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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Taylor V. Cameron [2007] ScotSC 52 (24 September 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2007/52.html Cite as: [2007] ScotSC 52 |
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(F964/07)
JUDGMENT OF
in the appeal
in the cause
PAUL TAYLOR
Pursuer and
Respondent
against
LINDA ELIZABETH CAMERON or TAYLOR
Defender
and Appellant
Act: Thorley, Solicitor, Thorley Stephenson
Alt: Rattray, Solicitor,
EDINBURGH, 24 SEPTEMBER 2007
The Sheriff
Principal, having resumed consideration of the cause, refuses the defender and
appellant's motion to allow an appeal to be marked late; makes no order in relation to expenses.
(signed) EFB
NOTE:
1. Decree
of divorce was pronounced in this action on 10 August 2007 and extract was
issued on 27 August. The present
motion presented on behalf of the defender is to relieve her of the
consequences of Ordinary Cause Rule 31.1 (which sets the 14 day time limit for
the marking of appeals) and to allow her to mark an appeal late. In a Note of Appeal which accompanies the
motion the defender sets out that she was unaware of the existence of these
proceedings until 28 August 2007.
2. The
solicitor for the defender, at the outset of her submissions, acknowledged that
seeking leave to appeal out of time against an extracted decree raised an acute
question of competency. Alloa Brewery Co Ltd v Parker
1991 SCLR 70, a decision of an Extra Division, was clear authority for the
proposition that the dispensing power presently contained in Ordinary Cause
Rule 2.1, could not be invoked to waive the time limit for an appeal after
extract had been granted. In expressing
that view, however, the Court observed that "the appeal...has not been presented
on the ground that the interlocutors sought to be appealed against is invalid"
(p.72C). This passage had been noted,
and acted upon, by Sheriff Principal Hay of
3. The
pursuer's solicitor also made reference to Anderson
Brown & Co v Morris 1987 SLT (Sh Ct) 96, in particular for Sheriff
Principal O'Brien's doubts as to the competency of recalling an extract
"competently issued and obtained in good faith" and to Sheriff Principal's
Nicholson's willingness to consider the question of the validity of an
interlocutor leading to extract in Nortech
v Aeroskip Sports Ltd 1996 SLT (Sh Ct) 94. She then turned to the history of proceedings
in this case in an endeavour to demonstrate that decree had not been obtained
in good faith, and that through a defect in service it fell to be regarded as
invalid.
4 It is
unnecessary to rehearse that history in detail.
It is clear that there has been a long and acrimonious dispute between
the parties following their separation in September 2002. There have been proceedings for interdicts,
exclusion orders, disputed awards of aliment and accumulating arrears, and a minute
for civil imprisonment of the pursuer.
Issues over division of the matrimonial assets, which comprise the net
proceeds of sale of the former matrimonial home and the pursuer's interest in a
taxi business, remain unresolved. It is,
I accept, inconceivable that if the defender had become aware of the existence
of divorce proceedings she would have failed to have brought these to the
attention of her solicitors. In the
event, they first became aware of them when they were contacted by agents
holding the free proceeds of sale on the matrimonial home.
5. The
difficulties which face the defender and appellant, which I have with some
regret concluded are insurmountable, are, however, twofold. First, it is difficult to conclude that
decree was obtained by some form of subversion (which the appellant's
submissions sought to imply) when the initial writ bears to have been served
both by post and by sheriff officer at the defender's address, (albeit in the
latter instance by depositing the document in a letterbox). On the basis of ex facie regular service, one could not readily conclude
that the proceedings heading to decree had been conducted other than in good
faith, nor is it possible to identify any irregularity such as existed in the
case of Millar. This was a validly obtained decree and
extract following upon it was properly issued.
In consequence the case of Alloa
Brewery Co Ltd cannot be distinguished.
That in itself is sufficient for disposal of the appeal.
6. The
matter does not however end there. In
his submissions the solicitor for the pursuer and respondent drew my attention
to the unreported case of Mahmood v Mahmood
(unreported, 29 June 2007) a decision of Sheriff Principal R A Dunlop QC
sitting at
7. Maintaining
that these cases were properly decided the pursuer's solicitor submitted that
even if the extract in the present case was in some way defective the appeal
could not succeed. But it was necessary
to distinguish between the competency of the extract and the competency of the
decree which preceded it. It was a
"rogue extract" which enabled Sheriff Principal Nicholson to act in the case of
Gaunt v Marcos Leisure. In the case of Brown v Brown 1996 SCLR 527 Sheriff Principal Maguire, QC
felt unable to follow the decision in Millar. He said "it is the extract that should be
looked at if one is hoping to distinguish Alloa
Brewery Co Ltd not the interlocutor" and concluded that where there is
a valid extract there can be no appeal.
8. In my
judgment the solicitor for the pursuer and respondent was correct in both
branches of his argument. The view as to
the limited scope for an appeal against an interlocutor granting decree of
divorce expressed by Sheriffs Principal Nicholson and Dunlop is in my view
unassailable. The solicitor for the
defender sought to argue that the appeal had not been presented "on reponing
grounds" and maintained that there must have been an irregularity in service
which undermined the validity of the divorce decree. That might be capable of being construed as
other than "a reponing ground", but it does not constitute a ground of appeal
directed against the merits of the Sheriff's decision and in consequence cannot
be entertained. Identification of the
appellant's argument in those precise terms also serves to emphasise the
weakness of it in relation to the rule in Alloa
Brewery Co Ltd. The argument is
directed not against the extract, but against the interlocutor preceding
it. There are sound policy reasons for
conferring the status of finality on the issue of extract, and to open the way
to an argument that an extract is invalidated by some perceived irregularity at
an earlier stage of the proceedings is not a course which in my view ought to
be adopted.
9. In all
these circumstances the appeal must be refused.
As in Mahmood I do that
with regret, accepting that the only course open to the defender to cure what
is undoubtedly an injustice will be recourse to an action of reduction.
(signed) EFB