2 Fla. 429 | Fla. | 1849
Opinion by
This is an action of ejectment, instituted'in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, on the demise of Henry R. Edwards, the appel-lee, against Richard Roe, Wm. S. Hill tenant in possession, to recover the premises in the declaration mentioned. Wm. D. Moseley, the appellant, was, on motion, admitted the defendant,, in the place of the said Roe and Hill, and thereupon he (the said Moseley) confessed the lease, entry and ouster in the declaration mentioned, and put in the usual plea of not guilty — upon which issue was joined, and the cause was submitted to a jury upon the evidence, who returned a special verdict, which, amongst other things, sets forth : That, on the 4th day of November, A. D. 1839, and before that time, one John D. Edwards, of the county of Jefferson, vras seized in his demesne as of fee, of and in the messuages, lands and tenements, with the appurtenances, in the declaration mentioned; that, on the said 4th day of November, A. D. 1839, one William Wilson, by the consideration of the Superior Court of the Middle District of Florida, in and for the County of Jefferson, recovered judgment against said John D. Edwards, for the sum of fourteen hundred and forty-nine dollars and thirty cents for his damages, and the sum of four dollars and forty-eight cents costs — on which judgment a writ of execution was issued in due form of law, on the 8th day of June, 1842 — the said judgment not having been revived by scire facias, against the said defendant; that, on the 2d day of November, 1840, one William G. Ponder, by the consideration of the same court, recovered judgment against the said John D. Edwards, for the sum of three thousand two hundred and one dollars and eighteen cents for his damages, and the sum of $4 52-100 for his costs — on which judgment a writ of fi. fa. issued in due form of law ; that, on the 23d day of April, 1841, one Harriet T. Wilson, administratrix of Robert H. Wilson, by the con.
The above lands were advertised according to law, and sold on the 6th day of December, being the first Monday of said month, Henry
And the jury having submitted to the court the question, whether the said plaintiff or the said defendant was in law entitled to judgment upon the facts presented in said special verdict, the court pronounced judgment for the plaintiff and the defendant appeals to this Court. The facts were all fully stated in the special verdict, but as there is no controversy about them, it is deemed unnecessary to recite them more fully.
The only errors assigned are, that the court erred in rendering judgment for the plaintiff, and in not rendering judgment for the defendant. And the only question presented for our consideration is, whether the sale of the lands in question, by virtue of ilm fieri facias issued upon the junior judgment of the Hagans’, carries the title against the elder judgment rendered in favor of William Wilson.
The question arises under our act of the Legislature, entitled “ An act in relation to liens created by judgments,” approved February 12, 1834. Duval’s Comp., 369. Thompson’s Digest, 351, 352; the first section of which declares that every judgment at law and decree in equity, which shall be entered and pronounced in any of the courts of this State, shall create a lien, and be binding upon the real estate of the defendant or defendants, as at common law.
The second section declares, “ That no judgment at law or decree in equity shall create a lien upon the real estate of the defendant situated in any other county than the one in which the same shall have been rendered or pronounced, until the said judgment or decree shall have been recorded in the county in which the real estate, so sought to be bound, may be situated.
The counsel for the appellant contend, that as a judgment created no lien upon the lands of the defendant at common law, the words .as at common law, at the close of the first section of our statute above
In Virginia, there is no statute which in express terms makes a judgment a lien upon the lands of the debtor ; as in England, the lien is the consequence of a right to take out an elegit. During the existence of this right, the lien is universally acknowledged. Different opinions (said Ch. J. Marshall, in the case of the United States vs. Morrison et al., 4 Peters’ Reps., 136,) seem at different times to have been entertained as to the effect of any suspension of that right. Tucker, Pres., in the case of Watts et al., vs. Kearny and wife, 3 Leigh, 293, said,, that, however long the judgment may have been out of date, there is no doubt that if it is susceptible of being revived at all, the lien upon the lands yet in the hands of the debtor would be revived eodern statu.
The case of Ridge vs. Prather, 1 Blackford’s (Indiana) Reps., 401 to 405, is this: Prather obtained judgment against Gilwick in 1816, and had execution and fieri facias thereon; the sheriff returned the execution executed by a replevin bond the same year.— Gilwick afterwards died. Upon scire facias issued in 1823, against the heirs and terretenants of Gilwick & Silly, the replevin surety, the sheriff, inter alios, returned Ridge terretenant of land that was Gil-wick’s, at the time of the judgment. Ridge came in, and pleaded that he was a Iona fide purchaser from Gilwick without notice, after the expiration of a year and a day from the time of the judgment on the replevin bond, and before the issuing of the scire facias,
These are all the cases cited in the brief of the appellant’s counsel, and they do not seem to us to sustain the proposition assumed. In Fprsyth vs. Marbury, decided by Judge Law, and reported by R. M. Charlton, 325, 326, it is said that “ the act of 1799 bound all the property of the defendant, from the signing of the first judgment.” — ■ !i It is not apprehended,” said that very able and learned judge, “ that the statute of Geo. II., chap. 7, touches the question of lien ;
In Andrews v. Doe ex dem. Wilkes, 6 Howard’s Mississippi Rep., 554 to 568, Chief Justice Sharkey, delivering the opinion of the Court, said : “ The question is whether a prior sale, under a junior judgment, destroys the lien of the elder judgment. It is freely conceded by counsel (says the Chief Justice) that, as a general rule, it does not; but that this case forms an exception, inasmuch as the liens accrued under different jurisdictions — [one of the judgments having been obtained in a court of that State and the other in the District Court of the United States]. But as the question is fairly before the Court for the first time, it is proper that it should be judicially settled,” and, after citing the act of the Legislature of Mississippi of 1824, which declares “ That in all cases the property of the defendant shall be bound and liable to any judgment that may be entered up, from the time of entering such judgment, proceeds as follows : “ This is emphatically a lien on all property in favor of a plaintiff. A lien is a right given by law to have a debt satisfied out of a particular thing. It may originate by contract or by operation of law and, in either case, the effect is the same — the property being bound and liable to satisfy the judgment, is as much a lien as though it had been created by act of the parties. The judgment is not only a lien, but it is a lien of record, which is notice to every one. The instance of a mortgage lien is a familiar one. There can be no difference in principle between a mortga ge and a statutory lien. The one is as binding as the other.” And in Ridge v. Prather, above cited, it was expressly held that the lien is not limited to a year and a day. Love
In Shotwell v. Murray, 1 John. Chancery Reps., 512, the judgments under which the lands were sold, were both in favor of the •same person. The plaintiff had the first sale made under his younger judgment, and then had the same lands levied on, in the hands of the purchaser, and resold under the elder judgment. The chancellor decided that the purchaser under the younger judgment held the land, subject to a re-sale under the elder judgment.
Since the statute of West 2, 13 Edward I., it has been considered that, when a man has judgments for debt, or is conusee of a statute, and the debtor before execution aliens by fine, and five years pass, yet the plaintiff may still have execution. 3 Bacon’s Abr., new edition, title Execution, page 725. These authorities, we think,
It has been urged that this case comes within the spirit, if not the letter, of the statute of frauds ; that the failure of the plaintiff in the elder judgment to sue out execution tended to hinder and delay creditors, and was therefore, as to them, a fraud in law. But we do not perceive the force of the argument. Junior judgment creditors were not prevented by it from proceeding ; they might, at any time, pursue their remedies against the property of a debtor. It would have been sold, to be sure, subject to the lien of the elder judgment — so much as it was worth more, it is to be presumed, could have been realized from it. The plaintiff in the elder judgment had a right, in any event, to be paid out of it, unless he voluntarily relinquished his claim or it was displaced by some act of his or “the party holding it,” and the judgment, being a debt of record, was notice of that right to all the world. Upon what reasonable groundcould junior incumbrances be permitted to disturb it 1 Upon what principle could such a lien be divested in favor of one who knew of its existence 1 He can have no superior right to urge — not even an equity to set up against it. He purchases with knowledge of the prior lien, and it is supposed that he gives what an encumbered property is worth; and, in this case especially,,, there is surely nothing to induce a belief that the purchase was not thus made, as we are shewn by the record that ten dollars was the whole amount paid as the purchase money for several tracts of land.
The judgment of the Court below is, therefore affirmed.
Per curiam,.