Flint v. Chaloupka

99 N.W. 825, 72 Neb. 34, 117 Am. St. Rep. 771, 1904 Neb. LEXIS 141
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1904
DocketNo. 13,544
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 99 N.W. 825 (Flint v. Chaloupka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flint v. Chaloupka, 99 N.W. 825, 72 Neb. 34, 117 Am. St. Rep. 771, 1904 Neb. LEXIS 141 (Neb. 1904).

Opinion

Letton, C.

This was a creditor’s hill brought by the appellant against the appellees in the district court for Saline county. After the note upon which the suit is based was placed in judgment, an execution was issued and returned unsatisfied, whereupon this action was begun. While this action was pending 5 years expired without the issuance of another execution, and the appellees contend that the judgment upon which it was based became dormant. The principal question discussed at the oral argument and in the briefs is whether or not this action can proceed when the judgment upon which it is based has become dormant. The appellees maintain that the lien of a judgment cannot be enforced in equity after the right to enforce the judgment at law has ceased to exist; that there is a clear distinction between a creditor’s suit in aid of execution and a creditor’s suit to reach property rights and interests that never were subject to and never could be taken upon execution; that, in the latter case, a lien upon the interest sought to be reached is acquired only by the bringing of the equity suit, while in the former case the judgment is a lien upon the property which the judgment debtor has fraudulently conveyed, and the creditor’s suit is brought to remove an obstruction from the title, in order that the property may be levied upon and sold advantageously upon execution; that the judg[36]*36ment is a lien upon the property fraudulently conveyed so long as the title remains in the fraudulent grantee; that any lien the appellant ever had upon the property in controversy was the lien of the judgment, and that this creditor’s action creates no lien on the property, and that, consequently, when the judgment became dormant it ceased to be a lien thereon, and could no longer be enforced either by execution or by a creditor’s bill. We have given the argument of the appellees at this length so that their contention may be clearly seen.

Is a judgment a lien in this state upon the equitable interest of the debtor in real estate?

In Rosenfield v. Chada, 12 Neb. 25, where an action in equity was brought to subject the equitable interest of a purchaser in possession of real estate to the payment of a judgment, it was held that an equitable interest in land, coupled with actual possession, may be reached by a seizure and sale under an ordinary execution.

Tin; next case in which this general subject was considered is Nessler v. Neher, 18 Neb. 649. In this case it was first held (23 N. W. 345) that the lien of a judgment will extend to all the legal or equitable interests of the defendant in lands within the county, of which such defendant is in actual possession; but upon rehearing it was held that “a judgment in the district court is not a lien upon an equitable interest in the real estate of the debtor.” This was followed in Dworak v. More, 25 Neb. 735; Shoemaker v. Harvey, 43 Neb. 75; First Nat. Bank v. Tighe. 49 Neb. 299; Omaha Coal, Coke & Lime Co. v. Suess, 54 Neb. 379, 387; Woolworth v. Parker, 57 Neb. 417; and may be considered as the settled doctrine of this court.

In Westervelt v. Hagge, 61 Neb. 647; Foley v. Doyle, 1 Neb. (Unof.) 643; First Nat. Bank v. Gibson, 60 Neb. 767, and State Bank v. Belk, 68 Neb. 517, there are certain expressions used in the opinions which might be taken to imply that a judgment is a lien upon land which has been conveyed to a third person with the intent to defraud creditors, and that it is the lien of the judgment which [37]*37is enforced by tbe bringing of tbe creditor’s suit. But upon a careful examination of the points that were actually decided in these cases, it will be found that, while the language of the opinions may imply that a judgment is such a lien, in no case were the former decisions overruled, and the action taken by the court in each of these cases was not inconsistent with the prior holdings.

It is not so much what a court says in the decision of a case as that which it actually does that should be considered in applying the principles of the case as a precedent. Courts often use language in an opinion responsive to an argument of counsel of which the reader of the opinion is not cognizant and thus general statements may be given undue weight. Williams v. Miles, 68 Neb. 479.

While it is said in First Nat. Bank v. Gibson, supra, “The judgment was a lien on the land, and the plaintiff had the undoubted right to make his lien effective,” still this, like the language used in State Bank v. Belk, and Foley v. Doyle, supra, which approve of the doctrine of Fusze v. Stern, 17 Ill. App. 429, means, as is said in that case, that the judgment is an equitable lien and that the recovery of a judgment which would in the absence of a fraudulent conveyance be a legal lien, is all that is necessary to prove in order to have the right to maintain the action.

We have considered at this length our former decisions since it would appear from the position taken by appellees that a misapprehension of our meaning has occurred.

The beginning of a creditor’s action gives a specific lien upon the property which it is sought to reach. The judgment is not a legal lien but the creditor’s action is in the nature of an equitable execution and when begun creates a specific lien. This lien continues while the cause is pending and until final determination. Since it is of the nature of an execution it tolls the statute of dormancy so far as the particular property sought to be reached is concerned, and hence the issuance of a general execution upon the judgment during the pendency of the creditor’s [38]*38action is not necessary to keep the-judgment alive so far as the specific property equitably levied upon by this suit is concerned. First Nat. Bank v. Gibson, 60 Neb. 767; Coulson v. Galtsman, 1 Neb. (Unof.) 502; Cincinnati v. Hafer, 49 Ohio St. 60.

We are cognizant of the fact that this doctrine is at variance with the position taken by the supreme court of Minnesota in Newell v. Dart, 28 Minn. 248, and later cases, and also with the holdings of the courts of North Dakota and South Dakota, but the provisions of the statutes of these states upon which the rule is based by their courts are not the same as those of our statute. The holding in these cases is that at the end of 10 years the judgment is void of vital force. ' In this state we have taken a different view as to dormant judgments; our statutes are not so broad and emphatic as to the inability to enforce a judgment after the time limited expires. We have held that a sale of real estate upon execution issued upon a dormant judgment could not be attacked collaterally after confirmation. Gillespie v. Switzer, 43 Neb. 772; Link v. Connell, 48 Neb. 574. A writ issued upon a dormant judgment is not void but voidable. Unless the bar of the statute is raised by motion or pleading it is waived. For these reasons we conclude that the decisions mentioned are not applicable in this state, and we decline to follow them.

~ At the trial appellant proved the rendition of the judgment, the issuance of an execution upon the same, and its return wholly unsatisfied; that the conveyances alleged to be fraudulent were executed in 1896 and 1897. It was also proved that the promissory note upon which the judgment was rendered was in the hands of an attorney for collection in July, 1896, before any of the conveyances were made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 N.W. 825, 72 Neb. 34, 117 Am. St. Rep. 771, 1904 Neb. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flint-v-chaloupka-neb-1904.