BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Somerville v. Dick [1902] ScotLR 39_836 (08 July 1902) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1902/39SLR0836.html Cite as: [1902] ScotLR 39_836, [1902] SLR 39_836 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Page: 836↓
[Dean of Guild, Edinburgh.
Burgh — Dean of Guild — Penalty — Technical Offence — Amount of Penalty.
Expenses — Dean of Guild Court — Petition Partially Abandoned by Procurator-Fis — cal — Technical Offence — Sole Ground of Complaint Insisted in Taken only at late Stage of Case.
Held ( diss. Lord Young) that the operation of cutting away part of the joists of a floor in a house for the purpose of making a hatchway was an “alteration of structure,” for which a warrant from the Dean of Guild Court was required under the Edinburgh Municipal and Police Amendment Act 1891, section 59.
A technical offence against the Edinburgh Municipal and Police Amendment Act 1891, section 59, having been committed by the carrying out of certain operations upon the floor and joists of a house without a warrant, in the erroneous but bona fide belief that such a warrant was not required, the Court on appeal, in view of the character of the offence, and of the fact that certain other items in his complaint had been ultimately abandoned by the Dean of Guild Court Procurator-Fiscal, reduced a penalty of £10 imposed by the Dean of Guild to the sum of one shilling.
A proprietor of subjects in Edinburgh who was making certain alterations on his premises made no application to the Dean of Guild Court for a warrant, being advised that no such warrant was required in the circumstances. After his operations had been practically completed he was served with a petition presented in the Dean of Guild Court by the Procurato-Fiscal
Page: 837↓
of Court, in which the petitioner craved interdict and the imposition of a fine, in respect of the proprietor having executed his operations without obtaining a warrant from the Dean of Guild. After a preliminary appeal, in consequence of which a proof was allowed and led, the Dean of Guild ordained the proprietor to apply for a warrant, and fined him £10. The proprietor appealed. The procurator-fiscal ultimately abandoned his contentions with regard to a great number of different operations of which he had complained as having been executed without a warrant, contrary to the Edinburgh Municipal and Police Amendment Act 1891, section 59, and in the end founded upon one operation only, as regards which the Court held that the proprietor had been guilty of a technical contravention of the Act, committed in the erroneous but bona fide belief that a warrant for this particular operation was not required. This operation had been founded on only at a late stage of the case. The Court, in addition to finding the proprietor entitled to expenses up to the date of the interlocutor in the preliminary appeal, found him entitled to expenses modified to two-thirds since that date.
This was an appeal against an interlocutor pronounced by the Dean of Guild of Edinburgh in a petition at the instance of George Somerville, Procurator-Fiscal of Court, petitioner and respondent in the appeal, against Adam Dick, solicitor, Dundas Street, Edinburgh, respondent and appellant, in which the petitioner craved the Court, inter alia, to fine and amerciate Dick in a sum not exceeding £25 for having proceeded to execute certain operations upon a house belonging to him, No. 12 Gayfield Square, Edinburgh, without applying for and obtaining a warrant from the Dean of Guild, contrary to section 59 of the Edinburgh Municipal and Police Amendment Act 1891.
Dick admitted that he had executed certain operations in the house referred to, and that he had not applied for a Dean of Guild warrant, but maintained that no warrant was required to entitle him to carry out these operations
Ultimately the only question on the merits came to be whether the operation of making a hatchway in the floor of the street floor of the house was “an alteration of structure” within the meaning of the Edinburgh Municipal and Police Amendment Act 1891, section 59, and therefore an operation for which a Dean of Guild Court warrant was required.
In carrying out the operation in question it was necessary to cut two of the joists of the floor of the street floor, to remove part of each of these joists permanently, and to bridle the joists at the points where they were cut away.
The petitioner had founded upon a number of other operations as having been illegally executed without a warrant, but he ultimately, either at the proof before the Dean of Guild or at the hearing in the present appeal, abandoned his contentions with regard to them and insisted in his contentions with regard to the hatchway only. This point had only been taken at a late stage of the procedure before the Dean of Guild. The petition was not presented until the operations complained of were practically completed.
The Edinburgh Municipal and Police Amendment Act 1891, section 59, enacts as follows:—“Every person who shall erect or begin to erect any house or building, or alter the structure of any existing house or building, or use for human habitation any building not previously so used, or alter the mode of occupancy of any existing house in such a manner as will increase the number of separate houses or occupiers without a warrant, or otherwise than in conformity with a warrant of the Dean of Guild Court, and every person who shall, in the erection or alteration of any house or building, the erection or alteration of which has been sanctioned by the Dean of Guild Court, deviate from the plan or plans, and section or sections, elevation or elevations, and detailed drawings so sanctioned, or shall in the erection or alteration of any house or building in any way contravene the building rules of this Act, shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding twenty-five pounds, besides being bound, if and in so far as required by the Dean of Guild Court, to take down or remove the said house or building, or to restore it to the state it was in previous to the alterations thereon, or to alter it in such a way as the Dean of Guild Court shall direct, so as to make it in conformity with the warrant of the Dean of Guild Court; and the Dean of Guild Court may grant an interdict for the prevention of any such erection or alteration or deviation being proceeded with until the extracted warrant of the Court shall be obtained for the same.”
By interlocutor dated 1st August 1901 the Dean of Guild, after visiting the premises, found that the appellant had contravened section 59 of the said Act, and interdicted him from proceeding further with his operations until he had obtained a warrant to do so.
Dick having declined to apply for a warrant, and having continued his operations, the Dean of Guild, by interlocutor dated 29th August 1901, fined him £10 for having proceeded with the operations without any warrant, and ordained him within twenty-one days to restore the house to the state in which it originally was.
Dick appealed, and on 23rd January 1902 the Second Division recalled the Dean of Guild's interlocutor of 1st August 1901, and the subsequent interlocutors, and remitted to him to proceed, reserving the question of expenses.
The Dean of Guild allowed the parties a proof of their averments, and thereafter on 1st May 1902 pronounced the following interlocutor:—“Repels the whole pleas-in-law for the respondent: Finds that the respondent has, without any warrant of Court and in contravention of the Edinburgh
Page: 838↓
Municipal and Police Amendment Act 1891, section 59, altered the structure of the house at 12 Gayfield Square, Edinburgh, by cutting the joists of the floor on the street floor of the said house at the point marked Q on the plan No. 60 of process, and by forming a hatchway at the said point—[ Then followed a finding with regard to matters, the contention of the Procurator-Fiscal in regard to which was ultimately abandoned]: Therefore sustains the pleas-in-law for the petitioner: Ordains the respondent to apply for a warrant of Court for the said operations: Fines and amerciates the said respondent in the sum of Ten pounds (£10) sterling, payable to the Procurator-Fiscal of Court for the public interest: Finds the respondent liable in expenses,” &c Note.—… “The other operations in respect of which the Procurator-Fiscal ultimately asked a conviction are in a different position. It is proved that without warrant of Court the respondent formed a hatchway at the point marked Q on the street floor plan No. 60 of process. To form this hatchway the respondent cut out considerable pieces of several of the joists, and had to bridle the joists at the points where they were cut away. The Court is of opinion that such an operation is essentially a structural alteration, and if not carried out with care may affect the stability of the building. While a mere alteration on the flooring of a house might fall within the rule laid down in Macgregor v. Somerville, an operation such as was carried out in this case on the joists of a floor cannot fall within that rule. The joists are an essential part of the structure of the building, and an interference with them by cutting part of them away is an operation of a delicate nature.…
With regard to the penalty to be imposed upon the respondent, the Court has been guided by two considerations. The first is that the operations for carrying out which without warrant it has convicted the respondent were operations for the like of which warrants are always applied for in Edinburgh. It is most necessary in the public interest that such operations should not be carried out without warrants, and if the respondent did not himself know that a warrant was necessary, the Court would expect that any competent tradesman employed to carry out the work would have informed the respondent that it was necessary to have a warrant. The second reason is that the respondent appears to have known that it was necessary to get a warrant at any rate for the operations at the cellar and the gangway *, as he himself applied for a warrant for the reerection of the side wall separating his back area from the side street. The operation on this wall was necessarily one open to public view, whereas it is in evidence that the operations for which the respondent is now being convicted were not open to public view, and might never have been discovered if an officer from the Master of Works had not required to visit the premises in connection with an application by the respondent for warrant to erect buildings of large size on the back area.”
Mr Dick appealed, and argued that the operations were not of such a kind as to require a warrant.
Counsel for the Procurator-Fiscal thereupon intimated that he did not insist in his contention quoad any of the operations except the alterations involved in the construction of the hatchway.
Argued for the appellant—The alterations on the floor of the house necessitated by the insertion' of the hatchway did not require a warrant, and consequently he had not contravened section 59 of the Edinburgh Municipal and Police Amendment Act of 1891. The Act only applied to operations which would affect the stability of the structure. The operations in question had not been proved to affect the stability of the structure, and that was the criterion as to whether a warrant was necessary or not— Somerville v. M'Gregor, November 7, 1889, 17 R. 46, 27 S.L.R. 52.
Argued for the respondent—The evidence showed that the alterations would affect the stability of the structure, and therefore the conviction should stand.
At advising—
The case has come before us again, and it is now limited down to this—whether or not the making of this hatchway, which involved the cutting through of two or more beams in the ceiling of the ground floor, was an operation or alteration which required that the Dean of Guild should have the matter laid before him, being an alteration of structure. Now, in such a matter of fact as the question whether it is an alteration of the structure or not, the decision on fact must be based very much on the view one takes of what is a structural part of a building, and I hold that the joisting which supports a floor and which forms part of the ceiling of rooms is a part of the structure, and that one cannot interfere with that in the way of removing any parts of the joisting permanently—which was done in this case—and substituting something else in the way of supports, than a continuous joist from side to side, without making any alteration of the structure. I think it is extremely probable that this particular operation was one in which any great risk was not to be anticipated, and probably one which might very well have
_________________ Footnote _________________ * Counsel for the Procurator-Fiscal ultimately abandoned the contention that a warrant was required for these operations.
Page: 839↓
But then comes what is really the important question in this case, namely, expenses. Now, I think the Procurator-Fiscal of the Dean of Guild Court was entirely wrong up till the time when we decided the case then before us, and therefore I think that the appellant in this case is entitled to his expenses up till the date of our pronouncing the interlocutor which we did, sending the case back. In regard to the subsequent expenses which have been incurred, and the matter of which formed the subject of the subsequent appeal, I think, looking to the fact I have just stated—that this was never made one of the points by the Dean of Guild till the very end of the case—that the appellant is entitled to some expenses, but as he was technically wrong I think the expenses he is entitled to should be subject to modification. I therefore propose a nominal fine, fining him a shilling, and finding him entitled to expenses up to and including the date of the last interlocutor, and also entitled to expenses subject to modification since that date.
This question of the hatchway is undoubtedly a very narrow question, and admits of very subtle argument on both sides. The question is, whether the hatchway which requires the cutting apart of a beam and the substitution of another form of support, is an alteration of the structure of the house? I think I quite fairly represent this as a question upon which there may legitimately be a difference of opinion. I think that the bulk of the evidence of experts in building operations is in favour of the view—which is certainly mine—that this alteration is not an alteration of the structure of the house. It was, I think, conceded, but whether conceded or not, it is I think clear, that to take out a beam which is worn out, or for any other reason, and supply its place with another beam is not an alteration of the structure. I think that it would be contrary to the common meaning of language to say that the structure of a house had been altered by the substitution of one beam for another in exactly the same place. Yet if you interpret these words literally, proceeding upon this as a foundation, that a beam is part of the structure, it is altered by taking it out and substituting another. Literally the language is satisfied, but I think there will be a unanimity of opinion—indeed, as I have observed, it was conceded—that the meaning of the words as used in the Act would not be at all satisfied by the mere substitution of one beam for another placed in the same position. The Dean of Guild has to do with the structure of the buildings only because he is entrusted with the safety of the public and the neighbours. There is no other reason for the Dean of Guild's interference. There is no difference between a burgh, a town, and the country—as remote from the town as you please—in regard to buildings, except that in a town it has been thought necessary—those responsible for the law have thought it necessary and proper in the interests of
Page: 840↓
With that explanation of my views as to altering the structure of the building I concur in the judgment which your Lordship proposes as to the expenses of the case.
Page: 841↓
On 4th June 1902 the Court pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“Dismiss the appeal: Find the appellant has without any warrant of the Dean of Guild Court, and in contravention of the Edinburgh Municipal and Police (Amendment) Act 1891, section 59, altered the structure of the house at 12 Gayfield Square, Edinburgh, by cutting the joists of the floor on the street floor of the said house at the point marked Q on the plan No. 60 of process—[ Then followed a finding in favour of the appellant with reference to the points which had been given up by the Procurator-Fiscal of the Dean of Guild Court]—Modify the amount in which the appellant was fined and amerciated by the Dean of Guild, viz., £10, to the sum of one shilling, for which sum decern against the appellant for payment to the petitioner: Find the appellant entitled to expenses up to and including the 23rd January 1902, and to the subsequent expenses subject to modification: Remit to the Auditor to tax the said expenses and to report: Recal the said interlocutor of 1st May 1902 so far as it finds the respondent Adam Dick liable in expenses, and decern.”
On 8th July 1902 the Court pronounced an interlocutor approving of the Auditor's report on the appellant's account of expenses, and with regard to the expenses to which the appellant had been found entitled subject to modification, fixing the modication at two-thirds of these expenses as taxed.
Counsel for the Respondent and Appellant— Clyde, K.C.— A. M. Anderson. Agent— W. R. Mackersy, W.S.
Counsel for the Petitioner and Respondent— Mackenzie, K.C.— Deas. Agents— Graham, Johnston, & Fleming, W.S.