Prather obtained judgment against Gilwick in 1816, and bad execution of 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, and Lilly tbe replevin-surety, the sheriff, inter alia, returned Ridge terretenant of land that was Gilwiclds at the time of the judgment. Ridge came in and pleaded, that he was a bona fide purchaser from Gilwick without notice, after the expiration of a year and a day from the time of the judgment or replevin-bond, and before the issuing of the scire facias. Upon demurrer to this plea, there was judgment for Prather, the plaintiff in the Circuit Court.
In opposition to the feudal principles of the common law, and beyond the bounds of the elegit given by the English statute of West 2, or that of the state of Virginia which ceded this territory to the union, the policy of our country has been, from its .earliest history, to subject real estate to absolute sale for the
At common law, land in the general was not liable for debt; Dor could any execution issue on a judgment, in a personal action, after a year and a day. 2 Bac. 728. The judgment however Was not barred, for an action of debt would still lie on it. The statute óf West. 2,13 Edw. 1, authorized the elegit, and thus ■made land in England liable for debt, from the time of the judg*
In New-York, there is the following case. In February, 1802, Ehle had judgment in debt against Borst, whose land was thereupon sold in June, 1802, to Ellwood. Afterwards an old judgment of 1798, in favour of Kane against Borst, was revived by scire facias in December, 1803, and the same land levied upon and sold to Kane. The claimant under Ellwood, who purchased under the younger judgment, brought ejectment against the lessee of Kane, who purchased under the prior judgment. It was determined that the plaintiff could not recover. The language of the Court is as follows: — “If the execution in favour of Kane had been issued within the year and a day, any lands purchased and possessed by third persons, after the docketing of the judgment, might have been sold. Here the plaintiffhaving lain by, for more than a year and a day after he bad obtained judgment, it became necessary to revive it against the original defendants, which, when revived, was of the same force and effect, and of course liable to be proceeded upon in the same manner, as if the time within which, an execution might legally have been issued, had not been suffered to elapse.” The Court further says, if the defendant could make the defence which the terretenant might have made to the scire facias, had he been admitted a party, it would not alter the-result. Jackson, ex dem. Sternberg, v. Shaffer, 11 Johns. R. 513. This is a strong case, and directly in point.
It appears to us, that the binding efficacy of a judgment continues upon land after a year and a day, although the-power of taking out execution on it without a scire facias be suspended
The judgment is affirmed with costs.
This is the common law. 1 Prest. Abst. 191. 3 id. 325, 350. — 4 Kent, 429, 430. It is the law in New-York. Ibid. But in Pennsylvania, after-acquired lands are not bound until the issuing of execution. Calhoun v. Snider, 6 Binn. 135.
Contra in Virginia Eppes v. Randolph, 2 Call, 125, 186. In that Slate there is no statute expressly making a judgment a Ken on land. The lien there results from the right to take out an elegit. During the existence of this right, says C. J. Marshall, the lien is universally acknowledged. Different opinions seem at different times to have been entertained of the effect of any suspension of the right. United States v. Morrison, 4 Peters, 136. In Kentucky, a judgment does not bind land, until the execution is delivered to the sheriff. In this respect, real and personal property are there on the same footing. Bank U. S. v. Tyler, ib. 383. For the statute law in the states generally, as to the liability of real property tojudgment and execution, vide 4 Kent, 425 — 431. The statute of this state, there referred to, prohibiting the sale of land on execution for less than one-half its value, is repealed. Here, now, if the rents and profits for seven years will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy the execution, the fee-simple is sold to the highest bidder. Stat. 1823, p. 188. By this statute, a judgment is expressly made a lien on land, in the county where rendered, from the day of its rendition; and, in any other county, from the time an attested copy of the record of the judgment is filed and recorded in the clerk’s office there. Ib. p. 192. For the statute of frauds referred to in the text, vide Stat. 1823, p. 218. Every clerk is bound to keep a docket (i. e. index) of judgments, to facilitate the search for them. Stat. Dec. 1825, p. 50.
For the English law respecting the encumbrance on real estate by judgment, wide 3 Prest. Abst. 311 — 354. The commencement of the lien is there
Judgments now cease to be liens on real estate, after the lapse of 10 years from the time of their rendition, unless revived by scire facias. Stat. Dec. 1825, p. 49.