Brown v. Butler

13 S.E. 71, 87 Va. 621, 1891 Va. LEXIS 114
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 9, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 13 S.E. 71 (Brown v. Butler) 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
Brown v. Butler, 13 S.E. 71, 87 Va. 621, 1891 Va. LEXIS 114 (Va. 1891).

Opinion

Lewis, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a creditor’s suit in the hustings court of Manchester, to subject certain lots of land situate within the present limits of that city, to the satisfaction of three judgments, recovered many years ago, against Joseph Butler, now deceased. The lots in question were sold, but not conveyed, by Butler prior to the rendition of the judgments, and the question is, whether, in the hands of his alienees, or those claiming under them, they are subject to the lien of the judgments. At the hearing, the court below dismissed the bill, whereupon the plaintiffs appealed. •

The judgments in question are as follows, viz: (1) A judgment in favor of A. A. Jenks, for $23.70 and costs, obtained before a justice of the peace of Chesterfield county, on the 23d of February, 1866, which was duly docketed, but upon which no execution has ever issued. (2) A judgment in favor of Jenks, for $500, with interest and costs, obtained in the circuit court of Chesterfield county, on the 2d day of November, 1866, which, also, was duly docketed, but upon which no execution has ever issued; and, (3) A judgment in favor of ¥m. B. Jones & Co., for $240.90, with interest and costs, obtained at the March term, 1867, of the same court. A few days thereafter, an execution of fi. fa. was issued on this judgment, returnable to the ensuing May rules, which was returned “no effects.” The judgment was docketed on the 20th of March, 1867.

[623]*623As to the first two judgments, we are of opinion that the defence of the statute of limitations is well founded. No execution has ever been issued on either of them, and the present suit was not commenced until April 30, 1887. The provision of the statute (Code, sec. 3573) is express that no suit shall be brought to enforce the lien of a judgment upon which the right to issue an execution, or bring a scire facias, or an action, is barred by sections 3577 and 3578; and by section 3577 it is provided that “on a judgment, execution may be issued within a year, and a scire facias, or an action, may be brought within ten years after the date of the judgment; and where execution issues within the year, other executions may be issued, or a scire facias, or an action, may be brought within ten years from the return day of an execution on which there is no return by an officer, or within twenty years from the return day of an execution on which there is no such return,” with certain exceptions not material to the present case.

The appellants, however, contend that the limitation of the statute is repelled by the judgment debtor’s departure without the State, and absence therefrom, and they rely upon the case of Ficklin’s Ex’or v. Carrington, 31 Gratt., 219 On the other hand, the appellees contend that that decision had no application to the present case, first, because the exception- contained in the statute, which was construed in that case, applies only to the person who obstructs the prosecution of any such right as is mentioned in the statute, and, secondly,-because there was no such departure from the State by the judgment debtor in the present case, as is contemplated by the statute.

The statute provides that where any such right as is mentioned therein “ shall accrue against a person who had before ■. resided in this State, if such person shall, by departing without the same, or by absconding or concealing himself, or by any other indirect ways or means, obstruct the prosecution of ■ such right, the time that such obstruction may have continued [624]*624shall not be computed as any part of the time within which the said right mightmr ought to have been prosecuted. But this section shall not avail against any other person than him so obstructing, notwithstanding another might have been jointly sued with him, if there had been such obstruction.” Code, sec. 2933.

With respect to the first branch of the appellee’s contention, above stated, we are of opinion that so long as a judgment is in existence as against the judgment debtor, the lien thereof continues, and may be enforced in equity, although the real estate sought to be subjected is in the hands of a purchaser who has in no way obstructed the prosecution of the plaintiff’s right, provided, of course, the lien is in other respects enforceable against such real estate.

In the present case, however, we agree with the appellees that there has been no such obstruction, and, consequently, that the case is not within the exception contained in the statute, above quoted. When the judgments were obtained, the judgment debtor was, confessedly, a resident of this State, having a family and a home in the city of Manchester. It. appears that he was by trade a carpenter and bridge-builder, and that several years after the rendition of the judgments he left Manchester, “going first to one place and then another,” working at his trade. His daughter, Mrs. Burton, who was; examined as a witness in the cause, testifies that he travelled about a good deal. “ I received letters from him,” she says, “from Tennessee, Cincinnati, St. Louis, Norfolk and other places.”

His wife and family, however, continued to reside in Manchester, to which place he occasionally returned. And the-preponderance of the evidence is to the effect that he regarded that city as his home until his death, which occurred after the institution of the present suit. Mrs. Burton testifies that, only three months before her deposition was taken, he wrote “he was coming home”—i. e., to Manchester—and she added;

[625]*625“ We were expecting him home Xmas, had he not died.” He died in Baltimore, where for a number of years he spent the most of his time.

That he and his wife liyed unhappily together is not disputed, nor is it disputed that he left Manchester much indebted ; but the evidence does not show that he ever intended to totally abandon his family, or to become a resident of another State. “Departing without the State,” within the meaning of the statute, is a removal from the State with, the intention of changing one’s residence. It is different from absconding or concealing oneself, and the burden of proving such removal, in the present case, was on the plaintiffs. Pilson v. Bushong, 29 Gratt., 229; Lindsay v. Murphy, 76 Va., 428.

The case of Ficklin’s Ex’or v. Carrington is not in conflict with these views, for there it was admitted that the defendant, after the cause of action accrued, left the State, and became a resident of another State. The court, however, in deciding the case, laid down the broad doctrine that such a removal operates, proprio vigore, an obstruction, within the meaning of the statute, to the prosecution of the plaintiff’s right, during the period of the debtor’s absence.

It is somewhat remarkable that no allusion was made in the opinion to Wilson v. Koontz, 7 Cranch, 202. In that case a substantially similar statute of this State was the subject of construction, and it was there held by the supreme court, speaking by Chief Justice Marshall, that it was essential, in order to bring the case within the exception contained in the statute, that the plaintiff should have been actually obstructed by the removal of the defendant. And in 1 Robinson’s (old) Practice, p.

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.E. 71, 87 Va. 621, 1891 Va. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-butler-va-1891.