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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Riddell v. Mackie [1874] ScotLR 12_115 (20 November 1874) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1874/12SLR0115.html Cite as: [1874] SLR 12_115, [1874] ScotLR 12_115 |
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Page: 115↓
[Sheriff of Stirling.
Held that a defender was not entitled to set off an illiquid claim for damages against a debt which he admitted on record.
The object of this action was to recover the price of three stots sold by the pursuer to the defender. The latter did not deny his liability, but stated as his defence that he had bought a horse warranted sound from the pursuer, which was in fact unsound, and that he had sold her at a loss, which loss he wished to set off against the pursuer's claim. The Sheriff-Substitute found for the defender. The Sheriff recalled his interlocutor. The defender appealed.
At advising—
In that state of the record the pursuer is apparently entitled to decree, but the defender pleads compensation as damages to the amount of £12, 10s. The pursuer has added an additional plea in law “In the circumstances above set forth, the defender is not entitled to plead compensation; and his statement of facts and pleas in law being irrelevant, unfounded in fact, and untenable in law, ought to be repelled.”
In my opinion the first of these should have been sustained at once, and decree given in favour of the pursuer. His claim being admitted, and the defender's counter claim being illiquid, the rule of law is quite settled that there can be no compensation. It is quite needless to go into the case. The case of the North-Eastern Railway Co. v. Napier, 21 D. 700, is on all fours with the present, and I am quite clear that all that has been done in the Sheriff-Court must be swept away. As the parties are here, however, it may be a kindness to them to express an opinion as to the counter claim. I am quite clear that warranty has not been proved, and that it cannot be proved. There is one observation which the Sheriff makes which I think a very good one; he says—“A purchaser intending to rely on an express warranty must either have it in writing or take care to have evidence sufficient to prove the fact and terms of the warranty.”
I quite concur in that. The Mercantile Law Amendment Act requires in such a case express warranty; here there is a total absence of anything of the kind.
The Court pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“Recal the interlocutor of the Sheriff of date 21st August 1873, and all the subsequent interlocutors in the cause; find that on the 1st February 1873 the pursuer (respondent) sold to the defender (appellant) three stots, at the price of £30, 15s.; find that the defender received delivery of the said stots on the 11th of the same month; find that the defender has failed to pay the price of the said stots find
Page: 116↓
that the claim on which the defender pleads compensation being illiquid cannot be set off against the pursuer's admitted claim; therefore repel the defences, and decern against the defender in terms of the conclusions of the summons; find the pursuer entitled to expenses both in the Sheriff Court and this Court; allow accounts thereof to be given in, and remit the same when lodged to the Auditor to tax and report.”
Counsel for the Pursuer— W. A. Orr Paterson. Agents— J. & A. Peddie, W.S.
Counsel for the Defender— Mackintosh. Agents— Gifford & Simpson, W.S.
M., Clerk.