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Redpath of Angelraw v White. [1737] Mor 15196 (22 November 1737)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1737/Mor3515196-062.html Cite as:
[1737] Mor 15196
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In a removing against a tenant, who had entered into possession, in virtue of a minute of tack, which bore no term of endurance, it was pleaded, That a tack wanting an ish, is void and null, Stair, Tit. Tack, § 27. Such a tack must be perpetual or nothing. It is a principle, that all obligations are, in their nature, perpetual; therefore, there can be no medium, but either that the tack is null or perpetual; for, supposing it once legally constituted, there is nothing to limit the endurance. Answered, Though other obligations be, in their nature, perpetual, this is inconsistent with the nature of a tack; and therefore it must be in arbitrio judicis to fix the time of endurance; and, as to this, there are clauses in the tack, which show it was intended to endure longer than one year, such as, that the tenant is tied to muck a certain quantity of ground yearly, to bring home to his master, every year, twenty loads of coals, &c. The Lords sustained the tack for two years. See Appendix