Myers v. Hewitt

16 Ohio St. 499
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Ohio St. 499 (Myers v. Hewitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myers v. Hewitt, 16 Ohio St. 499 (Ohio 1847).

Opinion

Read, J.

Persons having liens upon land, not being made parties to the proceeding, will not be affected by a decree subjecting such land to salo. The lien of a judgment under the statute subsists and continues for the period of five years. The sale taking place under a decree junior to the judgment, and the judgment creditors not having been made parties to the proceedings under which the decree was rendered, and the judgment liens being still in life, the purchaser would take subject to such judgment liens, unless the decree would protect him, either from having acquired superiority to the judgment by having been rendered a year after the judgment without levy, and a levy within the year or a prior levy to the ^judgment alter the year, or because the decree was subjecting the land to the satisfaction of a lien older and superior to that of the judgment. In this case the levy under the judgment was not had until after the sale under the decree. It might bo contended that the complainants had a complete remedy at law, and that a bill in chancery could not be sustained. A judgment lien is a statutory provision, and holds all the lands of the judgment debtor subject to execution, for the satisfaction of tbo [379]*379debt during its subsistence. An execution at law will not reach an equity. The effect of a judgment lien is to prevent a judgment debtor from divesting himself of the legal estate during the subsistence of the judgment, and thereby placing it beyond tho reach of execution at law. But although a judgment lien is a statutory and legal right designed to aid and secure the execution of a judgment at law, and has no independent existence apart from the process of execution, and in and of itself is unknown to equity, yet if other parties should attempt to impede its operation, equity would lend its aid to remove such impediment, and might exert its power to secure its satisfaction in some other mode than subjecting the'specific land, if that end could be accomplished, and it was necessary to protect the rights of others. Thus it is a familiar instance to levy upon lands which have been conveyed to hinder and defraud creditors, and then to file a bill to remove the cloud which tho fraudulent conveyance has cast upon the title, and which might prevent a sale, or the party may proceed and sell and litigate tho validity of the fraudulent conveyance upon a question of title in an action at law. In the present case the purchaser holds under a judicial sale, and has paid his money which has boon brought into court, but the judgment creditors not having been made parties to the proceeding in chancery, and having a subsisting judgment lien, the land is still liable to execution and sale at law to satisfy the judgment, but the judicial salo has cast a cloud upon the title which equity may remove. But all the parties being before the court, and the funds arising from the *sale of the lands being still under tho control of the court, to satisfy a mortgage lion which is inferior to the judgment lien, as is claimed by the bill, the appropriate remedy is to direct that the money shall bo appropriated to discharge the elder lion, and in this manner protect the purchaser. A bill filed on the part of a purchaser of land to direct that the fund thus paid into court should be applied to the discharge of elder liens entitled-to satisfaction out of the land, would be entertained upon ordinary and familiar principles of equity.

But the principal question in this case grows ont of the liens which are given to judgments and decrees under the statute.

It is admitted that the judgment lien is elder and superior to that of the mortgage, and must prevail, unless the iaet that there was no levy under the judgment within the year from the time [380]*380that it attached, and that a decree was had upon the mortgage after such year, and sale made within the year, gives to the decree a superiority over the judgment.

The statute provides that when there is a senior judgment and no levy within the year, and a junior judgment and levy'within the year, that the junior judgment shall hold against the senior judgment; and further it is provided that a decree in chancery shall have the same force and effect as a judgment at law. It is claimed, therefore, that this lien of the decree is superior to that of the judgment. If such be the case, a junior mortgago, if reduced to decree, might by virtue of the statute, under such circumstances, prevail against a senior judgment. It is claimed that the mortgage is merged in the decree, and that the decree has the force and effect of a judgment at law. If this were so, a judgment junior to a mortgage might oftentimes, by neglect of levy, cut off the mortgage. The object of a foreclosure is to enforce a lion; and the decree will not merge it so as to hazard its existence. This distinction must be observed between liens created by the acts of the parties, the liens of judgments, and decrees under the statute. The statutory liens are nothing but incidents and aids to the execution of judgments and decrees, *theyare designed merely to hold the property of the debtor within the reach of the execution, not to create, destroy, or impair independent rights to property. Strangers to a suit are not affected by their operation. But to hold that decrees to enforce specific liens, or to subject property to which such liens attached for their satisfaction, merged such liens, and that the property was only alter their rendition held by virtue of the liens of the decrees under the statute, would be to expose such liens to the risk of being lost by the very means employed to carry them into specific execution. The liens of judgments and decrees are given by statute, and exist, and are lost according to its provisions. The lion of a mortgago is the result of a contract of the parties, a right secured against all the world, and which can only be discharged by satisfaction or consent of the mortgagee. The general statute lien only attaches to the extent of the rights of the debtor, subject to the same restrictions, limitations, and incumbrances. The general statute lien is thus always subject to the specific lien. Hence the specific lien being superior to the general statute lien, will not be merged in it. A superior right is never merged in an inferior one; the whole doctrine of merger [381]*381proceeds upon the principle of a superior right covering and swallowing up an inferior right, and that keeping those rights separate when they unite in the same person, to the same thing, would be useless. The doctrine of merger never applies when it would work an injury to the owner, or where his interest requires that these rights should have a separate existence. It is perfectly clear, then, there is no merger.

But it is contended that the decree finding the money due under the mortgage, and a decree that it shall be paid, or the mortgaged property shall be sold to satisfy it, gives a general lien under the statute, which, if carried into levy and execution within the year, will prevail against a senior judgment, when execution had not been levied within the year, so as to give superiority to a mortgage junior to the judgment. The mortgage attached to land which was ^subject to the judgment lien ; if the mortgagee, when he filed his bill, had made the judgment lienholder a party, the decree would have directed the land to be sold and the proceeds to be distributed according to priority of lien, which would have first satisfied the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ohio St. 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-hewitt-ohio-1847.