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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Murphy and Others v. Smith [1879] ScotLR 16_436 (7 March 1879)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1879/16SLR0436.html
Cite as: [1879] SLR 16_436, [1879] ScotLR 16_436

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 436

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Friday, March 7. 1879. *

[ Lord Rutherfurd Clark, Ordinary,

16 SLR 436

Murphy and Others

v.

Smith.

Subject_1Entail
Subject_2Destination
Subject_3Clause of Devolution
Subject_4Whether “Heir and Disponee” of a Substitute is within a Clause of Devolution which struck at Substitutes.
Facts:

By a disposition and deed of settlement certain lands were disponed in favour of a series of heirs, which terminated in the settler's daughters, “equally among them, share and share alike, their heirs and disponees.” The deed recited an entail of even date, by which the settler entailed certain other lands in favour of his eldest son and a series of heirs, and contained this further clause, that in case the disponee under the deed of settlement,” or any of the heirs of his body, or any of the other substitutes before mentioned,

_________________ Footnote _________________

* Decided February 6,1879

Page: 437

shall succeed as heir of tailzie under the said deed of entail,” he should be bound to denude in favour of certain other heirs. The son of the eldest daughter succeeded as heir of tailzie, he having previously succeeded his mother in her portion of the lands disponed by the deed of settlement. Held that he was not bound to denude, as he had succeeded his mother as heir-at-law and not as a substitute within the meaning of the clause of devolution.

Headnote:

By disposition and deed of settlement dated 15th July 1812, John Wightman disponed the lands of Garloff to David Wightman, his youngest son, and the heirs of his body, whom failing to any other son that might be born to him, and the heirs of his body, whom failing to Nicholas, Mary, and Janet Wightman, his daughters, and any other daughters that might be born to him, “equally amongst them, share and share alike, their heirs and disponees.” The deed recited an entail of even date, by which Mr Wightman had settled the lands of Breconside on his eldest son and a series of heirs, and which contained the following clause:—“Providing and declaring alwise, as it is hereby expressly provided and declared, and appointed to be engrossed in the infeftment to follow hereon, that in case the said David Wightman, or any of the heirs of his body, or any of the other substitutes before mentioned, shall succeed as heir of tailzie under the said deed of entail of the lands of Meikle and Little Breconside, in the parish of Kirkgunzeon, then he, or the other person succeeding thereto shall be bound and obliged, as they by their acceptation thereof bind and oblige themselves, to denude as to the lands hereby disponed in favour of my younger children, equally amongst them, and the heirs of their own bodies, and to convey the same to them accordingly. Under the disposition David Weightman succeeded to the lands of Garloff, and made up titles in ordinary form. He died without issue in May 1856, when he was succeeded by his sisters Nicholas, then Mrs Smith, and Janet, then Mrs Murphy. Their titles were duly made up as heirs of provision. Mary had predeceased her brother without being married. On Mrs Smith's death in October 1859, her son, the defender, succeeded as her heir to her pro indiviso half of Garloff. Besides the defender she had two other children—the pursuers Mrs Cryan and Mrs M'Dowall. Mrs Murphy died in 1874, and her share of Garloff fell to her eldest son, the pursuer Andrew Murphy. In 1875 the defender succeeded as heir of entail to the estate of Breconside. In consequence, the pursuers, viz., Andrew Murphy, Mrs Cryan, and Mrs M'Dowall, founding on the clause of devolution above quoted, called on him to denude in their favour of the lands of Garloff. They maintained that he was a “substitute” within the meaning of the clause.

The Lord Ordinary ( Rutherfurd Clark) repelled this plea, and found the defender entitled to absolvitor. His Lordship added this note to his interlocutor:—

Note.—[ After narrating the facts ut supra]—In the opinion of the Lord Ordinary the destination terminated with the daughters of the disponer. They succeeded as the last heirs of provision, and on the death of Mrs Smith her share of the lands devolved on the defender as her heir-at-law. The addition of the words ‘heirs and disponees’ does not prolong the destination, nor does it add anything to the legal effect of the deed. The succession would have been the same though these words had been omitted. All this seems to be settled by the cases of Leny v. Leny, 22 D. 1272, and M'Gregor v. Gordon, 3 Macph. 164. Taken by mere force of law, the defender cannot, it is thought, be regarded as a ‘substitute’ within the meaning of the deed. He could not be so regarded if the words ‘heirs and disponees’ had not occurred; and the addition of words which are of no legal effect cannot, as the Lord Ordinary conceives, make any difference in his position.”

The pursuer reclaimed.

Argued for him—The heirs of the daughters were substitutes. It was a question of intention, and that was what the testator intended. It was of no moment that the deed relating to Garloff was not an entail. A clause of devolution was perfectly consistent with a fee-simple title. That was the opinion of the Lord Justice-Clerk in Munro v. Butler Johnstone, December 18, 1868, 7 M. 250; and the other Judges reserved their opinions on the point, holding that it did not arise. There were other cases in which defective entails had been held good as regards clauses of devolution— Eglinloun v. Hamilton, June 3, 1847, 9 D. 1167—July 8,1847, 6 Bell's Apps. 136; Lady Hawerden v. Howden, Feb. 2, 1866, 4 M. 353; Fleming v. Howden, Feb. 14, 1867, 5 M. 659— rev. July 16, 1868, 6 M. (H. of L.) 113.

Argued for the defender—A clause of devolution was absolutely foreign to a fee-simple title—Lord Cowan in Munro v. Butler Johnstone, supra. But here the question was this—Was the defender a substitute within the meaning of the clause of devolution? He was not. His mother possessed in fee-simple, and he succeeded as her heir-atlaw. Leny v. Leny, June 28, 1860, 22 D. 1272; Macgregor v. Gordon, December 1, 1864, 3 M. 164.

Judgment:

At advising—

Lord President—The question in this case is, whether the clause of devolution in the deed of settlement of the unentailed estate applies to the defender, or whether to make it so he must not be either David Wightman or the heir of his body, or one of the substitutes mentioned in the clause of destination in the deed? Undoubtedly, in the plain meaning of the words Mr Smith is not mentioned in the clause of destination, and he is not a substitute. The last of the branches in the deed of settlement destines the estate to the testator's daughters, equally amongst them, share and share alike, and as the defender is only here as heir to a daughter, he has a right to the estate. Nothing is better settled than that one who succeeds only as heir to a last substitute is not an heir of provision nor himself a substitute. Therefore I hold that the clause of devolution does not apply, and I entirely agree with the finding of the Lord Ordinary, and with the grounds on which he has gone.

Lord Deas and Lord Shand concurred.

Lord Mure was absent.

The Court adhered.

Counsel:

Counsel for Pursuer (Reclaimer)— M'Laren— Kinnear. Agent— James Somerville, S.S.C.

Counsel for Defender (Respondent)— Lord Advocate (Watson)— Keir. Agent— Neil M. Campbell, S. S. C.

1879


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