BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Buchanan, Petitioner [1883] ScotLR 20_534 (16 March 1883) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1883/20SLR0534.html Cite as: [1883] ScotLR 20_534, [1883] SLR 20_534 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Page: 534↓
Trustees acting under the powers of a private Act of Parliament obtained in 1866, sold the lands of A, which were held under an entail dated 1784, and with the proceeds purchased the estate of T., and entailed it on the same series of heirs. In a petition for authority to record an instrument of disentail, presented by the heir of entail in possession of the estate of T.— held, under sec. 28 of the Entail Amendment Act 1848, that 16th July 1866, the date of the private Act of Parliament, was the date of the exist ing deed of entail of the lands of T.
The Entail Amendment Act 1848, section 28. provides—“For the purposes of this Act the date at which the Act of Parliament, deed, or writing placing money or other property under trust, or directing lands to be entailed, came into operation, shall be held to be the date at which the lands should have been entailed in terms of the trust, and it shall also be held to be the date of any entail to be made hereafter in execution of the trust, whatever be the actual date of such entail.”
By a private Act of Parliament, known as “Buchanan's Estate Act 1866,” the late Major Herbert Buchanan, heir of entail in possession of the estate of Arden, in the county of Dumbarton, under a deed of entail granted by George Buchanan of Arden, dated and recorded in 1784, was authorised to sell that entailed estate, and to invest the proceeds in the purchase of land in Scotland to be entailed. Certain trustees were appointed by the Act, in whom the lands of Arden, free from the conditions, limitations, and clauses, irritant and resolutive, of the entail, together with certain unentailed lands, were vested, and who, in pursuance of its provisions, conveyed to different purchasers certain portions of the lands, and consigned the price, amounting to £49,000, in the Commercial Bank of Scotland. Of this sum £42,000 was subsequently applied by them in the purchase of the lands of Throsk and Popiltrees, in the county of Stirling, and a further sum of £1047 was expended in improvements on these lands. The balance, amounting to about £4507, was at the date of this petition deposited in the said bank at their branch at Dumbarton. A deed of entail was thereafter, in pursuance of the Act, executed by the trustees, in which the heirs of entail called to the succession of the lands of Throsk and Popiltrees were the same as those called to the succession of the estate of Arden by the disposition and tailzie of that estate. This deed was dated and recorded in 1869.
Page: 535↓
This was a petition presented by George Buchanan, heir of entail in possession of the estates, for authority to record an instrument of disentail of Throsk and Popiltrees. The petitioner succeeded his father Major Herbert Buchanan in 1882. He was born in 1860, and was unmarried. The three nearest heirs were his brother Herbert Buchanan and his sisters Elizabeth and Flora Buchanan. He set forth that being of full age and born after 1st August, and heir of entail in possession by virtue of a tailzie dated prior to 1st August 1848, no consent required to be obtained to the application. He further set forth that he was entitled to acquire the estate and the balance of consigned money in fee-simple, and for these purposes he made the present application to the Court in terms of the statutes 11 and 12 Vict. cap. 36, 16 and 17 Vict. cap. 94, 38 and 39 Vict. cap. 61, and relative Acts of Sederunt.
The Lord Ordinary ( Kinnear) appointed Mr J. H. Jameson, W.S., to be curator ad litem to Herbert, Elizabeth, and Flora Buchanan.
The curator ad litem lodged this minute—“The curator ad litem has examined the process, and objects to the petition as incompetent, in respect that the petitioner holds the entailed lands mentioned in the petition under a deed of entail dated after the first day of August 1848, and that the petition is not conform to the provisions of the Acts of Parliament 11 and 12 Vict. cap. 36, sections 1 to 3; 38 and 39 Vict. cap. 61, section 4; and 45 and 46 Vict. cap. 53, section 3, which regulate petitions for authority to disentail, and the curator ad litem craves the Lord Ordinary to be heard by counsel at the bar.”
The Lord Ordinary on 19th February 1883 reported the petition to the First Division.
“ Note.—The sole object of the Buchanan Estate Act appears to have been to substitute other lands for those originally entailed by the entail of 1784, but without making any change in the destination or in the conditions of the entail. For the accomplishment of this object it was necessary that a new deed of entail should be executed, but the legislation appears to have intended that the rights of the heirs under the new deed should be the same as under the old; and the Lord Ordinary would have been disposed to hold that the petitioner is in a position to disentail on the same conditions as if he had still held the estate of Arden under the original entail. But as the question is a novel one, it is undesirable that the validity of the disentail should depend upon the opinion of a single Judge; he has therefore thought it proper to report the petition to the Court. The case seems to be distinguishable from that of Lord Dunmore ( 3 R. 345).”
Authorities—Rutherfurd Act (11 and 12 Vict. cap. 36), secs. 27, 28; Black v. Auld, Nov. 5, 1873, 1 R. 133; Fincastle v. Dunmore, Jan. 14, 1876, 3 R 345; 10 Geo. III., cap. 51, sec. 32; 6 and 7 Will. IV., cap. 42, sec. 5.
At advising—
Page: 536↓
The Court remitted to the Lord Ordinary to refuse the petition.
Counsel for Petitioner— Jameson. Agent— F. J. Martin, W.S.
Counsel for Respondents— Begg. Agent— J. H. Jameson, W.S.