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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Lawrie v. Pearson [1888] ScotLR 26_37 (3 November 1888)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1888/26SLR0037.html
Cite as: [1888] ScotLR 26_37, [1888] SLR 26_37

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 37

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Saturday, November 3. 1888.

[ Lord Fraser, Ordinary.

26 SLR 37

Lawrie

v.

Pearson.

Subject_1Process
Subject_2Expenses
Subject_3Caution
Subject_4Insolvent Defender.
Facts:

In an action of accounting by a beneficiary under a trust against the trustee, it transpired that the defender had executed a trust-deed for behoof of his creditors. Intimation of the action was made to the defender's trustee, who declined to sist himself. Held ( rev. Lord Fraser) that the defender was entitled to litigate the question without finding caution for expenses.

Headnote:

This was an action of count, reckoning, and payment at the instance of Mrs Emily M'Guire or Lawrie, 4 Gilchrist's Entry, Greenside Row, Edinburgh, against David Pearson, solicitor, Kirkcaldy, the sole surviving trustee and executor under the trust-disposition and settlement of the deceased Andrew Greig and his spouse, the maternal grandparents of the pursuer.

The pursuer, who was a beneficiary under the trust, alleged, inter alia, that the defender was personally liable for loss occasioned to the trust-estate by investment of the trust funds upon unrealisable securities.

The defender denied this averment, and alleged that he had already accounted to the pursuer, and was not now indebted to her.

After the date of the action the pursuer ascertained that the defender had executed a trust-deed

Page: 38

for behoof of his creditors, and she added the following plea-in-law-“(1) The defender being insolvent, and having divested himself of his whole estates, is not entitled to defend this action without finding caution for expenses.”

The Lord Ordinary ( Fraser) pronounced the following interlocutors:—

16th May 1888.—In respect it is stated that the defender has executed a trust-deed in favour of Honeyman, writer, Kirkcaldy, appoints intimation of the dependence of the action, with a copy of this interlocutor, to be made to Mr Honeyman, and allows him, if so advised, to appear for his interest within eight days after intimation.”

6th July 1888.—In respect the defender has divested himself of his whole estates for behoof of his creditors, and of the failure of the trustee on the defender's said estates to sist himself for his interest, appoints the defender to find caution for expenses within ten days.”

19th July 1888.—In respect the defender has failed to find caution for the expenses of process as ordered by the interlocutor of 6th July current, on the motion of the pursuer, and in respect the pursuer restricts her claim under the alternative conclusions of the summons to the sum of £250 (said sum being exclusive of and in addition to the sums which the defender has already transferred to the pursuer in the course of the process), decerns against the defender for payment to the pursuer of the sum of £250 under the said alternative conclusion of the summons, reserving to the pursuer her right in and against the various funds in which the trust-estate under the defender's charge is or may be invested, and decerns: Finds the pursuer entitled to expenses,” &c.

The defender reclaimed, and argued—Caution for expenses by a bankrupt was a question of discretion for the Court, and was readily dispensed with where the bankrupt is defender. A bankrupt might defend without caution where the subject of litigation was a right which did not pass to the trustee— Taylor v. Fairlie's Trustees, 1830, 8 S. 666— rev. H. of L., 1833, 6 W. & S. 301; Goudy on Bankruptcy, 355. The defender was solvent.

Argued for the respondent—The action was raised before the pursuer was aware of the trust-deed. As the defender was divested of his property, and the pursuer could not arrest it, he must find caution for expenses— Stevenson v. Lee, June 4, 1886, 13 R. 913. This was a matter for the discretion of the Court— Thom v. Andrew, June 26, 1888, 25 S. L. R. 595.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Young—I cannot avoid coming to the conclusion that the Lord Ordinary has fallen into error in the view he has taken of this case. It is an action of count, reckoning, and payment against Mr Pearson, a solicitor in Kirkcaldy, as trustee under the testamentary trust of Mr and Mrs Greig. Mr Pearson defends the action, and he says that he has already sufficiently accounted, and that he is not indebted to the pursuer; and we have been informed that the real question in this accounting turns upon the point whether the defender is personally liable for having made certain investments of trust money on heritable securities which have turned out badly. Before this action was raised, but, as we were informed very properly by Mr M'Lennan, without the knowledge of the pursuer, Mr Pearson had executed a voluntary trust-deed with a view to the judicious management of his affairs and payment of his debts. The pursuer now puts in a plea that as the defender is insolvent, and has divested himself of his whole estate, he is not entitled to defend the action without finding caution. On this plea being brought under his notice, the Lord Ordinary ordered intimation to be made to the trustee, and as the trustee declined—and very properly declined—to have anything to do with the case, the Lord Ordinary pronounced the interlocutor ordering the pursuer to find caution for expenses. It was here, I think, the Lord Ordinary was in error. In my opinion Mr Pearson is absolutely entitled to defend himself without finding caution. The trust is a voluntary trust, although it would not have affected my opinion if this had been a trust on a bankrupt estate. No trust-estate in which the defender acted as trustee and executor would have been affected by his sequestration any more than by his voluntary trust; it would have remained in his hands, and he would have been responsible to the beneficiaries for it, and neither the trustee upon a voluntary trust executed by him nor the trustee in his sequestration could with any propriety have interfered. I therefore think that the Lord Ordinary's view was erroneous, and I would propose to your Lordship that we should recal the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor appointing the pursuer to find caution, and also the subsequent interlocutor decerning him to pay £250, and remit the case to the Lord Ordinary to proceed.

Lord Lee—There are two questions to be considered in a case like the present. The first is, whether the defender has so completely divested himself of his estate as to have no title to defend the action? But the question of his title to defend the action is not raised in this case, but only the question whether he should find caution before he can be allowed to do so. There may certainly be cases in which the defender might be called upon to find caution, but the general rule as to caution which applies to pursuers in actions does not apply to the case of defenders. There is no better illustration of this than the well known case of Stephen v. Skinner, May 31, 1860, 22 D. 1122, where Stephen was seeking to suspend a charge. In the present case no ground has been shown to us why the defender should be made to find caution as a condition of defending the action.

Lord Justice-Clerk—I quite agree in the judgment of your Lordships, and only wish to add that if this doctrine of making the defender in an action find caution be carried to its legitimate limit it would amount to intolerable hardship. If we were to affirm that principle it would amount to this, that where an action of any kind is brought against a bankrupt or person under a voluntary trust, he would be compelled to find caution or else submit to decree being given against him for any amount that might be asked. I therefore concur in the judgment proposed.

Lord Rutherfurd Clark was absent.

Page: 39

Tho Court pronounced the following interlocutor:—

“The Lords having heard counsel for the parties on the reclaiming-note for the defender against Lord Fraser's interlocutor of 19th July last, Recal the said interlocutor, and the previous interlocutor of 6th July 1888: Repel the first plea-in-law for the pursuer: Find the defender entitled to expenses from the date of the interlocutor reclaimed against: Remit to the Auditor to tax the same and to report, authorise the Lord Ordinary to decern for the taxed amount thereof, and remit the cause to his Lordship accordingly, and to proceed otherwise as accords.”

Counsel:

Counsel for the Defender (Reclaimer)— J. A. Reid—Macdonald. Agent— W. G. L. Winchester, W.S.

Counsel for the Pursuer (Respondent)— M'Lennan. Agent— Robert Broatch, Solicitor.

1888


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