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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Findlay v Blaylock [1936] ScotCS CSIH_1 (29 October 1936) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1936/1937_SC_21.html Cite as: [1936] ScotCS CSIH_1, 1937 SC 21, 1936 SLT 596 |
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29 October 1936
Findlay |
v. |
Blaylock |
However that may be, the real complaint is that the defender maliciously used his position as father of Peter Blaylock to incite and coerce him to break his promise of marriage with the pursuer. It is further said that the defender wrongfully and maliciously and without reasonable or probable cause used his position as employer of his son to incite and coerce him to break his promise of marriage and provided him with funds to fly from Scotland. When the pursuer's counsel was asked where the particular specification relating to this coercion was to be found, we were referred to another averment that the father
had dismissed the boy from his employment with himself. I do not understand how such a dismissal, which was operative notwithstanding that the boy had broken off the engagement, can have been regarded as an inducement to break off the engagement. It appears to me that the record, which contains averments of malice in general terms, contains no particular averment from which any obliquity of motive can be inferred.
The Sheriff-substitute has dealt with the case by sustaining both the plea to competency and the plea to relevancy. I think that the action is not in the proper sense an incompetent action, but that the Sheriff-substitute did right when he sustained the plea to relevancy. It is no doubt true that, if a person, knowing that another person has a contractual relation with a third party, induces that person to break that contractual relation, he may be liable to the third party whose contract in consequence of his action is thereby breached. There are illustrations of that both in Scotland and in England. In one of these cases, Glamorgan Coal Co. v. South Wales Miners' Federation, the very kind of case that is now before us was referred to by Stirling, LJ., in the King's Bench Division and by Lord Lindley in the House of Lords. In the King's Bench, Stirling, L.J., says (at p. 577):
"That interference with contractual relations known to the law may in some cases be justified is not, in my opinion, open to doubt. For example, I think that a father who discovered that a child of his had entered into an engagement to marry a person of immoral character would not only be justified in interfering to prevent that contract being carried into effect, but would greatly fail in his duty to his child if he did not. This duty is recognised by the Courts; for the Court of Chancery and the Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice have continually so interfered on behalf of wards of Court, sometimes with a heavy hand; and the principle on which the judges of those Courts have acted is simply that of doing on behalf of the ward that which a right-minded father would do in the true interest of his child."
I entirely agree with that. I think it is the duty of a father to consider whether a marriage which his son, and particularly a minor son, proposes to contract is one which he should encourage or discourage. If a father decides to dissuade his son from entering into a proposed marriage, it should reasonably be presumed that his dissuasion is brought to bear in the exercise of his parental duty to guide his son in a matter of such vital importance to his future happiness. Accordingly, if the dissuasion is to be said to have been inconsistent with his parental duty, and to have been actuated by motives which were oblique and not related to his son's future welfare, or if it is to be said that the dissuasion was exercised merely in order to inflict an unwarrantable wrong upon the woman to whom the son was engaged—these allegations must be supported by clear and specific averments of facts and circumstances from which the wrongful motive and malice may be
inferred. It is not necessary to decide in this case what facts and circumstances would have to be specified in order that a relevant case might be made, and I am assuming rather than deciding that it would be possible in a case of this sort for a father to render himself liable for damages for inducing his son to break a promise of marriage. In the same case of Glamorgan Coal Co. v. South Wales Miners' Federation Lord Lindley, in dealing with the observations of Stirling, L.J., said (at p. 254) that it was not necessary "to consider what a parent or guardian may do to protect his child or ward. That there are cases in which it is not actionable to exhort a person to break a contract may be admitted; and it is very difficult to draw a sharp line separating all such cases from all others." Without attempting to draw any definite and sharp line which will lay down a clear rule about the circumstances under which one party can sue another for inciting a third party to break a contract, I am clearly of opinion that there is no difficulty in disposing of this case. Here we have nothing but the adverb "maliciously," and similar phraseology, to buttress the idea that any wrong was done. There is no averment of any wrongful act of any sort committed by the father. There is no averment that he was actuated by any kind of malice directed against the pursuer at all. All that is left upon the general statement that he acted maliciously. The defender is therefore to be presumed to have acted in pursuance of the duty which he owed to his son, and for such action he is not answerable to the pursuer although it resulted in breach of the son's promise to marry her.
In my opinion the case is irrelevant; and while, therefore, I cannot support the Sheriff-substitute in holding the action to be incompetent. I suggest that, to that extent only, his interlocutor should be recalled, and that we affirm the remaining part of the interlocutor.
substitute cannot be supported in so far as he has sustained the first plea in law for the defender.
As regards the relevancy of the averments, while I very much deprecate any extension of the remedies which our law affors to one who has suffered in consequence of the breach of a promise of marriage, I do not find it possible to decide that those who interfere with the fulfilment of such a promise may not in appropriate cases be found liable in respect of such interference. At the same time I think that, where this particular interest under contract is pleaded, the case should he very narrowly viewed by the Court before any such remedy is accorded to a pursuer. In a case where interference with the completion of the marriage has been interference on the part of a father, and more especially in a case in which the party to the marriage whom he has sought to influence is still in minoritym, I think there is a very well-founded presumption that the father has acted, not in the commission of a wrong, but in discharge of his parental duty towards his child.
In the present case I find in the averments of the pursuer nothing to displace that general and salutary presumption. It is true that in her first plea in law she describes the action of the father as having been wanton, wrongful and malicious; and, had she made averments to support the use of these adjectives or even of one of them, she might quite possibly have been entitled to have her averments remitted for inquiry. All that she has averred, however, is that the father wrote a letter in which he intimated he was to do his best to prevent the marriage, and disclosed as his principal reason for interference a feeling of resentment in consequence of the whole of the arrangements for the marriage having been concealed from him. I think there were other reasons, as disclosed in the averments of the pursuer herself, upon which the father might in this case have justified his interference. More-over, even on his own explanation of the writing of the letter, I do not find from the fact that it was written enough per se to support an inference that the action of the father was wrongful or malicious. The pursuer goes on to aver, or the defender admits, that the father turned his son out of his house, turned him out of his employment, and sent him to England. These are, however, stated to have been completed and not conditional acts, and, accordingly, while they may have punished the offending son, cannot (so far as the pursuer explains them) be supposed to have influenced him towards a breach of his engagement. On the general ground that I find no relevant averment as against a father of a wrongful act, I agree with your Lordship that the second plea in law stated by the defender should be sustained.
The permission for BAILII to publish the text of this judgment
was granted by Scottish Council of Law Reporting and
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