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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Gibson & Co. v. Anderson & Co. [1897] ScotLR 34_435 (23 February 1897) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1897/34SLR0435.html Cite as: [1897] ScotLR 34_435, [1897] SLR 34_435 |
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Page: 435↓
[Lord President and a Jury.
In an action of damages against a defender for having, in breach of an agreement to withdraw certain proceedings in the Debts Recovery Court, taken decree in absence there against the pursuer, held relevant to lead evidence of damage sustained through the publication of the decree in the “Black List,” such publication being proved to be the natural and inevitable consequence of decree having been taken.
Davies & Company v. Brown & Lyell, June 8, 1867, 5 Macph. 842, distinguished.
Circumstances in which the Court refused to grant a new trial on the ground of excessive damages, where the jury had awarded £300 to the pursuer of an action founded on breach of an agreement to stop proceedings in the Debts Recovery Court.
As a result of a long series of transactions between the two firms, Gibson & Company, retail chemists, Edinburgh, were due to Anderson & Company, wholesale chemists, Edinburgh, on 5th November 1895, a sum of £43, 14s. 6d., and on that day a Debts Recovery summons was served by the latter upon the former firm.
Mr Gibson, the sole partner of the firm of Gibson & Company, was absent on the Continent at the time, and on Wednesday, 6th November, his manager Mr Gordon, called upon Mr Anderson, the sole partner of the firm of Anderson & Company, with reference to the summons. It was ultimately agreed between them that if Mr Gordon would pay down £25 in cash, Mr Anderson would undertake to see that all legal proceedings were stopped. Mr Gordon, accordingly, on Friday the 8th, sent Mr Anderson £25 in cash, for which a receipt was duly given.
Anderson & Company wrote to their law-agent to stop proceedings, and posted the letter before 2˙45 p.m. on Saturday the 9th. The law-agent had no time to open all his letters before the Court met on Monday the 11th, and did not open Anderson & Company's letter until after his return from the Court. Decree in absence consequently passed against Gibson & Company for £18, 4s. 6d., being the balance of the amount due by them.
Shortly afterwards the name of Gibson & Company appeared in the list of persons against whom decree in absence had been taken, in the Scottish Gazette, a periodical which existed for the purpose of publishing such a “black list.”
In these circumstances Gibson & Company raised an action against Anderson & Company, concluding for payment of £500 as damages for breach of agreement.
The pursuers averred—“To the trader it is of the utmost importance that his name should hot appear in a published list of defaulting debtors. In consequence of defenders' said breach of agreement, by moving for and obtaining decree in absence against the pursuers, and of the wide publication of the fact by the appearance of their name in the “Black List” and other lists of a similar character, which have a most extensive circulation in the country, the pursuers have sustained very serious loss and damage. Their credit has been seriously shaken, and their reputation as a mercantile firm has been irreparably injured. The defenders are liable to the pursuers for all loss, injury, and damage which has resulted to them by and through the wrongous, unwarrantable, and illegal proceedings taken by them, in breach of the foresaid agreement. The said loss, injury, and damage is moderately estimated at the sum sued for; but though the defenders have been asked to make compensation to the pursuers, they have refused, or at least they delay, to do so, and the present action has therefore been rendered necessary.”
The defenders averred, inter alia, that the pursuers had suffered no damage.
An issue having been adjusted, the case went to trial before the Lord President and a jury on 11th January.
Mr J. A. Gibson, sole partner of the pursuer's firm, deponed at the trial that the publication of the firm's name in the “black list” had been followed by an immediate rush of creditors; that he had been compelled to get an overdraft from the bank and to get security from his
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father for it; and that wholesale houses at once became suspicious of him and refused to deal with him, or at all events to give him the same terms as formerly. In particular, he deponed that he had lost £15 by the falling-through of a contract for soap with the firm of Bergmann of Leipsic. He also instanced Raimes, Clark, & Company, Honeyman & Wilson, Melrose, Drover, & Company, Bovril, Limited, and Schultz & Company, as firms which had either ceased to deaf with him or refused to give him credit since the publication of his firm's name in the “black list.” Representatives of these and other wholesale firms corroborated Mr Gibson's evidence on that point, and deponed that the effect of the publication of his name in the “black list” would be highly prejudicial to a trader's business. A traveller for Bergmann & Company corroborated Mr Gibson's evidence with regard to the soap transaction. A bank-agent deponed to the sudden pressure brought upon Mr Gibson's business in November 1895.
These witnesses, with two exceptions, deponed to having “heard” or having been “told” of the appearance of the pursuers' name in the “black list”; but Richard Clark, of the firm of Raimes, Clark, & Company, and James Hinton Robertson, manager for Bovril, Limited, deponed to having themselves seen the decree in the “black list.” It was further proved that all decrees in absence in the Debts Recovery Court were regularly published in the “black list.”
At the beginning of Mr Gibson's examination, on the point of his credit with wholesale firms having been impaired, counsel for the defenders objected to the evidence on the ground that such damage was a consequence of the publication of the decree in the “black list.”
The objection was repelled.
The jury returned a verdict for the pursuers and assessed the damages at £300. They further stated “that it makes no difference in their finding whether the evidence of the witnesses Richard Clark and James Hinton Robertson is taken into consideration or not.”
The Court having granted a rule to show cause why the verdict should not be set aside and a new trial granted, and the defenders having explained at the bar that they sought to set aside the verdict on the ground of excessive damages only—
Argued for the pursuers — The jury's award of damages ought not to be disturbed. There was ample evidence to support it. The case of Davies & Company v. Brown & Lyell, June 8, 1867, 5 Macph. 842, which the defenders relied on, was distinguished from the present case by the circumstance that there was no breach of contract there. Further, the opinions there expressed as to damages resulting from publication in a “black list,” besides being obiter, were expressed, not after the case had been tried and the facts proved, but upon adjustment of issues. Breach of contract had been proved here, and consequential damage might properly be taken into account by the jury—Chitty on Contracts, p. 750.— MacRobbie v. M'Lellan's Trustees, January 31, 1891, 18 R. 470, also referred to.
Argued for the defenders—The damages were excessive. The pursuers were bound to prove that any damage they might have suffered could be traced to sources of information other than the black list. Davies, ut sup., was express authority for the proposition that the defenders were only liable for the consequences of this decree in absence having been pronounced in and appearing in the records of the Sheriff Court. The pursuers had failed to prove loss of custom or any really substantial damage.
Lord President—The ground of action in this case is that whereas it had been agreed with the pursuers that the defenders should not proceed and take a decree in an action in the Debts Recovery Court in Edinburgh, yet, in breach of that agreement, they went on and took a decree out, to the loss, injury, and damage of the pursuers.
Now, two questions have been argued to us. The first is as to whether, in support of a case of damages on this head, the pursuers were not limited to the injury arising from the persons present in Court, or inspecting the records of the Sheriff Court, learning of the decree having been taken. I put the question in that form, because I think that that is really the logical extent to which Mr Jameson's argument carries him. He has maintained, on the authority of the case of Davies, that a person taking a decree in breach of an agreement is not liable for the larger amount of damage which may ensue, because, through the publication of certain lists of decrees in absence, a larger public is reached than that which frequents the Sheriff Court or inspects the records of the Sheriff Court. Now, I shall consider this question, first of all, apart from the case of Davies altogether. I suppose it is sound doctrine that when a man is sued for breach of an agreement he is liable in the natural and ordinary consequences of that breach; and accordingly, the question would naturally occur, if a decree is taken in the Debts Recovery Court, what is the ordinary and natural consequence so far as regards the degree of publicity which the fact obtains? Now, it was thought at the trial by the pursuers, and I think quite properly, that it was well that he should lay a foundation of fact on this question, and he asked the Sheriff-Clerk-Depute, as the functionary who had knowledge of the degree of publicity obtained by such decrees, and Mr Kerr says—“Decrees in absence of the Debts Recovery Court are invariably published. That follows as a matter of course.” And Mr Anderson of the defenders’ firm says very frankly—“I am aware that it is the custom to publish decrees in absence in such papers as the Scottish Gazette. If decree in absence were taken against a trader, publication in these papers would be the natural result.” It could not, I
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Now, I leave to others to comment on the decision, which is supposed, doubtless erroneously, to tend to exclude what apart from authority would seem prima facie to be very good evidence. It is scarcely to be supposed that if the question had been presented to the Court on proved facts such as I have adverted to, the Court would have rejected evidence which clearly showed that the degree of publicity actually obtained was the natural and foreseen consequence of a breach of agreement such as this. I may mention merely by way of explanation of what took place at the trial, that, feeling there was apparent plausibility in the argument of the defenders founded on that case, I thought it well that the jury should separate the damage which they considered to arise from the knowledge of this fact of the decree in absence having reached certain persons through these newspapers from the general evidence where there is no such tracing of the information to that particular class of newspapers; but it turned out that the jury did not think—there were only two gentlemen whose names were suggested—that the figure of the damages would be altered supposing these gentlemen had never heard of the decree at all.
Now, I pass from that special question to the more general question argued by Mr Jameson that the verdict for £300 is unconscionable or exorbitant and excessive; and I may say that if I had sat in the jury box at the trial, I might not have given so much as £300; but I mention that, not by way of placing my judgment against that of the jury, but merely as an observation of a hearer of the evidence at the time. It is rather difficult to assess the damages in a case of this kind, because there are various elements of a more or less delicate character to be considered. The facts of this case are not very complicated, but a brief narrative of them may suggest these difficulties. Unquestionably, when this decree was taken, the first result was to paralyse the business of the pursuer. Everybody came down upon him, demanding their due, and everybody raised his terms—I mean among the wholesale dealers—if further supplies were asked. I think the pursuer, to a large extent through his own exertions and still more through the business capacity of his subordinate, was lucky in getting over the pinch of the difficulty; but that cannot disentitle him to such damage as he proves in a competent way. Now, the heads of damage under which his claim fell, so far as supported by evidence, seemed to me to be these. First of all, certain wholesale traders left him altogether—their travellers never called again. Honeyman & Wilson were representative of that class. Other people said “We will not carry on transactions with you on the liberal terms hitherto given. He had to pay cash or higher prices. Again he says—“I lost customers.” To that Mr Jameson, rather rashly I think, says—“No, you did not, because you got a lot more customers.” But the two things are quite consistent, and there was evidence, on which the jury were entitled to go, that the pursuer did lose some customers, though the volume of business, taken as a whole, subsequently increased. But there is another element, substantial though incapable of exact measurement. He had been apparently indulgently treated by some of his wholesale people, but from this time they, as they put it, put him under supervision. That means that he got less liberal treatment, and he was more liable to be pulled up suddenly than before. Then, again, he had to go to friends—his servant actually produced a small sum of money—to keep the thing going. He had to go to his father—and it will not do to say these are not exhaustions of resources which injure a man. If he had been let alone his father would have been fresh and untried if another reverse had come—and so would his servant. I mention these things to show that it is not quite so easy a one-two-three calculation as Mr Jameson represented it to be, and accordingly I think the jury were entitled to proceed, not founding on actually proved figures, but estimated. Another case more palpable was where a German firm represented by Mr Brager refused to accept an order that would have been very advantageous, though not a very large one, to the pursuer. I have specified these things, not by way of furnishing an exhaustive collection that will work out £300, for I confess my sum would have been a somewhat smaller one; but your Lordships I understand in practice do not set aside a verdict merely because you think, or because the presiding judge thinks, that £200 might have been more like it than £300, and I must, speaking as I am bound to do, frankly say that I think a verdict for £200 would have been completely unassailable.
Page: 438↓
In support of his argument the defender founded upon certain observations made by the Judges in the case of Davies. Now, in the first place, I am not of opinion that these observations apply to this case. That was an action, as I understand it, for damages for malicious use of the forms of Court. The ground of action was that the defender after he had been paid what was due him, had gone and taken decree against the pursuer, and the issue was whether that proceeding was malicious and without probable cause, which is quite a different issue from what we have here. It certainly was not a case, as put in the issue, of breach of contract. In the next place, as I understood what was read to me, the stage at which these observations were made by the Judges was when they were adjusting the issues to try the cause, and it does not appear to me that the question of what was relevant or was not relevant to the amount of damages really came properly before them for consideration on the second point.
Your Lordship who tried the case is of opinion that supposing the jury had given the sum of £200 that would not have been unreasonable. In such a case I do not think the Court, even if they would have given £200 instead of £300, would hold the award to be such as twelve reasonable men could not have given, and to be so excessive as to justify the setting aside of the verdict.
I therefore concur with your Lordship.
The chief interest in this case seems to me to depend on the question which was raised as to the value to be attached to the indirect evidence in the case, that is to say, to the evidence of people in whose estimation the pursuer is said to have suffered because they had read his name in a publication of decrees in absence. Now, from the outset it seemed to me impossible to take any clear distinction between the evidence admissible in a case of this kind, and in the case of an ordinary action for defamation or injury to reputation. Supposing
Page: 439↓
The only difficulty that has occurred to me in the case has been created by the citation of Davies v. Brown. But in the first place I agree with what has been already said about that case, that the observations relied upon were not necessary to the judgment, but were observations by the way, and were therefore not binding upon us. But then I should myself have very great reluctance in coming to any decision directly contrary to an opinion expressed by such high authorities as the learned Judges whose observations are quoted in Davies v. Brown. But I am not
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As to the other matter, I entirely agree with all your Lordships that it is a question for the jury to determine what is the proper amount of damage, and as your Lordship has said, it is a question of difficulty and of considerable delicacy. Whatever our own opinion is, we ought not to interfere with the verdict of a jury unless it is quite evident that they have given not what we may think too much, but what is so excessive and exorbitant as to make it unreasonable that their verdict should stand. I do not think that is the case here, and therefore I concur in the judgment proposed by your Lordship.
The Court discharged the rule and applied the verdict.
Counsel for the Pursuers— A. J. Young— Kemp. Agent— Francis S. Cownie, S.S.C.
Counsel for the Defenders— Jameson— Watt. Agent— William Manuel, S.S.C.