17 Iowa 494 | Iowa | 1864
Plaintiffs are not judgment creditors. Por the purposes of the present inquiry, their action is like any ordinary one upon a note, account, or any simple contract, or evidence of indebtedness. They have a foreign judgment;. but, until it becomes a judgment in our courts, they are no more than creditors at large, and until they obtain tbe recognition of their claim by the adj udication of our State tribunals, they have no other or different rights as to tbe propertjr of their debtor than if their demand was indorsed by a less solemn or conclusive proceeding or instrument. Por, however effectual such judgment may be, or whatever the faith and credit to which it may be entitled, it is very certain
It seems to us, however, but too apparent that this provision does not, in the least, aid appellants’ case. Did they propose to restrain the repetition or continuance of defend
We need hardly say that the authorities cited by counsel have no application to cases of this character. There is, in the present state of this case, no controversy respecting the title to this land, as in King v. King, 2 Vesey, 192. Nor is it a case where a trustee is about to transfer or use pro
Affirmed.