42 S.E. 565 | N.C. | 1902
A jury trial having been waived the facts were found by the court. From the judgment rendered thereon the *123
plaintiffs appealed. There is no exception and none is necessary, the appeal being of itself an exception to a judgment. Murray v. Southerland,
Where there is objection to the evidence, to the charge or any other matter occurring on the trial, an exception must always be specifically taken; Code, sec. 550, and cases cited in Clark's Code, (3d Ed.), pages 772-774; and except as to the charge such specific exception must be taken at the time. S. v. Downs.
By virtue of the Code, sec. 412 (3), an exception to the charge can be taken for the first time in the appellant's statement of the case on appeal, though it must be specific and not "broadside." Lowe v. Elliott,
But as to errors upon the face of the record proper, such as defects in the summons, pleadings and judgment, the appellate court is required to take notice of these without assignment of error, by the Code, sec. 957. The distinction is clearly pointed out in Thornton v. Brady,
The court (a jury having been waived) found as facts that at June Term, 1889, of Pitt Superior Court, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs against Lizzina Wilson for $225 for mesne profits and for partition, and $50.19 costs, and said judgment was recorded in full on the minute docket, but in the judgment as docketed and duly indexed at that term the $225 was omitted from said docketing; and that about 1 December, 1898, this omitted part of the judgment was placed on the docket at the request of the plaintiffs, but without notice to the defendants, by the clerk after the expiration of his term of office. The docketed judgment, however, contained the following: "For *124 decree see Minutes No. 5, pages 619-623"; and the decree there copied in full embraced the $225 recovery. It is further found as a fact that in June, 1889, at the time the above judgment was docketed, Lizzina Wilson owned in fee two tracts, one containing sixty acres, which was worth, 1 March, 1902, $300, and the other, containing sixty-six and two-thirds acres, worth, 1 March, 1902, $800; that on 12 April, 1894, said Lizzina Wilson conveyed, for $135, the timber on the sixty-acre tract to the Beaufort Lumber Company, and thereafter conveyed the fee of said tract (subject to above conveyance of the timber) to the defendants, her son, Geo. W. Wilson, and grandson, John W. Wilson, without consideration; that on 18 December, 1890, she (166) conveyed the sixty-six two-thirds-acre tract, without consideration, to her son McD. Wilson, who on 25 December, 1896, conveyed the same for value to the feme plaintiffs, who are her daughters, and who are now the owners thereof; that on 25 May, 1899, notice was issued to Lizzina Wilson for revival of said judgment, and execution was issued thereon 26 May, 1899, and the homestead was allotted out of these lands, but the allotment was not recorded till after the expiration of ten years from the date of docketing said judgment. On 7 June, 1901, after the answer in this case had been filed, the plaintiffs entered a release of the lien of said docketed judgment as to the 66 2-3-acre tract.
His Honor correctly held that the judgment was not a lien for the $225, that part of the judgment not having been docketed. Code, 435. The reference to the minute docket was sufficient notice to put a purchaser on guard as to the nature thereof, as to matters which did not "affect the title or direct the payment of money." But a money judgment cannot be made a lien unless set out in the docketing thereof, which is required for this very purpose of guarding against liens, unless entered on the docket. InHolman v. Miller, 103 N.C. at page 120, it is said: "It is very clear that unless the judgment is docketed upon this particular docket there can be no lien by virtue of the judgment alone," and in Dewey v. Sugg, 109 N.C. at page 335, 14 L.R.A., 393, Merrimon, C. J., says: "A docketed judgment creates and secures a lien upon the judgment debtor's land. But a judgment, in order to create such lien, must be docketed in the way and manner above pointed out, otherwise the judgment is not docketed and no such or any lien arises," citing authorities.
The judgment was docketed in 1889, and no allotment of homestead having been made till after the ten years had expired, there was no suspension of the statute of limitations, and *125
the lien of the judgment having expired, could not be revived by its allotment after that time. The execution (167) issued on the revived judgment has lien only from its levy and by virtue of the levy, and not by virtue of his docketing the judgment in 1889. Spicer v. Gambill,
No error.
Cited: Baker v. Dawson,
(168)