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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Abel v. Watt [1883] ScotLR 21_118 (21 November 1883) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1883/21SLR0118.html Cite as: [1883] SLR 21_118, [1883] ScotLR 21_118 |
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Page: 118↓
(See Stewart v. M'Bey, ante, vol. xx. p. 580.)
Process — Remit to Lord Ordinary on the Bills — Vacation — Jurisdiction.
The estates of a bankrupt were sequestrated in 1863 and yielded no dividend. In 1870 the trustee was discharged. The bankrupt thereafter, without interference on the part of the creditors, carried on trade as a farmer, horse-dealer, and carter for many years. In 1883, after decree of cessio had been obtained against him at the instance of a creditor, one of the creditors in the old sequestration presented a petition for the appointment of a new trustee, on the narrative that the bankrupt had acquired heritable property, and also that be was possessed of some farming implements and furniture. Held that the creditors in the old sequestration were barred by acquiescence from insisting in their right to this estate, to the exclusion of subsequent creditors.
In a petition for the appointment of a new trustee in a sequestration— held that it is unnecessary to remit to the Lord Ordinary on the Bills to appoint a meeting of creditors, unless it should be necessary to do so for the purpose of allowing the petition to proceed in vacation.
Section 103 of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1856 provides—“If any estate, wherever situated, shall after the date of the sequestration, and before the bankrupt has obtained his discharge, be acquired by him, or descend or revert or come to him, the same shall ipso jure fall under the sequestration, and the full right and interest accruing thereon to the bankrupt shall be held as transferred to and vested in the trustee as at the date of the acquisition thereof or succession for the purposes of this Act; and the trustee shall, on coming to the knowledge of the fact, present a petition setting forth the circumstances to the Lord Ordinary, who shall appoint intimation to be made in the Gazette, and require all concerned to appear within a certain time for their interest, and after the expiration of such time, and no cause being shown to the contrary, the Lord Ordinary shall declare all right and interest in such estate which belongs to the bankrupt to be vested in the trustee as at the date of the acquisition thereof or succession thereto,” &c.
This petition was presented by John Abel, cattle-dealer, Strawberry Bank, Aberdeen, a creditor on the sequestrated estates of Alexander M'Bey, late farmer, Foveran, residing at Newburgh, Aberdeen, for the appointment of a new trustee in the sequestration.
The petition set forth that the estates of M'Bey, the bankrupt, were sequestrated by the Lord Ordinary officiating on the Bills on 6th July 1863, in terms of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1856, and that on 17th July 1863 David Kinnear, accountant in Edinburgh, was elected trustee thereon; that the petitioner was at the time of that sequestration a creditor of M'Bey to the extent of £99, 19s.; that the realised funds being insufficient to pay any dividend, the trustee was discharged in 1870; that the bankrupt had not been discharged; that the petitioner had recently become aware of the fact that the bankrupt in the beginning of 1882 feued a piece of ground at Newburgh, near Aberdeen, and built a house thereon, which was valued at £800, and on which the bankrupt obtained a loan of £500; that the lenders got an absolute title to the property direct from the superior with M'Bey's consent, dated 9th and 13th March 1882, and granted a back-letter to him, dated 15th and 27th March 1882, stating that they held the property in security for the loan of £500 and interest. Besides this reversion of £300, the petitioner stated that he had become aware that the bankrupt had household furniture and farming implements to the value of about £35.
Answers were lodged to this petition by John Stewart Watt, solicitor, Aberdeen, trustee for the creditors of Alexander M'Bey in a process of cessio, in which decree ordaining him to execute a disposition omnium bonorum for behoof of creditors was pronounced on 9th July 1883. It was stated in these answers that since the discharge of the trustee in the sequestration the bankrupt had not only, without interference on the part of the creditors, but with their full knowledge and acquiescence, embarked, within the county of Aberdeen, in the immediate neighbourhood of Foveran, in trade as a farmer,
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horse-dealer, and carter, and had continued therein for many years, and that the creditors had thereby barred themselves from insisting in any right of participation in any acquisitions of the bankrupt during that period. In the prayer of the petition the Court were craved “to remit to the Lord Ordinary officiating on the Bills to appoint a meeting of the creditors of the said Alexander M'Bey, to be held at such time and place as your Lordships may fix, to elect a trustee,” &c. The Court held that there was no need to remit to the Lord Ordinary on the Bills except to proceed in vacation, and accordingly on 10th July 1883 they remitted for that purpose, the cause not being thereby removed from the Inner House.
Argued for the petitioner—This estate fell ipso jure under the old sequestration in terms of section 103 of the Bankruptcy Act, and a new trustee should therefore be appointed to administer it for behoof of the creditors in that sequestration to the exclusion of all whose claims were subsequent— Gentles, November 22, 1870, 9 Macph. 176; Russell and Christie, January 15, 1867, 5 Macph. 282; Thomson, December 17, 1863, 2 Macph. 325.
Argued for the respondents—The creditors here were barred by their acquiescence for so long a period from now insisting in their claim. This was not the kind of estate intended to be carried by section 103. The sequestration was closed except against unexpected events— Barron v. Mitchell, July 8, 1881, 8 R. 933; Taylor v. Charteris and Andrew, November 1, 1879, 7 R. 128; Mein v. Turner, February 15, 1855, 17 D. 435; Christie v. Lowden, December 19, 1835, 14 S. 191.
At advising—
The petitioner does not explain how the bankrupt acquired this property, and we must of course assume, there being no allegation of fraud, that when the truster was discharged the whole estate then belonging to the bankrupt had been divided, and therefore that he started with nothing. The petitioner does not say how he came to be possessed of property having a reversionary value of £300, or farming implements worth £35, and we must therefore look to the respondent to tell us how the matter stands.
The respondent is trustee in the cessio awarded by the Sheriff, upon whom the petition was ordered to be served. He made inquiry into the facts of the case, just as the petitioner might have done, and had furnished us with an explicit statement; and in the absence of any other statement of how the bankrupt came to engage in business, the information supplied by the respondent must be taken as substantially accurate. It amounts to this, that after the discharge of his trustee the bankrupt set up as a farmer, and also traded as a horse-dealer and carter. In this way he made money, and acquired farm stock, and then with the proceeds of what he sold he purchased a piece of ground, upon which he built a house, which forms the heritable property, the balance being just the remainder of the proceeds of the farm stock.
The nature of the acquisition of the property having been thus established, the question is, whether the petitioner, who is one of the creditors in the old sequestration, is entitled to have a new trustee appointed in that sequestration, who would take this property for behoof of the former, and to the exclusion of all subsequent creditors.
No doubt the terms of section 103 of the Act of 1856 are very express, that “If any estate”—and the word estate is by the interpretation clause made to include anything that a man can possess or enjoy—“wherever situated, shall, after the date of the sequestration, and before the bankrupt has obtained his discharge, be acquired by him, or descend or revert or come to him, the same shall ipso jure fall under the sequestration, and the full right and interest accruing thereon to the bankrupt shall be held as transferred to and vested in the trustee.” …. In the present case the trustee has been discharged, but that did not prevent the application of this part of the statute, enacting that acquired estate shall ipso jure fall within the sequestration; for although in the statute there is no provision for the appointment of a new trustee, still we have held that the statute cannot be for that reason defeated, and that it is a mere casus improvisus. The right under the statute is unqualified, and the only necessity for an equitable jurisdiction is to supply the machinery for giving effect to it. The right conferred by section 103 is thus a strong one; circumstances, however, may occur to bar creditors from insisting in that right, and the question is whether the present case is not of that nature. In the case of Taylor v. Charteris and Andrew, one of the cases I suggested as operating so as to bar creditors from insisting was this, “No doubt, if, after his (the trustee's) discharge, the creditors showed no disposition to avail themselves of their rights, and had allowed the bankrupt to keep possession of the estate and deal with it as he pleased, there might in these circumstances, and by lapse of time, have been a bar to their title. So, again, it has been assumed in the decided cases on this matter that if the creditors allow the bankrupt to embark anew in trade, and to acquire a business stock on the footing that he is entitled to enter the market and trade as if sui juris, then they may not be entitled to prevent new creditors from ranking on the newly acquired estate.” Here the lapse of time is by no means immaterial. It is thirteen years since the trustee was discharged, and although it is not clear how soon the bankrupt started as a farmer and horse-dealer, we must take it to have been about the same time, for it is not said that the bankrupt had any means of
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Now, the creditors subsequent to that sequestration apply under the recent Act and get a decree of cessio against the bankrupt. I do not think in these circumstances that the old creditors are in a position now to say that the sequestration ought to be revived, so as to get hold of the debtor's estate to the exclusion of the other creditors. In this case I am of opinion that the principle upon which your Lordship observed in the case of Taylor v. Charteris and Andrew should be applied.
It is right to observe that the Act recognises that creditors may be barred, for the clause of the statute (sec. 103) provides that the trustee shall “present a petition setting forth the circumstance to the Lord Ordinary, who shall appoint intimation to be made in the Gazette, and require all concerned to appear within a certain time for their interest;” and then it goes on, “and after the expiration of such time, and no cause being shown to the contrary, the Lord Ordinary shall declare all right and interest in such estate which belongs to the bankrupt to be vested in the trustee.” That recognises the fact that there may be circumstances with reference to the conduct of the creditors which may render them not entitled to exercise their right.
The question remains, if in this case there is a bar to asking the appointment of a new trustee in this sequestration to administer this estate for behoof of the creditors to whom the bankrupt was indebted in 1863, to the exclusion of all who have become his creditors since, and who by giving him credit may have been the means of enabling him to acquire this property? The circumstances are that the sequestration was granted twenty years ago, that the trustee was discharged thirteen years ago, and that since then the bankrupt has been suffered to trade without interference. This being the position of matters, I think the creditors in the sequestration of 1863 are not entitled to revive it I am therefore of opinion that the petition should be refused.
The Court refused the petition.
Counsel for Petitioner— Watt. Agent— David Roberts, S.S.C.
Counsel for Respondent— Gloag— J. A. Reid. Agents— Ronald & Ritchie, S.S.C.