77 Va. 763 | Va. | 1883
delivered the opinion of the court:
At the April term, 1864, in the circuit court of Rockbridge county, a judgment was rendered in favor of John McCurdy against William Jordan, Samuel F. Jordan, James Gr. Paxton, and Joseph A. Logan, for the sum of $1,200, with $14, the costs of suit, and with the following credits endorsed: $40, paid September 14, 1861; $76.99, paid June 13, 1860; and $158.62, paid June 1st, 1863. Afterwards—to wit: on the 19th day of December, 1868,—the said William Jordan, who was the principal debtor, the others being his sureties, was adjudged a bankrupt in the district court of the United States, for the district of Virginia, and on the 21st day of November, 1871, was discharged in due form, and thereby was released from said debt.
In the meantime, John McCurdy, the plaintiff in said judgment, having died, on the 11th day of April, 1871, William T. McCurdy and A. A. McCurdy, as executors of said John Mc-Curdy, sued out a writ of scire facias from said circuit court, directed to the sheriff of Rockbridge, setting forth in the usual form said original judgment, the credits thereon endorsed, the death of the plaintiff therein, said John McCurdy, the qualification of his said executors; and reciting that, notwithstanding said judgment, yet execution of the said debt, interest and costs, aforesaid, still remained to be made.; and at the instance of the said executors, commanding said sheriff to make known to the said William Jordan, S. F. Jordan, and Joseph A. Logan, surviving obligors of themselves and James Gr. Paxton, deceased, who were survivors .of themselves, and J. J. Whitmore, deceased, that they be before the judge of the said circuit court on the first day of the then next term thereof, to show, if they have anything to say, why the said William T. McCurdy and A. A. McCurdy, as such executors, ought not to have execution against them for the debt, interest and costs aforesaid.
The writ of scire facias thus issued seems to have been regularly executed, and at the next term of said court, designated in
The said original judgment does not appear ever to have been docketed anywhere, hut said judgment on scire facias was, on the 11th day May, 1872, docketed in the county of Rockbridge, and afterwards, to-wit, on the 15th day of December, 1874, was docketed in Augusta county, and also in the city of Staunton.
At the time, and after the docketing of the judgment on said scire facias, said William Jordan, the principal debtor, owned several lots of land, some of which were situated in said city of Staunton, and others in Augusta county, outside of said city. Subsequent to the docketing of said judgment in said county of Augusta and city of Staunton, said William Jordan aliened several of the lots or parcels of land, so owned by him, to different persons. In January, 1881, William T. McOurdy and A. A. McOurdy, as executors of said John McOurdy, filed their hill in equity in the circuit court of Augusta county, in their own right and on behalf of other unsatisfied creditors by judg
The suit in equity thus instituted .was matured on the part of the complainants for hearing. William Jordan, the principal debtor in said judgment, and others, his alienees, severally demurred to and answered said bill. The answers are substantially the same. They each deny the existence of the judgment in question as a lien upon their lands, inasmuch as the original judgment was never docketed in Augusta county, and insist that the judgment on scire facias, though docketed in said county of Augusta, being a judgment not for execution according to the writ, hut a judgment for money, was without notice to the defendants, unauthorized hy law, and beyond the scope and purpose of the writ of scire facias, and therefore void for want of jurisdiction in the court to render the same. They further say that the said writ of scire facias, which they exhibit, is defective, and did not authorize the entering of any judgment thereon, because the statute, section two, chapter one hundred and sixty-six, Code 1873, regulating the time within which process shall be made returnable, provides that process “ shall he returnable within ninety days after its date to the court on the first day of a term, or in the clerk’s office to the first Monday in a month, or to some rule day; whilst the said writ of scire facias is dated on the 11th day of April, 1871, and made returnable to the first day of the then next term of the court, a period far exceeding the limit prescribed by the statute.” And the respondents further rely upon the discharge in bankruptcy of said William Jordan as a complete bar to complainant’s right of recovery. Other questions were incidentally raised in the progress of the cause below, but they, as well as the defence of
It will readily be perceived that the propriety, or impropriety, of the decree appealed from, depends upon—first, the validity of the writ of scire facias itself, and second, upon the validity of the judgment at law rendered thereon. In other words, if the proceedings on the law side of the court below were valid, and the docketing of said judgment on scire facias constituted it a valid subsisting lien, within the meaning of the registry act, then the decree appealed from is without error. If, on the other hand, the writ of scire facias was, for the reason of its being made returnable in violation of the positive command of law, a void writ; or if not made so absolutely void, but merely voidable, and the judgment rendered thereon was not for execution according to the notification in said writ, but a judgment for
It is, needless here to attempt to classify the numerous cases and their distinctions, in which the proceeding by scire facias is appropriate. In our practice this remedy is most frequently resorted to, to continue a former suit to execution; and this may be, either when this writ is required to revive a judgment by or against the same party, or when it is required to revive a judgment where there is, as in this case, a new party to the suit.
In the case under consideration, the plaintiff in the original judgment having died, his executors, by law, succeeded to his rights—stood in his shoes—but by reason of their testator’s death were temporarily disabled from having enforced satisfaction of their testators judgment, by legal process of execution. In fact the executors not being parties to the record, having presumably no knowledge of what may have transpired between the plaintiff in the judgment, after the rendition thereofj and prior to his death, and the defendants therein, were placed, as it were, under the necessity of proceeding by some legal method to ascertain in the exercise of prudent caution, what their rights as executors were in respect of this judgment; whether it was a subsisting demand, or had been released or in any way discharged ; and the law, in its wisdom-, having provided the cheap and expeditious remedy by scire facias, it became the privilege, if not the duty of these executors to resort to this remedy, thereby making the record consistent by setting out in the writ the original judgment, the death of their testator, their qualification as executors of the original plaintiff, and notification to the defendants of their demand, and that they, the defendants, appear according to the terms of the writ, to show cause, if any they could, against said demand. The writ thus constituted and made returnable as required by statute, is a judicial writ to continue the former suit, and to have execution of the former judgment. It is a rule that whenever it is sought to fix a party on a judgment
The imperative command of the statute is that process from any court, whether original, mesne or final, except a summons for a witness, shall be returnable within ninety days after its date,
In the next place, conceding for the sake of the argument that the writ was legally sufficient and the demurrer properly overruled, yet, was the judgment, being as it was not for execution, but for money, a valid judgment, capable of being docketed under our statute, and attaching as a lien upon real estate ? In the first place, for reasons already stated, it could only be treated as a judgment rendered without service of process, and, therefore, void. Kyles v. Ford, 2 Ran. 1; Hickman v. Larkey,
But, second. If the writ in this case had heen regular and lawful, and the judgment had been for execution, and not for money, as was the case, yet such judgment—the only legitimate one—could not, in itself, either with or without being docketed, constitute a lien upon real estate. The utmost extent of jurisdiction in the court was to render judgment that the plaintiffs in the writ of scire facias have execution of the judgment in said writ set forth. That a mere judgment awarding execution, in such a case as this, does not constitute a lien on real estate, is a proposition too clear to need at this day the support of adjudged cases. But the court went further, and rendered a judgment for money on a scire facias, by the very language of which, the only object was to have execution of the antecedent judgment therein named. This was clearly wrong, and, by the very terms of the writ, in excess of the ordinary jurisdiction of the court, and therefore absolutely void. In the apt language of Mr. Ereeman, in his admirable work on judgments, section one hundred and seventeen, “A void judgment is, in legal effect, no judgment. By it no rights are divested. From it no rights can
The decree is as follows:
This day came again the parties by their counsel, and the court having maturely considered the transcript of the record of the decree aforesaid, and the arguments of counsel, is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing and filed with the record,- that said decree is erroneous in that it recognizes as valid the judgment upon scire facias rendered by the circuit court of Rockbridge county on the 27th day of April, 1872, in favor of John Mc-Curdy’s executors against William Jordan and others, for the sum of $1,200, with interest and costs, subject to certain credits, and decreed a sale of the real estate in the proceedings mentioned, to satisfy the same, whereas said judgment, for reasons stated and filed as aforesaid, is null and void, and ought to have been so declared and treated by the said circuit court. Wherefore it is considered that the said decree be reversed and annulled, and that the appellees, out of the goods and chattels of their testator in their hands to be administered, pay to the appellants their costs by them expended in the prosecution of their appeal aforesaid here. And this court now proceeding to render such decree as the said circuit court ought to have rendered,
Decree reversed.