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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Smith v. The International Development Company (Aberdeen) Ltd [2006] ScotSC 50 (26 May 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2006/50.html
Cite as: [2006] ScotSC 50

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SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLAND AND ISLANDS AT ABERDEEN

 

A395/02

JUDGEMENT

 

of

 

SHERIFF PRINCIPAL SIR STEPHEN S T YOUNG Bt QC

 

in the cause

 

JOHN SMITH

 

Pursuer and Appellant

 

against

 

THE INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT COMPANY (ABERDEEN) LIMITED

 

Defenders and Respondents

 

 

 

 

 

Act: Party

Alt: Mr James Steel, solicitor, Raeburn Christie Clark & Wallace

 

 

Aberdeen: 26 May 2006

 

The sheriff principal, having resumed consideration of the cause, dismisses the appeal and adheres to the interlocutor of the sheriff dated 31 January 2005; finds the pursuer and appellant liable to the defenders and respondents in the expenses of the appeal and allows an account thereof to be given in and remits the same when lodged to the auditor of court to tax and to report; quoad ultra remits the cause to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Note

 

[1] I explained the background to this case in my note dated 21 April 2005. At that time the pursuer had marked an appeal to the Court of Session against my interlocutor dated 30 March 2005. This appeal was heard on 17 February 2006 when an interlocutor was pronounced in the following terms:

 

Edinburgh 17 February 2006

The Lords, having considered the Appeal, and having heard the pursuer personally and Counsel for the defenders, Allow the Appeal to the extent of Recalling the interlocutor of the Sheriff Principal dated 30 March 2005, and decern: remit to the Sheriff Principal to proceed as accords; find the pursuer liable to the defenders in the expenses of the Appeal and remit the account thereof, when lodged, to the Auditor of Court to tax and to report.

 

[2] By interlocutor dated 14 March 2006 I appointed parties to be heard on the competency of the pursuer's appeal against the interlocutor of the sheriff dated 31 January 2005 on 28 March 2006. I appended to this interlocutor a note explaining that the hearing on 28 March 2006 would be confined to the question whether the appeal was competent, and I referred here to rule 31.4(3) of the Ordinary Cause Rules.

 

[3] On 28 March 2006 the pursuer represented himself. He explained that he had consulted a firm of solicitors in Aberdeen who had instructed an opinion from counsel. These solicitors had indicated that, depending upon what counsel advised, they might be willing to act for the pursuer in the appeal. In this situation he moved me to adjourn the hearing on the competency of the appeal until a later date. The defenders' solicitor indicated that he was prepared to leave the decision on this matter to myself, and the result was that I adjourned the hearing on competency until 19 May 2006.

 

[4] On 19 May 2006 the pursuer again represented himself and the defenders were represented by their solicitor. The pursuer stated that in advance of the hearing he had had advice from both solicitors and counsel who had been aware that the purpose of the hearing that day was to consider the question of the competency of the appeal. They had advised him that he should represent himself at the hearing. He said that he had sought advice from the sheriff clerk about how he should appeal against the interlocutor of the sheriff dated 31 January 2005. He had, so he said, been advised to put in an appeal including the case number and date.

 

[5] I set out in paragraph [7] of my note dated 21 April 2005 what then seemed to me to be the relevant details of the pursuer's note of appeal (no. 28 of process). Since the point is of some importance, I think it may be helpful at this stage to set out in its entirety the note of appeal as lodged by the pursuer. It reads:

 

Form A1

 

NOTE OF APPEAL

 

SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLANDS AND ISLANDS AT ABERDEEN

 

Court Ref : A395/02

 

In the cause

 

MR JOHN SMITH, residing at 90 Sheddocksley Drive, Aberdeen

 

PURSUER

 

against

 

THE INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT COMPANY (ABERDEEN) LIMITED, formerly known as THE INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT COMPANY PLC, a company incorporated under the Companies Acts and having a place of business at 9 Queens Road, Aberdeen AB15 4YL

 

DEFENDER

 

I have been informed that on 31st January 2005 absolvitor was granted with expenses against me in the above action.

 

I am writing to inform you that I wish to lodge an appeal to the Sheriff Principal regarding this decision.

 

Yours sincerely,

(Sgd) John Smith

John Smith

 

Date: 11th February 2005

 

[6] The pursuer addressed me at some length on the merits of the interlocutors of the sheriffs dated respectively 13 December 2004 and 31 January 2005. For present purposes I do not think that I need to rehearse these particular submissions since they had nothing to do with the competency of the appeal. But I should say, in case they are thought to be of significance in the future, that the pursuer helpfully produced a typed version of his submissions and this has been retained as no. 30 of process along with copies of three letters which he produced, namely (1) a letter dated 15 December 2004 from Mr David S McDonald, solicitor, to the pursuer, (2) a letter dated 1 December 2005 with enclosures from Mr Frank Doran MP to the Rt Hon Tessa Jowell MP, and (3) a letter dated 17 May 2006 from Mr Doran to the pursuer.

 

[7] It will be seen from the typed version of his submissions that the pursuer did at one point purport to address the question of the competency of his appeal. The relevant passage reads as follows:

 

Incompetent Appeal

In relation to this action I appealed a decision at the Court of Session and the Lords ruled in my favour, referring me back to this hearing.

The Lords had found in my favour stating that for Justice to be seen to be done I had to be given the chance to put forward my case.

Lords stated that they preferred if I had attended court (re above hearings) but stressed that as a party litigant it was impossible for me to be in two places at once. They also stated that given a valid reason for not attending I had to be given the chance to be heard, in the interests of justice.

 

Lords stated that it was clear from my submission that I wished to appeal this decision, despite the fact that it was not submitted correctly.

It was also pointed out that it was not fair to expect a party litigant to be aware of the correct appeal procedure and that in the interests of justice I should be allowed to put forward my case.

 

[8] In response, the defenders' solicitor pointed out that no grounds of appeal had been stated in the note of appeal. He drew attention to rules 31.4(1) and (3) of the Ordinary Cause Rules and Form A1 appended thereto which includes the words "(state grounds on which appeal is to proceed)". It was thus clear, said the defenders' solicitor, both from the rules and Form A1 that the grounds of appeal required to be stated in a note of appeal. It followed that the pursuer's note of appeal was not in competent form and the appeal should therefore be dismissed as incompetent.

 

[8] In a brief reply, the pursuer stated that, when he had sought advice from the sheriff clerk, he had not been given advice about the correct form of appeal, nor had he been given any advice on this by Mr McDonald.

 

[9] In my opinion the submissions for the defenders are to be preferred. Rule 31.4(1) provides that an appeal to the sheriff principal shall be marked by lodging a note of appeal in Form A1. This provides, inter alia, as follows:

 

The pursuer (or defender or as the case may be) appeals to the sheriff principal on the following grounds:-

(state grounds on which appeal is to proceed)

 

It is thus abundantly clear in my opinion that a note of appeal must incorporate grounds of appeal, and this I think is reinforced by rule 31.4(3) which provides that the grounds of appeal in the note of appeal shall consist of brief specific numbered propositions stating the grounds on which it is proposed to submit that the appeal should be allowed or as the case may be. In the present case, as noted, the pursuer's note of appeal, although modelled to some extent on Form A1, contains not even a hint of any ground upon which it is proposed to submit that the appeal should be allowed. It follows in my opinion that the appeal is incompetent and should be dismissed without further ado.

 

[10] In reaching this conclusion I am conscious that rule 31.4(5)(a) provides that an appellant may amend the grounds of appeal at any time up to fourteen days before the date assigned for the hearing of the appeal. But this particular rule pre-supposes that there are already grounds of appeal which may be amended. In this case there are no grounds of appeal so there is nothing that may be amended in terms of rule 31.4(5)(a) and this rule is accordingly of no assistance to the pursuer in overcoming what appears to me to be the fundamental incompetency of his appeal.

 

[11] In this context it is perhaps worth recalling that the requirement that a note of appeal should include a statement of the grounds of appeal is of benefit not only to the respondent but also to the sheriff principal and his clerk. When a note of appeal is received in an ordinary action one of the first steps that has to be taken is to assign a diet for the hearing of the appeal. For this purpose it is necessary to estimate how much time may be needed to be set aside in the court diary for the hearing of the appeal and an adequate statement of the grounds of appeal is of considerable assistance in making this estimate. Likewise, it is of considerable assistance to the sheriff principal to have such a statement when he is preparing for the hearing of the appeal itself.

 

[12] For the sake of completeness, I should mention that in preparation for this appeal I had occasion to consider four cases which might have been thought to have had a bearing on the issue in the present case. These were McAdam v Shell UK Limited 1991 SC 360, City of Glasgow District Council v Secretary of State for Scotland 1993 SLT 198, Eurocopy Rentals Limited v Tayside Health Board 1996 SC 410 and the unreported decision of Sheriff Principal Macphail QC (as he then was) in Smyth v Pearce (Edinburgh, 13 July 2004). I had copies of the reports of these four cases made available to the pursuer and the defenders' solicitor and offered them an opportunity to comment upon them - see Brebner v British Coal Corporation 1988 SC 333. Not surprisingly, the pursuer had nothing to say about them while the defenders' solicitor observed, correctly, that the present case was to be distinguished from these four cases in that no ground of appeal at all had been stated by the pursuer in his note of appeal.

 

[13] I did not understand the pursuer to oppose the motion for the defenders that he should be found liable for the expenses of the appeal.

 


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2006/50.html