Anderson v. Taylor

1 Tenn. Ch. R. 436
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 15, 1873
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 436 (Anderson v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Taylor, 1 Tenn. Ch. R. 436 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1873).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

In this case, in the decision of the rights of Anderson and Douglass on the one side and Jones and Morton on the other, two questions were held up for further argument:

I. Whether the levy of an execution on land during the existence of the judgment-lien under the Code, §§ 2,980, 2,982, gives the judgment-creditor a specific lien which may survive the lien of the judgment, and, if so, whether this execution lien relates back to the teste of the execution.

2. Whether such lien, in this case, if it be held to have been acquired, has been lost by laches, so as to let in the rights of Anderson and Douglass.

Very able arguments in writing have been submitted by the learned counsel for the respective parties. Neither counsel has succeeded, however, in finding authorities so to the point, or reasons so clear as to remove all doubt. The gravest objection to the suggestion of the court upon the first point is the silence of the courts and profession, a weighty objection it must be admitted, but not conclusive by reason of the fact that the lien of the judgment has overshadowed, and rendered unnecessary a resort to the lien of the execution in all of our reported cases where the latter might have been relied on. No case has been found by either of the counsel or myself where, upon the facts given, the decision would have been different if the execution lien as contended for had been conceded to exist.

One reason, doubtless, which tended to obscure the execution lien, if it existed, was the wording of the act of 1,799, 14, 2, limiting the judgment lien. “No execution on land shall be levied, it says, or sale of lands or tenements shall be made, which may affect the title of any person purchasing bona fide from, through or under a defendant in any judg-[438]*438meat, unless suoli execution shall be issued, and levied on such land, and sale thereof made in twelve months from the time of said judgment being rendered, and every sale of lands or tenements under execution made contrary to the provisions of the act shall be null and void to all intents and purposes.” This language is broad, and would seem intended to prevent an execution levy from being effectual at all unless a sale should take place under it within the twelve months of the judgment lien. But this was not the construction put upon the statute by the courts, nor, as we all know, by the profession and the public in actual practice. That a levy of an execution after the expiration of the judgment lien, is a specific lien itself, of which all persons are bound to take notice, as a Us pendens, has never been questioned, although the learned counsel of the complainant seems to think that no such lien exists at all in this state. Even in Bagley v. Ward, 37 Cal. 121, upon which he relies to show that no execution lien exists pending the continuance of the judgment lien (which is for two years in that state), the court expressly held that where there is no judgment lien the levy of an execution operates upon real property as it does upon personal property — that is, according to California law, the execution first served has priority.

It was held at an early day by our courts that the levy of the execution on land was a specific lien and Us pendens, which was notice to all the world, and that no person could be a bona fide purchaser within the meaning of the act of 1799, after such lien had attached, unless it was lost by the act of the judgment-creditor. The language of the court in Overton v. Perkins, Mar. & Yer. 370, a decision as often cited as any in our books to this day as good law, is clear upon the point: “Whilst an execution or order of sale,” the court say, “ is in the hands of the sheriff, levied upon lands, although more than one year from the rendition of the judgment, no sale of the land can be made by the debtor to defeat such levy, aside from any negligence on the part of the creditor; such purchaser would not be a bona fide pur[439]*439chaser within the meaning of the act of 1799, 14, because he would he presumed to know of the existence of the execution and its levy.” In this case, the hen of the execution by levy within the year of the judgment hen, is clearly recognized: “When the .execution,” the court say, “is levied upon some particular parcel (of land), this is fixed with the lien after the year,” p. 374. The same distinction between the judgment lien and the execution hen is taken in Miller v. Estill, 8 Yer. 460 : “There is,” say the court, “a wide difference between the general lien of a judgment on all the debtor’s land, and a special and fixed hen by virtue of a levy. The latter is the inception of a right to satisfaction that cannot be defeated but by the act of the creditor himself, not by the act of the debtor conveying to a third person.” This language is cited with approval in Boggess v. Gamble, 3 Cold. 153. And in Taylor v. Mumford, 3 Hum. 66, in a contest between execution-creditors over the proceeds of land .sold under ay? fa., and a venditioni ex-ponas tested as of the same term, it was held that the latter was entitled to be first satisfied, because it related to the levy of they?, fa. previous to the term.

If the levy of an execution on land gives a hen, there is no sound reason, as it seems to me, why the hen should not relate to the teste of the execution, as it unquestionably does in the case of personality. The fieri facias, having been directed by the act of Geo. II, followed by the North Carolina act of 1777, to run against land, as well as goods and chattels, it would seem necessarily to follow, unless otherwise expressly provided, that the writ would affect land in al'. respects as it affects personalty. The concession of a general hen to the judgment would not necessarily take awiy the execution hen. Such a result would be contrary to all analogy. Nor is there anything in the decisions to countenance such a conclusion. On the contrary, the cases of Overton v. Perkins, Mar. & Yer. 370, and Miller v. Estill, 8 Yer. 460, are expressly based on the existence of the hen, because they hold that such a hen is not affected by an [440]*440injunction, whereas, the lien of the judgment would be lost by the continuance of the injunction beyond the twelve months, and Overton v. Perkins, 10 Yer. 328, 333, is to the same effect.

The North Carolina cases, as we learn from Judge Peck in Hickman v. Murfree, Mar. & Yer. 35, take for granted that an injunction binds lands from the teste, and that an alias pursued after the return of the first execution continues the lien thus acquired, without an actual levy.

The Code, §§ 2,980, 2,982, modifies the language of 1799, 14, and conforms to the decisions.

Whatever, therefore, may be the ruling in other states upon their statutes, the practice in this state, following in this respect the analogy of the English, decisions upon the writ of elegit, and the North Carolina cases upon the writ of fieri facias, is that the levy of an execution on land gives a specific lien, independent of the general lien of the judgment, and such lien, I must think, upon sound principle and in accord with the rule as to personalty, relates to the teste of the execution.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. Ch. R. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-taylor-tennctapp-1873.