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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Pollok v. Jones' Heir-at-Law and Others [1899] ScotLR 292_2 (13 January 1899)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1899/36SLR0292_2.html
Cite as: [1899] ScotLR 292_2, [1899] SLR 292_2

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 292

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Saturday, January 13. 1899.

36 SLR 292-2

Pollok

v.

Jones' Heir-at-Law and Others.

Subject_1Process
Subject_2Proving the Tenor
Subject_3Adminicles.

Process
Subject_4Proving the Tenor — Casus amissionis.

Process — Proving the Tenor — Necessity of Calling Representatives of Granter — Resjudicata.
Facts:

In an action of proving the tenor of a disposition of lands granted in 1842, and the sasine following thereon, held that an extract of the sasine was sufficient to prove the terms of the deeds.

Evidence of casus amissionis which held sufficient in an action of proving the tenor of a disposition of lands, and the sasine following thereon.

Observed that it is well settled that less full evidence of casus amissionis is necessary where a deed is not extinguishable by destruction than in the case of deeds which are so extinguishable.

Decree granted in an action of proving the tenor of a disposition of lands granted in 1842, of which the sasine was recorded, although the pursuer had failed, after inquiries, to discover the representatives of the granter, and had consequently not called them nominatim as defenders.

Observed that the decree would not be res judicata against the representatives.

Headnote:

This was an action of proving the tenor raised by Robert Pollok and John Auld M'Taggart. The pursuers were proprietors of a piece of ground in Glasgow, their titles to which had all been lost prior to a disposition granted in 1854 by John Campbell Colquhoun and others as trustees for the Society for Erecting Additional Parochial Churches in the City and Suburbs of Glasgow, in favour of the moderator and clerk of the Presbytery of Glasgow as trustees for the parish of Springburn. Infeftment was not taken on that disposition until 1897, when a notarial instrument was executed in favour of the then trustees for the parish of Springburn, and duly recorded in the Burgh Register of Glasgow, 15th October 1897. From disponees of these trustees for the parish of Springburn Mr George Charles Chapman acquired the subjects in question in February 1898, and he entered into a contract of ground-annual with the pursuers in July 1898 whereby they became proprietors of the ground. They then raised this action against the representatives of all the parties through whose hands the lands had passed since 1842, to prove the tenor of (1) a disposition granted in 1842 by William Jones, the then proprietor of the subjects, with the consent of the trustees of the then deceased James Shepherd, in favour of John Campbell Colquhoun and others as trustees designed above, and (2) instrument of sasine following thereon.

The pursuers averred that the deeds of which they sought to prove the tenor were the titles immediately preceding the disposition by John Campbell Colquhoun and others in 1854 above referred to, and that they were therefore the foundation of a prescriptive progress of titles.

It was further averred—“(Cond. 5) The pursuers have made every endeavour to find the principals of the deeds the tenor of which is sought to be proved, but without success. They believe and aver that while in the hands of the said Society for

Page: 293

Erecting Additional Parochial Churches in the City and Suburbs of Glasgow, or some members thereof, prior to 1854, they have been destroyed through carelessness, in some way which cannot now be explained.” This they alleged was apparent from an inventory of writs lodged in a process of disjunction and erection, raised by the Society for Erecting Additional Parochial Churches in or about the year 1854, in which inventory the deeds in question were marked “awanting.”

The only adminicle by which the pursuers sought to prove the tenor of the disposition and sasine was an extract from the Burgh Register of Glasgow of the sasine itself.

It was averred—“(Cond. 8) The pursuers have ascertained that the said William Jones has died since the date of said disposition and sasine, but after the fullest inquiry they have not been able to discover who, if anyone, is his heir, nor have they been able to discover the heir and representatives of the survivors of the trustees of the deceased James Shepherd, all of whom are dead.”

At a proof before a commissioner the entry in the inventory of the teind process was proved.

In addition to this, George William Black, writer, Glasgow, deponed—“I was appointed clerk to the heritors of Spring-burn in 1897. I examined their titles with a view of feuiug a portion of the superfluous ground adjacent to Springburn Church. Before my appointment there was no clerk to the heritors. There was no minute-book in existence, and no titles in the possession of the minister. I inquired at the Teind Office as to the disposition and instrument of sasine mentioned in the summons, but could find no trace of them. I called at the Teind Office because I knew of the existence of a process of disjunction and erection of Springburn Parish. The disposition and sasine set forth in the summons were marked wanting in the inventory of that process. The agent in that process was Mr John Marshall, S.S.C. I caused inquiries to be made at the office of his successor, Mr J. B. M'Intosh, S.S.C., in regard to the deeds, but without result. I have no other means of tracing these documents, and I believe they have been lost.” The only evidence adduced as to pursuers' inability to discover the representatives of the granters of the disposition was. that of Mr George Charles Chapman, writer, Glasgow, who said—“I have made inquiry as to the representatives of the late William Jones and the trustees of the late James Shepherd, but without success. I called on Dr Hill, partner of the firm of Hill & Hoggan, writers, a firm which has been in existence in Glasgow for the last hundred years. Dr Hill acts for the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow, and for the trustees of the widows' fund in connection with that body, who at one time held the ground-annual over the ground. He was unable to give me any information except that he had endeavoured to trace the trustees, but without effect. The agents who acted for the trustees were James Bogle, and for Jones, Richard Hall. They have long since died. I also called on Messrs Black, Honeyman & Monteith, writers, Glasgow, who act for the heritors of the Springburn Parish. They also were unable to trace Jones' representatives or Shepherd's trustees.”

Argued for the pursuer—A disposition not being a document which was cancelled by destruction, its loss might be proved to have occurred in any way—Dickson on Evidence, 1338. The proof established a sufficient casus amissionis; and the pursuer had done everything that was possible to discover the granters of the deed; and the sasine having entered the record, decree should be granted— Kerr v. Hay, July 3, 1830, 8 Shaw, 1008; Incorporation of Skinners and Furriers v. Baxter's Heir, March 17, 1897, 24 R. 744.

Judgment:

Lord Kinnear—I think that Mr Taylor is quite right in his statement of the main ground on which he maintains his conclusion in this case, because it is quite settled law, and quite reasonable, that the tenor of a document not extinguishable by destruction may be proved by much slighter evidence of the accident by which it was lost, than the tenor of a document which creates a right that may be extinguished by a debtor or granter or their representatives, such as a bond. But I think it quite clear that the right conferred by a disposition which has been delivered and placed on record cannot be extinguished by mere destruction of the document, and therefore if we are satisfied, first, that it has been placed on record, and secondly that it has been lost, or that there is reasonable ground for supposing it to be lost, we may grant decree of proving the tenor although we do not know the circumstances in which the loss occurred.

I think the existence and tenor of the document in question are sufficiently proved. How it was lost we do not know, but in the circumstances of this case I do not think it is indispensable that that should be cleared up. Therefore the only difficulty that there seems to me to be in giving the decree sought is that the pursuer has not been able to discover who the persons are that represent the granters of this disposition. I think the evidence on that part of the case is very far from satisfactory. It does not appear that an exhaustive search has been made which would enable us to say that they cannot be found, although it is very possible that further inquiries might be expensive and might not have any practical result.

If we were pronouncing .a judgment which would be res judicata against these persons, I should have great hesitation. But it is clear enough that if the representatives of these granters were to come forward and present any reasonable ground for challenging the disposition, nothing that we now do would preclude them from doing so. I think we may also take into account that there is no practical possibility

Page: 294

of these persons being prejudiced by anything we do now. The disposition was granted in 1842, and recorded in the Burgh Register of Glasgow, and whether a good prescriptive title can be made out or not, there has certainly been possession since that time contrary to the granter and his representatives, and therefore there seems very little practical probability of their being hurt by its tenor being now declared. I think we may give decree notwithstanding the unsatisfactory nature of the evidence as to the possibility of finding out who the representatives of the granters are.

Lord Adam—The documents of which the tenor is sought to be proved are a disposition dated so far back as 1812, and the instrument of sasine following upon it, and the only adminicle produced is an extract from the Burgh Register of Glasgow of the sasine. Now, so far as the sasine whose tenor is sought to be proved is concerned, we have the very words of the original sasine, and there is no question therefore that the adminicle is sufficient for that deed. As regards the disposition, it stands in this position. According to the old form of a disposition all the clauses peculiar to the particular disposition in question are in the sasine which has been recorded, and it is only when we come to what I may call the clauses of style that we are told that these are added, not from any document bearing on this right, or because of anything peculiar to this deed, but merely according to the forms in use generally in similar cases. In this way a complete disposition is made out. It appears to me that that process is perfectly legitimate, I mean to add clauses in the way we are told that these were added, and, because I am satisfied that they are in the usual form then in use, I think that is sufficient. I am disposed therefore to think that the tenor of the disposition is also sufficiently proved. I further agree in what Lord Kinnear has said on the other points in the case.

I may add that I do not recollect that it has before been held sufficient to call the heir-at-law and representatives of the granters without naming them. In my opinion calling them in such terms is no better than not calling them at all, and I think the summons would have been just as well framed if they had not been called in these terms as defenders at all, and it had been stated in the condescendence that it had been impossible to ascertain who the heir-at-law and representatives were. I agree with Lord Kinnear that in these circumstances any judgment we pronounce will not be res judicata in a question with these persons.

Lord M'Laren—The avowed object of this action is to set up a title by prescription to the heritable property in question; therefore it is quite right that the grounds of application and proof should be carefully examined. I should have thought that a great deal might be said for the view that there was already a prescriptive title, because although the charter is not extant, there are two sasines, the first of which is dated at a period greatly exceeding forty years, and the record of the sasine in the Burgh Register of Sasines at Glasgow is as good as the original unless challenged in a reduction improbation on the ground of forgery.

But no doubt the object in all these cases is to get a marketable title, and for the reasons given by Lord Kinnear I am of opinion that decree should be granted.

The Lord President concurred.

The Court granted decree in terms of the conclusions of the summons.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Pursuers— Alexander Taylor. Agents— T. & W. A. M'Laren, S.S.C.

1899


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