Fitzpatrick v. Edgar

ORMOND, J.

The question to be decided is, whether on a judgment recovered against the ancestor, the plaintiff can have execution against the heir upon scire facias, for lands descended without including the personal representative, no execution having issued on the judgment.

It appears that at common law, this writ lies in favor of the plaintiff against the heir, upon judgments after a year and a day. [Withers v. Harris, 1 Salk. 600.] It is however, stated in the Institutes, that this remedy at common law was confined to real actions, and was given in personal actions by the statute Westminster, 2; [3 Thomas ed. Co. Litt. 524; 290 b.; 291 a; Jefferson v. Morton, 2 Saund. 30, Note, 4.]

In the case of Bell v. Robinson, [1 Stewart, 193,] this court held, that this remedy could not be had against the heirs where the judgment was obtained after the death of the ancestor against his personal representative; after this decision was madej the following act was passed. “Whenever an executor of any deceased testator, or administrator of any deceased intestate, shall fail to apply to the county court for the sale of real estate, for the purpose of paying the debts due thereof, the judgment creditor may, upon filing a suggestion in the clerk’s office, in which judgment shall have been rendered, that real estate has descended to the heirs, and that sale of the same, or some part thereof, is necessary for the satisfaction of said judgment, and that said executor or administrator, has failed or refused to malee application for sale thereof, and setting out the names of said personal representatives and heirs, sue out a scire facias against said executor or admin*502istrator and heirs, returnable to the next term of said court, requiring them then and there, to show cause why said plaintiff should not have execution against said real estate; and if sufficient cause to the contrary be not shown, execution shall be awarded against said real estale; and all executors or administrators who fail to apply for leave to sell real estate, three months after reporting the estate insolvent, shall be deemed guilty of a devastavit, and may be sued on their bond, together with their securities.” [Aik. Dig. 156, § 17.]

It is insisted that this statute applies only to cases where the judgment is obtained against the personal representative, and not where it is obtained against the ancestor, but we are unable to perceive any reason for giving to it such a limited interpretation. The language is general and sufficiently comprehensive to embrace all cases of judgments which bind the realty. A construction which would confine this statute to those cases only where the judgment was obtained against the personal representative, and making thereby by implication, an exception in favor of creditors who obtained their judgment against the ancestor in his life time, would be contrary to the whole scope and design of our legislation on this subject, by which the common law preferences of certain creditors is destroyed, and the property of the deceased distributed rateably, where it is insufficient to pay all the debts.

Nor can we conceive of any adequate motive for confining the statute to those cases where judgments had been obtained against the personal representative. When a suit is prosecuted against the personal representative, if he omits to plead his want of assets, the judgment is binding on him personally, there would therefore seem to be more reason for supposing that the statute was intended for the benefit of creditors who had obtained judgments against the ancestor, than of those who obtained it against the personal representative. It is the duty of the personal representative to pay all the debts of the deceased, those which have been matured into judgments before his death, as well as those which have not. The natural and appropriate fund for this purpose is the personal estate, but if that is insufficient, it is his duty to obtain an order to sell the lands, which by law, is created a fund for that purpose, whether the estate is entirely insolvent or not. [Woods v. McCann & Witherspoon, 3 Ala. Rep. 61.] If he fails to do this, a summary remedy may be had against the land in the *503possession of the heirs. If he fails for three months after reporting the estate insolvent to apply for leave to sell the lands, he is guilty of a devastavit, and maybe sued on his bond.

It appeal’s from this examination that judgment creditors, whether the judgment was obtained previous or subsequent to the death of the testator or intestate, are fully provided for, at least to the extent of the estate of the deceased, real and personal.

It is, however, supposed that as the judgment creates a lien on the lands of which the defendant is seized, at the time the judgment is obtained, that judgments obtained during the life of the testator should be satisfied out of the real estate after his death, in preference to judgments of later date.

A lien is not an absolute, but a qualified right, given by law or created by the act of the parties, by which real or personal property is charged with the payment of a debt or duty. Mr. Justice Buller defines a lien to be a qualified right, which in given cases maybe exercised over the property of another. [Lickbarrow v. Mason, 6 East, 25 note.] In this sense it is employed by our Legislature, in determining the priority of liens between judgment creditors. [Aik. Dig. 166.] A lien on land in virtue of a judgment, being then merely a right to charge the land with the payment of the judgment, may be waived, or lost by the laches of the party entitled to enforce it. So, a lien created by law, may be taken away by law, as was held by this court, at the last term, in the case of Watson and Simpson v. Simpson, supra.

The plaintiff in this case might have enforced his lien by selling the lands of the deceased if he had thought proper to do so. He has lain by until the administrator has reported the estate insolvent, which by operation of law divests the estate out of the heirs at law, and vests it in the administrator for the purpose of equal distribution; and it would be contrary to the whole scope and design of the statute, and defeat its avowed object, if he took the estate charged with the payment of such dormant liens; as the lien of an execution on personal property, may be lost by the laches of the creditor; [Blount & Stanly v. Traylor, 4 Ala. 667;] so may the lien of a judgment on land be lost in the same way. [Ib. 543.]

There is still an objection to be considered, equally potent with any yet mentioned. It appears to be doubtful whether at common law a scire facias would lie against the heir upon a judg*504ment obtained against the ancestor in & personal action, or whether the remedy was not given by the statute of Westminster, 2d; but conceding that question, it was not a right to sell the land in the hands of the heir, but to extend it by the writ of elegit. The right to sell land in discharge of judgments is given by our statute, which declares that lands shall be subject to the payment of judgments, and that the clerk shall frame the “execution.” To infer from this statute that a scire facias would lie against the heir after the death of the ancestor, would be putting a most unreasonable construction on it. The only statute we have, in terms authorising such a proceeding against the heir, is the one already cited, and that requires the administrator to be a party; obviously for the purpose of enabling him to show whether the estate is insolvent. It'appears therefore to follow, quite conclusively, that as the right to sell lands in the" hands of the heir, to satisfy a judgment of the ancestor, did not exist at common law, such right if claimed here, but must be exercised in conformity with the statute.

It results from this examination, that this proceeding cannot be sustained, and it therefore becomes unnecessary to enquire into the correctness of the entry of judgment.

Let the judgment of the court below be reversed.