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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Wishart v. Hodge [1912] ScotLR 732 (31 May 1912) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1912/49SLR0732.html Cite as: [1912] SLR 732, [1912] ScotLR 732 |
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Page: 732↓
[Sheriff Court at Glasgow.
The judicial factor on the estate of a deceased lady whose husband's estate had been sequestrated failed to lodge a claim as creditor in the sequestration until nine days after the commissioners had met and declared a first and final dividend. He was cognisant of the sequestration, but had received no formal notice from the trustee in the sequestration of the date by which claims required to be lodged.
Held, in respect of his knowledge and of the fact that there was no fault on the part of the trustee, that he was not entitled to interdict the trustee from dividing the estate.
The Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1856 (19 and 20 Vict. cap. 79), section 125, enacts—“Immediately on the expiration of four months from the date of the deliverance actually awarding sequestration, the trustee shall proceed to make up a state of the whole estate of the bankrupt, … and within fourteen days after the expiration of the said four months the commissioners shall meet and examine such state … and they shall declare whether any and what part of the net produce of the estate, after making a reasonable deduction for future contingencies, shall be divided among the creditors.”
George Hodge, C.A., Glasgow, judicial factor on the trust estate of the late Mrs Elizabeth Kerr, pursuer, brought an action in the Sheriff Court at Glasgow to interdict John Wishart, accountant, Glasgow, trustee on the sequestrated estates of Hugh Kerr, contractor, Glasgow, defender, from dividing the whole funds available for division in payment of a first dividend among the creditors, until he had set aside a figure sufficient to pay an equalising dividend on pursuer's claim. Hugh Kerr was the executor-nominate of Mrs Elizabeth Kerr, his wife, and the pursuer averred that Hugh Kerr had collected sums under two policies of assurance on the life of the late Mrs Kerr, and had failed to account for them to the beneficiaries under her will.
The following narrative of the facts of the case is taken from the opinion of Lord Salvesen—“The pursuer Mr Hodge, who was appointed a factor on the trust estate of the deceased Mrs Kerr, claims to be a creditor qua factor of her husband Hugh Kerr, on whose sequestrated estate the defender is trustee. The pursuer was appointed factor so far back as 18th August, his appointment was extracted on 29th August, and he intimated his appointment as factor to the defender in the beginning of September. The examination of the bankrupt took place on 30th August, and it appears, and I think it is a material circumstance, that the pursuer was represented at that examination, because in another representative capacity he was a creditor of the bankrupt. He therefore had from that early date, if not sooner, full knowledge of the sequestration of Hugh Kerr, and it was his duty to apprise himself, if necessary, by examination of the Gazette of the procedure in that sequestration. He probably even did not require to look at the Gazette, because as a representative of another creditor he would get all the usual notices issued to creditors of the estate.
The pursuer at an early stage seems to have thought that there might be a claim against the bankrupt in respect of his having failed to account for the executry estate, and in September there was some correspondence between him and the defender on that subject. Nothing followed and no claim was lodged by the pursuer as factor on Mrs Kerr's estate, and I think the trustee, the defender in this case, was perfectly entitled to assume that, having had the possibility of such a claim brought to his mind, the pursuer had elected not to pursue it. The statutory period of four months expired on 28th November, after which, and within fourteen days, the commissioners were required to meet and to consider as to the distribution of the estate. The commissioners, in fact, met on the ninth day after the 28th November, and they then passed a deliverance to the effect that the whole estate should be distributed (except a small
Page: 733↓
balance on hand), as a first and final dividend. Up to that time the commissioners and the defenders had no knowledge that the pursuer intended to lodge any claim. The case might have been entirely different if at the time that their deliverance was pronounced a claim had in fact been lodged, or the circumstances even such as to make it their duty to provide for a known claim.”
On 22nd February 1912 the Sheriff-Substitute ( Taylor) pronounced the following interlocutor—“Finds the following facts are admitted—(1) The estates of Hugh Kerr were sequestrated on 28th July 1911; (2) the first statutory meeting was held on 8th August 1911, and defender was appointed trustee; (3) the said Hugh Kerr was confirmed executor of the late Mrs Elizabeth M'Lean, or Dimond, or Wallace, or Kerr, on 12th August 1910; (4) pursuer was appointed judicial factor on the trust—estate of the said Mrs Kerr on 18th August 1911; (5) the state of affairs lodged by the said Hugh Kerr contained no statement of any claim against him at the instance of himself as executor aforesaid; (6) to entitle creditors to participate in the first dividend, oaths and grounds of debt fell to be lodged on or before 28th November 1911; (7) no notice was sent to the pursuer by defender intimating the date by which olaims required to be lodged in order to participate in the first dividend; (8) intimation of a possible claim at the instance of pursuer was received by defender in the letter of 30th September 1911; (9) a claim in the sequestration at pursuer's instance for £754, 6s. 5d. was lodged on 9th December 1911; (10) the commissioners on the sequestrated estate met on 30th November 1911, and decided to divide all available sums amongst the creditors whose claims had been timeously lodged: Finds in law that the pursuer is entitled to the interdict craved.”
The defender appealed, and argued—The Sheriff-Substitute should have refused interdict. The circumstances in the case of Scobie v. Hill's Trustees, November 23, 1869, 8 Macph. 161, 7 S.L.R. 98, on which the Sheriff-Substitute had founded, were quite different. In Scobie's case the trustee did not fulfil his duty, here he did, and further in that case the creditor did not know of the sequestration, here he did. The respondent had abandoned the ground of judgment of the Sheriff-Substitute, that the cause of the omission was the fault of bankrupt attributable to the trustee. The respondent was a professional man and ought to have looked after his own interests. He could, in any event, have appealed against the deliverance of the commissioners—Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1856 (19 and 20 Vict. cap. 79) sec. 169; Steele v. Ligertwood, February 17, 1865, 3 Macph. 587. The respondent was alone to blame, and he ought to ask to have the process sisted and apply to the nobile officium of the Court.
Argued for the respondent—The Sheriff-Substitute was right. There were two questions in the case (1) Did pursuer's lateness forfeit his right to participate in the first dividend; (2) did his lateness forfeit his right to have money set aside to meet his claim. As to the former the only authority was Scobie v. Hill's Trustee ( cit. sup.), which rested on a principle which was applicable even though the trustee was not in fault. Here there were two special circumstances in favour of the pursuer—(1) his representative capacity, and (2) the fact that the claim required some investigation before it could be put forward. But further, respondent asked interdict to prevent the estate being distributed so as not to allow sufficient for a second dividend. It was in contemplation of the statute that the estate should not be entirely divided up at once, but provision made for contingencies—secs. 123, 125, and 130 of the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1856. The commissioners were bound to consider the contingency of a second dividend. The present case was a fortiori of Steele v. Ligertwood ( cit. sup.). There was no period of finality in the statute before the expiry of the fourteen days. The policy of the Court all through had been not to press the limits of time— Porteous & Mitchell v. Aitken's Trustee, November 18, 1828, 7 S. 22; Mitchell v. Wilson's Trustee, July 7, 1829, 7 S. 841.
Now I do not think it was contended before us that there was any fault on the part of the bankrupt. It is quite true that the bankrupt did not in the state of affairs that he requires to lodge with his trustee include this claim as one of the debts due by the estate, but the circumstances show quite clearly that he did not do so because he maintained, and has always maintained, that it was not a good claim against him. His case was that he never fingered a penny of the money, but that the money was appropriated by his law agents, whom he had properly employed to conduct the affairs of the executry. Therefore I cannot see that there was any fault in the bankrupt's not including in his state of affairs as a debt a claim which he did not recognise and which he had reasonable cause for not recognising as a debt against him.
Fault on the part of the trustee is not alleged. The trustee appears to me to have acted here perfectly properly and fairly. There is no suggestion of any desire on his part to take any undue advantage of the pursuer. He acted entirely in discharge of his statutory duties.
Now, is it to be said that in such circumstances, where a claim is not lodged simply through want of vigilance on the part of the person who is vested in it, that the a
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The case of Scobie was referred to as an authority, and indeed as the only authority, for this application, but it seems to me that that was a totally different case, and rests upon the well-known principle that if non-compliance with a statutory provision has been due to the fault of the person or body who are going to benefit by the strict application of these statutory provisions then the Court will give an equitable remedy. The Court there proceeded upon the view that but for the failure of the trustee to have the bankrupt examined there would in all probability have been notice given to the creditor which would have apprised him of the necessity of lodging a claim in the sequestration, and that as the creditor had received no such notice because of the failure of the trustee to perform his statutory duty, the creditor was entitled to the remedy of interdict against the estate being paid away to his prejudice. That I think was an entirely different case from the one which is presented to us here, and in which, as I think, there are no specialities at all, because the fact that this creditor was a creditor in a representative capacity cannot make any difference. Indeed I agree with Mr Wilton that it makes the case rather worse, because the pursuer was a professional man well versed in the Bankruptcy Statutes, having full knowledge through his position as representing another creditor of the exact position of this sequestrated estate, and therefore the very person who might reasonably be expected to do all that was necessary to protect the interests of those whom he represented.
My view is that if we were to listen to this demand on so-called equitable grounds we should really have to give the same relief to every creditor who happened to be too late in lodging his claim to participate in the first dividend, with the result of upsetting the whole scheme of distribution under the Bankruptcy Statutes.
I am therefore for recalling the judgment of the Sherifif-Substitute and refusing the prayer of the note.
The
The Court sustained the appeal, recalled the interlocutor appealed against and refused the crave of the initial writ.
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Counsel for Pursuer and Respondent— J. R. Christie. Agent— C. Strang Watson, Solicitor.
Counsel for the Defender and Appellant— Wilton. Agent— James G. Bryson, Solicitor.