14 Ark. 595 | Ark. | 1852
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of error was sued out by the plaintiffs in error, to a judgment obtained against them in the Clark Circuit Court, after execution had been issued and levied upon their property, and they, together with others, as securities, executed a forthcoming bond, and the same had been forfeited, and so returned by the sheriff, and the return term had elapsed, as appears by the dates set out. These facts were set up by plea, to which a demurrer was interposed, and the question is thus presented, whether the plaintiffs in error can now maintain their writ of error to the original judgment.
The constitutionality of the forthcoming law act was considered and determined in the case of Reardon, Ex parte, 4 Eng. R. 450. Its unconstitutionality was again urged in the case of Ruddell vs. McGruder, (6 Eng. R. 584), and the point again ruled as in the former case, with the additional intimation that, after the lapse of the term, to which the forthcoming bond was returnable, the obligors of the bond could find relief only in a court of equity. Afterwards, in the case of Whiting & Slark vs. Beebe, et al. 7 Eng. R. 548, it was held, that after the forfeiture of the bond the levy was discharged and the former judgment was satisfied. And to the same effect are the cases of Wright vs. Yell, et al. 13 Ark. 505, and Jamison vs. May, id. 608. And in the case of The Trustees of the Real Estate Bank vs. Sandefur, ad. et al. decided during the present term, where many of the cases decided in Kentucky, Vix*ginia, Mississippi and the Federal Court, as well as our own, are reviewed, it is shown that the statutory judgment is considered as having the qualities, force, effect and dignity of a judgment, obtained in the ordinaiy mode of proceeding according to the course of the common law, in a court of competent jurisdiction, and as such may be revived by scire facias, and, in another State, is within the act of Congress of 1790, and can no more be impeached collaterally than any other judgment, (Kelly vs. Lambs, 7 B. Monroe, p. 223.) And these cases sustain the decision of this court in the case of Kelly et al. vs. Garvin, Carson & Co., (7 Eng. R. at p. 621), where it is held that “the statutory judgment is an extinguishment of the first judgment upon the principle that a party cannot have more than one judgment for the same subject matter at the same time.”
These consequences resulting from the voluntary act of the defendant in the execution executing the forthcoming bond under the provisions of the statute, it is no more unreasonable that he should thereby be cut off from any further remedy in a court of law, and be driven to a court of equity exclusively for relief, as against any other judgment at law, than making an injunction operate as a release of errors at law.
We think the matters set up in the plea sufficient, and therefore the writ of error must be quashed.