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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Mordell v. Macandrew & Jenkins [1904] ScotLR 41_740 (07 July 1904) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1904/41SLR0740.html Cite as: [1904] SLR 41_740, [1904] ScotLR 41_740 |
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Page: 740↓
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In an action the record was closed and the case sent to the procedure roll, but printed copies of the closed record were not lodged with the clerk to the process within four days from the date of the interlocutor closing the record, as prescribed by section 4 of the Act of Sederunt, November 2, 1872. The clerk to the process did not record the failure to lodge the prints, and the case was not deleted from the procedure roll. No printed copies of the record having been lodged within twenty-one days from the date of the closing of the record, the defenders, after the expiry of the twenty-one days, moved the Lord Ordinary to dismiss the action. The Lord Ordinary refused the motion.
In a reclaiming-note, held (1) that it was the statutory duty of the clerk to the process to delete the case from the procedure roll upon the failure of the pursuers' agent to lodge printed copies of the record within four days from the date of the interlocutor closing the record, but (2) that as the clerk of the process had not in fact deleted the case from the procedure roll, the case should be allowed to proceed as it stood in the procedure roll, and reclaiming-note refused.
The Act of Sederunt to regulate proceedings in the Outer House, November 2, 1872, enacts—sec. 4—“Within four days from the date of the interlocutor closing the record the agent for the pursuer, or for the party appointed to print the record, shall lodge with the clerk to the process two printed copies of the record as finally adjusted and closed, one of which shall be marked by the clerk as the process copy, and the other shall be appropriated to the use of the Lord Ordinary. And failing the said agent lodging such copies within the prescribed period the clerk shall record such failure by a note on the interlocutor sheet, and the said agents' fee for the trouble connected with the closing of the record shall be disallowed by the Auditor to the extent of one-half in taxing his account… . But failing the two copies of the printed record being lodged as aforesaid, the case shall be deleted from the debate or procedure roll, as the case may be and shall be restored to the roll only on motion made to the Lord Ordinary by any party to the cause lodging the said two printed copies as aforesaid: Provided that if none of the parties to the cause move the Lord Ordinary to restore the same to the roll, and lodge the two printed copies as aforesaid within twenty-one days of the date of the interlocutor closing the record, the Lord Ordinary shall pronounce an interlocutor dismissing the action, … which shall not be recalled by the Lord Ordinary of consent, but may be recalled only in the manner and on the conditions foresaid.”
In an action brought by William Mordell, 18 Finborough Road, South Kensington, London, against Macandrew & Jenkins, solicitors, Inverness, the Lord Ordinary ( Kincairney) on May 31st 1904 closed the record, and appointed the cause to be put to the procedure roll.
Printed copies of the record were not lodged with the clerk to the process within four days as prescribed by the Act of Sederunt 1872.
The clerk did not record on the interlocutor sheet the failure to lodge the prints, and the cause was not deleted from the procedure roll.
No printed copies of the record were lodged within twenty-one days of the date of the closing of the record, and on June 23rd 1904 the agents for the defenders wrote to the clerk of the process calling his attention to the fact that they had requested that the cause should be deleted from the roll.
On June 28th the defenders moved the Lord Ordinary to dismiss the action.
The Lord Ordinary refused the motion.
The defenders reclaimed, and argued—The provisions of the Act of Sederunt, November 2, 1872, sec. 4, were imperative, and it was the duty of the clerk to the process to delete the case from the procedure roll on the failure of the pursuer to lodge prints within the prescribed time. While it was admitted that if the case had been deleted and the action dismissed it would have been competent for the pursuer to move the Lord Ordinary to be reponed, the failure of the clerk to the process to comply with the provisions of the Act of Sederunt should not prejudice the defenders' right to have the case dismissed.
Argued for the respondent—The duty of determining whether a case should be deleted from the roll in respect of a failure to lodge prints lay with the Lord Ordinary. It was the part of the defender, if he wished to take advantage of the provisions of the Act of Sederunt, to move the Lord Ordinary to delete the cause, and the defenders here had not done this. The decisions and practice of the Outer House were all in favour of this mode of interpreting the Act— M'Lintock v. Stubbs, February 28, 1902, 9 S.L.T. 383; Brown v. Brown, January 8, 1897, 4 S.L.T. 324; Dickson v. Orr, December 18, 1884, 12 R. 345, 22 S.L.R. 198.
Page: 741↓
What are we to do in the present case, where there has been a failure by the clerk of court to delete the case from the roll in compliance with the provisions of the Act of Sederunt. I agree with the Lord Ordinary that the case cannot now be deleted from the roll, as it should have been before the miscarriage, and therefore cannot be dismissed. The case must be sent back to the Lord Ordinary to take it up and proceed to hear it.
Page: 742↓
The result is that the case must proceed as if there had been no delay in lodging the printed record.
As we are all of one opinion as to the construction of the Act of Sederunt, the only question which arises is, whether we are now to treat the pursuer as being in default, and recal the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor and dismiss the action, or whether we are to adhere to the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor and allow the action to proceed. If there had been any just ground for blaming the party or his agent for the default there might have been difficulty. But Mr Clark candidly conceded that if the cause had been deleted from the roll and the action dismissed it would have been right to repone the pursuer. That being so, the only question is whether the circuitous procedure should be followed out of dismissing the action and reponing, or whether we should allow the case just to proceed as it stands in the procedure roll.
The Court refused the reclaiming-note and remitted to the Lord Ordinary to proceed with the cause.
Counsel for the Defenders and Reclaimers— James Clark. Agents— Strathern & Blair, W.S.
Counsel for the Pursuer and Respondent— J. B. Young. Agents— M'Nab & M'Hardy, S.S.C.