Pitzer v. Russel

4 Or. 124
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 4 Or. 124 (Pitzer v. Russel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pitzer v. Russel, 4 Or. 124 (Or. 1871).

Opinion

By the Court,

Upton, J.:

The matters discussed on the argument may be resolved into these questions:

[126]*126First. Does an action lie, as a matter of course, upon a judgment rendered in this State as soon as the judgment is rendered ?

Second. Do the particular circumstances disclosed by the transcript in the case justify the plaintiff in suing upon the judgment? .

The respondent claims that the statutory mode of applying for leave to issue execution, and the provisions in relation to filing transcripts and docketing judgments, are intended as a substitute for all other proceedings in the nature of scire facias and for all actions upon domestic judgments. The appellant claims that a judgment creditor has a common law right to sue upon his judgment as soon as it is rendered, and it is expressly stated in two of the New York cases, cited by the appellant, that it is a common law right to sue upon a judgment as soon as the judgment is recovered. (Hale v. Angel, 20 John. 342; Smith v. Mumford, 9 Cow. 26.) The appellant also claims as a general rule that creating a new remedy for the redress of a private injury does not by implication abolish or take away any existing fight of action; and this must be admitted to be the general rule.

If the language used in pronouncing upon the two cases above cited is to be taken without any qualification and received as sound law, and if it is to be deemed expressive of what is sometimes denominated American common law, that is, the general rule of action now in force in this country, except where it is modified by statute, the appellant’s conclusion seems a logical and necessary deduction. What is claimed by the appellant amounts to this: That although the Legislature may have intended to provide a statutory mode of enforcing judgment sufficient to meet every contingency that may arise, yet the Legislature has not interdicted the common law right of action if such right existed. It therefore becomes necessary to determine whether the appellant really has the common law right which he claims, and whether the language of those cases correctly declares the common law.

The reports of those cases are not very full, but they in[127]*127dicate that counsel did not at all, in either case, discuss the question whether at common law the action lies as a matter of course as soon as the judgment is rendered; and it is impossible to determine from the reports of those cases how much consideration was given by the Court to the point, whether at common law the bare existence of the unsatisfied judgment w7as a sufficient ground for an action, or to say whether debt upon the judgment was there sustained as a matter of course upon grounds or reasons that still exist. An examination of later decisions in that State and of the rulings in other States, leads to the belief that the Court would not have held, upon full investigation, that a plaintiff could maintain debt upon a judgment in a case where he could have the full effect and benefit of his judgment without such action.

It is true that from very ancient times the action of debt on judgment has been recognized as proper, but like every other proceeding at common law, the action was based upon some sufficient reason arising out of the nature or necessities of the case. If it would be a proper construction of the language used in the cases of Hale v. Angel and Smith v. Mumford to treat those cases as holding that the common law sustained the action without any other reason or necessity, and solely to enable the creditor to coerce or intimidate the debtor by threatening him with accumulation of costs, it is believed' that that position is not sustained by any other case to which our attention has been called.

The cases of Ames v. Hoy (12 Cal. 11), and Stuart v. Lander (16 Cal. 374), each declare that the action would lie at common law, and that it is maintainable even though an execution might issue to enforce ’the judgment. Each of these opinions contains language capable of construction quite as favorable to the appellant as that of the case above cited. But in the first case the report shows that the record-book containing the judgment had been destroyed by fire, and in the second case that “the time in -which an execution could be issued had expired, and that there was no means of enforcing the judgment except by action.” If the records in the two cases first above-mentioned could be in[128]*128spected, it is possible similar reasons might be disclosed; and if so, the cases would be classified with those where the action is grounded upon .special reasons arising out of the necessity of the case, and would not support the applicant’s first position.

In most of the subsequent cases arising in the State of New York in which the subject of suing upon judgment is discussed, either the discussion relates to foreign judgments, or the disputed right involves the construction of a statute, or the right to sue is based on a ground of some necessity or of some substantial advantage to the creditor. . After an examination of many cases from the same State, we do not find the idea reiterated that at common law an action would lie where no necessity exists, if in fact it ought to be considered as affirmed in these cases. On the contrary, in most of the subsequent cases cited from the State of New York, the proceeding is either based upon a statute, or some special reason appears why the plaintiff cannot otherwise have the full effect of his judgment. In some cases, the plaintiff being an executor, is compelled by statute to sue in order to have the benefit of the former judgment; in others, the new complaint is in the nature of a creditor’s bill; in others, it was necessary to try some issue in regard to the validity of the original judgment. (Cameron v. Fowler, 5 Hill, 306; Burwell v. Jackson, 5 Seld. 535; Dobson v. Pearce, 2 Kern. 156.)

This class of actions had frequently been the subject of legislation in that State prior to 1851; at which time it was provided by statute that leave should be obtained from the Court before bringing an action upon a judgment between the same parties. In regard to that provision, Justice Eoosevelt remarked in Burrough v. Hull, “It was enacted to prevent the evil of accumulating costs by piling judgment upon judgment.’” And he adds: “The ordinary and, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, the proper mode of collecting a debt which is already in judgment is by issuing an execution.” When, however, circumstances have occurred since the judgment was rendered, such, for [129]*129example, as a discharge in bankruptcy, or a release by act of the creditor, or a constructive payment, about the truth or effect of which circumstances a dispute exists, a formal action to try the newly arisen issues would not only be proper, but some proceeding of the kind may be necessary.

Por such reasons, actions upon-judgments continue to be brought; and there is no doubt they have been permitted, from the earliest times of which we have knowledge, for other equally valid reasons. Our statutory proceedings in the nature of scire facias (Civ.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Board of Ed. of City Drumright v. Bd. Cty.
1935 OK 379 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Hetfield v. United States
78 Ct. Cl. 419 (Court of Claims, 1933)
McDonald v. Ayres
242 S.W. 192 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1922)
Cleveland & Pittsburg Railroad v. Devine
15 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 56 (Columbiana County Probate Court, 1913)
Bowman v. Holman
99 P. 424 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1909)
Citizens' National Bank v. Lucas
56 L.R.A. 812 (Washington Supreme Court, 1901)
Stevens v. Stone
60 S.W. 959 (Texas Supreme Court, 1901)
Haupt v. Burton
55 P. 110 (Montana Supreme Court, 1898)
Bettman v. Cowley
40 L.R.A. 815 (Washington Supreme Court, 1898)
Hubermann v. Evans
65 N.W. 1045 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1896)
Knapp v. Knapp
59 F. 641 (D. Alaska, 1893)
Solen v. Virginia & Truckee Railroad
15 Nev. 313 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1880)
Newcomb's Lessee v. Smith
1 Wright 208 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1833)
Longworth v. Goforth
1 Wright 192 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1833)
Campbell v. English
1 Wright 119 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1832)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Or. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pitzer-v-russel-or-1871.