7 Mo. 421 | Mo. | 1842
Opinion of the Court, delivered by
These were actions of assumpsit brought by the plaintiffs in error, in the circuit court, by attachment. The writ was levied on property, and returned not found as to the defendant. After the commencement of the suit, and before the rendition ofijjthe judgment, the defendant below died, and af-
Tim lien by attachment is given against certain persons, , , . J , , , , . . I-who by their conduct subject themselves to the suspicion of fraudulent conduct, the plaintiff in the attachment making oath to such facts as induce this suspicion; and when the defendant dies, one woulc? suppose that, as he is no longer able to defeat the just claims of his creditors, this lien of the attachment ought also to die. A judgment obtained in a court of record against a debtor who appears and defends the action, is a lien on the real property of the defendant, and a much more meritorious lien than a lien of attachment,, procured simply by the affidavit of the plaintiff; and yet this lien of a judgment yields its preference, after the death of the defendant. The administrator then steps in and takes possession of the goods. They are under the guardianship of the law from the moment the defendant dies. The first section of the fourth article of the act respecting executors- and administrators, directs how all demands against the estate of any deceased person shall be classed : First, funeral expenses ; second, expenses of the last sickness, wages of servants, and demands for medicine and medical attendance, during the last sickness of the deceased ; third, debts due to the State ; fourth, judgments rendered against the deceased. Thus we see that there are three classes of debts preferred judgments rendered against the deceased ; judgments, too, rendered in the courts of justice on an investigation of the
It appears, then, to me, that the lien created by the issuing of the attachment, is lost when the defendant in the attachment dies.; and that the judgment obtained against the administrator must take its class under the act concerning administrators, &c.
The judgment of the circuit court quashing the fieri facias is therefore affirmed.
Opinion of Scott,
An execution cannot issue on a judgment obtained against a testator or intestate. The judgment in this case was a gen■eral one, and the circuit court did right in quashing the writ of execution. No opinion is given as to the lien of the attachment, or of the judgment.