Scott v. Allen

1 Tex. 508
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1 Tex. 508 (Scott v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Allen, 1 Tex. 508 (Tex. 1846).

Opinion

Lipscomb, J.

It has been contended by the appellee, that only one question is brought up for revision in this case, and that is, whether the execution should be quashed or not; that the question as to the levy and return is not presented; that the record of the judgment uses the word motion, and by strict grammatical construction, it could embrace but one motion; and that it would be left uncertain, as to which of the two motions were intended to be operated on, but then, they both appear to have been before the court and the bill of exceptions shows that they were both overruled. The only construction we can give the judgment and give to it any effect is to make it embrace both motions. There is certainly a manifest distinction between quashing an execution and annulling or setting aside the leyy and return thereon; for the power of the court may well be questioned to [(362)]*(362)quash an execution after it has been into court, and performed its office, and had become functus officio; hut the levy and return would still be in a condition to be acted on by the court. Sometimes from a want of precision they seem to be used as convertible terms, such as the execution ought to be quashed, when the levy and return is intended. They are, however, both before us, and the first in order is the motion to quash the execution. We might dispose of this by a reference to the case of Toler & Crosby v. Ayres, decided at this term, that an execution cannot be quashed after it has performed its functions and been returned. The ground of the motion, however, may receive a passing notice. It is alleged that it was improperly issued. If so, the appropriate remedy would have been by a supersedeas, applied for in proper form, before it had performed its office. We shall, however, in the course of our investigation, return again to this execution in discussing the circumstances under which it issued, and its sufficiency to support the levy and return. There is nothing in the second ground assigned for quashing the execution, but as it is again presented in the second motion, we will dispose of it now. It is alleged that ,the clerk had not taken the oath prescribed by the constitution at the time he issued the execution. This is true, nor was he required by the constitution to have taken it at that time. The constitution only required the officers appointed or elected under it to take those oaths. In this instance the clerk was acting under the laws of the republic, and had been duly elected according to those laws; and by the terms of the state constitution, he was qualified to continue the discharge of the duties of his office until superseded under the new organization under the state constitution, and the organization did not take place until sometime after the official act complained of. We now come to the motion to quash the levy and return made on the execution.- In reviewing the judgment of the court below in refusing to quash the levy and the return made by the sheriff, we do consider ourselves in anywise restricted to the grounds assigned by the counsel in the court below, why his motion ought to have been granted. We shall confine ourselves to the motion, bu1¿ not to his particular reasons. If he has offered an insufficient reason when there are others good in principle and law, the bad reason will be rejected and the law must prevail without regard to other matters that may have been erroneously thought available.

On a motion to quash, annul or set aside a levy made on the return on the execution, we may look to the execution and see if it carries on its face sufficient warrant for such levy and return. We may look back to the judgment, not for the purpose of reversing or of reform[(363)]*(363)ing it, but to ascertain if it affords authority for the issuance of the execution on which the levy and return were made. We may look likewise at the different executions that have been issued for the purpose of determining if by the law such levy and return can be sustained. The execution by which the levy was made and on which- the return was made, that the motion sought to quash issued from the clerk’s office of the county of Bowie on the 4th day of IVIay, 1846. It has the appearance from the beginning to the attestation of the clerk of an original fieri facias execution. In no single partieu-. lar is it different from the one that ought to have been the first issued' on the judgment, and the judgment to which it refers was rendered on the 15th day of October, 1844.

By the common law, if no execution was sued out within a year and a day from the judgment, none could be taken out at all, and the plaintiff was compelled to commence a new suit on his judgment and obtain another judgment before he could have execution. This was altered by the statute of Westminster, and the writ of scire facias was given to revive the judgment. The common law was introduced into Texas by the act of congress, approved 20th January, 1840. At the date of the passage of this act, there was no law in force in this country that contravened the common law rule as to the time in which an execution could issue on a judgment, and consequently the common law from that time governed, until altered or modified by statute. The only modification seems to be by the act known as the limitation law, approved 5th February, 1841, by which, if no execution has issued on the judgment within the year from the rendering of the judgment, such judgment may be revived by scire facias or action of debt brought on it, at any time within ten years. If this was the original execution, it was sued out too late and was void, and consequently the levy and return were a nullity. If an execution had been sued out within a year by the common law, it could have been continued to an indefinite term by the issuance of other executions, but these were distinguished as an alias and yyl/uHes, and then by number. The face of the execution showed whether it was the first or not. That this was the common law practice, a reference to any book of forms will show. The mandate in the body of the process of an alias, being the first after the return of the.original, is “you are commanded as yo%i have been before.” To those that succeed, the mandate is, “ you, are commanded as you have been often before.” To test the execution on which the levy and return under consideration were made by these rules, it is subject to two objections: That from its date it is inoperative and void and cannot sustain the [(364)]*(364)levy; because, if it is an original, it was issued after the expiration of a year from the rendition of the judgment on which it was founded. And secondly, if not an original, it does not show on its face that others had preceded it. There was, however, evidence before the court that this was the fourth execution that had been sued out on the judgment, and it may be contended that it was a mere clerical misprision (the omission to show on the face of these executions their different degrees), for which the plaintiff ought not to suffer any detriment or loss; and how far our liberal statute of amendments will have aided these defects is not presented, as no effort was made to amend. And it may be further urged that as all the executions were before the court, there was sufficient evidence to take the execution last issued from the influence of the limitation of a year from the rendition of the judgment; and if no rights were affected and it was only a question of lien to be kept up by a continuity of executions, we should incline to yield to its influence, although it would be passing over a great irregularity.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tex. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-allen-tex-1846.