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

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> PROSPER PROPERTIES Ltd+INKERSALL INVESTMENTS LTD v. THE SCOTTISH MINISTERS [2013] ScotCS CSIH_54 (18 June 2013)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2013/2013CSIH54.html
Cite as: [2013] CSIH 54, [2013] ScotCS CSIH_54, 2013 SLT 827, 2013 GWD 22-425, 2014 SC 25

[New search] [Help]


 

EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Menzies

Lady Dorrian

Lord Wheatley

 

 

[2013] CSIH 54

CA147/11

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD MENZIES

 

in the cause

 

by

 

(FIRST) PROSPER PROPERTIES LIMITED; (SECOND) INKERSALL INVESTMENTS LIMITED

Pursuers and Respondents;

 

against

 

THE SCOTTISH MINISTERS

Defenders and Reclaimers:

 

_______________

 

 

Act: MacColl; Tods Murray LLP

Alt: Martin QC, Burnett; Harper Macleod LLP

 

18 June 2013

 

Introduction


[1] This action concerns the validity and efficacy of two arrestments served on the Scottish Executive Environment and Rural Affairs Department ("SEERAD") on behalf of the pursuers on 13 October 2006. In this action the pursuers seek damages from the defenders for not retaining sums held by them, and thus having acted in breach of the arrestments. The defenders deny that the arrestments were valid and effective, and have pleas to the competency of the action and the relevancy of the pursuers' averments. The action proceeded under the Commercial Cause Rules to a debate before the Lord Ordinary. In his opinion dated 23 August 2012 Lord Woolman concluded that the arrestments were valid. On 4 September 2012 he decerned against the defenders for payment to the first pursuers of the sum of £31,934.64, and for payment to the second pursuers of the sum of £25,653.44. Against that interlocutor the defenders now reclaim.


[2]
The Lord Ordinary helpfully and succinctly set out the circumstances at paragraphs [2] to [15] of his opinion dated 23 August 2012 as follows:

"[2] Michael Woodcock is the principal of two related companies: Prosper Properties Limited and Inkersall Investments Limited (respectively "Prosper" and "Inkersall"). In 2006 they owned adjacent land at Kirkconnell, Dumfrieshire. Prosper owned Nether Cairn Farm. Inkersall owned Rigg Farm. Together the subjects are known as "the Rigg Estate".


[3]
For a number of years Robert Bell acted as the agent for both Prosper and Inkersall. He dealt with various matters relating to the Rigg Estate, including the letting of cottages. Between 2000 and 2004, Mr Bell was granted a number of short term grazing lets at Nether Cairn Farm and at Rigg Farm. In 2004, the relationship between Mr Woodcock and Mr Bell broke down. Disputes arose about Mr Bell's right to occupy various parts of the Rigg Estate. These disputes translated into several sets of legal proceedings. At some stage Mr Bell vacated the subjects.

 

The Prior Action

[4]
In 2006 Prosper and Inkersall raised proceedings against Mr Bell in this Court. They combined their claims in one action ("the Prior Action"). They each asserted that they had sustained damage by reason of Mr Bell's wrongful occupation of the two farms. The greater part of the pleadings relates to matters that are common to both claims.


[5]
Articles six and seven of condescendence concern the individual claims, which are very similar in their terms. Both Prosper and Inkersall sought to recover (a) lost rental income; and (b) the cost of undertaking weed control, mowing grass and repairing fences and dykes arising out of Mr Bell's alleged neglect of the subjects. In the case of Rigg Farm, there was also a claim for damage to a steading.

 

Prosper sought payment of £95,750 in respect of Nether Cairn Farm. Inkersall sought payment of £76,917 in respect of Rigg Farm. These were respectively the second and third conclusions. They also sought interest and expenses. Mr Bell lodged defences.

 

Arrestment on the Dependence

[6]
Tods Murray LLP have acted throughout as the solicitors for Prosper and Inkersall. The summons in the Prior Action was signetted on 8 October 2006. On the same date Lord Hodge granted a warrant to arrest on the dependence. Tods Murray sought the warrant because they believed that Mr Bell was entitled to a payment under the Single Farm Payment Scheme ("SFPS"). It is an agricultural subsidy paid annually to qualifying farmers. For the purposes of SFPS, Scotland is a region and the Scottish Ministers are the competent authority: Common Agricultural Policy Single Farm Payment and Support Schemes (Scotland) Regulations 2005.


[7]
Mr Bell had in fact applied for an SFPS payment on 15 May 2006. During the whole period relevant to the present dispute, the scheme was administered on behalf of the Scottish Ministers by SEERAD. After the change of administration in 2007, SEERAD ceased to exist. Responsibility for SFPS was transferred to the Scottish Executive Environment Directorate.


[8]
On 12 October 2006, Tods Murray instructed Scott & Co, Messengers at Arms, to serve the summons on Mr Bell and to arrest on the dependence of the action "in the hands of the Scottish Executive Environment and Rural Affairs Department, Dumfries office". The following day, officers from Scott & Co went to SEERAD's office in Dumfries and served two arrestments.


[9]
Apart from the names and the sums due, the arrestments are in identical terms. Each schedule is timed at 9.45 am and is addressed to "The Scottish Executive Environment and Rural Affairs Department, 161 Brooms Road, Dumfries". The schedule of arrestment for Prosper was for a figure of £105,325, and the one for Inkersall for £84,608.70. Those figures included estimated amounts for interest and expenses. By letter dated 19 October 2006, Scott & Co reported to Tods Murray that they had "effected service of the Arrestment on the Dependence". The certificate of execution states that the schedules were left with Quintin Donald, Principal Agricultural Officer.


[10]
Harper Macleod act for the Scottish Ministers in this matter. On 25 October 2006 they wrote a very short letter to Scott & Co. It is in the following terms:

"Scottish Executive - Arrestments v Mr Robert Bell

We refer to the above matter and confirm our clients have passed to us a Schedule of Arrestment and dependence (sic) served upon them on 13 October 2006. We confirm the arrestment is invalid as it incorrectly designs the arrestee."

 


[11]
The following day, Tods Murray wrote to SEERAD to enquire whether the arrestment had caught any funds due to Mr Bell. On 27 October 2006, SEERAD acknowledged receipt of that letter and said it had been passed to a named member of staff for a reply. SEERAD did not, however, send a further response to Tods Murray.

 

Payment to Mr Bell

[12]
On 14 December 2006 SEERAD authorised an SFPS payment to be made to Mr Bell in terms of his application. The Scottish Ministers state that they paid him £53,000 on 15 January 2007. Prosper and Inkersall did not learn about the payment until much later. They believe Mr Bell received a higher sum, perhaps £70,000.


[13]
Tods Murray understood that Mr Bell might be due a further SFPS payment. On 24 January 2007 they instructed Scott & Co to serve further arrestments on the dependence of the Prior Action. In order to avoid any doubt, they were served

(i) in the hands of SEERAD (on behalf of the Scottish Ministers)

(ii) in the hands of the Scottish Ministers (on behalf of SEERAD)

They were served at Dumfries and at the Scottish Ministers' principal office at Victoria Quay, Edinburgh. In fact no sums were caught by those arrestments.


[14]
Mr Bell was sequestrated on 21 May 2008. The trustee in the sequestration was the Accountant in Bankruptcy. Subsequently, he informed the court that he did not intend to enter the process and insist upon the defences. On 14 October 2008 Lord Drummond Young granted decree by default in the Prior Action.


[15]
At that stage Prosper and Inkersall sought release of the arrested sums. The Scottish Ministers denied that any sums were due. Prosper and Inkersall raised the current action on 6 October 2011. They concluded for furthcoming of the sums arrested, or for damages for breach of arrestment. Since early 2012, the action has proceeded solely on the alternative ground. Mr McColl explained that the first ground was deleted after the defences disclosed that there are no sums to arrest."

 

The issues


[3]
Four arguments were advanced before the Lord Ordinary on behalf of the defenders in support of their position that they were not liable to pay any sums to the pursuers. First, it was incompetent for the pursuers to combine their claims in one action. Secondly, the arrestments should have been served on them, not SEERAD. Thirdly, there was no arrestable obligation on the date of service. Fourthly, the pursuers had not properly averred that they suffered loss, as another creditor might have had a better claim. The Lord Ordinary resolved each of these issues in favour of the pursuers. The same arguments formed the basis for the grounds of appeal for the defenders and reclaimers, and were focused in their note of argument and submissions to us. We propose to deal with each of these issues in turn.

 

The competency of a single action


[4]
It was held in HM Feuars of Orkney v Steuart (1741) Mor.11986 that "different parties could not accumulate their actions in one libel, unless they had connection with one another in the matters pursued for, or had been aggrieved by the same act". Lord President Dunedin observed in Killin v Weir (1905) 7 F 526 at 528 that, on considerations of expediency, it would be regrettable if any amplification of these two principles had to be allowed. The matter was further considered by the First Division in Boulting v Elias 1990 SC 135 - see particularly the Opinion of the Court delivered by the Lord President at 146/147. The question in the present case (as in nearly all the authorities in which this issue has been considered) is whether the pursuers can bring themselves within one or other of the exceptions noted in HM Feuars of Orkney.


[5]
The Lord Ordinary considered separately the present action and the prior action. He decided that although the second exception did not apply to the prior action, there was the requisite coincidence of interest in the prior action to bring it within the first exception. With regard to the present action, he considered that both exceptions applied.


[6]
With regard to the prior action, counsel for the reclaimers submitted that the Lord Ordinary had fallen into error in holding (at paragraph [21] of his opinion) that there was the requisite coincidence of interest. There were similarities of circumstances between the two pursuers, but not a common interest. Neither pursuer had a legal interest in the other's contract. Counsel for the reclaimers referred to the statement of the law in Boulting v Elias (at page 147):

"Where the action is one for breach of contract it is necessary that all those who combine together as pursuers should be able to demonstrate that they have a title to enforce that contract or at least that they have an interest to do so."

 


[7]
The claims by each pursuer in the prior action related to different contracts with Mr Bell in relation to two different companies and two different properties. The grounds of action were not identical. The fact that no issue was taken as to competency in the prior action is neither here nor there - this cannot render an incompetent action competent. The validity of an arrestment on the dependence depends on the underlying action being competent at the time the arrestment was granted.


[8]
Counsel for the reclaimers also submitted that the Lord Ordinary fell into error in holding that both exceptions applied to the present action. This action arose out of the prior action. Separate arrestments were served on behalf of separate pursuers, and there are separate wrongs complained of. If service of the arrestments was effective, separate duties were owed to separate legal entities. Moreover, the Lord Ordinary was wrong to categorise breach of arrestment as an intentional delict - on the basis of Inglis and Bow v Smith and Aikman (1867) 5 M 320, counsel submitted that breach of arrestment is not a delictual wrong but is in a category of its own. It is analogous to (but not identical to) a finding of contempt of court; as such, it is not a form of delict that falls within either of the exceptions to the general rule. Counsel also referred to Ruddy v Chief Constable Strathclyde Police [2012] UKSC 57 (particularly at paragraph 32).


[9] Senior and junior counsel for the reclaimers accepted that the question of whether a particular case fell within one of the exceptions to the general rule required to be answered by reference to an assessment of the facts and circumstances in that case. They submitted that the Lord Ordinary had erred in his assessment of these in both the prior action and the present action.


[10]
Counsel for the pursuers and respondents submitted that the reasoning of the Lord Ordinary was sound in respect of both the prior and present actions. With regard to the prior action, that was not a claim based on breach of contract; it sought damages for wrongful occupation of property. As was averred in article 4 of condescendence in the summons in the prior action, Mr Bell claimed that he had a single tenancy over the whole of the Rigg Estate. Mr Bell had raised a single action in the Court of Session against both the present pursuers, and both present pursuers had raised another single action against Mr Bell in the sheriff court. It was clear from the pleas in law that this was not an action for breach of contract, so the statement of the law given in Boulting v Elias and relied on by the reclaimers was not applicable.


[11]
Mr Bell's assertion that he had a tenancy interest over the whole estate, including the lands belonging to each of the pursuers, was sufficient connection to bring the prior action into the first exception to the general rule (and, indeed, counsel submitted that it might bring the pursuers into the second exception as well). No issue of competency was raised by the defender in the prior action. The Lord Ordinary granted warrant for arrestment on the defenders and no issue of competency was taken at that stage, nor at any stage in the proceedings. Decree was pronounced in foro, and was not challenged. No steps were taken to reclaim or to reduce that decree. With regard to the present action, the Lord Ordinary was correct (at paragraph [19] of his opinion) to hold that both exceptions to the general rule applied. There was both coincidence of interest between the pursuers and a single act on the part of the defenders which gave rise to a claim by both pursuers.


[12]
We are unable to identify any error of law in the Lord Ordinary's approach to this issue. We agree with him that there was the requisite coincidence of interest between the pursuers in the prior action to justify the conclusion that it fell within the first exception to the general rule. The two companies were linked - Mr Woodcock was principal of each, and the registered office of the first pursuers is at the Estate Office, Inkersall Farm, Inkersall, Bilsthorpe, while the registered office of the second pursuer is at the Estate Office, Inkersall Farm House, Inkersall, Bilsthorpe. The lands owned by the pursuers were adjacent to each other, and together formed the Rigg Estate. Mr Bell had acted as agent for both companies, and it was after his relationship with Mr Woodcock deteriorated that problems arose between him and the pursuers. He asserted that he was the tenant of the whole Rigg Estate, and the claims of each pursuer against him were strikingly similar. We cannot say that the Lord Ordinary erred in his assessment that, in light of these facts and circumstances, the prior action fell within the first exception. Moreover, it was not an action founded on breach of contract, so the statement of law in Boulting v Elias quoted above is not applicable to this action.


[13]
Moreover, no issue was taken by the defender as to the competency of that action at any stage. Mr Bell entered appearance in that action and was legally represented. No attack on the competency of the proceedings was made when warrant for arrestment on the defenders was granted, nor at any stage thereafter. Decree in foro was granted; no steps were taken to reclaim or reduce that decree. While counsel for the reclaimers may be correct in observing that this history cannot render an incompetent action competent, these are factors to which the court is entitled to have regard when considering all the facts and circumstances of the case. Although not part of our reasoning, we observe that it would be unfortunate for an action in which warrant for arrestment was granted in October 2006 and a final decree in foro was pronounced in October 2008, and in which no challenge to competency was maintained by either party to the proceedings at any stage, should be declared incompetent as a result of an attack on its competence by defenders in separate proceedings at this time.


[14]
Be that as it may, we do not consider that the Lord Ordinary fell into any error in his disposal of this issue, and we reject the submissions for the reclaimers on this point.

 

The validity of the arrestments served on SEERAD


[15]
Counsel for the reclaimers submitted that SEERAD had no separate legal personality from the Scottish Ministers, but was simply the name given by the reclaimers to the organisation of those civil servants who at the material time dealt with matters related to the environment and rural affairs. The acts of those civil servants gave rise to rights and liabilities in respect of the reclaimers and not in respect of any other party. Reference was made to the Scotland Act 1998, sections 44, 52 and 59. A grouping of civil servants employed by the Scottish Ministers has no legal persona. This contrasts with the position of some departments of the UK government, which do have separate legal personalities and may raise and be served with legal proceedings; reference was made to the Crown Proceedings Act 1947 and particularly sections 17, 18 and 42 thereof.


[16]
Counsel for the reclaimers observed that it was an important matter of policy that the interpretation of whether an arrestment has been validly served is based on certainty. A strict approach is taken - see Graham Stewart on Diligence, page 35. Effective service of an arrestment imposes legal obligations upon an arrestee, and it should not rely on the arrestee's interpretation of whether the designation of the arrestee is "close enough" to be valid. The Lord Ordinary asked himself the wrong question at paragraph [31] of his opinion when he asked himself whether there was any real misunderstanding as to the true identity of the true arrestee, and answered that query in the negative. The question should be not what the arrestor intended to do, nor what the understanding of the arrestee was, but what was actually done.


[17]
Both senior and junior counsel for the reclaimers accepted that there was some degree of flexibility in the application of the rule of strict interpretation when applied to arrestments. A minor clerical error in the recording of the date of a decree will not invalidate an arrestment: Henderson v Rollo (1871) 10M 104. In Spalding v Valentine & Co (1883) 4 R 1092 an error in the Christian name of the defender was not sufficient to invalidate proceedings, the Lord Justice-Clerk observing that "nowadays no favour would be shewn to such a purely technical objection". In Hannan v Kendal (unreported, 30 March 1897, an excerpt from which is appended at page 849 of Graham Stewart on Diligence) two errors in the designation of an arrestee which were described as "careless blunders" but which were not said to have occasioned any mistake or misunderstanding were held not to invalidate the arrestment, and the court observed that:

"the errors in this case were nothing but clerical, and produced no misapprehension. There is, I think, no authority for holding the diligence inept on account of them. The case of Henderson's Trustees (1831) 9S 618 is not strictly in point, and it may be that there is less tendency now than then to give effect to a technical objection."

 


[18]
Counsel for the reclaimers accepted that the courts tended to look less favourably on such technical objections, and that the trend away from technicality which could be traced from Henderson's Trustees in 1831, through Henderson v Rollo in 1871 to Hannan v Kendal in 1897 had continued to the present day. However, the Lord Ordinary had taken this tendency too far in the present case.


[19]
Senior counsel for the reclaimers accepted, on the basis of the authorities referred to above, that a de minimis typographical error will not invalidate an arrestment, but anything more than that will have such an effect. The present case was an example of something far greater than a mere typographical error. The point was of importance to the Scottish Ministers, as there might have been sums owing or arrestable obligations owed to Mr Bell from other departments. Were all departments of the reclaimers caught by this arrestment, or only debts/obligations owed by SEERAD? The reclaimers' position was analogous to a company which traded under several different trading names; if an arrestment is served on one trading name, would it attach all obligations owed by the company, including those owed under different trading names, or only those obligations owed by the company under the particular trading name specified in the arrestment? He submitted that this highlighted the need for objective certainty, and supported the rule that any arrestment with an error greater than a de minimis typographical or clerical error will not be effective. If the test were to be what a reasonable arrestee should understand to have been the intention of the arrester, what factors should be taken into account? Once in the arena of the subjective judgment of the arrestee, a variety of circumstances may arise. Service of an arrestment is a formal procedure by order of the court, creating a nexus between the arrestor and the arrestee. Strict accuracy is required. In the present case, SEERAD is no more than a name adopted by the Scottish Ministers for administrative convenience, and is not a legal entity. This is no de minimis typing error, but a fundamental flaw which invalidates the arrestment.


[20]
Counsel for the pursuers and respondents observed that at no time have the reclaimers challenged the Lord Ordinary's view (at paragraph [32] of his opinion) that the Scottish Ministers knew that the arrestment was for them, they knew they were the intended recipient and that no other person could be the intended recipient. The reclaimers do not challenge the Lord Ordinary's analysis in this passage. The question therefore is, is it appropriate for the Scottish Ministers to disregard this arrestment, which they knew was for them? The Lord Ordinary identified the correct question at paragraph 31 of his opinion, namely whether there was any real misunderstanding as to the true identity of the intended arrestees. This had been the central question since the 19th century - the ratio of Hannan v Kendal was based on the fact that the errors in that case "produced no misapprehension" and "it is not said that these careless blunders occasioned any mistake or misunderstanding". It had always been the case that, provided there was no mistake or misapprehension, service on a person who was not strictly the correct arrestee did not invalidate an arrestment. In support of this proposition counsel referred to Graham Stewart on Diligence at 40/41:

"Trustees savings banks are not bodies corporate, and strictly the arrestment should be laid in the hands of the trustees nominatim; but in practice it is sufficient to arrest in the hands of a principal official, e.g the treasurer."

 

This was an example of an arrestment which was intended to affect the obligations of a particular legal person being effective, by practice, by service on another person, because it was perfectly apparent whose obligations were being arrested. This undermined the absolute rule argued for on behalf of the reclaimers.


[21]
We agree with the submissions on behalf of the pursuers and respondents on this issue. We do not seek to detract from the statement in Graham Stewart on Diligence that arrestments and all such diligences are strictly looked at, and the omission from or misstatement in the execution of anything essential will be fatal (page 35), nor do we disagree with the statement (at page 38) that "where the arrestee is not an individual, but a company, association, corporation, etc care must be taken that the arrestment is laid in the hands of the proper parties as arrestees". However, it is clear that, at least since the latter part of the 19th century, Scots law has applied this general rule pragmatically, and without undue regard to merely technical objections. It is not in dispute that de minimis clerical or typographical errors, such as the spelling of an arrestee's name, or the specification of a first name, or the specification of the date of a decree, will not invalidate an arrestment. However, the categories of cases in which absolute strictness is unnecessary is not confined solely to typographical or clerical errors, as the example of trustees savings banks quoted above from Graham Stewart on Diligence shows. The author there makes the distinction between the strict requirement of the law, and what in practice is sufficient and regarded as enforceable. The same might be said of actions against, or arrestments laid in the hands of, the Scottish Ministers; many types of court proceedings should strictly be raised by or against the Lord Advocate as representing the Scottish Ministers, but in practice many proceedings are raised by or against the Scottish Ministers themselves.


[22]
We endorse the view that it is important that care must be taken that an arrestment is laid in the hands of the proper party as arrestees, and that arrestments and all such diligences will continue to be strictly looked at. However, the court is no more attracted by a purely technical objection in the 21st century than it was in the late 19th century. Where there has been an error in the designation of an arrestee, whether this is a purely clerical or typographical error or otherwise, we consider that the real question which will inform the decision as to whether the arrestment is valid or not is whether the error would be likely to give rise to a mistake, misunderstanding or misapprehension in the reasonable observer as to the identity of the arrestee or the scope of the arrestment. The test is not that of whether a particular arrestee subjectively misunderstood or misapprehended the intention of the arrestor, but whether the reasonable observer would be under any misunderstanding or misapprehension when faced with the terms of a particular arrestment. In the circumstances of the present case, as the Lord Ordinary observed at paragraph [32] of his opinion, the reclaimers knew that the arrestment was for them. SEERAD has no separate legal persona; it forms part of the reclaimers. We do not consider that any reasonable observer would have been under any misunderstanding or misapprehension as to whom the arrestment was directed. It was clearly directed at the reclaimers. In these circumstances we do not consider that the Lord Ordinary has erred in law in his treatment of this issue, and we answer this point in favour of the pursuers and respondents.

 

Was there an arrestable obligation at the time that the arrestment was served?


[23]
As the Lord Ordinary observed, for an arrestment to be effective, there must be an arrestable obligation - a liability to account by the arrestee to the common debtor. It is not enough for there to be only an expectation or hope of payment. But the fact that the date upon which a debt falls to be paid has not yet arrived does not mean that there is no obligation to account - Costain Building and Civil Engineering Limited v Scottish Rugby Union 1993 SC 650 at 661F-G. The Lord Ordinary observed that a creditor can attach rent for a term, even though it is not due until a future date: Livingston v Kinloch 1795 Mor 769. The right to receive an SFPS payment is set out in Council EC 1782/2003. Article 28 provides inter alia as follows:

"Payment

 

Save as otherwise provided for in this Regulation, payments under support schemes listed in Annexe 1 shall be made in full to the beneficiaries.

 

2. Payments shall be made once a year within the period from 1 December to 30 June of the following calendar year."

 


[24] The Lord Ordinary took the view that although when the arrestments were served in October 2006 no payment had been authorised to Mr Bell, this did not matter because as he qualified under the scheme, he had a right to payment which was to be made between 1 December and 30 June. The Lord Ordinary accordingly held that the arrestments were a valid diligence in respect of the reclaimers' obligation to account to Mr Bell under SFPS.


[25]
Counsel for the reclaimers did not take issue with the rule stated in Costain v SRU; however, the real question was when did the common debtor obtain a vested right to payment under the SFPS. Payment could not have been made to Mr Bell prior to the payment window commencing on 1 December 2006. The submission of an application form for payment did not inevitably lead to a payment being made under the SFPS - the application required to be verified, and Mr Bell required to continue to fulfil his obligations in relation to the SFPS. Although there may be an ultimate entitlement to payment, the obligation to make that payment will not arise until an application has been administered - R v Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food ex p Lower Burytown Farms Limited [1999] EuLR 129, in which Laws J observed (at page 134):

"As it seems to me there is not the slightest doubt that the Community Law Regime which established the scheme for set-aside payments created a legal entitlement in the farmers to recover the grant or aid in question provided the qualifying conditions were fulfilled. So far as the amounts fell to be diminished by imposition of the sanctions laid down for over-declarations, the balance remaining due fell as surely within this entitlement as in the case where the farmer makes no over declaration. As I have said, there is no discretion in the respondent whether or not, or how much, to pay. This is as true in a case such as the present as in one where no sanctions are imposed; there is no more discretion in the ascertainment of any amounts to be deducted by way of penalty or sanction than in the ascertainment of the grant on a 100% basis. The rules are fixed and certain."

 


[26]
Counsel for the reclaimers submitted that the obligation to make payment did not arise until the amount of that payment had been ascertained. No entitlement to payment under the SFPS vested in the applicant until verification and authorisation had taken place - that is, in this case, 14 December 2006.


[27]
There was no obligation on a farmer to make an application for payment under the SFPS, and if no application was made, the reclaimers were under no obligation to pay. Where an application had been made, the farmer still required to comply with cross-compliance obligations throughout the period - ie he had to continue to own the land and manage it satisfactorily. His application required to be verified. Even after these steps had been fulfilled, payment could not be made until after 31 December. Senior counsel for the reclaimers suggested that the obligation to make payment either vested on the date of application or on the date of authorisation (ie 14 December 2006). If the latter were correct, no arrestable obligation existed when the arrestment was served.


[28]
Counsel for the pursuers and respondents submitted that the Lord Ordinary's reasoning at paragraphs [33] to [37] of his opinion was correct. It was clear from Costain v SRU (at page 661) that all personal debts due to the common debtor may be arrested and that these debts may be pure or conditional, constituted or unconstituted, liquid or illiquid. For his purposes it mattered not much whether this debt was a future or contingent debt - it was clearly at the very least contingent. The language of the EC Regulations was couched repeatedly in terms of entitlement in the farmer to receive payment - see articles 21, 22, 23 and 28. Not surprisingly, there was a requirement for verification before the money was paid out, but at the least this was a contingent obligation. This was entirely consistent with the observations of the court in Lower Burytown Farms. In addition to the passage quoted above, counsel referred to page 131 of the report, at which Laws J observed:

"It is enough to notice that if an applicant for aid follows and fulfils the detailed rules to which entitlement to the grant or grants is made subject, he has a settled legal right to the appropriately calculated amount and there is no discretion in the UK authority charged with administering the scheme (the respondent Ministry) whether or not, or how much, to pay."

 


[29]
Counsel for the pursuers and respondents observed that senior counsel for the reclaimers accepted that if a farmer makes a genuine application, there may be a presumptive entitlement to payment of the money. In terms of Costain v SRU that is sufficient. The reclaimers had no discretion as to whether or not to make payment to Mr Bell; this was not a discretionary payment. They could not simply refuse to verify the application. Mr Bell had made an application to be paid, he was entitled to be paid, and ultimately he was paid. This was not in the category of merely a "hoped for" payment, it was an entitlement which crystalized at the date on which the application was made. This was a future obligation, or at worst for the pursuers and respondents, a contingent obligation.


[30]
We consider that the submissions for the pursuers and respondents are well founded on this point too. The respondents had no discretion as to the payment that Mr Bell should receive. They were obliged to verify his application and then to make payment under the SFPS. These are circumstances which fall within the categories of debts held to be arrestable in the full bench decision of Costain v SRU. It is unnecessary to analyse whether the debt was contingent or future, as both categories of debt were arrestable; in the circumstances of this case we consider that the debt owed by the reclaimers to Mr Bell was contingent. This contingent debt arose at the date on which Mr Bell's application was submitted to the reclaimers, ie 15 May 2006. There was accordingly an arrestable obligation at the time that the arrestment was served on 13 October 2006.

 


Absence of averments of loss


[31]
Junior counsel for the reclaimers advanced an argument (albeit with no obvious enthusiasm) which was foreshadowed in the reclaimers' note of arguments, to the effect that as at the date of the debate before the Lord Ordinary the pursuers' averments of loss were irrelevant. By the time decree had passed against Mr Bell in the prior action, he had been sequestrated, and the claims of the pursuers and respondents might have been defeated by a better claim. The point was advanced before the Lord Ordinary, and in his opinion he explained that before issuing a final interlocutor he intended to put the case out by order to enable the reclaimers to investigate with the Accountant in Bankruptcy whether there were any other creditors with better rights. This course of action was adopted, and parties entered into a joint minute agreeing the point.


[32]
Junior counsel recognised that this argument had been overtaken by the joint minute, and that even if the court were to be with him on this point, this would not result in the Lord Ordinary's interlocutor being recalled. At the outset of his speech senior counsel for the reclaimers intimated that he intended to say nothing about this ground, which he accepted was to an extent now academic. We do not propose to address this issue further, beyond observing that the Lord Ordinary's disposal of this aspect of the dispute was well within the flexible powers available to a commercial judge. It was a pragmatic approach which resulted in a resolution of the issue, and we see no force in any criticism of the Lord Ordinary's approach on this point.

 


Conclusion


[33]
For each of these reasons we consider that this reclaiming motion must fail. We shall accordingly refuse it, and adhere to the interlocutor of the Lord Ordinary dated 4 September 2012.


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2013/2013CSIH54.html