State v. Miller

79 Tenn. 620
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 79 Tenn. 620 (State v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Miller, 79 Tenn. 620 (Tenn. 1883).

Opinions

Freeman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This bill is filed by the State to enforce the lien of a recognizance.

The defendants, in 1880, became bound in the form of a recognizance of record in the circuit court of Claiborne connty for the appearance of certain parties, at next term of the court, to answer the State in several cases in which they .were charged with felonies. There were four undertakings in as many cases in the sum of $1,000 each.

The parties failed to appear, and judgments nisi had; as is our practice, sci. fa. issued to show cause why these judgments should not be made absolute, and no defense being made, the same was done; after this an execution issued, which was returned nulla bona. In the meantime, after the recognizances had been en-, tered into, but before final judgment- rendered on the same, Emanuel Miller, the surety, conveyed the land sought to be subjected in- this case to his brother and co-defendant, Pleasant Miller, who now holds it. It is not averred that this conveyance was fraudulent, or made with the purpose to prevent appropriation of the land to meet this obligation.

This bill is filed to enforce the assumed lien on the land created by the recognizance of record. The land does not lie in the' county of Claiborne where the recognizance was taken, but in the adjoining county of Union.

An equity is sought to be raised against Pleasant Miller, the purchaser, on the allegation that he was [622]*622present in court when his brother, Emanuel Miller, was examined touching his ability to respond to the obligations entered ' into, and heard him qualify as surety on the basis of owning this land in Union county. This, however, we take it, does not materially affect the legal questions raised.

The bill was demurred to, and the demurrer overruled, from which there is an appeal to this court.

Two questions are raised, and very earnestly urged for reversal oí this holding.

Eirst. It is insisted, that ’ no lien exists since the adoption by enactment of the Legislature of the Code, which took effect May 1st, 1858, and especially by virtue df section 41 of said Code, providing that all public and general acts passed prior to the present session of the General -Assembly, all public and 'special acts, the subjects of which are revised in this Code, except acts creating special courts, subject to the limitations and° with the exceptions herein expressed, are hereby repealed.” We need not notice the exceptions and limitations referred to, as they have no bearing on the question.

Second. It is insisted, that conceding a lien does exist, it does not extend to lands owned by the' cog-nizor beyond the county in which the recognizance is taken, simply by virtue of the recognizance.

Both these questions are of interest, and neither, in the form presented, have been raised or decided in any case by this court. It was held in the .case of State v. Wynne, 3 Sneed, 393, and in 3 Head, 173, that a recognizance fixed a lien on the lands of the [623]*623cognizor from the time of its acknowledgment of record. This was, however, before the adoption of the Code, and the land held bound in these cases lay in the county where the recognizance was taken. The question of what is the effect of the Code legislation, and whether the effect of a recognizance, assuming the lien to still exist, is to' extend beyond .the county where the same is taken, are phases not passed upon, and are now to be considered for the first time.

The argument on- the proposition that no lien exists, since the Code is based on the proposition that-by the ancient common law, neither a judgment, recognizance, or any like form of liability, created any lien upon lands, but this effect was given in England by several statutes enacted by Parliament, some or all of which were held in force in our State before the Code. It is then insisted that since the Code no statute, except such as are therein provided for, are in force in this State,- therefore the decisions based on the law, as founded on these English statutes, are not authority — on, the contrary, it is maintained that no such lien being given by the Code, none exists.

The fact is, that no lien did exist at common law by virtue of a judgment or recognizance. The statute merchant was given by 11th Edward I., and amended by 13th of same reign, .and the recognizance in the nature of a statute staple by 23 Henry VIII., ch. 6, and are said all to agree in' this, that they are recorded acknowledgments of a debt, which not being paid at a certain day, the sheriff is authorized to deliver the lands, as well as the goods of the [624]*624debtor, to the creditor, “by a reasonable extent to bold them until such time as the debt is wholly levied.” See Cross on Levies, Law Lib., top page 129. 4nd this liability was held to fasten on lands ■which the debtor had at the time of its acknowledgment, though he should afterwards sell them, and to all after-acquired lands. Ibid, 2 Bac. Abr., 698. The lien was by construction of the. courts ’ not expressly given by statute. Out- of these enactments most certainly came the rule declared by the courts of a lien fixed on the land, such as was approved by this court in the cases of 3 Sneed and 3 Head’s Hep. No reference is had to these statutes in those cases, but they are based on North Carolina cases, which adopt the English rule derived from the construction of these statutes referred to by the courts of England.

The question whether since the Code any statute of England, as such, is in force in this State depends upon a fair construction of the Code in relation to the law as it then stood, and what is enacted by it, as well as its general intent and scope, as shown by the enactment itself. The act of 1715 was adopted from North Carolina, by virtue of Article II. of Constitution of 1834, providing “that all laws and ordinances now in force and use in this State, etc., shall continue in force and use until they expire, be altered -or repealed by the Legislature.”

That act provided,- section 6: “ The common law is and shall be in force in ■ this government, except such part in the practice in issuing and return of •writs and proceedings in the court of Westminster, [625]*625which, for want of several officers, cannot be used.” Section 7: That “all laws of England providing for the privileges of the people and security of trade, as also all statute laws made for the limitation of actions, and preventing vexatious lawsuits, and preventing immorality and fraud, and for confirming inheritances and titles of land, are and shall be in force here, although the plantations are not named.” By the act of 1778, section 2: It was provided substantially ' that such parts of the common law as was heretofore in force, and the acts of the late General Assemblies not inconsistent with or repugnant to the freedom and independence of the people or. the form of government established, were to continue in force.”

Under these statutes, it was held the statutes contemplated as in force were those passed before the fourth year of James I., 1607, when the charter of the Colony was granted. See IST. & C., 438; 1 Tenn., 154. Under these provisions many English statutes were held by the courts in force as statutes in Tennessee, a list of which will be found in a note by Judge Cooper to case of Glasgow v. Smith & Blackwell, Overton Rep., 168-9.

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Bluebook (online)
79 Tenn. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-miller-tenn-1883.