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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Cathcart v. Chalmers [1910] ScotLR 207 (20 December 1910) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1910/48SLR0207.html Cite as: [1910] SLR 207, [1910] ScotLR 207 |
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Page: 207↓
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The Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1883, sec. 36, provides—“Any contract or agreement made by a tenant by virtue of which he is deprived of his right to claim compensation under this Act in respect of any improvement specified in the schedule hereto (except an agreement providing such compensation as is by this Act permitted to be substituted for compensation under this Act) shall, so far as it deprives him of such right, be void.”
The lease of a farm prescribed compensation for improvements to be paid in lieu of the compensation provided by the Agricultural Holdings Act 1900, sec. 1, and relative schedule (which superseded sec. 1 and relative schedule of the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1883). The lease also contained a proviso that no claim for compensation should be made by the tenant later than one month prior to the determination of the tenancy. The tenant having given notice in terms of the lease of his intention to terminate the tenancy, quitted the farm accordingly. He made claims for compensation prior to the determination of the tenancy (which but for the proviso would have been timeously made) but less than one month prior thereto. The landlord intimated to the tenant that the claims were excluded by the lease in respect that they were not timeous. Thereafter on the application of the tenant the Board of Agriculture and Fisheries appointed an arbiter for the purpose of dealing with the claims. A note of suspension and interdict having been presented by the landlord to prevent the arbitration being proceeded with, the Court — rev. the decision of the Lord Ordinary (Guthrie) — refused the interdict, holding that the stipulation contained in the lease as to the time of making the claim was void in respect that it was an agreement by the tenant by virtue of which he was deprived of his right to claim compensation.
The Agricultural Holdings Act 1900 (63 and 64 Vict. cap. 50) enacts — Section 1 — “(1) Where a tenant has made on his holding any improvement comprised in the First Schedule to this Act, he shall, subject as in the [Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act] 1883 (in this Act referred to as the principal Act), and in this Act mentioned, be entitled
Page: 208↓
at the determination of a tenancy on quitting his holding, to obtain from the landlord as compensation under the said Acts for the improvement such sum as fairly represents the value of the improvement to an incoming tenant.…” Section 2—“(2) Any claim by a tenant for compensation under the principal Act or this Act in respect of any improvement comprised in the First Schedule to this Act shall not be made after the determination of the tenancy.” The Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1883 (46 and 47 Vict. cap. 62) enacts — Section 5—“… Where, in the case of a tenancy under a lease beginning after the commencement of this Act, any particular agreement in writing secures to the tenant for any improvement specified in the third part of the schedule hereto, and executed after the commencement of this Act, fair and reasonable compensation, having regard to the circumstances existing at the time of making such agreement, then in such case the compensation in respect of such improvement shall be payable in pursuance of the particular agreement, and not under this Act.” Section 36 is quoted supra in rubric.
Sir Reginald Archibald Edward Cathcart, Baronet, presented a note of suspension and interdict against Alexander Hyslop Chalmers and J. Montgomerie Pearson in order to prevent them proceeding with an arbitration under the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Acts. The respondent Chalmers had been tenant of a farm which had been let to him by the complainer on lease. The lease, dated 2nd and 14th March 1903, incorporated the estate regulations, which included, inter alia, an article prescribing the compensation for improvements to be paid to the tenant in lieu of that which he might otherwise have claimed in respect of improvements specified in Part III of the First Schedule annexed to the Agricultural Holdings Act 1900. The article also contained the following proviso — “Provided always that no claim for compensation under the said Acts or under these conditions shall be made by the tenant later than one month prior to the determination of the tenancy.”
The tenant having given notice in terms of the lease of his intention to terminate the tenancy vacated the farm on 28th November 1908 accordingly. On 9th November the tenant posted a claim for compensation to the landlord, who received it on 10th November. This was followed by an amended claim posted on 26th and received on 27th November. The landlord intimated to the tenant that the claims had not been made timeously and were therefore barred. The tenant treated this as a refusal to agree to the nomination of an arbiter and applied to the Board of Agriculture and Fisheries for the appointment of an arbiter under the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1908 (8 Edw. VII, cap. 64) to deal with the said claims. The Board appointed the respondent Pearson to be arbiter, whereupon the landlord brought a suspension and interdict to prevent the tenant proceeding with his claim and the arbiter from entertaining it. Answers were lodged by the respondent Chalmers only.
The complainer pleaded—“(1) The pretended claims of the respondent Alexander Hyslop Chalmers against the complainer not having been timeously made, and being excluded by the terms of the lease referred to in the statement of facts for the complainer, and therefore not a competent subject for arbitration, the complainer is entitled to interdict as craved. (2) The agreement as to compensation incorporated in the lease having been validly entered into under section 5 of the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1883, the respondent's claims for compensation can only be prosecuted in accordance with the provisions thereof.”
The respondent pleaded, inter alia—“(2) The lease founded on being a contract or agreement made by a tenant, by virtue of which he is deprived of his right to claim compensation under the Agricultural Holdings Acts, is, so far as it deprives him of such right, void by the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1883, sec. 36, and the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1908, sec. 5, and the prayer of the note should accordingly be refused.”
On 13th January 1910 the Lord Ordinary (
Opinion.—“I think the complainer here is entitled to interdict. The case for the respondent was argued under two separate views—the one being based on section 5 of the 1883 Act, and the other being based on section 36 of the 1883 Act, taken along with section 2 of the 1900 Act. The argument based on section 5 of the 1883 Act depended on the view that the right to compensation existed, even although there might be a clause such as the clause contained in section 17 of the articles, regulations, and conditions incorporated in this lease, under which no claim for compensation, under the said Acts or under these conditions, shall be made by the tenant later than one month prior to the termination of the tenancy. It was maintained that it would be competent, under section 5 of the 1883 Act, to void the effect of that clause by showing the arbiter that that was not a fair and reasonable condition. It seems to me clear that section 5 does not apply in the circumstances. It applies to an agreement substituted instead of the Act in relation to compensation for any improvement specified in the third part of the schedule annexed to the Act, and it has no application to the clause relating to notice which we are dealing with in this case.
The other argument, under section 36 of the 1883 Act and section 2 of the 1900 Act, raises a different question. It is said that under section 1 of the 1883 Act there is a right absolutely expressed to the tenant to get compensation for improvements, the class of improvements being specified in the schedule, instead of which there is provision that you may have a substituted agreement. It is said in regard to notice that the only restriction on the tenant is that no claim by him shall be
Page: 209↓
There was a point made by Mr Cooper in relation to certain claims contained in the claim in the present case which are not specified in article 17 of the Conditions, which it is said can still be made. The clause is read as if it ran—‘providing always that no claim for compensation under these Conditions shall be made later than one month prior to the determination of the lease.’ But this clause is not so limited, because it also covers claims for compensation made under the Acts. Now if these claims are not made under the Conditions, they must be made under the Acts. But the clause equally limits the time when notice can be given of claims made under the Acts. Therefore I think the complainer is entitled to interdict as craved, with expenses.”
The respondent reclaimed, and argued — The view of the Legislature as embodied in the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1883 (46 and 47 Vict. cap. 62) and the Agricultural Holdings Act 1900 (63 and 64 Vict. cap. 50) was that landlords and tenants did not contract on equal terms, and the intention of those Acts was to prevent landlords using the commanding position they would have in bargaining if tenants were not protected. Protection was given to tenants by restricting in their favour complete freedom of contract. To that end the Agricultural Holdings Act 1900, section 1, provided that tenants should have an absolute right to compensation subject only to the conditions contained in the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Acts. The tenants must get compensation in every case — Mears v Callendar, [1901] 2 Ch 388; Bell v. Graham, 1908 S.C. 1060, 45 S.L.R. 770, per Lord Ardwall. The scale of compensation might no doubt be varied provided the scale substituted were “fair and reasonable,” but any agreement, whether absolute or conditional, the operation of which in result deprived the tenant of compensation, was struck at by the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1883, section 36. That section contemplated the result of an agreement and not the form. The proviso as to the time of making the claim did not merely regulate the procedure to be followed. It subjected the right to compensation to risks which it did not run under the statutes. Apart from agreement the tenant had the right to claim compensation at any time before the determination of the tenancy. By agreement an earlier date had been substituted, and he was thereby deprived of his right to claim during a period which would have remained available to him but for this innovation. By section 36, the agreement so far as it deprived the tenant of this right was void. Section 5 of the Act did not allow either absolute or conditional contracting out. It merely permitted the substitution of a different scale of compensation for that provided by statute. The only agreements saved by the section were such as “secured” fair and reasonable compensation to the tenant. The result of the agreement in this case was however to deprive the tenant of compensation.
Argued for the complainer—The onus was on the respondent to show that there was something in the Acts which enabled him to get rid of the stipulation as to the time of making the claim. All the provisions of the Agricultural Holdings Act 1900 were not so sacred that they could not be varied by agreement. It was only where it was said that the tenant could not be deprived of a certain particular that freedom of contract was excluded. There was nothing in section 2 (2) of the Act to prevent parties contracting out of that section. In applying the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1883, section 36, the agreement must be taken as a whole — Hamilton— Ogilvy v. Elliot, November 3, 1904, 7 F. 1115, 42 S.L.R. 41. So taken the agreement in this case did not deprive the tenant of compensation, but on the contrary made elaborate provision for giving him compensation. Section 36 was intended to prevent the tenant surrendering his right to compensation absolutely or for something illusory, and did not prevent him rejecting his right under the statute in favour of an agreement which provided compensation for him. Here the tenant was deprived of his right to claim compensation not by the agreement but by his failure to make his claim timeously. In any event the agreement satisfied the provisions of the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland)
Page: 210↓
At advising—
In my opinion this is sufficient for the decision of the case, for the respondent's position is not altered or affected by section 5 of the 1883 Act, under which — [ quotes, v. sup.] Now in this case it is common ground that the tenant cannot claim under the terms of his lease, for he has failed to give the stipulated notice of his claim. He is thus not secured in compensation, and unless he has a right to claim under the provisions of the Act itself his claim for compensation is gone. This section plainly contemplates a claim being possible under the agreement at the time when the arbitration is commenced, and such a claim will exclude the claim under the Act if the arbiter is of opinion that, having regard to the circumstances existing at the time it was made, the agreed-on compensation was fair and reasonable. But the arbiter here has no power to award compensation in terms of the agreement, although it may be that he is entitled to look at it in estimating the amount to be awarded under the Act—a matter on which I express no opinion. I have therefore come to the conclusion that the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary must be recalled, and that the prayer of the note should be refused.
Page: 211↓
The Court recalled the interlocutor of Lord Guthrie dated 13th January 1910, repelled the reasons of suspension, and refused the interdict.
Counsel for the Complainer— Johnston, K.C. — A. R. Brown. Agents — Skene, Edwards, & Garson, W.S.
Counsel for the Respondent — Morison, K.C.— Jamieson. Agent— James Purves, S.S.C.