Cook v. Sparks

47 Tex. 28 | Tex. | 1877

Roberts, Chief Justice.

This is a motion made by appellee against appellant to set aside a writ of venditioni exponas, and a levy and sale thereunder of several tracts of land. The execution, upon which the levy of the land was made, in 1865, was issued upon a judgment rendered in 1859, upon the dissolution and dismissal of an injunction; and the writ of venditioni exponas was issued bn the judgment en*32joined, which, had been rendered in 1858, but which had been left in force after said dissolution of the injunction. There is no inconsistency in both judgments being in force at the same time, for the security of the payment of the same debt, and the plaintiff' was entitled to the benefit of the increased liability against the original defendants, and the sureties on them injunction bond, as recovered in their last judgment. The satisfaction of that, however, would have' extintingmshed the liability on the first.

The execution having issued on the last judgment, it was certainly irregular to issue the venditioni exponas on the first judgment.

The main objection, however, to the levy and sale of the land was, that-Daniel P. Sparks, one of the defendants in both of the judgments, and whose land was levied on by virtue of the first execution, in 1865, and sold under the venditioni exponas, in 1874, died in 1868, and his estate was being administered by his wife, Maliza Sparks, under his will, duly probated, in tl 10 county of Calhoun, in the State of Texas, long before and at the time of the issuing of the last writ, and the sale under it, at which sale William M. Cook became the purchaser, as shown-by the return of the sheriff.

Cook excepted to the motion, as not being a proper remedy to set aside the writ, levy, and sale, or either of them. He also answered, that Maliza Sparks was acting as executrix of the will, independent of the control of the Court of Probate, and that after purchasing said tracts of land at said sale, he had conveyed part of the same to Henry Bender, of Comal county, Texas, who should be made a party. The said Bender was not made a party to the proceeding, and there was no proof of the fact of the conveyance, as alleged, and therefore this part of the answer need not be further noticed.

Pirst, as to this motion being a proper remedy for the matters complained of. It is contended, that after the return of the writ, a motion cannot be entertained to set it aside. That may be so, when there is a merely formal defect. (Por*33tis v. Parker, 8 Tex., 28.) But on a motion to set aside a levy or sale, the execution, and the circumstances under which it was issued, and the judgment on which it is based, as well as extraneous facts affecting their validity, may be inquired into by the court. (Scott v. Allen, 1 Tex., 512; Bennett v. Gamble, 1 Tex., 132; Martin v. Rice, 16 Tex., 160.)

It was contended, that this motion was not a proper proceeding, because it involved the ascertainment of facts outside of the record, upon which issue might be joined, and which should be properly determined by a jury. In the first cases decided by this court, this matter was not discussed; but in the case of Bryan v. Bridge, 6 Tex., 141, which involved an investigation of facts relating to the levy that did not appear of record, the question was directly made, and the motion decided to be a proper remedy. Indeed, it would seem to be a necessary power, proper to be exercised by every court, to correct any material irregularity in or abuse of its process, when, upon a motion made for that purpose, the matters complained of were apparent from the records in the case.

' A motion, made upon the return of an execution,- to set aside a levy and return of the sheriff, upon grounds not apparent in the record, is adopted now" generally in practice, in place of, and is often in the nature of, a proceeding of audita querula. In the case of Baker v. The Judges of Ulster C. P., it is said, “he might have sought relief by an 'audita querula, but it is usual to grant the same relief upon motion.” (4 John., 191; 1 Bouv. Law Dic., 151.)

It was said by the Supreme Court in South Carolina, that “ where the facts are doubtful, and the court should be unwilling or unable to decide them, an issue might be ordered, which, I think, is the practice in this State; and then such an issue would become the substitute for the formal and technical wait of audita querula, and answer the same end.” (Lovejoy v. Webber, 10 Mass., 102.)

It has been the uniform practice in this State to .entertain *34motions of this sort, and, from judgments rendered therein, appeals have been allowed and sanctioned, as upon other final judgments. (Scott v. Allen, 1 Tex., 510, and other cases cited.)

It appears by the judgment that the matters involved in this motion were submitted to-the court, and, the exceptions to it being overruled, the court pronounced upon the law and upon the facts in favor of the mover, and rendered a judgment accordingly, setting aside the return of the sheriff, and the sale of the land therein described.

The controlling fact doubtless was, that the writ of venditioni exponas was issued, and the sale as returned by the sheriff' was made, long after the death of Sparks, one of the defendants in the judgment and execution. It is important to notice also that the venditioni exponas was issued about nine years after the return of the execution, upon which the levy was made, and there are no facts in the case tending in the least degree to account for the long delay.

It would be sufficient for this case to hold, that the writ and the return of sale were voidable, as between the parties to this motion. Having been issued after the death of Sparks, and the property having been bought by Cook, the plaintiff in execution, as returned by the sheriff, the judgment of the court, in setting them aside, as between them, is sustained by all of the authorities, and many of them hold that the' sale is absolutely void as to every one, the judgment not having been revived against the executrix. (Bennett v. Gamble, 1 Tex., 133; Conkrite v. Hart, 10 Tex., 140.) The authorities are cited from the different States, in which these different views are taken, and a doubt is expressed as to its being properly held void in the case of Webb v. Mallard, 27 Tex., 82, decided by tiffs court.

Its nullity is strongly maintained by decisions of the Supreme Court of the Bnited States. (Erwin’s Lessee v. Dundas et al., 4 How., 58; Ransom v. Williams, 2 Wall., 317.)

*35In the case last cited, Mr. Justice Swayne says: “By the common law, the death of either party arrested all further proceedings in the case.” “ When a defendant dies after judgment, and an execution is subsequently issued, without the notice required by the statute having been given, or the judgment revived by scire facias, the execution is a nullity. In 2 Bacon’s Ab., p. 731, title “ Execution,” note, it is said, that “if the defendant die in the vacation, judgment may be still entered after his death, as of the preceding term, when he was living, and it will be a good judgment at common law, as of that term, though execution cannot be sued out upon it against the representative of the defendant, until it is revived by scire facias.”

It is contended that execution could issue against the estate of Sparks, in his name, because it was being administered by his wife as executrix, without the control of the Probate Court, according to the terms of the will. The statute of this State, authorizing such a will to be made, then in force, provided that the estate “ shall become like any other property to be administered under a power, chargeable in the hands of a trustee, and liable to execution in any court having jurisdiction.” (Paschal’s Dig., Art. 5628.) This seems to be designed to define the status of the property in the hands of the executor, under such a will as being held, not for his own benefit, but in a fiduciary capacity for the benefit of those who have a beneficial interest in it, and in that sense he is in the position of a trustee in respect to the estate. But if he were a trustee in the ordinary sense, it would nqt follow that any one having an interest in the estate could reach the trust property in his hands without making him a party to a suit instituted for that purpose. In such case it would be proper that he should be made a party, and the property should be specified upon which action should be taken in charging it, and a decree would be rendered, requiring him to sell it, if necessary, instead of its being sold *36under execution issued from any court having jurisdiction, as prescribed by the statute. That would result in subjecting him to the direction of some court in administering the estate under the will, instead of holding him responsible for any violation of his duty that,he might be guilty of in respect to the rights of others. Without endeavoring to subject this sentence, found in the statute, to a more critical analysis, it may, it is believed, be regarded simply as an attempt to abbreviate the corresponding clause in the former law, by giving what was regarded as its legal effect, with, perhaps, something more that is not very obvious.

That clause is as follows: “In all such cases, any person having a debt or claim against said estate, may enforce the payment of the same by suit against the executor of said will; and when judgment is recovered against such executor, the execution shall run against the estate of such testator in the "hands of such executor.” (Paschal’s Dig., art. 1371.) This is very plain, and it is not shown that there was ever any complaint of it. It has been re-enacted in the law of the last session of the Legislature. (Genl. Laws, 1876, sec. 117, p. 124.) Upon general principles, inasmuch as a judgment is a subsisting proceeding in court until it is finally executed, there should be proper parties to it, both as plaintiffs and defendants, representing the interests fiable to be affected by it at every stage, and in every step taken in it. One of the reasons given why, upon the death of a defendant, the judgment should be revived against his representative is, to enable him to show that it has been satisfied, or that for some other reason it is not a subsisting or valid claim against the estate which he represents. The great length of time between the levy and the sale in this case, without any explanation given for the long delay in following up the proper remedies in the execution of the judgment, and the death of the defendant, in the meantime intervening, would make it reasonable, apart from other considerations, that the executrix should have an opportunity to show that the estate in her hands is *37not liable for it before the property is seized and sold under execution. There being no error in the judgment, it is affirmed.

Affirmed.

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