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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Bruce v. Stewart [1900] ScotLR 37_739 (06 June 1900) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1900/37SLR0739.html Cite as: [1900] SLR 37_739, [1900] ScotLR 37_739 |
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Sale — Sale of Heritage — Title — Objection to Title — Decree of Declarator of Irritancy Obtained in Absence.
The sellers of a heritable property tendered as one of the links in the title a contract of excambion entered into between two sets of trustees. No power to excamb was conferred upon either set of trustees by the deeds under which they acted, and neither had obtained power to excamb from the Court, but both had a
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power to sell heritage, and the trustees who under the contract had acquired the ground now in question had also power to buy. Held that a power to excamb could not be inferred from a power to sell heritage; that the title was not marketable; and that consequently the purchaser was not bound to accept it. The seller of a heritable property tendered as necessary links in the title two decrees of declarator of irritancy and removing pronounced respectively in 1891 and 1893. These decrees had been obtained in absence, and were consequently reducible at any time within twenty years. Opinions that the title was not marketable.
This was an action at the instance of John William Bruce, property agent, 161 Hope Street, Glasgow, against Andrew Stewart, writer, 116 West Regent Street, Glasgow, in which the pursuer concluded for decree ordaining the defender to implement his part of a certain missive of sale of two tenements with courts attached and offices thereon, forming Nos. 73 to 83 inclusive of Hopehill Road, Glasgow, or alternatively for payment of damages for breach of contract.
The pursuer averred that by missive of sale dated 14th February 1899 entered into between the pursuer and the defender, the defender agreed to buy and the pursuer agreed to sell the two tenements in question for the sum of £3300, and that although desired and required to implement his part of these missives the defender refused or delayed to do so.
The defender pleaded, inter alia—“(2) The pursuer never having tendered a valid marketable title to the subjects, the defender is entitled to absolvitor.”
In support of this plea the defender averred that the title submitted to him by the pursuer for examination was radically defective in various respects. In particular, he objected (1) to a certain contract of excambion, under which the pursuer's author acquired 109
square yards of the subjects contained in the missives; (2) to an extract decree of declarator of irritancy and removing part of the title to 839 6 9 square yards of said subjects; and (3) to an extract-decree of declarator of irritancy part of the title to 109 1 9 square yards of said subjects. 6 9 The objection stated to the contract of excambion, which was dated and recorded in 1894, was that it was entered into between the testamentary trustees of John Anderson Mathieson and the testamentary trustees of Miss Henrietta Scott, and that neither of these sets of trustees had power to excamb conferred upon them by the settlements under which they acted, or had obtained power to excamb from the Court.
The extract-decree first above mentioned was obtained under a contract of ground-annual at the instance of John Anderson Mathieson against Charles Simson Romanes, C.A., Edinburgh, trustee on the sequestrated estates of William Sillars and John Sillars, dated and extracted in December 1891, and recorded in January 1892. The objection to it was based, inter alia, upon the facts (1) that service upon the said William Sillars and John Sillars was made edictally, while ex facie of the decree itself their addresses were stated to be unknown, with the result that if they were within the jurisdiction of the Court the service was invalid; and (2) that the decree was pronounced in absence, and could be reduced or set aside at any time within twenty years of its date, there having been no appearance entered to defend the action.
The extract-decree second above mentioned was obtained under a contract of ground—annual at the instance of the trustees of Miss Henrietta Scott against Thomas Jackson, C.A., Glasgow, trustee on the sequestrated estates therein mentioned, and was dated May and extracted and recorded June 1893. This decree was objected to, inter alia, upon similar grounds to those stated above with regard to the decree first above mentioned.
In the contract of excambion the 109
square yards referred to were disponed by Miss Henrietta Scott's testamentary trustees to John Anderson Mathieson's testamentary trustees. In terms of Miss Scott's settlement her testamentary trustees had 6 9 power to sell the heritable property belonging to the estate, and that either by public roup or private bargain. They were not given power to purchase heritable property. In terms of John Anderson Mathieson's settlement his testamentary trustees had power (1) to sell heritable property by private bargain or public roup, and (2) to invest the trust funds in the purchase of heritable property in Great Britain.
The Trusts (Scotland) Act 1867 (30 and 31 Vict. c. 97), sec. 3, enacts as follows:—“It shall be competent to the Court of Session, on the petition of the trustees under any trust-deed, to grant authority to the trustees to do any of the following acts, on being satisfied that the same is expedient for the execution of the trust, and not inconsistent with the intention thereof … 1. To sell the trust-estate or any part of it. 2. To grant feus or long leases of the heritable estate or any part of it. 3. To borrow money on the security of the trust-estate or any part of it. 4. To excamb any part of the trust-estate which is heritable.” …
On 11th January 1900 the Lord Ordinary (
Kyllachy ), after hearing counsel in the procedure roll, assoilzied the defender from the conclusions of the action, and found him entitled to expenses.The pursuer reclaimed, and argued—A power conferred upon trustees to sell heritage included by implication a power to excamb. Excambing was simply selling for land instead of for cash. Trustees who had power to sell were not necessarily restricted to selling for cash. It was true that in the Trusts (Scotland) Act 1867, section 3, power to sell and power to excamb were mentioned separately, but the statute only contemplated the case of trustees who had neither power to sell nor power to excamb. These provisions did not apply to the case of trustees who had power to sell. Mathieson's trustees had power to sell and power to buy. It was clear that they would have been entitled to sell one piece of land and to buy another piece of the same value. That was in substance and effect what they did here. By excambing instead of selling and buying they only adopted a shorthand method of attaining the same result. If this view were sound then the title to the piece of ground now in question was unexceptionable. It was in effect bought by Mathieson's trustees, who had power to buy, from Scott's trustees, who had power sell. No objection could be taken to what was in effect the sale by Mathieson's trustees of the piece of ground conveyed in exchange to Scott's trustees, because Mathieson's trustees had power to sell. The fact that Scott's trustees had no power to buy could not affect the validity of the transaction in so far as Mathieson's trustees' title to the piece of ground now in question was concerned. The objection to the title based upon the alleged invalidity of the contract of excambion was not an objection to the ex facie validity of a deed. It proceeded upon the ground that the contract was ultra vires. Such an objection should not be sustained where it appeared that the granters could have attained exactly the same result quite competently by transacting in a slightly different form. But even if the title was objectionable upon this ground as it stood, it could be remedied by Scott's trustees granting a disposition as upon a sale for a price and a discharge for the sum stated as such price. (2) As regards the decrees of irritancy all that was possible was done. All persons were personally served whose whereabouts were known. In each case the trustee had been personally served, and service upon the trustee was all that was required. In practice almost all such decrees were obtained in absence, and if the fact that the decree might still be reduced rendered the title unmarketable, then practically every title which contained a decree of declarator of irritancy and removing was bad. If this contention were upheld by the Court doubt would be cast upon a great number of titles in all parts of the country which had been hitherto regarded as perfectly good.
Argued for the defender—The defender was entitled to a marketable title, and the title tendered was not marketable. (1) The excambion was invalid, because neither of the sets of trustees who were parties to it had power to excamb. A power of sale did not include a power to excamb. The Trusts (Scotland) Act 1867, section 3, made a clear distinction between power to sell, power to feu, and power to excamb. It was idle to say that Mathieson's trustees had power to sell and to buy. What took place here was not sale or purchase. The title could not be cured by obtaining deeds designed not to record the real nature of the transaction between the parties, but to conceal it by means of pretended sales and discharges which never in fact took place. Even if the cross sale theory was sound the title was not good, for one of the parties had no power to buy. (2) The decrees of irritancy were essential links in the title, and they were objectionable. Even assuming that there had been sufficient personal service, the decrees being decrees of declarator, and therefore decrees in which a charge was not competent, were reducible at any time within twenty years—a period which had not yet elapsed in either case—Court of Session (Scotland) Act 1868 (31 and 32 Vict. cap. 100), sec. 24. A title which contained such decrees as necessary links in the progress was not marketable.
At advising—
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The other objection is to a decree of declarator of irritancy which was obtained under a contract of ground-annual. It is objected to on several grounds, and among others on the ground that there was no personal service on certain of the defenders, of whom it was merely averred that they were believed to be abroad, and that the decree pronounced was a decree in absence only, and therefore open to the rest of the parties against whom the decree in absence was pronounced being reponed against it at any time during the running of the years of prescription. The objections to this branch of the title tendered seem also to be insuperable. It was maintained by the pursuer that in proceeding as they had they had done all that they could. But although this may be so, it is still the case that this blot in the title tendered exists, and if they cannot overcome it they are unable to give the defender that good and marketable title which he has a right to demand before parting with the price agreed on.
I am therefore of opinion that the judgment of the Lord Ordinary is right and ought to be adhered to.
On the ground alone with which I have been dealing I think the defender is justified in refusing to accept the title which the pursuer offers.
I am not disposed to regard the objection stated in the defender's second statement, in respect of insufficient citation to a summons of declarator of irritancy, as a serious one. The persons against whom the summons is said not to have been sufficiently executed were bankrupt. But their trustee was duly cited, and was by
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The first objection is that while 109 square yards of the ground purchased were acquired by excambion, neither the sellers nor the purchasers under the contract of excambion (who were both trustees) had power under their trust-deeds to excamb. Both sets of trustees had power to sell, but while power to sell may be a wider power than power to excamb, sale is not the same thing as excambion. Excambion is a peculiar transaction and is attended with some consequences which do not accompany an out-and-out sale. For instance, mutual rights of real warrandice attach to excambed lands; and although there may be no probability of eviction of the lands in exchange for which the 109 square yards were acquired, the burden of real warrandice would still remain.
Although this question is highly technical I think it is sufficiently serious to warrant the purchaser's objection.
Then as regards the declarator of irritancy and removing—while I think that there is little reason to anticipate challenge, it is a comparatively recent decree in absence and can be opened up, and as it affects 838 square yards of the ground purchased, I do not think that the defender is bound to be satisfied with it.
It is not necessary that I should notice the other objections taken, which I do not regard as serious.
The Court adhered.
Counsel for the Pursuer— Dundas, Q.C.— M. P. Fraser. Agents— Emslie & Guthrie, S.S.C.
Counsel for the Defender— H. Johnston, Q.C.— Cook. Agents— Macandrew, Wright, & Murray, W.S.