McDonald v. . Dickson

85 N.C. 248
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 85 N.C. 248 (McDonald v. . Dickson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. . Dickson, 85 N.C. 248 (N.C. 1881).

Opinion

Ruffin, J.

This was a motion for leave to issue execution-under section 256 of the code.

The judgment was obtained and docketed on the 31st of October, 1870. On the 9th May, 1871, a partial payment *249 was made thereon, and on the same day the judgment was assigned by the plaintiffs of record to the present plaintiff. Execution issued in 1875, but was returned unsatisfied. Two of the defendants in the judgment have been insolvent from the time it was rendered, and are so still. The defendant, Dickson, was so until recently when he came into possession of both real and personal property.

Notice of the motion was given 30th April, 1881, and during its pendency the plaintiff has brought an independent action on his judgment. The defendant pleads the statute of limitations, and the pendency of the new action as a waiver of the right to have execution under the judgment.

First, as to this last ground of defence : A party may have execution on his judgment, and at the same time prosecute an action on it under the leave of the court. It is so said in Freeman on judgments, § 440, and was so decided by this court, under the old system in the case of Carter v. Colman, 12 Ired. 274, and there is no change in this particular worked by the Code, which simply substitutes the discretion of the court, for the will of the plaintiff in determining when a new action on a judgment may be brought. It is easy to see that very many times it may be absolutely essential to the rights of a judgment creditor, that he should be allowed the contemporaneous use of both remedies; and this more frequently perhaps under the new than under the old system, and the defendant can never be needlessly oppressed as he may always relieve himself if he will by paying the debt.

. Two other preliminary questions may as well be disposed of at once, viz : whether the defence of the statute of limitations can be set up at all in a proceeding like this? and if so, then which statute governs the case, the Code of Civil Procedure, or the Revised Code ?

We think there can be little doubt as to either point. Rendered as the plaintiff’s judgment was in 1870, (though *250 upon a debt contracted before 1868), it must be subject to the provisions of the Code whenever it becomes itself a causa litis.

This proceeding by motion for leave to issue execution after a lapse of three years is in lieu of and a substitute for the ancient writ of scire facias, and it must be treated as such, and the same protection extended to parties thereunder as was done under the use of that writ. And while a scire facias for the purpose of reviving a dormant judgment was in the main regarded as a continuation of the old action merely, it was for some purposes a new action. Binford v. Alston, 4 Dev. 351. Its very object was to warn the defendant and furnish him the opportunity to plead any thing that could avail as a bar to the execution. In doing this, he was, of course, restricted to such defences as had supervened the rendition of the judgment, being estopped thereby as to all matters of defence against the original cause of action existing.anterior to judgment. But, with this single restriction he was permitted to make any defence legally sufficient, and to énable him to do so, or rather indeed because he could do so, the proceeding was treated as being in the nature of a neto action. “ As a proceeding to revive a judgment,” says Foster in his treatise on the writ of scire facias, “ it is a judicial writ to continue the effect of, and have execution of the former judgment, yet it is in the nature of an action, because the defendant may plead any thing in bar of the executionand express mention is made by the author of the statute of limitations as constituting one of the defences which might be set up.

This brings us to the graver question as to the effect of the limitation prescribed in the Code upon the plaintiff’s judgment and his right to have execution thereunder. Very much of the difficulty which surrounds the question comes from an effort to construe the provisions of our Code by the light of decisions made by the courts of other states, with *251 reference to their codes or statutes on the subject, when in fact their provisions are' variant, and oftentimes incom-patibie with ours. Compare our code for instance with that of the state of New York, and it is hardly possible to conceive of greater differences than exist between the two, with reference to this very matter of the effect of the lapse of time upon a judgment and its lien upon lands. That code, after declaring that a judgment docketed shall be a lien on the lands of the defendant for ten years, expressly provides that after that period the lien shall cease only as against in-cumbrances and bona fide purchasers. Again it provides, that after the expiration of ten years, the lands of the judgment debtor, or of any one claiming- under him as heir, may be levied upon by virtue of an execution under the judgment and sold, and the time fixed when an action on & judgment shall be barred is twenty years.

We have referred to the Code of that state, because it has been said that ours was mainly taken from it, and might therefore be supposed more nearly to resemble it than any other, and yet so marked are the discrepancies as to make it plain, that we can derive but little aid from the decisions of the courts there, in regard to the point in hand, and indeed so far as we have been able to investigate, ours is the only Code which fixes the current period of ten years as that which terminates the lien of a judgment and operates as a bar toa new action upon it.

That such is the effect of our Code, we can entertain no doubt, as its language is explicit as to both matters ; a judgment docketed shall “ be a lien on the real property in the county for ten years from the time of docketing the same,” and an action on “a judgment or decree of any court of the United States, or of any state or territory thereof ” must be commenced within ten years, or else be barred.

We can give no heed to the argument of counsel that under the maxim nosdtuv a sociis the words “-any st.ite” just *252 quoted from the 31st section of our Code must be taken to mean the judgment of a court of .some state other than our own, for we find the same form of words used in the Codes of several of the states, and everywhere they have been construed as applicable to the courts of their own states.

But with us it could make no material difference which construction should be given to that particular section, since by another of our Code, every action for relief not specially provided for must be commenced within the same period of ten years after the cause of action shall have accrued. C. O. P., §37. And a cause of action on a judgment has been uniformly held to have accrued from the day of its rendition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 N.C. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-dickson-nc-1881.