
1 
This Act may be cited for all purposes as the Heritable Securities (Scotland) Act, 1894.
2 
This Act shall apply to Scotland only, and shall come into operation on the first day of January one thousand eight hundred and ninety-five.
3 
The creditor in a heritable security may, without calling the tenants of the lands disponed in security as defenders, raise an action of maills and duties either in the sheriff court, in the form as nearly as may be of Schedule (A.) annexed to this Act, or in the Court of Session in common form, with the necessary alterations consequent upon the provisions of this Act, and may give notice of the raising of such action to the tenants by registered letter in the form as nearly as may be of Schedule (B.) annexed to this Act, and from and after the date when such notice is received by the tenants they shall be held as interpelled from making payment of the rents due by them, in the same manner and to the same effect as if they were called as defenders in an action of maills and duties according to the present law and practice, and upon intimation of the decree obtained in said action being made to the tenants by registered letter in the form as nearly as may be of Schedule (C.) annexed to this Act, the said tenants shall make payment of the rents due by them respectively in the same manner and under the like legal compulsitors as if the same had been decerned for and a charge for payment given in an action of maills and duties according to the existing law and practice, and payment when so made-shall be a complete exoneration and discharge to such tenants respectively: Provided always, that no decree in such action shall affect the right of the tenants to refuse payment of such rents on any ground not affecting the title of such creditor or the right of any prior creditor to enter into possession, and nothing herein contained shall prevent an action of maills and duties from being raised in the form heretofore in use, or deprive a creditor of any existing right competent to him of entering into possession without having recourse to an action of maills and duties.
4 
Any person interested may take proceedings to interpel the creditor from entering into possession of the lands disponed in security or collecting the rents thereof.
5 
Where a creditor desires to enter into possession of the lands disponed in security, and the proprietor thereof is in personal occupation of the same, or any part thereof, such proprietor shall be deemed to be an occupant without a title, and the creditor may take proceedings to eject him in all respects in the same way as if he were such occupant: Provided that this section shall not apply in any case unless such proprietor has made default in the punctual payment of the interest due under the security, or in due payment of the principal after formal requisition,
6 
Any creditor in possession of lands disponed in security may let such lands held in security, or part thereof, on lease, for a period not exceeding seven years in duration.
7 
Any creditor in possession of lands disponed in security may apply to the sheriff for warrant to let the lands disponed in security or part thereof, for a period exceeding seven years, setting forth the name of the proposed tenant or tenants, the duration and conditions of the proposed lease; and the sheriff may, after service on the proprietor and on the other heritable creditors, if any, and after such intimation and inquiry as he may think proper, and if satisfied that a lease for a longer period than seven years is expedient for the beneficial occupation of the lands, approve of the proposed lease on the terms and conditions proposed, or on such other terms and conditions as may appear to him expedient: Provided always, that such lease shall in no case exceed twenty-one years for heritable property in general and thirty-one years for minerals.
8 
Any creditor who has exposed for sale under his security the lands held in security, at a price not exceeding the amount due under the said security, and under any prior security, and any security or securities ranking pari passu with the exposer's security (exclusive of the expenses attending the exposure or prior exposures), or at any lower price, and has failed to find a purchaser, may apply to the sheriff for decree, in the terms of Schedule (D.) hereto annexed ; and the sheriff may, after service on the proprietor and on the other creditors, if any, and after such intimation and inquiry as he may think fit, grant such application and issue decree in the said terms. On such decree being pronounced, and an extract thereof in which said lands shall be described at length or by reference recorded in the appropriate register of sasines, the right of redemption reserved to the debtor shall be extinguished, and the creditor shall have right to the lands disponed in security in the same manner and to the same effect as if the disposition in security had been an irredeemable disposition as from the date of such decree, and upon registration of an extract of such decree in the appropriate register, the lands shall be disencumbered of all securities and diligences posterior to the security of the said creditor ; or instead of granting such decree, the sheriff may, upon any such application being made to him as aforesaid, appoint the lands held subject to the security to be re-exposed for sale at a price to be fixed by him, and in that event the said creditor shall have right to bid for and purchase the said lands at such sale, and, in the event of the creditor purchasing, the sheriff may issue decree in the form and to the effect aforesaid, or the creditor may grant a disposition of the lands to himself in the same manner as if he had been a stranger.
9 
Upon a sale being carried through under the immediately preceding section, and upon consignation of the surplus of the price, if any, over the sum due under the security, in terms of the Titles to Lands Consolidation (Scotland) Act, 1868, or upon the execution and recording of a certificate that there is no surplus, in terms of the Conveyancing (Scotland) Act, 1874, the right and title of the creditors to the lands shall be absolute and irredeemable, and the lands shall be disencumbered of securities and diligences in the manner and to the effect provided for in the said statutes as regards sales carried through in virtue thereof. Provided always, that the personal obligation of the debtor shall be reserved in full force and effect so far as not extinguished by the price at which the lands have been acquired.
10 
No purchaser from the creditor or other successor in title in the lands shall be under any duty to inquire into the regularity of the proceedings under which such creditor has acquired right to the lands held under his security by virtue of the provisions contained herein, or be affected by any irregularity therein, without prejudice to any competent claim of damages against such creditor.
11 
Any creditor holding a security ranking pari passu with another security who desires to sell the lands conveyed in security by his security, and who is unable to obtain the consent of the creditor holding such other pari passu security to a sale, may apply to the sheriff for warrant to sell the said lands, calling such other creditor as defender; and the sheriff, after hearing parties and making such inquiry as he thinks fit, may order a sale of the said lands, if in his opinion it is reasonable and expedient that such sale should take place ; and in case of difference of opinion, the sheriff may fix the price, authorise both or either of the parties or some other person to carry through the sale, and upon payment or consignation of the price to grant a conveyance and disencumber the lands of the said securities in the same way and as fully as if the creditors therein were by agreement carrying through said sale, and also to fix the times and conditions of sale in conformity with the law and practice relating to premonition and advertisement. And the expenses of and connected with the sale shall be payable preferably out of the price or proceeds of the sale, and the balance of such price or proceeds after providing for such expenses shall be paid to the creditors in the securities charged upon the lands according to their just rights and preferences.
12 
The following provisions shall have effect with regard to applications under sections seven, eight, and eleven of this Act:—
(1) The interlocutor of the sheriff who pronounces any order or decree shall be final, and not subject to review, except (1) as to questions of title and (2) where the principal sum due under the heritable security exceeds one thousand pounds.
(2) The sheriff may award expenses, or may direct that the expenses be treated as part of the expenses of the sale.
13 
The rights and powers conferred by this Act may be exercised by any creditor, although the debtor or any other creditor holding a security over the same lands, or other person to whom intimation may require or be ordered to be given is in pupillarity or minority, or subject to any legal incapacity, and any action or proceeding under this Act shall have the same force and effect as it would have had if such debtor, proprietor, creditor, or other person had been of full age and not subject to any legal incapacity when such action or proceeding was taken; and trustees, executors, tutors, curators, judicial factors, and other officers of court may exercise all or any of the powers conferred by this Act.
14 
From and after the passing of this Act the powers of sale contained in bonds and assignations in security granted in terms of the Registration of Leases (Scotland) Act, 1857, may be exercised by adopting the procedure provided in the case of sales under the powers of sale contained in bonds and dispositions in security by the Titles to Land Consolidation (Scotland) Act, 1868, and the Conveyancing (Scotland) Act, 1874, and this Act, and any sales under such bonds and assignations in security carried through by adopting the said procedure shall be as valid and effectual in every respect as if they had been carried through in accordance with the provisions of the Registration of Leases (Scotland) Act, 1857.
15 
The sheriff of the county in which the lands held in security or part thereof are situate, or where lands are situate in more counties than one the sheriff of any of such counties, shall have jurisdiction in all cases instituted under or in connexion with this Act, whatever the value of the lands may be.
16 
Where (a) the debtor in an heritable security has died and no heritable title has been completed to the lands by his heir or other representative, and the name and address of such heir cannot be ascertained by the creditor, or (b) the creditor cannot ascertain the address of the debtor in the security, or whether such debtor is still alive, or (c) the creditor cannot ascertain the address of the person who, in terms of such heritable security, is the person legally entitled to receive intimation of the demand of payment herein-after mentioned, the creditor in such security may, in any such case, apply to the sheriff of the county in which any portion of the lands disponed by such heritable security is situate, for warrant to intimate the demand of payment specified in section one hundred and nineteen of the Titles to Land Consolidation (Scotland) Act, 1868, to the debtor, at the office of the Keeper of the Record of Edictal Citations, within the General Register House, Edinburgh, in such form and addressed to such person or persons by name, or in his or their representative character, or as the sheriff may, after such inquiry (if any) as he may think fit, prescribe, and a demand for payment so made shall have the same effect as a demand for payment delivered personally to the debtor in such security.
17 
Nothing herein contained shall prejudice or restrict the powers, rights, and privileges of creditors in heritable securities according to the present law and practice.
18 
In this Act the words " conveyance, " " heritable security, " " security, " " creditor, " " debtor, " and " purchaser " shall have the same meanings respectively as in the Titles to Land Consolidation (Scotland) Act, 1868.
The word " lands " shall extend to and include all heritable subjects.
19 
Nothing in this Act contained shall affect the present law and practice in regard to the preferential character of debts due to the Crown, nor shall anything done under the new procedure by this Act authorised prejudice the rights of the Crown as these exist according to the present law and practice.
SCHEDULE (A.)
Section 3.

SCHEDULE (B.)
Section 3.

SCHEDULE (C.)
Section 3.

SCHEDULE (D.)
Section 8.
