169 P.2d 844 | Kan. | 1946
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This case creates the necessity for consideration of the legal effect of a dormant judgment and the significance of ancillary proceedings occurring prior to the dormancy of the judgment. It does not concern revivor proceedings.
On January 6, 1941, the bank obtained a judgment against Harper for $2,440.09 and costs. No execution was issued on the judgment until January 29, 1946. On such date an execution was issued and a motion to quash the execution was filed thereafter predicated upon the contention that the judgment was dormant. The trial court overruled the motion and this appeal followed. The bank contends that the judgment was not dormant because it had been asserted in an ancillary proceeding within five years from its date. During the five years following the entry of the bank’s judgment against Harper the Federal Land Bank brought an action to foreclose a mortgage which Harper had executed to such bank. The First National Bank of Norton was named as a codefendant in such action for the purpose of having its statutory judgment lien
1. Preliminary consideration will be given to the legal effect of a dormant judgment. G. S. 1945 Supp. 60-3405, provides that if an execution shall not be sued out within five years from the date of any judgment the judgment shall become dormant and shall cease to operate as a lien on the estate of the judgment debtor. During a period of two years following the expiration of such five years a dormant judgment can be revived pursuant to the provisions of G. S. 1935, 60-3221. Unless a judgment is revived within such statutory period it dies. During the two years prior to its death, however, it is only dormant. While a dormant judgment is not dead, it is asleep upon its death bed, inert and incapable of any effective manifestation of legal life. While such a comatose condition continues the judgment does not possess the power necessary for process. An execution issued upon it is void. From the case of Denny v. Ross, 70 Kan. 720, 79 Pac. 502, paragraph one of the syllabus is quoted as follows:
“An execution issued upon a dormant judgment is void; it neither receives life from the judgment nor imports life to it.”
It follows that proceedings in aid of execution upon a dormant judgment also are invalid. Such a judgment is too feeble to be the basis for garnishment. (See Grace v. Pierce, 127 Miss. 831, 90 So. 590, also reported in 21 A. L. R. at 1035 and the annotation beginning at page 1038, wherein it is held that the issuance of a garnishment prior to dormancy is not sufficient to toll the statute if the judgment becomes dormant prior to any additional judgment being entered in the garnishment proceedings.) In Shields v. Stark [1899] (Tex. Civ. App.), 51 S. W. 540, it was held that a writ of garnishment was not in any sense an execution because it was in the nature of a pleading and not a final process to enforce the collection of a judgment. In such connection see our recent case of Porter v. Trapp, 160 Kan. 662, 165 P. 2d 591, and also, Ring v. Palmer, 309 Ill. App. 333, 32 N. E. 2d 956. A dormant judgment is too frail to sustain attachment and it has been held that the issuance of an attachment is not the equivalent of an execution. (See Croskey, Appellant, v. Croskey, 306 Pa. 423, 160 Atl. 103, and, also, In re Cake’s Estate, 186 Pa. 412, 40 Atl. 568.)
2. Counsel for the bank contend that whenever the holder of a judgment affirms its vitality in any legal proceeding he asserts that it is unpaid and that he is intending at some time, in some way to enforce its collection and that such an assertion is sufficient compliance with the statutory requirement. In support of such contention see Halsey v. Van Vliet, 27 Kan. 474, Kothman v. Skaggs, 29 Kan. 5, and Capital Bank v. Huntoon, 35 Kan. 577, syl. ¶ 8. The question, therefore, arises whether life of a judgment can be prolonged by ancillary proceedings. Such a question is one upon the answer to which the judicial doctors have differed. (See cases cited in annotation in 21 A. L. R. beginning at page 1049.) A somewhat exhaustive search has failed to reveal many additional cases upon the general question, but see Hoskins v. Peak, 100 Okla. 124, 228 Pac. 478; also, Ring v. Palmer, supra, and Blair v. Rorer’s Adm’r., 135 Va. 1, 116 S. E. 767.
In Denny v. Ross, supra, this court qlearly held that ancillary proceedings pending in the probate court were insufficient to extend the time in which a judgment became dormant. There is, however, not only a contrariety of judicial conclusions in answer to such question but also as to the proper answer to the correlating question whether a special execution issued in such auxiliary proceedings is sufficient to toll the time in which a judgment becomes dormant. (See Watson v. Iron-works Co., 70 Kan. 43, 74 Pac. 269.) The general rule is to the effect that since the right of revivor as it exists today is purely a statutory remedy, strict compliance must be made with the terms of the statute, but opinions differ as to what constitutes strict compliance. Some of the diversity of opinion arises
Our applicable statute reads as follows:
“If execution shall not be sued out within five years from the date of any judgment, including judgments in favor of the state or any municipality in the state, that now is or may hereafter be rendered, in any court of record in this state, or within five years from the date of any order reviving such judgment, or if five years have intervened between the date of the last execution issued on such judgment and the time of suing out another writ of execution thereon, such judgment including court costs and fees therein shall become dormant, and shall cease to operate as 'a lien on the estate of the judgment debtor. . . .” (G. S. 1945 Supp., 60-3405.) (Emphasis supplied.)
In passing perhaps it is prudent to consider: What is an execution? Our statute, G. S. 1935, 60-3401, defines an execution as follows:
“Executions shall be deemed process of the court, and shall be issued by the clerk, and directed to the sheriff of the county. . . .” (Emphasis supplied.)
From Webber v. Harshbarger, Sheriff, 5 Kan. App. 185, at 186, the following is quoted:
“. . . What is an execution?
“ ‘Putting the sentence of the law in force.’ 3 Blackstone’s Commentaries, 412.
“ ‘The act of carrying into effect the final judgment or decree of a court. . . . The writ which directs and authorizes the officer to carry into effect such judgment.’ Bouvier’s Law Dictionary.
“This definition has been adopted by nearly every state in the union.
“ ‘An execution at law is a writ issuing out of a court, directed to an officer thereof, and running against the body or goods of a party.’ (Brown v. United States, 6 U. S. Ct. Claims, 178.
“ ‘An execution is the end of the law. It gives the successful party the fruits of his judgment.’ United States v. Nourse, 9 Peters, 28.”
Other definitions to the same effect are given in the cited case, and see, also, Norton v. Reardon, 67 Kan. 302, 72 Pac. 861. Thus, it will be seen that an execution implies its issuance.
. . ‘If execution be not sued out,’ the judgment becomes dormant; that is, if some kind of process issued by the clerk and directed to the sheriff, which the law classifies under the term ‘execution,’ be not sued out, the judgment becomes dormant.” (p. 52.) (Emphasis supplied.)
Later in such opinion appears the following: “All that is necessary is that it issue. [Citing Saville v. Schroyer, supra.] That is, all the judgment creditor need do to keep his judgment alive is to assert its vitality by having process merely issued for its enforcement.” (p. 55.) And the following also appear©: “. . . ‘whether the writ which the officer holds be called an execution, or an order of sale, it is but a written command, under the seal of the court, authorizing and directing him to execute its judgment.’ ... I believe that the issuance of any process which is for the enforcement of the judgment prevents dormancy; . . .” (p. 61.) On rehearing (70 Kan. 61, 78 Pac. 156) the court modified its former decision and paragraph two of the syllabus reads as follows: “. . . and an order of sale or special execution sued out by the plaintiff in the decree to enforce the same will have the effect of preventing a money judgment in favor of one defendant against his codefendant from becoming dormant, if the fact of such judgment and the amount thereof is recited or referred to in the order of sale. [Citing State v. McArthur, supra.] ” From the opinion the fol
The annotation in 21 A. L. R. 1035, et seq., supra, cites the case of Ruth v. Wells, 13 S. D. 482, 83 N. W. 568 from which the following is quoted:
“ ‘The rule of universal importance to the owners of real property and society in general is that time, when it has once commenced to run by operation of statute, will not cease to do so by reason of any subsequent event or condition for which the statute has not expressly provided.’ ” (p. 1052.)
Our statute does not expressly provide that the time shall cease to run by any proceeding other than the issuance of an execution. The statute does not refer to the bringing of an action.. From the A. L. R. note the following is quoted:
“So, where it is required by statute that, in order to prevent the dormancy of a judgment, an execution must be issued thereon within a certain time, the commencement of an action by the judgment creditor to subject the real estate of his debtor to the satisfaction of the judgment does not operate to extend the lien of the judgment, . . .” (p. 1052.) (Emphasis supplied.)
In the early case of Flagg v. Flagg (1894), 39 Neb. 229, 58 N. W. 109, it was said:
“In order to continue the lien beyond this period, the statute, in express terms, requires that an execution must be issued within the life of the judgment. The issuance of an execution within five years prolongs the judgment and preserves the lien of the judgment for five years longer. The bringing of this action was not equivalent to, nor did it take the place of, the issuing of executions upon the judgments. The pendency of this suit did not prevent plaintiff from suing out executions.” (p. 236.) (Emphasis supplied.)
And in Swafford v. Howard, 20 Ky. Law Rep. 1793, 50 S. W. 43, it was held that an action to enforce a judgment does not stop the statute of limitations, when no execution is issued within the required statutory time. Texas has held that the preparation of and delivery to the sheriff with instructions to hold the execution is not equivalent to the issuance thereof. (Harrison v. Orr, [Tex. Civ. App.] 296 S. W. 871, headnote ¶10.) To same effect see, also,
The order of sale issued in the case of the Federal Land Bank v. Harper, et al., did not recite the judgment in any manner which the First National Bank had obtained against Harper in the prior action. Therefore, it could not have been in the nature of an execution issued on such judgment. No execution ever issued in the original case brought by the First National Bank against Harper until after more than five years had expired from the date the judgment was entered. The judgment was dormant at the time such execution issued and, therefore, the attempted execution was a nullity.
Consequently, the trial court’s ruling is reversed with directions to sustain appellant’s motion to quash the execution.