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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Catto, Thomson & Co. v. George Thomson & Others [1867] ScotLR 5_36 (19 November 1867)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1867/05SLR0036.html
Cite as: [1867] ScotLR 5_36, [1867] SLR 5_36

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 36

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Tuesday, November 19. 1867.

5 SLR 36

Catto, Thomson & Co.

v.

George Thomson & Others.

Subject_1Bills of Exchange
Subject_2Accommodation Bills
Subject_3Onerosity
Subject_4Writ or Oath.
Facts:

Circumstances in which held that although the drawer of certain bills of exchange admitted these to be accommodation bills, the acceptors were not entitled to prove pro ut de jure that they were for the benefit of the drawer only and without value.

Headnote:

In this action the pursuers conclude for various sums which they allege are due to them by the defenders on seven different bills of exchange. The defenders called are George Thomson & Son, merchants in Aberdeen; James Chalmers and John Gray Chalmers, both printers in Aberdeen, executors of the deceased William Leslie Thomson, wine merchant and shipowner in Aberdeen, and the said James Chalmers and John Gray Chalmers as individuals. George Milne, agent of the Commercial Bank, trustee on the sequestrated estate of George Thomson, lately merchant in Aberdeen, and now furth of Scotland, is also called for any interest that he may have in the premises. The pursuers made the following statements in support of the action:—The pursuers, Messrs Catto, Thomson, & Company have for many years carried on business as rope and sail-makers in Aberdeen, and the pursuers, James Hall, William Hall, John Catto, and John Duthie junior, are now the sole partners of that firm. George Thomson, merchant in Aberdeen, was also a partner of the firm up to the date of the sequestration of his estates on 30th October 1863. The firm of George Thomson & Son had also for many years carried on business in Aberdeen as wine merchants and commission agents, and were a firm of good standing and repute. This firm had at various times consisted of different partners. Latterly, prior to 1862, the late William Leslie Thomson, wine merchant and shipowner in Aberdeen, brother of the said George Thomson, was the sole partner. He died on 29th January 1862, leaving a will dated 7th January

Page: 37

1862, by which he appointed the said George Thomson and the defenders, James Chalmers and John Gray Chalmers, who were his brothers-in-law, to be his executors; and he requested them to carry on the business after his decease for behoof of his family. The said George Thomson, James Chalmers, and John Gray Chalmers accepted of the office of executors under the said will, and, in terms of the directions therein contained, they continued to carry on the business under the firm of George Thomson & Son, and of which they were the sole partners. The said George Thomson took the active management of the business. He was, and from Jauuary 1862 had been, in use to adhibit the signature of the firm to bills, cheques, and other documents of that nature, and he was duly authorised to draw and accept bills and cheques for the said firm, and to adhibit thereto the signature of the said firm. Among other documents which the said George Thomson subscribed with the Company firm were the various bills set out in the libel, which are signed by the said firm of George Thomson & Son as drawers, and bear to be accepted, per procuration of the pursuers' firm, by William Beverley, their manager. These said bills all bear ex facie to be for value received, but in reality no value was received by the pursuers for any of them, and the pursuers were not debtors to the firm of George Thomson & Son in the sums contained in any of these bills, or any part thereof.

The defenders made the following statement:—The pursuers, or the company of Catto, Thomson, & Company, by whom the bills libelled were accepted, and Mr George Thomson, who was their managing partner, and Mr Beverley, who was their managing clerk, well knew, when the said bills were respectively drawn, accepted, and discounted, that they were not drawn on behalf of the executors of the late Mr William Leslie Thomson, or of the trade or business carried on by the said executors as aforesaid, or in the course of said trade or business. They also well knew that the executors had no authority and no occasion to raise money for the purpose of said trade or business by means of accommodation bills or otherwise. They also well knew that the said bills respectively were drawn, accepted, and discounted without the authority or knowledge of the defenders, and that the defenders received no part of the proceeds.

The defenders pleaded, inter alia, that the pursuers' averments could only be proved by the writ or oath of the defenders.

The Lord Ordinary ( Kinloch) pronounced the following interlocutor:—

Edinburgh, 30 th January 1867.—The Lord Ordinary having heard parties' procurators, and made avizandum, and considered the process—Finds that the averment of the pursuers in regard to the bills libelled—that the same, although bearing to be drawn by George Thomson & Son, and accepted by the pursuers, are in reality obligations in which the said George Thomson & Son were the primary debtors, or of which the said George Thomson & Son were and are bound to relieve the pursuers—is an averment which can be competently proved by the writ or oath of the said George Thomson & Son only; and in respect that the pursuers have not adduced or offered evidence by the writ of the said George Thomson & Son to instruct the averment, assoilzies the defenders from the conclusions of the action, and decerns, reserving to the pursuers all competent reference to oath: Finds the pursuers liable in expenses; allows an account thereof to be lodged, and remits to the auditor to tax the same and to report.

W. Penney.

Note.—The bills libelled are ex facie obligations by the pursuers to George Thomson & Son. To throw on George Thomson & Son, contrary to the terms of the bills, the burden of the obligations, requires that the alleged liability should be established by their writ or oath.

The pursuers obtained a diligence under which they recovered the books and documents of George Thomson & Son. The writings recovered did not establish the averment. At the debate they sought another diligence in order to recover the books and documents of George Thomson as an individual, but these would not be the writ of George Thomson & Son. At the best, they would only be George Thomson's parole testimony expressed in writing. They might bind George Thomson individually, but George Thomson is not a defender concluded against in the present process. The Lord Ordinary did not feel himself warranted to grant such a diligence, and no other documents being specified which could come under the description of the writ of George Thomson & Son, he considered that he was bound to grant absolvitor to the defenders. The pursuers will, of course, still have open to them the recourse of a reference to oath.

(Intd.) W. P.”

The pursuers reclaimed. The following is the prayer of the reclaiming note:—“May it therefore please your Lordships to recal the interlocutor complained of; to repel the second plea in law for the defenders, and find that the pursuers are entitled to a proof of their averments prout de jure, and to remit the cause to the Lord Ordinary to proceed further therein as may be proper; or at least to find that the pursuers have offered evidence by the writ of the defenders to instruct their averments, and to remit the cause to the Lord Ordinary to proceed further therein as may be proper; also to find the pursuers entitled to expenses; or to do otherwise in the premises as to your Lordships may seem just.”

Clark and Harry Smith for them.

Young and Shand in answer.

The following cases and authorities were relied on— Blackwood v. Hay, 19th July 1858, 20 D., 631; Lockhart v. Henry, 5 D., 1014; Clark on Partnership, vol. i, p. 215; Linley i, 213, 16.

Judgment:

Lord Neaves, who delivered the opinion of the Court, pointed out that some questions which had been raised in the course of the discussion, such as whether George Thomson, who was the medium by whom the bills were created, had power to bind the Company of which he was a partner, and whether it could be held there was such an entity as George Thomson & Son, seeing the firm had no partners, were not now properly before the Court. The case of Blackwood which had been relied upon had no application to this case, for there was an admission that the bills were accommodation bills. On the general doctrine he was quite clear that the bills, being ex facie absolute obligations, the presumption of onerosity could only be set aside by the writ or oath of the acceptors. That disposed of the first part of the prayer of the reclaiming note. But it was said that the pursuers had already offered proof by the writ of the defenders, and that they might get something out of the private books of George Thomson tht would obviate the objection in point of law. He could not see that that

Page: 38

had been done. The question of writ or oath was one of great nicety and delicacy, and he should be sorry on light grounds, or on such averments as were made and had been proved in the present case, to throw any discredit on the valuable dicta made by some of the learned judges in the cases referred to. The observations of Lord Medwyn in the case of Lockhart were particularly valuable; and, without saying whether or not the writ of one partner might be held to bind the company, there was nothing in the present case requiring the Court to accede to the extension of the principle that was asked by the reclaimers.

The other Judges concurred.

Solicitors: Agents for pursuer— Patrick, M'Ewen & Carment, W.S.

Agents for defender— Cheyne & Stuart, W.S.

1867


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