Cowles v. Bacon

21 Conn. 451
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 21 Conn. 451 (Cowles v. Bacon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowles v. Bacon, 21 Conn. 451 (Colo. 1852).

Opinion

Storrs, J.

1. The first question presented on this motion is, whether the plaintiff’s testator is to be deemed to have obtained satisfaction of the judgment on which this action is brought, by the levy and set-off of land upon the execution issued on that judgment, if there was an entire failure of title in the defendant to that land, and said testator therefore got nothing by the levy and set-off.

It was anciently an established principle of the common law of England, that an extent upon the land of the defendant, returned and filed of record, is a full satisfaction and end of the suit; and therefore, that the plaintiff is not entitled to any further means of satisfaction, by writ, action or execution. And if the tenant by elegit, were divested of the lands so held under that writ of execution, by one having a title paramount to his own, that is, a better title than the debtor from whom he extended the lands, the rule of law, [462]*462that the debt was considered satisfied by the extent, remained unchanged and unaffected, by this circumstance; and the creditor could not afterwards resort to any other writ, or have any other remedy for the portion of his debt thus deemed to be satisfied. The reason upon which this principle was adopted, was, that the creditor elects to hold the land for so many years till the debt be satisfied out of the rents and profits, and the judgment-roll shews, that it was satisfied by the elegit. This rule was so manifestly unjust, that in the thirty-second year of the reign of Henry VIII. a statute was enacted, for that reason expressed in its preamble, by which it was provided, that where the creditor is lawfully divested of the land so delivered to him on such extent, he, may have a writ of scire-facias against the defendant; and thereupon, if no sufficient cause, other than the acceptance of said land on the former writ of execution, is shewn, to bar the said suit, a new writ or writs of execution on the judgment, of the like nature and effect as the former, for the residue of the debt unsatisfied by such former execution; and the same provision is re-enacted, in similar terms, by the 8th Geo. 1. c. 25.; under which provisions the plaintiff, on the new writ of execution, has the same privileges as on the issuing of the original elegit; that is, if the plaintiff can have no fruit of it, he may sue out a scire-facias against the debtor’s goods or chattels, or a ca. sa. to take his person in satisfaction of the debt. The courts in England, early after the first of these statutes was passed, decided that the equivalent remedy of debt on judgment would lie, if the creditor thought fit, in lieu of a writ of scire-facias, which action of debt may now be brought on the unsatisfied judgment, at any time, although further writs of execution cannot be issued, without a scire-facias. (See Foster on the writ of Scire-Facias, 52. & seq.)

In this state, the ancient English common law rule has never been adopted but the practice has uniformly been in conformity with the principle, that where there is no real, but only an apparent, satisfaction of the execution issued on a judgment, by reason of a mistaken or fruitless levy on lands, debt on judgment, as well as scire-facias, may be brought to obtain satisfaction. The course of the authorities on this subject is given in the case of Fish v. Sawyer, 11 Conn. R. 545. in which we understand the court to approve and estab[463]*463lish that practice, and to decide, that in all cases, debt on judgment lies where an execution is fruitless, by reason of a mistaken or void levy on land.

And we see no just reason for the limitation of this principle for which the defendant contends, by which it should be held not to apply to cases, where, as in the present, the plaintiff’s testator, when he caused his execution to be levied, had notice from the records, or otherwise, that the defendant had executed a conveyance of the land levied on, but erroneously supposed that such conveyance was fraudulently made, and was therefore, as to him, void. Such a mistake constitutes no just reason why the defendant should not pay the unsatisfied balance of the debt. The former neither got, nor did the defendant lose, anything, by this mistaken levy. Is the latter to go quit of his obligation, when it has not been discharged, by any mode known to the law, and therefore remains in full force, merely because the former has acted on a mistaken belief that the land levied on belonged to the defendant, and not to the person to whom he had ostensibly conveyed it? Or, is the former to be thus punished, by a forfeiture of his debt, for the benefit of his debtor, for erroneously supposing, that such conveyance was actually or constructively fraudulent, and as to himself void, and for trying to avoid it? It must, indeed, be some very stubborn rule of law which would be held to produce such an unrighteous result. Nor on this point can the grounds on which the testator formed his opinion, be examined, for the purpose of determining whether he had reasonable cause for it; or whether such opinion was really entertained, or not; because it has no bearing on this question of right and justice between these parties. It may, however, be observed, that our records of deeds often furnish to creditors of the grantors but very imperfect information of the real state of titles. They sometimes disclose the invalidity of them as to creditors, when they are only constructively fraudulent, but of course, they never do, when they are actually so. And the object of recording conveyances, is, only to give notice of them; but their validity depends on other circumstances.

This action is therefore sustainable, notwithstanding this objection.

2. The next question is, whether it was competent for the [464]*464defendant to shew, that the deed from himself to Mrs. Humphreys was given for the purpose of defrauding his creditors. If, as the plaintiff claims, it was not, the whole defence to the action fails; and therefore, a decision of the questions, afterwards made on the trial, is unnecessary. The evidence offered by the defendant, was introduced, for the purpose of avoiding the effect of the conveyance from the defendant to Mrs. Humphreys, which had been produced by the plaintiff, and to shew, that that conveyance was executed under such circumstances that it was void, as against the plaintiff’s testator; and that the latter, therefore, by virtue of his levy and set-off on his execution, obtained full and legal satisfaction of the judgment declared on; which was the defence relied on, by the defendant. This being the state of the question, as it is thus presented, it should be viewed singly, and independently of the effect of the conduct and representations of the defendant after the levy and set-off, whereby the plaintiff’s testator may have been induced not to rely on those proceedings, but to treat them as ineffectual; which gives rise to a subsequent question in the case, and one to be considered hereafter.

However ungracious it may seem for the defendant thus to set up his own fraud in that conveyance, we are of opinion, that, as this question was presented, he was at liberty to do so, for the purpose stated. There cannot be a doubt, that this evidence conduced to prove, that the judgment was satisfied, and was, therefore, in its nature, relevant, for the purpose for which it was offered.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Conn. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowles-v-bacon-conn-1852.