15 Ga. 435 | Ga. | 1854
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
By the Common Law, “writs of execution must be sued out within a year and a day after the judgment is entered; •otherwise, the Coui't concludes, prima facie, that the judgment is satisfied and extinct” ; but, “the plaintiff may still bring an action of debt, founded on this dormant judgment, which was the only method of revival allowed by the Common Law”. (3 Black. 421. Co. Litt. 290.)
The Statute of West. 2, 13 Edw’d. I, c. 45) gives, as to • certain judgments, viz : enrolled judgments, another method of •revival; that is to say, a scire facias, for the defendant to show cause why the judgment should not be revived, and execution had against him. (Bac. Abr. “ Executions”, (H.) This method does not extend beyond enrolled judgments.
The Common Law method, namely: by action of debt, expends to all judgments, whether enrolled or not enrolled. It, therefore, extends to judgments of Justices’ Courts.
In 1812, the Legislature of Georgia made a law in these words: “No part of the Judiciary Laws of this State, shall be --go construed, as to require the renewal of any judgment, as heretofore practiced, or in any othermanner whatever”. (Cobb's Dig. 496.) This Act includes the judgments of Justices’ Courts, for the Judiciary Law of the State had been so construed as to require the renewal of said judgments, if unenforced for a year and a day, by action of debt.
The effect of this Act, was to repeal both the Common Law •and the Statute of West. 2, 13 Edw. 1, and to give to all judgments unlimited duration, without the intervention of scire facias, or action of debt. This effect equally extended, therefore, to the judgments of Justices’ Courts, which are never enrolled or recorded, as to the judgments of the Superior and Inferior Courts, which always are, or always should be recorded.
In 1823, the Legislature again spoke and said: “ All judgments that have been obtained since the said 19th day of De
The general rule laid down in these words, includes “ all judgments rendered in any of the Courts in this State". It, therefore, includes the judgments of Justices’ Courts.
The proviso includes all “such judgments” as the general rule includes, and therefore, it includes the judgments of Justices’ Courts. And as to all the judgments it includes, it says that nothing in the Act shall prevent the plaintiff from renewing the same, after the expiration of seven: years, in cases where, by law, he would be otherwise entitled so to do. It therefore says this, equally of the judgments of Justices’ Courts, as of the judgments of any Courts.
In short, judgments of Justices’ Courts, are as much within the words, both of the general rule and of the exception, the proviso of this Act, as are judgments of the Superior and Inferior Courts.
Being within the words of the Act, are those judgments yet ; without its meaning ? ,
Why should they be without the meaning ? Before the passage of this Act, the Legislature had required all the civil: proceedings had before the Justices of the Peace, to be kept in a fair and legible book of entry. And this book was to be preserved. At the time of the passage of the Act, therefore, Justices’ judgments were such as are evidenced by a writing'; This was by the Act of 1809. (Cobb’s Dig. 638.)
And before the passage of this Act of 1823, the Legisla
In a practical point of view, the aggregate ■ amount of debt secured by the judgments of the Justices’ Courts, probably exceeded; as if does still, and will ever exceed, that secured by the judgments of all of the other Courts put together. The number of those judgments more than makes up for their want of size.
Yet, it was’argued for the plaintiff in error, that this Act of . 1823, does 'not extend to the judgments of Justices’ Courts. The . argument was this: The Act allows plaintiffs to renew their judgments after the expiration of seven years of dormancy, in ■ cases where, by laiv, they would be otherwise entitled so to do, ■ and in no case iff a Justice’s judgment, would the plaintiff, even with this Act out of the way, be entitled, by law, to renew his judgment.
If this argument be good, it is equally good to prevent the renewal of any judgment of any other Court. Eor, by the law, as it stood when the Act was passed, no plaintiff, in any judgment of any'Court, whatever,, was entitled to renew the judgment. By the law, as it then stood, no judgment could get into-a condition to make it need renewing—could become dormant. By the law, as it then stood,'as much of the Common Law as made judgments, lying dormant, go out of date in a year and a day, and as gave 1 the mode, of renewing all of them, enrolled or not enrolled, by action of debt, and as much of the Statute 13 Edw’d. 1, as gave the mode of renewing those of them which might be enrolled, by scire facias, had been repealed, and in place thereof, had been substituted a
If, therefore, this argument be good, the effect of it is to render the Act of 1823, wholly nugatory. An argument producing such an effect is to be rejected, if possible.
In practice, it has been long rejected, probably from the time of the first case which ever arose under the Act. The Courts have never hesitated to enforce the Act, as to judgments of the Superior and Inferior Courts. And before that could be done, the ground of this argument had to be disregarded; for, as we have seen, it applies as well to the judgments of those Courts, as to the judgments of Justices’ Courts. They, “bylaw”, were no more renewable than these. And the contemporaneous and long-continued practical exposition of a Statute, of such a Statute as this—one so often to bo used—is likely to bo that which tho makers of it intended.
But is it impossible to justify this practical exposition of tho Statute, from the face of it ? Let us see.
The forepart of the Act which contains the general rule, extends, to all judgments “on which no execution shallbe sued out”, and to all, on the executions of which, if sued out, no return shall have been made by the proper offieer, within seven years. This-' part, therefore extends to judgments that may have been satisfied ■ by the act of parties themselves to the judgments—the act done before the issuing of execution, or if done. afterwards, done without the interposition of any executing officer, and so, without any “return” of it. ’ Still, in, any such case, the judgment would be, by lato, effectually extinguished. And, in any such case, it doubtless ought to stay extinguished. It ought not to be renewable. The Legislature could not have intended, it so to be..
But even in such case, it would have been renewable by tho proviso, unless there had been something put into the proviso to restrain its generality. It would manifestly have been renewable, had the proviso stopped at the end of these words: “ Provided that nothing in this Act contained, shall prevent
The^proviso is certainly susceptible of this sense. It has always been enforced in this sense ; for, upon scire facias under this Act, the inquiry has always been, not whether the judgment had ever been enrolled' or recorded, but whether it has ever been paid off—been satisfied. Taken in this sense, the proviso is fertile in good fruits; in the other, it is barren of all fruit. This, then, is the sense it must be considered to have.
There is nothing, in the words of the Act, to confine the authority to renew or revive a judgmeut of a Justices’ Court to the Justice of the Peace who happened to render the judgment, more than there is to confine the authority to renew a judgment of the Superior Court, to the Judge who chanced to preside in that Court, when the judgment was rendered. ' And Justices’ Courts are not, and were not, at the date of the Act in question, without written memorials of their judgments. The Act of 1809, requires “ each Justice .of the Peace, in this . State, to keep a fair and legible book of entry of all civil proceedings had before him, for the recovery of debts, &c.”’ (Cobb's Dig.
'
This is to be inferred, from the last clause of the proviso, .“but the lien of such revived judgments on the property of the defendants thereto, shall operate only from the time of such revival”, as the mention of one thing is the exclusion of oth- ' ers. The inference is, that the judgment, when revived, is to be as if it had never died, in all respects except one, viz: lien. It is, therefore, to bear interest as if it had been left continuously alive.
Besides, this is the dictate of natural justice, if indeed, it is not the express command of positive law. The^- judgment of revivor, is but evidence that a debt—a liquidated demand— has never been paid, although appearances may be to the contrary. And the law makes liquidated demands bear interest, during the whole period through which they pass unpaid.
It follows, that the judgment of the Court below, on all the points, ought to be affirmed.