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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dumbarton Waterworks Commissioners v. Lord Blantyre [1884] ScotLR 22_80 (12 November 1884) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1884/22SLR0080.html Cite as: [1884] ScotLR 22_80, [1884] SLR 22_80 |
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Page: 80↓
[Bill Chamber.
Statutory commissioners authorised to take certain land for the purposes of their works, served a notice on the proprietor that they intended to take certain portions of land belonging to him, and required particulars of his interest. He having served a claim, arbiters were appointed by both parties; but thereafter, on the ground that the claim made by the proprietor appeared to include claims for compensation which were excluded under their private Act, the commissioners sought interdict against the arbitration being proceeded with. The Court refused interdict on the ground that it was not desirable to interfere unless it was perfectly clear that under the Act the claims in question were excluded.
Page: 81↓
In 1883 a bill was promoted in Parliament called the “Dumbarton Waterworks, Streets, and Buildings Bill,” one of the purposes of which was to draw water from Loch Humphrey and Loch Fyn, and to increase thereby the water supply of the Burgh of Dumbarton. The bill passed, and the Act received the royal assent in August 1883. A portion of Loch Humphrey and of Loch Fyn belonged to Lord Blantyre, who had opposed the bill, and in consequence of whose opposition the amount of compensation water to be provided by the Commissioners had been largely increased. Sections 9 and 10 of the Act provided (section 9) that the “Water Commissioners shall, as soon as the waterworks authorised by this Act are completed so far as to be able to afford the supply of compensation water hereinafter mentioned, cause to be discharged from the reservoir by this Act authorised down the stream called Loch Humphrey Burn, a regular and continuous flow of not less than 320,000 gallons in every day (Sundays excepted) of twenty-four hours; and if the Water Commissioners shall commence and continue to discharge from and out of the said reservoir the due quantity of water in manner aforesaid the same shall be deemed to be compensation to millowners and other persons interested in the waters flowing down the said stream called Loch Humphrey Burn, and the stream called Duntocher Burn, for the water intercepted and appropriated for the purposes of this Act.” (Section 10) “Nothing in this Act contained shall be held to prejudice or affect the rights (if any) of the Right Honourable Charles Stuart Lord Blantyre in the loch known as Loch Humphrey, or to prevent him from claiming from the Water Commissioners compensation for any such rights which shall be injuriously affected by anything done by the Water Commissioners under or for the purposes of this Act.”
The Commissioners under the Act in June 1884 served a notice in pursuance of the provisions of their Act, and of the Lands Clauses Consolidation (Scotland Act) 1845, and the Lands Clauses Consolidation (Scotland) Acts Amendment Act 1860, upon Lord Blantyre, intimating that they were, by the first mentioned Act, authorised to purchase and take certain land or property belonging to him lying in the parish of Old or West Kilpatrick, in the county of Dumbarton, and requiring from him the particulars of his interest in the said land, and a statement of his claim for compensation therefor.
Lord Blantyre upon 3d July 1884 served upon the said Commissioners a statement and claim, in which, in addition to a reservation of various powers and privileges, he claimed a money compensation of £7000.
The Commissioners by notice of 24th July 1884 intimated to Lord Blantyre that they did not admit his claim, and that thus a question of disputed compensation arose between them, and under reservation of all their legal rights and remedies they appointed James Barr as their arbiter to determine the question of disputed compensation, and they called upon Lord Blantyre either to accept the said James Barr as sole arbiter or to appoint some other person to act for him. Lord Blantyre appointed Thomas Buchan, land valuator, Dundee, as arbiter for him in the premises.
The arbiters thus named appointed Sheriff Crichton as oversman.
The arbiters upon 22d August 1884 appointed Lord Blantyre to lodge a statement of his claim within eight days, and the Commissioners within eight days thereafter to answer the same.
While matters were in this position the Commissioners upon 25th August 1884 presented a note of suspension and interdict praying that Lord Blantyre might be interdicted from prosecuting his statement and claim of 3d July, above referred to, and further, that Messrs Barr and Buchan, the arbiters, should be interdicted from acting as arbiters and from issuing any interlocutor or award in the arbitration.
The complainers pleaded, inter alia, that as their operations did not affect Loch Humphrey, Lord Blantyre was not entitled to claim compensation in respect thereof. They also pleaded that Lord Blantyre's rights as riparian proprietor on Loch Humphrey Burn having been compensated by the private Act he was not entitled to compensation therefor; and (4) “the statement and claim of the said respondent including matters in respect of which he has no right of compensation, and being irrelevant and wanting in specification, and therefore invalid, the complainers are entitled to interdict.”
The respondent pleaded (1) that the complainers having by their notice initiated the proceedings complained of, and by their subsequent nomination of an arbiter acquiesced in them, were thus barred from insisting in this application; and (2) that as the question of compensation had been properly referred to arbiters and an oversman, and the arbitration being then in dependence, the application for interdict was incompetent.
The Lord Ordinary on the Bills ( Lord Kinnear) refused the note.
“ Note.—The complainers themselves have instituted the proceedings which they now seek to interdict. They had served a notice upon the respondent, under the Lands Clauses Act, that they were to take certain lands belonging to him, or in which he was interested, and required him to state the particulars of his interest and claims; and he having accordingly served upon them a statement and claim, they gave notice, in terms of the statute, that his claim was not admitted, that a question of disputed compensation had thus arisen, that they had nominated an arbiter, and called upon him either to concur in the nomination or to appoint some other person to act as arbiter along with their nominee.
The respondent has named an arbiter, and the arbiters so nominated have appointed him to lodge a statement of his claim, and the complainers to answer it. The complaint is that the original claim, which is said to be too vague to be submitted to arbitration, appears to include claims which under the statute Lord Blantyre is not entitled to make. But it was explained at the discussion in the Bill Chamber that the object of the application was to obtain the judgment of the Court upon the construction of the ninth and tenth clauses of the complainers' Act, by which they maintain that any claim by Lord Blantyre for compensation in money for injury to his rights as a riparian proprietor in certain streams has been excluded. It may be that this is a question as to which the decision
Page: 82↓
of the arbiters, if they find it necessary to decide it, will not be final. But the possibility that such a question may be raised appears to me to be no reason for stopping proceedings which have been duly instituted at the instance of the complainers themselves, or for withdrawing from the arbiters the consideration of questions which are competently before them.” The complainers reclaimed; argued for them that the case was one for the interdict craved. The authority of the case of The Glasgow and South-Western Railway Company v. Caledonian Railway Company, Nov. 3, 1871, 44 Scot. Jurist, 29, was entirely in point. The arbiters could not be compelled to split up their award into items; they would probably return their award of damages in the slump, and thus all objections to particular items would be precluded.
Argued for the respondent—This objection came too late; the proceedings now complained of were instituted by the Commissioners themselves, and they could not now be heard to object to them. The real object of this proceeding was to get a direction from the Court for the benefit of the oversman as to certain sections of the Commissioners' Act of 1883. Where a claim contained certain items untenable in law the Court would interdict the arbiter from considering them, but that must be quite clear before any interference by the Court would be made. While this Act certainly contemplated compensation in water, circumstances might arise in which a money compensation might also be demanded, such as (1) before the reservoirs were constructed, (2) if from any cause the water was cut off after the works had been completed.
Authorities— Caledonian Railway v. Walkers Trustees, December 2, 1879, 17 Scot. Law Rep. 192; Lord Blantyre v. The Clyde Trustees, June 6, 1883, 10 R. 910.
The complainers in the Inner House restricted the prayer of the note, and craved that the respondent be interdicted from prosecuting his claim only in so far as it imported a claim for money compensation.
At advising—
Now, if it could be made plain here that the arbiter is called upon to exercise a power which he does not possess, then this remedy of interdict would be competent and expedient, but it must always depend on the nature of the ease and upon whether the anticipated excess of power is made clear to the Court either upon the face of the statute or whatever it may depend on. The excess of power must, however, be clear, and the question comes to be whether that is the case here. Now, I confess I do not see that this is by any means so clear a point as has been represented to us on the part of the reclaimer; on the contrary, questions may arise under sections 9 and 10 which may depend for their solution not upon the words of the statute but upon surrounding circumstances. I do not see therefore that we can interfere with the action of the arbiter to prevent him entertaining a claim which we are not now in a position to determine. It is quite obvious that this is just one of those cases in which an arbiter of experience will make his findings of damages not in the slump but by items, and the party now seeking to restrain the arbiter will have an opportunity hereafter if he desires it of challenging the competency of these findings under the separate heads. I do not see therefore that any sufficient ground has been stated to warrant us in interrupting the proceedings in this arbitration.
Page: 83↓
The Court adhered.
Counsel for Complainers— J. P. B. Robertson— W. C. Smith. Agents— Murray, Beith, & Murray, W.S.
Counsel for Respondents— Mackintosh— Dun— Das. Agents— Dundas & Wilson, C.S.