93 N.C. 321 | N.C. | 1885
The only question brought up by the appeal and requiring a response from this Court is whether an execution issuing upon a judgment rendered by a justice of the peace, and docketed in the Superior Court after the death of the debtor, but whose teste antedates the death, can confer upon the sheriff legal authority to sell and convey his real estate under the statutory lien.
The affirmative has been held in cases that have occurred under our former system, and the rule is enunciated by Reade, J., in Aycock v.Harrison,
And so in Grant v. Hughes,
But liens on real estate are now referable to the time of docketing the judgment, and adhere to such as the debtor then held, and such as he has since acquired during the statutory limitation, a much more substantial security, with a more efficacious remedy to enforce it, than was given by the common law. The reason for the adoption of the rule of relation was to take from the judgment debtor the ability to transfer his property to others, and thus deprive the creditor of the fruits of his *286 recovery when in the diligent use of the means provided by law for securing them in satisfaction of his adjudged demand.
This reason no longer exists, for the judgment itself, when docketed, affixes a lien upon the debtor's land, and it is not now necessary for him in order to its preservation, as it was before, in force, to press unremittingly the process by which payment was to be enforced.
This superseding legislation must, therefore, to no inconsiderable extent, dispense with many rules before in force, and especially that of relation of the execution to its teste, as unnecessary and inapplicable to the new procedure and practice. We have, therefore, at the present term, inSpicer v. Gambill, post, 378, indicated an opinion that when final process is sued out and acted on after the judgment lien has been lost by efflux of time, or on a judgment rendered and not docketed, it affixes a lien as against purchasers and other attaching liens, alike upon real and personal property, only from the levy — upon the latter by virtue of the statute, upon the former to secure uniformity in the rule.
In Murchison v. Williams,
"The result is," are his words, "that when a debtor dies, against whom there is a judgment docketed, his land descends to his heirs or vests in his devisee, and his personal property vests in his administrator or executor just as if there were no judgment against him, and the wholeestate is to be administered just as if there were no judgment — that is to say, the personal property must be sold if necessary, and all the personal assets collected, and out of these personal assets all the debts must be paid if there be enough to pay all, as well docketed judgments as others. If there is not enough to pay all, then they are to be paid in classes, docketed judgments being the fifth class, to the extent of their lien, which is the value of the land," referring to Bat. Rev., ch. 45, sec. 40, class 5.
This seems to have been recognized as settling the law, and the extract which we have recited is quoted in Lee v. Eure,
Again the case of Murchison v. Williams, supra, is referred to, with approval of its ruling, in Mauney v. Holmes,
Moreover, the Code of Civil Procedure in the chapter consisting (326) of secs. 318 to 324, inclusive, which furnishes a remedy for enforcing the lien, in case of unreasonable delay by the personal representative, is applicable to the present case, while they seem not to have been brought forward in the Code.
Section 319 expressly confers upon the judgment creditor the right, after three years from the issue of letters testamentary or administration, "in case of the death of the judgment debtor, after judgment," to proceed and enforce his lien, plainly indicating the absence of such right after the debtor's death, until the expiration of the period allowed the representative to pay the debt and relieve the land.
Such are the rulings in the state of New York from which our new system is borrowed. In Wood v. Moorhouse,
No error. Affirmed. *288
Cited: Williams v. Weaver,