Baker v. Swineford

33 S.E. 542, 97 Va. 112, 1899 Va. LEXIS 17
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 33 S.E. 542 (Baker v. Swineford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Swineford, 33 S.E. 542, 97 Va. 112, 1899 Va. LEXIS 17 (Va. 1899).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

[113]*113This case is before us upon a writ of error to a judgment rendered by the Law and Equity Court of the city of Richmond, in an action at law wherein Baker was plaintiff and Swineford defendant.

Baker instituted an action of detinue to recover certain notes which was so proceeded in that a judgment was rendered for the plaintiff for the property demanded, or its alternate value, which was ascertained to be $1,680, with interest. Fifteen days having elapsed since the beginning’ of the term at which this judgment was rendered, the court entered an order by virtue of section 3600 of the Code permitting executions to issue on judgments of that term after the lapse of ten days from their date. Mrs. Baker, the plaintiff in error, issued an execution for the alternate value as set out in the judgment obtained by her, whereupon Swineford gave notice of a motion to vacate said judgment. This motion was resisted, but the court entered an order setting aside the judgment, and granting the defendant a new trial, to all of which the plaintiff excepted. At a subsequent trial there was a verdict and judgment for the defendant. During the progress, of the second trial exceptions were taken by the plaintiff to certain rulings of the court, but we do not deem them of sufficient-importance to merit discussion, and they are not in fact seriously-relied upon by plaintiff in error. In any event, they were! correctly decided, and we shall pass to the discussion of the controlling question in the case.

It is proper, however, to say one word with respect to the merits of the contention of the plaintiff in error before proceeding to a discussion of the questions of law presented. The action, as we have seen, was instituted to recover certain notes which the plaintiff claimed were in the possession of the defendant, and unlawfully withheld by him. There was no evidence at the first trial of the value of these notes. They are fixed in the verdict of the jury at $1,680. They were in fact only worth the paper upon which they were written, and there is not a particle [114]*114of evidence anywhere in the record of either trial to show that the defendant in error had been guilty of any impropriety whatever, or was under any obligation, legal or moral, to pay the plaintiff one dollar on account of their detention.

Did the court have the power to set aside a judgment upon which it had directed execution to issue by virtue of section 3600 of the Code? That section is in the following words: “Any court, after the fifteenth day of its term, may make a general order allowing executions to issue on judgments and ■decrees after ten days from their date, although the term at which they are rendered be not ended. For special cause, it may, in any particular case, except the same from such order, or allow an execution thereon at an earlier period.”

Upon the part of the plaintiff in error it is contended that, inasmuch as at common law no execution could issue except upon a final judgment, a statute authorizing the issue of an execution necessarily operates to impart the quality of finality to it, so that, if upon the expiration of the fifteenth day of its term a court exercises the power conferred upon it by section 3600 above cited, all judgments upon which an execution is authorized to issue become to all intents and purposes final, and pass beyond the jurisdiction and power of the court. In support of this proposition reliance is placed upon the case of Enders v. Burch, 15 Gratt. 64. That was a case from the Circuit Court of the city of Bichmond upon a judgment vacating an office judgment, and quashing the execution which had issued upon it after the fifteenth day of the term, and it was there held that if the term •of a circuit court last more than fifteen days, all office judgments in which no writ of enquiry is ordered become final and cannot afterwards be set' aside by the court. This is so by virtue of what is now section 3287 of the Code, which expressly provides that every “ judgment entered in the office in a case wherein there is no order for enquiry of damages, and every non-suit or dis-mission therein, shall, if not previously set aside, become a final [115]*115judgment, * * * of the last day of the next term, or on the fifteenth day thereof.” In the course of the opinion delivered by Judge Moncure, and concurred in by the three judges who sat with him in that case, it is said that “ a capacity to issue execution on a judgment at law implies its finality, unless there be something to repel the implication in the terms of the law which gives the capacity. There is nothing to repel it in the terms of the law in question.” (Referring to a statute similar to that now found in section 3600 of the Oode.) “ Judgments rendered in court, which thus become final after ten days from their date, then possess all the attributes of finality, and stand on the same footing with office judgments after they become final on the fifteenth day of the term, as aforesaid. In neither case has the court, as a court of original jurisdiction, any power over its judgments after they have thus become final.”

In the case of James River & Kan. Co. v. Lee, 16 Gratt. at p. 133, the case of Enders v. Burch, supra, is referred to by the judge who delivered the opinion, and it was said by bfm that “ two of the judges who united in the decision entertain some doubt as to its correctness, and the court- is therefore of opinion that a re-argument of the question ought to be heard whenever it may come up for decision before a full court.”

It is plain that the case of Enders v. Burch called for an opinion with respect to the power of courts over office judgments only,, and what fell from the learned judge who delivered tbe opinion, as to the power of courts, after the fifteenth day of the term, with respect to judgments upon which it permits executions to issue after ten days from that date, was an obiter dictum, entitled, it is true, to great respect, but not constituting an authority binding upon us. As a dictum its'force is impaired by what was subsequently said by the same court in James River &c. Co. v. Lee, above quoted. We are at liberty, therefore, to consider the question as an open one. It is true that at common law executions issued only upon final judgments. It is also [116]*116true at common law that “ during the term wherein any judicial act is done the record remains in the breast of the judges of the court and in their remembrance, and therefore the roll is alterable during that term as the judges shall direct; but when that term is past, then the record is in the roll, and admits of no alteration, averment or proof to the contrary.” 3 Tho. Co. Lit. 323, cited in Enders v. Burch, at p. 66.

We have, then, two seemingly antagonistic principles. The statute law has declared that a court may, after the fifteenth day of its term, direct executions to be issued upon judgments after ten days from their date, although the term at which they were rendered be not ended; but observe the dissimilitude between the language used in section 3600 and that employed in section 3287. In the latter section, which applies to judgments in the office, it is expressly declared that they shall become final on the fifteenth day of the term, or on the last day of the term, whichever shall happen first; while section 3600 is silent as to the effect upon the judgment of the execution when issued.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 S.E. 542, 97 Va. 112, 1899 Va. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-swineford-va-1899.