Petitioner George Trail exhibited a libel charging Thomas Lyell, minister at Lady, with fornication, attempted rape, attempted assassination, and other crimes. Trail, who was both the minister of Dunnet and a heritor in Lady, sought to have Lyell deposed from his ministry. The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland initiated a process regarding the libel, but many witnesses refused to appear on the ground that ecclesiastical courts could not compel their testimony. Trail therefore petitioned the Court of Session for letters of diligence (i.e., warrants) to force the witnesses to testify.
People involved
- George Traill, of Hobbister — Pursuer
- David Dalrymple, of Westhall, Lord Westhall — Pursuer
- Thomas Lyell — Defender
- William Nisbet — Named in case documents
- Alexander Boswell, Lord Auchinleck — Named in case documents
- George Broun, of Coalston, Lord Coalston — Named in case documents
- Malcolm Groat, of Warse — Named in case documents
- Thomas Lindsay — Named in case documents
- Robert Laing — Named in case documents
- John Miller — Named in case documents
- Barbara Smith — Named in case documents
- Barbara Peace — Named in case documents
- James Fotheringham — Named in case documents
- Barbara Spence — Named in case documents
- Bessie Skea — Named in case documents
- Thomas Brock — Named in case documents
- Helen Cock — Named in case documents
- Katherine Westness — Named in case documents
- Janet Westness — Named in case documents
- Margaret Groat — Named in case documents
- Barbara Strang — Named in case documents
- William Strang — Named in case documents
- Barbara Dennison — Named in case documents
- John Brock Sr. — Named in case documents
- Janet Thomson — Named in case documents
- John Brock Jr. — Named in case documents
- James Mill — Named in case documents
- Thomas Grieve — Named in case documents
- Janet Paul — Named in case documents
- Barbara Fotheringham — Named in case documents
- Jean Yorkston — Named in case documents
- Jean Dreaver — Named in case documents
- Mary Reid — Named in case documents
- Elspeth Maxwell — Named in case documents
- Richard Spence — Named in case documents
- Barbara Reid — Named in case documents
- Thomas Hepburn — Named in case documents
- Alexander Fraser — Named in case documents
- Hew Mowat — Named in case documents
- Hugh Sutherland — Named in case documents
- Alexander Oliphant — Named in case documents
- Alexander Nicolson — Named in case documents
- James Taylor — Named in case documents
- Martin Macpherson — Named in case documents
- George Macculloch — Named in case documents
- James Graham, of Graemehall — Named in case documents
- James Blaw — Named in case documents
- Andrew Ross — Named in case documents
- Drummond Ross — Named in case documents
Places
Petitioner George Trail exhibited a libel charging Thomas Lyell, minister at Lady, with fornication, attempted rape, attempted assassination, and other crimes. Trail, who was both the minister of Dunnet and a heritor in Lady, sought to have Lyell deposed from his ministry. The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland initiated a process regarding the libel, but many witnesses refused to appear on the ground that ecclesiastical courts could not compel their testimony. Trail therefore petitioned the Court of Session for letters of diligence (i.e., warrants) to force the witnesses to testify.