Jordan v. Bradshaw

17 Ark. 106
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 17 Ark. 106 (Jordan v. Bradshaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. Bradshaw, 17 Ark. 106 (Ark. 1856).

Opinion

I-Ion. TiioMas J oirNSON, Special J udge,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The first assignment of errors questions the propriety of the decision of the court below, in requiring the plaintiff to produce the judgment and execution, under which the land in controversy was sold, before he could read the sheriff’s deed in evidence. The 60th section of chapter 67, of the Digest, provides that “ The officer wlio shall sell any real estate, or lease of lands for more than three years, shall make the purchaser a deed, to be paid for by the purchaser, reciting the names of the parties to the execution, the date when issued, the date of the judgment, order or decree and other particulars recited in the execution; also, a description of the time, place and manner of'sale, which recital shall be received in evidence of the facts therein stated.” There can be no question but that the sheriff’s deed is evidence of the facts recited in it; for the statute is plain and positive upon the subject, and if the deed shall have recited all the facts required by the statute to constitute a complete transfer of all the right, title and interest, which the debtor had in and to the property sold, it is equally clear, that it should have been received as evidence of its recitals, and that too, without the introduction of the judgment and execution upon which it was founded. This court, in the case of Newton vs. The State Bank, 14 Ark. Rep. 10, said: “The act of the Legislature which requires the sheriff to recite the names of the parties, the date of the writ and of the judgment, together with a description of the time, place and manner of the sale, and which makes such recitals evidence of the facts so recited, was intended by the Legislature to supercede the necessity for producing the record from which such recitals were made as a matter of convenience and to furnish evidence of the authority under which the officer acted, as well as the manner in which he had executed his authority, in the deed itself. Not that the recitals should be conclusive evidence of the facts recited; for that would exclude all inquiry into the authority under which the sheriff acted; but that it should be legal, competent evidence until falsified by evidence of a higher and more authentic character. The statute requires the deed to recite the names of the parties to the execution, the date when issued, the date of the judgment, order or decree, and other particulars recited in the execution, and, also, a description of the time, place, and manner of the sale.” The deed‘exhibited in this case falls short of the requirements of the law, and that too in an essential particular; and, consequently, could not, of itself, and unsupported by other proof, have made such a case as would have entitled the plaintiff to recover. The deed is wholly silent as to the judgment; and, consequently, can furnish no evidence even of its existence, and much less of its date and filing in the Circuit Court. Without the provision of law already referred to, there can be no doubt of the necessity of laying a foundation for the introduction of the sheriff’s deed by first producing the judgment or execution upon which it is founded; and, as a necessary consequence, the deed, to supersede the necessity of such a foundation, must show a full compliance with the statute. The Circuit Court, therefore, did not orr in requiring the plaintiff in this case, to produce the judgment and execution before he could be permitted to read the deed in evidence. The plaintiff!, in obedience to the order of the court, read in evidence the docket entry in respect of the transcript of the justice’s judgment, the transcript of said judgment itself; and,, also, the original execution issued to the sheriff of Pulaski county upon said transcript, and under which the plaintiff purchased the property in dispute, and also the deed from, the sheriff to the plaintiff for said property. The defendants then moved to exclude each of the documents as evidence. The motion to exclude the transcript of the judgment of the justice was put upon the ground, that said judgment was dead before the transcript thereof was filed in the clerk’s office, as it did not appear from said transcript that an execution had been issued thereon within a year and a day from the time of its rendition ; also, upon the ground that the judgment was void, and further, that tlie plaintiff had failed to show that an execution had issued on said judgment by the justice, and had been returned “no property found,” before the transcript was filed in the clerk’s office, and execution issued thereon by the clerk, which the defendant’s counsel contended could only be shown by a transcript of such execution and return, or by producing the original; and thereupon, the court announced that inasmuch as said transcript of the justice did not embrace a transcript of such execution and return, he would sustain said motion, unless the plaintiff would produce and read in evidence such original execution and return thereon, or a certified copy thereof. The plaintiff having failed to produce either the original execution and return, or a certified copy thereof, the court excluded the transcript of the justice’s judgment filed in the clerk’s office, and the execution issued by the clerk, and the return of the sheriff thereon, and also the said deed executed by the sheriff to the plaintiff for the land in question. The first ground of the motion to exclude, ivas clearly untenable. It was not necessary under the law, that an execution should have been issued within a year and a day in order to keep the judgment alive, as the lapse of that period of time did not even raise a presumption of payment. This court in the case of Hanly vs. Carneal, 14 Ark. Rep. 527, said, that “by the Revised Statutes -of 1839, Title, LimitatioN, see. 30, judgments and decrees thereafter rendered, are presumed to be paid and satisfied, after the expiration of ten years from their rendition, and by the act of December, 1844, repealing the 30th section referred to, the like period was adopted as a limitation of actions upon judgments. It is manifest that under our statute of limitations, fixing the period often years, as the life time of a judgment no conclusive presumption in law of payment can arise within that space of time, and that consequently there can be no necessity to issue executions from time to time to keep it alive. True it is, that the judgment of a justice of the peace is not a lien, per se, upon the property of the defendant, before it is- filed in the Circuit Court: and, in that respect differs from that of the Circuit

Court, yet, inasmuch as no presumption of payment can arise from an omission to issue execution within a year and a clay, we can see no good reason for taking a distinction between them in regard to the necessity of taking steps to keep them in life. "We consider this the inevitable result of the doctrine laid down by this Court, in the case of Hanly vs. Carneal, already referred to. There is nothing appearing to show that the judgment is void, as contended by the defendants. The amount was within the jurisdiction of the justice, and the record shows upon its face that the justice had jurisdiction of the person of the defendant, as it purports to be by confession. The third and last reason assigned why the transcript of the justice’s judgment ought to be excluded, was also badly taken.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ark. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-bradshaw-ark-1856.