United States v. Minor

243 F. 953, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1198
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJune 20, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 243 F. 953 (United States v. Minor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Minor, 243 F. 953, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1198 (W.D.N.C. 1917).

Opinion

BOYD, District Judge.

This is a hill in equity filed by the United States, praying that a certain tract of land, which had formerly belonged to C. O. Ward, deceased, be sold to pay the amount due upon several judgments, which were rendered in the Circuit Court of the United States at Greensboro. The facts in the case are stated in substance in the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit, in this case at May term, 1916, the opinion being reported in 235 Fed. 101, 148 C. C. A. 595, but in order to present the views of this court in the present hearing it is deemed better to restate the facts more in detail.

The judgments claimed by the United States were obtained in actions at law, one at October term, 1885, for $225, on the distiller's [954]*954bond of Joseph A. Davis, for internal revenue taxes assessed against him, on which bond C. O. Ward was one of the sureties; also judgment rendered at October term, 1881, at Greensboro, for $67.57, internal revenue taxes assessed against said Davis as a distiller, C. O. Ward also surety upon the bond which covered this tax; at the same term another judgment was rendered against the same parties on a bond of like charatcer and for a like cause of action for $64.19; at April term, 1884, of the said court at Greensboro, a judgment was rendered against said Davis and his sureties on his distiller’s bond, among whom was C. O. Ward, for $18, for internal revenue taxes assessed against said Davis; at the same term another judgment was rendered against the same parties for a like cause of action for $20.70; at October term, 1885, a judgment was rendered against the same parties on the distiller’s bond of Davis for taxes assessed for $33.85. These judgments all carried with them interest and cost, were docketed in said court at Greensboro, and remained unsatisfied, and are still, as far as appears of record, unpaid, except the sum of $37.97, credited on the judgment for $67.57. Writs of fieri facias were issued upon these several judgments from the Circuit Court of the United States, and levies were returned upon them as follows :

Judgment for $64.19, fi. fa. issued October 18, 1881, levied upon the lands of J. A. Davis and S. T. Barber.
Judgment for $67.57, fi. fa. issued October 18, 1881, levied upon the lands of J. A. Davis and S. T. Barber, paid into clerk’s office the sum! of $37.97.
Judgment for $18, fi. fa. issued June 2, 18S4.
Judgment for $225, fi. fa. issued October 24, 1S85.
Judgment for $33.85, fi. fa. issued October 24, 1885.
Judgment for $20.70, fi. fa. issued June 2, 18S4.

The return upon each of the four last was “nulla bona.” No further writs of fi. fa. or execution were issued upon any of said judgments until January 25, 1912, when at the instance of the United States attorney executions were issued upon the said judgments and returned by the marshal: “Not executed; nothing found subject to execution. Defendants dead.” On June 20, 1913, the United States attorney procured transcripts from the District Court of the United States for the Western District of North Carolina, at Greensboro, of the said several judgments and caused them to be docketed in the superior court of Guilford county, N. C. Theretofore, on March 26, 1912, at the instance of the United States attorney, J. B. Minor took out letters of administration upon the estate of C. O. Ward; C. O. Ward having died intestate and-without issue in November, 1900, leaving as his own heirs at law the defendants in the present case, to wit, M. J. Wrenn, John R. Ward, Andrew U. Ward, Emma Ward, Belle Bratton, Josephine Hearst, Marshal Hiatte, and Frank Hiatte. There was no administration granted until the letters issued to Minor as above stated. On October 27, 1909, the heirs at law of Ward filed their petition in the superior court of Guilford county, alleging their ownership as tenants in common of the tract of land described in the petition filed in this case, and further alleging that on account of the number of tenants and the character and quantity of the land it was in[955]*955capable of actual partition, and they prayed for a sale of the land in order that partition might be had. An order o £ sale was granted on November IS, 1909, a commissioner appointed, the sale advertised and made on May 2, 1910, at the courthouse door in Guilford county, when and where M. J. Wrenn became the last and highest bidder, for the sum of $2,018. Upon a report of said commissioner, the sale was confirmed, and under a further decree of the court a deed therefor made to the purchaser, Wrenn, shortly thereafter.

On February 8, 1913, the United States attorney for this district filed the present bill in equity, setting forth the facts herein stated, though not to the same extent in detail, and praying that the land, which had descended from Ward to his heirs, and which was owned by Ward at the time of his death, and upon which these judgments were claimed to be a lien, be sold to satisfy the said judgments. The court here, upon the facts, was of the opinion that the law of North Carolina which rendered a judgment absolutely void after a lapse of 10 years applied, and this was in view of the fact that such was the law of the state of North Carolina by statute, and the further fact that the Congress of the United States had before these judgments were obtained enacted section 967, R. S. U. S. 1878, Second Edition (Comp. St. 1916, § 1608), which is in the following language:

“Judgments and decrees rendered in a Circuit or District Court, within any state, shall cease to be liens on real estate or chattels real, in the same manner and at like periods as judgments and decrees ol the courts of such state cease, by law, to be liens thereon.”

And it was further the view of this court that the United States, having come into a court in North Carolina and prosecuted its claim, was bound by the procedure which had been established by law as the practice of the courts, and, although the United States attorney insisted on the previous hearing of this case that the limit of time did not affect the right of the United States to proceed to collect its judgments, that view was discarded by the court here on the ground that although laches could not be imputed to the United States^ nor was it bound by the statute of limitations,' yet that the question of limitations was not involved; that the North Carolina statute with reference to the liens of judgments on realty was a rule of property, and that the lien procured by a judgment ceased to exist at the end of 10 years after the judgment was entered and docketed, because it became void. This court was further of the opinion that to hold that this local law did not govern a judgment in favor of the United States would be simply to keep alive such a judgment for all time, for, if it had life beyond the period prescribed by the state law, then its vitality would be without limit. If such was the law, unsatisfied judgments in favor of the United States would no doubt in many instances embarrass the title, the sale, purchase, and transfer of real property for an indefinite period.

However, the Circuit Court of Appeals was of a different opinion, and upon an appeal in this case reversed the decree which had been entered by this court refusing the prayer of the bill of the United [956]

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

Related

United States v. Minor
235 F. 101 (Fourth Circuit, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 F. 953, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-minor-ncwd-1917.