Emerson v. Washburn

8 Vt. 9 | Vt. | 1836

*12The opinion of the court was delivered by

Redfield, J.

The only question to be decided in the case is, whether the liability of the bail was discharged by the operation of the decree of foreclosure in the original suit.

It is contended, that, as the decree operated to stay the execution for one year after the judgment in favor of the plaintiff, it of necessity discharged the liability of the bail. Our statute requires the plaintiff within sixty days after the rendition of final judgment,, to cause a return of non, cst. inventvs to be regularly made upon the execution, issued upon the judgment, which execution shall be taken out and put into the bands of some proper officer' within thirty days from the rendition of judgment.

The first inquiry is, when does a judgment of the character named in the original suit, become final, within the fair construction of this statute. The judgment that the plaintiffs recover the seizin and possession of the land sued for, whether rendered by default or by consent, would be merely interlocutory, and in no sense final, unless the plaintiff waived all claim for mesne profits, which by our statute he is entitled to recover in ejectment, and the defendant waive’d the right to call upon the court for time to redeem. All judgments at common law and in our practice, which only fix the plaintiff’s right to recover, but without fixing the extent of his damages, are merely interlocutory, as judgments by default or upon demurrer, or for want oí a proper plea, or in proper time — or by nihil elicit or non svm informatics, when damages are to be assessed. The judgment in this case, in the first instance, was clearly of this character, and could not be in any sense treated as a final judgment until after the decree.

After the decree, the statute provides that the execution shall be stayed during the time limited, and in case of payment of the sum due, the judgment shall be vacated.” It is here treated as a judgment but not a final judgment. It is one depending upon a contingency for its effect, and is no more final in its character than if the suit had been continued for assessment of damages, or passed to the supreme court under a rule that judgment shall be vacated and entered for the opposite party, if that court should consider there was error in the judgment below; until the contingency had occurred the judgment could not become final. And we consider this judgment as merely interlocutory or conditional until the expiration of the time limited in the decree. This was the earliest time at which the plaintiffs would be entitled to an execution. And if any doubt could be entertained in regard to the views just *13taken of the case, the statute passed upon this subject, which provides that the day on which the party is first entitled to his execution, shall, for the purpose of charging bail, be considered the day of the rendition of the judgment, most manifestly both in terms and in rational construction, includes this case. So that in any view it cannot be said the plaintiffs have lost their remedy against the bail by the suspension and stay of execution.

The consideration that this stay of execution is on' motion of the defendant, and that the court have no discretion, but to fix the time of redemption and order stay of execution, still more forcibly induces us to decide that the lapse of time merely does net release the bail. For if so, the defendant might always, after any amount of cost had accrued, by litigation of the suit, interpose a motion which should effectually exonerate his bail, without the consent of the plaintiff or the order of the court, which cannot be admitted.

The extreme case of the decree extending the time of redemption through a period of years, might sometimes occur. If so it would be only the chance which every man incurs who enters a court of justice, either as party or bail. The period of the final determination of matters .in course of adjudication is necessarily uncertain. If one assumes the liability of bail, he does it with this reasonable expectation, and if he considers his liability more than he is willing to sustain, the law provides a ready release by committing the principal.

But it is contended that by the operation of the decree, the costs were so far merged, that the plaintiffs were not entitled to include these in their writ of possession. This is not in accordance with the contemporaneous construction of this statute, and long established practice under it. It has always been considered that the plaintiff, after the expiration of the time limited for the redemption and the terms of the decree not complied with, was entitled not only to his writ of possession, but to his execution for costs. And such has been the uniform practice, sub silentio perhaps, for so long a course of years, that we should not now feel at liberty to depart from it, unless the terms of the the statute clearly required such departure, in order to restore it to its legitimate operation.— Stuart vs. Laird (1 Cranch 299) 1 Pet. Cond. 316.

And from a fair construction of the statute, it does not seem to admit of much question that such was the intention of the framers. The costs are indeed to be included in the decree. For no rational construction would admit that the defendant might redeem the *14■ premises and thus relieve them from the lien created by the mortgage, until the costs as well as the debt were paid.

But if no payment of the sum stated in the decree is made, what is its effect ? It is not such a merger of the original cause of action as results from' a judgment in a personal action upon the securities described in the condition of the mortgage. The plaintiff may or may not take possession of the land. If he do, it is only at most payment pro tanto, in the ratio of its value to the sum due. If the land be not of value adequate to the full payment of the debt, the plaintiff may pursue his mortgage securities- and collect the difference, or if the defendant does not see fit to claim the offset of the land, it may be considered as opening the decree. But in no event is .taking possession of the land under •the decree payment of the sum stated, unless it appear that the land was of value sufficient for the purpose. And this must appear by showing on the part of the defendant,-which is not attempted here. If the defendant had here relied upon that, it should at all even's be presented by plea.

But the court think that the legislature did not intend to put the cost on the same footing with the money secured by the mortgage. The cost accrues in consequence of defendant’s neglect to surrender possession, which he is bound to do on coudition broken. The decree is made at the request and for the benefit of the defendant. The costs not having accrued in consequence of the plaintiff’s application to have defendant’s right of redemption foreclosed, are on different grounds from costs in chancery on bill for foreclosure by mortgagee. And from every view we have no doubt the plaintiff in this case is entitled to his scire facias against the bail for the recovery of the costs. ,<?

The judgment of the county court is therefore affirmed.

midpage