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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Frier v. Earl of Haddington [1871] ScotLR 9_100 (22 November 1871)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/09SLR0100.html
Cite as: [1871] ScotLR 9_100, [1871] SLR 9_100

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 100

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Wednesday, November 22. 1871.

9 SLR 100

Frier

v.

Earl of Haddington.

Subject_1Landlord and Tenant
Subject_2Lease.

Facts:

A landlord agreed that if his tenant should put up certain water pipes he would pay him “their value at the end of the lease.” Held that this did not mean the cost of the pipes, but “their value to the landlord or an incoming tenant at the end of the lease.“

Headnote:

This was an action by R. S. Frier against the Earl of Haddington, concluding for certain sums, amounting in all to £186, 4s. 8d., as due under a lease of a farm entered into between the father of the pursuer and the late George Baillie of Jervis—woode, the father of the defender. This lease was entered into by a holograph letter by the landlord, which contained the following provision:—“If you” (the late Thomas Frier) “lay pipes for bringing water to the house and steam-mill, you are to be paid their value at the end of the lease.” The 5th article of the condescendence, referred to in the Lord Ordinary's note, was as follows—“Various communications took place between the pursuer's father and the late Earl as to the mode of getting water. In or about the year 1854, the late Earl of Haddington, with the view of saving, if possible, the expense of bringing water from Fans Hill, a portion of the farm which had been fixed on by his Lordship and the late Mr Frier as the place from which it would require to be brought, instructed the late Mr Frier, before going on with the work, to endeavour to get water by digging and boring at the steading at East Fans. A considerable amount of work was done and paid for by the pursuer's father under these instructions. His Lordship specially undertook liability for the whole expense connected with the digging and boring. He repeatedly visited the steading while the digging and boring were going on, and ultimately, on finding that these operations were not likely to be successful, instructed the late Mr Frier to abandon the operations and get water from Fans Hill. The sum of £19, 4s. was expended in men's wages alone' (exclusive of cartages and horse labour) in connection with the attempt to procure water at the steading.”

The Lord Ordinary ( Mure) pronounced the following interlocutor—“ Finds that the allegations relative to the late Earl of Haddington having undertaken to pay the expense connected with the digging and boring for water, referred to in the fifth article of the condescendence, can only be proved by writ or oath; quoad ultra, and before answer, allows both parties a proof of their averments, and to each a conjunct probation, and appoints the proof to be taken before the Lord Ordinary on a day to be afterwards fixed.

Note.—Having regard to the nature of the demand made in the fifth article of the condescendence, and to the time which had elapsed since the obligation is alleged to have been undertaken, and to the fact that the parties to it are both now deceased, the Lord Ordinary does not think it would be proper to allow it to be proved otherwise than by writ or oath.

The abstract plea to title was not insisted on at the debate. And as regards the sums sued for, other than that claimed in the fifth article of the condescendence, the Lord Ordinary does not consider that he would be warranted, at this stage of the cause, in laying down any restriction either as to the mode or extent of the proof; because as regards the pipes parties are at issue, not only as to whether their value is to be taken as at the date when they were laid, or at the expiry of the lease, but also as to what their value was at the latter period; and as a proof will, in any view, require to be gone into on that point, the Lord Ordinary thinks it better to abstain at present from pronouncing any judgment as to the precise period at which the value is to be taken; while as regards the damage alleged to have been done by rabbits during the last year of the lease, the Lord Ordinary, as at present advised, can see no actual irrelevancy in that claim as laid, more especially in a case where the fact that some damage might have been done, of a description for which the landlord might be liable, is scarcely disputed in the letter founded on in the 12th article of the condescendence.”

The defender reclaimed.

Watson and Balfour, for him, argued that the Lord Ordinary should have construed the deed before sending the case to proof.

Solicitor-General Clark) and Campbell Smith for the respondent.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Justice-Clerk—We should now decide whether the lease settles the claim of the tenant to the value of the pipes at the end of the lease. The word “value” means value to the landlord at the end of the lease. The other construction would imply that the landlord was to pay the price of new pipes after they had been used for

Page: 101

twenty years. The tenant had the control of laying them down, and all the benefit during the lease, and he can only recover their value to the landlord at the end of the lease.

Lord Cowan—It is indispensable that we should construe the lease before sending it to a valuator. The meaning is not that the tenant should get the cost of the pipes, but their value to the landlord or an incoming tenant at the end of the lease. I should also say that I do not think this the value merely as old lead. If the tenant elected to lay pipes in order to bring water into the house, he was to be entitled to recover their value as they stood at the end of the lease. It may be that alternative views may arise on the estimate. The Lord Ordinary has overlooked the fact that the lease requires construction.

Lord Benholme concurred.

Lord Neaves—I am of the same opinion. I concur with the Lord Justice-Clerk and Lord Cowan, that the intention was not that the pipes should be taken away to an old iron shop and sold. They were an opus manufactum which the tenant was entitled to make, and which was fairly and properly made. The benefit thereby arising is the thing to be valued, and if there has been no deterioration in the pipes the tenant will get the full value.

Solicitors: Agent for Pursuer— Thomas Spalding, W.S.

Agents for Defender— W. H. & W. J. Sands, W.S.

1871


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1871/09SLR0100.html