Act, 6 August 1700, Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The Sixth day of August one Thousand Seven hundred years

D1700/8/91

Act

Act Reponing James Dunbar against a Certificat

Anent a Petition given in to His Majesties high Commissioner and Lords of his Majesties privy Councill be James Dunbar of Dalcross shewing That wher the Lady Strowan for her self and as assigney to Margarat Robertson her daughter, and to John Robertson alias Gilibreck her ground officer with concourse of his Majesties Advocat hade raised a Complaint before the said Lords against Duncan Robertsone her sone, and others his accomplices for severall Ryots alleadged Committed by the said Duncan on the said Lady and her Cedents, Which Complaint makes mention that the petitioner became Cautioner of Laborowes acted in the saids Lords books for the said Duncan under the paine of one Thousand merks Bot bears no warrand to cite the petitioner, notwithstanding quherof the petitioner gott ane full Copie of the said Complaint given him to Compear before the saids Lords upon the Threttie day of July last by past, and though the petitioner was nowayes concerned with the matter of the Complaint, yet he did wait in the Councill outter room upon the said Threttie day being Tuesday and the Thursday therafter at either of which dyets the said Complaint was not called or insisted in, Bot on the Frayday therafter the said Lords haveing sett the said Complaint was called, Tho the pursuer was absent and Certification granted against the petitioner Against which it was not doubted Bot the Lords would repone the petitioner Because primo the petitioner would make it appear that the subject of the Complaint does nowayes concerne the petitioner as actor Airt or part Secundo the Letters bears no warrand for citeing of the petitioner as his copie therwith produced would testifie Tertio the petitioner could instruct by severall famous witnesses and servants about the Councill Chamber that the petitioner attended the forsaid two dyets of Councill and that same day the forsaid Complaint was called the petitioner was ready to have Compeared hade the petitioner knowen what the saids Lords would have medled in any privat Bussines, and besides the petitioner could instruct that the petitioner had stayed in toune of Edinburgh because of the Citation given the petitioner on the said Complaint more then thir twenty dayes And Therfore Humbly supplicating the saids Lords to the effect aftermentioned as the said petition bears His Majesties privy Councill haveing Considered the above petition given in to them be James Dunbar of Dalcross They have Reponed and hereby Repones the petitioner against the above Certificaitone dated the second day of August instant and discharges the Extracting of the said Certificatione against the petitoner

Att Edinburgh The Sixth day of August one Thousand Seven hundred years

D1700/8/91

Act

Act Reponing James Dunbar against a Certificat

Anent a Petition given in to His Majesties high Commissioner and Lords of his Majesties privy Councill be James Dunbar of Dalcross shewing That wher the Lady Strowan for her self and as assigney to Margarat Robertson her daughter, and to John Robertson alias Gilibreck her ground officer with concourse of his Majesties Advocat hade raised a Complaint before the said Lords against Duncan Robertsone her sone, and others his accomplices for severall Ryots alleadged Committed by the said Duncan on the said Lady and her Cedents, Which Complaint makes mention that the petitioner became Cautioner of Laborowes acted in the saids Lords books for the said Duncan under the paine of one Thousand merks Bot bears no warrand to cite the petitioner, notwithstanding quherof the petitioner gott ane full Copie of the said Complaint given him to Compear before the saids Lords upon the Threttie day of July last by past, and though the petitioner was nowayes concerned with the matter of the Complaint, yet he did wait in the Councill outter room upon the said Threttie day being Tuesday and the Thursday therafter at either of which dyets the said Complaint was not called or insisted in, Bot on the Frayday therafter the said Lords haveing sett the said Complaint was called, Tho the pursuer was absent and Certification granted against the petitioner Against which it was not doubted Bot the Lords would repone the petitioner Because primo the petitioner would make it appear that the subject of the Complaint does nowayes concerne the petitioner as actor Airt or part Secundo the Letters bears no warrand for citeing of the petitioner as his copie therwith produced would testifie Tertio the petitioner could instruct by severall famous witnesses and servants about the Councill Chamber that the petitioner attended the forsaid two dyets of Councill and that same day the forsaid Complaint was called the petitioner was ready to have Compeared hade the petitioner knowen what the saids Lords would have medled in any privat Bussines, and besides the petitioner could instruct that the petitioner had stayed in toune of Edinburgh because of the Citation given the petitioner on the said Complaint more then thir twenty dayes And Therfore Humbly supplicating the saids Lords to the effect aftermentioned as the said petition bears His Majesties privy Councill haveing Considered the above petition given in to them be James Dunbar of Dalcross They have Reponed and hereby Repones the petitioner against the above Certificaitone dated the second day of August instant and discharges the Extracting of the said Certificatione against the petitoner

1. NRS, PC2/28, 4v-5r.

1. NRS, PC2/28, 4v-5r.

Act, 6 August 1700, Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The Sixth day of August one Thousand Seven hundred years

D1700/8/81

Act

Act In Favors of The Lady Naper for getting up a Trunk

Anent the petition given in to the Lords of his majesties privy Councill be Margaret Lady Naper Shewing That upon the petitioners brother the late Lord Napers death ther were two trunks of papers Consigned in the Councill office, And after the petitioner was served heir, the petitioner in the year Jaj vjc Eightie Eight a Warrand for getting up the petitioners papers Bot throw mistake the petitioner gott up only one trunk and the other Lyes thir still, which by the saids Lords Order, The Lord Aberuchill has gone thorow and found therin no other papers Bot what are the petitioners Bot the Inventaring being a work of time, And the Clerks servants not haveing so much to spare as to do it with that exactnes as is requyred, And the petitioner being willing to give her recept of the Trunk and papers therin contained Consigned as a forsaid in amplar And Therfore humbly Supplicating the saids Lords to the effect aftermentioned as the said bill bears His Majesties high Commissioner and the Lord’s of his Majesties privy Councill; Haveing Considered this petition given in to them by the above Lady Naper Craveing up a trunk with papers, Which are in the Clarks of Councills hand They hereby Grant the desyre therof, and Allowes the papers to be given up upon the Ladies oun recept or her factors.

Att Edinburgh The Sixth day of August one Thousand Seven hundred years

D1700/8/81

Act

Act In Favors of The Lady Naper for getting up a Trunk

Anent the petition given in to the Lords of his majesties privy Councill be Margaret Lady Naper Shewing That upon the petitioners brother the late Lord Napers death ther were two trunks of papers Consigned in the Councill office, And after the petitioner was served heir, the petitioner in the year Jaj vjc Eightie Eight a Warrand for getting up the petitioners papers Bot throw mistake the petitioner gott up only one trunk and the other Lyes thir still, which by the saids Lords Order, The Lord Aberuchill has gone thorow and found therin no other papers Bot what are the petitioners Bot the Inventaring being a work of time, And the Clerks servants not haveing so much to spare as to do it with that exactnes as is requyred, And the petitioner being willing to give her recept of the Trunk and papers therin contained Consigned as a forsaid in amplar And Therfore humbly Supplicating the saids Lords to the effect aftermentioned as the said bill bears His Majesties high Commissioner and the Lord’s of his Majesties privy Councill; Haveing Considered this petition given in to them by the above Lady Naper Craveing up a trunk with papers, Which are in the Clarks of Councills hand They hereby Grant the desyre therof, and Allowes the papers to be given up upon the Ladies oun recept or her factors.

1. NRS, PC2/28, 4r-v.

1. NRS, PC2/28, 4r-v.

Sederunt, 6 August 1700, Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The Sixth day of August one Thousand Seven hundred years1

D1700/8/72

Sederunt

His Majesties Commissioner; Lord Chancelor; Earl of Argyll; Earl of Mar; Earl of Mortoune; Earl of Cassills; Earl of Lauderdale; Earl of Lowdoune; Earl of Annandale; Earl of Forfar; Viscount Tarbat; Lord Forbes; Lord Advocat; Lord Aberuchill; Lord Philiphaugh; Lord Crossrig; Mr Frances Montgomry; Lord Provost of Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The Sixth day of August one Thousand Seven hundred years1

D1700/8/72

Sederunt

His Majesties Commissioner; Lord Chancelor; Earl of Argyll; Earl of Mar; Earl of Mortoune; Earl of Cassills; Earl of Lauderdale; Earl of Lowdoune; Earl of Annandale; Earl of Forfar; Viscount Tarbat; Lord Forbes; Lord Advocat; Lord Aberuchill; Lord Philiphaugh; Lord Crossrig; Mr Frances Montgomry; Lord Provost of Edinburgh

1. NRS, PC2/28, 4r.

2. NRS, PC2/28, 4r.

1. NRS, PC2/28, 4r.

2. NRS, PC2/28, 4r.

Decreet, 2 August 1700, Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The second day of August one Thousand seven Hundred years

D1700/8/61

Decreet

Decreit Strachan of Glenkindie against Captain Menzies and others

Anent the Bill of Suspension presented and given in to the Lords of his Maejsties privy Councill be Captain James Menzies Lawfull sone to the deceast Sir Alexander Menzies of that ilk and Donald Mccolroy alias Cameron Allaster and Evan Mccolroyes his brothers Grigor Mcjanoig and John Mccoill vicenduie designed by the pretended decreet aftermentioned in Cainsserah and Kinshlaicker in Ranach Against Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie Shewing That wher the said Captain James Menzies and the fornamed persones were Lately charged Conjunctllie and severallie at the instance of the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie be vertue of a decreet obtained at his Instance against the petitioner upon the twentie seventh day of Aprill Last before the Commissioners of Justiarij appointed for the Northern district of this kingdome To make payment to him for himself and as assigney Constitute by Alexander Leith of Bellchirry of the soume of six Thousand seven hundred and twenty nyne pounds threttein shilling four penies as the pryce and value of Certaine goods gear Catle and other moveables alledged stollen spulzied and away taken from the saids Alexander Strachan and Alexander Leith at the respective times and in the way and maner Lybelled By the saids Donald Allaster and Evan McColroyes Grigor McJanoig and John Roy McCoillvicenduy, and for the damnage and expences wared out by the Charger and his cedent theranent Extending in the haill to the soume abovementioned, And Likwayes To make payment to James Smith procurator Fiscall of the Court off the soume of six hundred and seventy two pounds Nyntein shilling four pennies scots as the tenth part of the said accumulat soume due to the Commissioners for their own charges attendance and expences within ane Certaine short space nixt after the Charge Under the payne of poynding and other Legall dilligence etc more wrongeously and unjustlie Considering It is of veritie That the forsaid Decreet is null in itself and mos[t]2 unjustlie pronunced in so farr as primo The dec[reet]3 proceeding upon a lybell for restitutuion of the value prices of Certaine goods therin mentioned as Randum without any regaird to probability or truth, The decerned is exactly Conforme to the Lybell, and albeit it was pars judicis to have taxed and modified the extravagant Oathes in Litem of the parties, yet the Commissioners have Decerned simply conforme to the saids oathes nay even beyond them, And that this may yet Further appear The Lords would Consider how extravagantly the particulars are Lybelled from the few instances of many following, as primo The Lybell and Decerrit bears a merk per diem for each horse, Albeit by the Custome before the Lords of session the violent profitts of Labouring horse or Oxen even in Labouring time is only extended to five shilling and the most to seven shilling per diem, Secundo The pursuer Lybells Eightie seven pounds as the intrest for half a year of the soume of Two Thousand five hundred pound which is usurious the intrest amounting only to seventie five pound evin without deduceing retention and yet the Decernitor is conforme to the Lybell Which is a plain evidence that the Decernitur has proceeded without any due consideration, And that the oathes in Litem were given without any regaird to truth; Tertio Glenkindie Depones that his expences in prosecuteing the process Did Extend to Two Thousand ane hundred pounds, which was a most exorbitant and extravagant soume, and yet the Commissioners Decerned without any modifcation at the first dyet of Compearance, without demanding any particular accompt of the Least mark of probabil And to render the matter yet more absured, Albeit Glenkindy was the only pursuar and his oath as to the expences was to be understood to Comprehend all the expences yet Leith, Glenkindies pretended assigney is allowed to give his oath in Litem seperatly and he depones that his expences amounted to six hundred merks, And the Damnadge he sustained throw the want of his goods Albeit he acknowledges he recovered all except ane Cow and ane Ox Did amount to six hundred merks more so that the expences decerned in favors of the pursuers by and attour the Extravagancy of the violent profitts Extends to about Thrie Thousand pounds scots And yet ther was bot one proces of one Citation and dyet and only four or five witnesses called which ware for the most part the pursuers oun servants, and this vast soume of expences is pretended to have been given out betwixt October and Aprill, And yet all these expences are allowed without any modifcation or taxataion, And the Decernitur proceeds for a Considerable soume, upon Leiths oath, who was neither partie nor witnes and his expence is stated as a seperat soume tho they were most apparentely contained under the pursuers oath in Litem Tertio albeit the pursuer pass from some part of the Lybell in his oun oath, yet the decernitur is roundly for all Quarto the decreet is null Because the pursuer Lybells not only for the damnadges he sustatined himself But for repairation and restitution of the goods taken from his servants and from his tennents, Albeit he neither Lybells nor produces any title from them And evin as to that part of the Lybell to which he pretends right as assigney be the said Alexander Leith it is most apparent by the extract of the decreet theirwith produced That albeit the pursuer pretended a right be vertue of ane assignation from Leith and as assigney Obtained a warrand to charge the Petitioner, yet the assignation itself is a date posterior to that warrant and Consequently the warrant was obtained by obreptione expresso mendario, Quinto The decreet is manifastly null for want of probation as is clearly instructed by the extract of the depositiones under the Clerks hand also therwith produced bearing nothing but hear-say and it is especially to be considered that after the witnesses hade been examined two of the very same witnesses being Glenkindies own servants are reexamined, Which was to this intent, That haveing been present at the depositiones of the other witnesses they might be the more closs and pack’t in the answers to other new Interogators, And as farder to be remarked That albeit the testimonies as they are marked bear the purging of the witnesses of partiall Councill or good deeds received yet by ane instrument therwith produced, It appears that they were not purged, And particularly Greogor Og Mcgregor the pretended Tascular was not only, not purged bot was admitted albeit he was manifastly guiltie of partiall Councill and that it was most contrary to Comon practise to admitt the Tascular as a witness, and in Like maner John Riach another witnes was admitted albeit it was instructed against him as appears by the said instrument that he was ultronious not contained in the list of witnesses and objected that he was one of pretended depredators himself, and that he was infamous and formally declared fugative, and besides these, The matteriall witnesses are Glenkindies own servants, so that the probation is doubly defective First because the point cheifly to be proven viz That the fornamed persones alleadged Depredators were the persones that Committed the Spulzie is only proven by hear-say, and then the witnesses who prove them and nixt the testimonies are unduely marked Sexto as the Corpus delicti is not proven so neither is it at all proven That the said Captain James Menzies was either tutor or in the termes or Circumstances of the acts of parliament Lybelled for he was neither the Land Lord Chiftain Leader Baillie, Wodsetter or master of the alleadged depredators, nor can he be Lyable as tutor quheranent he were really tutor Because ther is no such Law nor are penul Lawes to be extended, Because de casu in Causum which being facti ought to have been proven albeit their hade been no body present to have denyed it, as indeed the Lybell and whole qualificationes were denyed, so that the decret as to this point is utterly without probation and void, Wherby its evident that the Commissioners have Committed gross and manifast iniquity in pronunceing such a decreet, Likeas the same is null as to the said Captain James Menzies upon this ground that a procurator haveing offered to Compear for him and propon peremptor defences, The saids Commissioners contrair to all forme of Law did refuse to admitt him albeit the actione was only ad Civilus effectus as is instructed by the Instrument produced, Septimo as the proces and decreet are utterly informall and null so the Lybell it self was most Irrelevantly conceived against the said James Menzies tutorio nominae without calling the pupill or his other pretended tutors, and the Lords are intreated to Consider the Consequences of such a proces wherin all parties haveing intrest are neither called nor is their any direct Law to found the Conclusion of such a Lybell, And if the tutor being Decerned should make payment of the soume as tutor he might be in danger never to recover his releiff off the pupill who is not concerned in the proces Octavo the Lybell is yet furder most Irrelevant In so farr as the said Captain Menzies is decerned Simply to make restitutione or payment of the values, Wheras by the Lawes of nationes, and by the Law of this nation in particular no man is directly Lyable for another mans guilt, Bot the Oblidgment upon the master is only to present to Justice or doe sufficient dilligence for that effect and in case of faillie as the punishment and Certification for not doeing of what is in their power they are declared Lyable for the damnadges, And Therfore the Lybell ought to have been alternatively Conceived aither to have done dilligence, or to be Lyable and it wuld have been cleared That all dilligence was used and swa the saids Lords might evidently perceive etc. nevertheless for obedience they were instantly content to find sufficient Cautione etc Incase etc. And Therfore etc Suspend etc And Therefore Humbly Craveing the saids Lords would grant Letters for Summonding the said Chargers To Compear before the saids Lords at ane Certaine day Bringing with them the forsaid pretended decreet grounds and warrants therof etc To have been seen and Considered be the saids Lords and to have heard and seen the samen suspended, as the said bill of suspension at more Length bears, Upon which bill of suspension The Lords of his Majesties privy Councill by their delyverance of the fourth day of May Jaj vjc nyntie nyne years sisted execution upon the decreet charged on till a Certain day, And in the mean time alloued the Charger to see and answer the decreet charged on, And therafter the said bill of suspension with the answers given in therto by the Charger Being upon the twentie nynty day of June Jaj vjc nyntie nyne years Read in presence of the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Their Lordships nominated and appointed a Committie of their oun number to consider both the bill and answers therto, and to make ther report to the Councill, And the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill, haveing upon a bill of suspension given in to them by Gordon of Campdell against the said Laird of Glenkindie upon the Nynth of July Last by past appointed a Committie of their oun number to endeavor to setle and agree, and to call for and hear both parties in the matter in debate betwixt them; And to make their report to the Councill, Which bill of suspension given in by Gordon of Campdell is Coincident with the bill of suspension given in by the said Captain James Menzies, And the said Committie haveing accordingly mett They made their report to the Councill, And the Councill haveing Considered the Report, They have Refused and hereby Refuses the desyre of the said bill of suspension presented and given in to them by the said Captain James Menzies against the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie Bot his Majesties Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Have Allowed and hereby Allowes the said Gordon of Campdell and Captain James Menzies tutor of Wemye to pursue in Glenkindies name or in their own name the whole other accessories to and Complices in the depredation Dicerned for in the two Decreets charged on, And that either before the Lords of privy Councill or Commissioners of Justiciary to be of new appointed for the Highlands, or any other Judges Competent provyding that the said Gordon of Campdell and tutor of Weyme pursue the said accessories upon their own proper expences, and Reserving allwayes to the Lords of privy Councill to determine after decreet is recovered upon the saids pursuits how farr the said decret should be furthcomeing and by what proportion the said Gordon of Campbell and Tutor of Weyme for their respective releiffs, as also for payment to them of all expences taskall money and others they have been or shall be put to And Ordaines Letters of horning on fiftein dayes under the signet of Councill and others needfull to pass hereon in forme as effeirs.

Att Edinburgh The second day of August one Thousand seven Hundred years

D1700/8/61

Decreet

Decreit Strachan of Glenkindie against Captain Menzies and others

Anent the Bill of Suspension presented and given in to the Lords of his Maejsties privy Councill be Captain James Menzies Lawfull sone to the deceast Sir Alexander Menzies of that ilk and Donald Mccolroy alias Cameron Allaster and Evan Mccolroyes his brothers Grigor Mcjanoig and John Mccoill vicenduie designed by the pretended decreet aftermentioned in Cainsserah and Kinshlaicker in Ranach Against Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie Shewing That wher the said Captain James Menzies and the fornamed persones were Lately charged Conjunctllie and severallie at the instance of the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie be vertue of a decreet obtained at his Instance against the petitioner upon the twentie seventh day of Aprill Last before the Commissioners of Justiarij appointed for the Northern district of this kingdome To make payment to him for himself and as assigney Constitute by Alexander Leith of Bellchirry of the soume of six Thousand seven hundred and twenty nyne pounds threttein shilling four penies as the pryce and value of Certaine goods gear Catle and other moveables alledged stollen spulzied and away taken from the saids Alexander Strachan and Alexander Leith at the respective times and in the way and maner Lybelled By the saids Donald Allaster and Evan McColroyes Grigor McJanoig and John Roy McCoillvicenduy, and for the damnage and expences wared out by the Charger and his cedent theranent Extending in the haill to the soume abovementioned, And Likwayes To make payment to James Smith procurator Fiscall of the Court off the soume of six hundred and seventy two pounds Nyntein shilling four pennies scots as the tenth part of the said accumulat soume due to the Commissioners for their own charges attendance and expences within ane Certaine short space nixt after the Charge Under the payne of poynding and other Legall dilligence etc more wrongeously and unjustlie Considering It is of veritie That the forsaid Decreet is null in itself and mos[t]2 unjustlie pronunced in so farr as primo The dec[reet]3 proceeding upon a lybell for restitutuion of the value prices of Certaine goods therin mentioned as Randum without any regaird to probability or truth, The decerned is exactly Conforme to the Lybell, and albeit it was pars judicis to have taxed and modified the extravagant Oathes in Litem of the parties, yet the Commissioners have Decerned simply conforme to the saids oathes nay even beyond them, And that this may yet Further appear The Lords would Consider how extravagantly the particulars are Lybelled from the few instances of many following, as primo The Lybell and Decerrit bears a merk per diem for each horse, Albeit by the Custome before the Lords of session the violent profitts of Labouring horse or Oxen even in Labouring time is only extended to five shilling and the most to seven shilling per diem, Secundo The pursuer Lybells Eightie seven pounds as the intrest for half a year of the soume of Two Thousand five hundred pound which is usurious the intrest amounting only to seventie five pound evin without deduceing retention and yet the Decernitor is conforme to the Lybell Which is a plain evidence that the Decernitur has proceeded without any due consideration, And that the oathes in Litem were given without any regaird to truth; Tertio Glenkindie Depones that his expences in prosecuteing the process Did Extend to Two Thousand ane hundred pounds, which was a most exorbitant and extravagant soume, and yet the Commissioners Decerned without any modifcation at the first dyet of Compearance, without demanding any particular accompt of the Least mark of probabil And to render the matter yet more absured, Albeit Glenkindy was the only pursuar and his oath as to the expences was to be understood to Comprehend all the expences yet Leith, Glenkindies pretended assigney is allowed to give his oath in Litem seperatly and he depones that his expences amounted to six hundred merks, And the Damnadge he sustained throw the want of his goods Albeit he acknowledges he recovered all except ane Cow and ane Ox Did amount to six hundred merks more so that the expences decerned in favors of the pursuers by and attour the Extravagancy of the violent profitts Extends to about Thrie Thousand pounds scots And yet ther was bot one proces of one Citation and dyet and only four or five witnesses called which ware for the most part the pursuers oun servants, and this vast soume of expences is pretended to have been given out betwixt October and Aprill, And yet all these expences are allowed without any modifcation or taxataion, And the Decernitur proceeds for a Considerable soume, upon Leiths oath, who was neither partie nor witnes and his expence is stated as a seperat soume tho they were most apparentely contained under the pursuers oath in Litem Tertio albeit the pursuer pass from some part of the Lybell in his oun oath, yet the decernitur is roundly for all Quarto the decreet is null Because the pursuer Lybells not only for the damnadges he sustatined himself But for repairation and restitution of the goods taken from his servants and from his tennents, Albeit he neither Lybells nor produces any title from them And evin as to that part of the Lybell to which he pretends right as assigney be the said Alexander Leith it is most apparent by the extract of the decreet theirwith produced That albeit the pursuer pretended a right be vertue of ane assignation from Leith and as assigney Obtained a warrand to charge the Petitioner, yet the assignation itself is a date posterior to that warrant and Consequently the warrant was obtained by obreptione expresso mendario, Quinto The decreet is manifastly null for want of probation as is clearly instructed by the extract of the depositiones under the Clerks hand also therwith produced bearing nothing but hear-say and it is especially to be considered that after the witnesses hade been examined two of the very same witnesses being Glenkindies own servants are reexamined, Which was to this intent, That haveing been present at the depositiones of the other witnesses they might be the more closs and pack’t in the answers to other new Interogators, And as farder to be remarked That albeit the testimonies as they are marked bear the purging of the witnesses of partiall Councill or good deeds received yet by ane instrument therwith produced, It appears that they were not purged, And particularly Greogor Og Mcgregor the pretended Tascular was not only, not purged bot was admitted albeit he was manifastly guiltie of partiall Councill and that it was most contrary to Comon practise to admitt the Tascular as a witness, and in Like maner John Riach another witnes was admitted albeit it was instructed against him as appears by the said instrument that he was ultronious not contained in the list of witnesses and objected that he was one of pretended depredators himself, and that he was infamous and formally declared fugative, and besides these, The matteriall witnesses are Glenkindies own servants, so that the probation is doubly defective First because the point cheifly to be proven viz That the fornamed persones alleadged Depredators were the persones that Committed the Spulzie is only proven by hear-say, and then the witnesses who prove them and nixt the testimonies are unduely marked Sexto as the Corpus delicti is not proven so neither is it at all proven That the said Captain James Menzies was either tutor or in the termes or Circumstances of the acts of parliament Lybelled for he was neither the Land Lord Chiftain Leader Baillie, Wodsetter or master of the alleadged depredators, nor can he be Lyable as tutor quheranent he were really tutor Because ther is no such Law nor are penul Lawes to be extended, Because de casu in Causum which being facti ought to have been proven albeit their hade been no body present to have denyed it, as indeed the Lybell and whole qualificationes were denyed, so that the decret as to this point is utterly without probation and void, Wherby its evident that the Commissioners have Committed gross and manifast iniquity in pronunceing such a decreet, Likeas the same is null as to the said Captain James Menzies upon this ground that a procurator haveing offered to Compear for him and propon peremptor defences, The saids Commissioners contrair to all forme of Law did refuse to admitt him albeit the actione was only ad Civilus effectus as is instructed by the Instrument produced, Septimo as the proces and decreet are utterly informall and null so the Lybell it self was most Irrelevantly conceived against the said James Menzies tutorio nominae without calling the pupill or his other pretended tutors, and the Lords are intreated to Consider the Consequences of such a proces wherin all parties haveing intrest are neither called nor is their any direct Law to found the Conclusion of such a Lybell, And if the tutor being Decerned should make payment of the soume as tutor he might be in danger never to recover his releiff off the pupill who is not concerned in the proces Octavo the Lybell is yet furder most Irrelevant In so farr as the said Captain Menzies is decerned Simply to make restitutione or payment of the values, Wheras by the Lawes of nationes, and by the Law of this nation in particular no man is directly Lyable for another mans guilt, Bot the Oblidgment upon the master is only to present to Justice or doe sufficient dilligence for that effect and in case of faillie as the punishment and Certification for not doeing of what is in their power they are declared Lyable for the damnadges, And Therfore the Lybell ought to have been alternatively Conceived aither to have done dilligence, or to be Lyable and it wuld have been cleared That all dilligence was used and swa the saids Lords might evidently perceive etc. nevertheless for obedience they were instantly content to find sufficient Cautione etc Incase etc. And Therfore etc Suspend etc And Therefore Humbly Craveing the saids Lords would grant Letters for Summonding the said Chargers To Compear before the saids Lords at ane Certaine day Bringing with them the forsaid pretended decreet grounds and warrants therof etc To have been seen and Considered be the saids Lords and to have heard and seen the samen suspended, as the said bill of suspension at more Length bears, Upon which bill of suspension The Lords of his Majesties privy Councill by their delyverance of the fourth day of May Jaj vjc nyntie nyne years sisted execution upon the decreet charged on till a Certain day, And in the mean time alloued the Charger to see and answer the decreet charged on, And therafter the said bill of suspension with the answers given in therto by the Charger Being upon the twentie nynty day of June Jaj vjc nyntie nyne years Read in presence of the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Their Lordships nominated and appointed a Committie of their oun number to consider both the bill and answers therto, and to make ther report to the Councill, And the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill, haveing upon a bill of suspension given in to them by Gordon of Campdell against the said Laird of Glenkindie upon the Nynth of July Last by past appointed a Committie of their oun number to endeavor to setle and agree, and to call for and hear both parties in the matter in debate betwixt them; And to make their report to the Councill, Which bill of suspension given in by Gordon of Campdell is Coincident with the bill of suspension given in by the said Captain James Menzies, And the said Committie haveing accordingly mett They made their report to the Councill, And the Councill haveing Considered the Report, They have Refused and hereby Refuses the desyre of the said bill of suspension presented and given in to them by the said Captain James Menzies against the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie Bot his Majesties Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Have Allowed and hereby Allowes the said Gordon of Campdell and Captain James Menzies tutor of Wemye to pursue in Glenkindies name or in their own name the whole other accessories to and Complices in the depredation Dicerned for in the two Decreets charged on, And that either before the Lords of privy Councill or Commissioners of Justiciary to be of new appointed for the Highlands, or any other Judges Competent provyding that the said Gordon of Campdell and tutor of Weyme pursue the said accessories upon their own proper expences, and Reserving allwayes to the Lords of privy Councill to determine after decreet is recovered upon the saids pursuits how farr the said decret should be furthcomeing and by what proportion the said Gordon of Campbell and Tutor of Weyme for their respective releiffs, as also for payment to them of all expences taskall money and others they have been or shall be put to And Ordaines Letters of horning on fiftein dayes under the signet of Councill and others needfull to pass hereon in forme as effeirs.

1. NRS, PC2/28, 1r-4r.

2. Damage to page.

3. Damage to page.

1. NRS, PC2/28, 1r-4r.

2. Damage to page.

3. Damage to page.

Sederunt, 2 August 1700, Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The second day of August one Thousand seven Hundred years1

D1700/8/52

Sederunt

His Majesties Commissioner; Lord Chancillor; Earl of Melvill p: C; Earl of Crafurd; Earl of Mar; Earl of Morton; Earl of Buchan; Earl of Cassills; Earl of Lothian; Earl of Leven; Earl of Annandale; Earl of Forfar; Viscount Tarbat; Lord Forbes; Lord Advocat; Lord Thesaurer deput; Lord Justice Clerk; Lord Aberuchill; Lord Philiphaugh; Lord Halcraig; Mr Frances Montgomrie

Att Edinburgh The second day of August one Thousand seven Hundred years1

D1700/8/52

Sederunt

His Majesties Commissioner; Lord Chancillor; Earl of Melvill p: C; Earl of Crafurd; Earl of Mar; Earl of Morton; Earl of Buchan; Earl of Cassills; Earl of Lothian; Earl of Leven; Earl of Annandale; Earl of Forfar; Viscount Tarbat; Lord Forbes; Lord Advocat; Lord Thesaurer deput; Lord Justice Clerk; Lord Aberuchill; Lord Philiphaugh; Lord Halcraig; Mr Frances Montgomrie

1. NRS, PC2/28, 1r.

2. NRS, PC2/28, 1r. Sederunt repeated as start of new manuscript register with same date as the last in the previous one.

1. NRS, PC2/28, 1r.

2. NRS, PC2/28, 1r. Sederunt repeated as start of new manuscript register with same date as the last in the previous one.

Warrant, 2 August 1700, Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The Second day of August One Thousand Seven Hundred years

D1700/8/41

Warrant

Warrand for ane Edictiall Citatione Anderson and others against Mcdonald and others

Anent a Petition given In to his Majesties high Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill be Thomas Andersone in Molintyde Issobell Walker ther James Mery ther William Niven ther Jannet Jamesone relict of the deceast William Andersone, ther, James Ross ther, James Lesslie at the Milne of Williamstoune, Robert Demster in Brankienturne Mathow Coutts ther Patrick Mearnes in Greenishes, James Todd ther Androw Anderson in Over Williamstoune Patrick Lidenghame in Neath Williamstoune John Anderson in Tillmorgan, William Cruikshank their, Elspeth Mainey ther, Jannet Innes their, John Robertsone their, William Cruikshank in Woodend John Litle John in Fisherfoord, John Cruikshank in Cairnhill William Mitchell in Over Williamstoune Shewing That wher the saids Lordships petitioner haveing been most barbarously robbed some years agoe of all that the petitioners hade in the world by Gregor Mcdonald in Balnabo James Mcdonald their James Meldrum their tennants to Lauchlan Grant in Ballambo John McLauchlan in Dalabarver William Cruikshank their tennents to John Mcgrigor in Dallabarreir Duncan Doull in Wester Campdell John Grant alias McGillimicheall Donald Grant his brother ther John Grant their John Donan their Donald Down his Sone ther tennents to Gregor Farquharson of Wester Campdell James Riach in Findruin Allaster Riach his brother ther tennants to John Grant of Auchriacham John Grant in Fetter Letter, John Fleyming in Cauchlaw tennents to Alexander Gordon of Easter Campdell John Main in Glencowglass tennant to […] Grant of Carron Duncan McCaull in Leitch Thomas McComismoir their Allaster and Angus McCowlls ther John Geddies then tenants to the deceast Grant of Cambrackachie now to John Grant of Auchrianchin his Sone William Kaynd in Baddivockell tennent to John Grant of Weboy John Stewart Brother to Lessmordo John Forbes at the Milne of Lessmordie Thomas Stewart in Deskie John2 Stewart in Ballandie Alexander Stewart in Deskie then tenants to John Gordon of Deskie now to John Grant of Tomawillan John Ross in Clashamorie then tennant to the deceast Robert Grant of Combrachachie now to the said John Grant of Auchriachan his Sone John Mcantor in Badivochell tennents to John Grant of Nevoy James Mughaugh at the mylne of Rifries tennent to James Stewart of Auchriacham And the petitioners haveing Comenced ane process before the Highland Justiciary against the Saids fornamed persones, and their Land Lords and Chiftians of Clanns for repairatione of the petitioners Losses and damnadges, Bot the Commission for the Said Justiciary haveing expyred before any thing was done upon the said lybell the petitioners said process fell to the ground and the petitioners being now to renew the Samen and to persew the said depredators before the saids Lords And ther being severall of them who are now vagabounds and have no Certaine place of residence or to whom there is not titus accessus, And Likwayes the petitioners by the said depredation being reduced to extream poverty and want which initrely incapacitates the petitioners to pursue the same hitherto and proces it before the saids Lords Requyreing the personall presence both of the pursuers and defenders and it being altogether Impossible for the petitioners who have nothing to defray their Charges to come up here And prosecute the said actione themselves And that the petitioners are Content to grant a factory and power to Some of the saids 3 number to follow furth and pursue the same And Therfore Humbly Supplicating the saids Lords to the effect aftermentioned As the said petition more fully bears, His Majesties high Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill haveing Considered the above petition given in to them be the above Thomas Andersone and many others They doe hereby Allow their Clerks of Councill to give out a lybell at the petitioners instances against the persones above named And Grants Warrand for ane edictall Citatione therin to be used against such of the defenders who either have no Certaine residence or to whom there is not tutus accessus, And that at the Marcat Crosses of the Shyre wher they haunt frequent or Live, And Likewayes Dispennes with the Compearance of the haill pursuers, And Declaires that if any two of them Compear with a factory from the rest, They will Sustaine the persone or persones so Compearing alse Sufficence as if the haill pursuers Compearing personally Which they hereby dispence with.

Att Edinburgh The Second day of August One Thousand Seven Hundred years

D1700/8/41

Warrant

Warrand for ane Edictiall Citatione Anderson and others against Mcdonald and others

Anent a Petition given In to his Majesties high Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill be Thomas Andersone in Molintyde Issobell Walker ther James Mery ther William Niven ther Jannet Jamesone relict of the deceast William Andersone, ther, James Ross ther, James Lesslie at the Milne of Williamstoune, Robert Demster in Brankienturne Mathow Coutts ther Patrick Mearnes in Greenishes, James Todd ther Androw Anderson in Over Williamstoune Patrick Lidenghame in Neath Williamstoune John Anderson in Tillmorgan, William Cruikshank their, Elspeth Mainey ther, Jannet Innes their, John Robertsone their, William Cruikshank in Woodend John Litle John in Fisherfoord, John Cruikshank in Cairnhill William Mitchell in Over Williamstoune Shewing That wher the saids Lordships petitioner haveing been most barbarously robbed some years agoe of all that the petitioners hade in the world by Gregor Mcdonald in Balnabo James Mcdonald their James Meldrum their tennants to Lauchlan Grant in Ballambo John McLauchlan in Dalabarver William Cruikshank their tennents to John Mcgrigor in Dallabarreir Duncan Doull in Wester Campdell John Grant alias McGillimicheall Donald Grant his brother ther John Grant their John Donan their Donald Down his Sone ther tennents to Gregor Farquharson of Wester Campdell James Riach in Findruin Allaster Riach his brother ther tennants to John Grant of Auchriacham John Grant in Fetter Letter, John Fleyming in Cauchlaw tennents to Alexander Gordon of Easter Campdell John Main in Glencowglass tennant to […] Grant of Carron Duncan McCaull in Leitch Thomas McComismoir their Allaster and Angus McCowlls ther John Geddies then tenants to the deceast Grant of Cambrackachie now to John Grant of Auchrianchin his Sone William Kaynd in Baddivockell tennent to John Grant of Weboy John Stewart Brother to Lessmordo John Forbes at the Milne of Lessmordie Thomas Stewart in Deskie John2 Stewart in Ballandie Alexander Stewart in Deskie then tenants to John Gordon of Deskie now to John Grant of Tomawillan John Ross in Clashamorie then tennant to the deceast Robert Grant of Combrachachie now to the said John Grant of Auchriachan his Sone John Mcantor in Badivochell tennents to John Grant of Nevoy James Mughaugh at the mylne of Rifries tennent to James Stewart of Auchriacham And the petitioners haveing Comenced ane process before the Highland Justiciary against the Saids fornamed persones, and their Land Lords and Chiftians of Clanns for repairatione of the petitioners Losses and damnadges, Bot the Commission for the Said Justiciary haveing expyred before any thing was done upon the said lybell the petitioners said process fell to the ground and the petitioners being now to renew the Samen and to persew the said depredators before the saids Lords And ther being severall of them who are now vagabounds and have no Certaine place of residence or to whom there is not titus accessus, And Likwayes the petitioners by the said depredation being reduced to extream poverty and want which initrely incapacitates the petitioners to pursue the same hitherto and proces it before the saids Lords Requyreing the personall presence both of the pursuers and defenders and it being altogether Impossible for the petitioners who have nothing to defray their Charges to come up here And prosecute the said actione themselves And that the petitioners are Content to grant a factory and power to Some of the saids 3 number to follow furth and pursue the same And Therfore Humbly Supplicating the saids Lords to the effect aftermentioned As the said petition more fully bears, His Majesties high Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill haveing Considered the above petition given in to them be the above Thomas Andersone and many others They doe hereby Allow their Clerks of Councill to give out a lybell at the petitioners instances against the persones above named And Grants Warrand for ane edictall Citatione therin to be used against such of the defenders who either have no Certaine residence or to whom there is not tutus accessus, And that at the Marcat Crosses of the Shyre wher they haunt frequent or Live, And Likewayes Dispennes with the Compearance of the haill pursuers, And Declaires that if any two of them Compear with a factory from the rest, They will Sustaine the persone or persones so Compearing alse Sufficence as if the haill pursuers Compearing personally Which they hereby dispence with.

1. NRS, PC2/27, 365v-366v.

2. The phrase ‘Forbes at the mylne of Lessmordie’ scored out here.

3. An illegible word scored out here.

1. NRS, PC2/27, 365v-366v.

2. The phrase ‘Forbes at the mylne of Lessmordie’ scored out here.

3. An illegible word scored out here.

Decreet, 2 August 1700, Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The Second day of August One Thousand Seven Hundred years

D1700/8/31

Decreet

Decreet Suspender Strachan of Glenkindie against Gordon of Campdell

Anent the bill of suspension presented and given in to the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill by Alexander Gordon of Campdell Against Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie and John Smith procurator Fiscall to the Commissioners of Justiciary for the Highlands Making Mention That wher Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie and John Smith procurator Fiscall to the Commissioners of Justiciary for the Highlands have Caused Urge the said Alexander Gordon to make payment to the said Alexander Strachan for himself of the Soumes of money and pryces of the goods and geir and others alleadged robbed and Stollen from the Charges by John Mckean vic Gillenders and others extending to the Soume of Thrie Thousand Nyne hundreth ane Eightein pounds Scots as also to pay and delyver2 to him for himself as said is The Soume of Ane Thousand fyve hundred pounds of Tascall And the Soume of ane thousand Thrie hundreth pounds of expences Conforme to the charger his alleadged oath in Litem And Likewayes to make payment to the charger As alleadged assigney constitute be Alexander Leith of Belchirie Conforme to his assignatione dated the twentie fifth day of March Jaj vic nynty […] years of the soume of Twentie pounds as the price of ane Ox and Eight pounds as the price of ane Con alleadged wanting be the said Alexander Leith and of the Soume of six hundred merks of expensses wherupon its alleadged the said Alexander Leith hath deponed he was, at in recovering back his goods Extending in the haill the soumes Charged for to the soume of seven Thousand one hundreth fourtie six pounds money forsaid And in Like maner to make payment to John Smith procurator Fiscall of the Soume of Seven hundreth and fourtein pounds twelue Shilling As the tenth part of the said accumulat Soume alleadged due to the Commissioners of Justiciary for the Northern districts Commissioners of Justiciary for the Northern districts Conforme to ane pretended Decreet alleadged obtained at the instance of the said Chargers against the said Alexander Gordon petitioner and the said John Mcean vic Gillenders and others before the saids Commissioners upon the […] day of […] years Within ane Certaine Short Space nixt after the Charge under the paine of Rebellion and puting of the petitioner to the horne intending for the petitioners alleadged disobedience to Cause denounce the petitioner rebell and put the petitioner therto most wrongeously and unjustly Considering It is of verity That the decreet Charged on is absurdly informall and Irrelevant and wanting probation In so farr as the saids Commissioners Repelled all the petitioners most Just and Relevant defences which were proponed for the petitioner And are now here offered to the saids Lords by way of Suspensione And they are these Primo, Albeit all the Lawes and acts of parliament that was Lybelled upon in the said Decreet were clearly and plainly alternative, and did only oblidged the Highland heritors either to present their men to Justice Or otherwayes to pay the damnadges, yet the pursuer in his proces did not Lybell in the termes of these acts, Bot Concluded that the petitioner might pay the damnadges Because the pretended robbers Lybelled were alledged to have been the petitioners tennents without So much as noticeing the alternative of presenting and albeit the petitioner peremptorly demped That these robbers were men tennents or servants to the petitioner the Committing of the said Robbery, and tho they hade been as they were not, The lybell was not relevant to make the petitioner Lyable for the damnages And its weell knowen that all the decreets pronounced by that Commission decerning Damnadges when the theives were presented to Justice are and have been reduced and overturned by the Saids Lords in every case wher applicatione hade been made and if it were Otherwayes as upon the one hand ane enemie Subborning a fellow to Rifle a Chartor Chist or break a banbeirs Shop may ruin the best estate in Scotland if his master should be both Lyable to present him and pay the damnadges, So upon the other hand however privat repairatione were obtained, yet publict Justice Should never be vindicat For if ane heritor behooved both to present both his man and pay the Skaith he would never present him, Bot raither keep him to help to repair the damnadges Secundo the Said Decreet was most unjustly obtained against the petitioner, and altogither inconsistant with Law or reasone, In swae farr as there is no more in the whole Lybell upon which it proceeds that touches the petitioner Bot the followeing words that the petitioner as heritor or wodsetter of the Lands wherupon John Mcgill Vic Gillenders John and Gregor Mcphersones did Live the time of the Committing of the robbery ought and should be Decerned in the damnage which was not at all relevant, Unless they hade Lybelled that they were then or at least were the petitioners men tennents or Lived in the ground the time of the Citatione in the proces For its ane incontraverted maxim that nox Caput Sequitur And Consequently ane heritor cannot be Lyable for these who are not Living on his ground the time of the Citation Especially Considering the reasone of the Law Viz The master is punishable in damnadges Because he does not as he is presumed to be able to produce his men which ceases in the petitioners case, For it is not in ane old masters Legall power to produce those that are not under him Et Impossibilium Nulla est obligatio, And the petitioners case was yet more favorable In Respect the petitioner offered instantly to prove by vertue of ane exculpation Which the petitioner raised and execute for that effect that the men for whom the petitioner was pursued removed from the petitioners Land at a legall terme Viz the terme of Whitsunday Last, Long before the intenting of the cause and before the petitioner or they were any maner of way interpelled or the petitioners put in Mala fide to Lett them goe Likeas It was instantly verified by Greirsone of Bellators bond and List of men given in by him then lying in the Clerk of the proces his hands, That the said John Mc vicgillenders Lived with and wer Secured for by him, And it were a Strange and unheard of kynd of preprative to oblidge heritors for their men after they are bona fide and at Legall termes removed from their hand For by the same rule and parity of reasone that the petitioner or any other heritor is lyable for a tennant who removed as said is at Whitsunday Last, He is lyable altho the removeall hade been twenty or threttie years before if within the years of prescriptione So that ane heritor most either never Suffer a tennent to remove Least he by charged for him after he is gone3, Or otherwayes they Shall be much more exposed then they have been hitherto by any Law or practise in this kingdome after the Legall removing, This is also most clear and evident from positive Law For by the second act parliament 1st King James 5th The heritor is oblidged for the theif in whose Service he is when he is attacked to the Laws Item 94 act parliament 11th King James 6th Expressly bears That the master oblidged to present the theives to Justice or pay the damnadges Is he upon whose bounds or Jurisdiction they dwall the time of the Warning, and the 108 act parliament 11th King James 6th appointing the heritors releif fully clears that the present Master (and not the old master from whom they removed bonae fidei) must present or pay the Skaith And this is not only Law Bot has Likewayes been deryded both in the late rignes and this For in Anno 1688 Margret Mcintosh Lyfrentrix at Lurg haveing pursued a reductione before the Lords of Session of a decreit of the Commissioners of Justiciary Cheifly on this ground that they had found her lyable tho the man was removed from her before Citation, The Lords after a hearing in presence Sustained the reasones of reductione (amongst which this was the Chief as said is) And the decreet extracted therupon was therwith produced As also the Same As also the Same Commissioners that have altered their note against the petitioner did upon The Eight of August Last find the Lybell at the instance of the Tennants of Newtoune against the heritors of Strathdown not relevant In Respect the heritors are only lyable to present persones who are upon their ground the time of the Citation, The Extract of which interloquitor was Likewayes therwith produced, and by the interloquitor upon the Relevancie in the same proces Knockespack Younger was assoylzied from the damnages In Respect the man was presented, And yet the same was found relevant against the petitioner who was neither Lyable, able, nor charged to present, and they haveing removed from the petitioner at a legall terme before Citation as Secured for as said is, Tertio the methode and forme of proces caried on against the petitioner in this matter As it was malicious, so it was most Illegall and informall In so farr as primo The persones for whom the petitioner was cited were only cited at the Marcat Cross of Huntly and Bamff Wheras the warrands given to the Fiscalls Contained no warrand for that, Bot on the Contrary only to cite them personally or at their dwalling places, yea one of them neither lived in the Regallity of Huntly nor Shyre of Bamff As was instantly instructed by a bond of Cautionry granted by this present master for him within the Shyre of Aberdeen wher he was not cited Neither can it be pretended that ther was not tutus accessius For first that is utterly Calumnious they Liveing peaceably in the Countrey under peacable Masters Secondly the Judging of what is not tutus accessus is not to be left to ane officier, That Sumar Cognition therof Ought to be taken by the Judge, And he therupon grant a speciall Warrand to cite thus a particullar partie Wheras here ther was only a generall Warrant for citeing such at marcat Crosses to whom ther was not tutus accessus Bot this was repelled, tho it be Certaine that the petitioner being Conveened ad Civilam effectum and accessarie hade intrest to propone all that was Competent for the pannells Seing Otherwayes without their being cited they could not be Lyable in the petitioners releife Secundo the petitioner was formerly Conveened in a former Court and Because ther was not probatione against the petitioner after Severall witnesses hade been examined the dyet was deserted, Which was altogither a nomolus and Irregullar, For the petitioner haveing been Conveened and the process came the lenth of a probatione, and the Same falling the petitioner ought to have been assoylzied Seing after a proces is come that Lenth (much more if it participat partly of a Criminall matter) the petitioner hade Jus quisitum in it, And ane Master of it as weell as the pursuer And Lis alibi prudens Is a good defence in any Subsequall persuite Tertio One of the Commissioners of the said Court of Justiciary upon the fourtein day of November last gives warrand to cite the Laird of Weymes his tennants who were proven and found guilty by Sentance of the Same Commission for the Same self Robery and hade been denunced as fugitives therfore (upon a bargaine betwixt the Charger and the tutor of Weymes in behalf of the saids Robert That the saids principall robbers might prove the Lybell against the petitioners pretended tennants and him) and ther was only ane indemnity and relaxatione procured parte in audita for indemnifieing and relaxing the saids robbers by the said Glenkindie charger from the saids Lords the Twentie Eight of that moneth Likeas ther was other warrands granted for citeing other witnesses, and all before the raiseing of the principall Lybell which is only dated the fourtein day of December Last by past as the extract of the proces bearing the saids pretended warrants and principall Lybell And ane Coppie of the said act of indemnity therwith produced would testifie, so that as these Warrants doe instruct ane evident designe against the petitioner and particularly that before the indemnity to cite persones found guilty rebells and Traytors As it was filius ante patrem so it was most Illegall and unwarrantable Quarto for clearing the iniquity of the Second point Viz That the decreet was without probation, and that the objectiones against the witnesses were good It is to be Considered That the Case is not wher the kings advocat (who is presumed Impartiall to both sides as being a publict persone) getts a remission to some of the Criminalls For here Glenkindie is a privat partie obtaines it And that expressly in order to the makeing them witnesses neither is the case that the saids Lords had determined this by granting the petition For first that was parte in andula and periculo petentis Secondly It was upon a gross Misrepresentation per obreptionem dicto mandacio In so farr as the petition bears These denunced to have been only accessories and to be adduced against the principall actors Wheras in the Decreet against the tutor and them they are expressly, proven to be the principalls themselves hence they must be rejected by all the Law in the world, For in the first place if two or thrie dollars gott in order to depone would sett a witnes how much more ought ane indemnity, Which Secures not only his goods and Libertie, Bot Likwayes (in effect Considering Circumstanies4) his life He and his master by paction are to be freed of the Civill effect of the decreet to the boot, Secondly they were plainly to be tyners or Winers in the Cause In Respect that by the Capitulation if they deponed right their master (from whom they hade no standing tacks and Consequently could not be witnesses wher he was concerned) And Likewayes themselves were to be free of the decreet obtained against them, Wheras if they deponed not so they were to remaine bound therby Thirdly however persones denunced may be relaxed against whom nothing is proven, yet wher ther is such a Clear probation in the decreet against them, they become infameous Infamia juris So as they can never merit any Credit for throwing the burden on others to the exemption of them selves, Notwithstanding of any relaxation or indemnity Especially Considering that at the best, they are of most Suspect faith being Comon an Nottorious5 robbers and vagabonds And if such should be Sustained to bring upon a Countrey Gentlman such vast Sommes they might a pari be admitted in the case of Life and by Consequence ther is no Scotsman Secure either of life or fortune It is to be Noticed That the verity of the bargaine made betwixt the tutor of Weymes and Glenkindie or his doer was offered to be proven by Glenkindies oun oath, Wherby it was manifast, That ther was never any deserved more properly the name of Glenkindies witnesses Quinto The Commissioners ware so Frank in this matter, That without being asked They allow Glenkindie and his cedent Bellchirie their Juramentum in Litem, Tho it be a principall in all Judicatures That Judex numquam imperiter officum Noster rogatus, Tho indeed it be true That6 7 the Judges were not more willing then the party was ready for these oathes in Litem are instantly cancelled by wryte, In so farr as Glenkindie in a Letter therwith produced directed to the Baillie of the Regality of Marr acknowledge his damnadge to extend only in all to the value of Thrie thousand merks and yet his and Ballchiries his Constituents their oathes bears them to Surmount seven Thousand pounds, And Wheras the Somme Decerned for the goods alledged taken away from Ballchirie was only twenty Eight pounds yet the petitioner was decerned in six hundred merks of expenses to him, Which with many other Circumstances in this affair was ane evidence that ther was not only redress Bot likewayes profitt projected by the matter in hand And therfore the forsaid pretended decreet Letters and Charges raised theron Ought to be suspended and that without either Caution or Consignatione In respect the forsaid Decreet farr exceeds the petitioners whole fortune and estate And Therfore Humbly Craveing the Saids Lords would grant Letters for Sumonding the said Chargers To Compear before the saids Lords at ane Certain day Bringand with them the forsaid pretended decreet Letters and Charges raised theron To have been seen and Considered be the saids Lords and to have heard and seen the samen Suspended As the said bill of suspension at more length bears Which bill of suspension being upon the Twentie seventh day of February last by past Read in presence of the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill They by their delyverance wryten therupon of the said day Sisted all execution upon the said bill of Suspension at the instance of the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie and the said John Smith untill a Certaine day now bygone And in the mean time allowed the Charger to see and answer the same, and therafter the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie haveing given in a petition to the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Which petition with the said Suspension being upon the Twenty Nynth of February last by past Read in presence of the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill They againe Sisted executione upon the decreets Charged on untill ane Certain day now bygone inclussive And in the meantime allowed the Charger to see and answer the said Bill and granted Warrand to the Clerk of the Commissioners of Justiciary in the Highlands who pronunced the saids Decreets Charges on to transmitt the ground and warrands of the samen decreets to the Clerks of his Majesties privy Councill To the effect that their Lordships might Consider the same And appointed the saids grounds and warrands to be transmitted betwixt and ane Certaine day now bygone, after pronounceing of this interloquitor the said bill of Suspensione at the instance of the said Alexander Gordon of Campdell against the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie Charger with the answers made therto being upon the Nynth day of July last by past read in presence of his Majesties high Commissioner And the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill And both parties Suspendars and Chargers being called In presence of his Majesties Commissioner and privy Councill And the said Gordon of Campdell One of the Suspenders Compearing personally with Mr David Cuninghame and Mr Francis Grant, Mr John Murray and Mr John Mckenzie advocats for the saids haill suspenders And the said Alexander Strachan of Glenknidie Charger Compearing also personally With Sir James Stewart his Majesties advocat Sir Walter Setton Mr David Dalrymple Mr Robert Forbes and Mr William Carmicheall his advocats Both parties and their Lawiers being fully heard debate in this matter, And his Majesties Commissioner and the Lords of privy Councill haveing Considered the whole debate with the decreets Charges on, And haill wrytes produced in this proces for either partie They Repelled that reasone of Suspension Viz That the Suspender his tennants called in the decreet charged on were recently removed from off his Lands at the terme of Whitsunday preceeding the Citatione in the proces wherupon the decreet Charged on proceeds And Nominated and appointed a Committie of their Lordships own number to call for and hear both parties And Recommended to the said Committie to endeavor to Setle and agree both parties in the matter in debate betwixt them And to make report to the Councill with their first Conveniencie, And in the mean time Sisted executione upon the decreets Charged on untill ane Certaine day bygone, Which Committie haveing upon the Nyntein day of July Last by past Mett and heard both parties And haveing Considered the said matter They made their report therin to the saids Lords of his majesties privy Councill as the said report at more length bears And his Majesties high Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Haveing this day upon report of the Committie appointed to Consider the said affair Found and hereby Finds the Letters and Charges raised at the instance of Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie and John Smith procurator Fiscall Orderly proceeded Against the said Alexander Gordon of Campbdell and remanent Suspenders and Ordaines the samen to take effect and to be put to farder executione against the said Alexander Gordone of Campdell ay and while he make payment to the said Alexander Strachan for himself of the soumes of money and pryces of the goods gear and others alleadged robbed and stollen from the said Alexander Strachan Charger by the said John Mcean vic Gillanders and others Extending to the Soume of Thrie Thousand Nyne hundred and Eightein pounds Scots money as alsoe ay and whill the said Gordon of Campdell pay and delyver to the said Alexander Strachan Charger for himself as said is, The Soume of ane Thousand fyve hundred pounds of Taskall And the Soume of ane Thousand thrie hundred pounds of expenses, Conforme to the Chargers oath in Litem as Likewayes ay and while he make payment to the said Charger as assigney Constitute be Alexander Leith of Belchurie Conforme to the assignatione dated the Twentie fifth day of March Jaj vic Nyntie […] years of the Soume of Twenty pound as the pryce of ane ox and Eight pound as the pryce of a Cow at lead wanting by the said Alexander Leith, And of the Soume of Sivin hundred merks of expensses Wherupon the said Alexander Leith has deponed he was at in recovering back his goods Extending in the haill the Soumes Charged for to the soume of Seven Thousand one hundred Fourtie and six pounds Scots money forsaid, And in Like maner ay and whill the said Alexander Gordon of Campdell make payment to the said John Smith procurator Fiscall Another of the Charters of the Soume of Seven Hundred Fourtein pounds twelve Shilling as the Tenth part of the said accumulat Soume allenarly due to the Commissioners of Justiciary for the Northern districts Conforme to and after the forme and tenor of the decreet Charged on obtained at the Instance of the saids Chargers against the said Alexander Gordon of Campdell Suspender The said John Mcean Gillenders and others before the Saids Commissioners upon the Twentie day of December Jaj vic Nyntie Nyne years in all points And his Majesties Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Have by the same interloquitor Refused the bill of Suspension given in by Captain James Menzies tutor of Weyme against the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie upon the decreet therinmentioned But his Majesties Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Hath Allowed and hereby Allowes the said Alexander Gordon of Campdell and the said Captain James Menzies tutor of Weyme to pursue in the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie his name or in their own names the wholl other accessories to and accomplices in the depredation Decerned for in the saids two decreets And that either before the Lords of privy Councill or Commission of Justiciary to be of new appointed for the highlands or any other Judges Competent Provydeing That the said Gordon of Campbdell and tutor of Weyme pursue the saids accessories upon their oun proper expensses And Reserveing all wayes to the Lords of privy Councill to determine after decreet is recovered upon the saids pursuits How farr the said Decreet Should be furthcomeing and by what proportiones to the said Gordon of Campdell and tutor to Weyme for ther respective releiffs as also for payment to them of all expences taskall money and others they have been or shall be put to And Ordaines Letters of horning on fiftein dayes under the Signet of Councill to pass hereon in forme as effeirs.

Att Edinburgh The Second day of August One Thousand Seven Hundred years

D1700/8/31

Decreet

Decreet Suspender Strachan of Glenkindie against Gordon of Campdell

Anent the bill of suspension presented and given in to the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill by Alexander Gordon of Campdell Against Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie and John Smith procurator Fiscall to the Commissioners of Justiciary for the Highlands Making Mention That wher Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie and John Smith procurator Fiscall to the Commissioners of Justiciary for the Highlands have Caused Urge the said Alexander Gordon to make payment to the said Alexander Strachan for himself of the Soumes of money and pryces of the goods and geir and others alleadged robbed and Stollen from the Charges by John Mckean vic Gillenders and others extending to the Soume of Thrie Thousand Nyne hundreth ane Eightein pounds Scots as also to pay and delyver2 to him for himself as said is The Soume of Ane Thousand fyve hundred pounds of Tascall And the Soume of ane thousand Thrie hundreth pounds of expences Conforme to the charger his alleadged oath in Litem And Likewayes to make payment to the charger As alleadged assigney constitute be Alexander Leith of Belchirie Conforme to his assignatione dated the twentie fifth day of March Jaj vic nynty […] years of the soume of Twentie pounds as the price of ane Ox and Eight pounds as the price of ane Con alleadged wanting be the said Alexander Leith and of the Soume of six hundred merks of expensses wherupon its alleadged the said Alexander Leith hath deponed he was, at in recovering back his goods Extending in the haill the soumes Charged for to the soume of seven Thousand one hundreth fourtie six pounds money forsaid And in Like maner to make payment to John Smith procurator Fiscall of the Soume of Seven hundreth and fourtein pounds twelue Shilling As the tenth part of the said accumulat Soume alleadged due to the Commissioners of Justiciary for the Northern districts Commissioners of Justiciary for the Northern districts Conforme to ane pretended Decreet alleadged obtained at the instance of the said Chargers against the said Alexander Gordon petitioner and the said John Mcean vic Gillenders and others before the saids Commissioners upon the […] day of […] years Within ane Certaine Short Space nixt after the Charge under the paine of Rebellion and puting of the petitioner to the horne intending for the petitioners alleadged disobedience to Cause denounce the petitioner rebell and put the petitioner therto most wrongeously and unjustly Considering It is of verity That the decreet Charged on is absurdly informall and Irrelevant and wanting probation In so farr as the saids Commissioners Repelled all the petitioners most Just and Relevant defences which were proponed for the petitioner And are now here offered to the saids Lords by way of Suspensione And they are these Primo, Albeit all the Lawes and acts of parliament that was Lybelled upon in the said Decreet were clearly and plainly alternative, and did only oblidged the Highland heritors either to present their men to Justice Or otherwayes to pay the damnadges, yet the pursuer in his proces did not Lybell in the termes of these acts, Bot Concluded that the petitioner might pay the damnadges Because the pretended robbers Lybelled were alledged to have been the petitioners tennents without So much as noticeing the alternative of presenting and albeit the petitioner peremptorly demped That these robbers were men tennents or servants to the petitioner the Committing of the said Robbery, and tho they hade been as they were not, The lybell was not relevant to make the petitioner Lyable for the damnages And its weell knowen that all the decreets pronounced by that Commission decerning Damnadges when the theives were presented to Justice are and have been reduced and overturned by the Saids Lords in every case wher applicatione hade been made and if it were Otherwayes as upon the one hand ane enemie Subborning a fellow to Rifle a Chartor Chist or break a banbeirs Shop may ruin the best estate in Scotland if his master should be both Lyable to present him and pay the damnadges, So upon the other hand however privat repairatione were obtained, yet publict Justice Should never be vindicat For if ane heritor behooved both to present both his man and pay the Skaith he would never present him, Bot raither keep him to help to repair the damnadges Secundo the Said Decreet was most unjustly obtained against the petitioner, and altogither inconsistant with Law or reasone, In swae farr as there is no more in the whole Lybell upon which it proceeds that touches the petitioner Bot the followeing words that the petitioner as heritor or wodsetter of the Lands wherupon John Mcgill Vic Gillenders John and Gregor Mcphersones did Live the time of the Committing of the robbery ought and should be Decerned in the damnage which was not at all relevant, Unless they hade Lybelled that they were then or at least were the petitioners men tennents or Lived in the ground the time of the Citatione in the proces For its ane incontraverted maxim that nox Caput Sequitur And Consequently ane heritor cannot be Lyable for these who are not Living on his ground the time of the Citation Especially Considering the reasone of the Law Viz The master is punishable in damnadges Because he does not as he is presumed to be able to produce his men which ceases in the petitioners case, For it is not in ane old masters Legall power to produce those that are not under him Et Impossibilium Nulla est obligatio, And the petitioners case was yet more favorable In Respect the petitioner offered instantly to prove by vertue of ane exculpation Which the petitioner raised and execute for that effect that the men for whom the petitioner was pursued removed from the petitioners Land at a legall terme Viz the terme of Whitsunday Last, Long before the intenting of the cause and before the petitioner or they were any maner of way interpelled or the petitioners put in Mala fide to Lett them goe Likeas It was instantly verified by Greirsone of Bellators bond and List of men given in by him then lying in the Clerk of the proces his hands, That the said John Mc vicgillenders Lived with and wer Secured for by him, And it were a Strange and unheard of kynd of preprative to oblidge heritors for their men after they are bona fide and at Legall termes removed from their hand For by the same rule and parity of reasone that the petitioner or any other heritor is lyable for a tennant who removed as said is at Whitsunday Last, He is lyable altho the removeall hade been twenty or threttie years before if within the years of prescriptione So that ane heritor most either never Suffer a tennent to remove Least he by charged for him after he is gone3, Or otherwayes they Shall be much more exposed then they have been hitherto by any Law or practise in this kingdome after the Legall removing, This is also most clear and evident from positive Law For by the second act parliament 1st King James 5th The heritor is oblidged for the theif in whose Service he is when he is attacked to the Laws Item 94 act parliament 11th King James 6th Expressly bears That the master oblidged to present the theives to Justice or pay the damnadges Is he upon whose bounds or Jurisdiction they dwall the time of the Warning, and the 108 act parliament 11th King James 6th appointing the heritors releif fully clears that the present Master (and not the old master from whom they removed bonae fidei) must present or pay the Skaith And this is not only Law Bot has Likewayes been deryded both in the late rignes and this For in Anno 1688 Margret Mcintosh Lyfrentrix at Lurg haveing pursued a reductione before the Lords of Session of a decreit of the Commissioners of Justiciary Cheifly on this ground that they had found her lyable tho the man was removed from her before Citation, The Lords after a hearing in presence Sustained the reasones of reductione (amongst which this was the Chief as said is) And the decreet extracted therupon was therwith produced As also the Same As also the Same Commissioners that have altered their note against the petitioner did upon The Eight of August Last find the Lybell at the instance of the Tennants of Newtoune against the heritors of Strathdown not relevant In Respect the heritors are only lyable to present persones who are upon their ground the time of the Citation, The Extract of which interloquitor was Likewayes therwith produced, and by the interloquitor upon the Relevancie in the same proces Knockespack Younger was assoylzied from the damnages In Respect the man was presented, And yet the same was found relevant against the petitioner who was neither Lyable, able, nor charged to present, and they haveing removed from the petitioner at a legall terme before Citation as Secured for as said is, Tertio the methode and forme of proces caried on against the petitioner in this matter As it was malicious, so it was most Illegall and informall In so farr as primo The persones for whom the petitioner was cited were only cited at the Marcat Cross of Huntly and Bamff Wheras the warrands given to the Fiscalls Contained no warrand for that, Bot on the Contrary only to cite them personally or at their dwalling places, yea one of them neither lived in the Regallity of Huntly nor Shyre of Bamff As was instantly instructed by a bond of Cautionry granted by this present master for him within the Shyre of Aberdeen wher he was not cited Neither can it be pretended that ther was not tutus accessius For first that is utterly Calumnious they Liveing peaceably in the Countrey under peacable Masters Secondly the Judging of what is not tutus accessus is not to be left to ane officier, That Sumar Cognition therof Ought to be taken by the Judge, And he therupon grant a speciall Warrand to cite thus a particullar partie Wheras here ther was only a generall Warrant for citeing such at marcat Crosses to whom ther was not tutus accessus Bot this was repelled, tho it be Certaine that the petitioner being Conveened ad Civilam effectum and accessarie hade intrest to propone all that was Competent for the pannells Seing Otherwayes without their being cited they could not be Lyable in the petitioners releife Secundo the petitioner was formerly Conveened in a former Court and Because ther was not probatione against the petitioner after Severall witnesses hade been examined the dyet was deserted, Which was altogither a nomolus and Irregullar, For the petitioner haveing been Conveened and the process came the lenth of a probatione, and the Same falling the petitioner ought to have been assoylzied Seing after a proces is come that Lenth (much more if it participat partly of a Criminall matter) the petitioner hade Jus quisitum in it, And ane Master of it as weell as the pursuer And Lis alibi prudens Is a good defence in any Subsequall persuite Tertio One of the Commissioners of the said Court of Justiciary upon the fourtein day of November last gives warrand to cite the Laird of Weymes his tennants who were proven and found guilty by Sentance of the Same Commission for the Same self Robery and hade been denunced as fugitives therfore (upon a bargaine betwixt the Charger and the tutor of Weymes in behalf of the saids Robert That the saids principall robbers might prove the Lybell against the petitioners pretended tennants and him) and ther was only ane indemnity and relaxatione procured parte in audita for indemnifieing and relaxing the saids robbers by the said Glenkindie charger from the saids Lords the Twentie Eight of that moneth Likeas ther was other warrands granted for citeing other witnesses, and all before the raiseing of the principall Lybell which is only dated the fourtein day of December Last by past as the extract of the proces bearing the saids pretended warrants and principall Lybell And ane Coppie of the said act of indemnity therwith produced would testifie, so that as these Warrants doe instruct ane evident designe against the petitioner and particularly that before the indemnity to cite persones found guilty rebells and Traytors As it was filius ante patrem so it was most Illegall and unwarrantable Quarto for clearing the iniquity of the Second point Viz That the decreet was without probation, and that the objectiones against the witnesses were good It is to be Considered That the Case is not wher the kings advocat (who is presumed Impartiall to both sides as being a publict persone) getts a remission to some of the Criminalls For here Glenkindie is a privat partie obtaines it And that expressly in order to the makeing them witnesses neither is the case that the saids Lords had determined this by granting the petition For first that was parte in andula and periculo petentis Secondly It was upon a gross Misrepresentation per obreptionem dicto mandacio In so farr as the petition bears These denunced to have been only accessories and to be adduced against the principall actors Wheras in the Decreet against the tutor and them they are expressly, proven to be the principalls themselves hence they must be rejected by all the Law in the world, For in the first place if two or thrie dollars gott in order to depone would sett a witnes how much more ought ane indemnity, Which Secures not only his goods and Libertie, Bot Likwayes (in effect Considering Circumstanies4) his life He and his master by paction are to be freed of the Civill effect of the decreet to the boot, Secondly they were plainly to be tyners or Winers in the Cause In Respect that by the Capitulation if they deponed right their master (from whom they hade no standing tacks and Consequently could not be witnesses wher he was concerned) And Likewayes themselves were to be free of the decreet obtained against them, Wheras if they deponed not so they were to remaine bound therby Thirdly however persones denunced may be relaxed against whom nothing is proven, yet wher ther is such a Clear probation in the decreet against them, they become infameous Infamia juris So as they can never merit any Credit for throwing the burden on others to the exemption of them selves, Notwithstanding of any relaxation or indemnity Especially Considering that at the best, they are of most Suspect faith being Comon an Nottorious5 robbers and vagabonds And if such should be Sustained to bring upon a Countrey Gentlman such vast Sommes they might a pari be admitted in the case of Life and by Consequence ther is no Scotsman Secure either of life or fortune It is to be Noticed That the verity of the bargaine made betwixt the tutor of Weymes and Glenkindie or his doer was offered to be proven by Glenkindies oun oath, Wherby it was manifast, That ther was never any deserved more properly the name of Glenkindies witnesses Quinto The Commissioners ware so Frank in this matter, That without being asked They allow Glenkindie and his cedent Bellchirie their Juramentum in Litem, Tho it be a principall in all Judicatures That Judex numquam imperiter officum Noster rogatus, Tho indeed it be true That6 7 the Judges were not more willing then the party was ready for these oathes in Litem are instantly cancelled by wryte, In so farr as Glenkindie in a Letter therwith produced directed to the Baillie of the Regality of Marr acknowledge his damnadge to extend only in all to the value of Thrie thousand merks and yet his and Ballchiries his Constituents their oathes bears them to Surmount seven Thousand pounds, And Wheras the Somme Decerned for the goods alledged taken away from Ballchirie was only twenty Eight pounds yet the petitioner was decerned in six hundred merks of expenses to him, Which with many other Circumstances in this affair was ane evidence that ther was not only redress Bot likewayes profitt projected by the matter in hand And therfore the forsaid pretended decreet Letters and Charges raised theron Ought to be suspended and that without either Caution or Consignatione In respect the forsaid Decreet farr exceeds the petitioners whole fortune and estate And Therfore Humbly Craveing the Saids Lords would grant Letters for Sumonding the said Chargers To Compear before the saids Lords at ane Certain day Bringand with them the forsaid pretended decreet Letters and Charges raised theron To have been seen and Considered be the saids Lords and to have heard and seen the samen Suspended As the said bill of suspension at more length bears Which bill of suspension being upon the Twentie seventh day of February last by past Read in presence of the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill They by their delyverance wryten therupon of the said day Sisted all execution upon the said bill of Suspension at the instance of the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie and the said John Smith untill a Certaine day now bygone And in the mean time allowed the Charger to see and answer the same, and therafter the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie haveing given in a petition to the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Which petition with the said Suspension being upon the Twenty Nynth of February last by past Read in presence of the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill They againe Sisted executione upon the decreets Charged on untill ane Certain day now bygone inclussive And in the meantime allowed the Charger to see and answer the said Bill and granted Warrand to the Clerk of the Commissioners of Justiciary in the Highlands who pronunced the saids Decreets Charges on to transmitt the ground and warrands of the samen decreets to the Clerks of his Majesties privy Councill To the effect that their Lordships might Consider the same And appointed the saids grounds and warrands to be transmitted betwixt and ane Certaine day now bygone, after pronounceing of this interloquitor the said bill of Suspensione at the instance of the said Alexander Gordon of Campdell against the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie Charger with the answers made therto being upon the Nynth day of July last by past read in presence of his Majesties high Commissioner And the saids Lords of his Majesties privy Councill And both parties Suspendars and Chargers being called In presence of his Majesties Commissioner and privy Councill And the said Gordon of Campdell One of the Suspenders Compearing personally with Mr David Cuninghame and Mr Francis Grant, Mr John Murray and Mr John Mckenzie advocats for the saids haill suspenders And the said Alexander Strachan of Glenknidie Charger Compearing also personally With Sir James Stewart his Majesties advocat Sir Walter Setton Mr David Dalrymple Mr Robert Forbes and Mr William Carmicheall his advocats Both parties and their Lawiers being fully heard debate in this matter, And his Majesties Commissioner and the Lords of privy Councill haveing Considered the whole debate with the decreets Charges on, And haill wrytes produced in this proces for either partie They Repelled that reasone of Suspension Viz That the Suspender his tennants called in the decreet charged on were recently removed from off his Lands at the terme of Whitsunday preceeding the Citatione in the proces wherupon the decreet Charged on proceeds And Nominated and appointed a Committie of their Lordships own number to call for and hear both parties And Recommended to the said Committie to endeavor to Setle and agree both parties in the matter in debate betwixt them And to make report to the Councill with their first Conveniencie, And in the mean time Sisted executione upon the decreets Charged on untill ane Certaine day bygone, Which Committie haveing upon the Nyntein day of July Last by past Mett and heard both parties And haveing Considered the said matter They made their report therin to the saids Lords of his majesties privy Councill as the said report at more length bears And his Majesties high Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Haveing this day upon report of the Committie appointed to Consider the said affair Found and hereby Finds the Letters and Charges raised at the instance of Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie and John Smith procurator Fiscall Orderly proceeded Against the said Alexander Gordon of Campbdell and remanent Suspenders and Ordaines the samen to take effect and to be put to farder executione against the said Alexander Gordone of Campdell ay and while he make payment to the said Alexander Strachan for himself of the soumes of money and pryces of the goods gear and others alleadged robbed and stollen from the said Alexander Strachan Charger by the said John Mcean vic Gillanders and others Extending to the Soume of Thrie Thousand Nyne hundred and Eightein pounds Scots money as alsoe ay and whill the said Gordon of Campdell pay and delyver to the said Alexander Strachan Charger for himself as said is, The Soume of ane Thousand fyve hundred pounds of Taskall And the Soume of ane Thousand thrie hundred pounds of expenses, Conforme to the Chargers oath in Litem as Likewayes ay and while he make payment to the said Charger as assigney Constitute be Alexander Leith of Belchurie Conforme to the assignatione dated the Twentie fifth day of March Jaj vic Nyntie […] years of the Soume of Twenty pound as the pryce of ane ox and Eight pound as the pryce of a Cow at lead wanting by the said Alexander Leith, And of the Soume of Sivin hundred merks of expensses Wherupon the said Alexander Leith has deponed he was at in recovering back his goods Extending in the haill the Soumes Charged for to the soume of Seven Thousand one hundred Fourtie and six pounds Scots money forsaid, And in Like maner ay and whill the said Alexander Gordon of Campdell make payment to the said John Smith procurator Fiscall Another of the Charters of the Soume of Seven Hundred Fourtein pounds twelve Shilling as the Tenth part of the said accumulat Soume allenarly due to the Commissioners of Justiciary for the Northern districts Conforme to and after the forme and tenor of the decreet Charged on obtained at the Instance of the saids Chargers against the said Alexander Gordon of Campdell Suspender The said John Mcean Gillenders and others before the Saids Commissioners upon the Twentie day of December Jaj vic Nyntie Nyne years in all points And his Majesties Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Have by the same interloquitor Refused the bill of Suspension given in by Captain James Menzies tutor of Weyme against the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie upon the decreet therinmentioned But his Majesties Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Hath Allowed and hereby Allowes the said Alexander Gordon of Campdell and the said Captain James Menzies tutor of Weyme to pursue in the said Alexander Strachan of Glenkindie his name or in their own names the wholl other accessories to and accomplices in the depredation Decerned for in the saids two decreets And that either before the Lords of privy Councill or Commission of Justiciary to be of new appointed for the highlands or any other Judges Competent Provydeing That the said Gordon of Campbdell and tutor of Weyme pursue the saids accessories upon their oun proper expensses And Reserveing all wayes to the Lords of privy Councill to determine after decreet is recovered upon the saids pursuits How farr the said Decreet Should be furthcomeing and by what proportiones to the said Gordon of Campdell and tutor to Weyme for ther respective releiffs as also for payment to them of all expences taskall money and others they have been or shall be put to And Ordaines Letters of horning on fiftein dayes under the Signet of Councill to pass hereon in forme as effeirs.

1. NRS, PC2/27, 358v-365v.

2. The word ‘for’ scored out here.

3. The prefix ‘by’ scored out here.

4. Sic.

5. The word ‘rebells’ scored out here.

6. Insertion.

7. The word ‘of’ scored out here

1. NRS, PC2/27, 358v-365v.

2. The word ‘for’ scored out here.

3. The prefix ‘by’ scored out here.

4. Sic.

5. The word ‘rebells’ scored out here.

6. Insertion.

7. The word ‘of’ scored out here

Decreet, 2 August 1700, Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The Second day of August One Thousand Seven Hundred years

D1700/8/21

Decreet

Decreit Certificatione The Lady Strowan against Duncan Robertson and others

Anent The Lybell or Letters of Complaint raised and pursued before the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Be Marion Baillie Lady Strowan lifrentrix of the Lands of Feirnane Kinloch and Carie for her self and as assigney Constitute be Mrs Margrat Robertsone eldest Lawfull daughter to the deceast Alexander Robertsone of Strowan and John Robertson alias Gilliebreck ground officer With Concourse of Sir James Stewart his Majesties advocat for his hienes intrest in the Matter underwryten By Warrant of his Majesties privy Councill Making Mention That wher be the Comon Lawes and Customes of all weell governed nationes and Lawes and acts of parliament of this kingdome the Convocating of men in armes heading of ane Certaine number of vagabounds and Ruffians The robbing of any of his Majesties free Leidges or their tennants or servants upon his Majesties high way And the makeing them prisoners, The violent entering into the housses breaking up doors Chists Trunks Coffers and the Spoilling and Carieing away of the plenishing and furniture therof The Stealling robbeing and away takeing and killing of their kyne sheep goat and bestiall and the Resetting and disposeing therof and of the household plenishing or furniture so spoiled And all deeds of Bangstrie oppressione and unwarantable violence against men and their goods and possessiones, The fireing upon any of his Majesties forces and free Leidges and assaulting them under cloud and sillence of night presenting of Guns pistoll’s and durkes to them disarmeing binding and makeing them prisoners and therafter dismissing them disgracefully for offering to protect the persone so oppressed or to rescue the goods whill a robbing and away takeing And alse the dryveing away of goods Committed to Certaine of his Majesties2 forces for their protection by warrant and authoritie, and the raiseing of fire in the houses of any of his Majesties free Leidges in defyance of his Majesties authority, and burning the Same or such furnitur or plenishing that was therin Especially dureing the dependance of a Councill proces against the persones so guilty and after Labourowes were duely execute, and Caution found are prohibit, and the same deeds when Committed more Especially by a sone against a mother and sister and with other agravating Circumstances aftermentioned Are Crymes of a high Nature And ought to be severly punished, Nevertheless It is of verity that Duncan Robertsone second Lawfull sone to the said Lady Strowan casting off all fear of god duty to his mother and regaird to his Majesties Lawes and authoritie And the persones following his Servants and accomplices particularly Malcolme Mconeill Vic Condochie his Domestick servants Patrick Robertsone youngest Lawfull brother of Drummachoine Grand uncles sone to the said Duncan Donald Mconeill-Roy his domestick Servant Alexander Mcdonald alias Mcallaster Vic indowie Vic Gillispick later in Glencoe a Vagabound and […] Mcdonald his Servant are guiltie of the oppressiones and Other Crymes above and aftermentioned In so far as The said Lady Strowan pursuer being dayly troubled and Mollested in the possession of her Lands and goods and threatned with Severall acts of violence by the said Duncan Robertsone and his said accomplices She was necessity for her oun security to raise Laborrowes against him and the Said Patrick Robertsone and others By which they were Charged to find Cautione before the Lords of his majesties privy Councill in the Laborrowes under the penaltie of ane thousand merks the peice And after chargeing upon the said Laborrowes Denunceing registrating and takeing out Captione against the said Duncan and Patrick Robertsones and apprehending and incarcerating of the Said Duncan, and that James Dumbar of Dacus Merchant burges, of Innverness became Caution in Comon forme of Labborowes for him before he was set at Libertie yet Notwithstanding the saids Duncan and Patrick Robertsones Accompanied with the saids persones and a great many others of their accomplices came to the ground of the Lands of Carie belonging to the said Lady Strowan pursuer or Lands nixt adjacent therunto And their did upon the sixteinth day of May Last Or ane or other of the dayes of the said moneth violently Seaze and apprehend the persones of Duncan Moir, Donald and Malcolme Mccleans Tennants and Servants to the said Lady Strowan in the Lands of Feirnane and robbed them of Two bolls of meall and ane boll Malt belonging to her, and of the Sacks and Teathers and other horss furniture, as her said3 Servants with their horsses and Loads were goeing out his majesties high way throw a high way to the maner place and house of Carie And Detained them prisoners the most part of a day and Swore if they came that way againe That they Should Loss both their Lives and their horsses, and bid them tell the tenants of her lifrent Lands That if they did not Immediatly remove and leave the Joynture Lands waist they should repent it, Which meall and Malt and what was then robbed was worth and of value the Soume of Fourtie two pounds Scots money, And the said Duncan himself both before and after went to severalls of the tenents of the saids Lands Threatned some and Caused Others remove and Swore them not to tell that he so threatned them, Likeas the said Duncan and Patrick Robertsones with their accomplices being all armed with guns pistolls swords and other weapons invasive and offensive Came upon the Twenty Second, or ane or other of the dayes of the said moneth of May to the ground of the saids Lands of Carie, Swearing and Curseing most horid and execrable oathes and did violently and masterfully dryve away two great English Cowes ane Calf ane ane Bull belonging to the said Lady Valued to the Soume of ane hundred and fiftie pounds money forsaid and killed ane Cow belonging to the said John Robertsone allias Gillibrick ground officer4 worth Twenty four pound money forsaid And in furder prosecutione of their malice, And that the said Lady might not recide at the said Maner place of Carie, Bot to make the Lands Waste and turne out her, and her tennents Because of the former Councill process and publict order Subsequent therunto to a partie of his Majesties forces who were authorized and warranted to protect her and her tennants in her for said house and Joyntur Lands at and after the terme of Whitsunday Last The saids Duncan and Patrick Robertsones and their accomplices Did upon the said fifteinth or Twentie two or ane or other of the dayes of the said moneth of May or upon ane or other of the dayes of the Moneths and years of God Jaj vic nyntie Nyne or Jaj viic years Thifteously and Clandistinly in the night time break open and made patent all doors, Trunks Chists and Coffers of the said house and Mannor place of Carie and Conforme to ane particular Inventar repeated as a part of the Lybell violently robbed and Caried away what furniture infight plenishing goods and geir of all Sorts that was therin used and disposed therupon as he thought proper Which infight plenishing goods and gear were Worth and of value the Soume of six hundred Sixtie Six pounds thretein Shilling four peines money for said; As also The saids Duncan and Patrick Robertsones haveing Conceived a deadly hatred ill will Malice and prejudice against the said Lady Strowan pursuer his mother and the saids Margret Robertsone his sister And She being at the place of Carie intimating to the partie and Garisone their That She dreaded the said Duncan and Patrick Robertsones and the other persones Complained upon, and their accomplices their harme, and she goeing peaceably to the Lands and Sheillings possest be her and the other tennents of the said Joynture Lands and wher were, their goods and bestiall pasturing and she accompanied only with Thomas Barbour William Connell and David Evan Souldiers in Collonell James Fergusones regiment in Garison at the said place of Carie ordered ther, by publict warrand for protecting of the said Lady Strowan pursuer and her tennants and the said Mrs Margret their goods and possessiones The Said Duncan and the other persones defenders for preventing therof and as ane additione to their former guilt, Did upon the twentie day of June last or one ore other of the dayes of the said moneth Convocat and gather togither the number of Fourtie or Fiftie more Idle vagabounds and Ruffians all of them being armed as said is, oppenly and avoedly fire upon the said Mrs Margret and the saids Thomas Barbour, William Connell and David Eveans Souldiers eight or nyne Severall Shot and Sarjant John Reid Comander of the partie being alarmed with the fireing haveing come up with all in Garison and haveing inquyred at the said Duncan how it was and ane whatt account that he did head so many armed men, He very Impudently asserted that it was to dispossess the said Lady Strowan his mother and Sister and their tennants and which he did very effectually In so much as the said Duncan haveing detached a partie of the forsaids vagabonds and Ruffians armed as said is Who marched in a Military posture to the Sheallings of Innerbar belonging to the Earle of Tillibardine wher the said Mrs Margaret with her goods and servants were fleeing for Shelter, And the avoiding the hazard of being robbed of her goods, haveing allongst the said Thomas Barbour and William Mcphersone two Souldiers of the said partie and Garisone As aforsaid, She was followed and pursued be the said partie of Ruffians who hade orders and directione from the said Duncan Robertsone and they comeing under cloud and sillence of night entered the Shealling wher the saids Mistres Margret her servants and the said two Souldiers were, Did upon the Twentie one Or ane or other of the dayes of the said moneth of June last fall upon her and Servants And the saids two Souldiers with presented and Cocked guns and pistolls And with drawen Swords and Durks Beat and bruised the Servants bound and disarmed the saids two Souldiers Robbed Spoilled and Caried away the Cowes Sheep Goat Mears and others belonging to the Said Mrs Margaret Viz six great Cowes being Nuckill and furrow kine with thrie sticks and ane Calf their followers pryce overhead per peice includeing the followers Twentie four pounds Inde, Ane hundred and fourtie four pounds Item Twentie Sheep with their Lambs worth overhead per peice including the Lambs four pounds Inde Eightie pounds Item Twentie two goats with their Kidds worth overhead per peice includeing the5 Kidds four pounds Inde Eightie Eight pounds: Item Two Mears worth Twentie four pounds per peice overhead Inde Fourtie Eight pounds all Scots money and Caried the Same way Item the said Mistres Margarets Damnadges theron being violently dispossed from her house and Corne mylne of Stroan Fiernane and otherwayes damnified of the profits and excess of her goods Extending to Thrie hundred and Threttie thrie pounds Six Shillings Eight pennies Item the Loss of her oldine peats Turves, Which were casten and wine worth fourtie pounds Extending the Saids goods geir and others belonging to them with the said Damnadges to the Somme of Seven hundred Threttie thrie pounds Six Shilling Eight penies Scots money forsaid And therafter to the Saids Lands of Feirnane, and drove the haill tennants and goods therof from off the ground Throw their peits as Casten and wine into the peat mosies and threatned them with horible oathes and asseverationes of that the tennants Should returne againe to their possessiones they Should Loss their good and bestiall, And whatever Should be found upon the ground And Lastly upon the Twenty fifth or Twentie sixth Or ane or other of the dayes of the said moneth of June To make a totall ruine and vastatione of the whole Joynture Lands The Said Duncan and Patrick Robertsones haveing the number of6 Twenty four men of their accomplices armed as said is came in ane hostile Manner to the Lands of Kinnicalden a toune of the saids Lands of Fername and resided ther all night did what outragges and Abuses they pleased to Committ stript and Tirred some of the Tennants of their Cloathes Robbed them of their plaids and furniture and Caried away the Same openly and avowedly in high contempt of his Majesties Authority, As also robbed and away took the number and quantitie of Threttie Six bolls meall, Which the said Mrs Margret hade Sheltered in the toune of Kenmore being designed for and allocat to furnish the partie of the forces Lying in Garisone at Carie at Twelue pounds per boll Is four hundred and threttie two pounds Scots Item the worth and value of the said Mrs Margret infight plenishing of her dwalling house brock open be them and of the Chists plates and other dishes with severall Creills seives ridles and Such like furniture for husbandrie Brunt be the said Duncan and his partie Extends to ane hundred pounds money forsaid, Which haill goods gear and others abovewryten belonging to the saids Mrs Margarat and John Robertsones The said Lady Strowan pursuer has right be assignation from each of them dated the Second day of July One thousand Seven hundred years By all which acts and deeds the saids Duncan and Patrick Robertsones have not only Contraveened the forsaid Laborrowes, And the saids Duncan Robertsone and James Dumbar his Cautioner, And alse the said Patrick and ilk ane of them for the paynes therincontained Bot also the saids Duncan and Patrick Robertsones and the other persones Complained upon, Have Committed ane Manifast Ryot Creuall oppression Thift Robberty and fire raising And the said Duncan; And James Dunbar his Cautioner, The said Patrick Robertsone and the other persones Complained upon Singuli in Solidum ought to be Decerned Not only to pay the said Lady Strowan pursuer for her self and as assigney forsaid The respective pryces and value of the said meall malt and others particularly abovewryten And Inventar Repeated as a part of the lybell robbed and away taken from her self and from the said Mistres Margret and Brunt and distroyed to her And alse from the ground officer in maner abovementioned Extending to Two Thousand ane hundred Fourtie Eight pounds money forsaid And the Soume of Fiftie pound money forsaid Which the said Lady would have made of her said Cowes as for the violent profits Extending in the haill to the Soume of Two Thousand One hundred Nyntie Eight pounds money forsaid, And Likewayes the Said Duncan and Patrick Robertsones And the haill other persones above Complained upon who are actors at Least Airt and part of the haill forsaid Crymes, Which being proven, They ought and Should not only be Decerned to pay also the Soume of Fyve Hundred pounds money forsaid of damnadges and expences by the said pursuer Bot Likewayes farder punished in their persones and goods to the example and terror of others to Committ or doe the Like in time comeing And Anent the Charge given to the saids defenders To have Compeared personally before the saids Lords at ane Certaine day now bygone To have answered to the points of the above Complaint and to have heard and seen such order and Course taken theranent as the saids Lords should find Just As in the said Letters or Lybell at more Lenth is Contained Which Lybell being this day called in presence of his Majesties high Commissioner and the Lords of his majesties privy Councill, And the pursuer And also both the defenders being oft times called Lawfullie cited and not Compearing His Majesties high Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Sustaines the Lybell Albeit the Lady be not Compearing In Respect the Same is raised by particular Order of privy Councill at his Majesties advocats instance Who is present and Compearing with Sir Patrick Home and Mr John Meinzies Advocats and Craved that Certificatione might be granted against both the saids Duncan Robertson and James Dunbar defenders In Respect of their Absence And not Compearance, And that order and warrand might be granted to Brigadeer Maitland Commander of his Majesties forces at Fort William, And also to Collonell Fergusone Collonell of the Regiment and forces Lying in the Shyre of Pearth To Seaze and apprehend the person of the said Duncan Robertsone defender His Majesties high Commissioner And the Lords of privy Councill Haveing Considered the Lybell With the desire of his majesties advocat And the advocats for the pursuer They hereby Grant Certificatione against both the saids defenders In Respect of their absence and not Compearance And Ordaines Letters of Denuncatione to be direct to maccers or messengers at armes Commanding them to pass to the Marcat Cross of […] And other places needfull, And therat in his Majesties name and authority duely Lawfullie and Orderly Denounce the saids defenders his Majesties rebells and to ordaine all their moveable goods and geir to be escheat and inbrought to his majesties use for their Contempt and Disobedience; And Recommends to his Majesties advocat to give order and warrand to the said Brigadeer Maitland or the said Collonell Ferguson, To Cause Seaze and apprehend the persone of the said Duncan Robertsone wher ever he may be apprehended and to Cause Send him in under a secure guard to the Tolbooth of Edinburgh, And appoints the Magistrats of Edinburgh and keeper of ther Tolbooth to receive and detaine him prisoner therin till farder order of Councill.

Att Edinburgh The Second day of August One Thousand Seven Hundred years

D1700/8/21

Decreet

Decreit Certificatione The Lady Strowan against Duncan Robertson and others

Anent The Lybell or Letters of Complaint raised and pursued before the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Be Marion Baillie Lady Strowan lifrentrix of the Lands of Feirnane Kinloch and Carie for her self and as assigney Constitute be Mrs Margrat Robertsone eldest Lawfull daughter to the deceast Alexander Robertsone of Strowan and John Robertson alias Gilliebreck ground officer With Concourse of Sir James Stewart his Majesties advocat for his hienes intrest in the Matter underwryten By Warrant of his Majesties privy Councill Making Mention That wher be the Comon Lawes and Customes of all weell governed nationes and Lawes and acts of parliament of this kingdome the Convocating of men in armes heading of ane Certaine number of vagabounds and Ruffians The robbing of any of his Majesties free Leidges or their tennants or servants upon his Majesties high way And the makeing them prisoners, The violent entering into the housses breaking up doors Chists Trunks Coffers and the Spoilling and Carieing away of the plenishing and furniture therof The Stealling robbeing and away takeing and killing of their kyne sheep goat and bestiall and the Resetting and disposeing therof and of the household plenishing or furniture so spoiled And all deeds of Bangstrie oppressione and unwarantable violence against men and their goods and possessiones, The fireing upon any of his Majesties forces and free Leidges and assaulting them under cloud and sillence of night presenting of Guns pistoll’s and durkes to them disarmeing binding and makeing them prisoners and therafter dismissing them disgracefully for offering to protect the persone so oppressed or to rescue the goods whill a robbing and away takeing And alse the dryveing away of goods Committed to Certaine of his Majesties2 forces for their protection by warrant and authoritie, and the raiseing of fire in the houses of any of his Majesties free Leidges in defyance of his Majesties authority, and burning the Same or such furnitur or plenishing that was therin Especially dureing the dependance of a Councill proces against the persones so guilty and after Labourowes were duely execute, and Caution found are prohibit, and the same deeds when Committed more Especially by a sone against a mother and sister and with other agravating Circumstances aftermentioned Are Crymes of a high Nature And ought to be severly punished, Nevertheless It is of verity that Duncan Robertsone second Lawfull sone to the said Lady Strowan casting off all fear of god duty to his mother and regaird to his Majesties Lawes and authoritie And the persones following his Servants and accomplices particularly Malcolme Mconeill Vic Condochie his Domestick servants Patrick Robertsone youngest Lawfull brother of Drummachoine Grand uncles sone to the said Duncan Donald Mconeill-Roy his domestick Servant Alexander Mcdonald alias Mcallaster Vic indowie Vic Gillispick later in Glencoe a Vagabound and […] Mcdonald his Servant are guiltie of the oppressiones and Other Crymes above and aftermentioned In so far as The said Lady Strowan pursuer being dayly troubled and Mollested in the possession of her Lands and goods and threatned with Severall acts of violence by the said Duncan Robertsone and his said accomplices She was necessity for her oun security to raise Laborrowes against him and the Said Patrick Robertsone and others By which they were Charged to find Cautione before the Lords of his majesties privy Councill in the Laborrowes under the penaltie of ane thousand merks the peice And after chargeing upon the said Laborrowes Denunceing registrating and takeing out Captione against the said Duncan and Patrick Robertsones and apprehending and incarcerating of the Said Duncan, and that James Dumbar of Dacus Merchant burges, of Innverness became Caution in Comon forme of Labborowes for him before he was set at Libertie yet Notwithstanding the saids Duncan and Patrick Robertsones Accompanied with the saids persones and a great many others of their accomplices came to the ground of the Lands of Carie belonging to the said Lady Strowan pursuer or Lands nixt adjacent therunto And their did upon the sixteinth day of May Last Or ane or other of the dayes of the said moneth violently Seaze and apprehend the persones of Duncan Moir, Donald and Malcolme Mccleans Tennants and Servants to the said Lady Strowan in the Lands of Feirnane and robbed them of Two bolls of meall and ane boll Malt belonging to her, and of the Sacks and Teathers and other horss furniture, as her said3 Servants with their horsses and Loads were goeing out his majesties high way throw a high way to the maner place and house of Carie And Detained them prisoners the most part of a day and Swore if they came that way againe That they Should Loss both their Lives and their horsses, and bid them tell the tenants of her lifrent Lands That if they did not Immediatly remove and leave the Joynture Lands waist they should repent it, Which meall and Malt and what was then robbed was worth and of value the Soume of Fourtie two pounds Scots money, And the said Duncan himself both before and after went to severalls of the tenents of the saids Lands Threatned some and Caused Others remove and Swore them not to tell that he so threatned them, Likeas the said Duncan and Patrick Robertsones with their accomplices being all armed with guns pistolls swords and other weapons invasive and offensive Came upon the Twenty Second, or ane or other of the dayes of the said moneth of May to the ground of the saids Lands of Carie, Swearing and Curseing most horid and execrable oathes and did violently and masterfully dryve away two great English Cowes ane Calf ane ane Bull belonging to the said Lady Valued to the Soume of ane hundred and fiftie pounds money forsaid and killed ane Cow belonging to the said John Robertsone allias Gillibrick ground officer4 worth Twenty four pound money forsaid And in furder prosecutione of their malice, And that the said Lady might not recide at the said Maner place of Carie, Bot to make the Lands Waste and turne out her, and her tennents Because of the former Councill process and publict order Subsequent therunto to a partie of his Majesties forces who were authorized and warranted to protect her and her tennants in her for said house and Joyntur Lands at and after the terme of Whitsunday Last The saids Duncan and Patrick Robertsones and their accomplices Did upon the said fifteinth or Twentie two or ane or other of the dayes of the said moneth of May or upon ane or other of the dayes of the Moneths and years of God Jaj vic nyntie Nyne or Jaj viic years Thifteously and Clandistinly in the night time break open and made patent all doors, Trunks Chists and Coffers of the said house and Mannor place of Carie and Conforme to ane particular Inventar repeated as a part of the Lybell violently robbed and Caried away what furniture infight plenishing goods and geir of all Sorts that was therin used and disposed therupon as he thought proper Which infight plenishing goods and gear were Worth and of value the Soume of six hundred Sixtie Six pounds thretein Shilling four peines money for said; As also The saids Duncan and Patrick Robertsones haveing Conceived a deadly hatred ill will Malice and prejudice against the said Lady Strowan pursuer his mother and the saids Margret Robertsone his sister And She being at the place of Carie intimating to the partie and Garisone their That She dreaded the said Duncan and Patrick Robertsones and the other persones Complained upon, and their accomplices their harme, and she goeing peaceably to the Lands and Sheillings possest be her and the other tennents of the said Joynture Lands and wher were, their goods and bestiall pasturing and she accompanied only with Thomas Barbour William Connell and David Evan Souldiers in Collonell James Fergusones regiment in Garison at the said place of Carie ordered ther, by publict warrand for protecting of the said Lady Strowan pursuer and her tennants and the said Mrs Margret their goods and possessiones The Said Duncan and the other persones defenders for preventing therof and as ane additione to their former guilt, Did upon the twentie day of June last or one ore other of the dayes of the said moneth Convocat and gather togither the number of Fourtie or Fiftie more Idle vagabounds and Ruffians all of them being armed as said is, oppenly and avoedly fire upon the said Mrs Margret and the saids Thomas Barbour, William Connell and David Eveans Souldiers eight or nyne Severall Shot and Sarjant John Reid Comander of the partie being alarmed with the fireing haveing come up with all in Garison and haveing inquyred at the said Duncan how it was and ane whatt account that he did head so many armed men, He very Impudently asserted that it was to dispossess the said Lady Strowan his mother and Sister and their tennants and which he did very effectually In so much as the said Duncan haveing detached a partie of the forsaids vagabonds and Ruffians armed as said is Who marched in a Military posture to the Sheallings of Innerbar belonging to the Earle of Tillibardine wher the said Mrs Margaret with her goods and servants were fleeing for Shelter, And the avoiding the hazard of being robbed of her goods, haveing allongst the said Thomas Barbour and William Mcphersone two Souldiers of the said partie and Garisone As aforsaid, She was followed and pursued be the said partie of Ruffians who hade orders and directione from the said Duncan Robertsone and they comeing under cloud and sillence of night entered the Shealling wher the saids Mistres Margret her servants and the said two Souldiers were, Did upon the Twentie one Or ane or other of the dayes of the said moneth of June last fall upon her and Servants And the saids two Souldiers with presented and Cocked guns and pistolls And with drawen Swords and Durks Beat and bruised the Servants bound and disarmed the saids two Souldiers Robbed Spoilled and Caried away the Cowes Sheep Goat Mears and others belonging to the Said Mrs Margaret Viz six great Cowes being Nuckill and furrow kine with thrie sticks and ane Calf their followers pryce overhead per peice includeing the followers Twentie four pounds Inde, Ane hundred and fourtie four pounds Item Twentie Sheep with their Lambs worth overhead per peice including the Lambs four pounds Inde Eightie pounds Item Twentie two goats with their Kidds worth overhead per peice includeing the5 Kidds four pounds Inde Eightie Eight pounds: Item Two Mears worth Twentie four pounds per peice overhead Inde Fourtie Eight pounds all Scots money and Caried the Same way Item the said Mistres Margarets Damnadges theron being violently dispossed from her house and Corne mylne of Stroan Fiernane and otherwayes damnified of the profits and excess of her goods Extending to Thrie hundred and Threttie thrie pounds Six Shillings Eight pennies Item the Loss of her oldine peats Turves, Which were casten and wine worth fourtie pounds Extending the Saids goods geir and others belonging to them with the said Damnadges to the Somme of Seven hundred Threttie thrie pounds Six Shilling Eight penies Scots money forsaid And therafter to the Saids Lands of Feirnane, and drove the haill tennants and goods therof from off the ground Throw their peits as Casten and wine into the peat mosies and threatned them with horible oathes and asseverationes of that the tennants Should returne againe to their possessiones they Should Loss their good and bestiall, And whatever Should be found upon the ground And Lastly upon the Twenty fifth or Twentie sixth Or ane or other of the dayes of the said moneth of June To make a totall ruine and vastatione of the whole Joynture Lands The Said Duncan and Patrick Robertsones haveing the number of6 Twenty four men of their accomplices armed as said is came in ane hostile Manner to the Lands of Kinnicalden a toune of the saids Lands of Fername and resided ther all night did what outragges and Abuses they pleased to Committ stript and Tirred some of the Tennants of their Cloathes Robbed them of their plaids and furniture and Caried away the Same openly and avowedly in high contempt of his Majesties Authority, As also robbed and away took the number and quantitie of Threttie Six bolls meall, Which the said Mrs Margret hade Sheltered in the toune of Kenmore being designed for and allocat to furnish the partie of the forces Lying in Garisone at Carie at Twelue pounds per boll Is four hundred and threttie two pounds Scots Item the worth and value of the said Mrs Margret infight plenishing of her dwalling house brock open be them and of the Chists plates and other dishes with severall Creills seives ridles and Such like furniture for husbandrie Brunt be the said Duncan and his partie Extends to ane hundred pounds money forsaid, Which haill goods gear and others abovewryten belonging to the saids Mrs Margarat and John Robertsones The said Lady Strowan pursuer has right be assignation from each of them dated the Second day of July One thousand Seven hundred years By all which acts and deeds the saids Duncan and Patrick Robertsones have not only Contraveened the forsaid Laborrowes, And the saids Duncan Robertsone and James Dumbar his Cautioner, And alse the said Patrick and ilk ane of them for the paynes therincontained Bot also the saids Duncan and Patrick Robertsones and the other persones Complained upon, Have Committed ane Manifast Ryot Creuall oppression Thift Robberty and fire raising And the said Duncan; And James Dunbar his Cautioner, The said Patrick Robertsone and the other persones Complained upon Singuli in Solidum ought to be Decerned Not only to pay the said Lady Strowan pursuer for her self and as assigney forsaid The respective pryces and value of the said meall malt and others particularly abovewryten And Inventar Repeated as a part of the lybell robbed and away taken from her self and from the said Mistres Margret and Brunt and distroyed to her And alse from the ground officer in maner abovementioned Extending to Two Thousand ane hundred Fourtie Eight pounds money forsaid And the Soume of Fiftie pound money forsaid Which the said Lady would have made of her said Cowes as for the violent profits Extending in the haill to the Soume of Two Thousand One hundred Nyntie Eight pounds money forsaid, And Likewayes the Said Duncan and Patrick Robertsones And the haill other persones above Complained upon who are actors at Least Airt and part of the haill forsaid Crymes, Which being proven, They ought and Should not only be Decerned to pay also the Soume of Fyve Hundred pounds money forsaid of damnadges and expences by the said pursuer Bot Likewayes farder punished in their persones and goods to the example and terror of others to Committ or doe the Like in time comeing And Anent the Charge given to the saids defenders To have Compeared personally before the saids Lords at ane Certaine day now bygone To have answered to the points of the above Complaint and to have heard and seen such order and Course taken theranent as the saids Lords should find Just As in the said Letters or Lybell at more Lenth is Contained Which Lybell being this day called in presence of his Majesties high Commissioner and the Lords of his majesties privy Councill, And the pursuer And also both the defenders being oft times called Lawfullie cited and not Compearing His Majesties high Commissioner and the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill Sustaines the Lybell Albeit the Lady be not Compearing In Respect the Same is raised by particular Order of privy Councill at his Majesties advocats instance Who is present and Compearing with Sir Patrick Home and Mr John Meinzies Advocats and Craved that Certificatione might be granted against both the saids Duncan Robertson and James Dunbar defenders In Respect of their Absence And not Compearance, And that order and warrand might be granted to Brigadeer Maitland Commander of his Majesties forces at Fort William, And also to Collonell Fergusone Collonell of the Regiment and forces Lying in the Shyre of Pearth To Seaze and apprehend the person of the said Duncan Robertsone defender His Majesties high Commissioner And the Lords of privy Councill Haveing Considered the Lybell With the desire of his majesties advocat And the advocats for the pursuer They hereby Grant Certificatione against both the saids defenders In Respect of their absence and not Compearance And Ordaines Letters of Denuncatione to be direct to maccers or messengers at armes Commanding them to pass to the Marcat Cross of […] And other places needfull, And therat in his Majesties name and authority duely Lawfullie and Orderly Denounce the saids defenders his Majesties rebells and to ordaine all their moveable goods and geir to be escheat and inbrought to his majesties use for their Contempt and Disobedience; And Recommends to his Majesties advocat to give order and warrand to the said Brigadeer Maitland or the said Collonell Ferguson, To Cause Seaze and apprehend the persone of the said Duncan Robertsone wher ever he may be apprehended and to Cause Send him in under a secure guard to the Tolbooth of Edinburgh, And appoints the Magistrats of Edinburgh and keeper of ther Tolbooth to receive and detaine him prisoner therin till farder order of Councill.

1. NRS, PC2/27, 353r-358v.

2. An illegible word scored out here.

3. The letters ‘furnit’ scored out here.

4. The word ‘with’ scored out here.

5. The word ‘Lambs’ scored out here.

6. The word ‘four’ scored out here.

1. NRS, PC2/27, 353r-358v.

2. An illegible word scored out here.

3. The letters ‘furnit’ scored out here.

4. The word ‘with’ scored out here.

5. The word ‘Lambs’ scored out here.

6. The word ‘four’ scored out here.

Sederunt, 2 August 1700, Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The Second day of August One Thousand Seven Hundred years1

D1700/8/12

Sederunt

His Majesties Commissioner; Lord Chancelor; Earl of Melvill P:C:; Earl of Crafurd; Earl of Mar; Earl of Mortone; Earl of Buchan; Earl of Cassills; Earl of Lothian; Earl of Leven; Earl of Annandale; Earl of Forfar; Viscount Tarbat; Lord Forbes; Lord Advocat; Lord Thesaurer Deput; Lord Justice Clerk; Lord Aberuchill; Lord Philiphaugh; Lord Halcraig; Mr Fra: Montgomrie

Att Edinburgh The Second day of August One Thousand Seven Hundred years1

D1700/8/12

Sederunt

His Majesties Commissioner; Lord Chancelor; Earl of Melvill P:C:; Earl of Crafurd; Earl of Mar; Earl of Mortone; Earl of Buchan; Earl of Cassills; Earl of Lothian; Earl of Leven; Earl of Annandale; Earl of Forfar; Viscount Tarbat; Lord Forbes; Lord Advocat; Lord Thesaurer Deput; Lord Justice Clerk; Lord Aberuchill; Lord Philiphaugh; Lord Halcraig; Mr Fra: Montgomrie

1. NRS, PC2/27, 353r.

2. NRS, PC2/27, 353r.Sederunt repeated at start of new manuscript register with same date as this last in the previous one

1. NRS, PC2/27, 353r.

2. NRS, PC2/27, 353r.Sederunt repeated at start of new manuscript register with same date as this last in the previous one

Act, 1 August 1699, Edinburgh

Att Edinburgh The first day of August Jaj vic Nyntie Nyne years

D1699/8/71

Act

Act John Cowie merchant in Aberdeen

Anent the petitione given in to the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill be John Cowie merchant in Aberdeen Shewing That wher after2 Threttie one weeks Imprisonment the saids Lords were pleased the latter end of the Moneth called February last to ordaine the petitioner to be sett at Liberty out of the Tolbooth of Edinburgh upon the petitioners enacting himself not to goe beyond the watter of Tay and that dureing the saids Lords pleasure which the petitioner accordingly performed and has Lived ever since at Edinburgh, And seing the petitioners Circumstances and Condition was Such that he was not able to Live any longer here haveing with great difficultie Lived these fyve moneths Since the petitioners Confinement Wheras if the petitioner were at Aberdeen he could make some honest indeavors for the petitioners Livelyhood And Therfore Humbly Craveing to the effect underwrittin as the petitione more fully bears The Lords of his majesties privy Councill haveing Considered the above petition given in to them by the above John Cowie They doe hereby take off the above restraint put upon the petitioner And Declares him quyt therof and frae therfrae And Allowes him the freedome to goe home and Live in his oun Countrey or at Aberdeen Notwithstanding therof and allowes the former bond granted by the petitioner and his Cautioners for keeping of his confinement dated the twenty fourth of February Last to be given up.

Att Edinburgh The first day of August Jaj vic Nyntie Nyne years

D1699/8/71

Act

Act John Cowie merchant in Aberdeen

Anent the petitione given in to the Lords of his Majesties privy Councill be John Cowie merchant in Aberdeen Shewing That wher after2 Threttie one weeks Imprisonment the saids Lords were pleased the latter end of the Moneth called February last to ordaine the petitioner to be sett at Liberty out of the Tolbooth of Edinburgh upon the petitioners enacting himself not to goe beyond the watter of Tay and that dureing the saids Lords pleasure which the petitioner accordingly performed and has Lived ever since at Edinburgh, And seing the petitioners Circumstances and Condition was Such that he was not able to Live any longer here haveing with great difficultie Lived these fyve moneths Since the petitioners Confinement Wheras if the petitioner were at Aberdeen he could make some honest indeavors for the petitioners Livelyhood And Therfore Humbly Craveing to the effect underwrittin as the petitione more fully bears The Lords of his majesties privy Councill haveing Considered the above petition given in to them by the above John Cowie They doe hereby take off the above restraint put upon the petitioner And Declares him quyt therof and frae therfrae And Allowes him the freedome to goe home and Live in his oun Countrey or at Aberdeen Notwithstanding therof and allowes the former bond granted by the petitioner and his Cautioners for keeping of his confinement dated the twenty fourth of February Last to be given up.

1. NRS, PC2/27, 243v-244r.

2. The word ‘the’ scored out here.

1. NRS, PC2/27, 243v-244r.

2. The word ‘the’ scored out here.