18 Gratt. 235 | Va. | 1867
after stating the case, proceeded as follows : Pour errors are assigned in the judgment, but as the last two are in effect but repetitions of the first and second respectively, or at all events may be disposed of in disposing of them, the latter only need be noticed. They are:
1st. The execution upon the first judgment expired before the day named in the bond for the delivery of the property; the sheriff, therefore, could not legally receive it on that day, and the bond was consequently void, and no judgment could legally be rendered upon it.
2dly. The court, having rendered one judgment upon the bond, could not set aside that judgment without notice to the defendants, nor could it quash the execution without such notice.
In regard to the first error assigned, it will not be necessary to say much. The sheriff could legally receive the property on the day of sale named in the forthcoming bond, though that day was after the return day of the execution, and the bond was not, therefore, void. The execution of a writ of fieri facias is an entire thing, and having been commenced but not completed by the sheriff to whom it is directed before the return day, it is his duty to complete the execution afterwards. 1 Rob. Pr. old ed. 529, 580, 582; Dix v. Evans, 3 Munf. 308; Wheaton v.
In regard to the second error assigned. The first judg
The .court, therefore, had jurisdiction to make the order of the 1st day of August, 1867, setting aside the said judgment and quashing the execution thereon. To be sure the statute requires notice to be given to the adverse party, as well in a proceeding to reverse a judgment under ch. 181, § 5, as in a proceeding to quash an execution under ch. 187, § 23; but the notice required in either case is reasonable notice only, and not notice for a certain period of time. It appears, in this case, that the defendants had notice of the motion to set aside the judgment
I have not reviewed in detail the many authorities cited and commented upon by the learned counsel for the defendant in error, because I thought it unnecessary to do so for the decision of this case. They seem to sustain the positions in support of which they were cited. As—1st. That the notice for the second motion was good and valid, notwithstanding the existence of an invalid and illegal judgment previously entered on the same bond. 1 Chit. Pl. 7th Am. ed. pp. 523-4; Green v. Watts, 1 Ld. Ray. R. 274; Knight’s case, 2 Id. 1014; S. C. 1 Salk. 329; Croswell v. Byrnes, 9 John. R. 287, 290; Dyer 32a, pl. 5, 6; Jenk. Cent. 74 pl. 40; 4 Leigh 58; Archer v. Ward, 9 Gratt. 622. 2dly. That a writ of error “may be brought by the plaintiff to reverse his own judgment, if erroneous or given for a less sum than he has a right to demand in order to enable him to bring another action.” 2 Wms. Saund. 101f, citing Johnson v. Jebb, 3 Burr. R. 1772. 3dly. That if the plaintiffs in error have sustained no injury by the want of notice, and could not possibly have sustained any, they certainly are not entitled to reverse upon that ground the order setting aside the judg-ment and quashing the execution. Preston v. Harvey, 2 Hen. & Mun. 55; 64, 5; 66, 7; Pitman v. Breckinridge, &c., 3 Gratt. 127 ; Crawford v. Morris, 5 Id. 90; Hughes v. Stickney, 13 Wend. R. 280; and, 4thly. That the defendants in the Circuit Court, by appearing (as their own bill of exceptions shows they did) in opposition to the motion to set aside the erroneous judgment and quash the execution upon it, without making any objection to that motion upon the ground of failure to give them notice of it, must be held to have waived the notice, and cannot now be heard to make the objection. Ayres v. Lewellin, 3 Leigh 609; Poling v. Johnson, 2 Rob. R. 285; Pul
In the foregoing opinion I have not adverted to the fact that the order setting aside the first judgment was made during the same term of the court, because having been made after the 15th day of the term, and after an order had been made awarding an execution on the judgment, it might be contended that the term, in effect, was ended as to that judgment when the order was made to set it aside, according to the decision of this court in Enders’ ex’ors v. Burch, 15 Gratt. 64. Nor have I noticed what was said in the argument against the correctness of that decision. I have not deemed it necessary to do so, because, conceding that the order setting aside the first judgment was made at a different term of the court, I still think it was properly made.
I am of opinion that there is no error in the judgment, and that it be affirmed.
The other judges concurred in the opinion of Mon-cure, P.
Judgment arrirmed.