93 Iowa 772 | Iowa | 1895
Lead Opinion
I. Appellee contends that “the record' discloses no judgment or order of the lower court fr!om which an appeal will lie.” The record discloses that plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s answer was overruled, and that plaintiff excepted, and elected to stand on her demurrer. Section 3164 of th/e Code provide® that an appeal may he taken from an order “when it sustains or overrules a demurrer.” It ads© provides that an appeal may be taken from “an intermediate order involving the merits, and materially affects the final decision.” The matter demurred to clearly involves the merits, and materially affects the final decision. The case is appealable under either of these provision® of the Code. See Cowen v. Boone, 48 Iowa, 350.
II. Code, section 2529, provides as follows: “The following actions may be brought within the times herein limited, respectively, after their causes accrue, and not afterwards, except when otherwise specially, declared: * * * (6) Those founded on a judgment of a court of record, whether of this or of any other of the United States, or„ of the Federal Courts of the United States, within twenty years.” It was uniformly, held, under this statute, that a right to maintain an action upon a judgment of a court of record existed from the time of its rendition, and was barred after the lapse of twenty years. In Simpson v. Cochran, 23 Iowa, 81, it was held that an action might be maintained and recovery had by the judgment creditors, “although he
Dissenting Opinion
(Dissenting). Tbe rule of chief importance in tbe interpretation of statutes is to ascertain the legislative intent. “If a statute is valid, it; is to have effect according to the purpose and intent of the lawmakers. The intent is the vital part, — the essence of the law. * * * The rules of construction with which the books abound apply only where the words used are of doubtful import. They are only SO' many lights to assist the courts in arriving with more accuracy at the true interpretation of the
Prior to the taking effect of the Code, it was well settled that a cause of action on a judgment accrued when the judgment was rendered, and that an action could not be maintained on a judgment rendered by a court of record of this state, unless commenced within twenty years from the time of its rendition. The legislative assembly of the territory of Iowa, at its first ses; sion, which commenced in the year 1838, enacted “that judgment in any court of record in this territory may be revived by scire facias, or an action of debt be brought thereon within twenty years next after the date of such judgment, and not after.” Laws Iowa T., 1st Sess., p. 326, section 5. That section was incorporated in chapter 94, on “Limitation of Suits,” in the Territorial Revised Statutes of 1843. The portion in regard to an action on such judgments was contained in section 1659 of the Code of 1851, and section 2740 by the Revision of 1860, and in section 2529 of the Code of 1873, in the modified form in which it appears in the section last named. From the organization of Iowa as a territory to the taking eff ect of the Code, a period of nearly thirty-five years, the policy was adhered to of forbidding actions on judgments of courts of record, unless commenced within twenty years from the date of the judgment. During that time there was nothing in the legislative or judicial history of the state which suggested that a change in the statute in that respect was desired, or ought to he made. In the year 1867 the case of Simpson v. Cochran, 23 Iowa, 81, was decided. In that it was held that a judgment, whether rendered
It is said, however, that section 2529 of the Code authorizes actions founded on judgments of courts of record of this state to be brought at any time within twenty years after the cause of action accrues, and that causes of action do not accrue until the right to enforce them by action also accrues. That a cause of action includes a right to enforce it by action is undoubtedly true, in most cases; and the terms “cause of action” and “right of action” are frequently used interchangeably, and as synonymous. But there is a sensie in which they are different Thus, a “civil action” is defined to be a proceeding in a court of justice, in which one party demands against another “the 'enforcement or protection, of a private right, or the prevention or redress of a private wrong.” Code, section 2505. The cause of the action, or that, upon which it is founded, would appear to be the right which is to be enforced or protected, or the wrong which is to be prevented or redressed. In Veeder v. Baker, 83 N. Y. 160, it was said: “Jurists have found much difficulty in precisely defining a ‘cause of action.’ * * it may be said to be composed of the right of the plaintiff, and the obligation, duty, or wrong of the defendant; and these combined, it is sufficiently accurate to say, constitute the cause of action.” The cause of action is the right claimed or wrong suffered by the
What I have said in regard to the effect of section 2521 of the Code has support in the decisions of this court. In Watts v. Everett, 47 Iowa, 270, the leave to prosecute, for which the section provides, was spoken of as pertaining to the right to prosecute the action, and not to the cause of action, the two being treated as distinct. It was also said that prior to the enactment of that section the judgment creditor had two remedies: (one), to enforce his judgment by execution; (two) to maintain an action upon it. The court said further: “The statute takes away the second remedy. It in no sense affects the obligation of the judgment The judgment stands in all the vigor and force it possessed before. It can be enforced against all the property and rights of the defendant that were subject to it before the statute. No delay in enforcing it is caused by the
It is said that section 2541 of the Code show's conclusively that the right of action was extended as held by the majority. I am unable to assent to that conclusion. The section is as follows: “When the commencement of an action shall be stayed by injunction or statutory prohibition, the time of the continuance of such injunction or prohibition shall not be a part of the time limited for the commencement of the action.” The section, by its terms, refers only to cases where the commencement of actions- has been stayed, and necessarily to cases ifi which the right of action had accrued, and not to cases in which it did not exist. If 'the commencement of an action be enjoined because the right ©f action has not accrued, can it be said that the time during which the injunction was properly enforced ©n that ground should be added to the time given by law for cucnmencing the action after the right to begin it had fully matured? There can be but ®ne answer to that question, and in my opinion the same rule should be applied to’the statutory prohibition. If my view of the law be correct, “the time limited for the commencement of the action” on a judgment of a court of record of this state is the term