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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Horn v. Sanderson and Muirhead [1871] ScotLR 9_200 (9 January 1871) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/09SLR0200.html Cite as: [1871] ScotLR 9_200, [1871] SLR 9_200 |
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Page: 200↓
By antenuptial contract a husband renounced his jus mariti and right of administration over the whole means, estate, and effects of the wife, with a declaration that she should be entitled during the subsistence of the marriage to sue for, uplift, and discharge all debts and sums of money due and to become due to her in her own name. An action of damages was raised by the spouses for bodily injury to the wife, and incidental loss to the husband from her inability to attend to his business. In the course of the action the estates of the husband were sequestrated. The trustee in his sequestration declined to sist himself, and, at the request of the wife, executed, in conjunction with the husband, an assignation in favour of the wife of all claims against the defenders which either the husband or the trustee might have in connection with the subject of the action. The husband having been appointed to find caution for expenses, and having failed to do so, held that he was not entitled to sue the action for his own right and interest, or to recover damages in respect of the loss alleged to have been sustained by him, and the action dismissed as regards him; but held that the wife was, with consent of the husband as her administrator-in-law, entitled to insist in the action for her own right and interest, without finding caution.
This was an action at the instance of Mrs Eliza Horn, wife of Andrew Horn, spirit-dealer in Edinburgh, with consent of her husband as administrator-in-law, and of Andrew Horn for his own right and interest, against Sanderson & Muirhead, Builders, Edinburgh. The conclusions were for £500 of damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained by the fault of the defenders. The pursuers averred that in March 1871 the defenders had been employed to repair a portion of the pavement in Princes Street; that on the evening of the 6th March they had negligently left a piece of the footway unpaved, and without barricade or lamp to warn passengers; that on that evening Mrs Horn was walking along Princes Street, when she stumbled over the place and fell, and was seriously injured in her person. The pursuers further averred (Cond. 7), that in consequence of Mrs Horn not being able to attend to the shop, as she usually did, Mr Horn was obliged to manage the business himself, and that his health suffered from overwork.
After the summons was raised the pursuer Mr Horn was sequestrated.
The Lord Ordinary ( Jerviswoode), by interlocutor dated 20th October 1871, ordered the process to be intimated to the trustee in his sequestration, who declined to sist himself.
An antenuptial contract of marriage between Mr and Mrs Horn was produced, in which Mr Horn renounced his jus mariti and right of administration
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and all other rights competent by law to him, in consequence of the intended marriage, “over the real and personal, heritable and moveable, means, estate, and effects of the said Eliza Rankine, and whole rents, interests, and other income arising furth thereof.” It was declared that she “should be entitled to sue for, uplift, and discharge all debts, and sums of money, and rents of heritable subjects, due and to become due to her, in her own name, alone, and without the concurrence of me, the said Andrew Horn.” On the 17th November 1871 Mr Horn and the trustee and commissioners on his sequestrated estate executed an assignation in favour of Mrs Horn in the following terms:—
“And now seeing that the said Mrs Eliza Rankine or Horn has required us to execute these presents in terms of the said resolution of creditors, and that it is right and proper that we should do so; Therefore I, the said Andrew Horn, and I, the said William Myrtle, as trustee foresaid, and we, the said Henry Ruddiman Kay, William White, and William Lindsay, as commissioners foresaid, do hereby assign, dispone, convey, and make over to and in favour of the said Mrs Eliza Rankine or Horn, and to her heirs, executors, and assignees, exclusive of the jus mariti and right of administration of me the said Andrew Horn, and any right that may be competent to me, the said William Myrtle, as trustee foresaid, all claims which I, the said Andrew Horn, or I, the said William Myrtle, as trustee foresaid, may have against the said Messrs Sanderson & Muirhead, or the individual partners of said firm, in connection with the subject-matter of the said action of damages, or under said action, with all right, title, and interest competent to us, or either of us therein.”
On the 17th November 1871 the Lord Ordinary, in respect that the trustee on the pursuer's sequestrated estate had failed to sist himself as a party to the process, appointed “the pursuer” to find caution for expenses within ten days.
On the 5th December the Lord Ordinary, in respect of the failure of “the pursuer” to find caution in terms of the preceding interlocutor, dismissed the action, and found the defenders entitled to expenses.
Mrs Horn reclaimed, and maintained that the action at her instance ought not to be dismissed, and that she was entitled to insist in the action without finding caution.
Macdonald and Rhind, for her, argued that, in virtue of the renunciation of the jus mariti in her antenuptial contract, and the assignation in her favour by her husband's trustee, the right of action, so far as her interest was concerned, was completely vested in herself.
Lancaster, in reply, argued that the right to sue for pecuniary damages for personal injury to the wife, was competent only to the husband, and that, as he had become bankrupt and had failed to find caution for expenses, the action must be wholly dismissed. In any view, the wife could not sue without a curator ad litem.
The following cases were cited:— Finlay v. Hamilton, Feb. 6, 1748, M. 6051; Graham v. Hunter's Trs., March 4, 1831, 9 S. 543; Milne v. Gould's Trs, Jan. 14, 1841, 3 D. 345; Smith v. Stoddart, July 5, 1850, 12 D. 1185; Gall v. Bennett, March 7, 1857, 19 D. 665.
At advising—
A question has been raised whether she should not have a curator ad litem. Mr Horn is the proper curator or administrator for his wife. I have yet to learn that a man's bankruptcy disqualifies him from acting as curator to his wife. Mrs Horn is not bankrupt, and therefore she cannot be required to find caution. The result is, that while the Lord Ordinary is right in dismissing the action in regard to the pursuer Mr Horn, he is wrong if he intended to dismiss the action so far as Mrs Horn is concerned.
The other Judges concurred
The Court pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“Edinburgh, 7th January 1872.—The Lords having heard counsel on the reclaiming note for Mrs Horn and spouse against Lord Jerviswoode's interlocutor of 5th December 1871, recall the said interlocutor: Find that the pursuer Andrew Horn, having failed to implement the interlocutor of 17th November 1871 by finding caution for expenses, is not entitled to sue this action for his own right and interest, or to recover damages in respect of the loss alleged to be sustained by him in the 7th article of the condescendence: Therefore, in so far as regards the pursuer Andrew Horn for his own right and interest, dismiss the action and decern: But find that the pursuer Mrs Eliza Horn is entitled, with consent and concurrence of her husband
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as her administrator in law, to insist in this action for her own right and interest without finding caution for expenses; and remit to the Lord Ordinary to proceed with the cause: Find the pursuer Mrs Eliza Horn, and her husband as her administrator, entitled to expenses since the date of the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor reclaimed against: Allow an account,” &c.
Solicitors: Agent for Mrs Horn— W. G. Roy, S.S.C.
Agents for Defenders— Murray, Beith, & Murray, W.S.