115 P. 920 | Idaho | 1911
This is an original action commenced in this court, praying-for a writ of mandate against William C. Dunbar, probate judge of Ada county, directing and commanding him to issue an execution upon a judgment obtained in the court of which he is judge, which judgment was entered in an action wherein Edward Bose was plaintiff and Frances Bichardson, now deceased, was defendant.
It appears that on April 16, 1910, the plaintiff herein instituted an action in the probate court of Ada county against Frances Bichardson for the recovery of a sum of money due on a promissory note, and that on the 25th day of the same month plaintiff procured a writ of attachment to issue and caused the same to 'be levied upon real property belonging to the defendant Bichardson. Personal geKvice was had and
It is conceded by counsel for the plaintiff, in the.first place, “that under the common law, if defendant died after judgment and before issuance of execution, no execution could issue upon such judgment.” It is contended, however, by counsel that the statutes of this state have modified the common-law provision to such an extent that it was' the duty of the court in this case to issue an execution for the collection of the judgment rendered and entered prior to the death of the judgment debtor. Counsel bases this contention upon the provision of sec. 4475, Rev. Codes; that statute, in so far as it bears upon the question here in issue, reads as follows: “Notwithstanding the death of a party after the judgment, execution thereon may be issued, or it may be enforced as follows: .... (2). In case of the death of the judgment debtor, if the judgment be for the recovery of real or personal property, or the enforcement of a lien thereon.” It is contended by counsel that a valid attachment issued against the property of a debtor during his lifetime creates a lien on such property and subjects the property to the payment of any judgment obtained in the action, and that an execu
It seems clear to us that any lien acquired merely by reason of the issuance of an attachment in an action to collect a debt is not a “judgment for the enforcement of a lien” of any bind. The “judgment for the enforcement of a lien” mentioned in subd. 2 of sec. 4475, supra, evidently has reference to a judgment which forecloses a lien of some kind against either real or personal property, and authorizes and directs the sale of the specific property to satisfy the judgment. The statute has reference to a judgment for the foreclosure of a real.estate or chattel mortgage, a laborer’s or materialman’s lien, agister’s lien, or a pledge of personal property or some other lien, that has been-created either by contract or statute, and that the party in whose favor the lien exists has foreclosed or taken the legal steps necessary to reduce the same to a judgment and authorize the sale of the property on which the lien issued. It was evidently the purpose of the legislature in the enacting of sec. 4475 to preclude the issuance of an execution after the death of the judgment debtor on a plain money judgment, and in such case a lien acquired by attachment or other statutory process in aid of the collection of the judgment could not be enforced by execution after the death of the judgment debtor.
Our statute is practically the same as the statute of California and the statute of South Dakota, each of which has received a construction to the same effect as we have above reached. (See Myers v. Mott, 29 Cal. 359, 89 Am. Dec. 49; Yankton Savings Bank v. Gutterson, 15 S. D. 486, 90 N. W. 144.)