Pugh v. Heating Plumbing Finance Corporation

161 P.2d 714, 49 N.M. 234
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1945
DocketNo. 4896.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 161 P.2d 714 (Pugh v. Heating Plumbing Finance Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pugh v. Heating Plumbing Finance Corporation, 161 P.2d 714, 49 N.M. 234 (N.M. 1945).

Opinion

BICKLEY, Justice.

The plaintiff, on the 13th of November,. 1942, sued to quiet her title to real estate against a purported judgment lien obtained against her and her former husband in favor of defendant. Defendant answered with certain denials and by way of new matter that on November 25, 1931 defendant obtained judgment against plaintiff and J. H. Bass, then husband and wife, in the district court of Chaves County; that said judgment was duly docketed and a transcript thereof filed in the office of the county clerk of said county on December 21, 1931; that the judgment and the judgment lien created thereby are owned by the ■defendant, and have been so owned since their rendition and creation; that no part thereof had been paid and that J. H. Bass left the State of New Mexico in 1932, and ■since said date has been a nonresident; that plaintiff and J. H. Bass were divorced ■on November 30, 1932; that plaintiff ac■quired part of the property here involved by virtue of the divorce decree and part by ■conveyance from said J. H. Bass. These .averments are sustained by the court’s findings.

By an amended counterclaim defendant repeated essential allegations of its affirmative answer and added thereto the following:

“7. That the plaintiff has acknowledged in writing the obligation due to Defendant ■as above set forth, and said Judgment and indebtedness is now a valid and subsisting •claim against the Plaintiff.”

The prayer of the counterclaim was for the foreclosure of the judgment lien.

The plaintiff answered the counterclaim, putting at issue the allegations thereof in which she admitted that she had not paid the judgment or any part thereof and denying that the same was justly due the defendant and specifically denying the allegations contained in paragraph 7 of defendant’s counterclaim heretofore quoted. Plaintiff replied to defendant’s answer by way of new matter that plaintiff had at all times since the rendition of the judgment been within the jurisdiction of the court .and that the defendant failed to show a revival of the judgment and that the same is barred by the statute of limitations.

It is not contended that the judgment or the lien founded thereon, which were more than eleven years old when this action was commenced, have ever been revived by court action or otherwise unless they have been revived by admission of plaintiff that the judgment is unpaid.

Plaintiff, answering under protest, interrogatories propounded to her, admitted that the judgment was unpaid. It is claimed also that her counsel, Mr. Watts, admitted in a letter to defendant, seeking a compromise, that the judgment is unpaid. Defendant also asserts that the absence of J. H. Bass from the state interrupted the running of the statute of limitations against actions founded on the judgment.

The case presents many interesting questions, some of which are of first impression, and which are affected to a degree, and arguendo at least, by statutes of recent origin. We think it may be of value, even at the expense of brevity, to call attention to these statutes, for what they may be worth, in answering the questions presented.

We assume that' this is a money judgment and therefore that a transcript of the docket thereof, duly filed in the office of the county clerk, was effectual to create a lien on the real estate of the judgment debtor. 1941 Comp. § 19-906. Defendant asserts that this statute, since it is silent as to the duration of the lien, such lien continues after the judgment upon which it is founded has lost its vitality beyond the reach of legal renovation.

We think appellant is mistaken. It is held in Browne & Manzanares Co. v. Chavez, 9 N.M. 316, 54 P. 234, affirmed in 181 U.S. 68, 21 S.Ct. 514, 45 L.Ed. 752, that a judgment barred by statute of limitations (1941 Comp. § 27-102) is dead. The specific holding was that the judgment barred by the statute of limitations of 7 years cannot be revived by scire facias. The holding in that case is not impaired by our decision in Baca v. Chavez, 32 N.M. 210, 252 P. 987.

A timely revivor of a judgment may have the effect to also continue the judgment lien, subject possibly to displacement as to priority by intervening liens or encumbrances. See Otero v. Dietz, 39 N.M. 1, 37 P.2d 1110. But when a judgment can no longer be enforced because of the 7 year statute of limitation, the lien has expired with the judgment.

Our research discloses that in other states there are a variety .of statutory provisions as to the respective duration of judgments and the liens based thereon. In some instances it is provided that the lien is of shorter duration than the judgment; sometimes it is the reverse. See Freeman on Judgments, 5th Ed. Sec. 1006. Mr. Freeman, after alluding to the variety of statutory provisions, says:

“If the statutes of the state have not provided any limit of the time in which judgment liens continue to operate, they will be held to be operative during the time in which the judgment creditor is entitled to take out execution for the purpose of enforcing his judgment.”

And Mr. Freeman says in the same section :

“A statute making an abstract of a Justice’s judgment filed in the district court, a lien ‘until the expiration of 6 years,’ when construed in connection with a statute limiting the life of Justice’s judgments to 6 years, is held to limit the lien to the period for the enforcement of the original judgment.”

This serves to aid us in keeping in mind the distinction between the judgment, and the judgment lien which is of statutory origin.

To the same effect is the text of 31 Am. Jur., Judgments, Sec. 359, where it is said:

“In the absence of a statutory provision to the contrary, the lien of a judgment continues as long as the right to the issuance of an execution, o^ the maintenance of an action or scire facias on the judgment is not barred.”

And see Lyon v. Cleveland, 170 Pa. 611, 33 A. 143, 30 L.R.A. 400, 50 Am.St.Rep. 782, where it is said:

“While the right of seizure lasted, the judgment was said to be a lien on the defendant’s real estate.

“When the right of seizure was lost by lapse of time, the judgment was said to have lost its lien.”

And in Lamon v. Gold, 72 W.Va. 618, 79 S.E. 728, 729, 51 L.R.A., N.S., 883, it was said:

“The creditor’s right to the lien of his judgment is gone forever when his right to sue out execution on the judgment or to revive it by scire facias is barred.”

And the Court of Civil Appeals of Texas said in Oakwood State Bank v. Durham, 21 S.W.2d 586, 589:

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

Related

RH Fund 28, LLC v. O'Niell
D. New Mexico, 2024
Autovest v. Agosto
2021 NMCA 053 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2021)
Cook v. Wilson
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2020
Bennett v. Bank of Eastern Oregon
Idaho Supreme Court, 2020
Ranchers State Bank of Belen v. Vega
653 P.2d 873 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1982)
WESTERN STATES COLLECTION COMPANY v. Shain
490 P.2d 461 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1971)
Brieger v. Brieger
421 P.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1966)
Curtis Manufacturing Company v. Barela
415 P.2d 361 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1966)
Tidwell v. Reeder
247 P.2d 860 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1952)
Scott v. United States
213 P.2d 216 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 P.2d 714, 49 N.M. 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pugh-v-heating-plumbing-finance-corporation-nm-1945.