CHAPTER 13SUMMONSES, NOTICE, WARRANTS AND CALLING
Initiation of causes by summons
13.1 Subject to any other provision in these Rules, all causes originating in the court shall be commenced in the Outer House by summons.
Form of summonses
13.2.—(1) Subject to any other provision in these Rules, a summons shall be in Form 13.2–A.
(2) A conclusion in a summons shall be stated in accordance with the appropriate style, if any, in Form 13.2–B.
(3) Subject to rule 46.6(3) (no condescendence or pleas-in-law in ship collision actions), there shall be annexed to a summons–
(a)a statement, in the form of numbered articles of the condescendence, of the averments of fact which form the grounds of the claim; and
(b)appropriate pleas-in law.
(4) A condescendence shall include averments stating–
(a)in an action to which the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982(1) applies, the domicile of the defender (to be determined in accordance with the provisions of that Act) so far as known to the pursuer;
(b)the ground of jurisdiction of the court, unless jurisdiction would arise only if the defender prorogated the jurisdiction of the court without contesting jurisdiction;
(c)unless the court has exclusive jurisdiction, whether or not there is an agreement prorogating the jurisdiction of a court in another country; and
(d)whether or not there are proceedings involving the same cause of action in subsistence between the parties in a country to which the convention in Schedule 1 or 3C to the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982(2) applies and the date any such proceedings commenced.
(5) A summons may include warrants for diligence and intimation in so far as permitted under these Rules.
Address of defender
13.3. In a summons, the pursuer shall–
(a)set out in the instance the known residence, registered office, other official address or place of business of the defender where he is to be served; or
(b)where that residence, office, address or place, as the case may be, is not known and cannot reasonably be ascertained, set out in the instance that the whereabouts of the defender are not known and aver in the condescendence what steps have been taken to ascertain his present whereabouts.
Period of notice in summonses
13.4.—(1) Subject to any other provision in these Rules, the period of notice in a summons shall be–
(a)in the case of service within Europe, 21 days from whichever is the later of the date of execution of service or the giving of intimation before calling on a warrant for intimation;
(b)in the case of service furth of Europe under rule 16.2(2) (d) or (e) (service by an huissier etc. or personally), 21 days from whichever is the later of the date of execution of service or the giving of intimation before calling on a warrant for intimation;
(c)in the case of service furth of Europe other than under sub-paragraph (b), 42 days from whichever is the later of the date of execution of service or the giving of intimation before calling on a warrrant for intimation; and
(d)in the case of service by advertisement under rule 16.5 (service where address of person is not known), other than in an action to which rule 49.12 (notice of family actions by advertisement) applies, 6 months from the date of publication of the advertisement.
(2) An application may be made by motion to shorten or extend the period of notice in a summons.
(3) Where a motion under paragraph (2) is made after signeting of the summons but before service–
(a)the summons shall be produced to the court; and
(b)the decision of the Lord Ordinary on the motion shall be final and not subject to review.
Signeting
13.5.—(1) A summons shall pass the signet.
(2) No summons shall bear any date but the date of signeting, which date shall be treated as the date of the summons.
(3) A summons shall be signeted and registered by a clerk of session acting under authority from the Principal Clerk (by virtue of a commission granted to him by the Keeper of the Signet).
(4) Subject to paragraph (5), a summons shall be presented to the General Department during its normal office hours for signeting and registration.
(5) In an emergency, a summons may be signeted and registered outwith the normal office hours.
Warrants in summonses
13.6. When signeted, a summons shall be authority for–
(a)service on the defender designed in the instance;
(b)subject to any other provision in these Rules and the provisions of any other enactment or rule of law, arrestment to found jurisdiction where a warrant in the appropriate form in Form 13.2–A has been inserted in the summons;
(c)subject to any other provision in these Rules and the provisions of any other enactment or rule of law, diligence by–
(i)inhibition on the dependence of the action,
(ii)arrestment on the dependence of the action where there is a conclusion for the payment of money,
(iii)arrestment in rem, or
(iv)dismantling a ship,
where a warrant in the appropriate form in Form 13.2–A has been inserted in the summons; and
(d)intimation of the summons on any person on whom intimation is required by these Rules where a warrant for that purpose has been inserted in the summons.
Service and intimation of summonses
13.7.—(1) Where a summons is to be executed, a copy of the summons which has passed the signet shall be–
(a)served on the defender with a citation in Form 13.7 attached to it; and
(b)intimated to any person named in a warrant for intimation.
(2) Where service of a summons is not executed within a year and a day after the date of signeting, the instance shall fall.
Warrants after signeting
13.8.—(1) Where a warrant for diligence mentioned in rule 13.6(c) or for intimation referred to in rule 13.6(d) is not obtained when the summons is signeted, the pursuer may apply by motion for such a warrant at any stage of the action.
(2) Where a minute of amendment is lodged by a pursurer under rule 24.2 calling an additional or substitute defender, the pursuer may apply by motion for warrant to use any form of diligence which would have been permitted under rule 13.6(c) in a separate action.
(3) A certified copy of the interlocutor granting warrant for diligence applied for under this rule shall be sufficient authority for execution of the diligence.
Effect of warrants for inhibition on dependence
13.9.—(1) A warrant for inhibition on the dependence in a summons, or in a certified copy of an interlocutor granted on a motion under rule 13.8(3), shall have the same effect as letters of inhibition and may be executed at the same time as the summons is served or at any time thereafter.
(2) A summons, or a certified copy of the interlocutor, containing a warrant for inhibition on the dependence and a certificate of execution of it may be registered in the Register of Inhibitions and Adjudications.
(3) A notice of the certified copy of the interlocutor containing a warrant for inhibition on the dependence may be registered under section 155 of the Titles to Land Consolidation (Scotland) Act 1868(3); and such registration shall have the same effect as registration of a notice under that section.
Recall etc. of arrestment or inhibition
13.10.—(1) An application by any person having an interest–
(a)to loose, restrict or recall an arrestment, or
(b)to recall, in whole or in part, an inhibition,
mentioned in rule 13.6(c) shall be made by motion.
(2) Where the court grants a motion under paragraph (1), it may do so, on such conditions, if any, as to caution or other security and expenses as it thinks fit.
(3) Where a motion under paragraph (1) is enrolled before calling of the summons, the pursuer shall produce the principal summons, or a copy of it, with the certificate of execution of service of the arrestment or inhibition, as the case may be.
Movement of arrested property
13.11.—(1) Any person having an interest may apply by motion for a warrant authorising the movement of a vessel or cargo which is the subject of an arrestment mentioned in rule 13.6.
(2) Where the court grants a warrant sought under paragraph (1), it may make such further order as it thinks fit to give effect to that warrant.
(3) A warrant granted on a motion under paragraph (1) shall be without prejudice to the validity and subsistence of the arrestment.
Intimation of actions relating to heritable property
13.12.—(1) In an action relating to heritable property, it shall not be necessary to call a person as a defender by reason only of any interest he may have as the holder of a heritable security over the heritable property; but intimation of the summons shall be given to that person by notice of intimation in Form 13.12 attached to a copy of the summons.
(2) A warrant for intimation under paragraph (1) shall be inserted in the summons by the pursuer in the following terms:— “Warrant to intimate to (name and address) as a person who is believed to be a heritable creditor of the defender.”.
(3) A person on whom intimation has been made under this rule may apply by motion for leave to be sisted as a party and to lodge defences.
Calling
13.13.—(1) A summons shall not be called earlier than the day on which the period of notice expires.
(2) A summons shall be lodged for calling not later than 12.30 p.m. on the second day before that on which it is to be called.
(3) A summons may be called–
(a)during session, on a sederunt day; or
(b)in vacation, on a calling day of which notice has been given in the rolls.
(4) A summons lodged for calling shall be accompanied by a typewritten slip containing the instance, subject to the following provisions:–
(a)where there is more than one pursuer or defender, the slip shall contain only the name and designation of the first pursuer or defender, as the case may be, followed by the words “and Another [or Others, as the case may be]”; and
(b)in naming and designing a pursuer or defender who is a body of persons (such as a trust or a partnership), whether individual members are also parties or not, it shall be sufficient to use the collective name of that body.
(5) The calling of a summons shall be published in the rolls on the date on which the summons calls.
(6) Where a summons has not called within a year and a day after the expiry of the period of notice, the instance shall fall.
Protestation for not calling summons
13.14.—(1) Where the pursuer does not lodge the summons for calling within 7 days after the date on which the period of notice expires, the defender, on production of the service copy summons, may apply by motion for an order ordaining the pursuer to lodge the summons for calling within 7 days, or such other period as the court thinks fit, after the date of the order.
(2) Where the court pronounces an interlocutor under paragraph (1), the defender shall serve a certified copy of that interlocutor on the pursuer.
(3) Where the pursuer fails to lodge the summons within the period ordered by the court under paragraph (1), the defender may apply by motion–
(a)for declarator that the instance has fallen;
(b)for recall of any diligence mentioned in rule 13.6(c) which has been executed; and
(c)for payment to the defender of his expenses of process under this rule.
(4) An interlocutor granting a motion under paragraph (3) shall be final and not subject to review.
Schedule 1 to the Act of 1982 was substituted by S.I. 1990/2591 and Schedule 3C was inserted by the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1991 (c. 12), section 1(3).