Mullikin ex rel. Union Bank v. Duvall

7 G. & J. 355
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 7 G. & J. 355 (Mullikin ex rel. Union Bank v. Duvall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mullikin ex rel. Union Bank v. Duvall, 7 G. & J. 355 (Md. 1835).

Opinion

Stephen, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant recovered a judgment in Anne Arundel county court against Lewis Duvall, which judgment on appeal to this court, was affirmed at June term, 1819. On the 15th of May, 1832, the plaintiff issued a scire facias on the judgment of affirmance against the heirs at law, and terretenants of Lewis Duvall, directed to Anne Arundel county, and another to Prince George^s county, to be served on the appellee, Gabriel Duvall, terre-tenant of said Lewis Duvall. To this scire facias he appeared and pleaded, nul tiel record, no seizin in Lewis Duvall, See. of any lands whereof he is tenant, and the statute of limitations. Upon the two first pleas, issues were joined in the progress of the cause, but as no question in relation to them, is to be considered or revised [357]*357by this court, we will pass them over without further notice. To the plea of the statute of limitations the plaintiff replied, that within twelve years after the rendition of the judgment in the court of appeals, a writ of fieri facias issued thereon, to wit: on the - day of February 1820, at the suit of the plaintiff against the goods &c. of the defendant in that judgment, that is to say, the said Lewis Duvall, returnable to the second Monday in June then next; that the sheriff at the return day of the writ, made return thereon, stating that he had laid the said execution upon a tract of land, which remained in his hands for want of bidders. To this replication, the defendant demurred generally; the plaintiff joined in demurrer, and the court below ruled the demurrer good. From this decision the present appeal is taken; and the question presented to this court is, whether under the facts stated in the plaintiff’s replication, the plea of limitations is a bar to the plaintiff’s recovery upon his scire facias, in this case.

That part of the. act of limitations which embraces the present case, is in the following words, no bill, bond, judgment, recognizance, statute merchant, or of the staple, or other speciality, whatsoever, except such as shall be taken in the name, or for the use of our sovereign lord the king, his heirs and successors, shall be good, and pleadable, or admitted in evidence, against any person, or persons of this province, after the principal debtor, and creditor have been both dead twelve years, or the debt or thing in action above twelve years standing.” It is upon the latter branch of this statutory bar that the present question arises; and was the debt, or thing in action created by, or arising from this judgment of more than twelve years standing, is the point now to be decided. If it was, the statute is mandatory, alid imperative in its terms, and opposes a positive bar to the recovery in this case. It is not denied, that more than twelve years had elapsed from the recovery of this judgment, before the scire facias issued in this case; but it is contended, that the act of limitations runs not from the time the [358]*358judgment took effect, and gave the plaintiff a right to enforce payment by process of execution, but from the time of the return of the execution. In sustaining this position, we do not think, that the counsel for the appellant has been successful. It is true, that a judgment may be kept alive, and in full legal operation, for an indefinite period of time, by the issuing an execution upon it within a year and a day, by the law of England, and within three years by the law of this State, and if such execution is not effective, by renewing it from term to term; but if it is not regularly continued and a scire facias to revive becomes necessary, by the lapse of a year and a day by the English law, and of three years by the law of this state, the term of limitation is to be computed, not from the return of the writ but from the judgment, or the time when the process of execution could legally issue thereon. In 2nd Tidd. Pr. 1154; it is said, “the reason why the plaintiff is put to his scire facias after the year is, because when he lies by so long, after judgment, it shall be presumed that he hath released the execution, and therefore the defendant shall not be disturbed without being called upon, and having an opportunity in court of pleading the release, or showing cause if he can, why the execution should not go.” In the same book, and same page it is said, “ the general rule however that the plaintiff cannot take out execution after the year, without a scire facias must be understood with the following restrictions — when a fieri facias, or capias ad satisfaciendum, is taken out within the year, and not executed, a new writ of execution may be sued out at any time afterwards, without a scire facias, provided the first writ be returned and filed, and continuances entered from the time of issuing it.” From the principle thus laid down by Tidd, it would seem to follow, that where there is a total suspension of final process upon the judgment, and no continuances are entered, if a year and a day elapse from the time of the judgment in England, or three years in this State, a scire facias becomes necessary to revive the judgment, before further process can be obtained upon it; so that [359]*359regular continuances in such case seem to be necessary to keep the judgment alive. To the same effect in 2nd Inst. 471 ; where it said, “ if the demandant or plaintiff taketh his process of execution within the year, though it be not served within the year, yet if he continue the same, he may have process of execution at any time after the year.” So in 6 Bac. Air. 107, title scire facias, it is said, “ if a fi. fa. be taken out within the year, and a nulla bona returned, and continued down several years, a capias ad satisfaciendum may issue without a scire facias; but it is otherwise, if no execution be returned by the sheriff to warrant the entry of continuances upon the roll.” After the year and a day the law presumes the judgment to be executed or satisfied, and therefore it is, that the plaintiff is put to his scire facias to revive the judgment, to which the defendant may appear, and plead in the same manner, as to an action founded upon an original writ; but where continuances are entered upon the roll, they operate as a continuing demand of the debt by the plaintiff, and seem to repel the legal presumption of satisfaction, which would otherwise arise from the lapse of time. The execution which is relied upon in this case as preventing the bar of limitations was returned to the June Term of the court of appeals in 1820, and the scire facias issued in May, 1832. More than eleven years had elapsed between the return of the execution, and the issuing of the scire facias. No continuances have been entered upon the record, nor has any step been taken during the whole of that period by the plaintiff to assert his claim. It is however contended, that twelve years not having elapsed from the return of the execution, the statute of limitations is no bar, because it only commenced to run from that time. After the best consideration, we have been able to bestow upon this subject, we cannot accord to .this proposition.

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Bluebook (online)
7 G. & J. 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullikin-ex-rel-union-bank-v-duvall-md-1835.