It does not distinctly appear on what ground the Judge sustained this demurrer. If the judgment is not dormant, a scire facias is not necessary, and if the judgment is satisfied, it cannot be revived. The judgment may, therefore, be sustained, if the judgment be not dormant, or if it be satisfied. I am satisfied with the opinion delivered by me in Battle 'vs. Shivers. I adhere to the idea I then insisted on. The dormant judgment law is not a statute of limitations, and was not suspended by the various Acts suspending the statutes of limitations during the late war. This judgment was, therefore, dormant, and if not satisfied, the scire facias was not demurrable. Was it a satisfied judgment? I think not. If the Act of 1856 is to be understood as providing that judgments left seven years without an entry are, as against the defendant, satisfied, and cannot be revived at all, (of which I am not very clear,) then I think it may very fairly be called a statute of limitations, and if so, it was, without doubt, suspended by the suspending Acts. I do not propose, at present, to discuss the question whether the Act of 1856 was intended to provide that, after seven years without any entry, a judgment ceased to exist, and could not be sued on or revived. The Act of 1822 used almost the same words, yet the Legislature of 1823 declared that the Act of 1822 was only a dormant judgment Act. As, however, if such is the effect of the Act of 1856, it is, in my judgment, a statute of limitations, and was suspended by the suspending Acts, it follows that this judgment was not, under the operation of the Act of 1856, satisfied. I conclude, therefore, first, that this judgment is not satisfied, and that it is dormant. It was, there-, fore, error for the Judge to sustain the demurrer.
It was contended, in the argument, that thesé positions are inconsistent with each other; that if the Act of 1856 was not suspended, the judgment is satisfied, and that if it was suspended, it is not dormant. And the language used by me in declaring that'the suspension of the Act of 1856 revived the *364Act of 1823, lias been criticised. I do not see the force of the criticism. Perhaps the word “ revive " may not be the exact word proper to be used. Eat it is very clear to my mind that, taking the Act of 1856 as an Act providing that, after seven years without an entry, an execution is not dormant only, but dead, satisfied; and, admitting that it was, .therefore, suspended, as a statute of limitations, by the suspending Acts, that this .suspension left the Act of 1823 still operating on judgments affected by it, the misapprehension grows out of supposing that the Act of 1856, if it provides for the satisfaction -of the judgment, is a dormant judgment Act at all. If it was intended to provide for the satisfaction of judgments, the Act of 1823, providing that, under certain circumstances, a judgment should become dormant, was always of force, even after the passage of the Act of 1856.
True, as the Act of 1856 provided the judgment should become a dead judgment in seven years, the Act of 1823, whilst the Act of 1856 was of force, was inoperative, not because it was repealed, but because the evils it was intended to prevent could not arise. If a judgment was satisfied in seven years, without an entry, purchasers and creditors were protected by it, as well as the defendant, and they had no call for the protection of the Act of 1823. But when the Act of 1856 was suspended, all the evils which the Act of 1823 protected creditors and purchasers from, came again into existence, and the Act again operated. It was not the revival of another statute of limitations. Whilst the Act of 1856 operated, the dangers coming to purchasers and creditors from judgments, kept open without notice of their subsistence, did not exist, for if these entries were not made, the judgment died. But when %the Act of 1856 was suspended," and the judgment stood as a good judgment without the entries, the question of whether it kept its lien without the proper entries, was a very important one. to purchasers and other creditors, and there was nothing in the suspension of the Act, providing for the presumption of satisfaction against the debtor, which affected or ought to effect other creditors or purchasers. The Legislature might *365well intend that the Act of 1856, providing that a judgment should be satisfied, even as against the defendant, should be suspended, and yet still require the plaintiff to take the proper steps to give notice to creditors and subsequent purchasers of the plaintiff’s claims. In other words the suspension of the Act of 1856, left the Act of 1823 in full operation. It suspended all laws that were statutes of limitation, but it left in operation all laws which were intended to operate as notice to third persons-, and even though any such law may, by reason of the operation of the statutes of limitation, have, during the existence of those Acts, been unnecessary for the protection of the rights of third persons.
The Act of 1823 was never repealed by the Act of 1856. The Act of 1§56 simply operated so as to protect purchasers and creditors, just as well as did the Act of 1823. But it (the Act of 1856) operated between the plaintiff and defendant. When it (the Act of 1856) was suspended, the younger creditor and purchaser had still, as they always had, the Act of 1823 for their protection. Even, therefore, if the Act of 1856 was suspended, the Act of 1823 was still in operation.
Judgment reversed.