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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Shand v. Shand's Curator Adlitem [1876] ScotLR 13_348 (4 March 1876) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1876/13SLR0348.html Cite as: [1876] ScotLR 13_348, [1876] SLR 13_348 |
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Page: 348↓
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In a petition to disentail, the third heir declined to consent, and a remit was made, under the Act 38 and 39 Vict. c. 61, § 5, to ascertain the value of his interest. Before further steps were taken a nearer heir was born.— Held (1) that the equivalent to consent provided by the statute could not be held to be obtained, nor consent dispensed with, before the money value was paid or secured; and (2) that therefore the case did not fall under the 19th section of the Act 16 and 17 Vict. c. 94, which applied to circumstances occurring subsequent both to the date of the application for disentail and “to the last date of the consents required for the same.”
Question (per Lord Ardmillan)—Could the prayer of the petition have been granted even if the equivalents to consent had been completed, seeing the child was in utero, and its birth expected immediately?
The petitioner Robert Shand Kynoch Shand was institute of entail in possession of the entailed lands and estate of Hillside, Kincardineshire, under a deed of entail which, though dated 21st June 1869, had been made in implement of a trust-deed executed in 1845, and therefore fell (under the Act 11 and 12 Vict. c. 36) to be held as dated prior to 1st August 1848.
This was a petition for authority to record an instrument of disentail of these lands under the provisions of the statutes 11 and 12 Vict. c. 36, 16 and 17 Vict. c. 94, and 38 and 39 Vict. c. 61. The petitioner, who was upwards of thirty-five years of age, and was married, had applied for their consents to the three nearest heirs for the time entitled to succeed. He had obtained the consents of the two nearest, but the third declined to give it.
By the Act 38 and 39 Vict. c. 61, § 5, it is provided that in the event of the declinature or refusal of such an heir (other than the nearest heir, whose consent was necessary) to give his consent, “the Court shall, on a motion to that effect by the petitioner in the application, and on a statement by him of the declinature or refusal or incapacity of such heir or heirs aforesaid, and after such intimation to the heir or heirs so declining or refusing, or to the guardians or other persons interested in the heir or heirs incapacitated as aforesaid, as the Court shall think necessary, ascertain the value in money of the expectancy or interest in the entailed estate with reference to such application of such heir or heirs declining or refusing, or incapacitated to give consent as aforesaid.” The money value so ascertained was then to be paid into bank or secured over the estate, and the consent was therefore dispensed with.
A remit was accordingly made to ascertain the value of the third heir's interest, and a report was drawn up, but before any further step was taken a daughter was born to the petitioner. A curator ad litem was thereupon appointed to the infant daughter, who lodged a minute stating, inter alia—“The birth of the curator's ward, the infant heiress of entail, has entirely altered the position of matters, and the curator has been unable to find any provision in the statutes for such a peculiar contingency as has occurred in this case. The 19th section of the Act 16 and 17 Vict. cap. 94, provides that such a contingency occurring subsequent to the last date of the consents required to a petition of the nature of the present, shall not affect the proceedings in the petition, but that section does not apply to this case, as one of the heirs of entail whose consent was required had refused to give such consent, and the Lord Ordinary had remitted to Mr Samuel Raleigh, C.A., to ascertain the value in money of the interest of the said heir. The Act 38 and 39 Vict. cap. 61, which authorises the Court to assess the value of an heir who refuses to consent, makes no provision for the contingency of the birth of a nearer heir after the Lord Ordinary has ordered the value of the interest of such heir to be valued, but before he has approved of the report as to such value. In these circumstances the curator ad litem thinks it his duty to submit, on behalf of the ward, that the proceedings already taken under the petition are ineffectual, and that the prayer cannot now be granted in respect of the birth of the petitioner's daughter.”
The Lord Ordinary issued the following interlocutor:—
“ Edinburgh, 8th February 1876.—The Lord Ordinary having heard counsel for the petitioner and for the curator ad litem to the petitioner's infant child, Refuse the petition, and decerns.
Note.—This petition is presented under the Entail Act of 1875. Before it was brought into Court the petitioner obtained the consent of the nearest heir then in existence. He afterwards obtained the consent of the next heir; but the third declined to give his consent.
On 17th December 1875 the Lord Ordinary, on the motion of the petitioner, remitted to an actuary to ascertain the value of the expectancy or interest of the heir who had declined to consent, and on that day a report was made fixing it at £200, or ‘something like £250,’ according as the value of the estate was to be taken at twenty-five or thirty years' purchase of the free rental. Before any further proceedings were taken, a daughter was born to the petitioner, who was a nearer heir than any of the heirs existing at the time the petition was presented.
Thereafter a curator ad litem was appointed to the petitioner's daughter. He maintained that the petition must be refused, inasmuch as no instrument of disentail could be recorded without the consent of his ward, who could not legally give it. On the other hand, the petitioner contended that he was entitled to have the petition granted, because he had obtained the consent of the nearest heir when the petition was presented, and had thus become absolutely entitled to carry out the proceedings for disentail.
“The question depends on the construction of the 19th section of the Entail Act of 1853, with reference to the rights of heirs in possession under the Act of 1875.
Page: 349↓
By the 19th section of the Act of 1853 it is provided that ‘no alteration of circumstances which has occurred, or which shall occur, subsequent both to the date of presenting such application, and to the last date of the consents required for the same, whether by the birth of any intervening heir, or by the death of any granter of such consent,’ shall have any effect upon the rights of the heir in possession presenting a petition for disentail.
There is an exception in the provision, but it relates only to the rights of minor heirs, and is of no importance in this question.
The petitioner argued that by virtue of the provisions of the Act of 1875, which enabled him to disentail without the consent of any heir other than the nearest heir in existence at the time, he was in the same position as if he had obtained the consent of the three nearest heirs before his child was born. The argument is plausible, but the Lord Ordinary has been unable to sustain it.
It is true that if an heir of entail has obtained the consent of the nearest heir for the time he can carry through the proceedings for disentail without the consent of the remoter heirs, by taking such steps as are necessary to enable the Court to dispense with the consent of these heirs. But before an interlocutor can be pronounced dispensing with that consent the value of the expectancy or interest of the remoter heirs must be ascertained in money, and the sum so ascertained paid into bank, or security given for due payment. It is only on that being done that the Court can dispense with the consent of the heirs, and can proceed as if such consent had been obtained. The provisions of the 3d section of the Act of 1875 are very express on this subject.
In the opinion of the Lord Ordinary the interlocutor dispensing with consent must for the purposes of this question be taken as the equivalent of the consent of the remoter heirs. The 19th section of the Act of 1853 does not, of course, deal directly with this question, but it enacts that it is only after the consents have been given and the petition presented that emerging circumstances shall not defeat the rights of the heir in possession to carry out a disentail. The just construction seems to be that the equivalent shall be taken to be a consent given at the date of the interlocutor dispensing with the consent. For it is only after such an interlocutor has been pronounced that the Court can proceed as if the consent has been obtained.
The Lord Ordinary has therefore refused the petition.”
The petitioner reclaimed, and argued—(1) The three consents or their equivalents had been got before the birth of the child. It had been decided ( Carmichael, Petitioner, Dec. 22, 1853, 16 D. 296) that when three consents had been obtained, the death of an heir before service made no difference. (2) The consent of the nearest heir was all that was required under the Entail Amendment (Scotland) Act 1875. The other consents might be dispensed with. The only obstacle to disentailing now was that the nearest heir might refuse consent.
The counsel for the curator ad litem was not called on.
At advising—
This petitioner presents this petition, in which he states that he has obtained the consent of the nearest heir, which is still an indispensable requisite. The consent of the second heir has also been got. It was still necessary for him to obtain the value of the interest of the third heir, who refused consent, and the proceedings for this purpose were in progress, but not completed (the report having been prepared but not presented to the Lord Ordinary) when a new heir came into existence. Now, the value in money of the third heir's interest was not paid into bank nor secured, and it seems to me quite clear upon the statute that it is only when this has been done that the Court have it in their power to dispense with consents, and to proceed as if these had been obtained.
If under the former statute the third heir was not bought off, the petition could not go on. Must the same result not follow here if the petitioner has not succeeded in buying off the heir under the statute of 1875? The dispensation of the consents of the second and third heirs is as essential a requisite now as the consents under the previous Act were.
It has been suggested that aid is to be got from the 19th section of the Act 16 and 17 Vict. cap. 94, but to my mind the difficulty is not removed by that section, because if the purchase and dispensation of consents is a necessary preliminary, and comes in place of the consents themselves, this section must be construed as requiring that the date of the petition and the date of the completion of consents must have passed before the clause in question can have any effect so far as to validate the petition.
I agree in the result at which the Lord Ordinary has arrived.
I am very clearly of opinion, with the Lord Ordinary, that the equivalents to consent which the statute requires are not present here. The case does not, therefore, come under the provisions of the 19th section of the Act of 1853.
The Court adhered.
Counsel for Petitioner— M'Laren. Agents— Hagart & Burn Murdoch, W.S.
Counsel for Curator ad litem— Kinnear. Agent — John Home, W.S.