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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Creditors of Whitehaugh, Competing. [1747] 1 Elchies 105 (9 January 1747)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1747/Elchies010105-006.html
Cite as: [1747] 1 Elchies 105

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[1747] 1 Elchies 105      

Subject_1 COMPETITION.

Creditors of Whitehaugh, Competing

1747, Jan. 9, 10, 24.
Case No. No. 6.

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The question was, Whether when there were several different classes of annualrents or adjudications after an inhibiter, but whose claim of preference upon his adjudication is after them,—Whether the inhibiter's payment must be taken proportionally out of all the posterior annualrents or adjudications, which has been the practice hitherto ever since the creditors of Nicholson, or if the whole loss must fall upon the last? The papers are very full both as to the precedents and as to the reasons of the thing and principles of law.

This case was argued yesterday at the bar, and this day very fully argued upon the Bench. Kilkerran first spoke short for Lithgow,—next Dun against him,—also Drummore very full and long,—then Tinwald for him pretty long,—next Minto short,—then I spoke short against him for the other creditors,—last of all the President for Lithgow. My reasons were chiefly because of the decision in the case of Nicolson, and 50 years custom of the Court upon it; that it was not true that an infeftment cannot be prejudged by subsequent contractions, for if the debtor die, his heirs' debts will not be affected by inhibitions against the predecessor, and therefore these inhibitions must affect the infeftments of annualrent granted by him, and not those by his heir; and it was admitted, that debts contracted before the inhibition, but less preferable than the annualrent, would have the same effect. 2d, If we alter the rule in this case, I see no reason why we should not alter the rule likewise in the case of infeftments in different subjects, for the reason of the thing, the equity of the case, is the same in both. 3d, There is no necessity for altering the rule, because a creditor lending money to a person already inhibited, and taking infeftment or annualrent, he can secure himself against subsequent contractions by using inhibition. 2dly, They can secure themselves against both prior and posterior debts who had not a prior infeftment by a particular infeftment of warrandice. By the President's casting vote, it carried that the infeftments must not be burdened proportionally, but the last must be burdened.—Pro were Minto, Kilkerran, Monzie, Tinwald, and Shewalton. Con were Drummore, Strichen, Dun, Murkle, et Ego. 24th We adhered,—and Arniston was for it, though, as he observed, a second or third or last annualrenter purchasing the inhibition would have been safe.

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


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