Sinkett v. Wunder

1 Miles 361
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedApril 7, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Miles 361 (Sinkett v. Wunder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sinkett v. Wunder, 1 Miles 361 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1827).

Opinion

The opinion of the court

(Barnes, President; Halloweli,, J.; and Coxe, J.)

was delivered by

Barres, President.

JThe lien of the judgment and the light to [362]*362an execution upon it are not convertible terms. There may be a lien of the judgment and yet no right to an execution : there may be a right of execution and yet no lien of the judgment. A judgment binds real property though the debt secured by it is not due, and though it does not fall due during the five years, and of course no right to execution ever existed upon it. So that the lien may at(acl) and expire, unless revived according to the provisions of the act, without a right to execution upon the judgment ever having existed. The judgment is a lien only upon the legal and equitable interest which the defendant had in the land at the time it was rendered. An execution on the judgment may be levied on after-purchased land, not bound by the judgment. No agreement of the parlies to a judgment can extend its lien beyond five years. That is, though the parties should agree, and so enter upon (lie docket, that the judgment should be a lien for a longer term than five years, nevertheless, as against third persons favoured by the act, the judgment is a lien for only five years. Nor can the parties, by indirect means, do that which the law prohibits their doing by direct and open stipulation. But the right to issue an execution is subject to the agreement of the parties, because the limitation of the right is for the benefit of the defendant, and may be waived by him. This limitation is a year and a day from the entering of the judgment, or more correctly speaking from the right of execution on the judgment; but if the plaintiff has taken out execution within that time, he may pursue it to satisfaction thereafter. If the execution is unproductive, he may have an alias or pluries or even another kind of execution. The law adjudges the right of execution to be forfeited by the plaintiff’s laches, but when It appears that the plaintiff has not been guilty of laches, there is no loss of right.

But the right to execution, or the loss of it, in no respect alters or affects the lien of the judgment. If the execution is levied during the lien of the judgment, the lands so levied on may be sold by ven-ditioni exponas after lien has expired. Such proceedings give the plaintiff a right distinct from the lien of his judgment; they place the property in pledge, in custodia legis for the plaintiff’s debt. It is like the plaintiff’s levying his execution on after-purchased property of the defendant, not bound by the judgment; if, after such levy, judgment is entered against the defendant, the lien of that judgment does not divest the plaintiff’s right under his execution; he may proceed to sell in payment of his judgment, though his judgment is no lien on the property, and the subsequent judgment is.

[363]*363After the plaintiff’s right to execution has been lost, his remedy is by a new action, and this action must be founded on the judgment, when the judgment has extinguished the security upon which it was given. But if the judgment was founded upon a previous judgment, he may sue upon either, because the second judgment is no extinguishment of the first. With us the action of scire facias post annum et diem differs in the form of proceeding from an action of debt on the judgment. No notice is required to be given to the terre-tenants, for the lien of the judgment upon which it is founded is not to be brought into question, nor even to the defendant himself, two nikils being equal to service ; but the judgment, as in debt, is for life amount of the original judgment and interest, from the date of that judgment to the time of the judgment on the scire facias. If the defendant appears to the scire facias, he may make the same defence to the action that he could to an action of debt on the judgment; the judgment itself cannot be impeached in either form of action, the only inquiry being whether the judgment has been released or satisfied. The lien of a judgment given on a scire facias to have execution may bind more or less property than the original judgment. It binds the property purchased after the original judgment, and remaining in the hands of the defendant; but it does not bind property previously conveyed, though such property was bound by the original judgment. The lien of the original judgment is in no respect altered or affected by (he judgment obtained on a scire facias to have execution. If it be intended to affect the lien of that judgment, to revive and extend it, the provisions of the act of assembly must be pursued.

The judgment of revival under the act creates no new lien ; it is but a continuation, for five years, of the lien already existing. After-purchased property is not bound by the mere revival, nor will the judgment of revival alone entitle the plaintiff to execution. A judgment may be revived under the act, though a right to execution never existed upon it, and though it may not exist during the term for which it is revived. Where the debt secured by the judgment is due, there is, perhaps, no insurmountable objection to the uniting in the same process a scire facias post annum et diem, with a scire facias to revive under the provisions of the act.

The profession, however, I should suppose, would desire to keep the two proceedings separate. Great confusion has arisen in our practice, and some uncertainty in the law, from a too great neglect of forms. The proceedings by scire facias under the act to revive [364]*364and extend the lien of the judgment have no great resemblance to the proceeding's on scire facias to have execution.

The service is different, the issue may be different, the judgment is different. To state these at large would be but to repeat the plain and familiar provisions of the act. If the scire facias to revive is not issued within five years from the day of the term on which the judgment is entered,

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Related

City of Philadelphia v. Scott
93 Pa. 25 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1879)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Miles 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinkett-v-wunder-pactcomplphilad-1827.