99 Ala. 249 | Ala. | 1892
The sole question presented for review on this record is, whether fractions of a day are to be considered in determining the priorities of the liens of judgments registered in the office of the probate judge under the act of February 26, 1889. — Acts 1888-89, p. 60. While there is a general rule of law, having reference, it is believed, mainly to the computation of the time within which an act may or must be done, that fractions of a day will not be taken into account, yet, in cases like this, where the conflicting claims of parties are dependent upon the priority in point of time at which they severally accrued or attached in the form in which they are sought to be effectuated, the true doctrine, we apprehend, is, that the actual and exact time of accrual must be ascertained, and the respective rights of the claimants determined with reference thereto. This principle is recognized by Mr. Wait, who in effect says,
The application of this doctrine to the statute in question, and to the case at bar arising thereunder, must result in giving controlling importance to the precise moment of time at which judgments are registered, so that priority of registration, to the extent of any fraction of a day, will carry with it priority and superiority of the lieu which arises and attaches upon registration. This view finds support in all analogies of the law. It may be laid down as a very general proposition, that whenever it is provided that a lien shall attach upon the doing of an act by or in behalf of the party who asserts it, or seeks to fasten it upon property, — as, for instance, the filing for record of a mortgage, the placing of an execution in the hands of a sheriff, and the like, — fractions of a day will be considered in determining the priority, and consequent superiority, as between liens resulting from, or resting severally upon acts done on the same clay.
Adopting this view, we hold, with the court below, that the lien of the appellee, whose judgment was registered at an earlier hour of the clay on which appellant’s judgment was registered, was a superior lien on the property of the defendant in judgment, and entitled to be first satisfied.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is accordingly affirmed; and this judgment will be entered and take effect as of the date of the submission of this cause.
Affirmed and rendered.