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  "name": "ADAM SAWYERS v. TABITHA SAWYERS",
  "name_abbreviation": "Sawyers v. Sawyers",
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    "parties": [
      "ADAM SAWYERS v. TABITHA SAWYERS."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "SMITH, C. J.,\n(after stating the facts). The only question brought up by the appeal and requiring a response from this Court is, whether an execution issuing upon a judgment rendered by a justice of the peace, and docketed in the Superior Court, after the death of the debtor, but whose teste antedates the death, can confer upon the sheriff legal authority to sell and convey his real estate under the statutory lien.\nThe affirmative has been held in cases that have occurred under our former system, and the rule is enunciated by Reade, J., in Aycock v. Harrison, 65 N. C., 8, wherein the death took place, and most of the facts transpired, before the Code of Civil Procedure went into operation, and in reference thereto he uses this language: \u201cWhere there is a judgment, and a fi. fa., or ven. ex. issues during the life of the defendant, the sheriff may proceed to sell, although the defendant died before the sale. And so he may when the fi. fa. or ven. ex. issues after the death, but is tested before.\u201d\nAnd so in Grant v. Hughes, 82 N. C., 216, we upheld the validity of a sale under such process against the widow\u2019s claim for an allowance out of her husband\u2019s personal estate for her year\u2019s suppoi't. This ruling vests upon a recognition of the retroactive operation of the writ, as declared in adjudged cases, on the act of 1869 amending \u00a7261 of C. C. P., by annexing to paragraph 1 these words: \u201cBut no execution against the property of a jndg-nient debtor shall be a lien on the personal property of such debtor, as against any bona fide purchaser from him for value, or as against any other execution except from the levy thereof,\u201d thus by implication leaving undisturbed the relation to the teste as between the parties, when the rights of those mentioned are not invaded. The Code, \u00a7448, par. 1.\nBut liens on real estate are now referable to the time of docketing the judgment, and adhere to such as the debtor then held, and such as he has since acquired during the statutory limitation, a m.uch more substantial security, with a more efficacious remedy to enforce it, than was given by the common law. The reason for the adoption of the rule of relation was, to take from the judgment debtor the ability to transfer his property to others, and thus deprive the creditor of the fruits of his recovery when in the diligent use of the means provided by law for securing them in satisfaction of his adjudged demand.\nThis reason no longer exists, for the judgment itself, when docketed, affixes a lien upon the debtor\u2019s land, and it is not now necessary for him in order to its preservation, as it was before, to press unremittingly the process by which payment was to be enforced.\nThis superseding legislation must, therefore, to no inconsiderable extent, dispense with many rules before in force, and especially that of relation of the execution to its teste, as unnecessary and inapplicable to the new' procedure and practice. We have, therefore, at the present term, in Spicer v. Gambill, indicated an opinion that when final process is sued out and acted on after the judgment lien has been lost by efflux of time, or on a judgment, rendered and not docketed, it affixes a lien as against purchasers and other attaching liens, alike upon real and personal property, only from the levy \u2014 upon the latter by virtue of the statute,, upon the former to secure uniformity in the rule.\nIn Murchison v. Williams, 71 N. C., 135, Reade, J., clearly intimates, if he does not distinctly say, that the creditor is not allowed to enforce his lien on the judgment debtor\u2019s land, by suing out and selling under execution after his death, and that it devolves on the personal representative to provide for this as for. other debts of the deceased.\n\u201cThe result is,\u201d are his words, \u201c that when a debtor dies, against whom there is a judgment docketed, his land descends to. his heirs or vests in his devisee, and his personal property vests in his administrator or executor, just as if there were no judgment against him, and the whole estate is to he administered just-as if there were no judgment \u2014 that is to say, the personal property must be sold if necessary, and all the personal assets collected, and out of these personal assets all the debts must he paid, if there be enough to pay all, as well docketed judgments as others. If there is not enough to pay all, then they are to be paid in classes, docketed judgments being the fifth class, to the extent of their lien, which is the value of. the land,\u201d referring to Bat. Rev., ch. 45, sec. 40, class 5.\nThis seems to have been recognized as settling the law, and. the extract which we have recited is quoted in Lee v. Eure, 82. N. C., 428, with this subjoined remark : \u201c The reason for this, mode of administration is, that although a lien on land exists, the judgment should be paid out of the personal estate, if, any, in exoneration of the land for the benefit of the heir or devisee.\u201d\nAgain the case of Murchison v. Williams is referred to, with approval of its ruling, in Mauney v. Holmes, 87 N. C., 428, and this further portion of the opinion quoted : \u201cThe administration of the whole estate is placed in the hands of the executor, or administrator, as best it should be, instead of allowing a cred-, itor to break in upon it with an execution and sale for cash, at a, possible sacrifice, when it may turn out that the personal assets would be sufficient without a sale of the land at all.\u201d\nMoreover, the Code of Civil Procedure in the chapter consisting of \u00a7\u00a7318 10 324 inclusive, which furnishes a remedy for enforcing the lien, in case of unreasonable 'delay by the personal representative, is applicable to the present c\u00e1se, while rhey seein not to have been brought forward in The Code.\nSection 319, expressly confers upon the judgment creditor the right, after three years from the issue of letters testamentary or administration, \u201cin case of the death of the judgment debtor, after judgment,\u201d to proceed and enforce his lien, plainly indicating the absence of such right afier the debtor\u2019s death, until' the expiration of the period allowed the representative to pay the debt and relieve the land.\nSuch are the rulings in the State of New York, from which our new system is borrowed. In Wood v. Moorhouse, 45 N. Y., 368 (Court of Appeals), process had issued during the debtor\u2019s lifetime, and the sheriff proceeded t<> make sale after his death. This action was sustained as legal and warranted. Alus\u00f1, J., in delivering the opinion and expressing the views of the Court uses this language: \u201cThe sheriff could lawfully complete the execution of the process thus commenced- At common law an execution against the goods of a judgment debtor was regular, if tested in the lifetime of the debtor, although actually issued after his death. But an execution cannot be issued, after the death of the defendant which will authorize the sale of the real estate which may be bound by the judgment.\u201d The same Judge, in a subsequent case, Wallace v. Swinton, 64 N. Y., 188, re-affirms the proposition, and referring to \u00a7376 of the New York Code, which is \u00a7319 of ours, to which we have adverted, says, \u201cThe statute prescribing the procedure for the issuing of an execution against real property affected by the judgment, after the death\u2019 of the judgment debtor, necessarily by implication excludes every other process and proceeding to accomplish the same purpose, within the maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius.\u201d Without pursuing the subject further, we are of opinion, and so declare, that the execution issuing after the death of the judgment debtor was not. warranted by law, and no title passed under the sheriff's deed to the plaintiff. There is no error in the ruling of the Court in sustaining the demurrer and rendering judgment for the defendant.\nNo error. Affirmed.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "SMITH, C. J.,"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Messrs. Gohe & Williamson and Watson & Buxton and John Y. Phillips, for plaintiff.",
      "No counsel for defendant."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "ADAM SAWYERS v. TABITHA SAWYERS.\nJudgment Liens \u2014 Execution.\n1. Under the Code system, an execution which is issued after the death of the judgment debtor, although it bears teste before his death, confers no authority on the sheriff to sell, and a sale thereunder is void; but before the Code of Civil Procedure was adopted, a sale under such an execution would have been valid.\n2. Liens on real property are now governed by the docketing of the judgment, and not by the issuing of process to enforce it.\n3. When an execution is issued on an undocketed judgment, or one which has lost its lien on real estate by the lapse of time, it is a lien on both real and personal property from its levy.\n4. Where a judgment debtor dies, the creditor, cannot enforce the judgment by execution, but must collect his debt in the regular course of the administra! tion of the estate.\n5. The provision in the Code of Civil Procedure, furnishing a remedy for enfolding the lien in ease the administrator unreasonably delays settling the estate, has not been brought forward in The Code.\n(Ayeoclcv. Harrison, 65 N. C., 8; Grant v. Hughes, 82 N. C., 216; Spicer v. <?am-bill, decided at this term ; Murchison v. Williams, 71 N. C., 135; Lee v. Mure, 82 N. C., 428; Mauney v. Holmes, 87 N. C., 428, cited and approved).\nThis was a civil ACTION for the recovery of laud, tried before Graves, Judge, at August Term, 1885, of the Superior Court of Surry couuty.\nThe plaintiff, claiming to be the owner, brings this action to recover possession of the tract of land described in his complaint, and as he alleges, wrongfully withheld by the defendant. The defendant made answer thereto, which she afterwards withdrew and was permitted to enter her demurrer. , ;\nThe material facts set forth in the plaintiff\u2019s complaint upon which the case was heard were: that on the 1st day of March, 1877, in a justice\u2019s court of Surry county, a judgment was rendered in favor of Adam Sawyers against Solomon Sawyers for $90.15 and $2.75 cost, which was docketed in the office of the clerly of the Superior Court of said county on the 4th day of February, 1878. An execution from said court issued on the same on the 15th day of June, 1880, which was returned \u201cnot satisfied.\u201d After Fall Term of the Superior Court of said county (which was held October 25th, 1880), and before Spring Term, 1881, of said court, to-wit: on the 16th day of Nov., 1880, the said Solomon Sawyers, the judgment debtor, died. After the death of the said judgment debtor, on the said 16th day of November, 1880, and before Spring Term, 1881, of the Superior Court of said county, to-wit: on the 1st day of March, 1881, a writ of execution again issued out of the Superior Court of said county in favor of the said Adam Sawyers and against the said Solomon Sawyers on said judgment, tested of Fall Term, 1880, and returnable to Spring Term, 1881, of said court. By virtue and authority of said last named execution, the sheriff of said county levied on and sold the land claimed and described in the plaintiff\u2019s complaint, as the land of the said Solomon Sawyers, and the plaintiff became the purchaser of said land, and took the sheriff\u2019s deed for the same, under which the plaintiff claims. That the defendant, Tabitha Sawyers, is the widow of the said Solomon Sawyers, and there were no minor heirs. The defendant was in the wrongful possession of the land described in the complaint, and asked for the possession of the same, subject to the widow\u2019s dower, which was to be allotted to her in case the plaintiff recovered.\nThe defendant demurred ore tenus to the plaintiff\u2019s complaint, upon the ground that the facts set forth in the complaint do not constitute a cause of action; that the execution under which the plaintiff claimed, issuing after the death of the judgment debtor and tested before his death, on a justice\u2019s judgment, docketed in the Superior Court was void, and the plaintiff had no title under such deed of the sheriff, and ought not to recover the land described in the complaint. Upon the hearing of the case his Honor held that an execution issuing after the death of the judgment debtor, but tested before, on a justice\u2019s judgment docketed in the Superior Court, was void, and that the sheriff\u2019s deed under such execution gave the plaintiff no title, and therefore sustained the demurrer and gave judgment for the defendant, from which decision and judgment the plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court.\nMessrs. Gohe & Williamson and Watson & Buxton and John Y. Phillips, for plaintiff.\nNo counsel for defendant."
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