Robertson (General) v. Athol (Duke of) [1815] UKHL 3_Dow_108 (10 June 1815)
Page: 108↓
(1815) 3 Dow 108
REPORTS OF APPEAL CASES IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS, During the Session, 1814—15. 55 Geo. III.
SCOTLAND.
APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF SESSION.
No. 8
v.
TITLE. — PRESCRIPTION.
Two cases of adjudication, without infeftment in the one case, in the other with infeftment but without any declarator of the expiry of the legal. The decreet of adjudication was obtained in 1677, and that title was transferred to the Athol family in 1688. That family having thus got possession, of the lands obtained two crown charters, the one in 1691, the other in 1725, including the lands in question, and held the peaceable and uninterrupted possession till 1803, when the title Was challenged as depending only on the adjudication, and as being still redeemable because in the one case it Was not followed by infeftment, so that prescription would not run; and because in the other, though followed by infeftment, there was no declarator of the expiry of the legal. Held by the Court below that the crown charters and forty years possession formed a good title by prescription, and excluded all question on the subject. This decision affirmed above, the Lord Chancellor being also apparently of opinion that an adjudication with infeftment and forty years' possession after the period of the expiry of the legal, though without a declarator, formed a good title by prescription independent of the crown charter.
Two separate actions were, in 1803, raised by General Robertson, of Lude, against the Duke of Athol, the one to set aside the Duke's title to the lands of Clunes and Strathgroy, the other to set aside his title to the lands of Inchmagrenoch. The
Page: 109↓
But in 1691, John Lord Murray, afterwards first Duke of Athol, son of the Marquis, upon a deed of entail executed by his father, obtained a crown charter (which was produced) of “all and whole the Earldom of Athol, and of all and sundry the lands of the said Earldom with the pertinents.” This charter, upon which the grantee was regularly infeft, mentioned the lands of Inchmagrenoch nominatim as acquired by adjudication from Fascally, but did not specially mention the lands of Clunes and Strathgroy, these, as was contended, being included in the general description of the Earldom of Athol. In 1725 James, the second Duke of Athol, was served heir in special to his father, and was regularly infeft in the Earldom of Athol, and also in the lands of Inchmagrenoch, which were expressly mentioned in the precept; those of Clunes and Strathgroy not being specially named. In this manner the sasines were regularly continued from 1691 down to 1803, and during that period the family of Athol had been in uninterrupted and peaceable possession both of the
Page: 110↓
Thus the titles stood at the period when the actions were brought, with this distinction between the two cases as far as respected the adjudication title, that there had been no infeftment at all upon it in the case of Clunes and Strathgroy, but that there was an infeftment upon it in the case of Inchmagrenoch, but no declarator of the expiry of the legal.
The Court of Session decided for the Duke of Athol in both cases, on the ground that the charter of 1691, or that of 1725, with infeftment and forty years' peaceable and uninterrupted possession, formed a good title by the positive prescription to exclude all farther question; one Judge (Hermand) also observing with respect to Inchmagrenoch that an adjudication with infeftment and forty years' peaceable uninterrupted possession after the period of the expiry of the legal, would form a good title by prescription, though there were no declarator.
Campbell v. Scotland, and Jack. 1794.
The grounds of appeal from these decisions were in substance that the adjudication assigned by Fascally was the only title under which the Athol family possessed, as appeared from their own charters, and that it was not competent for the ad-judger to attribute his possession to any other title to the prejudice of the party on whose right of property the adjudication depended. Blackburn v. Gibson, Du. 1628.— Dickson v. M'Culloch, Fount. 1686.— Carnegie v. Magistrates of Montrose, 4 Dict. 1777. That as in the one case there was no infeftment, and in neither case any declarator
Page: 111↓
Stat. 1617, cap. 12.
It was answered for the Respondent that Clunes and Strathgroy were included in the Earldom of Athol (which did not appear to be very seriously disputed) granted by charter 1691, and that at any rate Respondent's predecessor, John Lord Murray, had right to them by a previous charter of 1683, with which Respondent connected by progress, and that under a charter containing in gremio a right to the whole property, and infeftment, with continued peaceable possession for forty years complete, he had an unchallengeable right by the positive prescription which precluded all further inquiry. Millar v. Dickson, 7th Feb. 1766.— Middleton v. Dunmore, 22d Dec. 1774.—That, supposing
Page: 112↓
Counsel:
Romilly,
Leach, and
J. P. Grant for Appellant;
Horner and
Adam, Jun. for Respondent.
Nov. 30, 1814.
Judgment.
Page: 113↓
Page: 114↓
Page: 115↓
May 10, 1815.
Judgment.
Page: 116↓
Judgments affirmed.
Solicitors: Agent for Appellant, Campbell.
Agent for Respondent, Fraser.
0
0
0