BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Law Commission (Reports) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Law Commission >> Scottish Law Commission (Reports) >> Seventh Programme of Law Reform [2004] SLC 198 (Report) (24 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/other/SLC/Report/2004/198.html Cite as: [2004] SLC 198 (Report) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
SCOTTISH LAW COMMISSION
(Scot Law Com No 198)
Seventh Programme of Law Reform
To: Ms Cathy Jamieson MSP, Minister for Justice
We have the honour to submit for approval by the Scottish Ministers our Seventh Programme of Law Reform to commence on 1 January 2005.
RONALD D MACKAY, Chairman
GERARD MAHER
KENNETH G C REID
JOSEPH M THOMSON
COLIN TYRE
Miss Jane L McLeod, Chief Executive
24 December 2004
Laid before the Scottish Parliament by the Scottish Ministers under section 3(2) of the Law Commissions Act 1965 February 2005
SE/2005/2
EDINBURGH: The Stationery Office
£x.xx
0 10 888158 X
The Scottish Law Commission was set up by section 2 of the Law Commissions Act 1965 for the purpose of promoting the reform of the law of Scotland. The Commissioners are:
The Honourable Lord Eassie, Chairman
Professor Gerard Maher, QC
Professor Kenneth G C Reid
Professor Joseph M Thomson
Mr Colin J Tyre, QC.
The Chief Executive of the Commission is Miss Jane L McLeod. Its offices are at 140 Causewayside, Edinburgh EH9 1PR.
Tel: 0131 668 2131
Fax: 0131 662 4900
Email: [email protected]
Or via our website at www.scotlawcom.gov.uk – select "Contact"
NOTES
1. For those wishing further copies of this paper it may be downloaded from our website or purchased from TSO Scotland Bookshop.
2. If you have any difficulty in reading this document, please contact us and we will do our best to assist. You may wish to note that an accessible electronic version of this document is available on our website.
This publication (excluding the Scottish Law Commission logo) may be re-used free of charge in any format or medium for research for non-commercial purposes, private study or for internal circulation within an organisation.
This is subject to it being re-used accurately and not used in a misleading context. The material must be acknowledged as Crown copyright and the title of the publication specified.
For any other use of this material please apply for a Click-Use Licence for core material at www.hmso.gov.uk/copyright/licences/core/core_licence.htm or by writing to: OQPS Licensing Division, St Clements House, 2-16 Colegate, Norwich, NR3 1BQ; Fax: 01603 723000; Email: [email protected]
Contents
Chairman's foreword | |
Part 1 Introduction | |
Background | 1.1 |
Project selection criteria | 1.2 |
Consultation | 1.3 |
Basis of the Seventh Programme | 1.6 |
Projects undertaken during the Sixth Programme | 1.10 |
Advice to government departments and the Scottish Administration | 1.12 |
Sharp v Thomson | 1.15 |
Interest on debt and damages | 1.17 |
Rape and other sexual offences | 1.18 |
Limitation in personal injury actions | 1.19 |
Assisting on implementation of reports | 1.21 |
Work of the Law Commission | 1.22 |
Consolidation and statute law revision | 1.26 |
Part 2 Seventh Programme of Law Reform | |
Preliminary | 2.1 |
Leasehold tenure – conversion of long leases | 2.3 |
Land registration | 2.7 |
Trusts | 2.12 |
Judicial factors | 2.18 |
Succession | 2.21 |
Assignation of, and security over, incorporeal moveables | 2.31 |
Unincorporated associations | 2.40 |
Provocation, self-defence, coercion and necessity | 2.46 |
Appendix List of those consulted on preparation of Seventh Programme | Appendix |
Chairman's foreword
SCOTTISH LAW COMMISSION SEVENTH PROGRAMME OF LAW REFORM
In June 2005 we will mark the fortieth anniversary of the establishment of the Scottish Law Commission and this, our Seventh Programme of Law Reform, sets out the projects on which we intend to work in the initial years of the Commission's forthcoming fifth decade. The Programme has been the subject of extensive consultation with the legal profession and other interested bodies and we have sought views from the public at large. We are very grateful to all who commented on our draft proposals and who made suggestions of other topics which we might consider. The result is a balanced programme of work, which we believe will be useful to the community in Scotland. We look forward to making progress with the topics contained in the Programme, together with the other projects which come to us by ministerial reference. We do so knowing that we can rely on the dedication of our staff and on the advice and assistance of both colleagues in the legal and academic professions and other interested bodies whose participation in our projects is important to their success.
THE HON LORD EASSIE
Chairman
Part 1 Introduction
Background
1.1 Under section 3 of the Law Commissions Act 1965 we are required to prepare and submit to the Scottish Ministers programmes for the examination of different branches of the law with a view to reform. This is the seventh such programme[1]. As with the last two, it has been conceived as a rolling programme, incorporating ongoing work from the Sixth Programme as well as identifying new projects to be undertaken, and comprising a mix of short, medium and long term projects. We recommend[2] that all of the projects identified should be undertaken by ourselves rather than by another agency.
Project selection criteria
1.2 We have adopted the following criteria in selecting new topics for inclusion in the Programme:-
• importance: the extent to which the law is unsatisfactory (for example, unfair, unclear, unduly complex or outdated); and the scale of the problem in terms of the proportion of the community affected, the extent of the practical difficulties created by the existing law and whether these difficulties can be overcome other than by a change in the law.
• suitability: whether the issues concerned are predominantly legal rather than political and whether there is any other agency better placed to examine the topic in question.
• resources: the expertise and experience of Commissioners and legal staff and, in relation to projects where there may be a substantial role for a consultant, the availability of adequate funding; and the need for a mix of projects in terms of scale and timing in order to achieve a balanced workload among Commissioners and facilitate effective management of the Programme.
Consultation
1.5 We are very grateful to all who took part in this consultation exercise. While the number of responses made to the leaflet was small, we did receive comments from individuals whom we would not otherwise have reached. Overall our provisional list of topics for inclusion in the Programme received a favourable response and a number of suggestions were made about other areas of the law that merited review. Two items are included in the Programme as a direct result of suggestions made by consultees[3]. Although a number of topics suggested did not meet our project selection criteria, there were some, such as the call for a comprehensive review of civil justice and reform of arbitration law, that we felt appropriate to draw to the attention of the Scottish Executive for consideration.
Basis of the Seventh Programme
Projects undertaken during the Sixth Programme
1.11 The following table summarises the projects that we have undertaken since the beginning of 2000. It includes both those carried out under the Sixth Programme itself and those that have been specifically referred to us by the Scottish Ministers or by a UK government department[4].PROJECTS UNDER THE SIXTH PROGRAMME
Projects under the Sixth Programme | Projects under the Sixth Programme |
Irritancies | Medium term project – report submitted May 2003 (Scot Law Com No 191) |
Judicial factors | Long term project – ongoing |
Leasehold tenure | Medium term project – ongoing |
Land registration | Medium term project – ongoing |
Trusts | Medium term project– ongoing |
Completion of work on diligence | Short term project – report submitted April 2001 (Scot Law Com No 183) |
Other advisory work ongoing at January 2000 or started since that date | Other advisory work ongoing at January 2000 or started since that date |
Jurisdictions under the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Acts | Reference from Scottish Ministers – report submitted March 2000 (Scot Law Com No 178) |
Poinding and warrant sale | Reference from Scottish Ministers – report submitted March 2000 (Scot Law Com No 177) |
Damages under the Human Rights Act 1998 * | Reference from the Lord Chancellor and Scottish Ministers – report submitted August 2000 (Scot Law Com No 180) |
Third parties – rights against insurers * | Advice to the Department of Trade and Industry – report submitted June 2001 (Scot Law Com No 184) |
Age of criminal responsibility | Reference from Scottish Ministers – report submitted November 2001 (Scot Law Com No 185) |
Title to sue for non-patrimonial loss | Reference from Scottish Ministers – report submitted August 2002 (Scot Law Com No 187) |
Law of the foreshore and seabed | Reference from Scottish Ministers – report submitted March 2003 (Scot Law Com No 190) |
Partnership * | Reference from the Department of Trade and Industry – report submitted October 2003 (Scot Law Com No 192) |
Insanity and diminished responsibility | Reference from Scottish Ministers – report submitted May 2004 (Scot Law Com No 195) |
Registration of rights in security by companies | Reference from the Department of Trade and Industry – report submitted June 2004 (Scot Law Com No 197) |
Damages for psychiatric injury | Reference from Scottish Ministers – report submitted July 2004 (Scot Law Com No 196) |
Unfair terms in contracts* | Reference from Scottish Ministers and the Department of Trade and Industry – report completed and to be submitted January 2005 |
Sharp v Thomson | Reference from Scottish Ministers – ongoing |
Interest on debt and damages | Reference from Scottish Ministers – ongoing |
Rape and other sexual offences | Reference from Scottish Ministers – ongoing |
Limitation in personal injury actions | Reference from Scottish Ministers – ongoing |
* Projects undertaken jointly with the Law Commission for England and Wales
Advice to government departments and the Scottish Administration
1.15 Sharp v Thomson. In September 2000 we were asked by Scottish Ministers to consider the implications of the House of Lords' decision in Sharp v Thomson[5] and to make recommendations as to possible reform. The issue concerned the protection afforded to purchasers buying land from insolvent sellers. In this case a floating charge crystallised after the debtor company had granted a disposition of a flat but before the disposition had been registered. Despite the absence of registration, the flat was held not to form part of the property and undertaking of the company and therefore was not attached by the floating charge.
1.16 We published a discussion paper in July 2001[6] in which we suggested that the approach adopted by the House of Lords should be abandoned and that special legislative protection for purchasers should be introduced. Our main proposal has, however, been largely superseded by the decision in Burnett's Trustee v Grainger[7] where the House of Lords declined to apply Sharp v Thomson to ordinary personal insolvency. It remains for us to consider the implications of this decision further in order to decide how best to draw this project to a conclusion. There may be scope for dealing with some of the remaining proposals in our project on land registration.
1.17 Interest on debt and damages. In November 2003 we received a reference from Scottish Ministers to examine the law relating to interest on claims for payment of money arising from contractual and other obligations, including claims within the jurisdiction of tribunals and courts or submitted for decision to arbitration, adjudication or some other form of dispute resolution, and to make recommendations as to possible reform. Our discussion paper on this topic will be published in January 2005[8].
1.21 Assisting on implementation of reports. In addition to undertaking specific projects referred to us, we intend to continue our present practice of supporting, on request, departmental officials who are responsible for implementing our reports. We regard this "after sales" service as an essential part of our function, enabling us to provide further explanation of our policy approach, if required, and to offer advice on technical aspects of implementation. During the Sixth Programme we have been closely involved in supporting Scottish Executive officials in implementation of recommendations contained in our Reports on The Law of the Tenement[9], Abolition of the Feudal System[10] and Real Burdens[11].
Work of the Law Commission
1.22 It is important for us to take account of the work being carried out in England and Wales by the Law Commission. The Law Commission is currently working under its Eighth Programme of Law Reform[12] and is likely to be submitting its Ninth Programme for approval early next year. Its ongoing work on the law of trusts[13] is of particular interest to us.
1.24 In addition, where the Law Commission is proposing to embark on a new project, particularly in an area that for Scotland falls within reserved matters and is therefore outside the legislative competence of the Scottish Parliament[14], we need to consider with our English colleagues whether it would be appropriate, or indeed necessary, for the two Commissions to undertake the work jointly. Such work as may emerge in this way is not included formally among the projects in this Programme.
Consolidation and statute law revision
1.26 In terms of section 3(1)(d)[15] of the Law Commissions Act 1965 we have a duty:-
"to prepare from time to time at the request of the [Scottish Ministers] comprehensive programmes of consolidation and statute law revision, and to undertake the preparation of draft Bills pursuant to any such programmes approved by the [Ministers]."
1.28 Government departments and the Scottish Executive have an important role in consolidation, not only in providing policy advice on the legislation in question and on any minor technical amendments that might be made in the process of consolidation but also in providing the drafting resources necessary for preparation of the consolidation bill itself. As has been mentioned in recent Annual Reports[16], we very much regret the fact that the Executive has not as yet been able to commit the resources necessary to support a programme of consolidation. While we continue to assist the Law Commission on consolidation of UK or GB legislation, we have undertaken only one Scottish consolidation exercise during the Sixth Programme, namely consolidation of the legislation relating to salmon and freshwater fisheries[17].
1.32 Statute law revision is the process whereby obsolete legislation is removed from the statute book. The most recent Statute Law (Repeals) Bill was appended to the Seventeenth Report on Statute Law Revision published jointly with the Law Commission in 2003[18] and was enacted in 2004.
Part 2 Seventh Programme of Law Reform
Preliminary
Item No | Project | Classification |
1 | Leasehold tenure– conversion of long leases | Short term project |
2 | Land registration | Medium term project |
3 | Trusts | Long term project |
4 | Judicial factors | Medium term project |
5 | Succession | Medium term project |
6 | Assignation of, and security over, incorporeal moveables | Long term project |
7 | Unincorporated associations | Medium term project |
8 | Provocation, self-defence, coercion and necessity | Medium term project |
No Project Classification
Leasehold tenure – conversion of long leases
2.3 This was first identified as a long term project in our Fifth Programme of Law Reform[19]. In the Sixth Programme[20] we proposed to examine as a medium term project the question of the conversion of some categories of long lease to ownership. We considered that a review of this topic would complement our work on the abolition of the feudal system.
2.5 Our Discussion Paper on Conversion of Long Leases was published in April 2001[21]. In it we proposed that ultra-long leases for more than 175 years should be converted into ownership. The proposed scheme followed closely the scheme for conversion of feus introduced by the Abolition of Feudal Tenure etc. (Scotland) Act 2000. We also considered options for reform in relation to residential ground leases granted for 50 years or more which would be too short to qualify under the main scheme.
Land registration
2.7 A review of the Land Registration (Scotland) Act 1979 was identified as a medium term project in our Sixth Programme[22].
2.10 The legal issues involved in this exercise have proved extremely complex. We issued a first Discussion Paper on Land Registration: Void and Voidable Titles[23] in February 2004. It explores the theoretical basis of registration of title from the point of view of both policy and technique. It considers the fundamentals of the system and lays down the foundations for consideration of the more detailed issues, to be dealt with in a second discussion paper.
Trusts
2.12 Trusts was first identified as a long term project in our Fifth Programme of Law Reform[24] and was carried forward to our Sixth Programme[25] as a medium term project examining aspects of the law governing express trusts.
2.13 We have already undertaken a substantial amount of work on this topic. Early on in our review, we decided to split the project into two phases, the first phase dealing broadly with the powers and duties of trustees and the second phase dealing with trusts themselves. In the first phase discussion papers have been published on Breach of Trus[26]t, Apportionment of Trust Receipts and Outgoings[27] and Trustees and Trust Administration[28]. These papers examine issues such as: trustees' liability for ultra vires acts, breaches of fiduciary duty or failure to meet the required standard of care when administering the trust; the extent to which a trust deed can protect trustees from such liabilities (immunity and exemption clauses); the ways in which trustees can make binding decisions; the extent to which trustees can delegate their functions by appointing agents and nominees; the appointment and removal of trustees; and the allocation of jurisdiction in trust proceedings between the sheriff court and the Court of Session.
2.16 In carrying forward this work we are mindful of the changes proposed in the current Charities and Trustee Investment (Scotland) Bill[29] in relation to the regulation and reorganisation of charities. We also keep in close touch with the work being undertaken by the Law Commission on aspects of English trust law[30].
Judicial factors
2.18 In both our Fifth and Sixth Programmes of Law Reform[31] we identified as a long term project the review and modernisation of the legislation relating to judicial factors.
Succession
2.22 We last examined this area some fifteen years ago. At that time we undertook a comprehensive review of the law, considering the major policy issues surrounding intestate succession and the protection of the deceased's spouse and children from disinheritance. We also looked at some of the more technical difficulties with the present law which had given rise to complaint. The resulting Report on Succession[32], published in 1990, has not been implemented. Yet the defects that we previously identified still exist. In our view, the law no longer reflects current social attitudes nor does it cater adequately for the range of family relationships that are common today.
2.23 As regards defects in the current law, the surviving spouse comes too low in the order of succession to the free estate on intestacy. In even modest estates, a spouse may have to share a substantial proportion of the estate with the deceased's parents, siblings or even cousins. There was overwhelming agreement in the consultation[33] leading to our 1990 Report that where the deceased died intestate leaving a spouse but no children the spouse should inherit the entire estate.
2.24 In addition, the rules on intestate succession are too complex. The rules distinguish two types of assets and debts (heritable and moveable) and five separate rights[34]: housing prior right; contents prior right; cash sum prior right; legal rights (a fixed share of the net moveable estate); and the right to the free estate. The surviving spouse's entitlement depends crucially on the type of assets in the estate. It is hard to justify one spouse getting all of a £200,000 estate while another gets very little of an estate of the same value, simply because of the particular type of assets comprised in the estate.
2.27 In addition, a variety of social changes in the 40 years since the Succession (Scotland) Act 1964 was enacted point to the need for a further review of succession law now. Many more people are living together as unmarried cohabiting couples (either in same-sex or opposite-sex relationships)[35]. People are living much longer with the result that many children are middleaged or older when their parents die[36]. Wealth is more widely distributed, particularly through ownership of heritable property[37]. And more marriages end in divorce, with step-families becoming more common[38].
2.28 Recent and proposed legislation gives further impetus for a re-examination of the law of succession. The Civil Partnership Act 2004 gives same-sex couples the opportunity to register their relationship and thereby obtain rights and obligations broadly equivalent to those of married couples. A surviving civil partner will therefore have rights on intestacy and legal rights to a proportion of the net moveable estate equivalent to those of a spouse[39].The Scottish Executive's proposed Family Law Bill may include provision allowing a surviving cohabitant to apply for a discretionary share out of the deceased partner's estate on intestacy[40].However, this may not deal with the issue of protecting cohabitants from disinheritance where their deceased partner's will fails to provide adequately for them. The introduction of rights of succession for cohabitants necessitates a re-examination of the current rights of succession for spouses and civil partners in order to resolve competing claims where the deceased is survived by both a spouse (or civil partner) and a cohabitant.
• Who should be entitled to share in the deceased's intestate estate?
• Should the distinction between heritable and moveable estate in relation to intestate succession be abolished?
• Should the surviving spouse (or civil partner) and children continue to be protected from disinheritance and, if so, what form should this protection take? In particular, should adult children have any legal right of succession in an estate left to others?
• Should cohabitants be protected from disinheritance? If so, how?
Assignation of, and security over, incorporeal moveables
2.32 This item was originally suggested by the Law Society of Scotland and a few other consultees in the context of our recent review of registration of securities granted by companies[41]. Inclusion of this item was supported also by a number of other legal bodies in our consultation about preparation of the Programme.
2.36 While a partial solution exists for companies (and limited liability partnerships) in their ability to grant security in the form of a floating charge over assets of any kind, including incorporeal moveables[42], an unincorporated business – typically a small business – or a sole trader is left without an effective method of borrowing money against book debts and other incorporeals.
2.37 From the lender's standpoint the value of the floating charge has been adversely affected by the Enterprise Act 2002. Under the Act[43] it is usually no longer possible for the creditor under a floating charge to appoint a receiver for the purposes of enforcement. Furthermore, certain funds ring-fenced for ordinary creditors are not to be available to satisfy floating charges[44]. In English law it is possible, subject to certain conditions, to create a fixed charge over book debts and other incorporeals without assignation and lenders have regularly sought to take such fixed, non-possessory security which will have priority over preferential debts. If a system of 'notice-filing' is introduced for companies in England and Wales, as is likely to be proposed[45], the security interest taken by the creditor will usually be a fixed security and the expectation is that the floating charge will fall out of use.
2.39 While some consideration was given to securities over incorporeals in a government consultation paper issued in 1994[46], a more extended examination of the law is, in our view, now required. A necessary part of this review is to examine the law of "ordinary" assignation, that is, assignation as outright transfer, not in security.
Unincorporated associations
2.41 Unincorporated associations cover a wide range of organisations from local sports clubs and residents' associations to larger scale voluntary bodies with affiliated groups across the country. The central legal characteristic of an unincorporated association is that it does not have an identity separate from its members. Its legal identity is simply the aggregate of its members from time to time. This lack of a separate legal existence causes a number of practical difficulties in the operation of the association, particularly in relation to entering into contracts, holding property and dealing with claims by or against the association and its members. For instance, members cannot sue the association or the membership collectively if they are injured. A pursuer must identify an individual or individuals within the association who owed a duty of care to him and who breached that duty[47]. This may be difficult to do where management responsibility is ill-defined or diffuse.
2.42 A third party, on the other hand, can sue members of an association collectively in some circumstances[48]. Liability of the members may be personal and unlimited[49]. Although members have a right of relief against the association's assets, they may be personally liable if there is a shortfall. Arguably this unfairly exposes to substantial claims members who do not have any part in management.
2.44 We therefore intend to explore the possibility of giving a new legal status to unincorporated associations. This would clarify the legal implications of membership, make internal management of the organisations easier and facilitate their dealings with third parties. One solution that we are likely to consider is that adopted in New Zealand[50] (and also in Australia and some American states[51]), creating a separate, fairly straightforward system of incorporation for non-profit making associations.
2.45 This topic is a reserved matter under Section C1 of Schedule 5 to the Scotland Act 1998 insofar as it concerns the creation, operation, regulation and dissolution of types of business association[52], other than charities. To that extent therefore implementation of any recommendations for reform would fall to the UK Parliament. Before embarking on this project, we intend to discuss the implications of this with the Department of Trade and Industry and also discuss with the Law Commission whether there is a need for a joint project. We will also bear in mind any implications for the project arising out of the current Charities and Trustee Investment (Scotland) Bill which provides for reorganisation of certain types of charitable bodies into Scottish charitable incorporated organisations.
Provocation, self-defence, coercion and necessity
2.46 Having recently completed a review of the criminal law defences of insanity and diminished responsibility[53], we now propose to examine the defences of provocation, self-defence, coercion and necessity. Our original proposal, which was limited to the first three of these defences, received broad support from consultees in the legal and criminal justice fields. Indeed some consultees encouraged us to consider a much wider review of criminal defences generally. We concluded, particularly in light of our current work on rape and other sexual offences, that this would be too large a project to accommodate within our available resources. We have, however, acted on one suggestion made to us which extended the scope of the proposed exercise to cover the defence of necessity.
2.48 A further general characteristic of these defences is the relatively undeveloped and uncertain state of the law. Many of the key issues have not been considered by the courts and some cases in which consideration took place are the subject of criticism. In relation to provocation, for example, the rationale adopted by the court in Drury v HM Advocate[54], that an accused who kills under provocation lacks (or is deemed to lack) the mens rea for murder and is to be convicted of culpable homicide, is controversial[55]. This decision leaves the law unclear regarding the effect of a successful plea of provocation in assault cases – acquittal or mitigation of sentence – and regarding its application in cases of attempted murder. There is also the separate issue, not yet explored by the courts, whether the defence is available where the accused has been subject to a long course of provocative conduct, such as by way of domestic violence.
2.49 While the law on the defences of self-defence, coercion and necessity is on the whole more settled, there remain areas where it is also open to criticism or is unclear. For instance, it is not clear what interests may be protected by self-defence, other than the accused's own life; and there has been some criticism of the decision in Cochrane v HM Advocate[56] where the court emphasised in relation to coercion that the test for assessing the threat to the accused was an objective one, based on an ordinary sober person of reasonable firmness of the same age and sex as the accused[57].
2.50 The main impetus for our review comes from the state of the current law on provocation. In Drury v HM Advocate[58] the court accepted not only that the law required reform and clarification but also that legislation was the best mechanism for changing the law. Given that the law on self-defence, coercion and necessity is also unclear to an extent and involves broadly similar issues to those in the law of provocation, we believe it is sensible to examine these defences together. We hope to carry out this review as a medium term project. However, as we are unlikely to begin work until our current review of rape and other sexual offences has been completed, it may be that the project will extend beyond the end of 2009.
Appendix
List of those consulted on preparation of Seventh Programme
Accountant in Bankruptcy's Office
The Accountant of Court
Association of British Insurers
Association of Chief Police Officers in Scotland
Association of Scottish Police Superintendents
Association of Sheriffs Principal
The Centre for Law Reform
Chartered Institute of Arbitrators
Chartered Institute of Bankers in Scotland
Commission for Racial Equality
Convention of Scottish Local Authorities
Crown Office
Department of Trade and Industry
Disability Rights Commission
Equal Opportunities Commission
Faculty of Advocates
Glasgow Bar Association
Glasgow Caledonian University
Heriot-Watt University
Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland
Keeper of the Registers of Scotland
Law Commission for England and Wales
Law Society of Scotland
Lord President of the Court of Session
Napier University
Procurators Fiscal Society
Robert Gordon University
Royal Faculty of Procurators in Glasgow
Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland
Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors in Scotland
SACRO
Scottish Conservative Party
Scottish Consumer Council
Scottish Green Party
Scottish Law Agents Society
Scottish Labour Party
Scottish Liberal Democrats
Scottish National Party
Scottish Police Federation
Scottish Socialist Party
Sheriffs' Association
Scottish Trades Union Congress
Society of Advocates in Aberdeen
Society of Local Authority Lawyers and
Administrators in Scotland
Society of Legal Scholars
Society of Solicitor Advocates
Society of Solicitors in the Supreme Courts of Scotland
Society of Writers to HM Signet
University of Aberdeen
University of Abertay Dundee
University of Dundee
University of Edinburgh
University of Glasgow
University of Paisley
University of Stirling
University of Strathclyde
Note 1 The previous programmes are: Scot Law Com No 1 (1965); Scot Law Com No 8 (1968); Scot Law Com No 29 (1973); Scot Law Com No 126 (1990); Scot Law Com No 159 (1997); Scot Law Com No 176 (2000). [Back] Note 2 See 1965 Act, section 3(1)(b). [Back] Note 3 See paras 2.21 to 2.30 and 2.40 to 2.45. [Back] Note 4 Under section 3(1)(e) of the Law Commissions Act 1965. [Back] Note 6 Discussion Paper No 114. [Back] Note 7 2004 SC (HL) 19. [Back] Note 8 Discussion Paper No 127. [Back] Note 9 Scot Law Com No 162, implemented by the Tenements (Scotland) Act 2004. [Back] Note 10 Scot Law Com No 168, implemented by the Abolition of Feudal Tenure etc. (Scotland) Act 2000. [Back] Note 11 Scot Law Com No 181, implemented by the Title Conditions (Scotland) Act 2003. [Back] Note 12 Law Com No 274. [Back] Note 13 Referred by the Lord Chancellor in January 2001; see Eighth Programme of Law Reform (Law Com No 274), pp 19 to 21. [Back] Note 14 Scotland Act 1998, s 29(2)(b) and Sch 5. [Back] Note 15 As read with section 6(2), amended by the Scotland Act 1998 (Consequential Modifications) (No 2) Order 1999 (SI 1999/1820), art 4 and Sch 2, para 36. [Back] Note 16 See Annual Report 2003 (Scot Law Com No 194), p 20; Thirty-Seventh Annual Report 2002 (Scot Law Com No 189), para 4.2; Thirty-Sixth Annual Report 2001 (Scot Law Com No 186) para 4.2; Thirty-Fifth Annual Report 2000 (Scot Law Com No 182) para 4.3. [Back] Note 17 Scot Law Com No 188, enacted in the Salmon and Freshwater Fisheries (Consolidation) (Scotland) Act 2003. [Back] Note 18 Law Com No 285/Scot Law Com No 193. [Back] Note 19 Scot Law Com No 159, para 2.36. [Back] Note 20 Scot Law Com No 176, para 2.12 [Back] Note 21 Discussion Paper No 112. [Back] Note 22 Scot Law Com No 176, paras 2.13 to 2.17. [Back] Note 23 Discussion Paper No 125. [Back] Note 24 Scot Law Com No 159, paras 2.43 to 2.45. [Back] Note 25 Scot Law Com No 176, paras 2.25 to 2.34. [Back] Note 26 Discussion Paper No 123. [Back] Note 27 Discussion Paper No 124. [Back] Note 28 Discussion Paper No 126. [Back] Note 29 Introduced to the Scottish Parliament on 15 November 2004. [Back] Note 30 See Law Commission Annual Report 2003/04 (Law Com No 288) paras 7.16 to 7.26. [Back] Note 31 Fifth Programme, paras 2.30 and 2.31;Sixth Programme, paras 2.9 and 2.10. [Back] Note 32 Scot Law Com No 124. [Back] Note 33 See Consultative Memorandum No 69 (1986) and Scot Law Com No 124, para 2.3. [Back] Note 34 See Succession (Scotland) Act 1964, ss 2, 8, 9 and 10(2). [Back] Note 35 Among UK women under 50, the proportion cohabiting at some time in their lives has increased from 9% to 29% between 1976 and 1998: Scottish Executive, Research Findings No 43/2004, p 2. In the UK only 2% of those born before 1930 cohabited before marriage compared with almost 50% of those born since 1960:www.brookes.ac.uk/schools/social/population-and-household-change/1_scott.html. Between 1991 and 2001 the proportion of cohabiting couple families in Scotland rose from 4% of total households to 7%:Research Findings No 43/2004, Table 1. 2% of cohabiting couples in Scotland in 2001 were of the same sex. This was the first time the Census recorded them as a separate category:Research Findings No 43/2004, p 1. [Back] Note 36 Life expectancy has increased from 64.4 years for males and from 68.7 years for females born around 1951 to 73.5 years and 78.8 years respectively for those born around 2002:Scotland’s Population 2003: The Registrar General’s Annual Review of Demographic Trends, p 20. The average age of mothers at their children’s birth has increased from 27.4 years in 1964 to 29.3 years in 2003:ibid, p 16. [Back] Note 37 In 1964 28,472 estates were granted confirmation, with an average value of £4,688 or £56,258 when adjusted for inflation to 2002. The corresponding figures for 2002 were 22,820 estates with an average value of £136,494: Civil Judicial Statistics 1965 and2002, Commissary Business tables, pp 31 and 19 respectively. Nearly two-thirds of homes in Scotland are now owner-occupied, compared with a figure of just over 30% in 1970:Scottish Household Survey 2003, ch 4 andhttp://thescotsman.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=819752002. [Back] Note 38 In 1965 there were 2,510 divorces in Scotland. The figures for 1985 and 2003 are 13,373 and 10,593 respectively: Civil Judicial Statistics 1964 and 1985 andScotland’s Population 2003, p 29. The number of marriages has decreased from over 40,000 in the 1960s to 30,757 in 2003:Scotland’s Population 2003, p 26. In 2001 and 2002 29% of marriages were between parties resident outside Scotland:Research Findings No 43/2004, p 2. One in four marriages is now between individuals one or both of whom were married previously:ibid. Around one in eight children now experience life in a step-family: Scottish Executive’s Report for Scotland’s Children (2000). [Back] Note 39 s 131 and Sch 28, Part 1. [Back] Note 40 Scottish Executive’s Consultation Paper Family Matters – Improving Family Law in Scotland (2004), section 4. [Back] Note 41 See Discussion Paper No 121 and Scot Law Com No 197. [Back] Note 42 Companies Act 1985, s 462 and Limited Liability Partnerships Regulations 2001(SI 2001/1090). [Back] Note 45 Law Commission Consultation Papers Nos 164 and 176. [Back] Note 46 Department of Trade and Industry, Consultation PaperSecurity over Moveable Property in Scotland. [Back] Note 47 Harrison v West of Scotland Kart Club 2001 SC 367 andwww.scotcourts.gov.uk/opinions/A300_01.html. [Back] Note 48 eg in the case of vicarious liability for a delict committed by an employee or liability under the Occupiers’ Liability (Scotland) Act 1960. In relation to claims under the 1960 Act, see McQueen v Ballater Golf Club 1975 SLT 160. [Back] Note 49 Harrison v West of Scotland Kart Club 2001 SC 367 andwww.scotcourts.gov.uk/opinions/A300_01.html. [Back] Note 50 Under the Incorporated Societies Act 1908. [Back] Note 51 An outline of the legislative provisions in these jurisdictions is contained in the Law Reform Advisory Committee for Northern Ireland’s Report on Unincorporated Associations (Report No 14, 2004), ch 4. [Back] Note 52 “Business association” is defined there to mean “any person (other than an individual) established for the purposeof carrying on any kind of business, whether or not for profit; and “business” includes the provision of benefits to the members of an association”. [Back] Note 53 Report on Insanity and Diminished Responsibility (Scot Law Com No 195) published in July 2004. [Back] Note 55 See, for example, Sir Gerald Gordon 2001 SCCR 618-620; James Chalmers, “Collapsing the Structure of Criminal Law” 2001 SLT (News) 241; Michael Christie, “The Coherence of Scots Criminal Law: Some aspects of Drury vHM Advocate”, 2002 JR 273; and Fiona Leverick, “Mistake in Self-Defence afterDrury”, 2002 JR 35. [Back] Note 57 Sir Gerald Gordon 2001 SCCR 672-673. [Back] Note 58 2001 SCCR 583 at 613 and 614. [Back]