4 Watts 424 | Pa. | 1835
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
—It is but a small matter in such a robbery as this case presents, whether the debt of 60 dollars had been paid once or twice, before the proceedings on the scire facias, which have ended in taking from the heirs of Nixon their whole property, and putting it in the pocket of one who had no claim on them or their ancestor.
Clearly, if the actors in this business were the owners of the property now, it would be recovered by the heirs, without inquiring very minutely whether the transaction was the effect of the most gross negligence or of a design to defraud. And it has been with some difficulty that I could bring my mind to agree, that an innocent purchaser for full consideration can hold it; and I do say, that I would have come to that conclusion, if it had not been in full proof, that the scire facias in 1827 was served on the administrator of Nixon, returned served that there was an appearance by an attorney (now dead and who cannot state why he appeared), and, as we see by the record, a regular and public sale. I do not see how Murphy could be required to look further than this. A fraud practised under the forms of law, is at least no better than if it had assumed another dress. Still, the sheriff was guilty of no trespass in executing the writ, and Murphy of no negligence ; for he was not bound to look further than a regular judgment after notice and appearance, and a regular sale. In 4 Johns. Chan. 247, the chancellor held the sales to those concerned
When the act of the 4th of April 1798 was passed, it introduced a considerable change in the effect, or rather the continuance of the effect, of judgments, and was the subject of much animadversion; but I never heard that its provisions were not plainly expressed. The object of those opposed to it was at first to limit and restrain its effect, and to evade its operation. Thus in Young v. Taylor a dictum was thrown out, which ripened into decision, that an execution issued and levied superseded the necessity of a scire facias, a stay of execution on the judgment suspended its effect for the time of stay, &e. The circuit court of the United States decided in 1807 that it applied only to purchasers, and not to subsequent judgments. In Bank v. Fitzsimons, 3 Binn. 342, this court decided that it extended not only to purchasers, but to all subsequent liens ; and from that case to the present it has not been a matter of contest in court, except where a purchaser or subsequent lien claimed against the unrevived judgment. But it is now contended, in direct opposition to the contemporaneous and continued construction for thirty-seven years, that it has no peculiar reference to purchasers or liens, but applies to cases where neither exist; in other words, that if the judgment has not been revived, the lands are discharged, at least in t.he hands of executors and heirs. This, if true, must go further. The act directs the scire facias to be served on the defendant or his feoffee, or his heirs, executors or administrators, or his or their feoffees, that is, on the feoffee of the heir or of the executors who have sold; and the enacting clause is general, “no judgment hereafter entered in any court of record, &c.;” it does not distinguish between judgments against executors and judgments directly against the debtor; and until now I never supposed, and no court (unless Penn v. Hamilton is an exception) ever decided that there was a difference. In that case, the counsel for the plaintiff first contended, that because the act of 1797 limited the lien of debts against the estate of deceased persons, therefore the act of 1798 could not limit the lien of judgments against estates of deceased persons, or at least, that we must reject plain and positive words to restrain the act from extending to the latter. I have not yet heard, however, any reason why the inconveniences which
In the case of Penn v. Hamilton, there was no judgment against the debtor in his lifetime. The first judgment was in a suit against his executors. This may be said to.distinguish it from the present: for myself, as at present advised, I do not see how that can make any difference.
But further; those judgments were entered on the 8th of January 1807; revived by amicable scire facias the 29th of December 1812 : and a scire facias issued, to continue the lien, to November 1821. In the meantime a sale of the lands was made, and a second sale of part. The case did not call for an opinion as to the case of no intervening right: it might be sufficient to say this much, but I will add that I do not understand that the Chief Justice intended to be understood as .going that length, or contemplated what was said by him as going to the extent now contended for. It is one thing to decide to whom the money shall go on a sale on execution, and another to say that the sale on regular, legal process is void, though made, or since trans
—It is proper to add that we entertain not a doubt of the doctrine in Penn v. Hamilton. In that case, to prevent the mischief which springs from liens of unlimited duration, we infused into the act of 1797 for limiting the lien of a decedent’s debts, principles borrowed from the act of 1798 for limiting the lien oí judgments, because the direct provisions of the latter could not be applied to judgments which have no lien to be limited ; and such are judgments obtained against the representatives of a decedent, as appears in Wootering v. Stewart, 2 Yeates 483 ; Scott v. Ramsay, 1 Binn. 221; Prevost v. Nichols, 4 Yeates 487, and Trevor v. Ellenberger, 2 Penns. Rep. 96. “ This,” it was said in Prevost v. Nichols, “ appeared to
accord with the policy of the government from the earliest times; and it made no difference to creditors whose lien attached only at the death of the testator or intestate, whether the assets arose from the sale of real or personal estate.” In Trevor v. Ellenberger, it is explicitly said, that a judgment against an executor or administrator gives no new or additional lien; and if it be not said so pointedly in the other cases, it is sufficiently intimated by saying that a decedent’s land is a subsidiary fund, on which the rights of his creditors are fixed at his death. It is, in truth, a chattel for payment of his debts; and to that end, a judgment against his representatives may be used to turn it into cash but not to acquire a lien on it more than on any other chattel in respect to which the doctrine of lien is not predicable. If a special or separate lien could be obtained against his heirs or devisees, why not also against the other creditors 1 The first is unnecessary, because the debts are sufficiently secured without it by the general lien established in Graff v. Smith, 1 Dall. 481; and the second would break in on the established order of payment. In Penn v. Hamilton, we did but treat the judgments as having been unattended with lien all along; and to the independent lien of the debt we but applied the principle of Kerper v. Hoch, 1 Watts 9, which puts volunteers, under the act of 1797, on a footing with purchasers and creditors ; a principle not introduced into the construction of the act of 1798, as is apparent in the opinion just delivered, the effect of which, in respect of the doctrine of Penn v. Hamilton, without a word of explanation, might be misapprehended.
Judgment affirmed.