Corby v. Tracy

62 Mo. 511 | Mo. | 1876

Hough, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 30th day of August, 1860, a judgment was rendered by a justice of the peace of Buchanan county, in favor of John Corby, and against the defendant, Tracy. On the 26th day of October, 1871, and after the death of said Corby, a citation was issued by the justice, under the provisions of the 5th section of article 6,Wagn. Stat., relating to justice’s courts, requiring the defendant to show eairse why said judgment should not be revived in the name of the plaintiff as executrix of John Corby. The defendant appeared to the citation, and on the 8th day of November, 1871, said judgment was by the justice revived in the name of the plaintiff. A transcript of the judgment as revived was filed in the office of-the clerk of the circuit court of Buchanan county on the 10th of March, 1873. Execution was issued thereon on the 13th day of, July, 1874, and was on the same day levied on certain personal property of the defendant, for which a delivery bond was given. This execution was returned unsatisfied on the 7th day of September, 1874, the return day thereof, without any sale thereunder. On the 26th day of September, 1874, and during the term to which the execution was returnable, the defendant filed a motion to quash said execution, which was overruled, and he has brought the case here by. appeal.

Passing by the question, whether the motion to quash was proper under the circumstances of this case, it having been made after the ietnrn of the execution, and omitting for the present any reference to another point, which is- fatal to the defendant’s case, we proceed to notice one objection made by him to the judgment of the court below, chiefly for the purpose of calling attention to the want of appropriate legislation on the subject.

It is contended by the defendant, that under the citation issued in favor of plaintiff, as executrix, in October, 1871, the judgment was, not, and, being more than ten years old, could not have been, revived under the statute, and that no exeeu*514tion could have been legally issued thereon by the justice, or by the circuit clerk after the transcript was filed in his office.

It must be conceded, that the proceedings before the justice in October, 1871, would not have afforded sufficient authority to that officer for issuing an execution on the judgment in the name of the plaintiff, as more than three years had then elapsed since the rendition of the judgment; and the citation was not issued, nor were the proceedings thereunder had, with a view of reviving the judgment and having execution thereon as provided in sections seven, eight and nine of the act relating to justices’ courts above cited. But the defendant is wrong in supposing that a judgment in a justice’s court cannot be revived in the mode pointed out in the last named sections, after the lapse of ten years. That point was expressly decided otherwise in the case of Humphreys vs. Lundy (37 Mo., 320), which was affirmed in Sublett vs. Nelson (38 Mo., 487). It was there held that a scire facias under the code, to revive a justice’s judgment, may issue after the lapse of ten years, and that the statute of limitations applies only to judgments of courts of record. It was further held in Carpenter vs. King (42 Mo., 219), that the provisions of our statute, prohibiting a party or his legal representatives from suing out execution on a judgment of a justice’s court more than three years after its rendition, when such judgment had not been revived, refer exclusively to the issuing of executions by justices of the peace, and have no application to proceedings on a transcript filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court. And it was then said, that the “import and intention of the statute is clear, and that is, that the lien should attach from the time the transcript is filed, for the same length of time and with like effect as upon a judgment from the date of its rendition.” The execution was issued from the circuit court in that case in a little more than three years after the rendition of the judgment of the justice.

At the time the transcript in the present case was filed with the circuit clerk, the justice’s judgment was valid and binding, though a scire facias was necessary in order to have *515execution, and after such scire facias execution might have issued at any time within the three years next ensuing. What was the status of this judgmeut when it became a part of the records of the circuit court? If it should be treated as a judgment of the circuit court rendered at the date it was filed in the clerk’s office, execution might be issued thereon at any time within ten years after such filing, and the judgment in the present case would thereby be kept alive for a period of twenty-three years, thus carrying it beyond the period at which, in analogy to the statute in relation to judgments and decrees of court of record, it might be presumed to be satisfied. And on the same principle the existence of justices’ judgments be much further prolonged.

On the other hand, if notice must be taken in the circuit . court of the previous existence of this judgment for the period of thirteen years prior to the filing of the transcript, no execution could be issued from the circuit court, and no scire facias, as both are limited to ten years after judgment. The judgment would thus become of less value than it was before the ten-script was filed. The difficulties of the case are patent, and we have thus called attention to them with the hope that some remedy may be provided by the appropriate department of the government. We are relieved of the necessity of prescribing a rule in such eases. The plaintiff has urged upon our attention the fact, that the motion to quash the execution, even though it should be considered a proper step in the cause, is not embodied in the bill of exceptions; and under our previous decisions it cannot be considered. (State vs. Wall, 15 Mo., 208; London vs. King, 22 Mo., 336; Blount vs. Zink, 55 Mo., 455.)

The judgment of the circuit court must, therefore, be affirmed. Judges Napton and Sherwood concur. Judges Wagner and Vories absent.