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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Baillie Estates Ltd v Du Pont (UK) Ltd [2009] ScotCS CSIH_95 (30 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2009/2009CSIH95.html Cite as: [2009] ScotCS CSIH_95, 2010 SCLR 192, [2009] CSIH 95, 2010 GWD 4-58 |
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SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord CarlowayLord ClarkeSir David Edward QC
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Defenders and Reclaimers: Gill; McGrigors, Solicitors, LLP
30th December 2009
Introduction
[1] This
commercial action relates to a transaction regarding the acquisition from the
defenders by the pursuers of a large printing machine. It is averred the
machine was ultimately made available to the pursuers for their use on or about
11 January 2007. The pursuers (the now
respondents) claim that almost immediately thereafter they experienced
fundamental problems with its operation. In the present proceedings, the
respondents seek a declarator regarding the quality of the machine and certain
other monetary orders. They also seek a declarator in the following terms:
"2. For declarator that the terms and conditions of sale of the defenders intimated to the pursuers under cover of an e-mail from the defenders to the pursuers dated 20 November 2006, were not effectively incorporated into the contract between the parties referred to in the first conclusion hereof, and form no part of that contract such as to affect the contractual relations between the parties to this action".
In terms of rule of court 18.2(b) the only defence to the action tabled by the defenders (and now reclaimers) is reflected in their sole plea in law which is in the following terms:
"The defenders not being subject to the jurisdiction of the court the action should be dismissed".
That plea in law is supported by averments to the effect that the contract between the parties included, as part thereof, the reclaimers' standard terms of conditions, clause 28 thereof being in the following terms:
"These conditions shall be subject to and shall be construed in accordance with the Laws of England. The Courts of England shall have exclusive jurisdiction over any dispute which may arise hereunder, unless the parties agree otherwise in writing".
[2] The Lord Ordinary,
Lord Hodge, allowed the parties a preliminary proof before answer in
relation to the question of jurisdiction. Having made avizandum, at the
conclusion of the proof, he subsequently issued an interlocutor dated the 30 June 2009 repelling
the reclaimers' plea of no jurisdiction and granting declarator in terms of the
second conclusion of the summons. Against that interlocutor the reclaimers
have reclaimed. We should say, at the outset, that we were not invited by
either party to make any further findings beyond those which the
Lord Ordinary had made nor to amend any of the findings he made.
The Factual
Background
[3] The factual background to the transaction as
found by the Lord Ordinary was as follows. In early June 2006 a
representative of the reclaimers, Mr Geoff Lewis, approached the
respondents in order to promote the possible purchase by the respondents of a
UV printing machine manufactured by the reclaimers. He visited the respondents'
premises in Edinburgh and there saw the location where any such
machine might be installed. Mr Lewis followed up his visit by sending to
the respondents an e-mail which contained an outline proposal for the sale of
the UV printing machine. This proposal included the option of a finance package
to allow the respondents to acquire the machine by payment on a monthly rental
under a hire purchase or lease agreement. In the meantime another supplier
approached the respondents with an offer to supply a rival machine to that of
the reclaimers. On the 27 June 2006 Mr Lewis,
having been requested to do so by the respondents, sent the respondents another
copy of his proposal. The respondents, in furtherance of their interest in
purchasing a UV machine, in October 2006, visited the premises of the reclaimers'
rivals and inspected the rival machine. Thereafter on the 2 November 2006, a
representative of the respondents, Derek Minto, sent an e-mail to
Mr Lewis informing him that the respondents were tempted by an offer which
the reclaimers' rivals had made in respect of a sale of their machine. Mr Minto
asked Mr Lewis what was the best price and terms that the reclaimers could
offer on their machine. Mr Lewis responded immediately on the same day by
an e-mail to which was attached a paper entitled "High Cromaprint Lowest
Cost". He agreed to give a demonstration to the respondents of the machine on
the 16 November 2006. He went on to
say that he would make "a final proposal covering all the points we find
directly after our demonstration".
[4] In the event,
Mr Lewis sent further proposals by e-mail dated
10 and 13 November 2006. On the 13 November 2006
Marion Goodridge-Payne of the reclaimers forwarded to Mr Minto and his colleague
Mr Mark Baillie, an internal reclaimers' e-mail in which
Mr Lewis informed Mr Jim Walker, his supervisor "that he had
backed away from his finance offerings in his final proposal and that he
expected to have this closed end of this week/beginning of next week".
[5] On 16 November 2006 the
operation of the printing machine was demonstrated to Mr Minto and
Mr Baillie at the reclaimers' premises in Stevenage. On
the 17 November 2006 Mr Lewis sent
to Mr Minto an e-mail to which there was attached a further proposal. Mr Lewis
apologised that the document was longer than had been planned and had taken
longer to put together. He stated that he would call "in a couple of hours"
but invited Mr Minto to telephone him if he had any questions. The
Lord Ordinary, at paragraph 7 of his opinion, sets out the full terms
of the proposal. It began in the following way:
"Thank you for visiting our facility yesterday. I hope you found the visit informative and useful. As discussed please find our revised proposal below to attempt to reconcile the phasing of payments for the Cromaprint 22UV.
We propose to supply the system to reach your price requirements as follows:
Principle £112,000"
[6] There then followed a
detailed payment schedule in the body of which appeared the following:
"Target installation date: 4 December 2006 (to be confirmed following survey)".
The proposal provided for the supply of certain materials, sets of ink and rolls of substrates to be supplied without cost. The proposal then contained a detailed specification of what was to be supplied and covered by the price which included delivery and installation and on site or off site training for up to three operators plus a 12 months all inclusive warranty. Mr Lewis did not, apparently, await for a response to that proposal but telephoned Mr Minto who explained to him that he had to consult his colleague, Mr Baillie before responding. Having considered the proposal with Mr Baillie, Mr Minto contacted Mr Lewis, by e-mail on the 17 November, (some hours after the time of Mr Lewis' e-mail proposal), with what the Lord Ordinary described as a "terse message". The e-mail simply read "Go ahead".
[7] On Sunday
19 November, Mr Lewis e-mailed Mr Minto and stated:
"It's on the way. See you tomorrow. Thanks again".
The following day, Monday 20 November, Mr Lewis visited the respondents' premises at Edinburgh. He was shown where it was proposed the machine should be installed. He said that he would want one of his engineers to inspect the locus in question. Later on the 20 November Mr Lewis sent Mr Minto an e-mail, which was copied to his colleagues Michael Banks and Jim Walker, in which he stated that they were "all underway" and that they should have a site survey of the respondents' premises at the end of the week. The message addressed to Mr Minto continued:
"I need to send you our exciting standard terms and conditions of sale, which should help if you have any insomniac tendencies. These also feature on the back of all our invoices should you be unlucky enough to lose this set, and wish to refer to them".
He also thanked Mr Minto for the order.
The Dispute
[8] As has been seen, the dispute between the parties
is as to whether or not those standard terms then became part of the contract
between the parties for the supply of the machine. The reclaimers maintain
that they did. The respondents contend that they did not, since they came too
late, a completed and binding contract between the parties having been
concluded prior to the 20 November.
[9] The reclaimers position
is that, as at 20 November, there was no concluded contract between the
parties since its conclusion depended on two suspensive conditions being
fulfilled. The first of these was that a satisfactory site survey would be
obtained. The second was the completion of a credit check on the respondents.
Both sides agreed that there was a concluded and binding contract for the
supply of the machine. The respondents' position was that the contract was
concluded by the exchange of messages on the 17 November between
Mr Lewis and Mr Minto, or alternatively, at the latest, when
Mr Lewis e-mailed with the message: "It's on the way". It was a striking
feature of the position of the reclaimers before the Lord Ordinary, as
recorded by him, that they could not, with any precision, say when the contract
between the parties was concluded and how it was concluded. That remained a
feature of their position before this court.
[10] It is appropriate to have
regard to the evidence in the Lord Ordinary's findings relative to the
issues of a site survey and credit check. As a matter of fact, on the
20 November, Mr Lewis and a colleague visited the respondents'
premises and carried out a site survey. The Lord Ordinary records that,
by this time, the respondents had ordered the materials necessary for
constructing the print room where the printer would be installed. After the
survey had been completed, a copy of a survey report was sent by the reclaimers
to the delivery company who were engaged to install the machine. Thereafter
the parties corresponded by e-mail concerning the specification of a compressor
for the printing machine and also, to assist the delivery company to plan the
installation, they exchanged information about the height of the steps into the
respondents' workshop.
[11] As regards the issue of a
credit check, the position, as found by the Lord Ordinary, was that on the
20 November 2006, the reclaimers instructed Dun
& Bradstreet to carry out a credit check on the respondents. The delivery
and installation of the printing machine was postponed by the reclaimers, from
the proposed delivery date to 4 December 2006, in
order that they might demonstrate it to another potential customer at their own
premises. The machine was then installed in the respondents' premises on the 13 December 2006. On
the same day, Mr Minto, on behalf of the respondents, completed a credit
account application in which it was stated that the estimated monthly spend
would be £20,000. On the reverse side of that application form was printed the
reclaimers' standard conditions of sale.
[12] The Lord Ordinary heard
evidence from Mr Minto of the respondents and Mr Lewis of the
reclaimers as to their understanding of how the contract came to be concluded.
Mr Minto gave evidence to the effect that he did not respond to
Mr Lewis's e-mail of the 20 November, with its reference to the
reclaimers' standard terms, as he thought that these were irrelevant because
they came too late. As the Lord Ordinary puts it "To his mind Baillies
had done a deal with Du Pont to purchase the printing machine at cost
price as Du Pont were very keen to break into the Scottish market with their
product" (at paragraph 15). At paragraph 30 of his opinion the
Lord Ordinary states:
"I accept Mr Minto's evidence that he did not respond to Mr Lewis's sending of Du Pont's standard terms on 20 November because he thought he already had a deal and that the terms were therefore irrelevant. I consider that the reasonable business man would have taken a similar view".
[13] The Lord Ordinary
records that Mr Minto was aware that the reclaimers were to carry out a site
survey before installing the printing machine but Mr Lewis had already
seen the premises in June 2006 and had formed the view that they could
accommodate the machine and had informed Mr Lewis that that was the case.
The planned survey was requested only to ensure that the doors of the building
would be wide enough to allow the machine to be installed.
[14] Mr Minto's position
with regard to the question of a credit check was that, had he applied his mind
to this question, at the time, he would have "considered this was appropriate
because there were deferred payments of the price". He understood that the
application form to open a credit account, which he completed on the
13 December, related to the purchase of the ink and other consumables and
not to the machine itself.
[15] Mr Lewis gave
evidence that it was the reclaimers' invariable practice to carry out credit
checks on customers and for customers to apply to open a credit account with
the reclaimers if they were to supply goods other than for cash in advance.
There was also a necessity for a site survey in every case, to avoid
discovering, too late, things on the site which would prevent installation on a
planned date. Under the reclaimers' procedures they could not install a
machine until their European Business Manager had approved the credit check on
the customer and their engineer had inspected and approved the site.
[16] The Lord Ordinary
records also, (at paragraph 17 of his opinion) that Mr Lewis' understanding
of the deal was that there would not be a binding agreement between the parties
for three months after the delivery of the machine since his understanding was
that the respondents had a right to return the machine within that period if
they were not satisfied with it. Mr Lewis maintained that when he said
"it's on the way" he intended to say that the reclaimers were taking the steps
necessary to provide for the installation of the machine, that is the credit
check and the site survey. He maintained that the respondents' instruction to
"go ahead" was signifying an assent to these matters.
[17] As identified by the
Lord Ordinary (at paragraph 23 of his opinion) the principal issue in
the case was:
"Whether the parties had entered into a binding contract on November 2006, before Mr Lewis sent Mr Minto Du Pont's standard terms".
In addressing that question, the Lord Ordinary, observed that while the evidence which the parties adduced included the subjective views of the persons directly involved with making the deal, namely Mr Minto and Mr Lewis, one party's views were not relevant to the task which the court had to perform, except to the extent that they were communicated to the other party or cast any light on factual circumstances which were known to both parties. The Lord Ordinary, in reaching his decision, noted (at paragraph 28 of his opinion) that:
"It was also common ground between the parties that the 17 November proposal contained the essential elements of a contract of sale. Prima facie it was an offer which was open for acceptance. Against that background, the e-mail exchanges of 17 and 19 November 2006, while informal, were the only vouching of the contract, other than, on Du Pont's approach, the e-mail of 20 November by which Mr Lewis intimated their standard terms".
His Lordship continued:
"In the circumstances I am not persuaded that the informal nature of the e-mail communications of 17 and 19 November 2006 points towards an intention to postpone the formation of a contract. On the contrary, the instruction to go ahead and the response that it's on the way would suggest to reasonable persons that the parties were agreeing a binding deal".
It was noted, by the Lord Ordinary, that the 17 November proposal did not state that there were any suspensive conditions which required to be satisfactorily performed before the agreement to sell became binding. His Lordship also found that there was nothing in the evidence to establish that there had been discussions, far less agreement, that the outcome of any site inspection might be "a deal breaker". Moreover there was nothing in the evidence to suggest that anyone from the reclaimers had ever told the respondents that there could be no concluded deal until there had been obtained, by them, a favourable credit check. Having regard to all these matters, the Lord Ordinary's conclusion was that the parties entered into a binding contract for the supply of the printing machine on the 19 November 2006, before Du Pont intimated the standard terms and conditions. Accordingly those terms and conditions were not incorporated into the contract of sale.
The Reclaimers' Case
[18] Before
this court, counsel for the reclaimers accepted, as had been the reclaimers'
position before the Lord Ordinary, that Mr Lewis' e-mail of the
17 November contained within it all that was required for a valid offer to
sell the particular machine. Counsel for the reclaimers informed us that, in
attacking the Lord Ordinary's decision, he did so under three broad headings.
The first was that the Lord Ordinary had erred in holding that the parties
had intended, by their exchange of e-mails on the 17 November 2006, to be immediately bound,
because he had failed to place sufficient weight on evidence that demonstrated
that there was no such intention. The second proposition was that the
Lord Ordinary had erred in failing to hold that, even if those exchanges
demonstrated an intention to be bound, the need for a site survey and credit
check was of such significance that neither party would have expected to be
bound until these matters were satisfactorily addressed. The satisfactory
outcome of these conditions were suspensive of the whole contract coming into
operation. The third proposition was that the Lord Ordinary had failed to
give enough weight to the response to Mr Lewis' e-mail of the
20 November enclosing the standard terms, from which response it was
reasonable to infer an agreement by the respondents that the standard terms
should be incorporated into the contract between the parties. The terms had
been accepted by reason of the respondents' silence and, accordingly, acquiescence
in the matter. When pressed by the court as to when, and how, the reclaimers
contended that the contract had been concluded, counsel for the reclaimers
informed the court that this was "sometime after the e-mail of the
20 November". That then became "sometime after the credit check and site
survey had been completed".
[19] Counsel's first proposition was expanded by
him on the basis that the terms of the correspondence of the 17 and
19 November were so informal and ambiguous that it did not manifest an
intention by the parties to be bound immediately to a contract. Reference in
particular was made to the expressions "go ahead" and "it's on the way". The
cases of Aisling Developments Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd & Another
(2008) CSOH 140 and Fletcher Challenge Energy Ltd v Energy
Corporation of New Zealand Ltd (2002) NZLR 433 were referred to.
[20] The second proposition advanced by counsel
for the reclaimers relied on what he repeatedly referred to as the "shared
knowledge of both parties as to the necessity of having a satisfactory site
survey and credit check". Reference was made to various passages in the
evidence of Mr Lewis and Mr Minto about these matters. The
submission appeared to be that such was the nature of this "knowledge" that
there was implied into the agreement, brought about by the exchange of the
e-mails of the 17 November, a condition suspensive of it becoming final
until a satisfactory survey and credit check were obtained. Reference was made
to passages of the evidence where it was said the parties did acknowledge that
a site survey and a credit check would be carried out. These matters imported
conditions, it was said, which were suspensive of any contract coming into
effect. Reference was made to McBryde: The law of Contract in Scotland (3rd Edition)
at para 5-36 and to Chisholm v Wardrope 2005 SCLR 530
for an example of an implied suspensive condition.
[21] In advancing the third of his propositions,
counsel for the reclaimers submitted that, whilst Mr Lewis' offer did
amount to a valid offer to sell, it did not contain provisions for certain
matters which one might have expected to have found in a contract of the kind
in question. For example, nothing was said about retention of title. Such
omissions were filled by the provisions of the reclaimers' standard terms.
That is what the respondents would have anticipated as being the normal course
of things. Mr Minto's conduct was reflective of that being the position.
He did not object to the standard terms and conditions being referred to by
Mr Lewis in his e-mail of 20 November. He simply remained silent.
In the context of a situation where the parties had been, as here, in a
prolonged course of negotiations, silence amounted to acceptance of the
conditions - reference was made to Gloag Contract 2nd Edition
at page 29. For all the foregoing reasons, counsel for the reclaimers
moved the court to allow the reclaiming motion, to repel the respondents'
fourth plea in law and to sustain the reclaimers' plea of no jurisdiction.
The Respondents' Case
[22] The
key question which the court had to determine, it was submitted by counsel for
the respondents in reply, was whether, on viewing matters objectively, there
was a concluded agreement between the parties on the 17 November 2006
or, at the latest, on 19 November 2006. The basic rule was that, in
deciding such questions, the court did not look into the minds of the parties
but assessed matters on an objective basis, having regard to what the parties
had said, or done, at the relevant times. For that reason it was questionable,
perhaps, as to whether there had been any need for a proof in this case. Be
that as it may, the key document was the reclaimers' e-mail of the 17 November 2006. Contrary to what had
been contended for, on behalf of the reclaimers, the e-mail exchange of the
17 November was not of an informal character. The proposal of the
reclaimers was set out in a detailed three page document. It followed the
demonstration to the respondents of the machine in question and was intended to
be a final proposal in terms of which the reclaimers made a offer to sell the
machine to the respondents at a stipulated price. As the reclaimers,
themselves, accepted, it contained all the essential elements of an offer for
the sale of this machine, which, the Lord Ordinary held, was prima facie
open for acceptance. The Lord Ordinary was correct in concluding that the
reply e-mail of 17 November stating "go ahead" was in the circumstances a
clear indication of the respondents' acceptance of that offer. That that was
the position, it was submitted, was confirmed by the reclaimers' e-mail
response of the 19 November 2006 stating "it's on the way", "it's"
referring to the printer. The reclaimers were intimating that the printer was
in the course of being delivered. That was consistent with a contract having
been concluded by, at the latest, 19 November 2006. The construction of the
parties' communings, which the reclaimers argued for, went beyond what the
words used conveyed. There was no indication in the reclaimers' proposal that
a site survey and/or a credit check required to be carried out before a
contract between the parties would be concluded. There was no evidence that
the reclaimers' representative gave any such indication in negotiation and
discussion with the respondents' representatives.
[23] The reclaimers argued that that it might
have been expected, in the circumstances, that the contract would include
standard terms covering certain specified matters. But that was completely
beside the point. The proposal of the 17 November 2006 was an offer containing
all the essential elements for a contract of sale, which was open for
acceptance. It was a final proposal or offer from the reclaimers. It was
accepted by the respondents that other matters might have been addressed in the
standard terms in the present case but the parties had concluded their contract
without these matters being dealt with by the incorporation of the standard
terms. Had the reclaimers wished to incorporate the standard terms, before the
conclusion of the agreement, they could have done so by making them an
essential part of the offer. They did not do so.
[24] The reclaimers' alternative approach to
matters, namely, that any agreement entered into on the 17 November 2006 was subject to suspensive
conditions regarding the obtaining of a satisfactory site survey and/or credit
check was also misconceived. There was no mention of these in the offer, nor
was there any evidence that the reclaimers' representatives had given an
indication to the respondents' representatives, prior to the communings of the
17 November, that such matters were to be so regarded. There was evidence
from the respondents Mr Minto that, as far as he was concerned, there was
no issue as to the site survey because the reclaimers', Mr Lewis, had
already visited the respondents' premises on June 2006 and had indicated
that there was no problem with the premises as far as any installation of the
printer was concerned. Mr Minto's evidence was to the effect that
Mr Lewis indicated that the respondents' credit worthiness was
satisfactory as the latter had already carried out a credit check on the
pursuers. Mr Minto, it was submitted, was entitled to ignore the
reclaimers' standard terms and conditions when they were sent on the 20 November 2006 because, as he said in
evidence, "the deal had been done". Moreover, the reclaimers e-mail of 20 November
was quite consistent with that being so. It concluded by Mr Lewis
thanking Mr Minto for the respondents' order, the order having been placed
on the 17 November by the respondents. For these reasons the reclaimers'
motion, it was submitted, should be refused.
Decision
[25] Unsurprisingly it was not suggested by counsel for the reclaimers
that the conventional means of identifying that a mutual contract has been
concluded by reference to an acceptance meeting an offer was inapplicable in
the present case. Moreover, as noted, it was accepted, on behalf of the
reclaimers, that the terms of their proposal of the 17 November were such
that it was capable of being accepted immediately, without further ado,
following as it did discussions and negotiations between the parties. That
concession was clearly correctly made, in particular having regard to the
background of the length of time the parties had been in discussion, the
previous proposals which had been put forward and the fact that the reclaimers
were clearly anxious to conclude a deal as soon as possible against their
rivals. There was nothing informal or ambiguous, in our view, in the proposal.
The brevity of the response thereto, that is "go ahead", (particularly standing
the previous dealings between the parties) did not, in our judgment, bring with
it any ambiguity. It was a totally apt communication of an acceptance of the
proposal. As noted, the reclaimers attempted to make something of the
informality of language employed but there is no requirement for formality of
language in a contract of this sort and commercial contracts are regularly
concluded in a similar way, particularly where the parties have been in
detailed discussion and negotiations beforehand. Accordingly we are of the clear
view that the communings of the parties of the 17 November were capable of
amounting to a concluded unconditional contract between them for the sale and
purchase of the printer and that, moreover, in choosing to use the language
they did, against the background in which it was used, the parties, looking at
matters objectively, must be held to have intended to have reached a binding
and concluded agreement by those communings. Not a word is said in the
proposal or in the e-mails of 17th November either about their
terms being qualified by reference to any standard terms and condition, or that
any agreement arising from them would be conditional on the obtaining of a
satisfactory site survey and/or credit check. There was no finding by the
Lord Ordinary that, at any time, prior to the exchange of correspondence
on the 17 November, the reclaimers' representatives had made it clear to
the respondents that any subsequent dealings, with regard to the purchase of
the printer, would be conditional on such matters. We were not invited to make
any additional or substitute findings to that effect.
[26] With regard to both the question of the
incorporation of the reclaimers' standard terms and the alleged requirements of
a satisfactory site survey and/or credit check, counsel for the reclaimers
based his argument, as has been noted, for much of the time on the idea of
these factors fell within "the shared knowledge" of the parties. Quite apart
from the fact that we do not consider that the findings of the Lord Ordinary
support the nature and extent of such knowledge, which was being argued for, it
was a concept which was left hanging in the air in that the counsel was unable
to demonstrate how it had been converted into legal rights and obligations
under the principles of the law of contract, at the stage at which the parties
made their deal. Assumptions, beliefs or understanding do not, by themselves,
translate into contractural rights and obligations. The reclaimers were unable
to demonstrate on the facts found, how any such things, (if they existed) came
to be translated into legal rights and obligations by virtue of what the
parties had said or done.
[27] With specific reference to the reclaimers'
position regarding the incorporation of their standard terms and conditions, as
counsel for the respondent pointed out, however common-place it might be for
such standard conditions to find their way into such a contract they can only
form part of a contract by virtue of silence and acquiescence when it has been
proposed that they should be part of the contract before the contract is
concluded. The problem for the reclaimers, in the present case, was that the
standard terms and conditions were proffered too late. The deal had been
struck and its terms already agreed. We should, furthermore, add that the
provisions of the reclaimers' standard conditions, as proffered, are in
conflict in certain respects with the terms of the final proposal, eg with
regard to payment of the price and delivery terms. Counsel for the reclaimers,
when that was brought to his attention, never explained how that difficulty was
to be resolved if his submissions were otherwise to be accepted.
[28] For all the foregoing reasons we conclude
that the Lord Ordinary was correct in reaching the decision he did. We
shall, therefore, refuse the reclaiming motion and adhere to the
Lord Ordinary's interlocutor of 30 June 2009.