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] | ||
United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Archibald Hunter - Attorney General (Denman) Lord Advocate (Jeffrey) v. Alexander Duff and Others, Trustees of the deceased Major Duff - Lushingto - T. H. Miller [1832] UKHL 6_WS_206 (11 August 1832) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1832/6_WS_206.html Cite as: [1832] UKHL 6_WS_206 |
[New search] [Contents list] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Page: 206↓
(1832) 6 W&S 206
CASES DECIDED IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS, ON APPEAL FROM THE COURTS OF SCOTLAND, 1832.
2 d Division.
No. 14.
[
Subject_Circumstantial— Expenses. —
Circumstances in which it was held, affirming the judgment of the Court of Session, that the interest on a bond was paid; that one bill was prescribed, and another retired; and that the trustees of a parly, alleged, but not proved to have purchased pictures, was entitled to return them to the seller. But the interlocutor of the Court below was altered in part as to costs.
Archibald Hunter of Upper Baker Street, London, in August 1829, raised an action in the Court of Session against the trustees of the late Major Duff of Milton, and concluded for payment of 600 l. sterling, due on an English bond dated the 30th of August 1821, with interest from that date: for 478 l. sterling, as the contents of an acceptance by Duff to Hunter, which fell due on the 2d of September 1822. This bill is dated London, 30th August 1821, was drawn by Hunter, residing in London, accepted by Duff, 185, Piccadilly, and made payable to Hunter twelve months after date. The summons also concluded for payment of 200 l. sterling, as contained in another acceptance by Duff to Hunter, which fell due on the
Page: 207↓
March 1, 1831.
The Lord Ordinary found, in respect to the bond for 600
l. libelled, that it is not now disputed that the principal thereof is due, with interest thereon from the period of the death of Major Duff, viz. April 1828; and therefore finds the defenders, as trustees libelled, liable for the said principal and interest, and decerns accordingly. But in regard to the interest on the said bond prior to the death of Major Duff, finds it sufficiently appears, from the writings and admissions in process, that the said interest was paid, or the claim for the same extinguished, by payments made in each year
_________________ Footnote _________________ * The respective statements of parties were in the usual shape of revised condescendence and revised answers, statements of facts and answers, counter statement of facts and answers, with additional statement of facts for the defenders, and answers for the pursuer.
Page: 208↓
June 9, 1831.
The case was taken by a reclaiming note before the Second Division; and their Lordships, having advised the cause, refused the desire of the reclaiming note, and adhered “to the interlocutor submitted to review, with this explanation as to the pictures, that these are actually to be restored as offered by the defenders, and, when that condition shall be fulfilled, adhere to
Page: 209↓
June 1 and 23, 1831.
Hunter appealed.
Appellant. —The bond is a regular and a probative document of debt; and it is not instructed by, and does not appear from, any writings or admissions in process, that the interest on the bond, prior to the death of Major Duff, was paid, or the claim for the same extinguished by payments made in each year by Major Duff to the appellant. The debt constituted by Duff's acceptance for 478
l. is an English debt, and therefore does not fall within the operation of the sexennial prescription of bills of the law of Scotland.—Delvalle, 9th March 1786, and York Buildings Co., 14th February 1792 (Mor. 4,525 and 4,528). Holding the debt to be English, the statute of limitations is excluded by certain legal procedures taken in England; and even were it to be held that the debt is liable to be affected by the Scotch law of prescription, the respondents, in the particular circumstances of the case, are barred, personali exceptione, from stating any such plea. At Duff's death the prescription had not run, and the trustees by their conduct misled and put the appellant off his guard.—Douglas, Heron, and Co., 1st March 1793 (Mor. 11,045). As to the bill for 200
l., it is a regular probative document in favour of the appellant, which the respondents are legally bound to pay, unless they
_________________ Footnote _________________ * 9 Shaw and Dun. 703.
Page: 210↓
Respondents.—Annual payments, proved to have been made by Duff to the appellant, must be held to have extinguished the accruing interest on the bond; and it is the principal only of the bond, with interest since Major Duff's decease, that remains due to the appellant, and this the respondents do not dispute. The acceptance for 478 l. is prescribed by the law of Scotland —the law of the country applicable to the case;
Page: 211↓
Page: 212↓
Page: 213↓
Parties not having agreed, the House of Lords ordered and adjudged, “That the interlocutors complained of be, and the same are hereby affirmed, except in so far as they, or either of them, find the expences of process herein-after specified due from the pursuer to the defenders: And with respect to such expences, it is further found and declared, that the pursuer ought not to have been charged with any expences of process up to the date when the revised answer for the defenders to the revised condescendence for the pursuer was put in, as the same appears in page fourth of the appellant's printed case; but, on the contrary, expences ought to have been allowed to the pursuer of the proceedings up to that date: And it is further ordered, that the cause be remitted back to the Second Division of the Court of Session, to vary the interlocutors in this respect, and to do further what shall be just thereupon.”
Solicitors: Caldwell and Son— Moncrieff and Webster,—Solicitors.