15 Daly 290 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1889
On the 21st July, 1873, the appellants recovered a judgment against the respondent in a district court for $112.65. On the same day they issued an execution on that judgment out of the district court to one of the city marshals, which was duly returned to that court wholly unsatisfied, ■on the 15th August, 1873. On the 20tli of the same month a transcript of the judgment was duly filed, and the judgmentduly docketed in the county clerk’s office; whereupon, under section 3220 of the Code of Civil Procedure, “it is •deemed to be a judgment of this court.” Ho execution was issued on the judgment after it was so docketed. On these facts, and others not necessary now to state, the appellants in December, 1888, asked leave of this court to issue execution, which was denied, on theground that leave was not necessary, .as an execution had been issued within five years after the entry of the judgment. In this conclusion we cannot concur. While section 1377 of the Code •of Civil Procedure seems on its face to provide for the issuing of all executions, whether based on judgments rendered in courts of record or courts not of record, yet section 3347, subd. 10, says chapter 13 of the Code, of which section 1377 is a part, applies only to executions issued out of courts of record after the 1st day of September, 1877. Executions issued before that time must therefore be governed by the old Code, but section 1377 is a re-enactment of a part of section 284 of the former Code, and both Codes contain other and entirely separate provisions, governing the issuing of executions out of the justices’ courts. They are substantially the same in both, and will be found in section 64 of the old Code, and in section 3024 of the present Code. These provisions were made applicable to district court executions by section 68 of the old Code, and by section 1403 of the consolidation act of 1882. As section 1377 is expressly said to refer to executions issued out of courts of record only, .and as both Codes made separate provisions for executions issued out of courts not of record, we think section 284 of the old Code, as well as section 1377 of the present, was intended to regulate the issuing of executions in courts of record only; and that an execution issued out of a district court to a marshal, before a transcript filed, would not, under either Code, authorize the issuing ■of an execution out of this court after transcript filed, if more than five years had elapsed, without leave of the court.
But there is another, and we think conclusive, reason why the leave asked for should not have been granted. It was long a moot question whether, when a transcript of a judgment rendered in a court not of record was docketed in the county clerk’s office, it became a judgment of the county court, or, if in this county, of this court, and the remedy by execution ran for 20 years; or whether it was to be deemed a judgment of the county court, or of this court, for tlie purposes of enforcement merely, still bearing the impress and characteristics of its origin, and the remedy by execution ran for 60 days only. As far as it is now necessary for us to consider the question, it first arose in Waltermire v. Westover, 14 N. Y. 16, and in that case Sellen, J., delivering the opinion of the court, distinctly held that statutes of limitation did not •discharge the debt, but acted exclusively upon the remedy; that the statute limiting the commencement of actions on judgments rendered in justices’ courts to six years was directed to the remedy by action only, and did not operate to extinguish the remedy by execution. When this decision was rendered, however, 2 Rev. St. § 128, p. 248, was still in force, and that section provided that a justice’s judgment docketed by a county clerk “shall be a lien on
See ante, 518.