51 Colo. 459 | Colo. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court:
March 21, 1910, the defendant in error, as plain tiff below, recovered a judgment against plaintiffs ir error, and two days thereafter, to order to make the same a lien upon the real property of the judgment
Defendant in error has filed a plea in abatement, ánd moves to dismiss the writ, for the reason that plaintiffs in error voluntarily paid, satisfied and discharged the judgment. Plaintiffs in error maintain that the payment and satisfaction of the judgment was under duress or compulsion, and, therefore, constitutes ho bar to the prosecution of the writ of error. We are unable to concur in this view of the matter. Defendant in error did nothing except that which the legislature authorized it to do. It made no illegal exactions of plaintiffs in error; indeed, no demand whatever. At the time no execution could have issued upon the judgment. The supersedeas stayed all proceedings to collect, so the judgment lien, though existing, was non-enforceable. It was no more incumbent upon plaintiffs in error to, at that time, satisfy the judgment than to liquidate an incumbrance before it became due, voluntarily placed upon their property. In either event, it might be to their interest or convenience to so do. They were engaged in buying and selling real estate, and negotiating loans thereon, and in order to more conveniently carry on that particular business, saw fit to satisfy the judgment, and remove the lien created thereby. This did not constitute duress.
The facts of this case bring it clearly within the principle announced in Hawthorne, Trustee in Bankruptcy, v. Hendrie & Bolthoff Mfg. & Sup. Co., 50
The plea in abatement is, therefore, sustained, and the writ of error dismissed.
Writ dismissed.