98 Va. 383 | Va. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the court.
• In the year 1893, Logan & Brewer recovered a judgment in Lee county against J. J. Kelly, Sr., for the sum of $5,000, ivith interest from January 1, 1891. At the same time, Kirkpatrick recovered a judgment against the same defendants for $5,000, with interest from the same date. About the same time the Asheville Shoe Company, a judgment creditor, brought suit in the Circuit Count of Lee county against Kelly & Ooldiron and others, alienees of Kelly, for the purpose of subjecting certain lands in Lee county, which were then in possession of said alienees, claiming that the lands really belonged to Kelly, and that he had conveyed them to his co-defendants ivith the intent to defraud, hinder and delay his creditors. Plaintiff sought also to subject any other land owned by Kelly to the satisfaction of its judgment. The cause was referred to a commissioner with direction to ascertain and report the liens against Kelly and their priorities, and what lands, if any, were subject thereto. The judgment creditors were made parties, and their several judgments were duly reported by the commissioner, who
At August rules, 1898, O. S. Hamblen, who in the mean time had become an assignee of the Logan and Brewer judgment, brought suit in Lee county against William J. Kelly and J. J. Kelly, Sr., making all other judgment creditors of J. J. Kelly, Sr., parties. The object of the suit was to enforce the lien of the judgments against a certain tract of land containing 700 acres, more or less, the surface of and timber on which were owned and claimed by William J. Kelly; complainants in the bill averring that J. J. Kelly, Sr., had parted with the title to the said land to William J. Kelly after the liens of the judgments had attached thereto. To this bill J. J. Kelly filed a plea, in which he sets forth the proceedings in the case of Asheville Shoe Company against himself and others, and relies thereon as res judicata.
Plaintiffs demurred to the plea of res judicata filed by J. J. Kelly, Sr., and filed exceptions to the answer of William J. Kelly on the ground that the same did not constitute any defence. -At the April term, 1899, the Circuit Court of Wise county entered a decree sustaining the demurrers to the plea, and the exceptions to the answer; and thereupon J. J. Kelly declined to further plead or answer, and William J. Kelly declined to amend his answer, and the court entered a decree holding that none of the judgments against J. J. Kelly, Sr., constituted liens upon the 700-acre tract, except the judgments of Logan & Brewer and Kirkpatrick, but maintained the liens of those judgments, and directed that unless they should be paid within a certain time, the surface of the 700-acre tract and the timber thereof should be sold.
The facts with, respect to the 700-acre tract appear to be as follows: In 1882 it belonged to J. J. Kelly, Sr., who in that year sold and conveyed to one Kemmerer the coal and minerals in it. In the year 1884 J. J. Kelly conveyed the surface and timber upon this tract to his son David Kelly, but this deed was never put to record. Subsequently, by an arrangement among the parties, David Kelly was given an interest in certain lands in Lee county, and in consideration thereof, he assigned and conveyed to William J. Kelly all his right, title, and interest in the 700-acre tract, who, finding that there was no deed on the record from J. J. Kelly, Sr., to David Kelly, procured from J. J. Kelly,
Brom the decree of the April term, 1899, the appeal now before us was taken, and the petitioners, L. J. Kelly, Sr., and William J. Kelly, admit that the judgments of Logan & Brewer, assigned to Hamblen as aforesaid, and the judgment of Kirkpatrick, constitute liens on the surface and timber of the 700-acre tract, unless the rights of Hamblen and Kirkpatrick have been lost by reason of the proceedings in Lee county in the suits brought by the Asheville Company, or 'by reason of the proceedings in Wise county in the suit of Logan & Brewer against J. J. Kelly, Jr., and others; but the petitioners insist that the proceedings in each of those causes do constitute bars to the right of recovery in this suit.
They assign as error in the decree complained of, first, that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the plea of res judicata filed by J. J. Kelly, Sr.
We shall not inquire nor decide whether a demurrer applies to an answer or plea in a chancery case. It would seem that it can only be interposed to a bill. However this may be, the appellant made no objection to it in the Circuit Court, has not assigned it as error in this court, and we, therefore, neither approve nor condemn the practice, but reserve it for future consideration.
Brom an inspection of the record of the Asheville Shoe Co. v. Coldiron and Others, which, as we have seen, resulted in a reversal of .the decree of the Circuit Court of Lee county, and a dismissal of the bill filed by the judgment creditors of J. J. Kelly, Sr., it appears, first, that William J. Kelly, one of the petitioners in the case before us, was not a party to that proceedings. It further appears from the opinion of the court
It is not necessary, however, to enlarge upon the familiar-doctrine of res judicata, or to multiply authorities upon the subject. We are of opinion that William J. Kelly, being in possession of lands confessedly liable to the lien of the judgments asserted in this cause, cannot escape that liability by vouching the record of a suit in which no effort was made to subject the land in question to those judgments, and in which they could not have been enforced, as he was not a party to the proceeding. As we have said, diligent effort was made in that litigation to ascertain a subject upon which the lien of the
Another error assigned rests upon the idea that the suits theretofore instituted by the judgment creditors to enforce their liens exhausted the vitality of those judgments, and that they are no longer subsisting causes of action. The precise principle invoked is, that a judgment is an indivisible cause of action, and that, when once an action is instituted upon it and prosecuted to a final judgment or decree, no other suit or action can be brought, upon it. It is true, that a judgment is an indivisible cause of action in the sense that it may not be divided or split up into several causes of action. Subject to the discretion of courts in -the imposition of costs, as many successive actions may be brought upon a judgment as may be needful in the opinion of the plaintiff, but there can, of course, be but one satisfaction. If it be true that but one bill to enforce a judgment can be maintained; if it be true that, by reason of the indivisibility of a judgment as a cause of action, a decree upon a bill filed to enforce it may be pleaded as an adjudication of all rights growing out. of it, a creditor who has proceeded against his judgment debtor, and made an unavailing attempt to obtain satisfaction, would be precluded from asserting his lien, though his debtor might thereafter acquire property sufficient to satisfy his demand. This we know is not, and cannot be, true; but, if the
We are of opinion that a suit brought to enforce the lien of a judgment and prosecuted in good faith, though ineffectual, is not a bar to a subsequent suit by the same plaintiff against the same debtor to enforce satisfaction of the same judgment. In all such cases it will be the duty of the court to see that the creditor does not exercise his right capriciously or oppressively, and malee such orders and decrees with reference to the imposition of costs as will protect litigants against unnecessary and vexatious suits.
The remaining error assigned is that the court erred in sustaining the exception of Hamblen and Kirkpatrick to the answer of William J. Kelly.
-From that answer it appears that Logan & Brewer and Kirkpatrick had liens upon two tracts of land owned by J. J. Kelly, Jr., the title to which remained in J. J. Kelly, Sr., until 1897, which were worth more than the sum of the judgments sought to be enforced in this suit, and that-Logan & Brewer, assignors of Hamblen, and Kirkpatrick, entered into a compromise with J. J. Kelly, Jr., who agreed to pay, and did pay, them one-third of their demands; whereupon a consent decree was entered reciting the compromise and dismissing the bill. This, we think, was error. If the facts stated in the answer be true, the land of J. J. Kelly, Jr., title to which remained in J. J. Kelly, Sr., until 1897, should have been subjected to the lien of the judgments to the exoneration of the lands of William J. Kelly, title to which J. J. Kelly, Sr., parted with as far back as 1894. See Jones v. Myrick, 8 Gratt. 179; Building Association v. Fellers, 96 Va. 337.
The answer also avers that J. J. Kelly, Sr., was the owner of a tract of land in Wise county, containing 396 acres, upon which the judgments in suit, constituted liens, which should be subjected to the exoneration of the lands in the hands of his
We are of opinion that the Circuit Court erred in sustaining exceptions to the answer of William J. Kelly, and for this cause its decree is reversed.
Reversed.