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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Cameron and Others v. The Duke of Argyll [1888] ScotLR 26_96 (24 November 1888)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1888/26SLR0096.html
Cite as: [1888] SLR 26_96, [1888] ScotLR 26_96

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 96

Court of Session.

[Sheriff of Argyllshire.

Saturday, November 24. 1888.

26 SLR 96

Cameron and Others

v.

The Duke of Argyll.

Subject_1Crofter
Subject_2Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886 (49 and 50 Vict. cap. 29), secs. 25 and 28
Subject_3Order of Commissioners
Subject_4Finality — Sheriff — Appeal — Competency.
Facts:

The Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886, sec. 25, provides—“The decision of the Crofters Commissioners in regard to any of the matters committed to their determination by this Act shall be final.” Section 28 provides—“Any order of the Crofters Commission … may be presented to the Sheriff, and the Sheriff if satisfied that the order has been made in conformity with the provisions of this Act and has been duly recorded, may pronounce decree in conformity with such order on which execution and diligence shall proceed.”

Certain crofters in the island of Tiree presented an application to the Crofters Commission praying the Commissioners to fix fair rents to be paid by them and to deal with the question of arrears. The Commissioners pronounced an order, which was recorded in the Crofters Holdings Book for the county of Argyll. The Duke of Argyll, as landlord, presented a petition to the Sheriff praying the Court to interpone authority to said order, and to pronounce decree in conformity therewith. Held that the decision of the Commissioners being final, and the Sheriff having satisfied himself that their order was in statutory form, and having pronounced decree, an appeal thereagainst was incompetent.

Headnote:

The Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886, sec. 25, provides—“The decision of the Crofters Commissioners in regard to any of the matters committed to their determination by this Act shall be final.” Section 28 provides—“Any order of the Crofters Commissioners … may be presented to the Sheriff, and the Sheriff if satisfied that the order has been made in conformity with the provisions of this Act and has been duly recorded, may pronounce decree in conformity with such order on which execution and diligence may proceed.”

Archibald Cameron and others, crofters in the island of Tiree, presented an application in December 1886 to the Crofters Commission in terms of the Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886, praying the Commission to fix the fair rent

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to be thereafter paid by them for their holdings, and dealing with arrears.

After sundry procedure the said Commissioners in October 1887 pronounced an order which was duly recorded in the Crofters Holding Book for the county of Argyll at Tobermory. The schedule appended to the order set out—(1) The total amount of arrears due by the applicants; (2) the amount cancelled; (3) the amount ordered to be paid; (4) the number of instalments; (5) the amount of each instalment and the dates when payable.

In June 1888 the Duke of Argyll presented a petition in the Sheriff Court of Argyllshire at Oban, against the said Archibald Cameron and others, and prayed the Court to interpone authority thereto, and to pronounce decree in conformity therewith. He pleaded that he was entitled to decree as craved in terms of the Crofters Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886, sec. 28, with expenses.

On 27th July 1888 the Sheriff-Substitute ( MacLachlan) refused the motion for the pursuer that the cause should be tried summarily, continued the cause until the first vacation court, and allowed the defender to lodge defences within that time.

Note.—The pursuer contended that parties should be heard summarily, but as the Crofters Holdings Act makes no provision for summary procedure in applications such as the present, the Sheriff-Substitute was obliged to refuse the pursuer's motion as incompetent. It is also to be noticed that the warrant for service obtained on the pursuer's application is in the ordinary form, and not in the form provided by section 52 of the Sheriff Courts Act 1876 for having causes disposed of summarily.”

The pursuer appealed to the Sheriff ( Forbes Irvine) who on 22nd September 1888 sustained the appeal, interponed authority to the said order, and granted decree in terms thereof.

Note.—The Crofters Commission not being a court of record, their orders can be enforced only through the interposition of a court of law. The Act therefore provides, by section 28, that ‘any order of the Crofters Commission or two of their number acting as hereinbefore provided may be presented to the Sheriff, and the Sheriff, if satisfied that the order has been made in conformity with the provisions of this Act, and has been duly recorded, may pronounce decree in conformity with such order on which execution and diligence shall proceed.’ The statute does not set out any precise form in which this and similar applications may be made, but it may be remarked that soon after its passing it was ably analysed and annotated by Mr C. N. Johnstone, advocate, who added a set of suggested forms, many of which have not been superseded by the official forms issued by the Commission (Rankine on Leases, p. 513, note 1). The application by the pursuer in the present case is substantially in terms of one of these forms (No. 8, p. 60).

Neither does the Act point out any particular mode of inquiry by which the Sheriff before pronouncing this ‘decree conform’ is to satisfy himself that the order of the Commissioners, or the decision of a single arbiter mutually chosen (section 30), is in conformity with the statutory provisions. It would, indeed, seem that this important matter is left pretty much to the discretion of the Judge, subject always, as his decision is, to the review of the higher Court. In the present case, however, owing to the form which the cause took in the first instance the Sheriff has had the advantage of the able pleadings of the parties on the question at issue.

“It is indeed true that the Act does not say in set terms that the proceedings under it are to be summary, but this would seem to be in conformity with the general tone and tenor of the statute. By section 25 the decision of the Crofters Commission is final. The pursuer has here produced an order by the Commissioners, with a certificate thereon that the same has been recorded in the book kept for that purpose by the Sheriff Clerk in terms of section 27 of the Act, and it does not appear to be contemplated that a formal record should be made up, with its necessary delay and eventual cost; it indeed seems difficult to conceive a case where it is more for the interest of all parties that the question at issue between them should have an early settlement.”

The defenders appealed to the Court of Session, and argued that they were entitled to lodge defences, as the Act nowhere said that the procedure under it was to be summary.

The respondent argued that the appeal was incompetent. Sec. 25 of the Act declared that the decision of the Commissioners was to be final. The Sheriff had pronounced decree in terms of sec. 28, and there was nothing to appeal from. The proceedings were summary— Bone v. School Board of Sorn, March 16, 1886, 13 R. 768.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—I think this appeal incompetent, and the subject-matter of it is such that we cannot entertain it or look at it at all. The 25th section of the Crofters Act provides that a decision under the Crofters Commission in regard to any matters committed to their determination by that Act shall be final. Now, that clause of itself creates a finality at a very early stage of the proceedings. The determination of the Crofters Commission is to be final; there is not an appeal against it, but there is a process of registering that determination in the Sheriff Court books as provided by the 27th section. The 28th section of the Act provides that any order of the Crofters Commission or two of their number acting as therein provided may be presented to the Sheriff, and the Sheriff, if satisfied that the order has been made in terms of the Act, and has been duly recorded, may pronounce decree in conformity with such order, on which execution and diligence shall proceed. The object of the Crofters Act is plainly that the order of the Commission may be enforced by the ordinary diligence of the law where necessary. It is not imperative that the order of the Crofters Commission should be presented to the Sheriff, it is only declared that it “may be presented to the Sheriff.” As I understand the 28th section, the only object of presenting an order to the Sheriff is to make it the foundation of a diligence. Now, what is the Sheriff to do when the order is presented? He is to pronounce decree conform to it, but he is to satisfy himself at the same time that the order has been made in conformity with the provisions of the Act. But I do not understand these words to import that the Sheriff is to

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have a process before him, or that he is to hear parties, but that he is to read the order for himself and see that it is in the statutory form, and then pronounce decree. Now, the notion of there being an appeal to this Court against the decree in conformity with the Act is quite out of the question. Never was there such a thing heard of. The sole object of a decree conform to the Act is to make the order a basis for a diligence. If anything has gone wrong in the course of the proceedings, either before the Crofters Comission or in the deliverance of the Sheriff in pronouncing the decree as conform to the Act, of course that may be set aside in the ordinary way by suspension or reduction, but certainly it is not intended by the statute that there should be a process in the Sheriff Court. And there being no process in the Sheriff Court, there can be no judgment of the Sheriff which can form the subject of an appeal.

Lord Mure, Lord Shand, and Lord Adam concurred.

The Court dismissed the appeal as incompetent.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Appellant— Watt. Agents— Clark & Macdonald, S.S.C.

Counsel for the Respondent— Mackay—H. Johnston. Agents— Lindsay, Howe, & Company, W.S.

1888


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