BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Paterson v. M'Vitie & Price, Ltd [1922] ScotLR 16 (28 October 1922)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1922/60SLR0016.html
Cite as: [1922] ScotLR 16, [1922] SLR 16

[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]


SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 16

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

(Single Bills.)

Saturday, October 28. 1922.

60 SLR 16

Paterson

v.

M'Vitie & Price, Limited.

Subject_1Expenses
Subject_2Jury Trial
Subject_3Verdict for Less than £50
Subject_4Modification — Sheriff Court Scale — Codifying Act of Sederunt (F, iii, 3).
Facts:

In an action of damages in respect of a road collision, the damages being laid at £120, the jury returned a verdict in favour of the pursuer, assessing the amount of damages at £35. The defenders moved that inasmuch as the pursuer had been awarded less than £50, the pursuer's expenses should be modified to such an amount as would have been recoverable if the action had been raised and concluded in the Sheriff Court. The Court refused the motion.

Opinion per the Lord President that this particular form of modification was competent, although it was without sanction in practice.

Headnote:

The Codifying Act of Sederunt 1913, F, iii, 3, enacts—“Where the pursuer in any action of damages in the Court of Session, not being an action for defamation or for libel, or an action which is competent only in the Court of Session, recovers by the verdict of a jury £5, or any sum above £5 but less than £50, he shall not be entitled to charge more than one-half of the taxed amount of his expenses unless the judge before whom the verdict is obtained shall certify that he shall be entitled to recover any larger proportion of his expenses not exceeding two-third parts thereof.”

Mrs Elizabeth Johnston or Paterson, hawker, wife of James Paterson, contractor, Slateford, brought an action against M'Vitie & Price, Limited, biscuit manufacturers, Edinburgh, in which she craved decree for £120 as damages sustained through a collision between a motor van belonging to the defenders and a horse-drawn lorry belonging to her.

After a trial at the sittings before the Lord President and a jury a verdict was returned in favour of the pursuer, the damages being assessed at £35.

Counsel for the pursuer subsequently appeared in the Single Bills of the First Division, and moved the Lord President—as the Judge presiding at the trial—to grant a certificate allowing the pursuer to charge more than one-half of the taxed

Page: 17

amount of her expenses. Counsel referred to the Codifying Act of Sederunt, F, iii, 3. The motion was refused.

Judgment:

Lord President—The verdict in this case was for £35. Under the Codifying Act of Sederunt (F, iii, 3) I am asked—as the Judge who presided at the trial—to certify the case as one in which the successful pursuer is entitled to charge more than one-half of the taxed amount of her expenses. The action was for damages in respect of a road collision, the damages being stated at £120. Having regard to the evidence adduced at the trial I think the case was of a relatively trumpery character for submission to a jury especially in the Court of Session. It raised no question of general interest or importance. I thought the jury's award both just and discriminating, and if it had been as high as £50 I should have thought it over-generous, In these circumstances the case seems to me a typical one for the application of the maximum prescribed by the Act of Sederunt. The Act establishes what may be called a rule of general application, and if a certificate is to be granted, it must be because there is something to take the case out of the ordinary rule. I do not think there is anything of the kind here and therefore I think no certificate ought to be granted.

Counsel for the pursuer thereupon moved the Court to apply the verdict and award half of the expenses as taxed.

Counsel for the defenders objected, and moved that the Court modify the pursuer's expenses to such an amount as would have been recoverable if the action had been raised in the Sheriff Court.

Argued for the defenders—Half expenses being the maximum in a case like the present, it was in the discretion of the Court to grant expenses on a lower scale, or even in certain circumstances none at all. Half expenses would here exceed the amount awarded to the pursuer. Counsel referred to Jamieson v. Hartil ( 1898, 25 R. 551, 35 S.L.R. 450, per Lords Trayner and Moncreiff), and to the Codifying Act of Sederunt (F, iii, 3).

Lord President—The unsuccessful defenders' motion to the Court is that we should modify the pursuer's expenses to such an amount as would have been recoverable if the action had been raised and concluded in the Sheriff Court. I do not doubt that the provision in the Act of Sederunt, which limits the amount of expenses for which motion can be made by the successful party in cases to which the Act applies, derogates nothing from the power of the Court to modify expenses further, or even in circumstances where the justice of the case demands it to refuse expenses altogether. The particular form of modification proposed is, no doubt, one which it would be within the competency of this Court to adopt, but it is, so far as I am aware, without sanction in practice. Apart, however, from any question with regard to form, I do not see anything in the circumstances of the case to take it out of the category to which the provisions of the Act of Sederunt normally apply, and in which the application of the Act of Sederunt is sufficient to do justice. Although the case was a small one and the pursuer recovered only £35 of her claim for £120, she was entitled to come to this Court and have her case tried by jury here.

Lord Skerrington and Lord Cullen concurred.

The Court refused the defenders' motion and modified the pursuer's expenses to one-half of the taxed amount.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Pursuer— Fraser, K.C.— Walker. Agent— J. M. Gow, Solicitor.

Counsel for the Defenders— Watt, K.C.— Jamieson. Agent— R. S. Rutherford, Solicitor.

1922


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1922/60SLR0016.html