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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> The Scottish Provident Institution v. Ferrier's Trustees and Another [1871] ScotLR 8_390 (3 March 1871) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/08SLR0390.html Cite as: [1871] SLR 8_390, [1871] ScotLR 8_390 |
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Page: 390↓
The debtor in a bond was taken bound, along with cautioners, to repay the sum borrowed' at a certain term. Thereafter the creditor, without communicating with the cautioners, granted a back letter to the principal debtor, agreeing that, under certain conditions, the bond should not be called up till six years after the term mentioned therein. Held that the creditor had effected a material alteration in the relative rights of parties, and had thereby liberated the cautioners.
On the 8th April 1857 Mr W. F. Ireland, banker in St Andrews, granted a bond for £1000 to the Scottish Provident Institution, in which Professors Ferrier and Fischer were bound as cautioners. The obligation was to repay at Whitsunday 1857, and the bond also contained an assignation to a policy of assurance on Mr Ireland's life. On the following day the Scottish Provident Institution, through their manager, granted a back letter to Mr Ireland, to the effect that, “although the bond bears that the principal sum is to be repaid at Whitsunday 1867, it is understood and agreed that the loan istoremain for six years from that term, provided the interest and the premiums of assurance on the policy are regularly paid, and the security shall remain in all respects as satisfactory as at present.” From the letters produced in process, it appears that, although the back letter was granted in terms of previous arrangements with Mr Ireland, the cautioners were not made aware either of these arrangements or of the existence of the back letter.
Professor Ferrier died in 1864. In June 1868 Mr Ireland's estates were sequestrated, and the Scottish Provident Institution, having ranked for their debt on his estate, now sued Professor Fischer and the trustees of the late Professor Ferrier for the balance
The defenders pleaded, that by granting the back letter to the principal debtor, the pursuers had entered into a new and different contract with him, and so liberated the cautioners.
The Lord Ordinary ( Mure) assoilzied the defenders.
The pursuers reclaimed.
The Solicitor-General and Asher, for them, argued—That the back letter made no material alteration in the rights of parties; that by it the creditors in no way tied their hands, but merely stated that they did not anticipate calling up the bond for six years, and that, consequently, there was nothing to prevent the cautioners paying the debt and operating their relief against the principal debtor.
Millar, Q.C., and Blair, for Ferrier's trustees, and J. C. Smith, for Professor Fischer, were not called on.
At advising—
The
The Court adhered.
Solicitors: Agents for Pursuers— Morton, Whitehead, & Greig, W.S.
Agent for Ferrier's Trustees— Hunter, Blair, & Cowan, W.S.
Agent for Professor Fischer— Thomas Spalding, W.S.