47 S.E.2d 504 | Ga. | 1948
1. A dormant judgment may be revived by suit or scire facias brought within three years from the date it becomes dormant, but where such a proceeding is brought after the expiration of the three-year period, the court is not without jurisdiction of the subject-matter. That the suit is barred is a matter of defense which the defendant must plead. Milner v. Neel,
2. A judgment obtained by revival of a dormant judgment by scire facias *526 in the name of the plaintiff as transferee, instead of in the name of the original plaintiff, suing for the use of the transferee, as required by the Code, § 110-1009, can not be treated as a void judgment, unless it appears that the court rendering the judgment did not have jurisdiction.
3. A judgment for a larger amount than that sued for is not for that reason void. It is a mere irregularity.
The petition prayed that the defendants be enjoined from enforcing the execution which had issued on the revived judgment of August 2, 1943; that the revived judgment, being void, be canceled as a cloud on title; and for general relief.
The court overruled all of the grounds of demurrer, general and special, and the exception here is to that judgment.
In the brief for the defendants in error it is stated that this case presents for decision three questions, namely: (1) Since it appeared on the face of the petition that at the time the scire facias issued the judgment sought to be revived was more than ten years old, did the court have jurisdiction to issue an order reviving the judgment? (2) Could the court revive a judgment in the name of the transferee only on a writ of scire facias which did not proceed in the name of the original plaintiff for the use of the transferee? And (3) since this was a proceeding by scire facias in which the sole prayer of the petition was to revive a judgment, was a judgment rendered by the court for a sum different from that in the original judgment a valid judgment, or was it void? It is conceded by the plaintiffs in error that a ruling on these questions by this court will determine whether or not the trial judge properly disposed of the grounds of general demurrer. Since these are the controlling questions in the case, we shall dispose of them in the order stated.
1. "A dormant judgment may be revived by scire facias or sued on within three years from the time it becomes dormant." Code, *528
§ 110-1002. In the instant case a proceeding was filed and scire facias issued on July 12, 1943, to revive a judgment which was rendered June 1, 1930. Clearly a right to revive the judgment was barred by the statute, but it is now too late to raise that issue for the first time. It should have been raised by an appropriate plea to the scire facias. In Helms v. Marshall,
2. "Scire facias to revive a judgment is not an original action, but the continuation of the suit in which the judgment was obtained." Code, § 110-1005. It is contended in the present case that the judgment of revival is void because the petition for revival was brought and the scire facias issued in the name of the transferee and not in the name of the original plaintiff, suing for the use of the transferee, as required by section 110-1009 of the Code, which provides: "The scire facias, when the judgment has been transferred, shall issue in the name of the original plaintiff for the use of the transferee." We can not agree that the judgment in the present case is for this reason void. Section 81-1307 declares: "When several plaintiffs shall sue jointly, the petition may be amended by striking out the name of one or more *529
of such plaintiffs; and when it shall become necessary for the purpose of enforcing the rights of such plaintiff, he may amend by substituting the name of another person in his stead, suing for his use." While it is true in the present case that the petition for revival was defective, since it should have been brought in the name of the original plaintiff suing for the use of the transferee, yet this, being an amendable defect to which there was no demurrer or other objection upon the trial, was cured by the verdict. Code, § 110-705; Stowers v. Harris,
In Chapman v. Taliaferro,
3. It is also insisted that the judgment obtained by the revival of the dormant judgment is void, because it was for a larger amount of interest and attorney's fees than the original judgment. This contention is also without merit. It has often been held by this court and the Court of Appeals that a verdict and judgment for an amount larger than that sued for is not for that reason void, but a mere irregularity. Buice v. Lowman c.Mining Co.,
From what has been said in the three preceding divisions, it follows that the judgment was not void, and that the petition failed to state a cause of action for any of the relief prayed. Therefore the court erred in overruling the general demurrer.
(a) Since the petition should have been dismissed on general demurrer, it is not necessary to pass on the several grounds of special demurrer.
Judgment reversed, with direction. All the Justices concur.