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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Bishop Galloway v Inglis. [1627] Mor 13090 (12 July 1627)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1627/Mor3113090-004.html
Cite as: [1627] Mor 13090

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[1627] Mor 13090      

Subject_1 PUBLIC OFFICER.

Bishop Galloway
v.
Inglis

Date: 12 July 1627
Case No. No 4.

Commissaries had no power to name their clerks and procurators-fiscal, but only the Bishop within his own diocese.


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In an action betwixt the B. of Galloway and Thomas Inglis, to hear him be decerned to desist from the office of procurator fiscal to the Commissary of Kirkcudbright; the defender defending himself with a right of that office, gifted to him by the Commissary, and that the Commissary had power and right to confer the same to him, the Commissary's gift containing power granted to him to admit procurators and other members of court; the Lords found that the Commissary, by virtue of the gift of the tenor foresaid, had no power to constitute a procurator-fiscal, albeit thereby he might admit other procurators to procure in his court; and that the right to make procurators-fiscal or clerks, belonged only to the Bishops within their diocese, and not to their Commissaries, whereanent look to the act of Parliament 1609 anent the granting of the commissariots to the Bishops. And the clerk further alleging, That the Commissary had a gift from the last Bishop, of that same office, which gave him power also to make deputes therein, and this clerk being received and admitted by the said Commissary, who had the foresaid right and power, and being by virtue thereof in possession many years, the same ought to defend him against the pursuit of the Bishop, in this possessory judgment, while the Commissary's right were taken away by some ordinary pursuit; which allegeance was repelled, and the foresaid gift found null; for, seeing the Commissary could not be both Commissary and procurator fiscal, as his own gift fell, so also the power to depute to himself in that place, which was not compatible to him to bruik, became extinct.

Act. Mowal. Alt. Belshes. Clerk, Gibson. Fol. Dic. v. 2. p. 291. Durie, p. 309.

The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting     


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1627/Mor3113090-004.html