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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Alex. Clerk, Aberdeen v. Hugh Gordon [1787] UKHL 3_Paton_61 (9 March 1787) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1787/3_Paton_61.html Cite as: [1787] UKHL 3_Paton_61 |
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Page: 61↓
(1787) 3 Paton 61
CASES DECIDED IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS, UPON APPEAL FROM THE COURTS OF SCOTLAND.
No. 19
House of Lords,
Subject_Gestio pro Hærede — Passive Title. —
A father had conveyed his whole estate, heritable and moveable, to his third son, who, in recovering, found an heritable debt of £60, which was not specially embraced in the conveyance. To remove objections to his title to receive and discharge the debt, the father's eldest son and heir-at-law, consented to sign the discharge along with his brother. Held, that this subjected him in the passive title of gestio pro hærede. But, in the House of Lords, case remitted back for consideration, and to adduce proof that, at the date of the discharge, his brother was in right to receive the debt of £60.
The appellant, Alexander Clerk, was the eldest son of the deceased John Clerk, advocate in Aberdeen. The appellant's father, before his death, conveyed his whole heritable and moveable estate to his third son James; and in the course of the latter recovering that estate, it was found that there was an heritable debt of £60 which the settlements did not specially convey, and the debtor, when payment was demanded, having objected to James' title, unless a discharge was got under the hand of the heir at law, or an adjudication in implement expede. The appellant was accordingly solicited by his brother to sign a discharge for the £60 bond. On its being explained that it was a mere form, to dispense with the expense of making up a title by adjudication in implement, he signed the discharges along with his brother,—the latter having three months previously received the money. The question was, on the failure of the father's funds to pay his debts, whether the appellant, the eldest son and heir at law, had thereby subjected himself in liability for his father's debts, under the passive title of gestio pro hærede?
By the appellant, who was defender in the action, it was contended, on the special circumstances above set forth, that he had not incurred a passive title by granting a discharge, simply to facilitate his brother's recovery of this small debt,—that he had taken no advantage from that deed,—that his brother had received the money, and had a universal right to receive it, and his signature was only adhibited to complete
Page: 62↓
Jan. 25, 1785.
The Lord Ordinary, of this date, found “that the said Alexander Clerk behaving as heir to his father, is sufficiently instructed by the discharge founded on by the pursuer, therefore recalls the commission granted by the former interlocutor as unnecessary, advocates the cause, and finds the defender liable in the principal sum, and interest libelled.”
Nov. 29, 1785.
Dec. 14. —
Dec. 17, —
On two reclaiming petitions to the Court, the Lords adhered.
Against these interlocutors, the present appeal was brought.
Pleaded for the Appellant.—The Court of Session has decided that the mere circumstance of signing the discharge, apart from the circumstances and special object for which it was signed, is a behaviour as heir sufficient to subject him in liability for his father's debts. For this proposition, the appellant maintains there is no authority in law, because, when the circumstances under which he signed the discharge are considered—circumstances which must necessarily enter into consideration, before any legal conclusion can be deduced, in order simply to ascertain whether they be such as in law commonly infer a behaviour as heir, it at once appears that they do not make out any such behaviour as heir, that the law recognizes as such. He has not intermeddled with the repositories of the deceased,—he has not taken possession of his papers, or any of his household goods, his jewellery, &c. None of his means, real or personal, has been touched by him. His father's settlement constituted his brother executor, intromitter, and universal legatory of his whole means and estate. He alone intromitted with the universitas of that estate; and all the appellant did was to lend the use of his name to his brother, in order to complete his title to an heritable debt of £60, and thereby save him considerable expense. He is ready to prove, that this alone was the precise extent of his whole interference,—that he never fingered a shilling of that £60,—and that he never manifested any intention whatever, either by this discharge or otherwise, of intromitting with the smallest portion of his
Page: 63↓
Pleaded by the Respondent.—Where a party acts or behaves himself as heir, in any thing or in any way, with respect to his ancestor's estate, he makes himself universally liable for his ancestor's debts. Such is the settled law of Scotland. And the appellant, in the present case, has just done what exactly answers the legal description of behaviour as heir. He has granted a discharge for an heritable debt as such, which is perhaps the most unequivocal act of behaviour as heir that could possibly exist. And it is mere pretence to say, that he gave the money to his brother, or allowed him to receive it, because this is by no means proved; and even if less doubtful than it seems, still, the argument would be immaterial and unavailing, because, in point of fact, the £60 heritable debt was his, as heir at law, and not his brother's, to whom it had not been conveyed, and the discharge was as much a behaviour as heir, and an incurring of the passive titles as such, whether the money was paid to another or directly to himself.
After hearing counsel, it was
Ordered and adjudged “that the cause be remitted back to the Court of Session in Scotland, without prejudice, with liberty to the defender to produce such proofs as he can that James Clerk, on the 30th Sept. 1778, (date of discharge), was entitled to the debt of £60 due by Raitt, or the trustees of Raitt, mentioned in the pleadings, reserving such objections to the competency of the evidence as the nature of the evidence itself, or the period of the cause in which it is produced may be liable to.”
Counsel: For Appellant,
Ilay Campbell,
Wm. Alexander.
For Respondent,
Alex. Macdonald,
Sylv. Douglas.
Page: 64↓
Note.—When this case came back to the Court of Session, the Court sustained the defence pleaded against the passive title gestio pro hærede, it being observed on the Bench, that as the Court had given relief in the case of actual service, while there was no intention to represent, so a fortiori, the same indulgence was due here. —M. 9734.