18 Ala. 519 | Ala. | 1850
The only question, we deem it necessary to decide, is this — whether an action of debt will lie in this State on a judgment, rendered more than a year and a day, but less than ten years from the institution of the suit, and on which execution had issued within the year and been returned no property found.
I confess that my researches have not satisfied my mind, whether an action of debt coilld be maintained at common law on a judgment within the year and day from the time of its rendition, and when the plaintiff could issue his execution thereon. The common law writers lay it down generally, that debt will lie on a judgment. — 1 Chitty’s Pl., 126; 1 Tidd’s Pr. 3. Blackstone says, that if one has obtained a judgment against another and neglects to sue out execution thereon, he may afterwards bring an action of debt on the judgment. — Yol. 3, 129. Mr. Selwyn says that debt lies on a judgment within or after a year
It is true that when an execution has been issued within the year and day, and has not been returned satisfied, an alias execution may be issued on the same judgment, within ten years, without a scire facias (Clay’s Dig. 206-7,) but this statute does not take away the common law right to sue in debt on the judgment. It only gives the plaintiff the remedy by execution to coerce the payment of the judgment, if he sees proper to use it, but was not intended to deprive him of his action of debt. The remedy' given by the statute is cumulative merely, and a plaintiff may, if his judgement be not satisfied, sue in debt upon it, although he could, under the statute, issue an alias execution. We think it very clear that the court erred in overruling the plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s third plea, and the judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded.