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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Henry Padwick and Franc Nichols Steuart v. Sir Archibald Douglas Steuart [1871] ScotLR 8_531 (3 June 1871) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/08SLR0531.html Cite as: [1871] SLR 8_531, [1871] ScotLR 8_531 |
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Page: 531↓
Petition presented by a party with whom a deceased heir of entail had entered into a contract of sale of the entailed estate under certain conditions, and by the general disponee and executor of the deceased, for the appointment of a judicial factor on the estate, pending the result of an intended action against the next heir of tailzie to have the validity of the sale ascertained, refused.
The late Sir William Drummond Steuart died on the 28th April 1871 infeft in the lands and baronies of Grandtully, Murthly, Strathbraan, and others, under a deed of entail and relative deed of nomination, both executed by John Steuart of Grandtully, on the 31st May 1717, but recorded at different times.
In January 1871 Sir William Steuart executed a mortis causa deed of settlement by which he conveyed to Mr Nichols Steuart his whole estate, heritable and moveable, declaring that the conveyance should extend to all lands with which he had power to deal; and he therein nominated Mr Nichols Steuart to be his sole executor.
On the 3d April 1871 an agreement was executed between Sir William Steuart and Mr Henry Padwick. By the deed of agreement Sir William Steuart sells to Mr Padwick the whole lands of Grandtully, Murthly, Strathbraan, and all others belonging to him in the county of Perth, with entry at Sir William Steuart's death, for the sum of £350,000, but declaring that the price shall only be payable to Sir William Steuart's executors at the first term of Whitsunday or Martinmas six months after the validity of the sale shall be finally and irreversibly ascertained; and that the free rental accruing prior to that time, but after the death of Sir William Steuart, so far as received by Mr Padwick, shall be paid over to Sir William Steuart's executors. It is further agreed that the expense of ascertaining the validity of the sale, including the costs in the House of Lords, shall form a deduction from the price, and that the price shall only be payable on Padwick obtaining a valid title. A clause follows, providing that in the event of any judicial proceedings being instituted in the lifetime of Sir William Steuart affecting his right to the lands, it shall be in the power of Sir William Steuart to annul this agreement.
A petition was now presented by Mr Padwick and Mr Nichols Steuart for the appointment of a judicial factor on the estates comprised in the above agreement. The petition founded on the agreement, and set forth that the petitioner Padwick was about to take proceedings to have the invalidity of the entail declared, and to obtain a valid title to the estates. A number of objections to the validity of the entail were set forth.
Answers were lodged to the petition for Sir Archibald Douglas Steuart, only surviving brother and heir under the entail to Sir William Steuart. In the answers it was stated that in 1851 Sir William Steuart had raised an action against the substitute heirs to have it declared that the estates in question were held by him free from the fetters of the entail. The defects alleged in that action were among those now alleged by the petitioners. The result of the proceedings was that the Lord Ordinary ( Cowan) found that the entail was not defective on any of the grounds stated by the pursuer, and assoilzied the defenders. This interlocutor became final. In 1870 Sir William Steuart made another attempt to free himself from the fetters of the entail, but this was abandoned.
The Lord Ordinary ( Mackenzie) refused the petition; adding the following note:—
“ Note.—The Lord Ordinary is of opinion that the petitioners have not shown any good or sufficient grounds upon which the estates of Grandtully, Murthly, Strathbraan, and others, should be sequestrated by the Court, and put under the management of a judicial factor.
The last proprietor, Sir William Drummond Steuart, from whom the rights founded on by the petitioners are derived, held these estates under the deed of entail and relative deed of nomination mentioned in the petition, and his title thereto was made up in the year 1839 by instrument of sasine following upon the retour of his special service as nearest and lawful heir-male of tailzie and provision of the deceased Sir John Archibald Steuart, his elder brother, and precept from Chancery following thereon. In the year 1851 he raised an action of declarator against the present respondent and certain other heirs of entail, to have it found and declared that the said deeds were defective in the clauses requisite for the constitution of a valid and complete entail, and that the said deeds were invalid and ineffectual as regards all the prohibitions therein contained or referred to, and that the estates thereby conveyed were subject to his deeds and debts as freely as if he held them in fee-simple. In that action it was found by the Lord Ordinary, whose interlocutor is final, ‘that the several deeds of entail libelled are not defective in any of the clauses requisite by statutory law and practice for the constitution of a valid and complete entail;’ and the defences were sustained, and that the defenders were assoilzied from the conclusions of the libel, with expenses.
The petitioner, Mr Padwick, claims right to the said entailed estates as the purchaser from Sir William Steuart, under an agreement of sale, whereby, as he avers, they were sold to him, with entry at the date of Sir William's death, at the price of £350,000, which is to be paid only at the first term of Whitsunday or Martinmas occurring six months after the validity of the sale thereby made should be finally and irreversibly determined, and upon a valid title being obtained by him; the free rents realised by Mr Padwick between Sir William's death and that time being payable by him to Sir William's executor; and he avers that he is about to take proceedings to have the invalidity of the entail declared, and his title completed by adjudication in implement of the said sale to him. The petitioner, Mr Franc Nichols Steuart, claims to be Sir William's executor under a general mortis causa deed of settlement, whereby Sir William conveyed to him his whole heritable and moveable estates, including all lands and estates with which he had power to deal, and of which he could dispose; and he maintains that in virtue of this settlement he is entitled, in respect of the invalidity of the entail, to receive payment of the price agreed to be paid by Mr Padwick, and the rents accruing between the date of Sir William's death and the date of the completion of Mr Padwick's title.
Page: 532↓
It is not necessary for the decision of this case that the Lord Ordinary should give any opinion as to the validity of the objections stated by the petitioners against the entail. It is said that these objections were not raised and considered or decided in the declarator at the instance of Sir William. Even supposing this to be the case, and that the entail could be again challenged, both on these objections and on those raised and disposed of in the above-mentioned action of declarator, the issue of that challenge is uncertain. Further, these objections are not of such a nature as could warrant the Court in now interfering with the rights of the respondent as heir-apparent under the entail, the standing investiture under which Sir William possessed the estates from 1839 down to the date of his death on 28th April 1871. As Mr Erskine remarks (Inst., iii, 8, 58), an heir-apparent ‘is entitled by his apparency to continue his ancestor's possession,’ and ‘this right of possession continues with the apparent heir though the ancestor should have made over the lands to a third party; because that grant, if it be not completed by seisin, imports only a personal obligation on the heir to divest himself, which is quite consistent with his possessing the subject till he be compelled to make up his titles and convey to the disponee; Fount., June 24, 1698; Home (Dict., p. 5235), July 18,1727; Ogilvie (Dict., p. 5242).’ The respondent's rights as heir-apparent are particularly strong in the present case in respect of the decision in the foresaid action of declarator and of the peculiar nature of the agreement of sale, and in respect that he avers that it was executed by Sir William on deathbed, he being at the date of its execution ill of the disease of which he died within a month thereafter, and that it is not a bona fide onerous agreement for the purchase and sale of the estates, but that it was entered into in pursuance of another attempt by Sir William to get rid of the fetters of the entail, for the purpose of transferring the estates to the other petitioner, Mr Nichols Steuart, on Sir William's death. It is also alleged by the respondent that the price stated in the agreement is £150,000 less than the true value of the estates, and that an understanding and arrangement existed between Sir William and Mr Padwick that the latter should, in the event of obtaining possession of the estates under the agreement of sale, convey them to the petitioner, Mr Nichols Steuart. This arrangement, it is stated, the pursuers are now endeavouring to carry into effect.
See Mackay v. Dalrymple, 9th March 1796, Dict. 5239; Munro v. Graham, 28th June 1849, 11 D. 1202; Borthwick v. Glassford, 28th February 1861, 23 D. 632; Campbell v. Campbell, 27th June 1863, 1 Macph. 991; and Catton v. Mackenzie, 16th March 1870, 8 Macph. 713.”
The petitioners reclaimed.
The Solicitor-General and Lee, for them, argued,—The present competition is between an heir of entail and a purchaser from the deceased heir of entail. This makes the case essentially different from those in which the competition was between an heir of entail and a gratuitous disponee. There is no presumption that the objections to the entail are not well founded. To allow Sir Archibald Douglas to take possession of the estates would be to presume that the entail is a valid entail, for unless the entail is valid he is not entitled to an hour's possession. All that Lord Cowan decided was the effect of certain clauses in the deed of entail. That decision, though it might bind Sir W. Steuart and his representatives, cannot affect an onerous purchaser. Moreover it does not touch the other objections which are now stated to the validity of the entail.
Shand and Balfour, for the respondent—The estate has been possessed by the heirs of entail for upwards of a century under the entail as a strict entail. This circumstance is alone sufficient. The argument of the petitioners comes to this, that whenever a party can say that he has purchased an entailed estate from a deceased heir of entail a judicial factor is to be appointed. Again, the deceased recognised the entail by making up titles under it; and the matter does not stop here—he made at least one unsuccessful attempt to treat the estate as if it were not well fettered. Everything then is to be presumed in favour of the validity of the entail. The present case is really not a question with a purchaser. We aver that Mr Padwick is under agreement to transfer the estates to the executor, Mr Nichols Steuart. The deed of agreement itself contains a provision that the rents of the estate between Sir W. Steuart's death and the time that the price becomes payable—which may be a period of several years—are to be paid to the executor. So that the case, as far as regards the present application, is really between an heir of entail and a gratuitous disponee.
At advising—
Page: 533↓
The other Judges concurred.
The Court adhered.
Solicitors: Agents for Petitioners— Tods, Murray & Jamieson, W.S.
Agents for Respondent— Dundas & Wilson, C.S.