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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Messrs ER Eunson & Partners & Ors v. Messs J & M Foubister & Ors [2006] ScotSC 82 (07 November 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2006/82.html
Cite as: [2006] ScotSC 82

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SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLAND AND ISLANDS AT KIRKWALL

 

A59/04

JUDGEMENT

 

of

 

SHERIFF PRINCIPAL SIR STEPHEN S T YOUNG Bt QC

 

in the cause

 

MESSRS E R EUNSON & PARTNERS, EDWARD ROBERT EUNSON, LILY ISABELLA EUNSON and BRIAN EUNSON

Pursuers and Respondents

 

against

 

MESSRS J & M FOUBISTER, JAMES FOUBISTER and

MOIRA ANN FOUBISTER

First Defenders and Appellants

SIDNEY DAVID EUNSON

Second Defender

 

and

 

COLIN BICHAN WYLIE

Third Defender

 

 

 

 

Act: Mr Andrew A Murchison, solicitor, Inverness

Alt: Ms Georgette Herd, solicitor, Kirkwall

 

 

Kirkwall: 7th November 2006

 

The sheriff principal, having resumed consideration of the cause, refuses the appeal and adheres to the interlocutor of the sheriff dated 30 June 2006 subject to the following qualifications:

 

(i)                  in part (4) delete the words "motion, no. 7.2 of process" and substitute therefor "motion to allow the record to be opened up and amended in terms of the first defenders' minute of amendment, no. 19 of process, the pursuers' answers thereto, no. 20 of process, and the second and third defenders' answers thereto, no. 25 of process";

 

(ii)                in part (5) add at the end the words "refuses to allow these adjustments";

 

(iii)               with reference to part (8), the hearing previously fixed by the sheriff to take place on 5 September 2006 should now take place on a date to be afterwards fixed by him; and

 

(iv)              in part (9) delete the word "refusing", substitute therefor the words "refuses in hoc statu" and insert after the word "commissioner" the word "and";

 

finds the first defenders and appellants liable to the pursuers and respondents in the expenses of the appeal and allows an account thereof to be given in and remits the same, when lodged, to the auditor of court to tax and to report; quoad ultra remits the cause to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

 

 

 

 

Note

 

[1] In this case the parties were formerly partners in a partnership based at Deerness, Orkney, and known as the Deerness (Orkney) Machinery Group. In terms of crave 1 the pursuers craved the court to find and declare that by letter dated 18 September 2002 notice had been given on behalf of the pursuers to the defenders to terminate the partnership and that as a result it had been dissolved with effect from 31 December 2002. In terms of crave 2 the pursuers craved the court (a) to ordain the defenders to produce a full account of their intromissions with the property of the former partnership and to grant decree for payment by the defenders, jointly and severally, to the pursuers of the balance found due with interest from 31 December 2002 until payment, failing which (b) to grant decree for payment by the defenders, jointly and severally, to the pursuers of the sum of £15,000 with interest from 31 December 2002 until payment.

 

[2] The action was originally raised on 25 June 2004. At that stage the defenders were all represented by the same solicitor. In due course defences were lodged on their behalf. These incorporated a counterclaim in terms of which they craved the court (1) to ordain the pursuers to produce a full account of their intromissions with the bank accounts, financial accounts and any other property of the partnership and to grant decree for payment by the pursuers, jointly and severally, to the defenders of the balance now due together with interest from 31 December 2002 until payment, failing which (2) to grant decree for payment by the pursuers, jointly and severally, to the defenders of the sum of £10,000 together with interest from 31 December 2002 until payment. The statement of facts in support of this counterclaim is notable for its brevity. It contains four paragraphs. Paragraphs 1 and 2 are purely formal and paragraphs 3 and 4 incorporate brevitatis causa the averments in answers 5 and 6 in the defences respectively.

 

[3] Answer 5 is in the following terms (the third pursuer is evidently meant to refer to Brian Eunson):

Denied. Explained and averred that the parties entered into the Partnership Agreement. This led them to acquire machinery over a period of years. Each piece of machinery was acquired in different percentage shares. The parties are all fully aware of the percentage shares and the individual items of machinery in which they share. Further explained and averred that during the course of the partnership the Pursuers and in particular the Third Pursuer was responsible for the book keeping for the group. The Third Pursuer held and to the knowledge of the Defenders continues to hold at the time of lodging these Defences all bank account, bank statements, bank books. Receipts, payments sales and purchase ledgers and accounts in connection with the financial operation of the group. The First, Second and Third Defenders have called upon the Pursuers on a number of occasions to produce these documents to them in an attempt to negotiate a settlement. The Pursuers have failed to do so. Further explained and averred that the Third Pursuer chose to withdraw from the Group. He sought no consultation with the First, Second and Third Defenders. The First, Second and Third Defenders call upon him to lodge the Sales and Purchase Ledger in respect of the operation of the group; the Bank Accounts at the Clydesdale Bank; the Value Added Tax Returns to the Inland Revenue which have been completed by the Third Pursuer; copies of all accounts and details of his intromissions with the accounts of the Deerness (Orkney) Machinery Group so that a final accounting may be produced. His failure to do so will be founded upon. Quoad ultra denied.

 

[4] Answer 6 is in the following terms:-

 

Denied. The Defenders having called upon the Pursuer to produce the Purchase and Sales ledgers, details of the final accounts and other accounting, and the Third Pursuer having attended to the book keeping of the group and having failed to produce said accounting this action is accordingly premature.

 

[5] The parties tabled a variety of preliminary pleas both in the principal action and in the counterclaim with the result that at the continued options hearing on 5 April 2005 the sheriff closed the record and assigned 3 May 2005 as a diet of debate.

 

[6] On 3 May 2005 the sheriff on the motion of the defenders, there being no objection, discharged the diet of debate and on the motion of the pursuers, there being no objection, (a) found and declared that by letter dated 18 September 2002 notice was given on behalf of the pursuers to the defenders to terminate the partnership and that as a result it had been dissolved with effect from 31 December 2002, and (b) ordained the defenders to produce a full account of their intromissions with the property of the former partnership. No date was set by the sheriff by which this account was to be produced, but instead on joint motion he sisted the cause "to allow parties to seek assistance from a qualified accountant to produce advice in relation to the said account". It is important to notice here that there was no objection to the order upon the defenders to produce an account.

 

[7] On 22 September 2005 the sheriff recalled the sist and assigned 18 October 2005 as a procedural hearing.

 

[8] On 18 October 2005 it was intimated to the court that the solicitor who had previously acted for all the defenders no longer acted for the second and third defenders and the sheriff therefore made the usual order for intimation to these defenders. He refused a motion by the pursuers for decree in terms of crave 2(b) in the principal action and ordained the first defenders to produce a full account of their intromissions with the property of the former partnership within twenty eight days. He continued the cause for a further procedural hearing on 15 November 2005.

 

[9] On 15 November 2005 the sheriff continued the cause to the procedural roll on 10 January 2006 "to allow the agent for the (second and third) defenders to consider the papers and respond as appropriate and to allow the pursuers and the first defenders to resolve issues in relation to books of account". Since then the second and third defenders have been separately represented from the first defenders, and they have played no part in this appeal.

 

[10] The case was duly called before the sheriff on 10 January 2006. It might have been thought that some time before that date an account would have been lodged by the first defenders as they had been ordered to do by the sheriff on 18 October 2005 (and previously on 3 May 2005), marked up in the inventory of process in the process folder and given a number of process. But there is no sign in the process of any of these things having been done. In spite of this at the conclusion of the hearing on 10 January 2006 the sheriff pronounced an interlocutor in the following terms:

 

The Sheriff, On Pursuers' motion, Allows 6 weeks for the Pursuers and 2nd and 3rd named Defenders to lodge a note of objection to the account produced by the 1st Defenders if so advised; Allows 3 weeks thereafter for the 1st 2nd and 3rd Defenders to lodge answers thereto, if so advised, and Continues the cause to the Procedural Roll of 21 March 2006 at 10.00 am. Meantime refuses the 1st Defenders Motion to appoint a commissioner anent the specification granted on 3 May 2005.

 

[11] When I enquired at the hearing of the appeal where the account lodged by the first defenders was to be found, it was suggested that it formed part of what has been described as the first defenders' first inventory in the accounting. This is marked no. 6/3 of process and was lodged only on 23 May 2006. It contains certain account statements and an invoice book, but there is nothing at all that appears to me to satisfy the terms of the orders which had been made to produce an account on 3 May 2005 and again on 18 October 2005. So it is still not clear to me what the first defenders have done to implement the terms of these orders. But they must have produced something at least to the pursuers and the second and third defenders since no. 18 of process is a note of objections for the pursuers which was lodged on 21 February 2006 and no. 26 of process is a note of objections for the second and third defenders which was lodged on 24 May 2006. Both these documents refer to the accounting produced by the first defenders. So far as I can discover from the process, no answers have ever been lodged by the first defenders to these notes of objection notwithstanding the terms of the sheriff's interlocutor dated 10 January 2006. But there is a document which is described as a note of objection for the first defenders which was lodged on 23 May 2006 and which forms no. 23 of process. Quite what the purpose of this document is I am not sure. It may be that it was intended to form the first defenders' answers to the note of objections for the pursuers since paragraphs 5, 6 and 7 and the fifth plea-in-law refer to the pursuers' note of objections. But paragraphs 1, 2, 3, 4 and 8 and the first and third pleas-in-law all bear to be objections to accounts of the partnership for the years from 31 May 1989 to 31 May 2002 and also to 31 December 2002 which were lodged by the pursuers on 21 February 2006 and which now form no. 5/4 of process.

 

[12] On 21 March 2006 the sheriff after hearing parties pronounced an interlocutor in the following terms:

 

The Sheriff, having heard parties on the 2nd & 3rd Defenders Motion to Sist in respect of them, Refuses same meantime; on the 1st Defender's motion, for the 2nd & 3rd Defender to lodge accounts refuses the motion Meantime; on 1st Defenders motion Allows 14 days for a Minute of amendment to be lodged , Allows 28 days for Answers thereto and a further 21 days for adjustment if so advised, Allows adjustment of the accounts and the objection until 23 May 2006 and Continues the cause to the procedure Roll of 30 May 2006 at 10.00am.

 

I confess that I do not understand what is meant by the reference to allowing "adjustment of the accounts and the objection". If the case had followed the usual procedure (as to which see Macphail's Sheriff Court Practice (2nd Edn) at paragraph 21.09), it might have been expected that by this stage in the proceedings the first defenders would have lodged their account, the pursuers and the second and third defenders their notes of objection and the first defenders their answers thereto so that the period of adjustment allowed by the sheriff on 21 March 2006 would have been for the purpose of allowing parties to adjust, not the account lodged by the first defenders, but the notes of objection and answers thereto.

 

[13] In the event the first defenders did not lodge a minute of amendment until 11 April 2006. On the same day they enrolled a motion, no. 7/2 of process, to allow this minute of amendment to be received although late. No opposition to this motion was lodged and accordingly on 19 April 2006 an honorary sheriff granted the motion and allowed the minute of amendment to be received although late and to form no. 19 of process. The pursuers' answers to this minute of amendment were lodged on 9 May 2006 and form no. 20 of process, while the answers for the second and third defenders to the minute of amendment were lodged on 24 May 2006 and form no. 25 of process.

 

[14] The next step in the procedure was a hearing which took place over two days, namely 30 May and 30 June 2006. At the conclusion of this hearing the sheriff pronounced an interlocutor in the following terms:

 

The Sheriff:

1) having heard parties on the 1st Defenders motion made at the bar to appoint a Commissioner in respect of the Specification of documents for the defender, no. 13 of process, for the recovery of the books, documents and others set forth in said specification approved by interlocutor dated 5 April 2005, the Pursuers objecting thereto as unnecessary; Grants same and grants commission to Alistair Bruce, Solicitor, Lows, 5 Broad Street, Kirkwall, Orkney, to take the evidence of witnesses and havers and to receive these said items and to report;

2)

3) having heard parties on the 1st defenders Motion made at the bar to Ordain the Pursuers, in terms of Crave 1 of their counterclaim, to account for the intromissions in respect of the Partnership, Refuses same in hoc statu;

4) having heard parties on the 1st defenders motion, no.7.2 of process, the Pursuers

objecting thereto, Refuses same;

5) having heard parties on the 1st defenders Motion made at the bar Pursuers objecting thereto, to adjust the Minute of Amendment no.19 of process, in terms of Rule 18 (5), by deleting

 

a. on page 5 in the 2nd paragraph in answer 5 the words "and the provision of an action for accounting no longer apply";

 

b. on page 5 in answer 6, the 2nd sentence in its entirety that is the words "The remainder of the Pursuers action is wrongly founded"; and

 

c. the esto case in that article, that is from the word "Esto" on the 5th line of article 3 on page 5 to the end of that article (on page 6);

6) on Pursuers Motion, Allows the defenders' counterclaim to be sisted;

7) on the 2nd & 3rd defenders Motion to sist the cause in respect of them, Refuses same;

8) on the motion of the pursuer and the 1st defender allows all parties a further 8 weeks for adjustment of the objections to the account and answers thereto; continues the cause to the Procedural roll of the 5th September 2006 at 10.30am to hear submissions from parties as to the next step in procedure; and Ordains the Pursuer to produce a record of those accounts, objections and answers as adjusted and to lodge that in court 2 days prior to that date;

9) on Pursuers Motion finds the 1st Defenders liable to the Pursuers in the expenses of the amendment procedure and refusing the 1st defenders' motion to award expenses in respect of the appointment of a commissioner reserves the question of those expenses meantime;

10)              having heard parties on the 1st Defenders Motion for leave to appeal this interlocutor, the pursuer and 2nd and 3rd defenders objecting, Grants same.

 

It is this interlocutor which is the subject of the present appeal. For the avoidance of doubt, I should record that the interlocutor has been typed out here as it appears on the interlocutor sheets signed by the sheriff.

 

[15] On 7 July 2006 a note of appeal (no. 27 of process) was lodged on behalf of the first defenders. It contains four grounds of appeal, but at the hearing of the appeal itself the first defenders' solicitor indicated that she no longer insisted on the first and second of these grounds. But she did insist on the third and fourth grounds of appeal which are in the following terms:

 

3. The Sheriff erred in law in failing to allow the first defender to amend in terms of Minute of Amendment no.19 of process. The Proposed amendment is necessary to determine the issues between the parties.

 

4. The Sheriff erred in law in failing to allow the First Defender's to adjust their minute of amendment. The adjustment would have effectively dealt with the objection of the Pursuers. He should have allowed the adjustment and amendment to allow the pleadings to correctly reflect the issues between the parties.

 

[16] With reference to the third ground of appeal, it was not disputed at the appeal that part (4) of the sheriff's interlocutor dated 30 June 2006 was incorrect. In the first place, it was not open to the sheriff to refuse the first defenders' motion, no. 7/2 of process, when this had previously been granted by another sheriff on 19 April 2006. In any event, this motion was simply to allow the first defenders' minute of amendment to be received although late. The motion which it was agreed had been canvassed before the sheriff on 30 May and 30 June 2006 was that the record should be opened up and amended in terms of this minute of amendment and the answers thereto, and it was accepted that the sheriff had refused to allow this. For the first defenders it was maintained that the sheriff had erred in reaching this decision, and the question whether or not he had so erred was the principal issue debated at the appeal. The sheriff dealt with this issue in paragraphs 6 to 12 of the very thorough note which he prepared following the lodging of the note of appeal, and it is unnecessary that I should repeat at length what he said in those paragraphs.

 

[17] It may be helpful at this point to be reminded of the provisions of rule 18.2 of the Ordinary Cause Rules as they applied to this particular issue. Paragraph (1) of rule 18.2 provides that the sheriff may, at any time before final judgement, allow an amendment mentioned in paragraph (2). Paragraph (2) describes a variety of different amendments including "(c) an amendment of a condescendence, defences, answers, pleas-in-law or other pleadings which may be necessary for determining the real question in controversy between the parties". There is a helpful discussion of Chapter 18 of the Ordinary Cause Rules at pages D44/62/1-6 of the Parliament House Book and, as indicated at page D44/62/2, where an amendment of the type proposed in sub-paragraph (c) is proposed the sheriff in deciding whether or not to grant the motion to give effect to such an amendment has to proceed in two stages. In the first place he has to consider whether or not the minute of amendment is necessary for determining the real question in controversy between the parties and, if he is satisfied of this, he has to decide whether or not in the exercise of his discretion he should allow amendment in terms of the minute of amendment.

 

[18] On 23 May 2006 there was lodged on behalf of the first defenders a copy of their minute of amendment which incorporated certain adjustments. This copy is no. 24 of process, and it was this version of the minute of amendment which was before the sheriff at the hearings on 30 May and 30 June 2006. It is important to notice that in terms of it the first defenders did not seek to amend the only pleadings which they have lodged which bear to have anything to do with the accounting procedure, namely their note of objections, no. 23 of process. (Indeed, as will be recalled, this was only lodged on 23 May 2006 exactly six weeks after the minute of amendment in its original form had been lodged). On the contrary, the minute of amendment as adjusted sought only to amend the answers in the principal action, and in particular answers 5 and 6 which had been incorporated brevitatis causa in paragraphs 3 and 4 in the statement of facts annexed to the counterclaim. It follows that, in determining whether or not the amendment was necessary for determining the real question in controversy between the parties, the sheriff had to consider, not what was the real question in controversy between the parties in the accounting procedure, but what were the real questions in controversy between the parties in the principal action and in the counterclaim.

 

[19] In terms of the principal action there were originally two such questions, namely (1) whether or not the partnership among the parties had been dissolved with effect from 31 December 2002 as a result of the sending of the letter dated 18 September 2002, and (2) whether or not the defenders were liable to produce a full account of their intromissions with the property of the partnership. As already noted, both these questions had been determined in favour of the pursuers on 3 May 2005 when the sheriff on their motion, there being no objection, had granted declarator in terms of crave 1 and had ordained the defenders to produce a full account of their intromissions with the property of the partnership in terms of crave 2(a). This did not mean that the pleadings in the principal action had altogether served their purpose since there remained the second part of crave 2(a) in terms of which the pursuers sought decree for payment by the defenders, jointly and severally, of the balance found due to them in the account to be produced by the defenders. Plainly the amount of this balance, if any, is still a question in controversy between the parties. But it is a question to be resolved, not in the context of the principal action, but in the context of the accounting procedure, the pleadings in which, as noted, were not sought to be amended by the first defenders.

 

[20] The real question in controversy between the parties in the context of the counterclaim is whether or not the pursuers are liable to account to the defenders in terms of crave 1 in the counterclaim. This question remains a live one and in my opinion it was this question alone which the sheriff had to consider when determining whether or not the first defenders' minute of amendment as adjusted was necessary for determining the real question in controversy between the parties.

 

[21] In the minute of amendment as adjusted there are three short passages which indicate that the first defenders are not liable to account to the pursuers at all. At the hearing before the sheriff the first defenders' solicitor moved him to allow the minute of amendment to be further adjusted to delete these three passages. The sheriff refused to do this (see part (5) of his interlocutor dated 30 June 2006) and at the appeal the first defenders' solicitor submitted that the sheriff had erred in this respect. She further explained that, following the closing of the record, it had come to light that books and accounts of the partnership were in the hands of the pursuers and that machinery belonging to the partnership had been stored in premises which were jointly owned by the pursuers and the first defenders and to which the pursuers had had regular access. She submitted that the sheriff ought to have allowed amendment in terms of the whole of the first defenders' minute of amendment as adjusted subject to the deletion of the three short passages to which reference has just been made.

 

[22] It has to be said that a great deal of the material in the minute of amendment as adjusted is such that it ought to find its place, not in the first defenders' pleadings in the principal action and in the counterclaim, but in their pleadings in the accounting procedure. Although her position on this was not altogether clear, I think that by the conclusion of the hearing of the appeal the first defenders' solicitor had come to accept this. But she did maintain that there were two passages in particular in the minute of amendment as adjusted which were relevant to the question whether or not the pursuers had a liability to account to the first defenders in terms of the counterclaim.

 

[23] The first of these passages appears in the minute of amendment as adjusted at the beginning of a lengthy insertion which the first defenders sought to make in answer 5. The passage reads as follows (I have corrected two obvious typographical errors):

 

In particular it is denied that the first defenders have retained the machinery. Explained and averred that the assets being the machinery is stored at Little Millhouse, Deerness. This property is held by the partners and trustees of the firm of S E F Properties. The remaining partners and trustees of said firm are Brian Eunson of the pursuers and James Foubister of the first defenders. A copy of the disposition in favour of S E F Properties is lodged herewith referred to for its terms and incorporated herein brevitatis causa. Brian Eunson is fully aware of the whereabouts of the machinery, he has access to same. His son Ian Eunson has had access to same and has caused damage thereto. The said premises are unlocked. The said Brian Eunson has access to the said premises.

 

[24] The second passage appears as part of a proposed new answer 6 which the first defenders seek to substitute for the existing answer 6 (which is to be deleted accordingly). The passage reads (again I have corrected a typographical error):

 

The pursuers have failed to yield up the necessary information to provide an accounting. Further explained and averred that the assets of the partnership have remained available to the pursuers as hereinbefore condescended upon. The pursuers are entitled to realise those assets. The assets being the machinery are stored at Little Millhouse, Deerness. This property is held by the partners and trustees of the firm of S E F Properties. The remaining partners and trustees of said firm are Brian Eunson of the pursuers and James Foubister of the first defenders. The premises are unlocked.

 

[25] At the end of the day, as I understood her, the submission of the first defenders' solicitor was that amendment should be allowed in terms of the minute of amendment as adjusted in its entirety subject to deletion of the three short passages to which reference has already been made, failing which amendment should at least be allowed in terms of the two passages which I have quoted in full in the preceding two paragraphs.

 

[26] In response, the pursuers' solicitor submitted that, before I could interfere with the sheriff's decision, I would have to be satisfied that he had erred in law or exercised his discretion wrongly in refusing to allow amendment in terms of the minute of amendment as adjusted and the answers thereto. He drew attention to the difficulties which would arise in practice if the amendment were to be allowed given that in the closed record in its present form the defences had been expressed to be on behalf of all the defenders whereas in the minute of amendment as adjusted it was sought to amend certain of the answers in the defences on behalf of the first defenders only. He submitted that the averments in the minute of amendment as adjusted demonstrated a confusion between, on the one hand, the issue of liability to account and, on the other, the issue of the extent of that liability which fell to be addressed in the accounting procedure. He submitted too that the two passages quoted in paragraphs [23] and [24] above did not assist towards establishing a liability on the part of the pursuers to account to the first defenders and so were irrelevant to this issue. And finally, even if these passages were thought to be necessary for determining the real question in controversy between the parties in the counterclaim, the court should not allow amendment in terms thereof given in particular that the order which had been made against the first defenders for production of an account related to their intromissions with the whole of the property of the partnership, that the probable result of the accounting procedure which had now been embarked upon would be a clear set of balances due one way or another, that in light of the pursuers' pleas to the relevancy and competency of the counterclaim there was no likelihood of an early order being made against them to produce an account of their intromissions, that to allow the counterclaim to proceed at this stage would result in an unnecessary duplication of expense and that in any event, in terms of part (6) of his interlocutor dated 30 June 2006, the sheriff had allowed the counterclaim to be sisted and no appeal had been taken against this part of the sheriff's decision. In all these circumstances the sheriff had been right to exercise his discretion to refuse to allow amendment in terms of the minute of amendment as adjusted and the answers thereto. Finally, the sheriff, so it was submitted, was in any event right to have refused to allow further adjustment of the minute of amendment in terms of the three short passages referred to in part (5) of his interlocutor of 30 June 2006. It was pointed out here in particular that these adjustments had only been proposed on the second day of the hearing before the sheriff and no satisfactory explanation had been afforded for this. The appeal should therefore be refused and the interlocutor of the sheriff dated 30 June 2006 adhered to subject to certain necessary minor qualifications being made to its terms to reflect what had actually been decided by the sheriff in particular in parts (4), (5) and (9) of the interlocutor and the fact that the date mentioned in part (8) had now passed.

 

[27] In my opinion the submissions for the pursuers are to be preferred. In crave 1 of the counterclaim the defenders seek to have the pursuers ordained to produce a full account of their intromissions with the bank accounts, financial accounts and any other property of the partnership. There are already averments about the partnership bank accounts, financial statements and the like in the existing answer 5 and it does not appear to me that anything in the two passages quoted in paragraphs [23] and [24] above is of any relevance at all to the supposed liability of the pursuers to account to the defenders for their intromissions with the bank accounts and financial accounts of the partnership. As for the other property of the partnership to which reference is made in crave 1 of the counterclaim, there are some brief and distinctly vague references to machinery in the existing answer 5, and it is true that the proposed addition to this answer quoted in paragraph [23] above does refer to machinery. But it is very difficult to see how this passage might be said to instruct a liability on the part of the pursuers to account to the defenders for their intromissions with this machinery. It is said that this machinery is stored in property held by another partnership of which the partners and trustees are one of the pursuers and one of the first defenders. It is said too that this pursuer is fully aware of the whereabouts of the machinery, that he has access to it, that his son has had access to it and has damaged it and that the premises are unlocked. It is not clear why it ought to follow from these averments that the pursuers should account to the defenders for their intromissions with the machinery, in particular when consideration is given to the initial denial in this passage that the first defenders have retained this machinery and the averments which follow which suggest that the pursuers stand in exactly the same relationship to this property as the first defenders. Finally, there is the passage quoted in paragraph [24] above which is intended to form part of the new answer 6 and which in my opinion adds nothing of significance to the passage quoted in paragraph [23].

 

[28] Even if it had been the case that the proposed amendments to answers 5 and 6 had been necessary for determining the real question in controversy between the parties in the counterclaim, I think that I should have hesitated long and hard before allowing amendment in terms of these passages in light of the factors to which the pursuers' solicitor referred as narrated in paragraph [26] above. At all events I am quite satisfied that the sheriff was correct to refuse to allow the record to be opened up and amended in terms of the first defenders' minute of amendment as adjusted and the answers thereto, and I have refused the appeal accordingly.

 

[29] In view of what I have already said, it is unnecessary that I should express any opinion on whether or not the sheriff was right to refuse to allow the first defenders' minute of amendment to be further adjusted as outlined in part (5) of his interlocutor dated 30 June 2006.

 

[30] The pursuers' solicitor proposed that I should find the first defenders liable to the pursuers in the expenses of the appeal in the event that it was refused. The first defenders' solicitor submitted that I should reserve the question of expenses in the meantime. For my part, I see no reason to depart from the normal practice that expenses should follow success, and I have found the first defenders liable to the pursuers in the expenses of the appeal accordingly.

 

[31] For the sake of completeness, I should record that in the course of his submissions the pursuers' solicitor referred me to Finnie v Finnie (Stonehaven, 3rd December 2003, unreported).


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