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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Whitelaw v. M'gowan [1905] ScotLR 43_346 (22 December 1905)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1905/43SLR0346.html
Cite as: [1905] ScotLR 43_346, [1905] SLR 43_346

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 346

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Friday, December 22 1905.

(Before

Lord Kinnear Lord Stormonth Darling, and Lord Johnston

43 SLR 346

Whitelaw

v.

M'gowan.

Subject_1Election Law
Subject_2County Occupation Franchise
Subject_3Personal Occupancy
Subject_4Temporary Absence on Business from Qualifying Premises — Representation of the People (Scotland) Act 1808 (31 and 32 Vict. c. 48), sec. 6 — Representation of the People Act 1884 (48 Vict. c. 3), sec. 5 and 7 (6).
Facts:

A person claimed to be registered as a voter for a county under the occupation franchise in terms of the Representation of the People Act 1884 (48 Vict. cap. 3), sec. 5.

It appeared that during twelve months prior to the application the claimant was temporarily absent from the qualifying premises for the purposes of his business, but that during that period the premises had been occupied by his wife, and that the furniture therein was his property. Held that the claimant's occupancy as tenant of the premises sufficiently satisfied the requirements of the statute notwithstanding his absence from them, and that therefore he was entitled to be registered.

Headnote:

The Representation of the People Act 1884 (48 Vict. cap. 3), section 5, enacts—“Every man occupying any land or tenement in a county or burgh in the United Kingdom of a clear yearly value of not less than ten pounds shall be entitled to be registered as a voter, and when registered to vote at an election for such county or burgh in respect of such occupation, subject to the like conditions respectively as a man is at the passing of this Act entitled to be registered as a voter and to vote at an election for such county in respect of the county occupation franchise, and at an election for such

Page: 347

burgh in respect of the burgh occupation franchise.” Section 7 (6)—“The expression ‘county occupation franchise means’ … as respects Scotland, the franchise enacted by the sixth section of the Representation of the People (Scotland) Act 1868.”

The Representation of the People (Scotland) Act 1868 (31 and 32 Vict. cap. 48), section 6, enacts—“Every man shall be entitled to be registered as a voter, and when registered to vote at elections for a member to serve in Parliament for a county, who, when the Sheriff proceeds to consider his right to be inserted or retained in the register of voters, is qualified as follows—that is to say (1) … (2) Is and has been during the twelve calendar months immediately preceding the last day of July in the actual personal occupancy as tenant of lands and heritages within the county of the annual value of fourteen pounds or upwards, as appearing on the valuation roll for such county …”

This was an appeal, by way of stated case, from a Registration Court for the county of Dumfries, held on 6th October 1905, in which James Walter Whitelaw, Solicitor, Dumfries, acting on behalf of Richard Jones, quarry foreman, Locharbriggs, was appellant, and James Hairstens M'Gowan, Ellangowan, Dumfries, was respondent. At the said Court M'Gowan had objected to Jones' name being retained on the list of voters, which objection had been sustained.

The facts of the case as stated by the Sheriff-Substitute ( campion) were as follows—“That Richard Jones had for the requisite period been tenant of a dwelling-house at Locharbriggs; that the subjects were entered in the valuation roll as of the yearly value of £13; that the said Richard Jones was in actual personal occupation of the said dwelling-house up to September 1904, when he left this country for Greece in order to fulfil a year's engagement there; as quarry-manager; that this engagement being completed he returned to Locharbriggs on 8th October 1905, and again took up residence there; that during his absence from this country the foresaid house has been occupied by his wife, and that the furniture therein is his property. I sustained the objection on the ground that Richard Jones had been absent from the foresaid dwelling-house during the greater part of the qualifying period, and that his absence having been rendered necessary by his business engagement before referred to interrupted the continuity of his occupation of said house, and so disqualified him.”

The question of law for the decision of the Court was—“Whether in the circumstances stated Richard Jones is entitled to be enrolled under the occupation franchise in terms of section 5 of the Representation of the People Act 1884 in respect of said dwelling-house.”

Argued for the appellant—The requirement of the statute as to “actual personal occupancy” did not involve the necessity of personal residence— Wetherhed v. Moffat, November 8, 1878, 6 R. 20. Occupation by wife and family was quite sufficient, provided the absence as here was merely temporary— Manson v. Sinclair, 19th December 1808, 7 Macph. 329, 6 S.L.R. 49. The Sheriff-Substitute had dealt with this case as if it were one of household qualification and involved the inquiry whether the claimant was an “inhabitant-occupier.” In the same way as a stable might be occupied by horses or a woodyard by wood for the purposes of the Act, a house might be occupied by a wife and family— Lunan v. Allan, November 13, 1880, 8 R. 13, 1 S.L.R. 69; Johnston v. Buchanan, 6th November 1879, 7 R. 7, 17 S.L.R. 163; Lynn v. Henderson, November 27, 1893, 1 S.L.T. 342.

Argued for the respondent—Personal residence was necessary to give a qualification, otherwise any number of votes might be secured by one person in different constituencies. The absence of the claimant was not voluntary. He was under a legal obligation to remain away for a whole year— Stewart v. M'Fadzean, December 20, 1890, 18 R. 349, 28 S.L.R. 196; Rintoul v. Falconer, December 6, 1898, 1 F. 207, 30 S.L.R. 185. Civil possession was not enough, but that was all that Jones had in this case— Allan v. Smith, November 5, 1879, 7 R. 6, 17 S.L.R, 158.

Judgment:

Lord Kinnear—The question put to the Court in this special case is whether the appellant “is entitled to be enrolled under the occupation franchise in terms of sec. 5 of the Representation of the People Act 1884 in respect of” a dwelling-house. But that enactment refers to the 0th section of the Act of 1808 for the definition of the county occupation franchise; and the true question we have to consider, therefore, is whether the appellant was, during the twelve months immediately preceding the last day of July, in the actual personal occupancy as tenant of lands and heritages within the county of the annual value of £10 or upwards. The facts on which this question arises are that he was tenant of a house at Locharbriggs of the requisite value during the whole period of twelve months; that he had himself lived in the house up to September 1904.; that at that time he left this country for Greece in order to fulfil a business engagement; that this engagement being completed he returned to Locharbriggs on the 8th of October 1905 and again took up his residence there; and that during his absence from this country his wife continued to live in the house and that the furniture was his property. The Sheriff has held that the absence of the appellant interrupted the continuity of his occupancy and so disqualified him, but I am unable to agree with that opinion. He seems to have assumed that personal occupancy necessarily means residence. But the two things appear to me to be different. The statute requires that the voter shall have a right of possession as tenant, and secondly, that he shall have actually exercised that right by occupying the premises. But if these two conditions are satisfied nothing more is necessary. Now the appellant's right as tenant is not disputed; and if the tenant of a house has furnished it so as to

Page: 348

make it habitable for his family, lives in it with his wife as long as he is in this country, and leaves his wife to live in it while he is absent from this country, it appears to me that he is still occupant as tenant notwithstanding his absence. I am of opinion, therefore, that the question should be answered in the affirmative.

Lord Stormonth Darling—I entirely concur with your Lordship. If this had been a claim under the “household qualification,” I think the Sheriff's judgment would probably have been right, because he would then have been obliged to inquire whether the claimant was an “inhabitant occupier.”

But the claim here is under the “county occupation franchise,” and I agree with your Lordship that there has been sufficient “actual personal occupancy” as that phrase is used in the 6th sec. of the Act of 1868, notwithstanding the appellant's absence for some months from this country. I therefore agree that the appellant is entitled to be enrolled, and that the question in the case ought to be answered in the affirmative.

Lord Johnston—I think that the only difficulty in this case has been created by an attempt to confuse the county occupation franchise with the county household franchise, and by citing cases on the construction of the provisions which introduced the latter as authorities for the construction of the provisions which introduced the former.

For the household qualification in counties the Act of 1884, section 7 (4), refers one back to the .Act of 1868, section 3, where the qualification is defined as that of “inhabitant-occupier, or owner, or tenant of any dwelling-house.”

But the Act of 1884, section 5, defines the qualification for the occupancy franchise as simply “occupying any land or tenement in a county …of the clear yearly value of not less than £10.” And if by reference that section requires one to consider the Acts of 1868 and 1832, then that of 1868 uses the phrase “actual personal occupancy,” and that of 1832 the phrase “in the occupancy as proprietor, tenant, or liferenter.”

A man cannot inhabit except personally, but he may occupy personally without inhabiting. In the present case I think that Richard Jones has done so, and that he is therefore entitled to be retained on the register. I therefore answer the question in the case in the affirmative.

The Court answered the question in the affirmative.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Appellant—Blackburn. Agents— Russell & Dunlop, W.S.

Counsel for the Respondent—T. B. Morrison. Agent— T. & T. Galletly, S.S.C.

1905


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