occasion, having entered a protest as to his right; but the Rev. Mr Greig, Lord Rosebery's presentee, was inducted without further opposition. In 1829 a vacancy again occurred by the death of Mr Greig, and Lord Rosebery executed a presentation in favour of the Rev. Mr Scott of Torphichen, but before it was lodged, the summons in the present action, at the instance of Lord Hopetoun, was executed, concluding to have it found and declared that Lord Hopetoun, by virtue of his titles to the patronage of Auldcathy, had right to present to the united parish alternis vicibus with Lord Rosebery.

In defence, besides a plea of prescription which there was no sufficient possession to support, Lord Rosebery contended, that, by the decree of annexation, the benefice of Auldcathy was merged in that of Dalmeny, and that the subsequent conveyance to his ancestor of the patronage of Dalmeny was a title exclusive of any claim arising from keeping up the terms of the old titles as to the patronage of Auldcathy.

The Lord Ordinary reported the cause on cases.

Pleaded for Lord Hopetoun

The rights of patronage of Dalmeny and Auldcathy were held by Lord Haddington at the date of the union under separate feudal titles flowing from different authors, and destined to distinct series of heirs. The union of the parishes could not extinguish one of these rights, both of which continued vested in his person, and both of which were feudally transmitted to different disponees. It did not require any reservation in the decree of union, or any provision in the act of Parliament, to preserve such rights, because they were necessarily reserved by law, and it would have required an express power given by the statute to the commissioners to have warranted their extinguishing any right of patronage; while there was no necessity for any reservation as to the exercise of several rights after union, because, unless intended to be otherwise provided for, it at once resulted from the rules of the canon and of our own common law, that, when by union of two parishes there came to be two parties having a right of patronage in the united benefice, they should exercise it per vices, 1 and there is no instance of the commissioners under the act 1617 having expressly regulated the exercise of the patronage in such cases.

Pleaded for Lord Rosebery

By the decree of union, Auldcathy, which was a very small benefice, was joined to Dalmeny merely “as a pendicle” thereof, so that in reality it was merged or sunk in the greater benefice, which, it was provided, was still as before to retain the name of Dalmeny, and the patronage of which was necessarily carried by a conveyance of the patronage of that original benefice to which Auldcathy was now added as a pendicle, while the vice-patronage claimed of Dalmeny could not be legally carried by titles of a right of patronage to the non-existent benefice of Auldcathy. Under the act 1617, the commissioners were empowered to regulate the exercise of the patronage per vices according to the greater or less interest of the patrons in the united benefice, but this was only in the case of “union of kirks belonging to presentation of diverse patrons,” so that the legitimate inference clearly was, that when the presentation did not belong to diverse patrons, but to the same individual, there was to be no reservation of separate rights to present. At all events, by the terms of the statute, the distribution of the exercise of the right must be according to the interest of the respective patrons in the united benefice, and consequently Lord Hopetoun, as patron of the comparatively insignificant benefice of Auldcathy, cannot have an equal vice in the presentation to the united parish with the patron of the valuable benefice of Dalmeny.

_________________ Footnote _________________

1 Brodie v. Earl of Moray, July 1777 (9937); Dictum in Grant v. Duke of Gordon, Feb. 7, 1788 (9945); Officers of State v. Gordon, Nov. 13, 1821 (F.C.); Marquis of Queensberry in Union of Broughton, &c. (Connell on Parishes, p. 200); M'Kenzie's Obs. on stat. 1617, c. 3.

Lord Justice-Clerk.—There are two questions here, 1. Whether Lord Hopetoun has made out a title to a vice-presentation? and, 2. Is it cut off by prescription? The first question depends on the act 1617, the proceedings of the commissioners, and the state of the titles. All cases of union under the commission 1617 seem to have been at the instance of the King's Advocate, and it is positively averred that in no decree of that commission extant is there any declaration as to the presentation, fixing alternate vices or otherwise. In this case both patronages were at the date of the decree in the person of Lord Binning, afterwards Earl of Haddington. They were held under different superiors, and with different destination of heirs. Then, in this state, the parishes were united by the decree before the Court, which, the pursuer alleges, is in exactly the same terms as all the other decrees of that commission, and he contends that the right of presentation of Auldcathy remained, just as that of Dalmeny, as it stood before the union, and necessarily fell to be exercised in terms of the statute alternis vicibus, while Lord Rosebery maintains that it merged in Dalmeny, and that no right of vice-patronage remained. But can we omit noticing that Lord Haddington at a future period conveys to Mr Monteith the lands of Auldcathy expressly with the right of patronage and advocation, and that he transfers in the same terms Dalmeny to an ancestor of Lord Rosebery. The titles in the one are just exactly the same as in the other. Now it is proved that there were a variety of unions under this statute. Then, if in none of them any thing is said of the exercise of vice-patronage, is silence here to decide the right? On the contrary, the principle recognised in the statute is given effect to where the decree is silent. Indeed the statute only declares the common law in such circumstances. Connell, p. 525, refers to an instance of this, July 1777, Brodie v. Earl of Moray (E. C.) Since that commission the Court have been in use expressly to provide in the decree, for the exercise of the presentation, but that does not effect unions by the commission of 1617, which did not follow that course. This view occurred to me, and I see no answer to it,—Suppose Lord Binning had been Succeeded in Auldcathy by a daughter as heir of line, and in Dalmeny by a nephew as heir-male, would not the heir of line have had the presentation as patron of Auldcathy? Then is there any alteration in the principle by going down to a later period when it passes to singular successors? I can see no ground for allowing such. It is said we must go on the intentions of Lord Binning, and we are said to have a clue to these in his supposed views for a prolongation of the tack of the teinds of Auldcathy. But I cannot see any trace of the intention supposed, and at any rate we must decide according to the principles of law, and I certainly do not understand that he intended to annihilate the patronage when he conveyed it with absolute warrandice, and, on the whole, I see no ground to doubt there is a sufficient title. Then has it been excluded by a prescriptive title in the person of Lord Rosebery? I think not, for I cannot hold there are sufficient grounds for prescription. On the first point I think the case new and open to further argument, yet at present I think Lord Hopetoun has made out his title.

Lord Glenlee.—The case is altogether new, and without precedent. As to prescription, it is clear there is not sufficient to exclude. On the other, and new point, I would like to have the opinion of the whole Court. Alternate presentation was the law of Scotland under the canon law before the Reformation; and these commissioners were only to supply the powers formerly belonging to the bishop, or other church officer. Now, the words of the act are, where the presentations belong to diverse patrons, the commissioners are to appoint the presentation alternis vicibus. But does that fix that, where both are held by one patron, though by different titles, if the succession splits, an alternate vice shall arise to the different heirs of the patron. That is just the question, and the great difficulty. Where the rights exist separately, the justice is clear, of preserving to each his own right; but I do not see the necessity or propriety to provide, that, where they belong to one person, if the patronages ever come into different persons, an alternate vice is to arise. I would rather think the policy is, where there is no right violated at the time, to retain the presentation single, and if once united, is it to be liable to be separated, at any distance of time—suppose only yesterday? No decided case touches this question. The only cases are of claims at the original union, or where it is admitted the patronages were distinct. The case approaching nearest is that of the Marquis of Queensberry. There were there four patronages, and the Marquis was held to have exclusive right to two vices, as proprietor of two of the patronages; but there was no decision, that, if separated, it would each give a vice in the united church. The right of presentation is not always necessarily connected with the right of patronage. Patronage was in its own nature a peculiar status, to which many rights belonged. The being patron or advocatus was, one way or other, a good thing. He was a sort of tutor or protector of the church, and bound to defend it; and he generally made a good deal out of it, by confidential leases, and otherwise. The right of presentation was only one of the rights attaching to it, and the act 1617 does not unite patronages, but only churches. In like manner, the act 1690 did not abolish patronage, but only took away the right of presentation, and there was nothing absurd in keeping up the patronage in the titles, notwithstanding the loss of the right to present. There may be rights arising therefrom; but it does not per se imply a right of vice presentation in a united church. Lord Rosebery requires nothing special, as he had the patronage of the church retained with which the other merged. But the case is very difficult, and I would propose to have the opinions of the whole Court.

The other Judges concurring, the Court (January 17, 1833), appointed the papers, with additional minutes, to be laid before the Judges of the other Division, and the Lords Ordinary, for their opinion. The following was returned:—

Lords Balgray, Gillies, Mackenzie, Corehouse, Fullerton, Moncreiff, Jeffrey, and Cockburn.—“The summons at the instance of the pursuer concludes for having it ‘found and declared that he has good and undoubted right and title to the right of patronage of the parish of Auldcathy, and that in consequence of its annexation to the parish of Dalmeny, he has right to the advocation, donation, and right of patronage of the church and united parish of Dalmeny, alternis vicibus along with the defender Archibald John Earl of Rosebery.’

“In consequence of the interlocutor of the Second Division of the Court, we have considered the cause, and the papers given in by the parties, and we have particularly observed that the patronages of Dalmeny and Auldcathy were derived from different authors, and held of different superiors; and we are of opinion, that the right of patronage of the parish of Auldcathy, which was held of the Duke of Hamilton, was completely vested in the person of Thomas Earl of Haddington, the common author of the parties, and that the same has been correctly, legally, and feudally transmitted to the pursuer, with all the privileges thereunto annexed by law.

“It is indisputable that the right of patronage, when once feudalised, is an heritable and feudal right, and therefore, in its exercise, in its transmission, and in its extinction, is subject to all those rules and principles of law, which are fixed, and are acknowledged to apply to all rights of that kind and nature.

“We consider that the defender has pointed out no legal or relevant grounds upon which the pursuer can be deprived of his right, or by which it can be extinguished.

“We are clearly of opinion, that the mere union of the two parishes or churches of Dalmeny and Auldcathy did not extinguish the respective rights of patronage separately vested in the parties concerned, but that the same existed thereafter, with such rights and privileges as were consistent with law and practice. This appears to us, in the case of union, to be the rule both of the canon law and of the law of Scotland. (See Mackenzie, Obs. on the Act 1617, cap. 3). We therefore think that the pursuer is entitled to a judgment in terms of the summons.”

The Court accordingly decerned and declared in terms of the libel.

Solicitors: James Hope, W.S.— J. and W. Ferrier, W.S.—Agents.

SS 13 SS 685 1835


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