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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Governors of Heriot's Hospital . Lushingto - Simpson v. Major M'Donald - Murra - Brown [1830] UKHL 4_WS_98 (7 April 1830) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1830/4_WS_98.html Cite as: [1830] UKHL 4_WS_98 |
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Page: 98↓
(1830) 4 W&S 98
CASES DECIDED IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS, ON APPEAL FROM THE COURTS OF SCOTLAND, 1830.
1 st Division.
No. 16.
Subject_Superior and Vassal — Clause — Consuetude. —
Where a vassal was bound, in a feu-contract, to relieve the superior, and the lands, houses, teinds, and feu-duties, of and from all multures which could be claimed furth thereof, “and that for all other burden, exaction, question, demand, or secular service, which can anyways be exacted or demanded” for the same; and the feu-duty was equivalent to the rent of the lands; and the superior, from the date of the contract, (a period more than 40 years), paid the minister's stipend;—Found, (affirming the judgment of the Court of Session), that the superior could not throw the burden of stipend upon the vassal.
Subject_Process. —
A charter not produced or founded on in the Court below, not permitted to be referred to in the House of Lords.
About the middle of the 17th century the Governors of Heriot's Hospital acquired the lands of Broughton, lying in the immediate vicinity of the town of Edinburgh. Thereafter, they granted various feus of small portions of these lands to different individuals, averaging a feu-duty of four bolls an acre; and for some also a money price. This price was alleged to be equal to the agricultural rent of the land. Six of these feus were acquired from the respective vassals by Alexander M'Donald, who was succeeded by his son, Major M'Donald. These six feus had been conveyed in six different feu-rights; but Major M'Donald, in completing his titles, included all the feus in one charter, which, however, contained a verbatim transcript of the reddendo clause of all the feus. After specification of the amount of the feu-duty, a clause (slightly varying in expression) was inserted, by which the vassal was bound to free and relieve “the said Hospital, and Governors thereof, the said house, and the whole of the foresaid lands above-mentioned and disponed, and feu-duties payable for the same, of and from all multures which can be claimed forth of the said lands, teinds, and others above-mentioned, as payable to any mill to which the same may have been astricted; and that for all other burden, exaction, question, demand, or secular service, which can anyways be exacted or demanded for the house, lands, teinds, and others above-mentioned.” In one of the feu-contracts, (1771), the clause was, “and also freeing and relieving us, and our successors in office, of and from payment of cess, ministers' stipends, and all other public burdens payable forth of the same, from and after the 25th day of March next; and sicklike freeing and relieving us and
Page: 99↓
Major M'Donald having reclaimed, the Court, 12th February 1828, found, “From the terms of the feu-contract, and in respect of the uniform practice of the Hospital having paid all along the stipend of the lands of Powderhall, that there is sufficient evidence of the understanding of the parties to that effect; and
Page: 100↓
The Governors of Heriot's Hospital appealed.
Appellants.—It is a general rule that teinds are debita fructuum, and are payable by the proprietors of the ground producing the fruits, and who reap and enjoy the fruits. But a feuar is a proprietor: the superior only retains the dominium directum. There is neither authority nor principle for maintaining, (even if the fact were true, which it is not), that where the feu-duty is equal to the full annual value of the lands, the superior who draws the feu-duty must be subjected to payment of the tithes. Neither is there any thing in the terms of the different feu-rights to warrant the judgment of the Court of Session. They are in the ordinary style of such instruments, and do not contain any clause declaring that the stipend shall be payable by the superior.
Lushington (for the appellants).—It never was produced in the Court below. It is neither referred to nor founded upon by Judge nor Counsel. If it relates to the respondent's lands, it settles the question in his favour; if not to his lands, then it affords us a powerful argument, by shewing that when stipend was to be relieved against, there was an express clause for the purpose.
_________________ Footnote _________________
* Shaw and Dunlop's Teind Cases, p. 156.
† This clause was as follows:—“Nos et successores nostri tenebimur et obligamur tenoreque præsentium nos nostrosque antedict. astringimus et obligamus dict. magistrum Georgium Gordon ejusque antedict. ab omnibus censibus stipendiis decimis aliisque publicis oneribus imposit seu imponend. super dictas acras terræ cum pertinen. præscript. tam pro præterito quam pro futuro liberare et relevare.”
Page: 101↓
Lushington.—It is of no avail to the respondent to resort to the alleged usage. Usage may in some matters be permitted to explain a doubt, but not to controul written documents, where the meaning is clear, and the intention of parties manifest; particularly, it would be unjust to permit the vassals to obtain an advantage never contemplated, in a question with an Institution whose managers are varying. In truth, the payments of stipend by the Hospital were made from mere want of attention.
Respondent.—The Hospital received the full value of the lands, which necessarily implied relief from the burden of stipend. If the Governors of the Hospital receive the whole returns, they cannot object to pay the burden to which the fruits of the subject feued is liable. There is a great similarity between tacks of land and feus; yet it is well known, that unless there be a stipulation to the contrary, the landlord pays the stipend. In point of fact, the respondent pays his proportion in the feu-duty exacted from him; but the appellants wish him to pay that twice. If the superiors had any intention of throwing this burden on the vassals, that would have been expressed in all, as it was expressed in one of the feu-charters. But the best interpretation of the intention of parties is to be found in the conduct of the Hospital. Although repeated opportunities occurred, in the allocation of augmentations to the minister of the parish, for distributing the burden, and of course for placing it on the respondent, had such been the original contemplation of parties, the Hospital uniformly assumed that liability. Usage is good evidence in this case, and leaves no doubt what was the real meaning and understanding of all parties.
If we are only to look at the documentary evidence, I think that the Governors of Heriot's Hospital are bound to pay the minister's stipend, and not the feuars. If the evidence of usage was admissible to explain the written instruments, the usage proved in this cause shows, that the construction put on the instruments is the true construction. It is not, however, necessary to decide the question, whether the evidence of usage was admissible or not. But old instruments may be expounded by contemporaneous and continued usage. There can be no means of getting at the meaning of old instruments so satisfactorily, as that of seeing how the parties acted under them at the time they were made, and have since continued to act. Now, from the year 1763 down to this time, the trustees have borne the burden of the minister's stipend, and at those times when the stipend was raised they took upon them the increased charge on their estate.
Page: 102↓
Although I think that the judgment of the Court below was right, yet the Provost and Corporation of Edinburgh, acting as trustees, might think themselves obliged to have the opinion of this House. They must pay, however, at least a part of the expense that they have put the respondent to by their appeal; and I therefore move your Lordships that this appeal be dismissed, with L.50 costs.
The House of Lords accordingly “ordered and adjudged, that the interlocutor complained of be affirmed, with L.50 costs.”
Appellants' Authorities.— 2. Ersk. 3. 10.; 2. Ersk. 10. 42. Bruce Carstairs, Jan. 23. 1773, (2333.) Colquhoun, Jan. 23. 1798, (Synop. No. 3. Sup. and Vassal). Plenderleath, Jan. 31. 1800, (16,639.) Stewart, July 1. 1806, (Synop. 762.) 2. Connell on Teinds, 479. Hamilton, June 13. 1823, (2. S. & D. 403.) Mill, Feb. 7. 1794, (13,081.)
Respondent's Authorities.— 2. Stair, 3. 34.; 2. Bank. 3. 35.; 2. Ross, Lect. 474.; Bell on Leases, p. 184. Feuars of Kinross, Dec. 6. 1693, (13,071.) Town of Edinburgh, Feb. 25. 1696, (4188.)
Solicitors: Spottiswoode and Robertson— Richardson and Connell,—Solicitors.