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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> M'Kinnon, Petitioner [1884] ScotLR 21_476 (8 March 1884) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1884/21SLR0476.html Cite as: [1884] SLR 21_476, [1884] ScotLR 21_476 |
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Page: 476↓
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A curator bonis proposed as cautioner a public company registered with limited liability under the Companies Acts and carrying on guarantee business. The Accountant of Court reported the company to be in a good financial position. Held (1) that such a company was a public company incorporated by Act of Parliament in the sense of the Pupils Protection Act, section 27, and that its bond might be accepted as caution for the petitioner, and (2) that apart from the Pupils Protection Act the Court had discretion to accept such security for its officer.
Lauchlan M'Kinnon junior, advocate, Aberdeen,
Page: 477↓
was upon 15th February 1876 appointed curator bonis to Mr Alexander Adam, papermaker, who had become insane. His cautioner as curator was John Manson of Fingask. Mr Manson having died, the present petition was presented by Mr M'Kinnon to have the new caution restricted to £5000, and further, craving the Court to authorise a bond or policy of the National Guarantee and Suretyship Association, Limited, to be accepted and taken instead of a bond of caution by a private individual. The petitioner stated that the value of the estate under his charge was £73,225, 4s., and that with the exception of about £2000 the whole was invested in heritable security under sixteen separate bonds and dispositions in security. The gross annual income was £2373, 18s. 10d.
The petitioner referred to the Pupils Protection Act of 1849, and especially to section 27, which provides—“It shall be lawful for the Court of Session or Court of Exchequer, as the case may be, to limit, upon cause shown, the caution to be found by factors and tutors and curators to a specified amount, and also to authorise, if they should deem it expedient, bonds or policies of the British Guarantee Association, or other public company incorporated by Act of Parliament or royal charter carrying on guarantee business within Scotland, to be accepted and taken instead of bonds of caution by private individuals.”
The petitioner stated that the extent of the estate made him unwilling to apply to any private friend to become his cautioner in the curatory, and that he desired to take advantage of the provisions of section 27 for the limitation in any event of the caution to be found; that the British Guarantee Association referred to in section 27 was, after the date of the enactment, amalgamated with an insurance company, and had ceased to grant bonds of suretyship, and that the company with which it was amalgamated did not now exist.
No answers were lodged.
The Lord Ordinary ( Kinnear) remitted the petition to the Accountant of Court, who reported:—“The National Guarantee and Suretyship Association (Limited), named by the petitioner, is not a company incorporated by Act of Parliament or royal charter, but is formed under the Limited Liability Acts. From the report of the directors presented to the twenty-first general meeting of the association, held on 18th July 1883, it appears that the capital of the company consists of 25,000 shares of £20 each, representing £500,000; that of this amount £2 per share has been paid up,
representing |
£50,000 |
0 |
0 |
while the reserve and other funds held by the company amounted to… |
40,114 |
1 |
10 |
making the assets |
£90,114 |
1 |
10 |
besides the uncalled capital of £450,000. The Accountant has no doubt that the company is in a good and safe financial position, and quite good for the amount of liability which the petitioner proposes should be undertaken by it.
An application very similar to the present was made to the Court in 1863, and reported on by the Accountant ( Sim, December 1863, 2 Macph. 205). The case was reported to the First Division by the Lord Ordinary (Barcaple), who was favourable to the application, but the Court remitted to his Lordship to refuse it, partly on the ground that the system of limited liability was then untried, and partly from doubts whether a company registered under the Companies Acts could be said to be incorporated under Act of Parliament in the sense of the Pupils Protection Act. Since then twenty years have elapsed, and the principle of limited liability has had a longer trial, but the other objection stated remains in the same position.
As to restricting the amount of caution to £5000, the Accountant would point out, that although this sum is about equal to about two years' revenue, yet the capital of the estate, which exceeds £70,000, is under the control of the factor, and can be intromitted with by him, so that the full amount of the estate has to be considered, and not only the revenue.
There are two points involved in the application— First, Whether it is competent for the Court to authorise acceptance of a bond of caution by such a company as the National Guarantee and Suretyship Association (Limited); and Second, If competent, whether a bond for £5000 is adequate in the circumstances of this case.
The first is a question for the decision of the Court; but if your Lordships rule that it is competent to sanction acceptance of such a bond as that offered, the Accountant is of opinion that there is no reason to doubt the financial position of the National Guarantee and Suretyship Association (Limited), or their responsibility for such an obligation as proposed.
On the second point, the Accountant is of opinion, that if caution be restricted to a limited sum, the amount should, having regard to the very large amount of the funds under the control of the factor, be fixed at a higher Sum than £5000.”
The Lord Ordinary reported the petition with the Accountant's report to the Inner House.
Note.—If the Lord Ordinary had thought it proper to dispose of this application, he would have been inclined to authorise the acceptance of the proposed bond. The Accountant of Court reports that the company is ‘in a good and safe financial position, and quite good for the amount of liability’ proposed to be undertaken. It appears from the report of the Accountant in the case of Newell Burnett ( 31 Scott. Jurist. 637), that the sufficiency of the cautioner is more readily ascertainable in the case of a company than in the case of a private person; and if this be so, the security of a company, with regard to which the Accountant is able to report in the terms quoted, would appear to the Lord Ordinary to be at least as satisfactory as that of an individual cautioner. The case of Sim, 2 Macph. 205, cannot be regarded as a conclusive authority to the contrary, both for the reasons indicated by the Accountant, and because in that case caution had been already found, and there was not thought to be sufficient reason for disturbing the existing arrangement. But having regard to the opinions expressed in that case, the Lord Ordinary thinks it right to report the application to the Court.
The Accountant points out that the amount proposed is insufficient, and the Lord Ordinary understands that the petitioner does not dissent from the Accountant's view, and is prepared to find caution for a larger sum.”
Page: 478↓
In terms of the Accountant's report, the petitioner expressed in the Inner House his readiness to obtain a bond from the association for £10,000.
It was argued for the petitioner that no technical objection arose from the terms of section 27 of the Pupils Protection Act, for the association suggested as cautioner was by its registration under the Companies Act a “public company incorporated by Act of Parliament.” The bond tendered was better in point of security than private caution, and the Court had a discretion apart altogether from the statute, to grant an application such as this if it was reasonable, and it was eminently so in the present case, for the sufficiency of the caution was apparent from the Accountant's report. The petitioner offered to procure a bond for £10,000 in place of £5000 as suggested in the petition.
Authorities—Cases cited by Lord Ordinary; and Saunders v. Saunders' Trustees, Nov. 7, 1879, 7 R. 157.
At advising—
The second question referred to us by the Lord Ordinary is, however, of much more importance, because our decision upon it will regulate the procedure in petitions of this class in the future.
If the present application falls to be dealt with by section 27 of the Pupils Protection Act, then I think all difficulty connected with it is at an end. That section provides— [His Lordship here read the section]. Now, it is clear that when that Act was passed the kind of question which we have here to deal with could not by any chance have arisen, because no statute had been passed providing for the incorporation of companies by means of registration. The mode of obtaining incorporation at that time was either by means of a private Act of Parliament or by a royal charter; and therefore we find the words “incorporated by Act of Parliament or royal charter” introduced into this section of the statute. But this has been changed by the recent legislation, and especially by the Companies Act of 1862, and the question for our consideration comes to be whether a company such as the “National Guarantee and Suretyship Association, Limited,” now proposed to us is not a “public company incorporated by Act of Parliament” within the meaning of section 27 of this statute. It cannot be said that a company is not incorporated by Act of Parliament because it has not a private Act all to itself, for it used to be common to include several companies under one Act. But now under the provisions of the Companies Act a joint-stock company by regulation secures incorporation, and thus becomes incorporated by Act of Parliament. I therefore think that there is authority under this 27th section of the Pupils Protection Act for granting the present application.
But I desire to add, that even if no such provision as I have referred to had existed, still I should have been inclined to hold that the present question was one for the discretion of the Court, whether in the interests of this estate it is not more desirable to substitute the security here offered to us for that of a private individual. Looking to the terms of the Accountant's report, there can be no doubt that the security offered by the petitioner is better than that of a private individual, and I am therefore prepared to accede to this part of the prayer of the petition.
It is also to be observed that we are not hampered by precedent in this matter. In the case which seems most unfavourable to the present application—the case of Sim—it must be kept in mind that at that time the whole matter of registered joint-stock companies and of limited liability was very new to the Court, and the Lord President put that circumstance forward as one of his reasons for refusing the petition. But since then the Court has had a very great deal of experience upon these matters, and, besides, the tendency at present seems to be to turn all concerns into limited liability companies; in that respect therefore I do not think that we are in the position in which the Court was in 1863. Nor does the case of Saunders in any way affect the present judgment. The language there used occurred in a trust-deed, and the question was whether the trustees were not precluded by the terms of that deed from investing the trust funds in any but a “chartered bank,” and we then found that the term “chartered bank” applied only to the three banks in Scotland incorporated by statute or by royal charter.
On the whole matter, I am prepared to accede to the present application and to accept the caution offered.
As your Lordship has shown, at the time when this statute was passed, incorporation by registration was impossible; but if a public Act is passed like the Companies Act of 1862, superseding incorporation by private Act or royal charter, then I think that it is only a fair construction of that Act to hold that a company incorporated under it by registration is a public company incorporated by Act of Parliament.
Page: 479↓
The Court pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“On the report of the Junior Lord Ordinary, having heard counsel, remit to his Lord—ship to grant the prayer of the petition to the effect of accepting as sufficient caution a bond or policy of the National Guarantee and Suretyship Association (Limited) for £10,000.”
Counsel for Petitioner—Sol.-Gen. Asher, Q.C.— Begg. Agents— Morton, Neilson, & Smart, W.S.