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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Shirer (Formerly Dixon) v. Dixon [1885] ScotLR 22_669 (28 May 1885)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1885/22SLR0669.html
Cite as: [1885] SLR 22_669, [1885] ScotLR 22_669

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 669

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Thursday, May 28. 1885.

22 SLR 669

Shirer (Formerly Dixon)

v.

Dixon.

Subject_1Process
Subject_2Expenses
Subject_3Expenses of Preliminary Investigations
Subject_4Discretion of Court — A. S., July 15, 1876.
Facts:

A woman who had been divorced from her husband presented a petition praying for access to her child. The application was opposed by the husband, who by means of an expensive investigation satisfied the Court that from her mode of life the petitioner was an unsuitable person to have access to her child. Held ( diss. Lord Shand) that the application being to the discretion of the Court, and the interests of the child being concerned, the expenses incurred in supplying information enabling the Court to dispense with a public and formal inquiry ought to be allowed, and a remit made to the Auditor accordingly.

Headnote:

George Dixon, stockbroker, Glasgow, was upon 24th April 1878 married at Cheltenham to Alice Shirer. The parties thereafter cohabited as husband and wife, and on 7th April 1879) a son was born named George Clifford Dixon.

In an undefended action for divorce for adultery, at the instance of the husband against his wife, decree of divorce was pronounced by the Lord Ordinary on 2d August 1883.

On 14th August 1884 the divorced wife presented a petition to the Court of Session praying for access to her child (who was living with Mr Dixon, who had married again), under such restrictions and conditions as the Court might see fit to impose.

Answers were lodged by Mr Dixon, in which he narrated the circumstances of the adultery founded on in the action of divorce, which adultery had been committed frequently, and in his own house. He also averred that the petitioner had committed adultery with two other men not mentioned in the divorce proceedings, with one of whom she continued her immoral relation after decree of divorce was pronounced. The adultery he alleged to have been committed in London, and in various other parts of England which he named.

The Court refused the petition.

In taxing the respondent's accounts the Auditor disallowed all charges connected with the investigation of the petitioner's immoral relations with the man with whom she was alleged to have lived before and after the divorce. These included the respondent's agent's fees and travelling expenses in England while making these inquiries, and payment of a detective who had been employed. They also included a precognition of the agent, and copy correspondence with the petitioner and her agents.

The respondent lodged objections to the Auditor's report, and argued that in so far as the investigation had supplied the Court with information necessary to the disposal of the petition without proof the expense thereof should be allowed.

The petitioner replied that the Auditor had followed the ordinary rule of not allowing

Page: 670

any expenses for investigation conducted prior to an order for proof or issues.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Mure—This is undoubtedly a very peculiar case. I have not my papers beside me at this moment, but enough has been stated at the bar to satisfy me that the circumstances are very special indeed. It is not disputed that the inquiries, the expense of which is sought to be recovered, related to matters relevant to the question at issue, and accordingly I think that unless the allowance of these charges is directly struck at by the rule regarding precognition, this is a case in which something should be allowed towards the expense of these inquiries. The investigation related to the conduct of a divorced woman who had presented a petition for access to her child, and it was most pertinent to the disposal of this petition that the Court should know what the petitioner was doing at the time of her application. I should therefore be disposed to remit back to the Auditor to hear the parties, and to make such allowance for these inquiries as he thought suitable.

Lord Shand—I have some difficulty about this case, and I cannot concur in remitting it to the Auditor. No doubt it turns out from these inquiries that the petitioner has been shown to have lived with her paramour since the divorce, but it is a settled rule of this Court that parties must make these preliminary inquiries at their own expense. This is a most salutary rule, and its observance prevents abuses. I think that the Auditor has acted properly, and that we should not depart in this case from the ordinary rule.

Lord Adam—I am in this position, that I do not know anything about the early procedure in this case but from what I have heard to-day. I am inclined to agree with Lord Mure that this is an exceptional case, and ought not to fall under the general rule.

When this petition was presented it was undoubtedly the duty of the respondent to make himself aware of his wife's doings that he might be in a position to supply the Court with the necessary information. This is not a case of the usual kind in which a mere patrimonial interest is involved; the respondent here was only doing his duty in making these inquiries, and all reasonable charges ought to be allowed.

Lord President—I am also inclined to make this case an exception to the salutary rule referred to by Lord Shand, that a party is not entitled to take precognitions prior to an order for proof or for issues except at his own expense. The present case does not fall under that rule. It is an application to the discretion of the Court, and in such applications the Court tries to avoid as much as possible all public and formal inquiry. It tries to get its information as much as possible by explanations and admissions of parties, and in order to obtain these expense must be incurred and should be allowed for. It is clear that the present case might not have terminated as it did but for the inquiries made by the respondent, and it is quite obvious from the explanations which were made that the petitioner is not a suitable person to have access to her child.

In such circumstances it would not be fair to the party who has made these inquiries and obtained this result that he should not be relieved to some extent of the expense which he has thus incurred.

There is another consideration which weighs with the Court in cases of this kind, and it is this, that the interests of the child have to be considered. Our duty is sometimes a difficult one, and it is very desirable to avoid as much as possible in the interest of the child anything of the nature of a formal proof.

On the whole matter I think that this is a case in which the ordinary rule does not apply.

The Court remitted back to the Auditor to hear the explanations of parties, and to make such allowance of expenses as he thought fit.

Counsel:

Counsel for Petitioner — Lang. Agents — Paterson, Cameron, & Co., S.S.C.

Counsel for Respondent— Robertson— Dickson. Agent— Alex. Morison, S.S.C.

1885


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