BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Kilmarnock Gas Co. v. Smith [1872] ScotLR 10_49_1 (9 November 1872)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1872/10SLR0049_1.html
Cite as: [1872] ScotLR 10_49_1, [1872] SLR 10_49_1

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]


SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 49

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

[Sheriff-Court of Ayr.

Saturday, November 9. 1872.

10 SLR 49_1

Kilmarnock Gas Company

v.

Smith.

Subject_1Lease
Subject_2Rent
Subject_3Retention
Subject_4Sequestration — Relevancy.
Facts:

A Gas Light Company granted a lease of certain premises adjoining their works, with right to the whole secondary products which should flow into the tenant's cistern. During the currency of the lease the tenant refused the rent for a certain half-year, and the Compaay raised a process of sequestration against him. The tenant's defence was, that

Page: 50

he was entitled to retain the rent, as the Company, by withholding part of the secondary products, had failed to place him in possession of a material part of the subject leased. Held that this was a relevant defence to a claim of rent.

Headnote:

In 1860 the Kilmarnock Gas Light Company let to Robert Smith, for a period of ten years, at a fixed annual rent of £130, a piece of ground adjoining their works at Kilmarnock, with right to the whole of the ammoniacal liquor and the tar produced and arising from the Company's works in their operations of making gas, which should flow into the tenant's cistern, and with the stipulation that the tar, after being distilled by the tenant, should be returned by him to the Company, and that the tenant should thereafter receive back again what the Company did not require for the heating of their retorts, or otherwise connected with their works. Robert Smith accordingly entered on possession of the premises, and continued to pay his rent until 1868. At Martinmas in that year, however, he refused to pay the rent for the preceding half-year, and in consequence of this the Gas Light Company presented a petition to the Sheriff, in January 1869, praying for sequestration of all the effects of the respondent Smith which were subject to the petitioners' hypothec, for payment and in security of the rent.

The respondent's defence was, that while in terms of the lease he was entitled to the whole of the ammoniacal liquor and tar produced in the operation of making gas, the Company had diverted, for purposes of their own, large quantities of the said ammoniacal liquor and tar. The respondent therefore pleaded that, not having received the ammoniacal liquor and tar to which he was entitled under the lease, he was not bound to pay the rent sued for.

The petitioners denied that under the terms of the lease the defender had right to the whole of the ammoniacal liquor and tar produced from the pursuers' works; and further, pleaded that the averments of the defender were not sufficient or relevant grounds for his refusing to pay the rent, and that the defender was not entitled to resist implement of his liquid and unambiguous obligation to pay the rent claimed from him on any of the grounds stated in defence, even though an action were raised by him for the purpose of constituting his alleged counter-claim.

The Sheriff-Substitute repelled the pursuers' plea that the allegations of the defender did not set forth any relevant ground for refusing to pay the rent, and allowed a proof. On appeal, the Sheriff recalled hoc statu this interlocutor, opened up the record, and remitted to the Sheriff-Substitute to amend and to readjust. The Sheriff-Substitute therefore adjusted and closed the record, and thereafter the defender's procurator consigned £65 sterling. The Sheriff-Substitute then allowed the parties a proof, before answer, and, upon consideration of the evidence, decerned against the respondent, in terms of the prayer of the petition. This interlocutor was sustained by the Sheriff, and the respondent appealed to the Court of Session.

The only question of law before the Court was as to the relevancy of the respondent's defence.

It was argued for the appellant that he had not received the subject leased, in respect that the pursuers had withheld part of the secondary products to which he was entitled, as a material part of the subject leased to him, and that therefore he had a right to retain the rent, and that without prejudice to his claim for damages, as the same might be ascertained by investigation; Johnston v. Robertson, March 1, 1861, 23 D. 646; Young v. Mann, 19 D. 785.

It was argued for the pursuers that this was not a case in which the tenant was entitled to withhold his rent. In order to entitle a tenant to relief of rent, there must be direct loss; but in this case, upon the defender's own showing, there was no proper damnum, but rather a lessening of the profits— lucrum cessans. In such a case the tenant is bound by the clearest evidence to prove wilful withholding of the subjects, in order even to substantiate a claim of damages. Further, the tenant's claim is not cut off by payment of rent; but having given, by his acceptance of the lease, a registrable decree for the rent, he has no claim unless he can also bring a decree or a document liquidating the debt. An illiquid claim cannot be pleaded to resist implement of a liquid obligation to pay rent, unless it be capable of immediate liquidation. Finally, want of beneficial possession may be pleaded as a set-off against a claim for rent; but in this case there was really and truly beneficial possession, and all that was complained of was, that on account of the want of something, the tenant had not made quite so much as he otherwise would have done. It was therefore argued that the defence should be repelled, the prayer of the petition granted, and the proof which had been led before the Sheriff held pro non scripto; Catterns v. Tenant, March 1, 1861, 23 D. 646.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Justice-Clerk—This is a petition for sequestration in security and for payment of rent, due under a lease of certain subjects. These subjects are premises adjoining the works of the Kilmarnock Gas Light Company, with right to all the secondary products which shall flow into the tenant's cistern. For these subjects the tenant agreed to pay a fixed rent of £130 a-year, and this uniform rent would seem to indicate that the supply of secondary products, which formed part of the subject for which the rent was paid, was also likely to be uniform, although there was no guarantee on the part of the Gas Company that any specified amount should be received by the tenant, but only that such amount as happened to be over should be conveyed to him. For payment and in security of the rent due under this lease for the year ending at Whitsunday 1869, this petition for sequestration has been presented. Now, in answer to this petition, the tenant Smith avers that there was a diversion or retention on the part of the Company of part of the secondary products to which he was entitled under the lease, and that he had thereby suffered loss to an amount which entitled him to retain the rent sued for. To this defence it is objected, on the part of the landlord, that the allegations of the tenant are not relevant or sufficient to entitle him to retain the rent. Now, seeing that the parties have joined issue on the main question, and gone to proof on the merits of the cause, I do not think that they are entitled at this stage of the proceedings to fall back upon this plea. But even if they had been entitled to do so, I do not think that it would have occasioned much difficulty. The landlord is as much bound to give and continue the tenant in possession, as far at least as his own action is concerned, as the tenant is to pay

Page: 51

his rent. It does not follow that every alleged deviation from incidental stipulations in the contract will entitle a tenant to resist the demand of the landlord for the liquidated rent; and questions have often occurred in regard to caution or consignation as the condition of allowing the tenant to defend or suspend the demand on such grounds. But by a series of decisions it is well fixed that if the lessor by his own act withhold from the tentant in whole or in any material part the subject of the lease, the tenant may resist payment, to the extent at least of what he has suffered. But, of course, the tenant's averments must be proved; and what we have now to consider is, whether the averments in this case have been proved or not.

Lord Cowan—It has been strongly pressed for the pursuers in this case that the defence is not relevant, and should not have been sustained, that therefore the Sheriff ought not to have allowed a proof; and that the interlocutor by which he did so was erroneous. But that interlocutor, which embraced all the allegations as to the withholding of the ammoniacal liquor, &c., was acquiesced in by both the parties, and thus what might otherwise have been a difficult question to deal with has been removed. I quite concur in the general views urged for the pursuers by Mr Watson. A liquid claim for rent is not to be met by an illiquid claim for damages, but there must be a liquid claim for damage, or at least a claim capable of immediate liquidation. But the defence, as I understand it, is not a counter and illiquid claim of damage, but the defence that the landlord has not maintained the tenant in possession of the subject leased, but has withheld from him certain subjects which under the lease he was entitled to; and this is a perfectly relevant defence to a claim of rent.

Lord Benholme and Lord Neaves concurred.

The Court repelled the objections to the relevancy of the defence, and affirmed the judgment of the Sheriff.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Appellants— Solicitor-General and Moncrieff. Agents— M'Ewen & Carment, W.S.

Counsel for the Respondent— Watson and Guthrie. Agents— Duncan & Black, W.S.

1872


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1872/10SLR0049_1.html