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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Henderson v. Davidson [1871] ScotLR 8_633 (8 July 1871) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/08SLR0633.html Cite as: [1871] SLR 8_633, [1871] ScotLR 8_633 |
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Page: 633↓
Orders were given for meal by the boll. The meal was delivered and accounts rendered at so much per stone. Held that the contract was not null under the Weights and Measures Acts.
This was an appeal under the Debts Recovery (Scotland) Act 1867, from the Sheriff-court of Caithness, &c.
James Henderson, Pulteneytown Mills, Wick, sued David Davidson junior, fishmonger, for £45, 5s. 6d., being the balance of an account for meal.
The defender admitted that he gave orders to the pursuer to furnish meal to sundry fishermen, and that the account was rendered, but claimed credit for £30, 1s., alleged to have been paid to account.
At the proof the pursuer produced the orders. The defender requested time to examine them, and craved a continuation for that purpose. He led no evidence in support of his statements. The Sheriff-Substitute continued the case till next Court-day, and then, the defender failing to appear, circumduced the term of proof, and pronounced an interlocutor decerning against the defender for the sum concluded for.
“ Note—It is very seldom that furnishings made in the course of trade, in addition to being duly entered in duly-kept books, are so verified as by the productions and proof furnished by the pursuer in this case. An opportunity was given to the defender to examine and redargue the evidence thus supplied, but he has been confessedly unable to impugn the same.”
The defender appealed.
The Sheriff ( Thoms) altered, and found the defender only liable in payment of £14, 2s. 3d.
The grounds of the Sheriff's judgment were— (1) that all the orders were not proved to have been signed by the defenders; (2) that none of the orders refer to stones, while the entries in the account refer mostly to stones, and the rest to sacks; (3) that 22 of the orders refer to bolls, which is not an imperial measure, and the contracts thereby evidenced are null under 5 Geo. IV. c. 74.
The pursuer appealed.
Mackintosh for him.
Burnet and M'Kechnie for the defender.
At advising—
The Court recalled the interlocutor of the Sheriff, and found the defender liable in expenses in both Courts.
Solicitors: Agents for Pursuer— Horne, Horne & Lyell, W.S.
Agent for Defender— John A. Gillespie, S.S.C.