64 N.Y.S. 1044 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
It appearing that the judgments have not been paid, and no cause being shown why the executions should not issue, other than a denial of power on the part of the court to grant the motion, this appeal presents a question of law only.
By the Revised Statutes (2 R. S. 359, §§ 3,4) a judgment remained a lien upon real property as against the defendant, his heirs and devisees, for the period of twenty years, after which time payment was presumed; but a judgment ceased to be a lien after ten years from the docketing thereof as against subsequent incumbrancers
Prior to the enactment of the Code, if the judgment debtor died after judgment and before execution issued, an execution could not be issued until the expiration of one year after his death. (2 R. S. 368, § 27.) • In such case an execution .could then only be had against the personal representatives, heirs or terre tenants, after the return of a' writ of scire facias. (Wood v. Morehouse, 45 N. Y. 368, 374, 375; Marine Bank of Chicago v. Van Brunt, 61 Barb. 361; 49 N. Y. 160, 163.)
Section 376 of the Code of Procedure provided that' where the judgment debtor died after the recovery of the judgment, his heirs, devisees or legatees or the tenants of real property owned by him “ and affected by the judgment ” might, after the expiration of three years from the time of' granting letters testamentary or of administration, be summoned to show cause why the judgment should not be enforced against the estate of the judgment debtor in .their hands, respectively, and that the personal representatives of a deceased judgment debtor might be so- summoned at any time-within one •year after their appointment. Chapter 295 of the Laws of 1850 provided as follows:' “Notwithstanding the death of a party after judgment, execution thereon against any property, lands,' tenements, real estate, or chattels real, upon which such judgment shall be a lien, either at law or in equity, may be issued and executed .in the same manner and with the same ■ effect as if he were still living, except that such execution cannot be issued within, a year after the death of the defendant, nor in any case, unless upon permission granted by the surrogate of the county who has jurisdiction to grant administration or letters testamentary on -the estate of the deceased judgment- debtor, which surrogate may, on sufficient cause shown, make an order granting permission to issue such execution as aforesaid.”
Section- 376 of the Code of Procedure, requiring leave of the court
Section 282 of the Code of Procedure provided for the docketing of judgments to conform to the new practice, but left the extent of the lien and the manner of enforcing the same to be determined by the Revised Statutes. (Throop’s note to § 1252, Code Civ. Proc.; Matter of Hallock, 61 N. Y. St. Repr. 230.) But the Legislature, by an act passed July 10, 1851, amended this section by providing that a judgment, upon being duly docketed, “ shall be a lien on the real property in the county where the same is docketed of every person against whom any such judgment shall be rendered, and which he may have at the time of docketing thereof in the county in which such real estate "is situated, or which he shall acquire at any time thereafter, for ten years from the time of docketing the same in the county where it was rendered.”
Such was the. state of the statutory law on these questions when the first part of the.Code of Civil Procedure was enacted. Section 1251 of the Code of Civil Procedure as originally enacted provided as follows:
“ Except as otherwise specially prescribed by law, a judgment, hereafter rendered, which is docketed in á county clerk’s office, as prescribed in this article, binds, and is a charge upon, for ten years after filing the judgment roll, and no longer, the real property and chattels real, in that county, which the judgment debtor has, at the time of so docketing it,' or which he acquires at any time after-wards, and within the ten years.”
Section 1252, as originally enacted, provided as follows :
“ When ten. years after filing the judgment-roll have expired, real property or a chattel real; which the judgment debtor, or real property which a person, deriving his right or title thereto, as the*114 heir of devisee or the judgment debtor, then has, in any county, may be levied upon, by virtue of an execution against property, issued to the sheriff of that county, upon a judgment hereafter rendered, by filing, with the clerk of that county, a notice, subscribed by the sheriff, describing the judgment, the execution and the property levied upon ; and, if the interest levied upon is that of an heir or devisee, specifying that fact, and the name of the heir or devisee. The notice must be recorded and indexed by the clerk, as a notice of the pendency of an action. For that purpose the judgment debtor, or his heir or devisee, named in the notice, is regarded as a party to an- action. The judgment binds and becomes a charge upon, the right and title thus levied upon, of the judgment debtor, or of his heir or devisee, as the case may he, only from the time' of recording and indexing the notice, and until the execution is set aside or returned.” •
Neither of these sections has been since amended.
Throop, in his note to section 1252, says that a doubt existed as to whether the provision of the Revised Statutes continuing the lien of a judgment for twenty years, as against the defendant, his. heirs and devisees, was repealed by implication by said amendment of 1851 to section 282 of the Code of Procedure,, and if so, as to-whether the lien of a judgment- could be extended by redocketing it. He states that for these reasons it was deemed necessary to replace the former provisions by these two sections, the first limiting-the lien in all cases to ten years after docketing the judgment, in accordance with the apparent meaning of said amendment to the Code; and the second supplying the omissus by providing a' mode which enables a judgment creditor to proceed against real property after .the lapse of the ten years. In his note in the Appendix to sections-1251 and 1252 of the Code, he says that section 1252 was designed “ to enable a creditor,, after the lapse of the ten years, to bind and reach the real property of the judgment debtor, or of an heir or devisee, by issuing an execution, and filing a notice similar to a notice of the pendency of an action.”
At common law, a judgment was not a lien ujjon real property ; consequently, a judgment creditor only acquires such lien as is given by the statute. The execution, authorized by section 1252 during the life of the judgment and after its lien'period has expired, is a
Section 1379, as originally enacted, provided as follows:
“An execution to collect a sum of money cannot be issued against the property of a judgment debtor, who has died since the entry of the judgment except as prescribed in the next two sections.”
The language of this section being sufficiently definite and comprehensive tó embrace executions upon which judgments may be enforced pursuant to section 1252, it follows that it must have been intended to provide in sections 1380 and 1381 for the issue of the executions referred to in section 1252.
Section 1380, as originally enacted, provided as follows:
“After the expiration of one year from the death of a party, against whom a final judgment for a sum of money, or directing the payment of a sum of money is rendered,, the judgment may be enforced by execution against any property upon which it is a lien with like effect as if the judgmént' debtor was still living. But such an execution shall not be issued, unless an order granting leave to issue it is procured from the court from which the execution is to be issued, and a decree to the same effect is procured from a surrogate’s court of this state, which has duly granted letters testamentary or letters of administration uj)on the estate of the deceased judgment debtor.”
To-carry into effect the clear intent of the Legislature, which the court has implied authority to do (Beard v. Sinnott, 35 N. Y. Super. Ct. 51), section 1380 must yield to the construction that the requirement, as a prerequisite to granting the order, that the judgment shall be an existing lien, only applies when ten years have not elapsed since it was docketed, that being the only case where it could, be a lien. A careful analysis of these .statutory provisions
In Lefevre v. Phillips (81 Hun, 232) it was only necessary to decide whether a judgment creditor’s action could be maintained without the- previous issue and return unsatisfied of an execution. Ten years had not elapsed since the recovery of the judgment in that case, and consequently the observations of the learned justice
The case of Wilgus v. Bloodgood (33 How. Pr. 289), holding that an execution might issue after ten yeárs, and Matter of Harmon (79 Hun, 226), and Baumler v. Ackerman (63 id. 40), and Matter of Hallock (61 N. Y. St. Repr. 230), holding the contrary, are not in point, as the judgments there under consideration were docketed prior to the enactment of the Code of Civil Procedure.
We are of opinion that the petitioner has shown a legal right to the issue of the execution so far as the court in which the judgment is docketed is concerned. It follows that the order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the appellants, and the motions for leave to issue executions granted.
All concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, without costs, the form of the orders to be settled by and before Mr. Justice Laughlin upon five days’ notice.