Jackson v. Heiskell

1 Va. 257, 1 Leigh 257
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMay 15, 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1 Va. 257 (Jackson v. Heiskell) 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
Jackson v. Heiskell, 1 Va. 257, 1 Leigh 257 (Va. 1829).

Opinions

Carr, J.

Though several questions were raised and discussed, in the argument of this cause, there is but one which seems to me worthy of consideration by the court. That is a question wholly new, and very important. I sincerely wish, therefore, that it had been heard by a full court. It was said at the bar, that there is another case in court involving the same point: and, so far as I am concerned, I shall be perfectly willing, when that shall come before us, to hear the point again argued.

The question arises upon the 10th section of the statute concerning executions; a provision first introduced at tire revisal of 1819. As the law stood, up to that date, when a debtor charged in execution died, the party at whose suit he was so charged, might sue out new execution against his lands and goods : but such new execution could not be taken [273]*273against, any lands, tenements or hereditaments, which the person dying in execution, should, at any time after the judgment or judgments on which he was so charged, have sold bond fide for the payment of any of his creditors, at whose suit he should have been in execution, and the money paid, or secured to be paid, to any such creditors with thenprivity, in discharge of his or their debts, or some part thereof. These provisions of the former law were retained at the revisal, and form the 8th and 9th sections of the revised act. And then follows the new section.

In the case before us, Heiskell had a ca. sa. levied on Thompson: and while he was in execution upon it, the commonwealth obtained judgment against him, took out a fi. fa. and under it sold his tenement in Clarksburg to the defendant Jackson. Thompson afterwards stvore out. And the question arising under this new provision of the law, is, whether the lien of Heiskell’s ca. sa. do not overreach the sale of the commonwealth and the title of Jackson ?

If we take the literal meaning of the words, it would seem to decide the question at once : for they say that the ca. sa. shall bind the estate of the debtor, from the time of the levy; and here the levy was before the judgment of the commonwealth, and the ca. sa. in full force, when the sale took place. It was strongly contended, however, at the bar, that this would be giving the law a meaning much too large, and going far beyond the mischief intended to be cured. That mischief was said to be this, that a debtor in jail might give preference to some ca. sa. creditors over others; and the object of this clause was to take away such power, and give the ca. sa. creditors priority according to the levy of their executions. If a judge might be permitted the expression, I should say, I wish this were the true construction : for, it seems to me, that there is a harshness in the other, not in harmony with the general humanity of the law. It seems to hold out an invitation to creditors to take the bodies of their debtors. But such considerations can have no weight with the judge, where the -words of the lawr are [274]*274plain, and the meaning clear : and to me it seems that they are so here. The " ca. sa. shall bind the real estate from the time it shall be leviedbind the real estate, how ? not sub modo, but without exception. I can only understand it to mean, that from the moment the ca. sa. is levied, there is a lien which attaches to the real estate, and which, when the state of things happens that shall give it activity, will overreach every subsequent lien, incumbrance or sale. A creditor gets his judgment and levies his ca. sa. So long as the debtor chooses to remain in execution, the lien is dormant. When he swears out, it is wakened into life and activity, and vests in the sheriff a right to recover for the creditors (each in his turn) all land, to which the debtor had title on the date of the levy. But it looks not beyond the levy. If A. and B. have judgments, A’s being prior, and B. levies a ca. sa. and then A. taires an elegit, he can never be disturbed by the lien of B’s ca. sa. because his judgment was before it.

It was said this construction changes wholly the nature and effects of the ca. sa. And this is most true. But the legislature had the right to do this; and its words are so plain, that I am compelled to believe it meant to do it. If inconveniences are found to follow, the same hand which gave the wound, must administer the cure.

Green, J.

Of the various objections taken to this decree, only one requires serious examination; that which presents the question, Whether a ca. sa. executed, and the discharge of the debtor afterwards under the act for the relief of insolvent debtors, so binds the debtor’s lands, as to give the creditor a right to satisfaction out of diem, against a purchaser of the same lands, before the discharge of the debtor, under a writ of fieri facias upon a judgment of the commonwealth, obtained after the service of the ca. sa. ?

This depends upon the true construction of our act of 1819, declaring that all executions of ca. sa. shall bind the defendant’s real estate, from the time when they shall be [275]*275levied; a provision extended to personal property by an act of 1820-21. These provisions seem, at first, view, very odd, and almost unintelligible. Before they were enacted, a ca. sa. whether executed or not, neither bound nor in any way affected tire debtor’s property, real or personal: and these new enactments provide no moans, by which to render the binding force given to a ca. sa. executed, available to the creditor. Wc can readily understand, how a judgment binds a moiety of the debtor’s land; because it may be taken by elegit: how a fieri facias bound the debtor’s goods, from its date at the common law, and from its delivery to the sheriff by statute; because they might be taken under it, notwithstanding an alienation after the date in the one case, and after the delivery of the writ to the sheriff in the other: and how a writ of warranlia charlas, or a writ against an heir upon the obligation of his ancestor, binds all the lands of the defendant in the one case, and all the assets descended in the other, from their dates; because upon the judgments in such suits, the land itself may be taken. But there is some difficulty in comprehending how any proceeding, under which no property' can be taken, without the assent of the. debtor, can bind it, or in what way, or to what purpose or extent. Yet these provisions certainly meant to give some now capacity to the ca. sa. when executed; and it is our duty, to inquire into the true object, of the law, and to carry it into effect by the means intended, if that can he ascertained, or otherwise, by means most convenient and conformable to the general spirit, of our legislation. To this end, an attention to the state of the law, when these provisions were introduced, is necessary.

Before the statute of 21 Jac. 1. ch. 24. after a ca. sa. executed, the creditorkliad no further remedy upon his judgment, even if the debtor died in execution, except perhaps in tlie case of an escape. That statute authorized the creditor, in case the debtor died in execution, to resort to new executions against the debtor’s lands and goods, as if ho had never been taken in execution, with a proviso ex-[276]*276empling all lands,

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Bluebook (online)
1 Va. 257, 1 Leigh 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-heiskell-va-1829.