56 Ala. 255 | Ala. | 1876
The plaintiff in the present cause had previously sued his debtor, Mrs. Lipscomb, by a writ of attachment, which was levied on land of the latter; the reason assigned for praying out the writ of attachment being, that the debtor was “about fraudulently to dispose of her property.” She did, a few days later, make a deed of sale of a part of the land attached, to a daughter-in-law; and having afterwards died, the action was revived, and prosecuted to judgment against her administrator. On this judgment, writs of execution were issued, under which some of the lands attached were sold by the sheriff, and bought by the plaintiff. The action in the cause now before us was brought by him, against the tenant, to obtain possession of the lands; and the heirs of the deceased debtor, Mrs. Lipscomb, on their application, were let in to defend, instead of the tenant. On the trial, plaintiff offered, as evidence of his title, a record of the attachment suit, and of the sheriff’s sale under the execution, and the sheriff’s deed; which .evidence was, on motion of defendants, excluded by the court; and the principal question for us to decide is, whether or not, in this ruling, the Circuit Court erred.
According to the statute, “The levy of an attachment creates a lien, in favor of the plaintiff, upon the estate of the defendant so levied on, from the levy.” — Bev. Code, § 2955. And in Woolfork v. Ingram (53 Ala. p. 13), it is said of this lien, “Nothing occurring subsequent to the levy can destroy it, but the dissolution of the attachment;” which is not dissolved by the death merely of the defendant. In that case, the property attached was personalty; the title to which, subject to the special property vested in the sheriff by the levy, passed, on the death of the original defendant, to his
But the levy of either an attachment, or execution, upon realty, unlike a levy on personalty, does not invest the sheriff with a title, nor divest the owner of his title, or possession.— Fry v. Branch Bank, 16 Ala. 284-5. It only creates a lien, to be made available in the event judgment shall be rendered in favor of plaintiff in the suit; and if the judgment is obtained after the death of the owner, and a revival of the suit against his administrator (as in the present case), the lien cannot be enforced, by a sheriff’s sale of the realty to satisfy an execution upon that judgment; because the judgment and execution are against the administrator, upon whom, as such, the title to the realty did not descend. On the death of the former owner, the title then in him passed to his heirs; and no man shall be deprived of his land, without an opportunity to defend his title against the claimant. In reference to an execution in the hands of a sheriff at the time of the defendant’s death, the statute law has authorized lands subject to it, to be sold to satisfy it, or an alias issued to take its place, without the lapse of a term.- — Rev. Code, § 2875; Hendon v. White, 52 Ala. 597. But there is no such enactment to carry into effect the lien of a writ of attachment levied on lands.
2. In Avhat mode, in such a case as the present, the controversy must be instituted,.it may not be easy to determine. In Tennessee, under an act of 1784, which authorizes a scire facias to issue to the heirs of a person against whom judgment was obtained in his life time, to show cause why plaintiff should not have execution thereof against the lands descended to them, it is held, that a creditor, who has obtained a lien by attachment on the land of his debtor, in the lifetime of the latter, and a judgment after his death against his administrator, may, when the personalty is exhausted, have a scire facias against the heirs, to subject the land which had been attached, to satisfaction- of the judgment. — Perkins’ Heirs v. Norvell, 6 Humph. 151. A similar statute in this State, not being incorporated in the Code, was abrogated by the adoption of it, which operated to repeal all general laws not contained therein. It is not, therefore, certain what
The writ of scire facias was anciently used by the English courts, as a common-law process of obtaining execution, against heirs, of a judgment rendered against their ancestor in his lifetime, for the recovery of land in a real action. In this manner, they were made parties to the record, so that consistently with it the execution might go against them. By the statute of Westminister 2 (13 Edw. 1, st. 1, ch. 45), enacted long before the settlement of this country, the writ was made available to obtain execution against the legal representatives of a deceased defendant to a judgment in a personal action also; and under this act, it became a rule, that “where a new person, who was not a party to a judgment or recognizance, derives a benefit by, or becomes chargeable to the execution, there must be a scire facias to make him a party to the judgment or recognizance.” — Foster on Scire Facias, 6, 99, 175. It is worthy of consideration, whether, under this statute, as a part of the common law in this State, a scire facias should be issued to heirs, to enforce a sale under execution of lands descended to them after being attached, or whether the plaintiff should have recourse to a court of equity, for its aid. As the question has not been argued, and it is not necessary for us to decide it, we leave it undetermined. Indeed, by itself simply, it is not now presented. Other questions are complicated with it by the execution of the deed to the daughter-in-law.
The sale of the land sued for in the present action having been made under a judgment and execution against the administrator alone, after the death of the original defendant, when there was no title in the administrator to be sold, the purchaser from the sheriff acquired none upon which he could maintain this action. The court, therefore, did not err in excluding the record of the former suit, and the execution therein and sheriff* s deed, from the jury.
3. It is not contended that the plaintiff had any right, other than that supposed to have been derived through these proceedings. In this controversy, he must rely on the strength of his own title — not on the infirmity of that of his adversaries. And as he had none that would enable him to maintain his suit, no damage could come to him from the exclusion from the jury of the deed of Mrs. Lipscomb to her daughter-in-law, or any of the other evidence on his behalf which the court ruled out.
The judgment of the Circuit Court must be affirmed.