Creighton v. Leeds, Palmer & Co.

9 Or. 215
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 9 Or. 215 (Creighton v. Leeds, Palmer & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Creighton v. Leeds, Palmer & Co., 9 Or. 215 (Or. 1881).

Opinion

By the Court,

Waldo, J.:

This suit was brought by the respondent in the circuit court for Benton county, to enjoin the sheriff of said county from levying an execution on certain lands purchased by respondent at an execution sale. The facts are, that on the 4th day of February, 1873, the appellants, Leeds, Palmer & Co., recovered •a judgment against Simeon Bethers. On the 9th day of November, 1876, the respondent also recovered a judgment against said Bethers. Each judgment was docketed at the time it was recovered, and remained unsatisfied, when, on the 10th day of June, 1878, Simeon Bethers acquired title, by descent, to the tract of land in question. The respondent made the first levy on said land, and purchased the same at the execution sale. After said levy, in November, 1879, the appellants had leave to issue an execution on their judgment of February 4, 1873, and thereupon placed an execution in the hands of Sol. King, sheriff, to subject the said lands to the payment of the judgment.

The point in controversy arises under section 266, page 160, of the civil code of Oregon: “ From the date of the docketing of a judgment as in this title provided, or a transcript thereof, such judgment shall be a lien upon all the real property of the defendant within the county or counties where the' same is docketed, or which may be afterwards acquired therein.”

The appellants claim that judgments rank on after-acquired property in the order of their dates of docketing, while the respondent insists that if two judgments have been docketed against a defendant, they will both attach to subsequently acquired property at the same moment, and neither will have [217]*217priority over the other on account of its prior docketing or rendition, and cites Freeman on Judgments, sections 355 and 356; Michaels v. Boyd, 1 Ind., 259, and Moody v. Harper, 25 Miss., 484.

Appellants claim that the text and the authorities cited are not in point in the construction of the statute. That under the statute it is priority of docketing, and not priority in point of time at which the lien attached, that determined the right of priority of payment. The question is on the construction of the statute. In construing a statute we must never lose sight of its object and intent. While the immediate object of the statute is to provide for judgment liens, the primary object is to secure the payment of judgment debts. In giving a lien, the object is to compel the debtor to satisfy the debt. This compulsion is exercised by means of the lien; that is, giving to the creditor the right, running with the land, to have the debtor’s lands applied to the satisfaction of the judgment.

The right to satisfaction accrues as soon as the judgment is entered; for the entry of judgment fixes the date at which the creditor chooses to avail himself of the power of the law to compel the payment of his debt. If the lien is co-extensive with the judgment obligation, there will be no distinction in right of preference between property in existence when the judgment is recovered, and that afterwards required. A law releasing after-acquired property from liability' to be taken and applied to the satisfaction of a judgment, would impair the obligation of the contract. Future acquisitions are liable for contracts, and to release them from this liability would impair their obligation. (Sturgis v. Crowninshield, 4 Whea., 198.)

In Neely v. Henry, 63 Ala., 263, the court say: “ In the absence of statutory or constitutional exemptions, the law subjects to the payment of debts any and every beneficial interest of the debtor in property, real or personal, whether the interest is legal or equitable, held severally, jointly or in [218]*218common with others. Nor is there any intendment that the parties have in view only the property which the debtor may own at the time of entering into a contract, or to which he may then have an inchoate right. Subsequently acquired property is as liable to the payment of debts as that which the debtor may own at the time of creating a debt. A state law which sought to release such property from liability for the payment of . past debts, would impair the obligation of contracts, and violate the constitution of the United States.”

It follows that if the lien was strictly an incident of the judgment — if the judgment, per se, gave the lien to enforce payment, the right of priority as to all property, after-acquired or otherwise, would naturally be co-extensive with the priority of the judgment. The lien is a right to take with a preference over all adverse interests. There was that in its origin under the statute of 13 Edw., 1, which prevented any preference as to after-acquired lands, but this was because the lien was an incident of the writ of execution, either of its issuance, or the actual present right to issue, and hence could not relate back to a period prior to the existence of that which created it. This will be shown by a reference to its origin under the statute giving an elegit.

In Bliss v. Clark, 39 Ill., 595, the court say: “At common law, a judgment created no lien on real estate, nor could it be sold on execution. Put as trade became developed, and was fostered by the government, it was found necessary to subject it to the payment of debts. The first enactment having that object was the statute of Westminster, 2, adopted the 13 Edw., 1, ch. 18, which was usually called the statute de mereantoribus. It authorized the judgment creditor to sue out the writ of elegit, by which the sheriff was required to have all of the debtor’s goods liable to execution appraised and delivered to the creditor in satisfaction of his debt, and if insufficient for the purpose to deliver to him a moiety of his freehold estate until he should have execution of his judgment. The court in analogy to a fiere facias, held that this writ [219]*219created a lien on the real estate of the debtor from the test of the writ. Thus it will be seen that it was the writ, and not the judgment, which created the lien.”

So, in Scribner v. Deans, 1 Brock., 170, Chief Justice Marshall, in delivering the opinion of the court, says : “ The judgment in favor of John Allen having been first rendered, would constitute the first lien, had there been no stay of execution. The rank of that judgment depends on the question whether the lien takes place at the rendition, or at the time when execution may issue on it. It must be admitted that a judgment at common law did not bind lands, and that there has been no statute which in direct terms creates the lien. But courts have so construed the statute, which gives the elegit, as to infer a lien from the power to take the lands in execution. The lien, then, grows out of the right to issue the elegit, and is, consequently, inseparably connected with that right.”

It is important to note the distinction declared in these cases — -that the lien is, correctly speaking, an incident or consequence of the writ, not of the judgment, because out of this fact grew the principle that there were no priorities between judgment liens on after-acquired property. It followed inevitably from this principle that as to all judgments in existence when the property was acquired, no lien could have a preference, because the right to take the lands in execution, which created the lien, accrued to each creditor at the same moment. The lien could not relate back beyond its origin in the power to take the lands , under the writ.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Or. 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creighton-v-leeds-palmer-co-or-1881.