13 Tex. 379 | Tex. | 1855
The judgment on which this suit was brought, was rendered more than ten years before the institution of the suit. But an execution was taken out within the year, and others regularly from Term to Term of the Court, until within less than ten years next before the bringing of the suit. So that the last act of legal diligence was within time to prevent the bar of the statute or of the lapse of time, upon the principle of the case of Fessenden v. Barrett. (9 Tex. R.
The only principle determined in the first of these cases, which can be supposed to have any application to the present, is the construction or definition given to the “ due diligence” required by the Act of 1840, to preserve the lien of the judgment ; which was, that executions must be continuously issued from Term to Term, after the return of the first execution, required to be issued within the year, not satisfied ;■ and this principle was reaffirmed in the case of Hall v. McCormick. (7 Tex. R. 269.) The question here presented did not arise and was not considered in the case. If it was supposed, as from the brief of counsel for the appellee there is reason to suppose it was, that the case of Scott & Rose v. Allen is an authority for the judgment of the Court under revision, that case must have been singularly misunderstood. The same irregularity, it is true, which appears upon the face of the executions in this case appeared also there; but it was treated by the Court as the least important of the many irregularities which appeared in the proceedings. In noticing it the Court said it might be urged that “ as all the executions “ were before the Court, there was sufficient evidence to take “ the execution last issued, from the limitation of a year from “ the rendition of the judgment; and if no rights were affected, “ and it was only a question of lien to be kept up by a conti
Though the executions in question were irregular in point of form, they were not nullities. They might have been amended; and when the Court has before it that which to amend by, a mere clerical omission will be considered as amended; upon the principle, that, as to mere matters of form, for the purpose of sustaining right, that will be considered as done which ought to have been done.
We are of opinion that the Court erred in its judgment; and as a jury was waived and the case submitted to the Court upon the evidence, which is embodied in the record, the judgment will be reversed, and such judgment here rendered as the Court below ought to have rendered.
Reversed and re-formed.