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An Act to provide as respects Scotland for the variation and discharge of certain obligations relating to land; to facilitate the allocation of feuduties and ground annuals; to reduce the period of positive prescription of 20 years to 10 years; to provide for a new form of heritable security; to make certain amendments to the existing law relating to heritable securities; to make certain other amendments to the law relating to conveyancing; to abolish the rights of pre-emption of heritors in respect of glebes; to amend the Lands Tribunal Act 1949; and for connected purposes.
[29th May 1970]
Be it enacted by the Queen's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:—
(1)The provisions of this section and of section 2 of this Act shall, without prejudice to any other method of variation or discharge, apply for the variation or discharge of any land obligation, however constituted, and whether subsisting at the commencement of this Act or constituted thereafter:
Provided that the provisions of the said sections shall not apply in relation to an obligation specified or referred to in Schedule 1 to this Act.
(2)For the purposes of this section and of section 2 of this Act, a land obligation is an obligation relating to land which is enforceable by a proprietor of an interest in land, by virtue of his being such proprietor, and which is binding upon a proprietor of another interest in that land, or of an interest in other land, by virtue of his being such proprietor.
For the purposes mentioned in this subsection, an obligation includes a future or contingent obligation, an obligation to defray or contribute towards some cost, an obligation to refrain from doing something, and an obligation to permit or suffer something to be done or maintained.
(3)Subject to the provisions of this section and of section 2 of this Act, the Lands Tribunal, on the application of any person who, in relation to a land obligation, is a burdened proprietor, may from time to time by order vary or discharge the obligation wholly or partially in relation to the interest in land in respect of which the application is made, on being satisfied that in all the circumstances,
(a)by reason of changes in the character of the land affected by the obligation or of the neighbourhood thereof or other circumstances which the Tribunal may deem material, the obligation is or has become unreasonable or inappropriate; or
(b)the obligation is unduly burdensome compared with any benefit resulting or which would result from its performance; or
(c)the existence of the obligation impedes some reasonable use of the land.
(4)An order varying or discharging a land obligation under this section may direct the applicant to pay, to any person who in relation to that obligation is a benefited proprietor, such sum as the Lands Tribunal may think it just to award under one, but not both, of the following heads—
(i)a sum to compensate for any substantial loss or disadvantage suffered by the proprietor as such benefited proprietor in consequence of the variation or discharge ; or
(ii)a sum to make up for any effect which the obligation produced, at the time when it was imposed, in reducing the consideration then paid or made payable for the interest in land affected by it;
but the Tribunal may refuse to vary or discharge a land obligation on the ground specified in subsection (3)(c) of this section if they are of the opinion that, due to exceptional circumstances related to amenity or otherwise, money would not be an adequate compensation for any loss or disadvantage which a benefited proprietor would suffer from the variation or discharge.
(5)The power conferred by this section to vary or discharge an obligation includes power to add or substitute any such provision (not being an award of money otherwise than by way of compensation under subsection (4) of this section) as appears to the Lands Tribunal to be reasonable as the result of the variation or discharge of the obligation and as may be accepted by the applicant; and the Tribunal may accordingly refuse to vary or discharge the obligation without some such provision.
(6)On the taking effect of an order under this section varying or discharging to any extent a land obligation, any irritant or resolutive clause or other condition relating to the enforcement of the obligation shall, in relation to any act or omission occurring after the date of such taking effect, be effective (if at all) only in so far as it would have been effective if the obligation had to that extent been varied or discharged by the person entitled to enforce the obligation; and any such added or substituted provision as is referred to in subsection (5) of this section shall be enforceable in the same manner as the obligation to the variation or discharge of which it relates.
(1)On an application under section 1 of this Act, the Lands Tribunal shall give such notice thereof, whether by way of advertisement or otherwise, as may be prescribed, to the persons who, in relation to the obligation which is the subject of the application, appear to them to be either benefited or burdened proprietors, and to such other person as the Tribunal may think fit.
(2)In an application to the Lands Tribunal under section 1 of this Act, any person who, in relation to the obligation which is the subject of the application, is either a burdened or a benefited proprietor, shall be entitled, within such time as may be prescribed, to oppose or make representations in relation to the application, and the Tribunal shall allow any such person, and may allow any other person who appears to them to be affected by the obligation or by its proposed variation or discharge, to be heard in relation to the application.
(3)An order made under section 1 of this Act shall take effect in accordance with such rules as may be prescribed.
(4)Where an order made under section 1 of this Act which has taken effect is duly recorded, it shall be binding on all persons having interest.
(5)Where a land obligation is first created, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, in a conveyance, deed, instrument or writing, no application shall be brought under section 1 of this Act in relation thereto until the expiry of two years after the date of its creation.
(6)For the purposes of this section and of section 1 of this Act,
" benefited proprietor ", in relation to a land obligation, means a proprietor of an interest in land who is entitled, by virtue of his being such proprietor, to enforce the obligation ; and " burdened proprietor ", in relation to such an obligation, means a proprietor of an interest in land upon whom, by virtue of his being such proprietor, the obligation is binding; and—
the benefited proprietor or the burdened proprietor of an interest in land held by two or more persons jointly or in common means either all those persons or any of them ;
the benefited proprietor or the burdened proprietor of an interest in land which is subject to a heritable security constituted by ex facie absolute disposition or assignation includes the person who, if the debt were discharged, would be entitled to be vested in that interest;
" interest in land " means any estate or interest in land which is capable of being owned or held as a separate interest and to which a title may be recorded in the Register of Sasines;
" land obligation " has the meaning assigned to it in section 1(2) of this Act.
(7)Section 189 of the [1966 c. 49.] Housing (Scotland) Act 1966 (power of sheriff to authorise conversion of house into separate dwellings) shall cease to have effect.
(1)The provisions of this section and of sections 4 and 5 of this Act shall, without prejudice to any other method of allocation, apply for the purpose of allocating any cumulo feuduty, whether constituted before or after the commencement of this Act.
(2)For the purposes of this section and of sections 4 and 5 of this Act,
" cumulo feuduty " means the whole of a feuduty which at any given time is exigible in respect of land consisting of two or more parts held by separate proprietors, being a feuduty which at that time has not been allocated upon those parts by the superior or under this Act;
" feu " means the whole land burdened with a cumulo feuduty; and
" land " has the meaning assigned to it in section 3 of the [1874 c. 94.] Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1874.
(3)Any proprietor of part of a feu may serve upon his superior or upon any other person to whom the cumulo feuduty is paid on his behalf a notice of allocation of the portion of the cumulo feuduty which has been apportioned by disposition or other document or by any other method (formal or informal) on the part of the feu of which he is proprietor.
(4)A notice of allocation shall be in, or as nearly as may be in, such form as may be prescribed by regulations made by the Secretary of State by statutory instrument, and shall contain—
(a)the name and address of the proprietor serving the notice and a sufficient identification of the part of the feu of which he is proprietor and on which he wishes the portion of the cumulo feuduty to be allocated, and the name and address of the person to whom that portion is paid;
(b)a statement of the amount of that portion ;
(c)a statement to the effect that that portion of the feuduty is to be allocated under the Conveyancing and Feudal Reform (Scotland) Act 1970 on the part of the feu of which the person serving the notice is the proprietor;
and shall be signed by the proprietor or his agent.
(5)Subject to the provisions of sections 4 and 5 of this Act, a notice of allocation shall be effective to allocate on the part of the feu of which the person serving the notice is the proprietor the portion of the cumulo feuduty stated in the notice.
(1)If a superior upon whom a notice of allocation has been served under section 3 of this Act wishes to object to the amount of the portion of feuduty of which allocation is sought by the proprietor serving the notice, he may, within such time as may be prescribed, apply to the Lands Tribunal, and on such application, the Tribunal (except in so far as they consider it impracticable to do so) shall by order allocate the cumulo feuduty, in such manner as they consider reasonable, on the part of the feu of which the person serving the notice is the proprietor, and on every other part of the feu which is held by a separate proprietor.
(2)On any application to the Lands Tribunal under this section, the Tribunal shall give such notice thereof, whether by way of advertisement or otherwise, as may be prescribed, to the persons who appear to them to be proprietors of parts of the feu in respect of which the cumulo feuduty is exigible, and to such other persons as the Tribunal may think fit; and the Tribunal shall allow the superior of the feu and any such proprietor, and may allow any other person who appears to them to have an interest in the application, to be heard in relation thereto.
(1)Where, under the provisions of this Act, a portion of a cumulo feuduty has been allocated on a part of a feu, that part of the feu shall, in relation to the rights and obligations of the proprietors of the remainder of the feu relating to payment of the remainder of the feuduty, be treated as if it had never been part of the feu and as if the portion of the feuduty allocated on it had never formed part of the cumulo feuduty.
(2)Nothing in section 4 of this Act shall empower the Lands Tribunal to make an order which would result in any alteration of the total amount of feuduty exigible in respect of the feu which, before the making of the order, was burdened with the cumulo feuduty allocated by the order.
(3)An order of the Lands Tribunal under section 4 of this Act allocating the whole of the cumulo feuduty to which the order relates shall supersede for all purposes any existing apportionment of that feuduty.
(4)Where an application is made to the Lands Tribunal under section 4 of this Act in respect of a notice relating to a cumulo feuduty, any notice of allocation relating to that feuduty shall be of no effect.
(5)Subject to the provisions of this section, an allocation of feuduty effected under section 3 or 4 of this Act shall take effect as respects the amount of the feuduty so allocated which becomes exigible at any term occurring not less than 3 months after the service of the notice of allocation or (in the case of an allocation effected by order of the Lands Tribunal) after the date of the order, as if it were effected by a duly recorded memorandum of allocation under the law in force before the commencement of this Act.
(6)In any proceedings, the production of a document purporting to be a copy of a notice of allocation together with a registered post or recorded delivery service receipt addressed to the superior shall be sufficient evidence of the fact and date of service of the notice; and any such copy shall be taken to be a true copy unless the contrary is shown.
(7)For the purposes of this section and of sections 3 and 4 of this Act,
" notice of allocation " means a notice under section 3 of this Act;
" proprietor ", in relation to a part of a feu, includes a person having right to that part but whose title thereto is not complete, and includes a person who is obliged to relieve the proprietor of liability for payment of the whole or part of the cumulo feuduty burdening that feu;
" superior", in relation to a feu, means the immediate superior, and includes a person having right to a superiority but whose title thereto is not complete.
The provisions of sections 3 to 5 of this Act shall apply in relation to a ground annual as they apply in relation to a feuduty, and for the purposes of such application—
" cumulo feuduty " and " feu " shall be construed accordingly ; and
" superior " means the creditor in the ground annual.
Any agreement or other provision, however constituted, shall be void in so far as it purports to exclude or limit the operation of any enactment contained in sections 1 to 6 of this Act.
(1)Section 16 of the [1924 c. 27.] Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1924 (prescription following on title and possession) shall have effect, except in relation to any claim as against the Crown to the ownership of any foreshore or salmon fishings , with the substitution for the references to 20 years of references to 10 years.
(2)The provisions of subsection (1) of this section shall not be pleadable to any effect in any action in dependence at the commencement of this Act, or in any action which shall be commenced prior to the day occurring on the expiry of 2 years from and after such commencement (hereafter in this section referred to as " the appointed day ").
(3)For the purposes of the said section 16, as amended by this section, possession for any space of time prior to the appointed day shall not have effect unless such space of time immediately preceded and was continuous up to that day.
(1)The provisions of this Part of this Act shall have effect for the purpose of enabling a new form of heritable security to be created to be known as a standard security.
(2)It shall be competent to grant and record in the Register of Sasines a standard security over any interest in land to be expressed in conformity with one of the forms prescribed in Schedule 2 to this Act.
(3)A grant of any right over an interest in land for the purpose of securing any debt by way of a heritable security shall only be capable of being effected at law if it is embodied in a standard security.
(4)Where for the purpose last-mentioned any deed which is not in the form of a standard security contains a disposition or assignation of an interest in land, it shall to that extent be void and unenforceable, and where that deed has been duly recorded the creditor in the purported security may be required, by any person having an interest, to grant any deed which may be appropriate to clear the Register of Sasines of that security.
(5)A standard security may be used for any other purpose for which a heritable security may be used if any of the said forms is appropriate to that purpose, and for the purpose of any enactment affecting heritable securities a standard security, if so used, or if used as is required by this Act instead of a heritable security as defined therein, shall be a heritable security for the purposes of that enactment.
(6)The Bankruptcy Act 1696, in so far as it renders a heritable security of no effect in relation to a debt contracted after the recording of that security, and any rule of law which requires that a real burden for money may only be created in respect of a sum specified in the deed of creation, shall not apply in relation to a standard security.
(7)The provisions of this section shall not affect the operation of the Small Dwellings Acquisition (Scotland) Acts 1899 to 1923, except that in section 11(8) of the [1899 c. 44.] Small Dwellings Acquisition Act 1899, in the substitution for section 2(e) of that Act, after the words " other security " there shall be inserted the words " not being a security constituted by an ex facie absolute disposition or assignation, whether qualified by a back letter or not. ".
(8)For the purposes of this Part of this Act—
(a)" heritable security " (except in subsection (5) of this section if the context otherwise requires) means any security capable of being constituted over any interest in land by disposition or assignation of that interest in security of any debt and of being recorded in the Register of Sasines;
(b)" interest in land " means any estate or interest in land, other than an entailed estate or any interest therein, which is capable of being owned or held as a separate interest and to which a title may be recorded in the Register of Sasines;
(c)" debt" means any obligation due, or which will or may become due, to repay or pay money, including any such obligation arising from a transaction or part of a transaction in the course of any trade, business or profession, and any obligation to pay an annuity or ad factum praestandum, but does not include an obligation to pay any feuduty, ground annual, rent or other periodical sum payable in respect of land, and " creditor " and " debtor ", in relation to a standard security, shall be construed accordingly.
(1)The import of the clause relating to the personal obligation contained in Form A of Schedule 2 to this Act expressed in any standard security shall, unless specially qualified, be as follows—
(a)where the security is for a fixed amount advanced or payable at, or prior to, the delivery of the deed, the clause undertaking to make payment to the creditor shall import an acknowledgment of receipt by the debtor of the principal sum advanced or an acknowledgment by the debtor of liability to pay that sum and a personal obligation undertaken by the debtor to repay or pay to the creditor on demand in writing at any time after the date of delivery of the standard security the said sum, with interest at the rate stated payable on the dates specified, together with all expenses for which the debtor is liable by virtue of the deed or of this Part of this Act;
(b)where the security is for a fluctuating amount, whether subject to a maximum amount or not and whether advanced or due partly before and partly after delivery of the deed or whether to be advanced or to become due wholly after such delivery, the clause undertaking to make payment to the creditor shall import a personal obligation by the debtor to repay or pay to the creditor on demand in writing the amount, not being greater than the maximum amount, if any, specified in the deed, advanced or due and outstanding at the time of demand, with interest on each advance from the date when it was made until repayment thereof, or on each sum payable from the date on which it became due until payment thereof, and at the rate stated payable on the dates specified, together with all expenses for which the debtor is liable by virtue of the deed or of this Part of this Act.
(2)The clause of warrandice in the forms of standard security contained in Schedule 2 to this Act expressed in any standard security shall, unless specially qualified, import absolute warrandice as regards the interest in land over which the security is granted and the title deeds thereof, and warrandice from fact and deed as regards the rents thereof.
(3)The clause relating to consent to registration for execution contained in Form A of Schedule 2 to this Act expressed in any standard security shall, unless specially qualified, import a consent to registration in the Books of Council and Session, or, as the case may be, in the books of the appropriate sheriff court, for execution.
(4)The forms of standard security contained in Schedule 2 to this Act shall, unless specially qualified, import an assignation to the creditor of the title deeds, including searches, and all conveyances not duly recorded, affecting the security subjects or any part thereof, with power to the creditor in the event of a sale under the powers conferred by the security, but subject to the rights of any person holding prior rights to possession of those title deeds, to deliver them, so far as in the creditor's possession, to the purchaser, and to assign to the purchaser any right he may possess to have the title deeds made forthcoming.
(1)Where a standard security is duly recorded, it shall operate to vest the interest over which it is granted in the grantee as a security for the performance of the contract to which the security relates.
(2)Subject to the provisions of this Part of this Act, the conditions set out in Schedule 3 to this Act, either as so set out or with such variations as have been agreed by the parties in the exercise of the powers conferred by the said Part (which conditions are hereinafter in this Act referred to as " the standard conditions "), shall regulate every standard security.
(3)Subject to the provisions of this Part of this Act, the creditor and debtor in a standard security may vary any of the standard conditions, other than the provisions of Schedule 3 to this Act relating to the powers of sale, redemption and foreclosure and to the exercise of those powers, but no condition capable of being varied shall be varied in a manner inconsistent with any condition which may not be varied by virtue of this subsection.
(4)In this Part of this Act—
(a)any reference to a variation of the standard conditions shall include a reference to the inclusion of an additional condition and to the exclusion of a standard condition;
(b)any purported variation of a standard condition which contravenes the provisions of subsection (3) of this section shall be void and unenforceable.
(1)Notwithstanding any rule of law, a standard security may be granted over an interest in land by a person having right to that interest, but whose title thereto has not been completed by being duly recorded, if in the deed expressing that security the grantor deduces his title to that interest from the person who appears in the Register of Sasines as having the last recorded title thereto.
(2)A deduction of title in a deed for the purposes of the foregoing subsection shall be expressed in the form prescribed by Note 2 or 3 of Schedule 2 to this Act, and on such a deed being recorded as aforesaid the title of the grantee shall, for the purposes of the rights and obligations between the grantor and the grantee thereof and those deriving right from them, but for no other purpose, in all respects be of the same effect as if the title of the grantor of the deed to the interest to which he has deduced title therein had been duly completed; and any references to a proprietor or to a person last infeft shall in this Part of this Act be construed accordingly.
(3)There may be specified for the purposes of any deduction of title in pursuance of any provision of this Part of this Act any writing which it is competent to specify as a title, midcouple, or link in title for the purposes of section 5 of the [1924 c. 27.] Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1924 (deduction of title).
(1)Where the creditor in a standard security duly recorded has received notice of the creation of a subsequent security over the same interest in land or any part thereof, or of the subsequent assignation or conveyance of that interest in whole or in part, being a security, assignation or conveyance so recorded, the preference in ranking of the security of that creditor shall be restricted to security for his present advances and future advances which he may be required to make under the contract to which the security relates and interest present or future due thereon (including any such interest which has accrued or may accrue) and for any expenses or outlays (including interest thereon) which may be, or may have been, reasonably incurred in the exercise of any power conferred on any creditor by the deed expressing the existing security.
(2)For the purposes of the foregoing subsection—
(a)a creditor in an existing standard security duly recorded shall not be held to have had any notice referred to in that subsection, by reason only of the subsequent recording of the relevant deed in the Register of Sasines;
(b)any assignation, conveyance or vesting in favour of or in any other person of the interest of the debtor in the security subjects or in any part thereof resulting from any judicial decree, or otherwise by operation of law, shall constitute sufficient notice thereof to the creditor.
(3)Nothing in the foregoing provisions of this section shall affect—
(a)any preference in ranking enjoyed by the Crown; and
(b)any powers of the creditor and debtor in any heritable security to regulate the preference to be enjoyed by creditors in such manner as they may think fit.
(1)Any standard security duly recorded may be transferred, in whole or in part, by the creditor by an assignation in conformity with Form A or B of Schedule 4 to this Act, and upon such an assignation being duly recorded, the security, or, as the case may be, part thereof, shall be vested in the assignee as effectually as if the security or the part had been granted in his favour.
(2)An assignation of a standard security shall, except so far as otherwise therein stated, be deemed to convey to the grantee all rights competent to the grantor to the writs, and shall have the effect inter alia of vesting in the assignee—
(a)the full benefit of all corroborative or substitutional obligations for the debt, or any part thereof, whether those obligations are contained in any deed or arise by operation of law or otherwise,
(b)the right to recover payment from the debtor of all expenses properly incurred by the creditor in connection with the security, and
(c)the entitlement to the benefit of any notices served and of all procedure instituted by the creditor in respect of the security to the effect that the grantee may proceed as if he had originally served or instituted such notices or procedure.
(1)The security constituted by any standard security duly recorded may be restricted, as regards any part of the interest in land burdened by the security, by a deed of restriction in conformity with Form C of Schedule 4 to this Act, and, upon that deed being duly recorded, the security shall be restricted to the interest in land contained in the standard security other than the part of that interest disburdened by the deed; and the interest in land thereby disburdened shall be released from the security wholly or to the extent specified in the deed.
(2)A partial discharge-and deed of restriction of a standard security, which has been duly recorded, may be combined in one deed, which shall be in conformity with Form D of the said Schedule 4.
(1)Any alteration in the provisions (including any standard condition) of a standard security duly recorded, other than an alteration which may appropriately be effected by an assignation, discharge or restriction of that standard security, or an alteration which involves an addition to, or an extension of, the interest in land mentioned therein, may be effected by a variation endorsed on the standard security in conformity with Form E of Schedule 4 to this Act, or by a variation contained in a separate deed in a form appropriate for that purpose, duly recorded in either case.
(2)Where a standard security has been duly recorded, but the personal obligation or any other provision (including any standard condition) relating to the security has been created or specified in a deed which has not been so recorded, nothing contained in this section shall prevent any alteration in that personal obligation or provision, other than an alteration which may be appropriately effected by an assignation, discharge or restriction of the standard security, or an alteration which involves an addition to, or an extension of, the interest in land mentioned therein, by a variation contained in any form of deed appropriate for that purpose, and such a variation shall not require to be recorded in the Register of Sasines.
(3)Where the amount secured by a standard security duly recorded is increased by virtue of a variation effected in accordance with this section, then, for the purposes of stamp duty, any such increase shall be treated as an addition, made on the date of the execution of that variation, to the amount repayable by virtue of the debtor's personal obligation.
(4)Any variation effected in accordance with this section shall not prejudice any other security or right over the same interest in land, or any part thereof, effectively constituted before the variation is recorded, or, where the variation is effected by an unrecorded deed, before that deed is executed, as the case may be.
A standard security duly recorded may be discharged, and the interest in land burdened by that security may be disburdened thereof, in whole or in part, by a discharge in conformity with Form F of Schedule 4 to this Act, duly recorded.
(1)The debtor in a standard security or, where the debtor is not the proprietor, the proprietor of the security subjects shall be entitled to redeem the security in conformity with the terms of standard condition 11 and the appropriate Forms of Schedule 5 to this Act.
(2)Where owing to the death or absence of the creditor, or to any other cause, the debtor in a standard security or, as the case may be, the proprietor of the security subjects is unable to obtain a discharge under the last foregoing subsection, he may—
(a)where the security was granted in respect of any obligation to repay or pay money, consign in any bank in Scotland, incorporated by or under Act of Parliament or by Royal Charter, the whole amount due to the creditor on redemption, other than any unascertained expenses of the creditor, for the person appearing to have the best right thereto, and
(b)in any other case, apply to the court for declarator that the whole obligations under the contract to which the security relates have been performed.
(3)On consignation, or on the court granting declarator as aforesaid, a certificate to that effect may be expede by a solicitor in the appropriate form prescribed by Form D of Schedule 5 to this Act, which on being duly recorded shall disburden the interest in land, to which the standard security relates, of that security.
(4)For the purposes of this section, " whole amount due " means the debt to which the security relates, so far as out-, standing, and any other sums due thereunder by way of interest or otherwise.
(1)Where a creditor in a standard security intends to require discharge of the debt thereby secured and, failing that discharge, to exercise any power conferred by the security to sell any subjects of the security or any other power which he may appropriately exercise on the default of the debtor within the meaning of standard condition 9(1)(a), he shall serve a notice calling-up the security in conformity with Form A of Schedule 6 to this Act (hereinafter in this Act referred to as a " calling-up notice "), in accordance with the following provisions of this section.
(2)Subject to the following provisions of this section, a calling-up notice shall be served on the person last infeft in the security subjects and appearing on the record as the proprietor, and should the proprietor of those subjects, or any part thereof, be dead then on his representative or the person entitled to the subjects in terms of the last recorded title thereto, notwithstanding any alteration of the succession not appearing in the Register of Sasines.
(3)Where the person last infeft in the security subjects was an incorporated company which has been removed from the Register of Companies, or a person deceased who has left no representatives, a calling-up notice shall be served on the Lord Advocate and, where the estates of the person last infeft have been sequestrated under the [1913 c. 20.] Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1913, the notice shall be served on the trustee in the sequestration (unless such trustee has been discharged) as well as on the bankrupt.
(4)If the proprietor be a body of trustees, it shall be sufficient if the notice is served on a majority of the trustees infeft in the security subjects.
(5)It shall be an obligation on the creditor to serve a copy of the calling-up notice on any other person against whom he wishes to preserve any right of recourse in respect of the debt.
(6)For the purposes of the foregoing provisions of this section, the service of a calling-up notice may be made by delivery to the person on whom it is desired to be served or the notice may be sent by registered post or by the recorded delivery service to him at his last known address, or, in the case of the Lord Advocate, at the Crown Office, Edinburgh, and an acknowledgment, signed by the person on whom service has been made, in conformity with Form C of Schedule 6 to this Act, or, as the case may be, a certificate in conformity with Form D of that Schedule, accompanied by the postal receipt shall be sufficient evidence of the service of that notice; and if the address of the person on whom the notice is desired to be served is not known, or if it is not known whether that person is still alive, or if the packet containing a calling-up notice is returned to the creditor with an intimation that it could not be delivered, that notice shall be sent to the Extractor of the Court of Session, and shall be equivalent to the service of a calling-up notice on the person on whom it is desired to be served.
(7)For the purposes of the last foregoing subsection, an acknowledgment of receipt by the said Extractor on a copy of a calling-up notice shall be sufficient evidence of the receipt by him of that notice.
(8)A calling-up notice served by post shall be held to have been served on the next day after the day of posting.
(9)Where a creditor in a standard security has indicated in a calling-up notice that any sum and any interest thereon due under the contract may be subject to adjustment in amount, he shall, if the person on whom notice has been served so requests, furnish the debtor with a statement of the amount as finally determined within a period of one month from the date of service of the calling-up notice, and a failure by the creditor to comply with the provisions of this subsection shall cause the calling-up notice to be of no effect.
(10)The period of notice mentioned in the calling-up notice may be effectively dispensed with or shortened by the person on whom it is served, with the consent of the creditors, if any, holding securities pari passu with, or postponed to, the security held by the creditor serving the calling-up notice, by a minute written or endorsed upon the said notice, or a copy thereof, in conformity with Form C of Schedule 6 to this Act.
(11)A calling-up notice shall cease to have effect for the purpose of a sale in the exercise of any power conferred by the security on the expiration of a period of five years, which period shall run—
(a)in the case where the subjects of the security, or any part thereof, have not been offered for or exposed to sale, from the date of the notice,
(b)in the case where there has been such an offer or expo sure, from the date of the last offer or exposure.
(1)Where the debtor in a standard security is in default within the meaning of standard condition 9(1)(a), the creditor may exercise such of his rights under the security as he may consider appropriate, and any such right shall be in addition to and not in derogation from any other remedy arising from the contract to which the security relates or from any right conferred by any enactment or by any rule of law on the creditor in a heritable security.
(2)Where the debtor is in default as aforesaid, the creditor shall have the right to sell the security subjects, or any part thereof, in accordance with the provisions of this Part of this Act.
(3)A creditor in a standard security who is in lawful possession of the security subjects may let the security subjects, or any part thereof, for any period not exceeding seven years, or may make application to the court for warrant to let those subjects, or any part thereof, for a period exceeding seven years, and the application shall state the proposed tenant, and the duration and conditions of the proposed lease, and shall be served on the proprietor of the subjects and on any other heritable creditor having interest as such a creditor in the subjects.
(4)The court, on such an application as aforesaid and after such inquiry and such further intimation of the application as it may think fit, may grant the application as submitted, or subject to such variation as it may consider reasonable in all the circumstances of the case, or may refuse the application.
(5)There shall be deemed to be assigned to a creditor who is in lawful possession of the security subjects all rights and obligations of the proprietor relating to—
(a)leases, or any permission or right of occupancy, granted in respect of those subjects or any part thereof, and
(b)the management and maintenance of the subjects and the effecting of any reconstruction, alteration or improvement reasonably required for the purpose of maintaining the market value of the subjects.
(1)Where the debtor in a standard security is in default within the meaning of standard condition 9(1)(b), and the default is remediable, the creditor may, without prejudice to any other powers he may have by virtue of this Act or otherwise, proceed in accordance with the provisions of this section to call on the debtor and on the proprietor, where he is not the debtor, to purge the default.
(2)For the aforesaid purpose the creditor may serve on the debtor and, as the case may be, on the proprietor a notice in conformity with Form B of Schedule 6 to this Act (hereinafter in this Act referred to as a " notice of default") which shall be served in the like manner and with the like requirements as to proof of service as a calling-up notice.
(3)For the purpose of dispensing with, or shortening, the period of notice mentioned in a notice of default, section 19(10) of this Act shall apply as it applies in relation to a calling-up notice.
(4)Notwithstanding the failure to comply with any requirement contained in the notice, a notice of default shall cease to be authority for the exercise of the rights mentioned in section 23(2) of this Act on the expiration of a period of five years from the date of the notice.
(1)Where a person on whom a notice of default has been served considers himself aggrieved by any requirement of that notice he may, within a period of fourteen days of the service of the notice, object to the notice by way of application to the court; and the applicant shall, not later than the lodging of that application, serve a copy of his application on the creditor, and on any other party on whom the notice has been served by the creditor.
(2)On any such application the court, after hearing the parties and making such inquiry as it may think fit, may order the notice appealed against to be set aside, in whole or in part, or otherwise to be varied, or to be upheld.
(3)The respondent in any such application may make a counter-application craving for any of the remedies conferred on him by this Act or by any other enactment relating to heritable securities, and the court may grant any such remedy as aforesaid as it may think proper.
(4)For the purposes of such a counter-application as aforesaid, a certificate which conforms with the requirements of Schedule 7 to this Act may be lodged in court by the creditor, and that certificate shall be prima facie evidence of the facts directed by the said Schedule to be contained therein.
(1)Where a person does not object to a notice of default in accordance with the provisions of the last foregoing section, or where he has so objected and the notice has been upheld or varied under that section, it shall be his duty to comply with any requirement, due to be performed or fulfilled by him, contained in the notice or, as the case may be, in the notice as so varied.
(2)Subject to the provisions of section 21(4) of this Act, where a person fails to comply as aforesaid, the creditor, subject to the next following subsection, may proceed to exercise such of his rights on default under standard condition 10(2), (6) and (7) as he may consider appropriate.
(3)At any time after the expiry of the period stated in a notice of default, or in a notice varied as aforesaid, but before the conclusion of any enforceable contract to sell the security subjects, or any part thereof, by virtue of the last foregoing subsection, the debtor or proprietor may, subject to any agreement to the contrary, redeem the security without the necessity of observance of any requirement as to notice.
(1)Without prejudice to his proceeding by way of notice of default in respect of a default within the meaning of standard condition 9(1)(b), a creditor in a standard security, where the debtor is in default within the meaning of that standard condition or standard condition 9(1)(c), may apply to the court for warrant to exercise any of the remedies which he is entitled to exercise on a default within the meaning of standard condition 9(1)(a).
(2)For the purposes of such an application as aforesaid in respect of a default within the meaning of standard condition 9(1)(M, a certificate which conforms with the requirements of Schedule 7 to this Act may be lodged in court by the creditor, and that certificate shall be prima facie evidence of the facts directed by the said Schedule to be contained therein.
A creditor in a standard security having right to sell the security subjects may exercise that right either by private bargain or by exposure to sale, and in either event it shall be the duty of the creditor to advertise the sale and to take all reasonable steps to ensure that the price at which all or any of the subjects are sold is the best that can be reasonably obtained.
(1)Where a creditor in a standard security has effected a sale of the security subjects, or any part thereof, and grants to the purchaser or his nominee a disposition of the subjects sold thereby, which bears to be in implement of the sale, then, on that disposition being duly recorded, those subjects shall be disburdened of the standard security and of all other heritable securities and diligences ranking pari passu with, or postponed to, that security.
(2)Where on a sale as aforesaid the security subjects remain subject to a prior security, the recording of a disposition under the foregoing subsection shall not affect the rights of the creditor in that security, but the creditor who has effected the sale shall have the like right as the debtor to redeem the security.
(1)The money which is received by the creditor in a standard security, arising from any sale by him of the security subjects, shall be held by him in trust to be applied by him in accordance with the following order of priority—
(a)first, in payment of all expenses properly incurred by him in connection with the sale, or any attempted sale ;
(b)secondly, in payment of the whole amount due under any prior security to which the sale is not made subject;
(c)thirdly, in payment of the whole amount due under the standard security, and in payment, in due proportion, of the whole amount due under a security, if any, ranking pari passu with his own security, which has been duly recorded;
(d)fourthly, in payment of any amounts due under any securities with a ranking postponed to that of his own security, according to their ranking,
and any residue of the money so received shall be paid to the person entitled to the security subjects at the time of sale, or to any person authorised to give receipts for the proceeds of the sale thereof.
(2)Where owing to the death or absence of any other creditor, or to any other cause, a creditor is unable to obtain a receipt or discharge for any payment he is required to make under the provisions of the foregoing subsection, he may, without prejudice to his liability to account therefor, consign the amount due (so far as ascertainable) in the sheriff court for the person appearing to have the best right thereto; and where consignation is so made, the creditor shall lodge in court a statement of the amount consigned.
(3)A consignation made in pursuance of the last foregoing subsection shall operate as a discharge of the payment of the amount due, and a certificate under the hand of the sheriff clerk shall be sufficient evidence thereof.
(1)Where the creditor in a standard security has exposed the security subjects to sale at a price not exceeding the amount due under the security and under any security ranking prior to, or pari passu with, the security, and has failed to find a purchaser, or where, having so failed, he has succeeded in selling only a part of the subjects at a price which is less than the amount due as aforesaid, he may, on the expiration of a period of two months from the date of the first exposure to sale, apply to the court for a decree of foreclosure.
(2)In any application under the last foregoing subsection the creditor shall lodge a statement setting out the whole amount due under the security but, without prejudice to the right of the debtor or of the proprietor to challenge that statement, it shall be sufficient for the purposes of the application for the creditor to establish to the satisfaction of the court that the amount so stated is not less than the price at which the security subjects have been exposed to sale or sold, where part of the subjects has been sold as aforesaid.
(3)Any application under subsection (1) of this section shall be served on the debtor in the standard security, the proprietor of the security subjects (if he is a person other than the debtor) and the creditor in any other heritable security affecting the security subjects as disclosed by a search of the Register of Sasines for a period of twenty years immediately preceding the last date to which the appropriate Minute Book of the said Register has been completed at the time when the application is made.
(4)The court may order such intimation and inquiry as it thinks fit and may in its discretion allow the debtor or the proprietor of the security subjects a period not exceeding three months in which to pay the whole amount due under the security and, subject to any such allowance, may—
(a)appoint the security subjects or the unsold part thereof to be re-exposed to sale at a price to be fixed by the court, in which event the creditor in the security may bid and purchase at the sale, or
(b)grant a decree of foreclosure in conformity with the provisions of the next following subsection.
(5)A decree of foreclosure shall contain a declaration that, on the extract of the decree being duly recorded, the debtor's right of redemption under the standard security has been extinguished and that the creditor has right to the security subjects or the unsold part thereof, described by means of a particular description or by reference to a description thereof as in Schedule D to the [1924 c. 27.] Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1924 or in Schedule G to the [1868 c. 101.] Titles to Land Consolidation (Scotland) Act 1868, including a reference to any conditions or clauses affecting the subjects or the unsold part thereof, at the price at which the said subjects were last exposed to sale under deduction of the price received for any part thereof sold, and shall also contain a warrant for recording the extract of the decree in the Register of Sasines.
(6)Upon an extract of the decree of foreclosure being duly recorded, the following provisions of this subsection shall have effect in relation to the security subjects to which the decree relates—
(a)the debtor's right of redemption shall be extinguished, and the creditor shall have right to, and be vested in, the subjects as if he had received an irredeemable disposition thereof duly recorded from the proprietor of the subjects at the date of the recording of the extract of the decree;
(b)the subjects shall be disburdened of the standard security and all securities and diligences postponed thereto ;
(c)the creditor who has obtained the decree shall have the like right as the debtor to redeem any security prior to, or pari passu with, his own security.
(7)Notwithstanding the due recording of an extract of a decree of foreclosure, any personal obligation of the debtor under the standard security shall remain in full force and effect so far as not extinguished by the price at which the security subjects have been acquired and the price for which any part thereof has been sold.
(8)Where the security subjects or any part thereof have been acquired by a creditor in the security by virtue of a decree of foreclosure under the provisions of this section, the title thereto of the creditor shall not be challengeable on the ground of any irregularity in the proceedings for foreclosure or on calling-up or default which preceded it; but nothing in the provisions of this subsection shall affect the competency of any claim for damages in respect of such proceedings against the creditor.
(1)The court for the purposes of this Part of this Act, and for the operation of section 11 of the [1894 c. 44.] Heritable Securities (Scotland) Act 1894 (application by pari passu creditor to sell), in relation to a standard security, shall be the sheriff having jurisdiction over any part of the security subjects, and the sheriff shall be deemed to have such jurisdiction whatever the value of the subjects.
(2)Any application, or counter-application to the court under this Part of this Act shall be by way of summary application.
(3)An interlocutor of the sheriff disposing of any cause under this Part of this Act shall be final, except as to a question of title.
(1)In this Part of this Act, unless the context otherwise requires, the following expressions have the meanings hereby respectively assigned to them, that is to say—
" creditor " and " debtor " shall include any successor in title, assignee or representative of a creditor or debtor ;
" debt " and " creditor " and " debtor ", in relation to a standard security, have the meanings assigned to them by section 9(8) of this Act;
" duly recorded " means recorded in the appropriate division of the General Register of Sasines; " exposure to sale " means exposure to sale by public roup, and exposed or re-exposed to sale shall be construed accordingly;
" heritable security " has the meaning assigned to it by the said section 9(8);
" interest in land " has the meaning assigned to it by the said section 9(8);
" Register of Sasines " means the appropriate division of the General Register of Sasines;
" the standard conditions " are the conditions (whether varied or not) referred to in section 11 (2) of this Act;
" whole amount due " has the meaning assigned to it by section 18(4) of this Act.
(2)For the purpose of construing this Part of this Act in relation to the creation of a security over a registered lease and to any subsequent transactions connected with that security, the following expressions shall have the meanings hereby respectively assigned to them, that is to say—
" conveyance " or " disposition " means assignation ;
" convey " or " dispone " means assign ;
" infeft " means having a recorded title ;
" proprietor " means lessee ;
" security subjects " means a registered lease subject to a security.
Nothing in the provisions of this Part of this Act shall affect the validity of any heritable security within the meaning of this Part which has been duly recorded before the commencement of this Act, and any such security may be dealt with, and shall be as capable of being enforced, as if this Part had not been passed.
The provisions of any enactment relating to a bond and disposition or assignation in security shall apply to a standard security, except in so far as such provisions are inconsistent with the provisions of this Part of this Act, but, without prejudice to the generality of that exception, the enactments specified in Schedule 8 to this Act shall not so apply.
(1)For the avoidance of doubt, it is hereby declared that for the purposes of section 33 of the Act of 1924 (notice of calling-up security) a creditor in possession of the land disponed in security may adapt the form of notice contained in Form No. 1 of Schedule M to the said Act by stating that the principal sum and interest thereon specified in that notice is subject to adjustment in amount as calculated in a statement of relevant intromissions.
(2)The person on whom notice as aforesaid is served may request the creditor to furnish to him a statement as aforesaid, in a case to which the foregoing subsection applies, within a period of one month from the date of service of the notice calling-up the security, and a failure by the creditor to comply with that request shall cause the notice of calling-up to be of no effect.
With a view to making provision for the service of notices required to be served for the purposes of the said section 33 on persons who are not known to be alive or dead, section 34 of the Act of 1924 (service of notice of calling-up) shall have effect as if after the words " is not known," there were inserted the words " or if it is not known whether such a person is still alive ".
(1)The creditor in a bond and disposition in security may exercise his power to sell the land disponed in security by way of sale by private bargain for the best price that can be reasonably obtained.
(2)In relation to a sale by private bargain, the Act of 1924, except as respects amendments thereto made by this Act, shall have effect subject to the following modifications—
(a)any reference to sale by public roup shall include a reference to a sale by private bargain, and any reference to exposure to sale, however worded, shall include a reference to an offer for sale;
(b)any reference to the upset price of the land, or any part thereof, shall be omitted ;
(c)section 39 shall be omitted.
(3)Nothing in the provisions of this section shall authorise a sale under warrant of the sheriff in pursuance of section 11 of the Act of 1894 (empowering by sheriff of pari passu security holder to sell pari passu security) to be by way of private bargain.
For section 38 of the Act of 1924 there shall be substituted the following section—
(1)An advertisement for the purposes of an exposure to sale shall be inserted at least once weekly during a period of not less than three consecutive weeks in accordance with the provisions of this section, and the exposure to sale so advertised shall take place within a period of fourteen days beginning with the day following the day of the publication of the third advertisement required under this subsection.
(2)An advertisement for the purposes of an offer for sale by private bargain shall be inserted in like manner during a period of not less than two consecutive weeks, and it shall be a requirement of a competent sale that an enforceable contract to sell shall be concluded within a period of twenty-eight days beginning with the day following the day of the publication of the second advertisement required under this subsection.
(3)Insertion of an advertisement for the purposes of the two foregoing subsections shall be as follows, that is to say—
(a)in the case of land situated in the county of Midlothian, in at least one daily newspaper published in Edinburgh;
(b)in the case of land situated in the county of Lanark, in at least one daily newspaper published in Glasgow;
(c)in the case of land situated elsewhere in Scotland, in at least one daily newspaper published in Scotland circulating in the district where the land or the main part thereof is situated and in at least one newspaper (if any) circulating as aforesaid and published either in the county in which the land, or any part thereof, is situated or in a county (being a county in Scotland) adjacent to that county.
(4)A copy of an advertisement required by this section shall, when supported by a certificate of publication by the publisher, printer, or editor of the newspaper in which that advertisement is inserted, be sufficient evidence of the insertion and publication thereof.
(5)For the purposes of this section—
(a)a week means the period between midnight on Saturday night and midnight on the succeeding Saturday night, and
(b)" exposure to sale " and " offer for sale " respectively include re-exposure to sale and re-offer for sale.”
Section 40 of the Act of 1924 (exposure in lots and apportionment of feu-duty etc.) shall be amended as follows—
(a)for the words from the beginning to the words " price or prices and," there shall be substituted the words—
“(1)The land, or any part thereof, may be exposed to, or offered for, sale either in whole or in lots, and in the former case at such upset price or prices as the creditor may think proper, and in the latter case at the best price that can be reasonably obtained,”and
(b)at the end there shall be added the following subsections—
“(2)Where there is a sale as aforesaid in lots, the creditor shall have power to create such rights and impose such duties and conditions as he considers may be reasonably required for the proper management, maintenance and use of any part of the land to be held in common by the owners for the time being of the lots.
(3)For the purpose of exercising the power conferred by the last foregoing subsection, a creditor shall have the like right as has a proprietor by virtue of section 32 of the [1874 c. 94.] Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1874 to execute and record to the like effect a deed of declaration of conditions in the manner prescribed by that section.”.
For subsection (2) of section 41 of the Act of 1924 (protection of purchasers) there shall be substituted the following subsection—
“(2)Where a disposition of land is duly recorded in the appropriate Register of Sasines and that disposition bears to be granted in the exercise of a power of sale contained in a deed granting a bond and disposition in security, and true exercise of that power was ex facie regular, the title of a bona fide purchaser of the land for value shall not be challengeable on the ground that the debt had ceased to exist, unless that fact appeared in the said Register, or was known to the purchaser prior to the payment of the price, or on the ground of any irregularity relating to the sale or in any preliminary procedure thereto; but nothing in the provisions of this subsection shall affect the competency of any claim for damages in respect of the sale of the land against the person exercising the said power.”;
but in relation to a disposition duly recorded before the commencement of this Act the said subsection shall continue to have effect as originally enacted.
(1)Section 8 of the Act of 1894 (provisions for security holders becoming proprietors of security subjects) shall be amended a :s follows—
(a)in the first sentence, the words " or at any lower price " shall be omitted ; and
(b)in the second sentence, after the words " extinguished, and " there shall be inserted the words " as from the date of the said recording ".
and for the words " as from tin date of such decree " there shall be substituted the words " as from that date ".
(2)In Schedule (1)) to the Act of 1894 (form of decree under the said, section 8), for the words " this date " there shall be substituted the words " the date on which an extract of this decree is recorded in the appropriate register ". and after the word " petitioner " there shall be inserted the words " as from the said date, ".
(1)Where land is held in security by virtue of a heritable security constituted by ex facie absolute conveyance, whether qualified by a back letter or not, a discharge by the creditor in security in conformity with Schedule 9 to this Act, either as a separate dead or as a deed endorsed on the conveyance, shall, as from tine date on which that discharge is duly recorded, discharge that heritable security, disburden the land to the extent that it is the subject of the security, and vest that land in the person entitled thereto in like manner and to the like effect as if a conveyance containing a clause of warrandice from fact and deed only and all other usual and necessary clauses had been granted by the creditor to that person and duly recorded.
(2)Nothing in the provisions of the foregoing subsection shall affect any method of granting a discharge in existence at the commencement of this Act.
(1)Where the discharge, in whole or in part, of a security over land is duly recorded, whether before or after the commencement of this Act, and that discharge bears to be granted by a person entitled so to do, the title of a person to any subsequent interest in the land, acquired bona fide and for value, shall not be challengeable, after the expiration of a period of five years commencing with the date of the recording of the discharge, by reason only of the recording of an extract of a decree of reduction of the discharge, whether or not the date of that decree was before or after the date on which the acquisition of the interest was duly recorded.
(2)Section 46 of the Act of 1924 (which requires extract decrees of reduction of certain deeds to be recorded) shall cease to apply in relation to a decree of reduction of a discharge of a security where that discharge has been duly recorded for a period of five years or more, but the provisions of this subsection shall not preclude the recording of such a decree of reduction as provided for in the said section 46.
(3)Nothing in the provisions of this section shall affect any rights of a creditor in a security as against the debtor therein.
(4)The provisions of this section shall not be pleadable to any effect in any action begun, whether before or after the date of the commencement of this Act, before the expiry of a period of two years beginning with that date.
Section 13 of this Act shall apply, in relation to the effect on the preference in ranking of any heritable security, constituted by ex facie absolute disposition or assignation, as it applies to the preference in ranking of a standard security.
(1)In this Part of this Act, unless the context otherwise requires, the following expressions have the meanings hereby respectively assigned to them, that is to say—
" the Act of 1894 " means the [1894 c. 44.] Heritable Securities (Scotland) Act 1894;
" the Act of 1924 " means the [1924 c. 27.] Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1924;
" land " has the meaning assigned to it by section 2(1) of the Act of 1924.
(2)For the purpose of construing this Part of this Act in relation to the creation of a security over a registered lease and
(1)Subject to the provisions of subsection (2) of this section, where—
(a)a conveyance, deed, instrument or writing, whether relating to land or not;
(b)an inventory, appendix, schedule, plan or other document annexed to such a conveyance, deed, instrument or writing,
is subscribed and (where appropriate) sealed on the last page, it shall be no objection to its probative character that it is not subscribed or, as the case may be, subscribed and sealed on every other page.
(2)Nothing in subsection (1) of this section shall affect the law relating to wills or other testamentary writings.
An extract, whether issued before or after the commencement of this Act, of a conveyance, deed, instrument or other document bearing to have been recorded in the Register of Sasines shall be accepted for all purposes as sufficient evidence of the contents of the original so recorded and of any matter relating thereto appearing on the extract.
(1)For the avoidance of doubt, in section 9 of the [1938 c. 24.] Conveyancing Amendment (Scotland) Act 1938 (which limits the effect of conditions as to pre-emption), subsection (1) shall have effect subject to the following amendments—
(a)by inserting after the words " by the proprietor of the feu " the words " (whether or not that right purports to be exercisable on more than one occasion) " ; and
(b)by substituting for the words " intimate his intention to exercise such right of pre-emption " the words " accept the offer.".
(2)In the said subsection, for the reference to forty days there shall be substituted a reference to twenty-one days. to any subsequent transactions connected with that security, section 30(2) shall apply as it applies to Part II of this Act, and any reference to a security over land, however expressed, shall be construed as a reference to a registered lease subject to a security, and " land " shall be construed accordingly.
The provisions of Part I of Schedule 10 and Part I of Schedule 11 to this Act shall apply for the purpose of abolishing the requirement that in certain cases the granter of a deed who has a duly recorded title must specify his title in the deed.
The provisions of Part II of Schedule 11 to this Act shall apply for the purpose of repealing certain provisions for the assignation of unrecorded conveyances, deeds and leases and for the completion of title by assignees under such assignations by the recording of the conveyance, deed or lease together with the assignation.
The obligation imposed upon the General Trustees by section 37 of the [1925 c. 33.] Church of Scotland (Property and Endowments) Act 1925 (powers of General Trustees), before selling or feuing a glebe or any part thereof, to give to the heritor or heritors whose lands adjoin such glebe or part an opportunity to purchase or take the same in feu, is hereby abolished.
In this section, " the General Trustees" has the meaning assigned to it in section 47 of the said Act.
(1)In the [1949 c. 42.] Lands Tribunal Act 1949 (hereafter in this section called " the principal Act"), in section 2 (members, officers and expenses of Lands Tribunal), for paragraph (b) and (c) of subsection (9) there shall be substituted the following paragraph:—
“(b)for subsection (2), of the following subsection:—
“(2)The President shall be a person appearing to the Lord President of the Court of Session to be suitably qualified by the holding of judicial office or by experience as an advocate or solicitor, and of the other members of the Lands Tribunal such number as the Lord President of the Court of Session may determine shall be persons so qualified, and the others shall be persons who have had experience in the valuation of land appointed after consultation with the chairman of the Scottish Branch of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors.”.”
(2)In section 3 of the principal Act (procedure, appeals, costs and fees), for paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of subsection (12) there shall be substituted the following paragraphs:—
“(a)for subsection (4) of this section there shall be substituted the following subsection:—
“(4)Section 9 of the [1958 c. 66.] Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1958 (appeals from certain tribunals) shall apply, subject to the modifications specified in subsection (6) of that section, to proceedings before the Lands Tribunal as it applies to proceedings before the tribunals referred to in subsection (1) of that section.”.
(b)for paragraph (c) of subsection (6) of this section there shall be substituted the following paragraph:—
“(c)provide for requiring persons to attend to give evidence and produce documents, and for authorising the administration of oaths to witnesses, and for granting to any person such recovery of documents as might be granted by the Court of Session.”;
(c)any person who without reasonable excuse fails to comply with any requirement imposed by rules under this section in accordance with paragraph (c) of subsection (6) of this section shall be guilty of an offence and liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding £50 or imprisonment for a term not exceeding three months or both ;
(d)any order of the Tribunal may be recorded for execution in the Books of Council and Session and shall be enforceable accordingly ;
(e)the rule-making authority for the purposes of this Act shall be the Secretary of State.”.
This Act shall, subject to any exceptions stated therein, apply to land held of the Crown and of the Prince and Steward of Scotland, and to land in which there is any other interest belonging to Her Majesty in right of the Crown or to a Government department, or held on behalf of Her Majesty for the purposes of a Government department, in like manner as it applies to other land.
(1)Any procedure, notice, advertisement, certificate or warrant instituted, given or granted, or any other thing done under any enactment amended or disapplied by this Act, shall not be invalidated by the coming into force of that amendment or disapplication, but it and any sale or other proceedings dependent thereon shall have effect as if this Act had not come into operation.
(2)The enactments specified in Schedule 10 to this Act shall have effect subject to the amendments specified in that Schedule, being minor amendments and amendments consequential on the provisions of this Act.
(3)The enactments specified in Schedule 11 to this Act are hereby repealed to the extent specified in relation thereto in that Schedule.
(1)It shall be sufficient compliance with any provisions in this Act which require any deed, notice, certificate or procedure to be in conformity with a Form or Note, or other requirement of this Act, that that deed, notice, certificate or procedure so conforms as closely as may be, and nothing in this Act shall preclude the inclusion of any additional matter which the person granting the deed or giving or serving the notice or giving the certificate or adopting the procedure may consider relevant.
(2)In any Form prescribed by Schedules 2, 4, 5, 6 and 9 to this Act, and in any Note to those Schedules, the expression " Register for " means the Register of Sasines appropriate for.
(3)Any reference in this Act to any other enactment is a reference thereto as amended, and includes a reference thereto as extended or applied, by or under any other enactment, including this Act.
(4)In this Act, except Part II, unless the context otherwise requires—
" conveyance ", " deed " and " instrument " have the meanings assigned to them in section 3 of the [1868 c. 101.] Titles to Land Consolidation (Scotland) Act 1868, section 3 of the [1874 c. 94.] Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1874, and section 2 of the [1924 c. 27.] Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1924 ;
" duly recorded " means recorded in the appropriate Register of Sasines;
" Lands Tribunal " means the Lands Tribunal for Scotland ;
" prescribed " means prescribed by rules made under section 3 of the Lands Tribunal Act 1949 ;
" Register of Sasines " has the meaning assigned to it in section 2 of the Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1924.
(1)This Act may be cited as the Conveyancing and Feudal Reform (Scotland) Act 1970.
(2)This Act shall come into operation—
(a)except as respects sections 1 to 6, section 50, sections 51 to 53 in so far as they relate to those sections, and this section, at the expiration of a period of six months beginning with the date on which it is passed,
(b)as respects sections 1 to 6 and sections 51 to 53 in so far as they relate to those sections, on such date as the Secretary of State may by order made by statutory instrument appoint, and different days may be appointed for different provisions,
(c)as respects section 50, sections 51 to 53 in so far as they relate thereto, and this section, on the passing of this Act;
and any reference in any provision of this Act to the commencement of this Act shall, unless otherwise provided by any such order, be construed as a reference to the date on which that provision comes into operation.
(3)This Act shall extend to Scotland only.
Section 1.
1An obligation to pay feuduty, ground annual, rent, skat, dry multure, teind, stipend, standard charge or other payment of a like nature, or an obligation of relief relating to any such payment.
2An obligation, however constituted, relating to the right to work minerals or to any ancillary right in relation to minerals within the meaning of section 2 of the [1966 c. 4.] Mines (Working Facilities and Support) Act 1966.
3An obligation imposed by or on behalf of the Crown for the protection of any royal park, garden or palace.
4An obligation created or imposed—
(i)for naval, military or air force purposes;
(ii)for civil aviation purposes under the powers conferred by section 19 or 23 of the [1949 c. 67.] Civil Aviation Act 1949 or any enactment replaced thereby:
Provided that this paragraph—
(i)shall exclude the application of section 1 of this Act to an obligation falling within sub-paragraph (i) above, and not created or imposed in connection with the use of any land as an aerodrome, only so long as the obligation is enforceable by or on behalf of the Crown; and
(ii)shall exclude the application of section 1 of this Act to an obligation falling within sub-paragraph (ii) above, or created or imposed in connection with the use of any land as an aerodrome, only so long as the obligation is enforceable by or on behalf of the Crown or any public or international authority.
5An obligation created or imposed in or in relation to a lease of—
(a)an agricultural holding, within the meaning of the [1949 c. 75.] Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1949;
(b)a holding, within the meaning of the Small Landholders (Scotland) Acts 1886 to 1931; or
(c)a croft, within the meaning of the [1955 c. 21.] Crofters (Scotland) Act 1955.
Sections 9 and 10.
Section 11.
1It shall be an obligation on the debtor—
(a)to maintain the security subjects in good and sufficient repair to the reasonable satisfaction of the creditor ;
(b)to permit, after seven clear days notice in writing, the creditor or his agent to enter upon the security subjects at all reasonable times to examine the condition thereof;
(c)to make all necessary repairs and make good all defects in pursuance of his obligation under head (a) of this condition within such reasonable period as the creditor may require by notice in writing.
2It shall be an obligation on the debtor—
(a)to complete, as soon as may be practicable, any unfinished buildings and works forming part of the security subjects to the reasonable satisfaction of the creditor ;
(b)not to demolish, alter or add to any buildings or works forming part of the security subjects, except in accordance with the terms of a prior written consent of the creditor and in compliance with any consent, licence or approval required by law ;
(c)to exhibit to the creditor at his request evidence of that consent, licence or approval.
3It shall be an obligation on the debtor—
(a)to observe any condition or perform any obligation in respect of the security subjects lawfully binding on him in relation to the security subjects ;
(b)to make due and punctual payment of any ground burden, teind, stipend, or standard charge, and any rates, taxes and other public burdens, and any other payments exigible in respect of the security subjects ;
(c)to comply with any requirement imposed upon him in relation to the security subjects by virtue of any enactment.
4It shall be an obligation on the debtor—
(a)where he has received any notice or order, issued or made by virtue of the Town and Country Planning (Scotland) Acts 1947 to 1969 or any amendment thereof, or any proposal so made for the making or issuing of any such notice or order, or any other notice or document affecting or likely to affect the security subjects, to give to the creditor, within fourteen days of the receipt of that notice, order or proposal, full particulars thereof ;
(b)to take, as soon as practicable, all reasonable or necessary steps to comply with such a notice or order or, as the case may be, duly to object thereto ;
(c)in the event of the creditor so requiring, to object or to join with the creditor in objecting to any such notice or order or in making representations against any proposal therefor.
5It shall be an obligation on the debtor—
(a)to insure the security subjects or, at the option of the creditor, to permit the creditor to insure the security subjects in the names of the creditor and the debtor to the extent of the market value thereof against the risk of fire and such other risks as the creditor may reasonably require;
(b)to deposit any policy of insurance effected by the debtor for the aforesaid purpose with the creditor;
(c)to pay any premium due in respect of any such policy, and, where the creditor so requests, to exhibit a receipt therefor not later than the fourteenth day after the renewal date of the policy ;
(d)to intimate to the creditor, within fourteen days of the occurrence, any occurrence which may give rise to a claim under the policy, and to authorise the creditor to negotiate the settlement of the claim;
(e)without prejudice to any obligation to the contrary enforce able against him, to comply with any reasonable requirement of the creditor as to the application of any sum received in respect of such a claim ;
(f)to refrain from any act or omission which would invalidate the policy.
6It shall be an obligation on the debtor not to let, or agree to let, the security subjects, or any part thereof, without the prior consent in writing of the creditor, and " to let" in this condition includes to sub-let.
7(1)The creditor shall be entitled to perform any obligation imposed by the standard conditions on the debtor, which the debtor has failed to perform.
(2)Where it is necessary for the performance of any obligation as aforesaid, the creditor may, after giving seven clear days notice in writing to the debtor, enter upon the security subjects at all reasonable times.
(3)AH expenses and charges (including any interest thereon), reasonably incurred by the creditor in the exercise of a right conferred by this condition, shall be recoverable from the debtor and shall be deemed to be secured by the security subjects under the standard security, and the rate of any such interest shall be the rate in force at the relevant time in respect of advances secured by the security, or, where no such rate is prescribed, shall be the bank rate in force at the relevant time.
8The creditor shall be entitled, subject to the terms of the security and to any requirement of law, to call-up a standard security in the manner prescribed by section 19 of this Act.
9(1)The debtor shall be held to be in default in any of the following circumstances, that is to say—
(a)where a calling-up notice in respect of the security has been served and has not been complied with ;
(b)where there has been a failure to comply with any other requirement arising out of the security ;
(c)where the proprietor of the security subjects has become insolvent.
(2)For the purposes of this condition, the proprietor shall be taken to be insolvent if—
(a)he has become notour bankrupt, or he has executed a trust deed for behoof of, or has made a composition contract or arrangement with, his creditors ;
(b)he has died and a judicial factor has been appointed under section 163 of the [1913 c. 20.] Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1913 to divide his insolvent estate among his creditors, or an order has been made for the administration of his estate according to the law of bankruptcy under section 130 of the [1914 c. 59.] Bankruptcy Act 1914, or by virtue of an order of the Court his estate is being administered in accordance with the rules set out in Part I of Schedule 1 to the [1925 c. 23.] Administration of Estates Act 1925 ;
(c)where the proprietor is a company, a winding-up order has been made with respect to it, or a resolution for voluntary winding-up (other than a members' voluntary winding-up) has been passed with respect to it, or a receiver or manager of its undertaking has been duly appointed, or possession has been taken, by or on behalf of the holders of any debentures secured by a floating charge, of any property of the company comprised in or subject to the charge.
10(1)Where the debtor is in default, the creditor may, without prejudice to his exercising any other remedy arising from the contract to which the standard security relates, exercise, in accordance with the provisions of Part II of this Act and of any other enactment applying to standard securities, such of the remedies specified in the following sub-paragraphs of this standard condition as he may consider appropriate.
(2)He may proceed to sell the security subjects or any part thereof.
(3)He may enter into possession of the security subjects and may receive or recover feuduties, ground annuals or, as the case may be, the rents of those subjects or any part thereof.
(4)Where he has entered into possession as aforesaid, he may let the security subjects or any part thereof.
(5)Where he has entered into possession as aforesaid there shall be transferred to him all the rights of the debtor in relation to the granting of leases or rights of occupancy over the security subjects and to the management and maintenance of those subjects.
(6)He may effect all such repairs and may make good such defects as are necessary to maintain the security subjects in good and sufficient repair, and may effect such reconstruction, alteration and improvement on the subjects as would be expected of a prudent proprietor to maintain the market value of the subjects, and for the aforesaid purposes may enter on the subjects at all reasonable times.
(7)He may apply to the court for a decree of foreclosure.
11(1)The debtor shall be entitled to exercise his right of redemption under this Act on giving two months' notice of his intention so to do, being a notice in writing (hereinafter referred to as a " notice of redemption ").
(2)Nothing in the provisions of the foregoing sub-paragraph shall preclude a creditor from waiving the necessity for a notice of redemption, or from agreeing to a period of notice of less than two months.
(3)(a)A notice of redemption may be delivered to the creditor or sent by registered post or recorded delivery to him at his last known address, and an acknowledgment signed by the creditor or his agent or a certificate of postage by the person giving the notice accompanied by the postal receipt shall be sufficient evidence of such notice having been given.
(b)If the address of the creditor is not known, or if the packet containing the notice of redemption is returned to the sender with intimation that it could not be delivered, a notice of redemption may be sent to the Extractor of the Court of Session and an acknowledgment of receipt by him shall be sufficient evidence of such notice having been given.
(c)A notice of redemption sent by post shall be held to have been given on the day next after the day of posting.
(4)When a notice of redemption states that a specified amount will be repaid, and it is subsequently ascertained that the whole amount due to be repaid is more or less than the amount specified in the notice, the notice shall nevertheless be effective as a notice of repayment of the amount due as subsequently ascertained.
(5)On payment of the whole amount due, or on performance of the whole obligations of the debtor under the contract to which the security relates, the creditor shall grant a discharge in the terms prescribed in section 17 of this Act.
12The debtor shall be personally liable to the creditor for the whole expenses of the preparation and execution of the standard security and any variation, restriction and discharge thereof and, where any of those deeds are recorded, the recording thereof, and all expenses reasonably incurred by the creditor in calling-up the security and realising or attempting to realise the security subjects, or any part thereof, and exercising any other powers conferred upon him by the security.
In this Schedule, where the debtor is not the proprietor of the security subjects, " debtor " means " proprietor ", except
(a)in standard conditions 9(1), 10(1) and 12, and
(b)in standard condition 11, where "debtor" includes the proprietor.
Sections 14, 15, 16 and 17.
Section 18.
CERTIFICATE OF CONSIGNATION ON REDEMPTION OF STANDARD SECURITY WHERE DISCHARGE CANNOT BE OBTAINED
CERTIFICATE OF DECLARATOR OF PERFORMANCE OF DEBTOR'S OBLIGATIONS UNDER STANDARD SECURITY WHERE DISCHARGE CANNOT BE OBTAINED
Sections 19 and 21.
Sections 22 and 24.
1A certificate which is lodged in court by the creditor for the purposes of section 22 or 24 of this Act shall contain the information required by the following provisions of this Schedule.
2A certificate shall state—
(i)the name and address of the creditor and shall specify the standard security in respect of which the default is alleged to have occurred by reference to the original creditor and debtor therein and to the particulars of its registration ;
(ii)the nature of the default with full details thereof.
3The certificate shall be signed by the creditor or his solicitor, and a certificate which does not comply with the foregoing requirements of this Schedule shall not be received in evidence for the purposes of the said section 22 or 24.
Section 32.
1Section 7 (Securities for cash accounts or credits).
2Section 4 (Assignations in security).
3Section 5 (Instrument to be expeded where party presenting assignation in security for registration is not original lessee or assignee) so far as affecting assignations in security.
4Section 6 (Translation of assignations in security and creditor's entry on possession in default of payment), so far as relating to such a translation.
5Section 13 (Renunciations and discharges to be recorded) so far as affecting discharges.
6Section 20 (Interpretation of clauses in Schedules).
7Sections 118 (Form of bond and disposition in security).
8Section 119 (Explanation of clauses in Schedule (FF) No. 1—Form of a Bond and Disposition in Security).
9Section 121 (Validity of sale to purchaser).
10Section 122 (Creditors selling to count and reckon for the surplus of the price and to consign the same in the bank).
11Section 123 (Disburdening of lands on sale and after consignation of surplus price).
12Section 124 (Prescription of form of transfer of securities).
13Section 132 (Renunciation or discharge of heritable security).
14Section 133 (Restriction of heritable security).
15Section 138 (Use of short clauses of consent to registration).
16Section 48 (Disburdening of lands sold under heritable securities when no surplus emerges).
17Section 49 (Disburdening of lands where debtor in a heritable security cannot obtain discharge owing to the death or absence of the creditor, or any other cause).
18Section 6 (Power of creditor to lease security subjects for seven years or under).
19Section 7 (Granting of power by sheriff to lease security subjects for period of more than seven years).
20Section 8 (Foreclosure).
21Section 9 (Completion of title of security holders and preservation of personal obligation of debtor so far as not extinguished by price on sale of land).
22Section 10 (Purchaser's title indefeasible).
23Section 12 (Procedure).
24Section 15 (Jurisdiction of sheriff).
25Section 24 (Assimilation of forms for registered leases).
26Section 25 (Form of bond and disposition in security).
27Sections 28 to 30 (Provisions dealing with the assignation, discharge and restriction of bond and disposition in security).
28Section 31 (Description of lands and deduction of title unnecessary in certain deeds).
29Section 32 (Redemption of bond and disposition in security).
30Sections 33-39 (Provisions relating to calling up bond and disposition in security and advertisement and exposure to sale of the land).
31Section 42 (Mode of disburdening land sold by creditor under power of sale).
Section 40.
Sections 47 and 52.
1In Schedule (H), in the footnote, for the words " here state his title and date of recording the same " there shall be substituted the words " name and design original creditor ".
2In Schedule J, in Note 3, for the words from " insert " to the end there shall be substituted the words " no specification of the granter's title is required.".
3In Schedule K, in Note 2, for the words from " insert " to " say " (where the word first occurs) there shall be substituted the words " no specification of the granter's title is required; or if such granter has not a recorded title, insert at the end of the deed Which bond and disposition in security (adding, if necessary, to the extent aforesaid or as the case may be) ".
4In Schedule 1, in the note, before the words " the prior pages thereof" there shall be inserted the words " (in the case of a will or other testamentary writing) ".
5In section 10, for the words " Lord President of the Court of Session " there shall be substituted the words " Secretary of State ".
Sections 47, 48 and 52.
Chapter | Short Title | Extent of Repeal |
---|---|---|
1857 c. 26. | The Registration of Leases (Scotland) Act 1857. | In Schedule (A), the words " [and (when the assigner is not the grantee in the lease) my title to which is recorded in the said register, of date ] ". |
In Schedule (B), the words " and [where cedent not the original lessee) my title to which is registered therein [date of recording] ". | ||
In Schedule (1)), the words " [and (if the granter is not the assignee in said bond) my title to which bond and assignation in security is recorded in the said register (date of recording)] ". | ||
In Schedule (G), the words " and [where the party renouncing not the original lessee] my title to which is recorded in the said register on [date]". |
Chapter | Short Title | Extent of Repeal |
---|---|---|
1868 c. 101. | The Titles to Land Consolidation (Scotland) Act 1868. | Section 22. |
Schedule (M). | ||
1924 c. 27. | The Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1924. | Section 7. |
In section 10(4), the words " along with a separate assignation or separate assignations, or " and the words " on such separate assignation or on the last in date of such separate assignations or ". | ||
In section 24, in paragraph (1), the words in brackets. | ||
In Schedule B, Note 5. | ||
Schedule C. | ||
In Schedule F, Note 4, and in Note 5, the words " (with the assignation or assignations, if any, endorsed thereon)", the words " a separate assignation or separate assignations, or along with ", the words " such separate assignation or on the last in date of such separate assignations or on", and the words " adding, if required, and assignation (or assignations) ". |
Chapter | Short Title | Extent of Repeal |
---|---|---|
1857 c. 26. | The Registration of Leases (Scotland) Act 1857. | In section 15, the words from " and extracts of all such writs " to the end of the section. |
1868 c. 101. | The Titles to Land Consolidation (Scotland) Act 1868. | In section 142, the words from " and extracts of all such conveyances " to the end of the section. |
1924 c. 27. | The Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1924. | In section 16, subsections (3) and (4). |
1925 c. 33. | The Church of Scotland (Property and Endowments) Act 1925. | In section 37, the words from "Provided that" to "either party ". |
1949 c. 42. | The Lands Tribunal Act 1949. | In section 8(3), the words from " and the Statutory Instruments Act 1946" to the end of the subsection. |
1966 c. 49. | The Housing (Scotland) Act 1966. | Section 189. |
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