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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Tennents v. Romanes [1881] ScotLR 18_583_1 (22 June 1881) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1881/18SLR0583_1.html Cite as: [1881] ScotLR 18_583_1, [1881] SLR 18_583_1 |
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Page: 583↓
[Sheriff of Lanarkshire.
A Sheriff-Substitute on 10th March pronounced an interlocutor exhausting the merits of a cause, and finding the unsuccessful party, T., liable in expenses. The Sheriff on appeal adhered on 31st March, and found T. liable “in the expenses of this appeal, to be taxed and decerned for along with the other expenses,” and decerned. This decree was extracted on 21st April, and implemented
Page: 584↓
by payment to the successful party, R., of money which had been consigned in the cause. On 2d May the Sheriff-Substitute approved of the Auditor's report on R.'s account of expenses, decerned in favour of R. for the “said taxed expenses of process to which he has been found entitled, besides the dues of extract.” T. appealed to the Court of Session, his appeal being noted on 16th May. Held (1) that the interlocutor of 31st March having been duly extracted in terms of sec. 32 of the Sheriff Courts Act 1876, and implemented, was not subject to appeal; and (2) that the interlocutor of 2d May being merely a decree for expenses, was also not subject to appeal, to the effect of bringing the previous interlocutors under review. Appeal refused as incompetent.
A process of multiplepoinding was raised in the Sheriff Court of Lanarkshire by James Logan, as pursuer and real raiser, against Mrs Hamilton Dunbar Tennent of Pool, her husband Charles Welch Tennent of Rumgally and Pool, Charles Simon Romanes, accountant, trustee on the sequestrated estate of Wm. Carmichael, and the said Wm. Carmichael, common debtor, as defenders.
On 10th March 1881 the Sheriff-Substitute (13nanrs) pronounced an interlocutor in which, after findings, he ranked and preferred the claimant C. S. Romanes to the whole fund in medio; granted warrant to the Clerk of Court to pay over to him the whole consigned money, with all interest thereon; and found the claimants Mr and Mrs Tennent liable in expenses.
Mr and Mrs Tennent having appealed, the Sheriff ( Clark) on 31st March 1881 adhered, found them liable “in the expenses of this appeal, to be taxed and decerned for along with the other expenses,” and decerned.
This interlocutor was extracted on 21st April, and on the 22d the consigned money was duly paid over to the procurator for Mr Romanes. On 2d May the Sheriff-Substitute, on the craving of the procurator for the claimant C. S. Romanes, approved of the Auditor's report on his account of expenses, and decerned against Mr and Mrs Tennent to pay to the said C. S. Romanes the amount of the said taxed expenses of process to which he has been found entitled, besides the dues of extract, and decerned.
Mr and Mrs Tennent appealed to the Court of Session, their appeal being noted on 16th May 1881.
The Sheriff Courts (Scotland) Act 1876 (39 and 40 Vict. c. 70) provides (sec. 32) that “Notwithstanding anything contained in section 68 of the Court of Session Act 1868, extract of any judgment, decree, interlocutor, or order pronounced in the ordinary Sheriff Court may be issued at any time on the expiration of forteen days from the date thereof, unless the same shall, if competent, have been sooner appealed against, and no extract of any such judgment, decree, interlocutor, or order shall be issued before the expiration of fourteen days from the date thereof, unless the Sheriff or Sheriff-Substitute who pronounced the same shall allow the extract to be sooner issued.”
The respondent objected to the competency of the appeal. He argued that the interlocutor of 31st March was a final judgment disposing of the whole merits and awarding expenses. It was duly extracted, and had been implemented by payment of the consigned money. It could not therefore be now brought under review. The interlocutor of 2d May was a mere decree for expenses, which was not subject to appeal and could not be made a means for bringing all the previous interlocutors up for review. See Cruickshank v. Smart, Feb. 5, 1870, 8 Macph. 512; A. S., July 11, 1828; A. S., July 10, 1839, sec. 109; Sheriff Court Act 1876, secs. 3, 32, 33.
The appellant argued that the appeal was competent. The extract here was incompetent, because the proceedings were not then at an end, expenses not having been decerned for—M ‘Glashan's Sheriff Court Practice, sec. 1702; A. S., July 10, 1839, sec. 113. If the extract was good, then the interlocutor of 2d May 1881 was incompetently pronounced, for no proceedings could take place after extract—Shand's Practice, 1048; Badger v. Lord Blantyre, Nov. 16, 1844, 17 J. 53. The appeal had been noted within fourteen days from the date of the decree for expenses, which was therefore competently brought under review, and so brought all the previous interlocutors under review also. There was no authority against an appeal from a decree for expenses.
At advising—
Mr and Mrs Tennent have now appealed. The appeal was noted on 16th May, that is, just within the fourteen days from the decree for the taxed amount, and objection has been taken to the competency of the appeal.
It is contended, in the first place, that a final judgment having been extracted and implemented by payment of the consigned money, it is no longer possible to bring it under review; and, in the second place, that an appeal against a decree for expenses is inoperative and incompetent, because a decree for expenses follows as a matter of course on a final judgment which has been extracted.
The appellant, on the other hand, contends, that having brought his appeal within fourteen days of a decree for expenses, that decree is competently brought up on appeal, and so brings up all the previous interlocutors.
I have great difficulty in sustaining this appeal to any effect. Mr Rhind contended that the extract was here incompetent, because the proceedings were not at an end, and the claimant should have waited till expenses had been decerned for before procuring extract; and if he is right in that view there is a great deal to be said for the competency of this appeal. But it appears to me that that question was set at rest by section 32 of the Sheriff Court Act of 1876, which provides that “Notwithstanding anything contained in section 68 of the Court of Session Act 1868, extract of any judgment, decree, interlocutor, or order pronounced in the ordinary Sheriff Court may be issued at any time on the expiration of fourteen days from the date thereof, unless the same shall, if competent, have been sooner appealed against, and no extract of any such judgment, decree, interlocutor, or order shall be issued before the expiration of fourteen days from the date thereof, unless the Sheriff or Sheriff-Substitute who pronounced the same shall allow the extract to be sooner issued.” Now, this is a very unqualified provision; and if fourteen days have elapsed from the date of any judgment which is extractable, then I think extract of it must be competent. In the present case fourteen days had elapsed, because the extract was on 21st April, and the interlocutor of the Sheriff was on 31st March. I think, therefore, that under that section of the statute extract was competent and proper; and so it follows that this appeal cannot be taken, for there is no appeal against an extracted judgment.
The interlocutor on the merits being therefore not subject to appeal, the question comes to be whether there is any appeal here at all. To bring up a decerniture for expenses, to the effect of letting the appellant get into a review of the interlocutors on the merits, would be, I think, by a mere evasion to set at naught the provisions of the Acts of Parliament. I think, therefore, it is impossible to sustain the competency of this appeal to that effect. Then if there is only a decerniture for expenses, that is not an interlocutor subject to appeal. In Cruickshank v. Smart (5th Feb. 1870, 8 Macph. 512) Lord Deas expressed his opinion that a decree for expenses is not subject to appeal, and I concurred in that opinion, though not entering so fully into the question.
On both grounds I think this appeal must be dismissed as incompetent.
The Lords refused the appeal as incompetent.
Counsel for Appellants— Rhind. Agents— Hagart & Burn Murdoch, W.S.
Counsel for Respondent— Baxter. Agent— W. Black, S.S.C.