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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Lord Elibank v Margaret Hay. [1780] Mor 13869 (19 January 1780) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1780/Mor3213869-111.html |
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Subject_1 REMOVING.
Subject_2 SECT. VII. Act of Sederunt, 14th December 1756.
Date: Lord Elibank
v.
Margaret Hay
19 January 1780
Case No.No 111.
Whether an arrear of a year's rent due to the landlord's executor entitles his heir to pursue an action of removing?
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At the time of the death of Patrick Lord Elibank, in the month of August 1778, Margaret Hay, lessee of certain lands belonging to his Lordship, had incurred an arrear of more than a year's rent, which devolved to his Lordship's executor.
In the month of September following, George Lord Elibank, heir to Lord Patrick, commenced an action before the Sheriff of the county, against Margaret Hay, upon the act of sederunt 1756; by which it is, inter alia, provided, “That where a tenant shall run in arrear of one year's rent, it shall be lawful to the heritor, or other setter of lands, to bring his action before the judge-ordinary, who is hereby empowered and required to ordain the tenant to find caution for the arrears, and for payment of the rent for the five crops following, or during the currency of the tack, if the tack is of shorter endurance, within a certain time, to be limited by the judge; and failing thereof, to decern the tenant summarily to remove, and to eject him in the same manner as if the tack were determined, and the tenant had been legally warned in terms of the act 1555.'
In support of this action,
The pursuer pleaded; In order to eject a tenant who had fallen in arrear, a landlord, before the year 1756, was obliged first to attach the whole stocking
on the ground, and afterwards to pursue an action of removing against the tenant as being a bankrupt. During this procedure the farm was neglected, the landlord's security diminished, and both parties exposed to much litigation and inconveniency. To remove this was the object of this branch of the act of sederunt, by which the tenant's owing a year's rent is made equivalent to bankruptcy, and he obliged, in that event, either to find caution for the arrears, and for the rents of the five following crops, if the lease shall subsist so long, or to remove within a short time, to be limited by the judge-ordinary. It cannot, therefore, be thought, that the landlord's death, and the consequent partition of interests between his heir and executor, should defeat this salutary and politic regulation. By the same rule, supposing a proprietor to dispone his estate to his son, or his rents to a stranger, or that the rents are attached by legal diligence, a bankrupt tenant might be allowed to retain his possession, and to neglect and deteriorate the lands.
Nor can it with propriety be said, that by virtue of his hypothec the landlord is sufficiently secured, if no rent is due to him, whatever may be the extent of the tenant's debts to others. The act of sederunt had in view, not merely the landlord's security, but also the cultivation of the ground, which a bankrupt tenant is incapable to accomplish. Debts due to third parties, not connected with the lease, are not considered; but when a landlord can subsume, that one year's arrear of rent has been incurred, both the words and spirit of the act of sederunt support him in the requisition therein prescribed.
Answered for the defender; Practice having indulged landlords with an hypothec on the fruits and the tenant's goods for a year's rent, they are effectually secured for that period, if the land be sufficiently stocked; and it is only when more than a year's rent is due to them, that the interposition of the judge is necessary to compel the tenant on this account to find caution, or to remove. Arrears of rent due to the landlord's executor, to his creditor, or to his assignee, the existence and extent of which can be legally ascertained only in a question where, they are parties, can no more enter into this computation than extraneous debts. Indeed, if the lease be a beneficial one, nothing could be more repugnant to the interest of the other creditors, than to afford the landlord a mean of withdrawing from them perhaps the only fund out of which they can expect payment.
Upon these principles, the judge-ordinary is directed, by this act of sederunt, to decern the tenant “to find caution for the arrears, and also for payment of the rents of the five following crops;” which supposes, that the arrears are due to the same person who is entitled to caution for the rents of the following years. And, on the same idea, it has been found, in an action for declaring the irritancy of a feu-right, propter non solutum canonem, that a superior was not entitled to found upon the arrears of a feu-duty to a third party these having been incurred before he had purchased the superiority. See Jus Tertu.
The Judge-Ordinary had repelled the defences; but the defender having Applied by bill of suspension to the Court of Session, upon advising memorials,
‘The Lords suspended the letters.’
Lord Reporter, Kennet. Act. Solicitor-General Murray, Ilay Campbell, Law. Alt. Blair, Hay. Clerk, Tait,
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting