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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Fordyce v. Clark [2007] ScotSC 12 (16 March 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2007/12.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotSC 12

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SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLAND AND ISLANDS AT ABERDEEN

 

F123/05

JUDGEMENT

 

of

 

SHERIFF PRINCIPAL SIR STEPHEN S T YOUNG Bt QC

 

in the cause

 

PATRICIA FORDYCE or BURTON or CLARK

 

Pursuer

 

against

 

ALLAN ALFRED CLARK

 

Defender

 

 

 

 

 

Act: Miss Lynda Brabender, advocate, instructed by Patience & Buchan, Aberdeen

Alt: Mr Thomas Mullen, solicitor, Stronachs, Aberdeen

 

 

Aberdeen: 16th March 2007

 

The sheriff principal, having resumed consideration of the cause, refuses both the pursuer's and the defender's appeals and finds it unnecessary to deal with the pursuer's cross-appeal; adheres accordingly to the interlocutor of the sheriff dated 24 August 2006; reserves meantime the question of the expenses of the appeal and appoints parties to be heard thereon on Thursday 22nd March 2007 at 9.30 am.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Note

 

[1] This is an action of divorce in which the wife is the pursuer and the husband the defender. The action was raised on 25 February 2005. At that time the parties were the partners in a business carried on under the firm name of Auchlea Farm at Auchlea Farm, Kingswells, Aberdeenshire. The partnership had been constituted by a contract of copartnery dated 2 September 1993. Clause SECOND provided that the partnership should be held to have commenced on 1 November 1992 and should continue until 31 October 1993 and yearly thereafter, and that it might be terminated at 31 October in any year by notice in writing given by one partner to the other at least six months before the date on which the partnership was to be terminated. Clause FOURTH provided that all profits both capital and revenue should be shared equally between the parties. Clause THIRTEENTH provided that on the death of either partner, the surviving partner should have the option to continue the business and in that event should be bound to pay to the representatives of the deceased partner the sum at credit of the capital account of the deceased partner as shown in a Balance Sheet to be made up at the date of death. In this Balance Sheet no allowance was to be made for goodwill, but the other assets were to be valued by a valuator to be mutually chosen by the representatives of the deceased partner and the surviving partner and entered in the Balance Sheet at valuation figures. Clause FIFTEENTH provided:

 

On the dissolution of the partnership by either partner giving notice in writing in terms of Clause SECOND thereof the other partner shall have as regards the other partner's share an option of acquisition on the same terms and conditions as is given to the surviving partner under Clause THIRTEENTH hereof and should the other partner not desire to purchase on these terms, the whole assets (including goodwill) shall be sold by public roup or private bargain, all debts and liabilities of the firm shall be settled and a final Balance Sheet shall forthwith be prepared by the firm's accountants showing the entitlements of the partners which shall immediately be paid to them or their respective representatives.

 

Clause LASTLY provided in short that any dispute arising under or in connection with the agreement either during or after its performance, or during the existence of the firm, or after its dissolution should be referred to arbitration.

 

[2] On 6 January 1994 the defender's parents granted a disposition of the farm to the pursuer and the defender. For present purposes it is necessary to notice only the opening section of this disposition which reads as follows:

 

WE, ALEXANDER CLARK and MRS FRANCES JEAN ANDERSON or CLARK, Spouses, ....... IN CONSIDERATION of the sum of ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY THOUSAND POUNDS (£150,000) STERLING paid to us by the firm of Auchlea Farm, Farmers, of Auchlea Farm, Kingswells, Aberdeenshire, HAVE SOLD and DO HEREBY DISPONE TO AND IN FAVOUR OF ALLAN ALFRED CLARK and MRS PATRICIA CLARK, Spouses, residing together at Auchlea Farm, Kingswells aforesaid, the partners of the said firm of Auchlea Farm, as trustees for that firm and to the survivor of them as partners and trustees foresaid heritably and irredeemably (IN THE FIRST PLACE) ALL and WHOLE THE FARM AND LANDS of Auchlea .......

 

[3] Defences were lodged on behalf of the defender on 30 March 2005 and after sundry proceedings an options hearing was assigned to take place on 6 September 2005. On that date the sheriff on the motion of the pursuer, and of consent, continued the options hearing until 4 October 2005.

 

[4] In anticipation of the continued options hearing a certified copy of the record as adjusted was lodged with the sheriff clerk by the pursuer's solicitor on 23 September 2005. It is instructive to look at the pleadings as they stood at that time. In terms of craves 1, 2 and 3 the pursuer sought respectively decree of divorce against the defender, decree for payment by him to her of interim aliment in the sum of £1,300 per month and decree for payment by him to her of a capital sum of £55,000. In terms of crave 4 the pursuer sought an order in terms of section 14(2)(a) of the Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985 "for the sale of the parties' heritable property at Auchlea, Kingswells, Aberdeen". The crave included the usual provisions about granting warrant for the sale and signature of the necessary deeds and ended with the words: "And to divide the proceeds of the said subjects when sold equally between the parties, after deduction of any debts or burdens affecting the same and all other expenses attending the sale".

 

[5] It is not in dispute that the parties were married on 8 April 1988, that they have two children, namely a girl born on 27 April 1989 and a boy born on 8 November 1990 and that they resided together until 1 February 2002 when they ceased to live together as man and wife although they continued to reside under the same roof until about August 2004. It appears that the pursuer then left the matrimonial home with the two children.

 

[6] In article 5 of the condescendence the pursuer averred that when the parties separated in or around 1 February 2002 the matrimonial property comprised seven items which she numbered 1 to 7. Item 1 read as follows:

 

1.      The business of Auchlea Farm, including the farm itself. The farm business is in the joint names of the parties.

 

In response to this the opening sentence in answer 5 read:

 

Admitted that items 1, 2, 3, 7, 8 and 9 as designed by the pursuer constituted matrimonial property as at the date of separation.

 

[7] In article 6 the pursuer averred inter alia:

 

The pursuer seeks an order for sale of the farm. There is substantial equity in the said property. The current value is in excess of £575,000 ....... The pursuer is entitled to realise the capital in the farm ........ The pursuer is prepared to negotiate transfer of the property into the defender's sole name for a fair and reasonable price. No offers to purchase the pursuer's share in the business and farm have been made by the defender. The pursuer seeks orders for a capital sum and sale of the farm in order to achieve a fair sharing of the matrimonial property. Orders for sale of the property and a capital sum are justified and reasonable having regard to the principles contained within the Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985 and the resources of the parties.

 

[8] In response to these averments the defender averred in answer 6:

 

Admitted that no offers to purchase the pursuer's share of the business and farm have been made by the defender. Not known and not admitted whether there is substantial equity in the farm. Explained and averred that there are substantial borrowings secured over the farm. There is a loan from Clydesdale Bank plc and a second ranking security in favour of Alexander Clark and Mrs Frances Jean Clark. Quoad ultra denied.

 

[9] The pursuer had tabled various pleas-in-law in familiar terms in support of her craves. In particular her fifth plea-in-law read as follows:

 

5.      The order for sale of the heritable property being justified and reasonable having regard to the principles contained within the Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985, decree should be granted as fourth craved.

 

[10] The defender had tabled six pleas-in-law. The first and fourth of these were directed to the relevancy and specification of the pursuer's averments generally. The second and third pleas-in-law were directed against the pursuer's craves 2 and 3 respectively. Finally, the fifth and sixth pleas-in-law read respectively: "5. The pursuer's averments, so far as material, being unfounded in fact, the defender should be assoilzied", and "6. In any event, the sums being sought being excessive, decree should not be pronounced as concluded for".

 

[11] It is important to notice here that the defender had tabled no plea-in-law directed in particular against the relevancy or specification of the averments in support of the pursuer's crave 4. Nor was there a plea-in-law to the effect that this crave should be dismissed as incompetent. Nor before either the options hearing or the continued options hearing had he lodged a rule 22 note in support of those preliminary pleas which he had tabled (with the result that at the continued options hearing the sheriff should have repelled these preliminary pleas in terms of rule 22.1(3)).

 

[12] At the continued options hearing on 4 October 2005 it appears that neither party was present. But they were both represented by their respective solicitors. On the motion of the pursuer the sheriff allowed craves 1 and 4 to proceed as undefended with proof by way of affidavit evidence. He closed the record and allowed parties a proof of their averments quoad craves 2 and 3 and assigned a diet for this purpose. Although it is not apparent from the terms of his interlocutor, it is not in dispute that the pursuer's motion to allow craves 1 and 4 to proceed as undefended (which was made at the bar) was not opposed by the defender's solicitor.

 

[13] On 14 November 2005 the pursuer's solicitor lodged a minute for decree in terms of crave 4 only. In support of this she lodged also an affidavit by the pursuer dated 11 October 2005. These were evidently placed before the sheriff in chambers in the usual way and on 29 November 2005 he pronounced an interlocutor in the following terms:

 

The sheriff, on pursuer's motion, having considered the cause and the productions and affidavits lodged in support thereof, makes an order in terms of section 14(2)(a) of the Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985 for the sale of the parties' heritable property at Auchlea, Kingswells, Aberdeen and for that purpose, Grants warrant to Strutt & Parker, 68 Station Road, Banchory to dispose of the said subjects heritably and irredeemably and to divide the proceeds of said subjects when sold equally between the parties after deduction of any debts or burdens affecting the same or all other expenses attending the sale; quoad ultra Reserves to pronounce further meantime.

 

It is not in dispute that this interlocutor was extracted on 16 December 2005.

 

[14] For present purposes the next significant step in the procedure occurred on 10 March 2006 when a minute (no. 19 of process) was lodged on behalf of the defender in terms of which he craved the court to recall the interlocutor dated 29 November 2005. (The minute gives the date of the interlocutor as 4 October 2005, but it is not in dispute that what was meant was the interlocutor dated 29 November 2005). In the statement of facts, after narrating the making of the order on 29 November 2005, the defender averred:

 

2.      The defender seeks recall of the order for sale in order that the true issues and controversy between the parties can be determined. In terms of contract of copartnery entered into between the parties Auchlea Farm is a partnership asset. The pursuer resigned from the said partnership with effect from 31 October 2005. In terms of the parties' contract of copartnery the division of the partnership assets, including Auchlea Farm, fall to be determined by the dissolution provisions of the contract of copartnery. The pursuer is bound by the terms of the contract in relation to the division of the partnership assets.

 

The minute incorporated a single plea-in-law in following terms:

 

1.      Recall of the interlocutor of (29 November) 2005 being necessary to determine the issues in controversy between the parties and the division of the partnership assets being determined by contract of copartnery dated 2 September 1993, recall should be granted as craved.

 

[15] On 20 March 2006 the sheriff allowed amendment of the pleadings in terms of a minute of amendment for the pursuer and the defender's answers thereto (nos. 17 and 22 of process respectively). She allowed the defender's rule 22 note to be received at the bar (no. 23 of process) and appointed parties to be heard on the pursuer's first plea-in-law and the defender's first plea-in-law at a diet of debate on 28 April 2006. She continued consideration of the defender's minute, no. 19 of process, until that diet.

 

[16] The effect of the amendment process can be seen in the certified copy of the closed record which was lodged by the pursuer's solicitor on 22 March 2006 (no. 24 of process). In particular, the pursuer had added four new craves numbered 5, 6, 7 and 8. For present purposes nothing turns on craves 7 and 8. Craves 5 and 6 are in the following terms:

 

5.      To grant an order in terms of section 14(2)(a) of the Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985 for the sale of all livestock, farm equipment, motor vehicles, hay, straw, silage and feed owned by the parties' firm of Auchlea Farm and to divide the proceeds of sale equally between the parties;

 

6.      To grant an order in terms of section 14(2)(a) of the Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985 for the sale of the milk quota and single farm payment owned by the parties' firm of Auchlea Farm and to divide the proceeds of sale equally between the parties.

 

[17] In support of these two craves the pursuer had incorporated various averments and a new sixth plea-in-law to the effect that, the orders sought in terms of these two craves being justified in terms of the principles contained within the Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985 and reasonable having regard to the resources of the parties, decree therefor should be granted as craved. Curiously the defender's pleas-in-law remained exactly as they had been at the time of the continued options hearing but in his rule 22 note (no. 23 of process, lodged on 20 March 2006) it was said, inter alia:

 

Reference is made to contract of copartnery executed on 2 September 1993. The pursuer has obtained decree for the sale of Auchlea Farm and further, seeks various orders for the sale of the moveable property pertaining to the farm ........ These orders seek to deal with assets which are held in the partnership and accordingly require to be dealt with in terms of the copartnery agreement. The averments relating to assets held in the partnership are irrelevant and should be excluded from probation, the pursuer having agreed in terms of the contract of copartnery how these assets should be dealt with.

 

[18] At the diet of debate on 28 April 2006 the sheriff allowed the defender to amend in terms of his minute of amendment, no. 26 of process. In short, this incorporated in answer 5 a reference to the arbitration clause to which reference has been made in paragraph [1] above and added a new first plea-in-law for the defender as follows:

 

1.      In respect that the pursuer's craves 4, 5, 6 and 7 fall to be determined by the terms of the parties' contract of copartnery, (they) should be dismissed as incompetent.

 

[19] Having heard counsel for the pursuer and the defender's solicitor the sheriff made avizandum. Subsequently, by interlocutor dated 24 August 2006, he refused the defender's minute, no. 19 of process, and sustained the defender's first plea-in-law to the extent of dismissing the pursuer's craves 5 and 6. It is this interlocutor which is the subject of the present appeal. In support of it he issued a detailed and thorough note. This speaks for itself and it is unnecessary to repeat its terms in full here.

 

[20] In response to the sheriff's interlocutor both parties lodged notes of appeal. In short, the pursuer maintained that the sheriff had been in error in sustaining the defender's first plea-in-law and dismissing her craves 5 and 6, while the defender maintained that the sheriff had been in error in refusing his minute, no. 19 of process, for recall of the interlocutor dated 29 November 2005. In addition, the pursuer lodged a note of cross-appeal in which she sought adherence to the sheriff's interlocutor to the extent that it refused the defender's minute for recall, but for reasons additional to those given by the sheriff. It was submitted that he had been in error in rejecting certain reasons proposed by the pursuer for refusing the minute for recall.

 

[21] At the outset of the hearing of the appeal I allowed both parties to amend, the pursuer in terms of her minute of amendment no 33 of process and the defender in terms of his minute of amendment as adjusted, no. 32 of process, and the pursuer's answers thereto, no. 34 of process. In terms of the pursuer's minute of amendment there were added in each of craves 5 and 6 between the words "proceeds of sale" and "equally" the words "after deduction of the expenses of sale and repayment of the debts due by the said firm as at 31 October 2005".

 

[22] The defender's minute of amendment made various changes to his pleadings including the deletion of his existing answer 6 and its replacement with a new answer 6. Towards the end of this there is an averment which reads:

 

Explained and averred that following the pursuer's resignation from the firm of Auchlea Farm, the defender, on 10 May 2006 intimated his intention to continue the business and acquire the pursuer's share in terms of Clause FIFTEENTH of the said contract of copartnery.

 

In response to this the pursuer in her answers inserted the following in article 6 of the condescendence:

 

Admitted the defender has intimated his intention to continue the business and acquire the pursuer's share in terms of Clause FIFTEENTH of the said contract of copartnery, under explanation that the defender has been aware of the pursuer's resignation, effective 31 October 2005, since on or before 30/4/05 and has made no proposals in terms of said Clause FIFTEENTH to acquire the pursuer's share notwithstanding repeated requests so to do.

 

[23] In his minute of amendment the defender also added a new sixth plea-in-law as follows:

 

The orders fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh craved not being justified by the principles set out in sections 9(1)(a) and 9(1)(b) of the Family Law (Scotland) Act 1985 and not being reasonable having regard to the resources of the parties, decree should not be granted as craved.

 

[24] Section 8(1) of the 1985 Act provides in short that in an action for divorce either party to the marriage may apply to the court for one or more of a variety of orders including an order for the payment of a capital sum, an order for the transfer of property and "(c) an incidental order within the meaning of section 14(2) of this Act". Section 8(2) provides that, subject to sections 12 to 15 of the Act, where an application has been made under sub-section (1) the court shall make such order, if any, as is (a) justified by the principles set out in section 9 of the Act; and (b) reasonable having regard to the resources of the parties. Section 9(1) contains the familiar principles which are to be applied in cases of this kind including the principle in sub-paragraph (a) to the effect that the net value of the matrimonial property should be shared fairly between the parties to the marriage. Section 10(1) provides that in applying this particular principle the net value of matrimonial property should be taken to be shared fairly between the parties to the marriage when it is shared equally or in such other proportions as are justified by special circumstances. Section 14(1) provides that an incidental order may be made under section 8(2) before, on or after the granting or refusal of decree of divorce. Section 14(2) provides that "an incidental order" means one or more of a variety of specified orders. The first of these is (a) an order for the sale of property. Section 14(4) provides that an incidental order may be varied or recalled by subsequent order on cause shown.

 

[25] At the debate the defender's solicitor submitted to the sheriff that the minute to recall the order dated 29 November 2005 should be granted because the order itself was incompetent in that it sought to order the sale of property that was owned by a third party, namely the partnership. The sheriff dealt with this argument in paragraphs 14 and 15 of his note. At the outset of paragraph 14 he expressed the opinion that, in determining the issue of the competency of the order, it was necessary to look at the pleadings at the time the order was made. He proceeded to examine the pleadings at that time and in light of these concluded in paragraph 15 that crave 4 was in its terms a crave for a competent order at the time that it was made. He acknowledged that the position might have been different had the defender's arguments in respect of the competency of the order been advanced before the order itself was made, and he concluded:

 

The order was made in the context of the position which the defender was then taking, whether or not that amounted to a formal waiver of his plea to the competency, and I do not think it is appropriate now to look at competency simply because the defender has changed his mind as to how he wants the property disposed of. It seems to me that the issue of competency is now simply a convenient peg on which to hang an argument to achieve his new objective. I do not think that that is available to him. As I do not consider that there is an apparent incompetency in the order which the defender seeks to recall I do not need to consider whether I should take notice of it.

 

[26] The sheriff dealt with the defender's challenge to the competency of the pursuer's craves 5 and 6 at paragraphs 20 to 25 of his note. At paragraph 25 he concluded:

 

As a general rule I would say that section 14(2)(a) relates to the sale of matrimonial (or civil partnership) property, or to property of one or other of the parties to the marriage even if it is not matrimonial property, or perhaps to the property of a party to the action. It does not refer to the property of a third party. In seeking to have the gross value of the assets of the partnership, or some of them, equally distributed between the parties the pursuer is seeking the sale and division of partnership property without reference to the rights of the creditors of the partnership for whom the partners hold the property in trust. To grant decree in these terms could be to the detriment of the creditors. I do not think it can competently be done at least in the terms of the craves sought.

 

[27] In support of the pursuer's appeal her counsel submitted that the sheriff's decision had been internally inconsistent, given on the one hand his decision that it was competent to pronounce an incidental order for the sale of the farm and, on the other hand, that it was incompetent to seek incidental orders for the sale of the moveable property in terms of craves 5 and 6. Counsel drew attention to what the sheriff had said in the passage from his note which I have quoted in the preceding paragraph and pointed out that craves 5 and 6 now included references to the deduction of debts before division of the proceeds of sale so that, if the concerns of the sheriff about the rights of the creditors were valid, these concerns had now been addressed. In point of fact, said counsel, these references were unnecessary in light of the provisions of section 9 of the Partnership Act 1890 and sections 10 and 15 of the 1985 Act.

 

[28] Counsel further submitted that the orders sought in terms of crave 5 and 6 were competent in the context of an action of divorce where the parties to the marriage were the parties in the partnership and where the partnership itself constituted matrimonial property. The terms of section 14 of the 1985 Act were, said counsel, wide enough to allow for the making of such orders in these circumstances. The court in a divorce action had a wide discretion to determine financial issues between the parties and could only determine the final position after proof. The making of orders in terms of crave 5 and 6 was discretionary and could be determined following proof as to the import of the partnership agreement in the final determination of the court. If the matter could not be resolved in the context of the action for divorce and required to go to arbitration to settle any dispute as to the value of the property concerned, this would defeat the ends of the 1985 Act and its clean break philosophy. As a matter of public policy, all property matters between spouses ought to be resolved on divorce and the court would be capable of resolving all issues between the parties including the issues relating to the partnership and the partnership agreement. Evidence could be led as to the value of the partnership itself and the sheriff would be entitled to make any order required to achieve a fair sharing of that value where the partnership was matrimonial property. The arbitration process which would be required in light of the sheriff's decision was unnecessary and would be a waste of the parties' precious resources. The pursuer was reasonably apprehensive that, unless craves 5 and 6 were allowed to go to proof, arbitration was a more than realistic prospect. The sheriff would not know what the parties' resources were until the arbitration process had been completed and there could then be no clean break and final financial provision on divorce. For these reasons, so it was said, the sheriff's decision in relation to the pursuer's craves 5 and 6 was unsound. The pursuer's appeal should be allowed accordingly and craves 5 and 6 allowed to proceed to proof.

 

[29] In my opinion there is a short answer to these submissions which was briefly alluded to by the defender's solicitor when he suggested that section 20 of the 1890 Act was at the heart of this aspect of the case. For present purposes I think that it is necessary to notice only section 20(1) which provides:

 

All property and rights and interests in property originally brought into the partnership stock or acquired, whether by purchase or otherwise, on account of the firm, or for the purposes and in the course of the partnership business, are called in this Act partnership property, and must be held and applied by the partners exclusively for the purposes of the partnership, and in accordance with the partnership agreement.

 

[30] Craves 5 and 6 seek orders in terms of section 14(2)(a) of the 1985 Act for the sale of a variety of assets, all of which are rightly said to be "owned by the parties' firm of Auchlea Farm". These are therefore all assets to which section 20(1) applies and it follows, as the sub-section states, that they "must be held and applied by the partners exclusively for the partnership, and in accordance with the partnership agreement". Leaving aside the position of the farm itself, there can be no suggestion in this case that there has been any variation of the parties' contract of copartnery so as to allow the disposal of the assets to which craves 5 and 6 refer otherwise than in terms of this contract. If the sheriff were to grant orders in terms of these two craves in pursuance of section 14(2)(a), he would be cutting across the provisions of the parties' contract and this in my opinion he could not competently do in the face of section 20(1) of the 1890 Act. It follows that the sheriff was I think correct to sustain the defender's first plea-in-law to the extent of dismissing craves 5 and 6. The pursuer's appeal against the decision of the sheriff is therefore refused.

 

 

[31] I turn now to the defender's appeal. His first ground of appeal refers to the interlocutor of 29 November 2005 and is in the following terms:

 

The sheriff erred in holding that it was not appropriate to recall the interlocutor and order since there was no apparent incompetence in the order. Notwithstanding the defender's position in the pleadings at the time the interlocutor was granted the heritable property at Auchlea, Kingswells, Aberdeen was held by the parties as trustees for the partnership of which they were both partners. The partnership is not and was not a party to the action. The parties' interest in the partnership is a moveable asset. The pursuer in the matrimonial proceedings cannot competently seek an order for sale of property owned by a separate and distinct legal personality. The sheriff was entitled to and ought to have taken into consideration the actual position in relation to the partnership and title to the property in circumstances where the question of competency had not previously been argued before the court.

 

[32] In support of this first ground of appeal the defender's solicitor began by submitting that the sheriff had erred in holding that he ought to look only at the pleadings at the time the order was granted to determine the issue of competency. Questions of competency, said the defender's solicitor, were pars judicis and it was not necessary that a plea to the competency should have been taken before such a question could be considered by the court. Reference was made here to Hay v Hay 2000 SLT (Sh Ct) 95 and it was submitted that in the present case, since the action was still in dependence, it had been open to the sheriff to consider the question of the competency of the order made on 29 November 2005 and he had misled himself in finding that he could not visit the issue of competency since this had not been raised earlier in the proceedings.

 

[33] Reading what the sheriff said in particular in paragraph 15 of his note, I confess that it is not altogether clear to me that the sheriff did in fact conclude that, the order having been competently made when it was in light of the pleadings as they stood at that time, it was not open to him to consider the issue of the competency of the order in light of the submissions that had been made to him. But, on the assumption that it was, and remains, open to the court to consider the issue of the competency of the order, the real question here in my opinion is whether the sheriff was right to conclude, as he did, that there was no apparent incompetency in the order which the defender sought to recall.

 

[34] Turning to this question, the defender's solicitor referred to Robertson v Robertson 2003 SLT 208. In that case a husband raised an action of divorce against his wife with whom he was in partnership carrying on a farming business. Section 14(2)(h) of the 1985 Act provides that an incidental order under the section means, inter alia, "an order setting aside or varying any term in an antenuptial or postnuptial marriage settlement". The pursuer sought an incidental order under this sub-section to vary a clause of the contract of copartnery between the parties. According to the report, the defender challenged the relevancy of the pursuer's conclusion for this order. (In passing, I suspect that the challenge was to the relevancy of the averments in support of this conclusion). Not surprisingly, the temporary judge sustained this challenge holding that the contract of copartnery was not a marriage settlement within the meaning of the sub-section.

 

[35] The defender's solicitor founded in particular on what was said by the temporary judge at paragraphs [12] to [15] of his judgement, viz:

 

[12] It is not instantly apparent that a contract of copartnery could be a marriage settlement. It is a business arrangement. In the present case the parties have each contributed to the enterprise and each continue to run it as a business. It is independent of their marital status other than referring to the second party as wife of the first party in the preamble. There is no reason why the partnership should determine on divorce. Parties of full age have made a very specific provision about the situation which would arise on dissolution of their partnership by death or retiral. The conclusion effectively seeks to make the retiral of one of the partners possibly more advantageous to him than it was specially designed to be by each of the parties at the time of their contract.

 

[13] There is ample provision in the Family Law (Scotland) Act to take account of any imbalance in the parties' assets and provide for fair sharing by way of property transfer orders and the like.

 

[14] The response to the argument that this disposition of property by the spouses was to provide for them in the future must be that any business arrangement would be expected so to provide. That would not make the arrangement a "marriage settlement"; it is an arrangement which confers an immediate absolute interest in the business.

 

[15] A contract of copartnery entered into by two adults with specific provision must be taken to represent what they intended to happen. They require to abide by their bargain. The contract of copartnery does not look like a marriage settlement. It has no distinctive features which would make it such, however wide an interpretation one gives to the words of the statute. I shall accordingly sustain the defender's second plea in law and dismiss the pursuer's third conclusion.

 

[36] The defender's solicitor submitted that the position in respect of the incidental order made by the sheriff in this case on 29 November 2005 was exactly the same as that in respect of the incidental order which had been sought by the pursuer in Robertson v Robertson. He further submitted that the sheriff should have applied the same logic to this incidental order as he had done in respect of the incidental orders sought by the pursuer in terms of craves 5 and 6.

 

[37] In my opinion the decision in Robertson v Robertson is of no assistance to the defender in this case. In the first place, the circumstances of the two cases are readily distinguishable given that what was in issue in the earlier case was the meaning of the expression "marriage settlement" in the context of section 14(2)(h) whereas in the present case the question is whether or not an incidental order made in terms of section 14(2)(a) was, and remains, a competent order. And secondly there is the very important point that in Robertson the defender challenged the making of the incidental order under section 14(2)(h), just as the defender in this case has challenged the making of incidental orders in terms of crave 5 and 6 under section 14(2)(a). By contrast, the defender did not challenge the making of the incidental order in terms of crave 4 notwithstanding that he had ample opportunity to do so before it was made.

 

[38] The defender's solicitor referred to the disposition in favour of the parties which made it plain that the title to Auchlea Farm had been taken in the name of the parties as trustees for the firm (see paragraph [2] above). Under reference to section 22 of the Partnership Act 1890 and Miller on Partnership (1st Edn - sic) at page 390 he submitted that it was not competent for the transfer of the farm to take place in terms of the incidental order granted on 29 November 2005 since the parties' respective interests in the property were moveable, not heritable, the title to the farm being vested in the partnership which had a separate legal personality from that of each of the parties. The assets, heritable and moveable, of a partnership, said the defender's solicitor, fell to be treated differently from assets held in the name of the parties to an action of divorce. The terms of the incidental order made on 29 November 2005 were problematic as regards it being possible to transfer any interest in the heritable property to a prospective purchaser or purchasers since an incidental order under the Act did not of itself vest title whether for transfer between spouses or where there was to be a sale to a third party.

 

[39] The defender's solicitor referred to what had been said by the sheriff at paragraphs 22 to 26 of his note where, in short, he had pointed out the difficulty of granting incidental orders in terms of craves 5 and 6 in relation to assets which belonged, not to the parties to this action, but to the partnership between them which was a third party. It was submitted that the same logic should have been followed through by the sheriff as regards the farm which was the heritable property, not of the parties, but of the partnership, the parties' respective interests in the farm being moveable property, namely their reversionary interests in the property after all the debts due to the creditors of the partnership had been settled. It was difficult, said the defender's solicitor, to see on any view of the matter that either of the parties were in a position to transfer good title to the farm to a bona fide purchaser except through the medium of the partnership.

 

[40] The defender's solicitor further submitted that, if he was wrong in his submission that the incidental order made on 29 November 2005 should be recalled as incompetent, then it would appear to follow that there would be no purpose in the order in any event since it referred effectively to property which in a legal sense did not exist. By this I understood the defender's solicitor to be referring to that part of the incidental order where the farm is described as "the parties' heritable property". It was submitted that this was inaccurate since the property belonged to the partnership, and it followed, so I understood the defender's solicitor, that the incidental order should be recalled on cause shown.

 

[41] In response, counsel for the pursuer submitted that it was competent for an incidental order to be made under 14(2)(a) for the sale of property held in the name of a husband and wife as the sole partners in a partnership, and that where the partnership was matrimonial property. Counsel referred to sections 8, 9, 10 and 14 of the Act of 1985 and sections 4 and 9 of the Partnership Act 1890 and submitted that, where a partnership consisted only of two spouses, there was nothing which precluded the making of orders under the Act of 1985 for the sale of partnership property. On the issue of the competency of the incidental order made on 29 November 2005, counsel founded strongly on the fact that, as she put it, the defender had consented to this order. She submitted that the fact that there had been no plea-in-law tabled by the defender against the pursuer's crave 4, that the defender had not himself sought any order in respect of the farm and that he had not opposed the motion that crave 4 should proceed as undefended cumulatively amounted to consent by the defender to the making of the incidental order on 29 November 2005, with the result that any reference now by him to the contract of copartnery had to be seen against the background of his having consented to the making of the order. In short, said counsel, the defender could not now maintain that it was incompetent to make the incidental order under section 14(2)(a) when he had consented to it.

 

[42] In my opinion the incidental order made on 29 November 2005 was when it was made, and remains, a competent order of the court. In this context it is important to notice section 19 of the Act 1890 which provides: "The mutual rights and duties of partners, whether ascertained by agreement or defined by this Act, may be varied by the consent of all the partners, and such consent may be either expressed or inferred from a course of dealing". I can readily understand why it may be said, in particular in light of section 20(1) of the 1890 Act, that the incidental order made on 29 November 2005 would have been incompetent if other persons apart from the parties to this action had been partners in the firm of Auchlea Farm and these other persons or the firm as such had not consented to the sale of the heritable property. Likewise, I think that the incidental order would have been incompetent if the defender himself had opposed the making of it since in that event the fate of the farm would have fallen to be determined by the terms of the contract of copartnery in the same way as the assets referred to in craves 5 and 6. Here the observations of the temporary judge in Robertson v Robertson at paragraphs [12] and [15] of his judgement as to the nature of a contract of copartnery are apposite. But the situation in this case is quite different. It is always open to the whole partners of a firm to agree among themselves that an asset, heritable or moveable, of the partnership should be sold and the proceeds of sale divided among themselves after deduction of the expenses of sale and any debts or burdens affecting the asset in question. That in my opinion is what has happened here. In her crave 4 the pursuer sought an incidental order for the sale of the farm and the division of the proceeds of sale equally between the parties after deduction of any debts or burdens affecting the property and all other expenses attending the sale. The defender had ample opportunity in the months following the raising of the action in February 2005 to challenge this crave. But he did not do so, and indeed at the continued options hearing on 4 October 2005 offered no opposition to the pursuer's motion that crave 4 should proceed as undefended. In these circumstances it seems to me that the irresistible inference to be drawn is that the defender had consented to the sale of the farm and the division of the proceeds of sale in terms of the incidental order sought by the pursuer in crave 4. In other words, he had consented to a variation of the contract of copartnery which would allow for the sale of the farm in terms of crave 4 (with the result that the difficulty created for the pursuer by section 20(1) of the 1890 Act did not, and does not, apply here) . In this situation it was in my opinion perfectly competent for the sheriff to have made the incidental order as he did on 29 November 2005, and the order does not cease to be a competent order simply because, for whatever reason, the defender has now changed his mind and regrets having given his consent. In short, the order is no less a competent order today than on the day on which it was made and it follows that the defender is not entitled to have it recalled on the basis that it is incompetent.

 

[43] I can see the force of the argument that the incidental order made by the sheriff is on one view inaccurate in referring to "the parties' heritable property". Strictly the farm is the heritable property, not of the parties, but of the partnership between them. But in my opinion what matters here is that the meaning and intent of the order should be clear, and in my opinion there can be no doubt that what the sheriff has done is to order the sale of Auchlea Farm and the division of the proceeds of sale between the parties after deduction of any debts or burdens affecting this property and the expenses of sale. And to this end the parties will have to execute whatever deeds are required to give effect to the sale of the property.

 

[44] In the course of his response to the submissions of counsel for the pursuer the defender's solicitor suggested that one obstacle to the practicality of putting the order of 29 November 2005 into effect was that there were third party secured creditors who had not had intimation of the order for sale. For my part I confess that I do not understand why this should be an obstacle. It seems to me to be a novel (and unsound) proposition that, in the absence of a specific provision, a property subject to a secured loan may not be sold unless and until intimation of the proposed sale is made to the creditor. In this context the defender's solicitor expressly disclaimed any reliance upon section 15(2) of the 1985 Act which provides that a court shall not make an order under section 8(2) of the Act for the transfer of property subject to security without the consent of the creditor unless he has been given an opportunity of being heard by the court. Needless to say, an order for the sale of a property to a third party under section 14(2)(a) is not the same as an order for its transfer from one party to an action to the other in terms of section 8(1)(aa).

 

[45] As I understood him, the defender's solicitor also suggested here that, since the farm was held by the parties as trustees for the partnership, in the event of its being sold the proceeds of sale would have to be applied in the first instance in payment, not only of debts secured over the farm, but also of the unsecured debts of the partnership. It was only after all these debts had been paid, so I understood it to be said, that the remaining proceeds could be divided among the parties. Again, I do not follow this. If A has two debts, one a building society loan secured over his house and the other an unsecured loan from his bank, he does not have to repay the loan from the bank if and when he sells his house. But of course he remains liable to the bank for the amount of the loan. Likewise it is not necessary whenever an asset of a partnership is sold that the proceeds of sale should be applied towards repayment of the unsecured debts of the partnership. If the whole partners agree, the proceeds may be divided among themselves (and they and the firm will remain jointly and severally liable for these debts just as they were before the sale - see sections 4 and 9 of the 1890 Act).

 

[46] The sheriff's decision to refuse to vary or recall the incidental order made on 29 November 2005 was one made in the exercise of the discretion conferred upon him by section 14(4) of the 1985 Act. In his second and third grounds of appeal the defender maintained in short that the sheriff had erred in the exercise of this discretion. In paragraphs 5 and 13 of his note the sheriff recorded the defender's solicitor as having explained that the defender's change in position had come about once a further valuation of the farm had been received after the continued options hearing at which the pursuer's crave 4 had been allowed to proceed as undefended. Then in paragraph 18, in considering whether or not cause had been shown for the purposes of section 14(4), the sheriff commented that a change of circumstances such as that the property was potentially worth significantly more or less than had previously been thought seemed to him to be capable of amounting to cause shown.

 

[47] The defender's solicitor informed me that he had not in fact suggested to the sheriff that the defender's change of heart had come about as a result of discovering that the farm might be worth significantly more or less than had previously been thought. What in fact he had said to the sheriff was that it had been the preparation of draft accounts for the partnership which had caused the defender to reconsider his financial position and the viability of his purchasing the pursuer's interest in the partnership.

 

[48] Counsel for the pursuer accepted that the sheriff had erred in his account of what had been said to him by the defender's solicitor in this respect, and at the end of the day it was common ground between counsel and the defender's solicitor that the question whether or not cause had been shown for the recall of the incidental order made on 29 November 2005 was at large on appeal.

 

[49] I am bound to say that, having regard to the care with which he had recorded the other submissions that were made to him, I should be very reluctant to think that the sheriff had been mistaken in his understanding of what had been said to him by the defender's solicitor. But since he and counsel were agreed on the point, I do not think that I have much option other than to consider for myself whether or not the incidental order of 29 November 2005 should be recalled. But I do so the more readily since I have no hesitation in saying that I think that the sheriff's decision to refuse to recall the incidental order was correct.

 

[50] It appears from what the sheriff said in paragraphs 18 and 19 of his note that section 14(4) demanded a two-stage approach in which it was necessary to consider, firstly, whether or not cause had been shown for the variation or recall of an incidental order and, secondly, on the assumption that cause had been shown whether or not the court ought in the exercise of its discretion to grant the variation or recall. Given that every decision made by a court in the exercise of a discretion must be reasonable, in other words one for which there is a reason, it is not immediately apparent to me what the words "on cause shown" add to what is in any event meant by the remainder of section 14(4). At all events I must respectfully doubt whether the sheriff was correct to have followed the two-stage approach indicated in paragraphs 18 and 19 of his note. In my opinion the question posed by section 14(4) is a single question, namely whether or not cause has been shown to persuade the court in the exercise of its discretion to grant the variation or recall sought.

 

[51] The defender's solicitor suggested that there were a number of reasons upon which I might rely as demonstrating that cause had been shown for the recall of the incidental order of 29 November 2005. He submitted in the first place that, even if this order was competent, there was no heritable property belonging to the parties at Auchlea Farm. The order was thus redundant and inoperable and so should be recalled. Secondly, said the defender's solicitor, the defender himself had been entitled to consider, after dissolution of the partnership on 31 October 2005, whether he could afford to purchase the pursuer's interest in the partnership. Thirdly the defender had never waived his contractual right to purchase the pursuer's interest in terms of Clause FIFTEENTH of the contract of copartnery. Here the defender's solicitor emphasised that the farm had been a partnership asset at the date of the dissolution of the partnership and remained so since it had not yet been sold. And finally the defender's solicitor submitted that the incidental order was an ancillary order which was intended to assist in giving effect to the principles set out in section 9 of the 1985 Act. In point of fact it did not do so, and here the defender's solicitor referred to the fact, as he put it, that at the time the order had been granted the court had mistakenly considered in light of the pursuer's affidavit that the farm itself had been a matrimonial asset in the joint names of the parties.

 

[52] For the sake of completeness I should record here that in addressing me in support of the defender's second and third grounds of appeal his solicitor suggested that the sheriff had failed to take sufficient weight of the fact that the parties had chosen how to regulate the dissolution of their partnership in terms of the contract of copartnery between them. Both parties, and not merely the defender, ought to have known of the significance of this contract and the fact that the title to the farm was held by them as trustees for the partnership. The incidental order had not been an order for the sale of matrimonial property which was represented by the value of each party's interest in the partnership at the date of their separation. At that time the partnership was ongoing, and it would have continued on the same basis as it always had if the pursuer had not resigned from the partnership. The contract of copartnery was what governed the partnership and its dissolution and the 1985 Act governed the division of the remainder of the matrimonial property. The court was concerned to ensure the fair division of this property. The first stage in doing this was to ascertain what the matrimonial property was. If the provisions of the contract of copartnery then allowed a more favourable financial outcome for one or other party, then the court might take that into account in the division of the matrimonial property. What the court could not do, so it was argued, was to place the terms of the 1985 Act before the terms of the parties' contractual relationship.

 

[53] The defender's solicitor submitted here too that the pursuer ought to have been aware of the terms upon which the title to the farm was held. The potential prejudice to the defender in consequence of the making of the incidental order was significantly greater than that to the pursuer. The defender had expressed a desire to continue to work the farm and the result of its sale would be the loss of both his livelihood and the means by which he had been meeting his alimentary obligations toward the pursuer to the extent of £700 per month. Moreover, if the incidental order were not to be recalled, the parties would end up with the worst of both worlds. They were already engaged in the current proceedings, and they might also find themselves in arbitration proceedings since the value of the moveable partnership assets could not be agreed.

 

[54] Not surprisingly counsel for the pursuer opposed the recall of the incidental order made on 29 November 2005 and, as already indicated, I am in no doubt that the defender's minute for recall of this order should be refused. The blunt fact is that by his actings, or lack of them, in the period between the raising of the action and the continued options hearing on 4 October 2005 the defender effectively indicated his consent to the making of the incidental order. He was represented throughout this period by a reputable firm of solicitors and he must be taken to have understood the significance of offering no opposition to the pursuer's crave 4. In my opinion it simply will not do for him to come back to the court after the order has been made and ask for it to be recalled essentially for no other reason than that he now regrets his decision not to oppose the order. It was, and is, a competent order of the court which can readily be given effect by his joining the pursuer in signing the necessary disposition of the farm and accepting the division of the free proceeds of sale equally between the pursuer and himself, and that in my opinion is what he ought now to do without further delay.

 

[55] The defender's fourth ground of appeal raises a point that was not argued before the sheriff. The defender's solicitor explained that it was only on 10 May 2006, following the diet of debate before the sheriff, that the defender had intimated that he intended to continue the business and to acquire the pursuer's share in terms of Clause FIFTEENTH of the contract of copartnery. This followed the pursuer's resignation from the partnership with effect from 31 October 2005. Thus the defender's fourth ground of appeal is in the following terms:

 

4. The pursuer resigned from the firm of Auchlea Farm on 31 October 2005. On 10 May 2006 the defender intimated his intention to continue the business and acquire the pursuer's share including Auchlea Farm in terms of Clause FIFTEENTH of the parties' contract of copartnery. The defender could not seek to implement Clause FIFTEENTH until after the pursuer's resignation from the partnership. The interlocutor of (29) November 2005 should be recalled since the defender is entitled to acquire the pursuer's interest in the partnership in terms of this Clause.

 

[56] The defender's solicitor submitted that the terms of Clause FIFTEENTH could be relied upon by the defender and that the pursuer was obliged in terms of this to allow the defender the opportunity of purchasing her interest in the partnership. Even if he was wrong in everything that he had said so far it could not, submitted the defender's solicitor, be contended that the defender had waived the right afforded to him under this clause since at the time that the pursuer had sought the order for sale of the farm she had not resigned from the partnership and the right to purchase her share only became exercisable upon her resignation from the partnership.

 

[57] In my opinion the short answer to this ground of appeal is that there is no inconsistency between, on the one hand, the two partners having agreed that the farm itself should be sold and, on the other hand, the defender's option of acquisition in terms of Clause FIFTEENTH. All that will happen is that in the balance sheet to be made up in terms of Clause THIRTEENTH the value of the farm itself will be excluded, the partners having agreed that it should be sold and the proceeds of sale divided among themselves after deduction of debts, burdens and the expenses of sale. But all the remaining assets of the firm will be included in the balance sheet as envisaged in Clause THIRTEENTH.

 

[58] I have already touched upon the third ground of appeal in the pursuer's cross-appeal which is to the effect that the sheriff had erred in determining that the defender had shown cause for the recall of the incidental order. In her first and second grounds of appeal it was submitted in short that the sheriff had erred in determining, as he had, that a minute for recall of an incidental order at the instance of the defender was competent where (a) the defender had consented to the making of the incidental order, and (b) the incidental order had been extracted, and further that the actions of the defender in consenting to the making of the incidental order were insufficient to support the conclusion that he was now personally barred from seeking recall of the order. In view of what I have already said, it is unnecessary that I should express a concluded opinion on these particular issues. I will merely say that an application under section 14(4) of the 1985 Act for the variation or recall of an incidental order is not the same as an appeal against such an order or an application for its reduction, so that considerations which might be of significance in the context of an appeal or process of reduction need not necessarily have the same significance in the context of an application under section 14(4). As the sheriff pointed out in paragraph [16] of his note, the section is not qualified by a statement that an incidental order may only be varied or recalled so far as not extracted. Nor is there a statement that such an order may not be varied if the applicant has previously consented to it. So at first blush it does not seem to me that the fact that an order has been extracted or made of consent should be an automatic bar to its subsequent variation or recall. But of course these matters may well be relevant to the question whether the court should exercise its discretion to vary or recall the order.

 

[59] In addition to the authorities which I have already mentioned, I was also referred to Macphail's Sheriff Court Practice (3rd Edn) at paragraph 18.15, Paterson v Kidd's Trustees 1896 23R 737, Lauder v National Bank of Scotland 1918 1SLT 43, Jones v Jones 1993 SCLR 151, Anthony v Anthony 1999 SC 494, McBryde on Bankruptcy (2nd Edn), paragraphs 9-62/65 and the Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985 section 33(1).

 

[60] It was agreed that the question of the expenses of the appeal should be reserved for a further hearing.

 

 

 

 


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