Hastings v. Bryant

3 N.E. 507, 115 Ill. 69
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 N.E. 507 (Hastings v. Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hastings v. Bryant, 3 N.E. 507, 115 Ill. 69 (Ill. 1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shops

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of ejectment, by appellant, against appellees, in the Morgan circuit court, to recover certain lots in the city of Jacksonville. Both parties claimed title through Alexander Edgmon, as common source. The title of appellant was based upon the following facts: On the 1st day of December, 1875, one Ann Becraft recovered a judgment in the circuit court of Morgan county, against Alexander Edgmon, on which execution issued within one year, and was returned by the sheriff unsatisfied. On the 13th day of November, 1882, alias execution issued thereon, and on the same day was levied on the property in controversy. The sheriff advertised the lots for sale on the 13th day of January, 1883, and on that day, under said execution, without the issuance of a ven&itioni exponas, sold the same to one Weathers, to whom a certificate of purchase was issued. Weathers afterwards assigned said certificate to appellant, and no redemption having been made from said sale, the sheriff, on the loth day of April, 1884,.executed and delivered to appellant a deed for said.lots. On the trial below, the court excluded said sheriff’s deed, which resulted in a finding for defendant. A motion for a new trial was overruled, and judgment rendered against appellant for costs. The appellant brings the case to this court by appeal.

; The title of appellees is not disclosed, further than that they claim through the common source, therefore the only question presented is, whether said deed was sufficient to convey the title of Edgmon, defendant in execution, to appellant. No objection is urged, nor is any apparent, to the validity .of the -judgment, or any of the proceedings under said execution, prior to the sale; but it is insisted that the sale is invalid .because the alias execution having been issued and levied within seven years from the rendition of the judgment, did not authorize a sale of the property after said seven years had elapsed, but should, have been returned.and a writ venditioni exponas issued, under which it is conceded a valid sale could have been made. The proper solution of this question will involve a construction of section 6, of chapter 77, of the Revised Statutes of 1874. It will aid in this to look at the prior statute, and ascertain the supposed defects therein attempted to be corrected by this section of the act of 1872, and what alteration in fact was made by the latter act.

■ The statute of 1845 provided that the judgment shall be a lien, etc., “from the last day of the term of the court at which it was rendered, for the period of seven years, provided that execution b§ issued at any time within one year on such judgment ; and after said seven years, the same shall cease to be a lien on any real estate, as against bona fide purchasers or subsequent incumbrancers, by mortgage, judgment or otherwise. ” Under this Statute it had been repeatedly held that a levy of an execution, whether in a foreign county or in the county where the- judgment-was .rendered, would not extend the judgment lien beyond the seven years, and that with the expiration of the lien of the judgment the execution and levy fell with it, and all subsequent proceeding thereunder, as to bona fide purchasers or incumbrancers, was void. (Tenney v. Hemenway, 53 Ill. 97.; Gridley v. Watson, id. 186; Ewing v. Ainsworth, id. 464; James v. Wortham, 88 id. 69; Scammon v. Swartwout, 35 id. 343; Conwell v. Watkins, 71 id. 492.) It was also'held, under that statute, that when the execution issued on the. judgment within one year after its rendition, although the lien of the judgment was lost at the end of seven years from its rendition, yet an alias execution could be issued •thereon, after the seven years had expired, at anytime within twenty years, and levied, upon any property the debtor might own, and a sale thereunder would be valid. Stripling v. Prettyman, 57 Ill. 371; Priest v. Wheelock, 58 id. 114.

- Section 1 of:the act of, 1872 provides that a judgment of a court of record shall be a lien, etc., “from the time the same is rendered or revived, for' a period of seven years, and no longer. ” The section then provides that if execution be not issued within a year, it shall cease to be a lien, etc.; but that portion of it is not material to be considered here. Section 6 of the act provides that no execution shall issue upon any •judgment after the expiration of seven years from the time the same becomes a lien, except upon revival of the same by scire facias, “but real- estate.levied upon within said seven ■years may be sold, upon a venditio rei exponas, at any time ,within one year ■after -the expiration .of said seven years.” By this section, if a levy was made within the seven years, the levy and execution no longer, as under the former law, -cease to have vitality, as against subsequent incumbrancers ■or purchasers, when the seven years expire, but one year is given in which to sell the property to satisfy, the execution; and the time within which the sale may be made, as against the judgment debtor, is limited to one year after the expiration of the seven years.

It will be seen, then, that the substantive thing sought to be attained by the latter clause of that section was the extension of the right, in all cases, to satisfy the judgment by sale of the property levied upon during the seven years, but remains unsold at its expiration, after the seven years had expired, and to limit the right to make such sale, in all cases, to one year after the expiration of said seven years. The real object to be attained was to so change the law that a limited time should be given after the period fixed by the statute for the lien of the judgment had elapsed, in which to dispose of the levy and satisfy the judgment by sale of the property levied upon, and thereby give a more just rule, and relieve from the supposed defects already pointed out in the prior law. To accomplish this purpose the legislature employed the language of the latter clause of section 6,—“but real estate levied upon within said seven years may be sold, upon a venditio rei exponas, at any time within one year, ” etc. The difficulty here arises solely from the words, “under a venditio rei ex-ponas, ” employed by the legislature, and it is contended that as it is by force of the statute alone that a judgment can be a lien upon lands, or that a sale of land on execution can be made, and that neither can receive any aid from the common law, to which they were unknown, the statute must be literally followed. It is true that the legislative will, as expressed in the act, must control, when it is ascertained according to the rules of construction. It is already seen that the object sought by this portion of the act was to give the right, in all cases where a levy had been made within the seven years, to sell the property levied upon to satisfy the debt for one year thereafter; but did the legislature intend, by the language employed, also to prescribe the particular mode in which it was to be made,—that is, to require that in all cages the sale should ■ be made under a venditioni exponas, and not otherwise ?

It is said by counsel, in argument, that this section of the statute is the first legislative recognition of the writ venditioni exponas in this State. However that may be, it had long been in use in this State as a common law writ, and this court, as early as the ease of Phillips v. Dana, 3 Scam. 551, and again in Bellingall v. Duncan, 3 Gilm.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.E. 507, 115 Ill. 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hastings-v-bryant-ill-1885.