Shourds v. Allison

5 Ohio N.P. 54
CourtHuron County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedSeptember 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 54 (Shourds v. Allison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Huron County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shourds v. Allison, 5 Ohio N.P. 54 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

WILDMAN, J.

In this case, a question of statutory construction is raised, which is a matter of surprise to find unanswered by any express adjudication. After the lapse of nearly a century since the organization of our state, it might not unreasonably be supposed that courts would have unequivocally determined as to just what is the date of a judgment.

That lands of the debtor, within the county where the judgment is entered, are, except in certain specified cases, bound from the first day of the term at which judgment is rendered, is expressly provided by the statute (Rev. Stat., 5375); but it is contended that the period of five years within which execution must be sued out to prevent dormancy, does not begin to run until the date of the actual entry of the judgment on the court’s journal.

By the terms of the dormancy statute, (Rev. Stat., 5380), it is provided that “if execution * * * * be not sued out within five years from “the date of the judgment, * * * such judgment shall become dormant and shall cease to operate as a lien, ” etc.

The question presented, then, is, — what is the precise significance of the phrase, “date of the judgment,-” as used in the section last quoted?

The question becomes important in view of the facts presented in t'his case. The suit is brought to quiet plaintiff’s title to certain lands in this county, described in the petition. The defendant, Augusta Allison, is a judgment creditor whose judgment was rendered at the May term of this court, 1890. The term began on the 12th day of May, 1890, and the plaintiff’s action was then pending,but the judgment was not in fact entered until the 29th day of the same month. On the 24th day of May, 1895, when more than five years had elapsed from the first date mentioned, but less than five years from the entry of the judgment, an execution was issued and levied. Meanwhile, to-wit, on or about the 5th day cf February, ' 1894, while said judgment was in full force, the plaintiff purchased the property from a grantee of the judgment debtor.

Other questions are raised in the pleadings and on the trial, but the sole question which it is now my purpose to determine is that already stated, whether or not the judgment became dormant and ceased to operate as a lien upon the land, by reason of the fact that execution was not sued out within five years from the first day of the term at which the judgment as rendered.

If it did so cease to operate, the subsequent levy of an execution as invalid, and the plaintiff’s title should be quieted. If-on the other hand, the statutory' period within which execution should issue to preserve the judgment from dormancy and the lien from destruction did not expire until five years from the actual entry of the judgment, the other issues in the case remain for later consideration.

The question presented is one which, it might be supposed, would have arisen very early in the courts; but a somewhat careful research among the reported adjudications in our state, has failed to disclose a cafe in which it has been presented and passed upon. #Severa) dicta of eminent judges of our supreme court have been found and quoted by counsel in argument, and some of them are valuable as indicating the trend of opinion of such judges, blit in no instance was the precise question here presented involved.

The statute, looking at the phrase employed, requires the execution to be sued out within five years, from what? Not the entering of a judgment on the trial docket or the journal, which is a ministerial act, the mere recording of the judicial act of deciding or ordering which has gone before (See Freeman on Judgments, sec. 38.); nor even in terms within five years "from the rendition of the judgment; but the exact phrase is, ‘ the date of the judgment” and our inquiry must be whether these expressions are convertible ones, or whether tne date of the judgment, as understood by the law-makers, was one thing, and the time of its rendition or rendering another.

The distinction becomes important,because the latter phrase has received such [55]*55judicial construction as must be potent in the construction of the first if they are equivalent in meaning.

It was expressly held, in Nolen v. Urmston, 17 Ohio, 170, a case cited by' counsel for Miss Allison,and referred to with much force in argument, that “a bill of review may be filed within five years from the day on which the decree sought to be reversed was rendered; the time to be counted from the day of the rendition of the decree, and not from the first day of the term.”

This decision was in construction of a statute providing that a bill of review may be filed “at any time within five years next after rendering- such decree,” and the Judge delivering- the opinion, says: “A decree is not in fact rendered, until the day it is pronounced and entered.”

Ib., p. 171.

This old procedure by bill of review was directed against, decrees in chancery. It has been held by the supreme court to be inconsistent with the code of civil procedure, and not to exist “in respect to an action commenced and prosecuted under the code,” (see Corry v. Campbell, 31 Ohio St., 204); but of course, any judicial construction which its language has received, is of force so far as applicable to our existing statute. The remedy by bill of review has been in a much modified form embodied in our late statutory revision. (See secs. 6734-6740.) Analogous provisions for the reversal or modification of judgments and final orders are found in secs. 6708, 6709 and 6710, of the Rev. Stats., and as to these a limitation of time within which the proceedings must be instituted is found in sec. 6723. In this section as in the law of 1831, construed in the case of Nolan v. Urmston, supra, and as in the modified proceeding for bills of review in our present system, (R. S., 6740), the limitation period begins by the express requirements of the several statutes, with the “rendition” of the judgment, order, or decree, or the “making” of the order. Construing another statute containing the same phrase (S. & C., p. 1106,) the supreme court say that “the time begins to run, not from the first day of the term at which the judgment sought to be reversed was rendered, but from the day on which it was actually rendered.” (West v. Meddock et al., 16 Ohio St., 417.)

The use of the words “actually rendered” by Judge Brinkerhoff, who spOke for the court,implies a supposition that there might be a constructive rendering which "by some legal rule would start the limitation law in motion at a date prior to the actual rendering or pronouncing- of the judgment. And clearly such must have been the contention in the case, notwithstanding the phraseology of the statute.

This leads me to a consideration of that leg-ai fiction which, for many years before the adoption of our system of civil procedure, treated the term of a court as consisting- of but one day, the day of its opening, and judgments rendered during-the term as bearing date on that day. No intelligent examination of the question of legislative intent which has been submitted to me, can ignore that fiction.

The origin of the idea is perhaps not very important.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shourds-v-allison-ohctcomplhuron-1897.