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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Ferrier v. Campbell and Others [1870] ScotLR 8_43 (29 October 1870)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1870/08SLR0043.html
Cite as: [1870] SLR 8_43, [1870] ScotLR 8_43

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 43

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Saturday, October 29. 1870.

8 SLR 43

Ferrier

v.

Campbell and Others.

Subject_1Process
Subject_2Multiplepoinding
Subject_3Double Distress.
Facts:

A multiplepoinding was raised by the agent of a trust of a certain fund, which was the balance of the trust funds in his hands at the close of his agency. He himself was one of the trustees as well as agent for the trust-estate, and he brought the action in his character of trustee and not of agent. Held the action was incompetent, as the money was in his hands as agent, not as trustee, and he was as such simply a debtor to the trust-estate.

Question, Whether, had the action been otherwise competent, there would have been any double distress, as the only other claim alleged besides that of the trustees, was the “possible claim of a possibly existent claimant?”

Headnote:

This was an action of multiplepoinding raised by Thomas Henry Ferrier, W.S., calling as defenders the representatives of Major James Campbell of Glenfeochan, the trustees of the late Professor Ferrier of St Andrews, the trustees of the late Walter Ferrier, the children of the late Professor Ferrier, the sole surviving trustee of the late John Ferrier, W.S., and Messrs Ferrier & Wilson as the representatives qua successors in business of the said John Ferrier, W.S.

The alleged fund in medio amounted to about £519, and was the balance remaining in the hands of Mr Ferrier of the funds and effects belonging to the trust-estate of the late Professor Ferrier, at the close of his intromissions therewith on 31st January 1869, he having at that date ceased to be agent for the trust.

The grounds which he stated for raising this process of multiplepoinding, instead of paying over the said balance to his employers, Professor Ferrier's trustees, of whom he himself was one, were;— that the late John Ferrier, W.S., the father of Professor Ferrier, had, while a partner in the firm of James and John Ferrier, W.S., afterwards James,

Page: 44

John, and Archibald Ferrier, W.S., placed to his own credit in the books of said firm certain sums belonging to the trust-estate of the late Major James Campbell of Glenfeochan. This he did during the years 1796–1802, and for some purpose now undiscoverable. The firm of James and John Ferrier having passed through several changes has now become that of Messrs Ferrier & Wilson, W.S. The trustees of the said John Ferrier did not ascertain and pay off this debt to the representatives of Major Campbell, but on the contrary handed over the residue of the estate of John Ferrier to Professor Ferrier, the residuary legatee. The claim of Major Campbell's representatives, therefore, remained unsettled, and he alleged that it had become necessary for the good of all parties concerned to raise the present action of multplepoinding.

Watson and Hutchison for the pursuer and reclaimer.

Lord Advocate Young and Blair for the objectors and respondents, Professor Ferrier's trustees.

At advising—

Judgment:

The Lord President—This is a most singular summons of multiplepoinding, and there are so many apparent grounds of objection that one is almost embarrassed in dealing with them. However, on the very face of the summons there seem to be no grounds whatever for the process. It is raised here with the object of distributing funds in Mr Thomas Ferrier's hands, being the balance due by him to the trust-estate of the late Professor Ferrier of St Andrews, to which trust he acted as agent. In January 1869 Mr Ferrier's agency ceased, and he was then debtor to the trust in the sum of £519 or thereby, which is stated to be the fund in medio in this action. Mr Thomas Ferrier, besides being agent, was himself one of the five trustees of the late Professor Ferrier. Now, he appears on his own shewing to raise this multiplepoinding as trustee? If so, I think it is surely incompetent, because the money is in his hands not as a trustee, but simply as a debtor to the trust-estate. If, on the other hand, he were to acknowledge that the money was in his hands as agent, which is clearly the case, but were to say that it remained undivided, and that there was a competition of claims on the fund; then that would seem to me to be equally untenable in point of fact. The first claim, and an undoubtedly just one against him, is that of the trustees, whose agent, he was. But what is the other? It is the claim of certain supposed heirs of Major Campbell of Glenfeochan, who may have an existence and who may not—we know nothing and he can tell us nothing about them—and what is their claim, supposing it to be made? It is one against Mr Ferrier, upon the ground that he is the business representative of certain legal firms. That may be the case, but it can give the supposed claimant no right against this £519. They may have a very good claim against Mr Ferrier, but they have no right against this fund in competition with the trustees of Professor Ferrier. There are no termini habiles whatsoever for a multiplepoinding, and I am not even satisfied that there are any double claims, for I am not at all clear that there are any such persons as the representatives of Major Campbell of Glenfeochan.

Lord Deas—There is no room for any dubiety as to the way in which Mr Ferrier brings this summons of multiplepoinding. He himself says in the summons that he, the said Thomas Henry Ferrier, as one of the trustees of the late Professor Ferrier, is the real raiser. He raises this process as trustee, though he is only one of five trustees. If he can do so, it seems to follow that the other four could raise a similar process. And a multiplepoinding being already a congeries of actions, we should have a congeries of congeries. But then, although he stated this at the outset, he goes on to make other statements perfectly inconsistent. He goes on to say that the sum in question is the balance in his hands as agent belonging to these trustees, of whom he himself is one. The trustees were therefore, upon the face of the summons, his creditors, and his only creditors. They are entitled and bound to give him a discharge. If this had been an action by the trustees or their quorum, a nice question might have been raised, whether or no there was double distress. It might have been a question whether the possibility of a claim being made by a possibly existing person is enough to raise double disteess. But that is not the action before us. The action is not raised by any person legally entitled to hold the funds. The pursuer's duty was, as soon as required, to pay the funds over to the trustees. I do not see that the mere fact of his being also a trustee makes any difference. He was still acting as the agent of the trust. Nor do I see either danger or hardship that can result to him in being obliged to make such payment to the trustees. Would it make him any more personally liable that, having at one time a fund belonging to the trust estate in his hands as agent for the trust, he paid that sum over into the hands of the trustees on being required to do so. I cannot think so. And, over and above this, I do not see why he should not insist upon paying over the sum to-morrow, and take a discharge from the trustees, and then, if he likes, resign his trusteeship.

Lord Ardmillan concurred.

Lord Kinloch—I am of the same opinion. How does the pursuer justify this action of multiplepoinding? simply by telling us that some people are coming about him and saying that they have possible claims against the trust estate of Professor Ferrier, and asking him to keep this money for their behoof. This can never amount to double distress. I think that the Lord Ordinary was right in dismissing this process as incompetent.

The Court adhered.

Solicitors: Agents for the Pursuer and Reclaimer— Ferrier & Wilson, W.S.

Agents for the Objectors, Professor Ferrier's trustees,— Hunter, Blair, & Cowan, W.S.

1870


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