135 A. 435 | Conn. | 1926
All right to recover, on scire facias, from a garnishee is lost unless demand is made on such garnishee, upon execution, within sixty days after final judgment is rendered against the principal; but in reckoning that period "any time during which the issue or levy of an execution may be prevented or stayed by the pendency of a writ of error, or by an injunction or other legal stay of execution, shall be excluded from the computation." General Statutes, § 5914; Hayes
v. Weisman,
The first question presented is as to what is meant by the "final judgment" from which computation is to be made. The judgment to which the statute refers must be such as would support an execution based thereon. Mallory v. Hartman,
However, to regard the date of final judgment as being April 25th, when the appeal was dismissed and the judgment of the City Court was reinstated, instead of February 14th, on which day it was originally rendered, would not avail the plaintiffs, since, while execution was issued within sixty days thereafter, demand is not alleged to have been made until July 7th, which date is considerably beyond the expiration of the statutory period, so computed.
The plaintiffs further claim, however, that the pendency of an appeal, of itself and without an injunction or other formal action, works such a "legal stay of execution" that the time covered thereby is, under § 5914 of the General Statutes, to be excluded in reckoning the sixty-day period, and that the computation should not only not commence before April 25th, but not until May 27th, upon which day execution was finally issued, or the still later date up to which, it is argued, Carlson might have perfected an appeal from the "decision" of the City Court in issuing the execution. We have no present occasion to decide whether stay of execution may be incident to an appeal from a judgment of the City Court, since the pendency of the appeal in the present case extended only until April 25th, and so could not avail the plaintiffs. A contention that any such stay could, in any event, continue, *429 further, to or after the issuance of execution, is obviously fallacious.
It is a judgment upon some issue in the case which, only, is appealable. Norton v. Petrie,
The last date upon which, by any legal possibility, the prescribed period for taking out execution and making demand could commence was April 25th, and such period ended not later than June 24th. Demand is not alleged to have been made until July 7th. The demurrers were properly sustained.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred, except WHEELER, C. J., and HAINES, J., who dissented.