30 Del. 338 | Del. Super. Ct. | 1919
delivering the opinion of the court.
By act of the General Assembly, passed January twenty-ninth, A. D. 1829 (Hall’s Digest [1829] 392-395), the following provisions, in substance, among others, were enacted:
A judgment shall bind lands only from the time of actually entering, or signing it, and not by relation from the first day of the term in, or of which it is entered. Rev. Code 1915, § 4282.
A judgment given, amount to be ascertained by the prothonotary, or other person, shall bind from the time of its entry, if the amount be ascertained and entered upon the docket before the first day of the term next after that in which the judgment is given; but otherwise only from the time of entering upon the docket the ascertained amount. Rev. Code 1915, § 4284.
If several judgments be entered against the same person, on the same day, the first entered shall have the priority. If where there are several judgments against the same person, it does not appear, by the entries, which was first entered, they shall, when given in suits previously commenced, have priority according to the priority of the dates of the suits in which they are respectively given. Rev. Code 1915, § 4285.
A judgment entered during a term, if the day of entering it does not appear by the docket, shall be postponed to a judgment entered during the period of the same term, the day of entering which does appear by the docket. None of the foregoing regulaions shall contravene the provisions of the second section respectng judgment upon a verdict. Rev. Code 1915, § 4286.
Another provision thereafter enacted, requiring the true date of entry of a judgment to be set down on the docket is:
The true date of entering, or signing, every judgment, shall be entered on the docket thereof, as also the date of ascertaining the amount of a judgment given, the amount to be ascertained by the pyothonotary, or other person; and all judgments shall be indexed according to the provisions of Chapter 113 Rev. Code 1852, § 2407; Rev. Code 1915, § 4302.
Also:
Whenever a judgment is entered, or signed, in the Superior Court (except judgments on verdict when entered before the end of the term next after that in which the verdict is given), the prothonotary shall set down on the docket the day, month, and year of actually entering or signing it; and also when entering
This was the state of the statute law down to 1854. So that in the entry of a judgment, whether confessed in court in a pending action, or before the prothonotary upon a warrant of attorney, the prothonotary was only required to set down on the docket the day, month and year of actually entering or signing it. There was not, therefore, any distinction in respect to the requirement of setting down the time of entry between a judgment confessed in court in a pending action and a judgment confessed upon a warrant of attorney. The time of entry required to be set down in each case was the day of entry.
In Hollingsworth v. Thompson (1854) 5 Har. 432, on a rule for the distribution of money, in the hands of the sheriff, between two lien creditors, one by mortgage, recorded October fifteenth, A. D. 1851, at eleven o’clock a.m., and the other by judgment confessed the same day upon a warrant of attorney, the court held that the time of the entry of the judgment was the day of entry; and in respect to the lien of the judgment, following the rule of law excluding fractions of a day in determining the priority of liens, gave the judgment preference, as commencing from the first moment of the day on which it was entered. The court suggested that the inconvenience referred to in the argument ought to be corrected by statute. Subsequently, on January twenty-third, A. D. 1855, the General Assembly enacted:
“The prothonotary on entering a judgment on bond with warrant of attorney, or in taking a judgment by confession other than by virtue of such warrant, shall set down on the docket, under such judgment, the precise hour and minute of the day when the same was entered or taken, and such judgment shall operate and take effect as liens, at and from the time so noted or entered on the record as aforesaid.” 11 Del. Laws, c. 154; Rev. Code 1915, § 3764, second paragraph.
From the time of the passage of this amendment, it has not been considered, according to the unbroken practice of prothonotaries, that the clause therein, viz., “or in taking a judgment by confession other than by virtue of such warrant,” required the
The prothonotary enters a judgment so confessed upon order of the court. There is no difference between a judgment so entered in respect to the notation of the time of entry and a judgment on the verdict of a jury.
See Forms, 1 Woolley, Del. Prac. §§ 669, 771.
On the question of hearing evidence to vary the notations in respect to the time of entry of a judgment it is the opinion of the court that the legislative purpose to make such entries conclusive is clearly shown by said sections 4285 and 4286 of the statute. And the reason therefor is based upon sound public policy which should be adhered to as a measure to prevent litigation.
The Joines judgment entered by the prothonotary upon warrant of attorney appears upon what is known as the “Judgment Docket”; the judgment of Layton & Layton, Incorporated, confessed in court in an action pending appears on what is known as the “Continuance Docket”; so that from an inspection of the two records it does not appear which of the two judgments was first entered.
The conclusion reached by the court is that testimony as to the precise time of the confession of the judgment in favor of Layton & Layton, Incorporated, should not be admitted, and that in determining the time of the commencement of the lien of said judgment the principle of the unity of a day must be applied, so that the court is constrained to hold that said judgment relates back as a lien to the first minute of the day on which it was confessed in court. The money in court under consideration, being less than the amount due on said judgment, should, there