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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Buchanan v. Glasgow Corporation Water Works Commissioners [1869] ScotLR 6_540_1 (3 June 1869) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1869/06SLR0540_1.html Cite as: [1869] ScotLR 6_540_1, [1869] SLR 6_540_1 |
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Page: 540↓
A landowner having for ten years made no complaint of pipes which had been laid through his lands at an unauthorised level by statutory commissioners, held barred from objecting, in a suspension and interdict, to the laying of a new pipe alongside of the old, the commissioners having power to alter or add to their pipes.
In 1855 the respondents were authorised by statute to construct water works for the conveyance of water from Loch Katrine to Glasgow, and for that purpose they acquired land and wayleave through other land from Mr Buchanan of Carbeth. By the Act the commissioners were entitled to execute all necessary works in lines and on levels delineated on deposited plans, it being provided that they should not be entitled to make any vertical deviation exceeding five feet. By the 68th section of their Act power was given them to alter, enlarge, and increase the number of pipes. Subsequently, by an Act passed in 1865, the commissioners were empowered to construct a bridge over the Endrick for conveyance of the water there-by instead of by a syphon in the bed of the river, as was previously the case, and to perform all necessary works in connection therewith. Mr Buchanan presented this note of suspension and interdict, alleging that the commissioners were now laying additional pipes through his lands at levels not permitted by the Act of 1855, and craving interdict. The respondents pleaded that the works were being done under the Act of 1865; and further, that the complainer was barred by consent and acquiescence from now objecting to the level of the pipes. The Lord Ordinary refused interim interdict, and thereafter found that the work in progress when the interdict was applied
Page: 541↓
for was being executed under the statute of 1865. He therefore repelled the reasons of suspension, and refused the interdict. Mr Buchanan reclaimed
Watson and Hall for reclaimer.
Millar, Q.C., and Burnet for respondents.
At advising—
The case has been complicated, because a new operation was going on at the same time and in the same locality under the authority of a different Act of Parliament. But Mr Hall properly pointed out that the crossing of the Endrick by a bridge instead of a syphon has no necessary or natural connection with the addition of the three-foot pipe. There may be some remedy, which may result in alteration of the original works; but so long as this does not take place, it is extravagant to say that while the original pipe remains you cannot add to it. I think it is impossible to accomplish that by a suspension. It may be observed, that the interdict was refused as an interim interdict, and that refusal was acquiesced in. The complainer then went on, not through any hope of stopping the work, but in order to try the question of right in the suspension. I think it was not a competent process for that purpose, and that nothing but a declarator of removal would raise the question attempted to be raised here. I am, therefore, clear that our judgment must be for the complainer.
The other Judges concurred.
Agent for Complainer— J. Macknight, W.S.
Agents for Respondents— Campbell & Smith, S.S.C.