181 S.E. 817 | W. Va. | 1935
By this proceeding in prohibition, the petitioner, United States Fidelity Guaranty Company, seeks to stop proceedings in a judgment lien creditor's suit pending before the Honorable J. W. Eary, Judge of the Circuit Court of Fayette County, wherein the Bank of Raleigh is plaintiff and Isaiah Kidd and others are defendants.
The petition alleges that the Circuit Court of Fayette County is without jurisdiction to entertain the judgment lien creditor's suit because of the fact that the bill of complaint filed therein shows upon its face that two executions were issued upon the judgment sued on within two years of its date; that neither of them was directed to the sheriff of the county wherein the judgment debtor resided at the time, he being a resident of this State; and that since an execution issued upon the judgment sued on within two years of its date, but none was addressed to the sheriff of the county wherein the judgment debtor resided, there is no jurisdiction for a suit in chancery to enforce the lien of the judgment against the land of the judgment debtor under the provisions of Code,
"The lien of a judgment may be enforced in a court of equity after an execution or fieri facias thereon has been duly returned to the office of the court or to the justice from which it issued showing by the return thereon that no property could be found from which such execution could be made: Provided, That such lien may be enforced in equity without such return when an execution or fieri facias has not issued within two years from the date of the judgment. If it appear to such court that the rents and profits of the real estate subject to the lien will not satisfy the judgment in five years, the court may decree such real estate, or any part thereof, to be sold and the proceeds applied to the discharge of the judgment."
The respondents take the position that since more than two years have elapsed since the date of their judgment, they are entitled to maintain the judgment lien creditor's suit because the executions issued upon the judgment sued on within the two-years period were not such executions as are contemplated by the section quoted, as defined by this court in the recent case of Lewis v. Fisher,
The question at issue is thus narrowed to the query: under the proviso of the statute, can a judgment lien creditor's suit be brought upon a judgment after two years from its date, if executions addressed to the counties other than the county of the judgment debtor's residence have been issued during the two-year period, but no execution addressed to the sheriff of the county wherein the judgment debtor resides has been issued and returned "no property found"?
No cases in point other than Lewis v. Fisher,
The opinion of the court in Lewis v. Fisher,
The reasons set forth above, coupled with the fact that the execution required by the statute has already been defined by this court, and because of the general rule of construction that terms having one meaning in a statute are to be given that same meaning throughout, unless to do so creates repugnancy or otherwise distorts the plain purpose of the act, impel us to hold that the execution contemplated throughout the statute and in the proviso is an execution addressed to the county of the judgment debtor's residence. Since no such execution was issued within a period of two years from the date of the judgment sought to be enforced in the judgment creditor's suit herein, and since the amended bill of complaint shows that fact and that that was the situation when the judgment lien creditor's suit was brought, we are of the opinion that the circuit court of Fayette County has jurisdiction upon the showing made by the amended bill of complaint to entertain the judgment lien creditor's suit, and the writ of prohibition is therefore declined.
Writ denied.