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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Walker v. Knowles & Sons [1902] ScotLR 39_291 (08 January 1902)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1902/39SLR0291.html
Cite as: [1902] ScotLR 39_291, [1902] SLR 39_291

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 291

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

[Sheriff of Aberdeen.

Wednesday, January 8. 1902.

39 SLR 291

Walker

v.

Knowles & Sons.

Subject_1Process
Subject_2Proof
Subject_3Proof or Jury Trial
Subject_4Appeal for Jury Trial — Remit to Sheriff for Proof — Court of Session Act 1825 (6 Geo. IV. cap. 120) (Judicature Act), sec. 40.
Facts:

In an action of damages for £150 brought in the Sheriff Court at the instance of a tenant against her landlords, on the ground that she had sustained loss in her business through building operations carried out by the landlords on the building of which her premises formed part, a proof was allowed, and the pursuer appealed for jury trial. The Court, on the motion of the defender, in view of the nature of the injuries alleged and the character of the case, remitted to the Sheriff to proceed with the proof allowed.

Headnote:

Mary Jane Walker, dressmaker, Aberdeen, brought an action in the Sheriff Court at Aberdeen against her landlords, Knowles & Sons, fruit salesmen there, in which she craved decree for payment of £150 as damages.

The pursuer had for a number of years been tenant of the first floor of a tenement, No. 423 Union Street, Aberdeen, at a rent of £40 per annum. In the early spring of 1901 she re-took these premises for the year from Whitsunday 1901 to Whitsunday 1902 from the then proprietor, one Watson. She occupied the said first floor for the purposes of her business as a dressmaker, her show and fitting-rooms facing Union Street being immediately over a shop, No. 425 Union Street, which also belonged to Watson. The whole property, including both the shop and the first floor premises occupied by the pursuer, was purchased from Watson by the defenders in April 1901. In the beginning of June the defenders began making certain alterations on the shop and the lower part of the front of the building. These alterations consisted in putting in a modernised shop front and lowering the floor of the entrance to the floors above. It was in the course of carrying out these operations and from their effect when carried out that the loss and injury for which the pursuer claimed damages in the present action were alleged to have been sustained.

The pursuer averred that during the operations in question the defenders had blocked up the doorway leading to her premises, leaving a passage only two feet wide, and that the doorway and passage were rendered unsafe for use; that they had removed her brass plate and doorbell from the doorway; that they had put in a steel beam across the front of the property immediately below or at the level of the first floor joists, which involved the opening of the pursuer's premises to the weather for a considerable time; that this operation caused damage to the pursuer's stock, and also interfered with the carrying on of her business in her show and fitting-rooms; that the pursuer was not warned as to the nature and extent of the alterations, and that her consent was not asked or obtained; that the defenders when they replaced her door-plate put it on the opposite side of the doorway from where it had been formerly, and also on the opposite side from the bell; that the defenders had permanently altered the entrance to the pursuer's premises and narrowed it from five to three and a-half feet; that owing to the appearance and condition of the property during the defenders' operations the pursuer's business was brought to a standstill through the pursuer's customers either refusing to enter the premises on account of their condition or imagining that the pursuer had removed; and that the pursuer was prevented from procuring temporary premises elsewhere owing to the defenders not giving her proper notice of their intended operations.

The defenders had made the pursuer a tender of £20.

By interlocutor dated 16th December 1901 the Sheriff-Substitute ( Robertson) allowed a proof.

The pursuer appealed to the Court of Session for jury trial. When the case appeared in the Single Bills the defender moved that the case be remitted back to the Sheriff for proof, and cited Nicol v. Picken, 20 R. 288, 30 S.L.R. 342; Cuningham v. Ayrshire Foundry Company, 21 R. 19, 31 S.L.R. 9.

The argument for the pursuer sufficiently appears from Lord Adam's opinion.

Judgment:

Lord Adam—From the statements made at the bar this case seems to be of this nature, that in a street in Aberdeen the pursuer is tenant of the first floor of a property, the owner of the property himself occupying the ground floor. The pursuer holds her subjects under a lease, and the lessor to her having sold his property, the purchaser, who is now the proprietor, with a view to improving the property, carried out certain alterations on the ground floor with the result, it is said, of damage being done to the tenant on the first floor. The damage of which the pursuer complains includes the removal of a brass plate affixed to the street doorway indicating the pursuer's name and business, the reduction of the width of the entrance to the pursuer's premises from five feet to three and one-half feet, and the injury done to some of her property in consequence of the operations of the workmen extending to her showroom. Mr Thomson maintained that this case fell within the list of enumerated causes, and should therefore go to trial before a jury, but that does not necessarily follow. As this case has been brought here the Court has full control of it. Now, after coming into the Court of Session by way of appeal for jury trial, we know that while numerous cases are sent to trial before a jury some are remitted for proof before a Lord Ordinary and some also are sent back to the Sheriff Court from which they have been appealed. The considerations

Page: 292

which lead to the latter course being adopted are, I think, their local character, the fact that all the likely witnesses are to be found on the spot, and the facility of visiting the premises if the judge should think it desirable to do so. It appears to me that, keeping in view the nature and character of this case, and having regard to the considerations to which I have referred, this case is not appropriate for jury trial in this Court, that indeed it is altogether inappropriate. I propose, therefore, that the case should be sent back for proof before the Sheriff.

Lord Kinnear—I concur entirely in your Lordship's opinion. I think this is a proper case for the judge ordinary of the bounds, and that it is not a fit case for trial by jury in this Court. I am confirmed in that view by observing that the pursuer makes a strong point of the injury done to her by reason of the defender having, in replacing the brass plate which he had removed, put it up “on the other side of the doorway from where it was formerly stationed.” Now, if that is a question which it is fitting to raise in any court, it must certainly be in the local court, and not in the Court of Session.

The Lord President concurred.

Lord M'Laren was absent.

The Court pronounced this interlocutor:—

“The Lords having heard counsel for the parties upon the motion to appoint parties to lodge the issue or issues proposed for the trial of the cause: Refuse the motion, dismiss the appeal, and remit to the Sheriff to proceed with the proof allowed by the interlocutor of 16th December 1901, and to dispose of the cause: Find the defender entitled to the expenses of the appeal; modify the same to the sum of three guineas, for which decern against the pursuer.”

Counsel:

Counsel for the Pursuer and Appellant— W. Thomson. Agent— John Veitch, Solicitor.

Counsel for the Defender and Respondent— P. Balfour. Agents— Alex. Morison & Company, W.S.

1902


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1902/39SLR0291.html