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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Scott v. Nicol [1914] ScotLR 613 (26 May 1914)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1914/51SLR0613.html
Cite as: [1914] ScotLR 613, [1914] SLR 613

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 613

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

[Sheriff Court at Aberdeen.

Tuesday, May 26. 1914.

51 SLR 613

Scott

v.

Nicol.

Subject_1Bankruptcy
Subject_2Petition for Discharge
Subject_3Expenses
Subject_4Caution.
Facts:

As a general rule a bankrupt is entitled to petition for his discharge without finding caution.

Headnote:

Alexander Scott, whose estates were sequestrated on or about 26th January 1906, and who had failed to pay five shillings in the pound, presented an application in the Sheriff Court at Aberdeen for his discharge.

Notes of objections were lodged for Alexander Tytler Nicol, solicitor, the trustee on the sequestrated estates, and for R. D. Cruickshank & Company, Aberdeen, creditors of the bankrupt.

On 21st January 1911 the Sheriff-Substitute ( Laing) pronounced this interlocutor—“Allows the pursuer to answer the objections by the trustee upon finding caution to the satisfaction of the Clerk of Court for

Page: 614

the expense of this application, and that within a week from this date.”

The bankrupt appealed, and argued—The bankrupt was entitled to apply for his discharge without finding caution— Melrose-Drover Limited v. Heddle, June 28, 1905, 7 F. 852, 42 S.L.R. 650; Heggie v. Heggie, June 6, 1855, 17 D. 802; Hooper v. Ferguson, July 20, 1850, 12 D. 1309. In Gilmour v. Donnelly, December 23, 1899, 7 S.L.T. 267, there were other circumstances besides the pursuer's bankruptcy which justified the order to find caution.

Argued for the respondents—The Sheriff-Substitute had a discretion to order the bankrupt to find caution— Gilmour v. Donnelly ( cit.). Melrose-Drover Limited v. Heddle ( cit.) was not inconsistent with the existence or exercise of such a discretion. The Court should be slow to disturb the Sheriff's finding, since it was an exercise of his discretion. A bankrupt was not entitled to his discharge until his trustee's expenses had been paid— M'Carter v. Aikman, July 20, 1893, 20 R. 1090, 30 S.L.R. 934.

Judgment:

Lord Dundas—This is an application by a bankrupt for his discharge. By the interlocutor appealed against the learned Sheriff-Substitute allowed the pursuer to answer the objections by the trustee “upon finding caution to the satisfaction of the Clerk of Court for the expenses of this application, and that within a week from this date.” The pursuer is willing and apparently anxious to answer the objections, but he objects strenuously to the condition of doing so upon caution, and that is the subject of this appeal.

It may prove that the application for discharge will not be entirely plain sailing for the applicant, but the point at the moment, and the only point, is whether the condition of caution should be imposed upon him at this stage. I think it should not. I think he ought to be allowed to proceed in the meantime with his application unhampered by this obligation.

In the case of Melrose-Drover, (1905) 7 F. 852, to which we were referred, Lord President Dunedin said that the petition before him was one by a bankrupt for his own discharge, and that is in a different position from a litigation by him about other matters. I do not think that a bankrupt applying for his discharge should be hampered by being ordered by the Court to find caution and the other learned Judges concurred. I do not take it that Lord Dunedin was there laying down a principle to which no exception could be found, but the general rule he states in perfectly distinct terms, and I cannot see anything in what we have before us to take this case out of the scope of that general rule.

I therefore move your Lordships to recal the interlocutor in so far as it orders caution to be found by the pursuer; and quoad ultra to adhere to the interlocutor and remit the matter back to the Sheriff-Substitute.

Lord Salvesen—I concur. We are not in the habit of requiring a litigant to find caution, even though it be plain that he has no means to pay his opponent's expenses should he fail in his litigation. If so, the reasons for a similar practice are much stronger in the case of a man who has been divested of his estate, and who is seeking an opportunity to earn a livelihood free from the debts which led to his sequestration. Everything that he has hitherto earned has fallen into the net of the sequestration. He cannot, therefore, have any means from which to provide for the expenses of his opponents; and if he has no means, it can only be by the charity of his friends that he could implement the interlocutor of the Sheriff-Substitute.

These considerations have led to the settling of a general rule that a bankrupt who is petitioning for his discharge should not be ordained to find caution; and I can find nothing so exceptional in this case, where as yet there has been no inquiry, as to justify a departure from it. I accordingly agree with your Lordship that we should recal the part of the interlocutor appealed against.

Lord Guthrie—I am of the same opinion. There are cases in which a trustee in a sequestration who depends on the assets of the estate to meet his expenses has also the compulsitor that a discharge will not be granted unless the expenses incurred by him are paid. The course proposed by your Lordship does not in the least interfere—when the facts are ascertained, and if the case be a suitable one for applying the compulsitor—with the preservation of the trustee's rights.

The Lord Justice-Clerk was absent.

The Court sustained the appeal, recalled the interlocutor of the Sheriff-Substitute, and remitted the cause to him to allow the appellant to answer the objections by the trustee without finding caution.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Appellant— Kemp. Agent— Wm. Geddes, Solicitor.

Counsel for the Respondents— Valentine. Agents— J. & A. F. Adam, W.S.

1914


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