59 Neb. 170 | Neb. | 1899
In November, 1892, Anna B. Morrow recovered a judgment in the district court of Valley county against the Bankers Life Insurance Company of Lincoln, and soon afterwards caused an execution to be issued thereon. This writ was delivered to the sheriff of Lancaster county, who returned it unsatisfied in consequence of having been served with an in junctional order issued by the district court in an original action instituted by the defendant on the theory that the Valley county judgment was void. In July, 1893, Mrs. Morrow died, and A. M. Robbins, the defendant in error, was, in pursuance of testamentary nomination, appointed executor of her will. He immediately accepted the appointment, and, having first duly qualified, entered upon the discharge of his trust. In 1898 the action to enjoin the enforcement of the judgment against the insurance company was finally decided on the merits in favor of Robbins, who had been substituted for Morrow as a party defendant therein. This proceeding was then commenced to revive, in the name of the executor, the judgment rendered by the district court of Valley county in 1892. In response to a conditional order of revivor served upon it, the company, by its attorney, appeared in court and filed what is
The first contention is that the service of the conditional order did not give the court jurisdiction to hear the plaintiff’s application, or to grant the relief demanded. We will not inquire into the efficiency of the order as a jurisdictional process, because we are satisfied that the defendant, by its “special appearance,” appeared generally, and thus became subject to the authority of the court. Among the objections urged to the revivor of the judgment were these: That the several kinds of relief sought by the plaintiff were improperly joined; that Robbins was never the duly constituted executor of Morrow’s will, and that the right to have the judgment revived had become barred by the statute of limitations. Upon two issues raised by these objections the company presented evidence, and sought the judgment of the court in its favor. Had the court decided these points against the plaintiff, he would have been defeated, not because the court was without jurisdiction of the defendant or of the subject-matter of the action, but because the facts alleged and proved did not entitle him to the relief demanded. These objections did not'relate to the power of the court to hear and determine the application. They denied Robbins’ right to a revivor, because his demands for relief were improperly blended, because he had no capacity to maintain the proceeding, and because the claim which he was seeking to enforce had become stale. ')The effort of the company evidently was to try the matter and obtain a judgment on thé merits while standing just outside the threshold of the court. This it could not do. A party can not be
We will now inquire whether the court was justified in making the order of revivor more than four years after Morrow died, and more than five years after the issuance of an execution on the judgment. The statutory proceeding to reviAre a dormant judgment is a substitute for the common-law writ of scire facias. It is not the commencement of a civil action, but the continuation of an action previously commenced. The object in view is not to obtain a judgment, but to obtain permission of the court to execute a judgment already in existence. See Eaton v. Hasty, 6 Nebr., 419; Irwin v. Nixon, 11 Pa. St., 125; Rice v. Moore, 18 Kan., 590; Freeman, Executions [1st ed.], sec. 81. Clearly-then the general limitation law, Avhieh prescribes the time within which civil actions shall be commenced, has no application to the revivor of judgments. But it is insisted by counsel for defendant that the spe
“Sec. 472. If either or both the parties die after judgment, and before the satisfaction thereof, their represen-' tatives, real or personal, or both, as the case may require, may be made parties to the same, in the same manner as is prescribed for reviving actions before judgment; and such judgment may be rendered and execution awarded as might or ought to be given or awarded against the representatives, real or personal, or’ both, of such deceased party.
“Sec. 473. If a judgment become dormant, it may be revived in the same manner as is prescribed for reviving actions before judgment.”
Both of these sections, it will be observed, declare that the judgment is to be revived “in the same manner as is prescribed for reviving actions before judgment.” Whether the limitation contained in chapter 1 may be alleged as a defense to a motion to revive a judgment under the provisions of sections 471-473 depends, therefore, upon the import of the word “manner” as it is. used in the sections quoted. If the word embraces the idea of time, the special limitation is applicable to proceedings of this character; otherwise it is not. The manner of doing a thing has reference to the way of doing— to the method of procedure — and the element of time does not seem to be involved. In United States v. Morris, 1 Curtis [U. S. C. C.], 26, it is said: “Generally the time of doing an act and the manner of doing an act are distinct things.” In at least three cases the question now
It is finally urged as a reason for reversing the order of revivor that the proceeding by supplemental petition instead of by motion was fatally irregular. That point was not raised in the trial court and is, therefore, not
Affirmed.