40 Ark. 541 | Ark. | 1883
STATEMENT.
This was a scire facias to revive a judgment, issued 10th October, 1881. The writ recited that on the llth June, 1867, W. H. Morrison, as administrator of the estate of Isaac II. Morrison, deceased, recovered a judgment against R. B. Macon for $889. for debt and damages, &c.
That after the recovery of'the judgment W. H. Morrison was removed from the administration, and C. B. Powell appointed administrator de bonus non of the estate of Isaac H. Morrison.
That on the 10th January, 1868, R. B. Macon died seized and possessed of a tract of land, which is described, and other lands, and that said judgment constituted a lien upon said lands at the time of his death.
That the heirs at law of R. B. Macon, deceased, were Robert B. and Ida T. Macon (now Ida S. Lucy) who, on his death took possession of his lands, and held the same as a homestead under the Constitution of 1868, until they become of age in 187 — , and ever since his death have held said lands, and are now in possession of them by descent from him as their ancestor.
That there was not, nor had there been at any time, any administration on the estate of R. B. Macon.
After making the above recitals the writ commanded the sheriff to summon said R. B. Macon and Ida S. Lucy, heirs at law of R. B. Macon, deceased, to appear at the next term of the Phillips Circuit Court,, etc.; to show cause why the judgment above recited and the lien thereof upon the lands aforesaid should not be revived, and execution issued thereon in the name of the said C. B. Powell, as administrator aforesaid, against them as heirs at law of R. B. Macon, deceased, and against the lands aforesaid, &e.
The Court sustained a demurrer to the scire facias, interposed by defendants, and dismissed the writ, and plaintiff appealed.
OPINION.
Under our system of administration, a revivor of the on the facts recited in the scire facias, against appellees, as heirs at law of R. B. Macon, the judgment debtor, would be fruitless. No execution could issue against them on the revival judgment, for they were not personally liable, and no execution could be issued against lands descended to them from the judgment debtor, because the judgment, at' his death, was but a general, and, not a specific lien, upon his lands. Homor as Trustee v. Hanks et al, 22 Ark., 572; Yonley v. Lavender et al, 27 Ib., 252.
If execution had been taken out in Ike lifetime of the debtor, upon the judgment, and levied upon laud, a ' specific, instead of a general, lien would have been created, and after his death, the. judgment might have been revived by scire facias, and the land sold under a tend. ex. Barber v. Peay, Ad., 31 Ark., 392, and cases cited. But no such case is made by the recitals of the scire facias before us. Without administration upon the estate of the judgment debtor, the judgment being but a general, and not a specific, lein upon his lands, appellant undertook to revive the judgment by scire facias against his heirs, for the purpose of taking out execution against lands descended to them. This cannot be done under our administration statutes.
■ The fact that appellees may have occupied the land during their minority, as a homestead, is no excuse for the attempt to revive the judgment by scire facias, after the termination of the homestead right, and sell the land on execution without resort to administration through the Probate Court.
- If appellant had caused letters of administration to be táken out upon the estate of R. B. Macon, before suing out the scire facias, and made the administrator a defendant to the writ, he might, upon the facts recited in the writ, have been entitled to a revivor of the judgment, (Gantt’s Dig., sec’s. 3614, 3619), but he could not have enforced the revived judgment by execution against the land of the deceased judgment debtor. At last he would have been obliged to resort to the Probate Court for classification of the judgment, and an order for the sale of the land under our administration system, as shown by the adjudications above cited.
Under the scire facias before us he could accomplish nothing by a revivor againsUappellees.
Affirmed.