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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Crichton Stuart v Ogilvie [1914] ScotCS CSIH_5 (03 July 1914) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1914/1914_SC_888.html Cite as: 1914 SC 888, 1914 2 SLT 116, [1914] ScotCS CSIH_5 |
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03 July 1914
Crichton Stuart |
v. |
Ogilvie. |
I cannot think that that effect was produced by the 5th subsection of 18th section, to which we were referred. It provides that the landlord may resume in a case such as this for the purpose of “building, planting, feuing, or other purposes.” Now, it is quite true that the landlord does not propose to resume for building, planting, or feuing, but he does propose to resume for another purpose; and the question that was argued to us was this:—Whether or no the words “other purposes” are limited by the words which precede them to purposes ejusdem generis, according to the familiar rule of construction. I think that they are not, because, in the first place, I do not think that this clause in the Agricultural Holdings Act is one to which the rule of ejusdem generis applies at all, and that for the reason which was given by Lord Kinnear in the case of The Admiralty v. Burns, where he says,—“The second observation is perhaps of more importance, and it is this, that if you are to limit general words by holding that they must cover only things that are ejusdem generis with preceding specific words, you must find that these specific words themselves are ejusdem generis with one another.” Now, I cannot think that building, planting, and feuing are ejusdem generis with one another, and accordingly I think that this clause of the Act of Parliament is not one to which the rule of construction applies.
But I, for my part, go further, and say that “other purposes” in the statute in question must clearly include “any purpose” which is a matter of express contract between the landlord and the tenant, even although it might not be ejusdem generis with words which we see in the Act of Parliament; and I think it would be out of the question to hold that an Act of Parliament could so seriously modify the contract—or rather delete or alter entirely the contract—between landlord and tenant as would be the case here if we were to hold that “other purposes” did not include a purpose which was made matter of express contract between the parties.
I therefore propose to your Lordships that we should adhere to the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary.
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