60 S.W. 959 | Tex. | 1901
The plaintiff in error brought this suit against defendant in error to recover upon a judgment. A demurrer was sustained to the petition, and the plaintiff having declined to amend, judgment final was rendered against him, which judgment was affirmed upon appeal.
It appears from the allegations of the petition that on the 9th day of June, 1885, the plaintiff recovered in the District Court of Cooke County a judgment against the defendant and four others for the sum of $9526 and costs of suit; that the judgment is unpaid and that executions have been issued thereon so as to prevent its becoming dormant. It also appears that two of the defendants in the judgment are dead and that two others are nonresidents of the State and are insolvent. It is also alleged that the present defendant, W.F. Stone, has not sufficient property in Texas to satisfy the judgment, but that he is a man of large means and has ample property in the Indian Territory out of which the debt can be satisfied, and in effect that, by reason of the long lapse of time since the judgment was rendered and the laws of limitation in that Territory, it is not there available as a cause of action.
Where no advantage can accrue to a plaintiff in a judgment by a second suit upon it, we fail to see that there is any propriety in allowing such suit. It is a narrow view of the subject, as we think, to say that the judgment is an evidence of debt and that a debt will support a cause of action. The purpose of judicial actions is to afford remedies for the enforcement of rights, and where the result of a suit prosecuted to success is to give the plaintiff no better remedy for the enforcement of his right than he had before, no reason other than a technical one can exist for permitting its prosecution. Since equity discourages a multiplicity of suits and will in a proper case enjoin vexatious litigation, and since under our blended system equitable principles in every case have their full scope and effect, it would seem that our court should never allow a suit upon a judgment unless it should be made to appear that the second judgment would be more efficacious than the first. Yet it is broadly held by the great weight of authority that a judgment will support an action without allegation and proof of any additional advantage to be secured by the second recovery. The cases are too numerous for special citation but will be found exhaustively collated in 11 Encyclopedia of Pleading and Practice, pages 1085, et seq. See also for elaborate discussion of the question and the authorities. Pitzer v. Russel, 4 Ore., 128, and Solen v. Railway,
Applying the principle of the cases last cited to the case before us, we think the petition shows a sufficient reason for bringing suit upon the judgment. If an action on the judgment be barred by the laws of the Indian Territory and if the defendant has property there subject to execution, then the second judgment is clearly more available than the first, and the action is not futile.
In this connection we will say that the proposition announced in Parks v. Young,
The defendant also pleaded by way of special exception to the *419
petition the statute of limitations of four and ten years. The statute of ten years applies to actions upon judgments, and such actions are not barred until the lapse of that period of time from the issuing of the last execution. Rev. Stats., art. 3361; Willis v. Stroud,
We are of opinion that the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals erred in sustaining the demurrers to the petition and therefore their judgments are reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.