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CONTENTS.

11 & 12 Bell YARD,

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MESSRS. BUTTERWORTH & Co. have pleasure in

stating that an important contribution will be included in the work under the title

REPORTS.
IBISH NOTES

338

OUR AUSTRALIAN LETTER.................. 339 SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATUBE

COMMENTS ON CASES....................... 340 OOURT OF APPEAL.

TAROONVEYANCER........................... 841 NASH 1. LAYTON.-Practice-Inter

rogatorios Moneylender - Chargo OCCASIONAL NOTB8......................... 342 on property to secure loan-Action to enforce - Interrogatories as to

NOTES OF RECENT DECISIONS NOT whether plaintiff was carrying on

YET REPORTED..................................

342 business of monoglender

8 34
LAW LIBRARY ............................****

343 Re LACON'S SETTLEMENT; LACON v. LACON.-Settled land-Oapital of

LEGISLATION AND JURISPRUDENCE. income-Mansion-house-Lease by

Topics ************************************.***..

315 tenant for life-Dilapidations

PARLIAMENTARY SUMMARY.- Topics 84.5 Damages for breach of covenant to repair

810! OBIMINAL LAW AND THE JURISDIO

TION OF MAGISTRAT38. -Costs in HIGH COURT OF JUSTIOE.

Proceedings Under the Indictable OHANOERY DIVISION.

Offences Act 1848...........

346 Re RAMEL SYNDICATE LIMITED. —

GENERAL INTELLIGENCE. - Land Company - Winding-up - Articles

Registry: Retura of Work-The of Association Moaning or

Lord Chancellorship : An Over" surplus assets

812

worked and Anomalous Omco-Land GREAT CENTRAL RAILWAY COMPANY

Va'uation-Heirs-at-Law and Next v. MIDLAND RAILWAY COMPANY.

of Kin-Appointments under the Railway companies Runniog Joint Stock Winding-up Acts Powers over another's line

844 Creditors under Estates in Chancery

Creditore under 22 & 28 Vict. c. 35... 847
KING'S BENOA DIVISION
RAULIN 0. FISCHER. -Foreign judg-

COUNTY COUBT8.-Sittings of tho
Courts...........................

350 ment-Prosecution for criminal offence - Intervention by person PROMOTIONS AND APPOINTIENTS 350 iojured by criminal act.................. 849

LAW SOCIETIES. -- Solicitors' Bene. ATTORNEY-GENERAL ». REYNOLDS,

volent Association

350 Common-Rights of-Turbary and estovers — Ancient messuage

CORRESPONDENCE.............

**t.............. 350 Pulling dowa-New house-Continuance of old rights...

852 NOTBS AND QUERIES ........................ 351

LEGAL OBITUARY Mr. George

Edward Cokayne - Mr. Oliver

James Stockton-Mr. C. C. Becke LEADING ARTICLES, &c. -Mr. Frederick Horatio Barr 351

THE COURTS AND OOUBT PAPIRS.

High Court of Justice : Long TO READERS AND CORRESPONDENTS... 335 Vacation Notice

351 LEADING ARTIOL R8. -Topics of tbe THE GAZETTES.............................. 351

Week-Noteworthy Decisions of the
Judicial Year

335 BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, AND DEATHS ... 325

PARLIAMENT.

This title is being prepared by the Right Hon. the EARL of HALSBURY, D.C.L., F.R.S., a Member of the Judicial Committee of His Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council ; Sir H. J. L. GRAHAM, K.C.B., Clerk of the Parliaments ; and CUTHBERT HEADLAM, Esq., Barrister-at-Law.

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MR. JUSTICE HORRIDGE is acting as Vacation judge for the first part of the Long Vacation. Last week there were no attendances in court, but on Tuesday last the learned judge had a formidable list of summonses to dispose of_thirtytwo attended by counsel and four not attended by counsel. It seems a pity that so much work should be crowded into one day, when probably one-half of it might have been disposed of if there had been a sitting in chambers last week. From many points of view, which it is not necessary to specify more particularly, it is not in the interests of the administration of justice nor in the interests of the parties concerned that such a congestion should be allowed in the hottest part of a particularly hot year.

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The sitting in court on Wednesday last was not a protracted one, the learned judge clearing off his list shortly after one o'clock. In addition to three cases in chambers there were twenty-five cases to dispose of. None of these were of the least interest, either from a general or from a legal point of view. Following on the lines adopted by the Vacation judges of the last few years, Mr. Justice HORRIDGE has made it clear that he will not deal with any matters which cannot be said to fall strictly within “ Vacation Business." He added a warning, of which, no doubt, the Profession will take careful notice, that if cases are set down which ought not to be placed in the list, such cases may be dismissed with the penalty of the payment of costs attached.

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It was laid down in Lockwood v. Cooper (89 L. T. Rep. 306; 20 Cox C. C. 539) that to constitute gaming within the

Second Sheet.

Licensing Act 1872 the game must be one in which the players stake money or money's worth, and not merely one in which the only money or money's worth involved consists of prizes given by persons who are not players in the game. That was a case of a whist drive, and the application of that decision was considered by His Honour Judge Bray in an action brought to recover a sum of money, being the prize won by the plaintiff at a whist drive promoted by the defendants. In that case the players contributed to the prizes, and the defendants relied upon the Gaming Acts, the learned judge holding that those statutes constituted an answer to the claim. The point is an interesting one, but it would seem that the decision is correct, having regard to the fact that whist cannot be considered as a game of skill, and the learned judge was of opinion that it did not come within the saving words at the end of sect. 18 of the Gaming Act 1845, which provides that the statute shall not apply to “any subscription or contribution or agreement to subscribe or contribute for or towards any plate, prize, or sum of money to be awarded to the winner or winners of any lawful gime, sport, pastime, or exercise."

Owing to the cases of Caterham Urban District Council v. Godstone Rural District Council (90 L. T. Rep. 653; (1904) A. C. 171) and West Hartlepool Corporation v. Durham County Council (97 L. T. Rep. 114; (1907) A. C. 246), considerable difficulties have been created with regard to the questions of adjustment which may arise on the alteration or creation of local government areas, and therefore a Joint Select Committee of both Houses was appointed to inquire into the application of the provisions contained in the Local Government Acts 1888 and 1894 and the Scottish statutes of 1889 and 1894 relating to financial adjustments consequent on the alteration of the boundaries of a local government area, or on an alteration in the constitution or status of the governing body of such area. The report of that committee has now been issued, which we shall publish next week, and it is recommended that the statutes in question shall be amended in accordance with the conclusions arrived at, which undoubtedly will effectively remove many of the difficulties which at present attend the alteration of the boundaries of a local government area.

We publish this week two interesting documents. The first of these contains details of the instructions given to valuers under the Finance (1909-10) Act 1910 by the Inland Revenue Department with reference to the ascertainment of site value on occasions” under that Act. The other is a circular emanating from the Home Office as to costs and proceedings under the Indictable Offences Act 1848 as affected by the Costs in Criminal Cases Act 1908. Apparently the matter has been raised by the Director of Public Prosecutions and other private prosecutors, owing to the reluctance of certain benches of magistrates in issuing a certificate for costs.

It is now pointed out, and we think rightly so, that when the magistrates are satisfied that the employment of a solicitor has resulted in a difficult or complicated case being put before them in a manner which has assisted them to come to a decision, or that it would not have been rigbt to permit or expect the police or a private prosecutor to present the case unassisted, it is their duty to issue a certificate in pursuance of sects. 1 and 3 of the Cost in Criminal Cases Act 1908.

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The report for last year issued by the Board of Agriculture under the Tithe, Copyhold, Inclosure, Commons, and other Acts shows that the total amount of tithe rentcharge charged on the land of England and Wales at the commutation in 1836 was £4,054,406, but by merger or redemption this has now been reduced to £3,704,056. The actual sum payable to the tithe owners, being dependent on the average price of corn, was in 1910 £2,609,764. The number of orders for redemption made by the board during last year was 498, being twenty-eight more than in 1909, and, of these, 312 were voluntary.

NOTEWORTHY DECISIONS OF THE JUDICIAL YEAR. The following review is intended to aid the busy legal practitioner who desires to take advantage of the greater leisure afforded by the Long Vacation in noting up his text-books or reports, or in refreshing his memory as to the trend of judicial opinion during another year upon those special subjects which are in his practice chiefly to be borne in mind. It is obviously impossible to touch upon every case within any reasonable limit of space. As in previous years, we therefore devote this review to such decisions as seem to be of practical importance in ordinary day-to-day legal work, and to facilitate reference we have chosen the most obvious of the possible catch-words descriptive of the scope of the cases touched upon, and have arranged them in an alphabetical order. It only remains to be said by way of preliminary that this review covers the period from the sitting of the courts in Oct. 1910 down to their rising for the Long Vacation in 1911.

ADMINISTRATION is the first subject demanding attention. l'auntleroy v. Beebe (104 L. T. Rep. 704; (1911) W. N. 110) is a very practical little point, for in it was raised anew a question upon which there has been some hesitation. Mr. Justice Warrington has held, and the Court of Appeal has affirmed the view, that an order for sale operates as an immediate conversion of realty into personalty as from the order's date. There is already some authority for this, but of late it has been regarded as doubtful, and it is now satisfactory to have so important a point settled. The notorious Crippen case has led to the decision of a point on administration law. In Re Estate of Crippen (104 L. "T. Rep. 224; (1911) P. 108) the murderer

convicted 22nd Oct. 1910. His appeal was dismissed on the 5th Nov., and on the 8th Nov. following he executed a will appointing Le Neve executrix and legatee. His murdered wife's next of kin included H., and her attorney moved for a grant of letters of administration in respect of the estate of the wife, who had died intestate. The conviction of Crippen was held “a special circumstance” within sect. 73 of the Court of Probate Act 1857, and the legal personal representative of the husband was passed over, and the applicant as attorney was appointed administrator of the wife's estate. Wilson v. Wilson (104 L. T. Rep. 96; (1911) 1 K. B. 327) raises a totally different class of case. An administrator was an undischarged bankrupt, and the question was whether he was able to retain a debt due to him from the deceased intestate out of the assets acquired by him qua administrator. Mr. Justice Channell thought the real point was, What was the effect of the bankruptcy? The learned judge thought that the beneficial right to the debt was in his trustee in bankruptcy, and that the latter was the proper person to sue for it, and on this ground the basis of the right of retainer (viz., that an administrator cannot sue himseli) was gone. It was held, therefore, that such an administrator has no right to retain. Turner v. T'urner (1911) 1 Ch. 716) was determined by the Court of Appeal. The facts are somewhat complex and curious, and it may be said that they involved questions of partnership, the construction of an obscure codicil, and some points on the law relating to executors. The principle of the decision may, however, be narrowed down to this, in the phraseology of Lord Justice Fletcher Moulton, that there is no power in an executor to retain a legacy to one partner of a firm in virtue of a partnership debt to the estate. There was raised in argument the principle that a legacy is not to be paid except out of the debt which is owing by the legatee to the testator, Appeal was prepared to accept this, but would not go so far as to hold that the doctrine applied when the debtors were a firin, when the debt was joint, and the legacies are given to individual partners; and in such a case the principle fails to attach.

AFTER-ACQUIRED PROPERTY has given canse rather important decisions. Thus Re Mackenzie; Jackenzie v.

The total number of manors affected by the enfranchisement of lands under the Copyhold Acts, with the sanction of the board or their predecessors, has reached 2571, the number of transactions involved being 22,261. The gross sum paid for enfranchisement has been £2,721,020, while, in addition, rentcharges amounting to £21,023 have been created, and 1388 acres have been assigned to the lords for compensation. During 1910, 226 applications were received and 205 enfranchisements were completed, and, of these, fifty-two were voluntary and 153 compulsory. With regard to recreation grounds set out under the Inclosure Acts from 1845 to 1910, the number was 350, and only twenty-nine are still vested in the church wardens and overseers, the remainder having been transferred to the charge of the local authorities.

The Court of

for two or three

Edward3-1/08s (1911) 1 Ch. 578) touched upon this branch of law introducing somewhat novel points, but on the whole came to the amongst other points considered. A domiciled Scot had married a conclusion that the. Guernsey company was a mere alias for D. domiciled Englishwoman, and a settlement in Scottish form had and G., and that the company through its liquidator could prove in been made by the husband, and a contemporaneous English settle- the bankruptcy for the whole of the secret cash profit received by ment by the wife's father. The “after-acquired property clause D. and G. Re Anderson (104 L. T. Rep. 221; (1911) 1 K. B. 896) gave the income of life interests (included amongst such property) to raises another question of great importance in practice. It settles the wife for her separate use without power of anticipation. They could only be sold with the wife's consent, and they were excluded

on the authority of Mr. Justice Phillimore that where a debtor is

adjudicated bankrupt in New Zealand, having an English domicil from the trust for conversion. The marriage was an unhappy one, and entitled to a reversionary interest in English personalty, such and the wile had to leave her husband under circumstances which interest, although overlooked in the colonial bankruptcy, belongs to would have entitled her to a decree of judicial separation. On her the colonial othcial assignee, although its existence was discovered death the husband and child claimed that she was domiciled in in an English bankruptcy at a date subsequent to the bankruptcy Scotland, and that each of the plaintiffs were entitled to one-third, in New Zealand. The notice was given of title directly the English or alternatively that one or the other was entitled to one moiety, of her free movable estate after payment of testamentary expenses

trustee in bankruptcy obtained disclosure of the existence of the and debts, notwithstanding provisions in her will purporting to

property. It was further held that the court fastens on the laches

of a first incumbrancer, and says that, not having given notice, he dispose of all her property. The defendants denied the Scottish domicil, and further argued that, even if there were such, the

is, pro tanto at any rate, postponed to the man who has been

deceived by the fact that he has not given notice. This reason plaintiffs were not entitled either to jus relicti or legitim out of the does not exist when there are dealings with statutory assignees, estate. Mr. Justice Swinfen Eady was satisfied that the parties such as trustees and assignees in bankruptcy, who get only that to the English settlement intended that English law should govern which the bankrupt has to give them. So the perfection of title it, and he held that the wife could dispose by will of the savings by the English trustee in this case by notice did not give him of income of separate property, and that the after-acquired lite priority over the colonial trustee. Another case turning on notice interests were caught by the settlement, notwithstanding the may be mentioned in He A Debtor, No. 305 of 1911 (noted ante, restraint on anticipation imposed by the donors. Another case on p. 147; (1911) W. N. 135). The question was one of disputed the same subject, but dealing with a different aspect of it, may be validity. The debtor and the petitioning creditors, K., A., and C., cited in Re Williams' Settlement; Williams v. Williams (104 L. T. were members of the Stock Exchange. They obtained final judg. Rep. 310; (1911) 1 Ch. 441). Here a wife took out a summons ment against the debtor for £780, and shortly aiterwards dissolved against her husband and the trustees of their marriage settlement partnership. The solicitors of the firm lately broken up issued a to settle certain questions, amongst which was one whether funds to which she became entitled on the death of F. were caught by an

notice calling on the debtor to pay sums due 'to the creditors or

their solicitor. This was relied on as a good bankruptcy notice. after-acquired property clause. The plaintiff was before her It concluded with a sentence alleging that the solicitors were marriage absolutely entitled to one-third of her parents' marriage authorised to receive payment and to act for K., A., and C. The settlement funds, and contingently entitled to a further one-third debtor resisted the petition, arguing that the notice did not direct share upon the death of F. under twenty-one. The plaintiff in her payment in accordance with the terms of the judgment. The own settlement covenanted that, if she “ should become entitled in Court of Appeal took this view, having consulted Lord Justice any manner and for any estate or interest to any property exceed- Vaughan Williams, who had no recollection of having sanctioned ing in value £500 at one time and from one source,” the same any such direction, and who had an impression that it was would be settled. F. dying under twenty-one, it was argued that unauthorised. Under these circumstances the Court of Appeal the phrase already set out could not extend to an already contingent thought that a bankruptcy notice directing payment either to the interest which subsequently fell into possession, but that the cre itors or to their solicitor was not a notice requiring payment covenant only applies to property acquired in title in futuro. Mr. of a judgment debt in accordance with the terms of the judgment, Justice Eve held that the contingent interests in Fi's share were as provided by the Bankruptcy Act 1883, s. 4 (9). Another case on within the mesh of the after-acquired property clause, and for so the validity of the bankruptcy notice may be usefully recalled in holding relied on an old authority--viz., Archer v. Kelly (1 Dr. that arrived at by the Court of Appeal in Re Cooper (1911) 2 K. B. & S. 300).

550). There the petitioning creditors had obtained a judgment for The question whether ANNUITIES are charged on income or on the £3750, and served a notice requiring the debtor to pay £3753, as principal is one of perennial difficulty, and in all such doubts the being the “amount due.” In the margin the particulars set out new decision in Re Watkins' Settlement: Wills v. Spence (103 the £3750 and interest at 4 per cent. to date. The debtor appealed 1.. T. Rep. 749; (1911) 1 Ch. 1), arrived at by the Court of Appeal against a receiving order made by the registrar on default of will be certainly cited as authority. A marriage settlement had compliance with this notice. The Court of Appeal dismissed the conveyed certain property to trustees upon trust, after the husband's appeal, and held the notice to be valid. The Master of the Rolls death, to pay out of the income 'the clear yearly sum of £400 thought that a judgment debt, though by law carrying interest per annum to the wife, and subject thereto” the trustees were for the week elapsing between the judgment and the notice, was directed, if there should be any children, upon certain trusts, and, not a transaction to which the language of the Income Tax Acts if there should be no children, then after paying the annuity, and relating to "yearly interest of money applied. Lord Justice “subject thereto,” in trust for W. The income of the property Buckley said that the Bankruptcy Act 1883 required the notice to was insufficient to pay the £400 in full, and the summons raised call upon the debtor to pay the debt in accordance with the the question whether the annuity was not, on the true construction judgment. To do this entailed paying the sum due plus the of the settlement, a mere continuing charge on the income, but interest, the legal interest, attaching to it. He Richardson ; was a charge on the corpus. Mr. Justice Swinien Eady thought Er parte St. Thomas' Hospital (1911) W. N. 100) raised a totally it was not a charge on the corpus, but the Court of Appeal thought different question. Certain leaseholds were in 1896 vested in that this decision was wrong, and based their view on the words H. R. as trustee for his wife, who paid for them out of her “subject thereto.” This meant subject to the annuity, not in a separate estate. The lease expiring in March 1908, the landlords referential sense, but in a sense importing a full and complete in April sued H. R. for breach of covenant and rent, the action payment, and thus there is broug about a charge on the corpus. ultimately being referred. In May 1910 the referee found against This reading was reinforced, in the opinion of the Court of Appeal, H. R. in the sum of £711. A month prior thereto H. R. was by a power of sale in a later portion of the instrument. This case adjudicated bankrupt. In August they lodged a proof, but it was is rather important, for there will be found some authority only never adjudicated on. Meantime the wife remained in possession four years old where the same words, “subject thereto,

and received rents and profits, and was liable to indemnify the given a different construction.

bankrupt against the landlords' claims. In Nov. 1910 the official We now pass to BANKRUPTCY, obviously one of the most receiver, as trustee in bankruptcy, and the landlords sued the wife important as it is one of the most prolific subjects for judicial and the bankrupt. The action was compromised on the footing consideration. Re Darby; Ex parte Brougham (1911) 1 K. B. 95) that the wife paid £520. The next question was to whom the tells the old tale of fraud in company-mongering. A certain money belonged. Mr. Justice Phillimore held that it was part of company was registered in Guernsey, and consisted only of its the bankrupt's estate, but the Court of Appeal, on the landords? seven signatories, D. and G. being two of them. They formed it appeal, held that the right to the indemnity was not a contractual to hide their identity, and they were its sole managers and right, but merely an equitable one arising out of the relationship directors. The company contracted to buy a licence to work a of trustee and cestui que trust. The Master of the Rolls observed quarry and promoted a company to acquire it, and contracts were that equity took a wider view, for a surety with an absolute entered into between the two companies. The latter company was liability to pay was in equity entitled to commence an action formed by D. and G., and all its signatories were their creatures. against the principal debtor and to obtain an order that he should Then were issued prospectuses inviting public subscription, and pay off the creditor and relieve the surety. The common law view D. and G. secured the spoil. These documents did not disclose was, on the other hand, first pay, and then come for an indemnity. the fact that D. and G. were promoters and vendors. and were His Lordship held, therefore, that the money recovered from the receiving profits. In due course the company liquidated, and D. wife was not a portion of the bankrupt's estate unless and until and G. were bankrupt. The former had some assets, the latter had the landlords' claim was discharged. The effect of admitting the nil. They were subsequently prosecuted and convicted for fraud. official receiver's claim would be, in the opinion of the Court of The liquidator of the company lodged a proof against D.'s estate Appeal, to permit a trustee to make a profit out of his trust. for damages for breach of trust as promoter, or, alternatively, for One or two rather useful decisions on the law relating to money had and received in respect of undisclosed profits. T BETTING may be mentioned here. Stead v. Aykroyd (103 L. trustee in bankruptcy rejected the proof on the ground that the Rep. 727; (1911) 1 K. B. 57) was an information charging the debtor was not a promoter, and that the claim was not provable. appellant, under the Street Betting Act 1906, s. 1, with unlawfully Mr. Justice Phillimore thought the case rather a fine one and loitering in a field for betting purposes. This field was being

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IRISH NOTES.

THE Irish courts have had recently to consider on several occasion the liability of tramway companies where aocidents bave occurred to passengers in the act of descending from tramcarg. Decisions of the Irish court on this point are to bo jound in Murphy v. Dublin United Tramway Company (43 Ir. L. T. Rep. 11), Martin v. Dublin United Tramway Company (1909) 2 Ir. Rep. 13), Roscoe v. Dublin United Tramway Company (1909) 2 Ir. R.P. 13), and Pickering v. Bella / Corporation (45 Ir. L. T. Rep. 34). Another decision on this point was given by the Court of Appeal on the 14th ult. in Breslin v, Dublin United Tramway Company. The plaintiff, who was a passenger on a tramoer of the defendante, was thrown off, as he was about to descend, by a sudden backward jerk of the car.

He was very seriouely injured and took an action against the company.

flis evidence was as follows: “About fifteen yards from the stopping. place I commenced to get down. Tram not going at full rate of speed. Twenty five to nine o'clock, dark. Came down the platform. I did not see the conduotor. I took a bold of the bar, the braes bar that is on the platform. I got on platform. I swung on the step and loosened my hold of the brass bar before the car stopped, and immediately was thrown off and lifted completely over.' Sabee. quently he added : “ When I got on to the step the car stopped, and immediately it did it gave a sudden jerk backwards, snapping the bar out of my hand and throwing me clean out. The next thing I romember was after recovering consciousness.” This practically was the only evidence as to tbe cause of the accident. The King's Benoh Division oame to the conclusion that there was no evidence of negligence on the part of the company to go to the jury, and a direction of the judge at the trial in favour of tbe defendants was upheld. Mr. Justice Madden, in the King's Beuch Division, said that the alleged evidence amounted to no more than saying that the defendants ran a traccar; and the Court of Appeal upheld this reasoning. Tbe result of this decision seems to be that a passenger on a platform goes on the platform at the back of the car wbilst it is in motion at his own risk.

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utilised for mixed sports, partly athletic and partly horse racing. For the latter purposes the field had been adapted by certain temporary arrangements. The question was, under these circumstances, whether the premises came within sect. 2 as being

ground used for the purpose of a racecourse for racing with horses, or adjacent thereto.” If this question were answered in the affirmative, then there would be an exemption. The Lord Chief Justice held that because the programme included two horse races it could not be said that the place was being used for the purposes of a racecourse. Such a view would be too great a strain on the language of sect. 2. The justices were deemed right in convicting the appellant. Rex v. Mortimer (103 L. T. Rep. 910; (1911) 1°K. B. 71) was an appeal against the conviction of a bookmaker, under sect. 3 of the Betting Act 1853, for using his premises for the receipt of money “as and for the consideration for certain assurances, undertakings, promises, and agreements to pay thereafter

money on bets on horse races. It was proved that the police wrote in the name of E. (an existing person) seeking to open a deposit account, the commissions not to exceed £5 without further remittance. Bets were subsequently made by the appellant, and postal orders passed to aid were retained by the appellant. On Derby Day the police searched the premises, and found slips and entries in ledgers concerning the bets. It was held that the transaction came within the ambit of prohibited betting, and that the evidence was sufficient to justify conviction. The Court of Criminal Appeal held that where money is sent to a bookmaker and retained by him, and bets are made by him for the sender of the money at the address where the money is received, the case cannot be treated as an instance of an isolated transaction insufficient to prove user.

No final opinion was given as whether postal orders were money; but, semble, the receipt of a document convertible into money is the receipt of money.

Bills OF SALE have in past years been a far more prolific cause for litigation resulting in the decision of moot points than is the case during the period now under review. There are only two or three cases which can fairly claim notice. In Newman v. Oughton; Pond and Oughton, Claimants (104 L. T. Rep. 211; (1911) 1 K. B. 792), a curious problem presented itself in an interpleader issue. A plaintiff recovered judgment against a debtor, and issued execution. The goods seized were claimed by some pawnbrokers, P. and 0., who declared that they were included in a bill of sale of which they were the grantees and the defendant was the grantor. The plaintiff denied the claim. It appeared that the bill of sale had been given as security for £50, and the plaintiff argued that this not “business carried on [by the pawnbroker] in accordance with the provisions of” the Pawnbrokers Act 1872, and that, as the claimants were not registered as moneylenders, the transaction was void. It was held that an isolated transaction such as this did not make the pawnbroker a moneylender.

A somewhat curious point of law relating to COMMONS was raised in Coaker v. Willcocks (104 L. T. Rep. 769; (1911) 2 K. B. 124) on the special subject of the obligation to fence. The action was in form one for wrongful distress, and the facts, briefly put, were as follows : The plantiff enjoyed rights of common, including pasturage, upon certain land forming a portion of Dartmoor. The defendant occupied a farm inclosed out of land forming a part of the same, and the defendant admitted that he was bound to fence his land against moorland cattle and sheep. Some sheep belonging to the plaintiff, grazing on the uninclosed land, strayed into the defendant's holding and were distrained by him damage feasant, and were by him driven into a pound within the same hundred, but more than three miles from the locality of the distress. The plaintiff alleged a grievance in this, inasmuch as the sheep had strayed into the defendant's land through the latter's omission to duly fence, and he further objected to a pound more than three miles off, as contravening sect. 1 of 1 & 2 Ph. & M. c. 12. An expert in local conditions assisted the court, and from his evidence it appeared that it was not customary on Dartmoor to erect fences of a kind different to that necessary to keep out Dartmoor sheep, whereas in this case the plaintiff's sheep were Scotch sheep, possessing unusual jumping powers. The Court of Appeal, on a somewhat unsatisfactory presentation of the dispute, came to the conclusion that the defendant was only bound to erect the fences usual in the locality, such being enough to exclude the ordinary sheep there found, and was not bound to fence out animals possessing such extraordinary jumping powers as Scotch sheep. On the construction of the statute already indicated, the court held that the defendant was entitled to judgment, and that a distrainer of cattie damage feasant may drive them to any pound within the hundred.

(To be continued.)

was

SOME strong comments were made by the Master of the Rolls and the Chief Baron in the Court of Appeal on the 20th ult., in the case of Oswald v. Farrell, with reference to the present state of business in that court. Owing to the way in which the number of judges in Ireland has been reduced, it is necessary that the two Lords Justices of Appeal should go on circuit. The practical result of that is that no appeals can be heard jo the Court of Appeal during the months of March and July. With reference to the latter month, the case of appellants is partioularly bard, as the Long Vacation intervento botore a full court can be formed. The appeal in question was by a defendant in a Chancery suit in which the sale of a farm had been set aside and the defendant had been ordered to repay the purchase money, amounting to about £700. A stay of execution had been refused by the court below, and it appeared that a summons in baok. ruptoy had been taken out against the defendant. The appeal was ripe for hearing on the 27th June, but it was impossible to have it heard before Lord Justice Holmes and Lord Justice Cherry bad gone out ca circuit. The Master of the Rolls said that if the Court of Appeal were manned as it should be, a litigant would not be deprived of his right of getting bis appeal heard in the month of July, and, if he had demanded that his appeal should be heard, no Government could have refrained from keeping the Lords Justices in town and appointing commissioners of assize. The Chief Baron said that it was a startling thing that a man was ready to have big appeal heard and that the case was in the list for hearing, but that in consequence of the action of the authorities no court could be formed, and he pointed out the special hardship in the case if the appellant were made a bankrupt in the interval before his appeal had been determined. Ultimately it was arranged that a stay of execution should be granted on the appellant lodging £250 in court.

Much interesting evidence as to old-world customs and primitive habits with reference to certain sections of the population in Ireland was given belore Mr. Justice Barton in the case of M.Couaig v. M'Cormick and another. The action bad reference to the praotice of the farmers on Rathlin Island (off the coast of Antrim) with reference to the making of kelp from seaweed. The island has a great number of indentations or baye, locally known as “ porte," into which seaweed, which is valuable for manure and for kelp-making, is washed from time to time. The plaintiff was the tenant of certain Jands on the island wbich had a frontage to the seashore of over a quarter of a mile in length, and he alleged that tho defendants, who were the tenants of neighbouring lands, bad entered his lands and deprived him of seaweed which had been

washed up into certain ports on the plaintiff's lands. It appeared that the landlord, a Mr. Gage, had established a co-operative system for the distribution of kelp in the English and Scottish markets. For the purpose of this co-operative system the landlord placed the foreshore at the disposal of the tenants, giving all of them a share of tbe seaweed in proportion to tớe size of their holdings. There were thirty-five porte or creeks on the townland of which the plaintiff's and defendants' lands consisted. They took the “ porte” in rotation, never taking the same in two guocessive years, each going on the lands of the other in turn, spreading the seaweed for drying, and leaving it in kilns for the purpose of the manufacture of kelp. The judge came to the conclusion that these curious rights were not enforceable eagements, but were part of a commercial arrangement made between the landlord and the tenants, the details of which

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were worked out between the tenants themselves for the carrying on of the kelp industry. He said that the rotatory system was perbaps borrowed from some old traditional custom or habit, and was incor. porated in the modern commerojal arrangement. He decided that ibe rights could not be enforced as eaeements, but might be termi. nated on reasonable and proper notice. The cage was therefore diemissed.

OUR AUSTRALIAN LETTER.

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Sydney, N.S.W., July 4, 1911. The principle governing privileged communications was laid down by Baron Parke io Toogood v. Spyring (1 C. M. & R. 181), when he stated that those communications were privileged : “ If fairly warranted by any reasonable occasion or exigenoy, and honestly made.

The demand to apply the principle was made in the High Court in the CA90 of Howe and McColough v. Lees (1910, 11 C. L. R. 361), which was an appeal by the dofendants from a decision of the Supreme Court of Victoria. The oircumstances were as follows: Several persons and firms osrrying on business as stock and station agents in Bendigo formed an association to regulate the trade, and one of the terms of their agreement was that, should any default by made by a buyer, notice thereof should be given to the secretary, and the secretary should communicate the name of the defaulter to the other members. A wistake was made by the defendants as to a supposed default of Lees, who was not in default, and be sued for blander inagmuch as the report had been communicated to the other agents and be had suffered logs in consequence. The defence was privilege, but the judge of first instance, considering himself bound by a decision of the Victorian court (Pealling v. Watson, 1909, V. L. R. 198) gave a verdict in favour of tho plaintiff, Lees, on the ground of there being no privilege. The law in Victoria on this subject is the Bime as the law of Eoglaod, and has been declared as applying to Australia by the Judicial Committee in Macintosh v. Dun (1908) A. C. 390). Relying on Baron Parke's judgment in Tocgood v. Spyring (aup.), as being applicable to distinguish between the case under potice and Macintosh v. Dun, the defendants appealed to the High Court, olaiming privilege for the report as being obtained and issued by one of a mercantile association to the members only for their mutual protection, and not (for the purpose of profit. The question of malice not baving come before the court for their consideration, tbe decision of the Bench (Chief Justice Griffith and Justices Barton, o Coppor, and Higgins, Mr. Justice leaacs dissentiente), was on the point of privilege. Separato judgments were delivered, and the appeal was sustained. Taking as their text the words of Baron Parke in Toogood v. Spyring, “The law considers such publication (of statements false in fact and injurious to the character of another) as malicious, unless it is fairly made by a person in the discharge of some publio or private duty, whether legal or moral, or in the conduct of his own affairs in matters where his interest is concerned. lo such cases the occasion prevents the ioference of malice which the law draws from unauthorised communications, and affords a qualified defence depending on the absence of actual malice. If fairly warranted by any reasonable occasion or exigency, and honestly made, such communications are proteoted court declared that in the case there was a request on the part of the Agents for information as to defaults, and that to give it was the moral and social duty of the defendants. The agents had a substantial interest in knowing who were defaulters, and there was always the probability of a reasonable occasion or exigency to warrant Buch information being of great value : (Clark v. Molyneux, 3 Q B. Div. 237; Andrews v. Nolt-Bower, (1895) 1 Q B. 888; Fleming v. Newton, 1 H. L. C. 363, et alia). Dealing with the argument that Macintosh v. Dun (sup.) was in favour of the respondent, it was declared that, allowing to it the most ample effect possible, it amounts to than an authority for the proposition that an individual, or Association or corporation, that makes a business of collectiog informa. tion about traders' credit and selling it for reward to other traders has no privilege to communicate defamatory matter in the information. On the subject of “duty” the Chief Justice said: “ With regard to duts, I am of opinion that, when parties have made an agreement which is not unlawful witb regard to a matter in which they have a community of interest, it is their duty, in the relevant sense of the word, and quite irrespective of any technical rules as to the consideration for an agreement, to keep their promises.” In his disBepting judgment Mr. Justice Isascs, dealing with the subject of " common interest,” relating to occasion where it could only exist when the relation of a person to a number of othere was a universal menace to them, said : “A man's solvency is not in itself, apart from actual or pending transactions, a matter of common interest' to all the traders in the community, and until some interest' arose to which it was relevant, Lees' reputation for solvency or insolvency was not at the mercy of the agents' as :ociation.” And on the subject of “duty” be said : “But the law does not permit one person to preferentially sacrifice a second person'a reputation merely because of some interest, however slight, which a third person may possess. He must not forget that the second person has an interest too-tbat in his own character. Unless, there. fore, that the situation is one in which social or moral consideratione impose upon him a duty and either legally or morally leave him no ohoice, he commits an actionable wrong.'

The priooiple of Re Henley and Co. (9 Ch. Div. 469) which gave priority to the Crown as a creditor in the winding-up of a company was not accepted as applicable to the claim of the Crown in a banka

ruptcy proceeding in New South Walug. By tbe Act of 1898, upon & sequestration order being made, the property of the bankrupt vest 8 in the official assignee, and certain sections provide for certain preferential payments in respect of wages, salaries, &o., and it is declared by seot. 48, sub-sect. 4, that “subjeot to the provisions of this Act, all debts proved in the bankruptcy sball be paid pari pa88u.' There is no provision in the local Act. similar to that in sect. 150 of the English Bankruptoy Act of 1883, by which the Crown is bound as are ordinary creditore. The facts of the local case, Re Martin ; Ex parle Commissioners of Taxalion (5 N. S. W. S. R. 181), are these : At the date of sequestration of his estate, Martin was indebted to the Commissioners of Taxation in the sum of £59 3s. 8c., in respect of land and income tax, which under the Taxation Act was constituted a Crown debt. The commissioners lodged a proof in the ordinary way, and the official assignee ranked the claim with the preferential creditore. To this the commissioners took exoeption, and the matter came before the Judge in Bankruptoy, who decided against them. On appeal to the Full Court, the judgment of the lower court was sustained, and the right to priority of the Crown was not recognised. In support of the Crown, Re Henley and Co. (sup.) was relied on, as was Re Galvin (1897, 1 Ir. Ch. 520); while for the respondent Clarkson v. Allorney, General of Canada (15 Ont. R. 632 ; 16 Oot. App. R. 202) and Re Baynes (9 Q. L. J. 33) were tho objef foundations of argument. Thus thero were contrasted, in this Australian case of first impression, on the one side the judicial opinions of the Court of Appeal in England and the Court of Appeal in Ireland, and on the other side the judicial opinions of the Chief Justice of Ontario and the Chief Justice of Queensland. In bis decision, which was upheld by the Full Court of New South Wales, the Judge in Bankruptcy, Mr. Justice Walker, pointed out that the Crown was not, in the strict sense, bound by the Bankruptoy Act, but might have remained outside the Act, and used the remedies, as by extent, open to it. But it it does come in with other creditors and prove, its rights

creditor must be determined by the Act. It cannot prove its debt in Bankruptcy and at the same time repudiate the enactment that (except as provided) “all debts proved in the bankruptoy shall be paid pari" passu." The writ of extent by wbioh the Crown can bind its debtors is applicable only so long as the property remaios in the hands of the debtor, and was not applicable where the property had passed to the official assignee, as in this case. Further, seot. 44, sub-sect. 1, provides that a certificate of discharge does not release the bankrupt from Crown debts, and so preserved to the Crown the power to follow the released bankrupt, a privilege denied ordinary creditors. Distingaishing Re Henley and Co. (oup). he pointed out that there the property of a company remains vested in the company, liquidation notwithstanding, and so the Crown was in the position to issue execution. Further, the Crown did not come in under the Companies Act to prove its claim-it merely moved that the liquidator should pay the claim or be ousted by a writ of extent ; he was merely bolding possession of the company's property, which had not vested in him. The same remarks were applicable :o Re Galvin (sup.). The judgment was against the Crown's contention. On appeal to tho Full Court, a majority decision (the Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Owen) opheld the decision of the Bankruptoy judge, virtually upon the grounds given by him. Simpson, A. H. J. in his dissenting judgment, after pointing out that the question at issue could not arise under the English Bankruptoy Act, discussed the right of the Crown to priority on the ground of prerogative, and said: “There is apparently no actual decision in England on the point. still the point might have arisen before 1869, and the absence of a decision may arise from the fact that the Crown never claimed such a right, or that such a right was never disputed.”. In the absence of any actual decision to bind the court, he jollowed the law laid down by the English and Irish Courts of Appeal. An argu. ment based on the nocturnal energy of Lord Eldoo and Lord Rosslyn, reserred to by the former in Wydown's case (14 Ves. 80), had some weight with the majority of the court, as it was hardly possible that two Lords Chancellor would have rigen from their bede to sign commissions of bankruptcy to enable the Crown's right of extent to be defeated, if they thought that the Crown had the right of priority in the administration of assets in bankruptoy.

The question of scienter in relation to a matter occurring in a public-house, when the publican is asleep, at a time when he might naturally be expected to be asleep, arose in the case of Bear v. Lynch (8 C. L. R. 592). A statutory penalty was inflicted on a publican when knowledge positive or assumed was an ingredient of the offence, and on appeal from the conviction the consideration of mens rea in the publican as a determining factor in the crime drew very contradictory opinions from the judges of the State Court and the High Court respectively. There was a difference of opinion among six judges as

what were the actual components of crime. Peter Lynob, a publican, whose house must close at 11 p.m., was asleep after that hour, but was awakened by the police when they visited bis premises, oply to see one Melrosa, a visitor, charged with being on such premises pot for a lawful purpose-to wit, he was gaming. Lyoch was convicted for a breach of the Liquor Act, but carried the matter to the State Supreme Court (N.S.W.). The conviction was quashed, and on the subject of mens tea the judges differed. Chief Justice Darley and Mr. Justice Pring held that mens rea was a necessary ingredient of the crime, but Mr. Justice Cohen was against them. The special provision of the Liquor Aot 1905 raising the point in sect. 19 (4), which provides that a licensee upon whose premises any person is so found (“in contravention of the provisions of this Act”) sball, unless ho proves that suob person was there for a lawlul purpose," be liable to a penalty, Couneel for the licensee relied on Sherras v. De Rutzen (1895)

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