This is a proceeding in error to review the order of the •district court of Douglas county distributing the moneys arising from the sale of certain personal property upon executions. The facts upon which the order in question was based are as follows : On the 1st day of June, 1892, the Farmers & Merchants Bank of Fremont recovered a judgment by confession in the district court of Douglas county against one O. S. Higgins for the sum of $500, and on the ■same day Higgins confessed judgment in the same court in favor of D. M. Steele & Co. for $360. An execution was issued upon each of these judgments on the date they were rendered and delivered to the sheriff, who levied the writs on that day upon a stock of merchandise belonging to the ■execution debtor. Two days later Allen Bros, recovered a judgment for the sum of $137 against Higgins before a justice of the peace of Douglas county, and the justice immediately issued an execution thereon and placed it in the hands of the sheriff, who levied upon the same stock of goods theretofore taken under the writs in favor of the Farmers & Merchants Bank and D. M. Steele & Co., •said levy, being made subject to said prior executions. No transcript of the judgment in favor of Allen Bros, was ■ever filed in the district court. On June 3, 1892, judgments were recovered against said Higgins in the justice ■court of Seymour G. Wilcox, in and for Douglas county, in favor of the following named parties, and for the amounts stated : Peycke Bros., for $47.70 debt and $7.70 costs; R. Douglas & Co., in the sum of $101.30 and $7.70costs; and Sahmer-Richardsou Manufacturing Company, for $20.88 debt and $7.70 costs. On the samé *408day transcripts of the three last described judgments were duly filed in the district court and executions issued thereon by the clerk and delivered to the sheriff, and by him on the same day levied upon the stock of merchandise already mentioned, but in terms subject to the levies made under the three prior executions aforesaid. On June 6, 1892, the following judgments were recovered) before the said Justice Wilcox against said Pliggins: Pitkin Bros., $90.84; Earwell &■ Co., $23.38; Peycke Candy Company, $17.25, and Pitkin & Brooks, $159.11. The-costs are not included in the above sums, the costs in each case being $7.70. Transcripts of last named judgments w'ere filed in the district court on June 11,1892, and on the same day executions were issued thereon and delivered to the sheriff, who forthwith levied the writs upon the stock of goods above named, subject to the executions issued on June 1 and June 3 respectively. The property levied upon was advertised and sold by the sheriff on June 17, 1892,, under the executions in favor of the Farmers & Merchants-Bank and D. M. Steele & Co., for $1,105. The next day the sheriff, after deducting the costs of sale, $142.40, returned the residue of the proceeds into the district court,, paying to Frank E. Moores, the clerk of said court, th& sum of $962.60. On the same day said clerk paid to the Farmers & Merchants Bank $502.36, being the amount of their judgment and interest, and to D. M. Steele & Co.,, $361.99, said sum being the principal of their judgment and interest, and after the payment of the costs in these two-cases, amounting to $16.76, there remained in the hands of the clerk of the district court the sum of $71.49. The May,, 1892, term of the district court in and for Douglas county convened May 9, 1892, and adjourned sine die July 30th> of the same year. On June 20, 1892, two days after the-money had been paid but by the clerk as aforesaid, a motion was filed in the district court in the case of Peycke Bros. v. Higgins, praying a pro rata distribution of the moneys *409realized from the sale of the property among all the judgment creditors above referred to, excepting Allen Bros. This motion was sustained by the court, and the clerk was ordered to distribute the funds pro rata between all of the execution creditor's except Allen Bros. To reverse this de-. cisión Frank E. Moores, the clerk of the court, and the Farmers & Merchants Bank and D. M. Steele & Co. have prosecuted a petition in error to this court.
Under the foregoing facts the defendants in error contend that no priority or preference between the eight executions issued out of the district court exists, but that the entire fund was properly ordered by the court applied pro rata in payment of the eight execution creditors, according to the amount of their respective claims.
On behalf of plaintiffs in error it is urged that, as the money arising from the sale -of the property is insufficient to satisfy the several executions, the judgments in favor of D. M. Steele & Co. and the Farmers & Merchants Bank, having been rendered at the same term of court and the executions thereon having been first levied, should be first satisfied in full before any portion of the proceeds of the property should be distributed or appropriated to the judgments subsequently rendered. .
The determination of the question depends upon the construction of section 484 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides as follows:
“Sec. 484. When two or more writs of execution against the same debtor shall be sued out during the term in which judgment was rendered, or within ten days thereafter, and when two or more writs of execution against the same debtor shall be delivered to the officer on the same day, no preference shall be given to either of such writs; but if a sufficient sum of mouey be not made to satisfy all executions, the amouut made shall be distributed to the several creditors in proportion to the amount of their respective demands. In all other eases the writ of execution first delivered to the *410officer shall be first satisfied. And it shall be the duty of the officer to indorse on every writ of execution the time when he received the same, but nothing herein contained shall be so construed as to affect any preferable lien which one or more of the judgments on which execution issued may have on the lands of the judgment debtor.”
By the foregoing section, .where two or more judgments are recovered at the same term of court against the same debtor, and where there is no priority of lien, and executions are issued thereon during such term, or within ten days thereafter, and placed in the hands of the sheriff, whether on the same or different days, no preference shall be given either of said writs, but if the property levied upon is insufficient to satisfy all the executions, the money realized from the sale must be distributed or appropriated to the several execution creditors in proportion to the amounts of their respective judgments. The legislature, by the section quoted, has further provided that “in all other cases the writ of execution first delivered to the officer shall be first satisfied.” In other words, in all cases where executions are not issued during the term at which the judgments are entered, or within ten days after the term, as well as where the writs are received by the officer on different days, the proceeds of the sale of the preperty must be first applied in satisfaction of the execution first delivered to the officer, and so in the order of their priority. By the last clause of the section provision is made saving the rights of preferable lien-holders, but this limitation, or proviso, applies alone to lands within the county upon which the judgment is a lien, and not to lands out of the county where the judgments were rendered, nor to goods and chattels, for upon neither of which does a judgment operate as a lien.
Section 481 was under consideration in Hibbard v. Weil, 5 Neb., 41, and Mr. Justice Gantt, in delivering the opinion of the court, after quoting the section mentioned, *411uses this language: “The above seems to be the only cases in which the statute authorizes the apportionment of money arising from the sale of a debtor’s land on execution pro rata to judgment creditors. The one is where two or more excutions against the same debtor shall be issued during the term at which the judgments were rendered, or within ten days thereafter; the other when two or more executions against the same debtor are issued and placed in the hands of the officer on the same day.”
State v. Hunger, 17 Neb., 216, was where several executions issued by a justice of the peace were delivered to the officer on the same day, and it was held that the provisions of section 484 were applicable to executions issued by justice courts, and that the money realized from the sale of the property levied upon must be distributed pro rata among the several judgment creditors.
In the case under consideration, the judgments of D. M. Steele & Co. and the Farmers & Merchants Bank were entered at the same term of court and on the same day, and executions were issued thereon during the term and placed in the hands of the sheriff at the same time. All the other judgments were subsequently rendered iu the justice court and, with the exception of the one in favor of Alien Bros., were transcripted to the district court and executions issued thereon by the clerk thereof at the same term of court the judgments in favor of the Farmers & Merchants Bank and D. M. Steele & Co. were obtained. Does the fact that transcripts of the judgments were filed in the district court and executions were issued therefrom and delivered to the sheriff at the same term the two judgments were procured authorize the applying of the proceeds of the sale in question pro rata upon all the executions issued out of the district court? It is obvious that the question must be answered in the negative, unless the judgments, of which transcripts were filed and entered upon the execution docket, stand upon the same footing with the judgments rendered *412in the district court. We do not think such is the case. The purpose of the legislature in enacting the section of the statute we have been considering was to provide that there should be no preference in cases where two or more executions are sued out of the same court in term time or within a specified number of days thereafter on judgments rendered at the same term against the same defendant, and when there is no priority of lien. Section 561 of the Code provides for the filing of transcripts of judgments rendered by justices of the peace in the district court of the county in which the judgments were recovered. The next section makes such judgment so transcripted and filed in term'time a lien upon the lands of the defendant from the date of the filing, but when filed in vacation it is a lien as against the judgment debtor from the day of filing, “and against subsequent judgment creditors from the first day of the next succeeding term, in the same manner, and to the same extent as if the judgment had been rendered in the district-court.” Section 563 declares that “execution may be issued thereon to the sheriff by the clerk of the court in the same manner as if the judgment had been taken in ' court, and the sheriff shall execute and return the same as other executions.” It is plain from these provisions that the filing and docketing of such transcript does not transform the original judgment into a judgment of the district court. The statute authorizes such filing simply for the purpose of making the judgment a lien upon the real estate of the debtor and for being enforced by the issuing of execution out of the district court. (People v. Doe, 31 Cal., 220; Martin v. Mayor, 11 Abb. Pr. [N. Y.], 295.)
The transcriptive judgments of the several defendants in error not being judgments of the district court, the conclusion is irresistible that they are not proratable in the distribution of the fund in question. The clause in section 484, which provides that “in all other cases the writ of execution first delivered to the officer shall be first satisfied,” *413governs and controls in making distribution of the proceeds of the sale in the case at bar. The executions in favor of the.defendants in error were not upon judgments obtained in the district court, nor were such executions placed in the sheriff’s hands on the same day those in favor of the bank and D. M. Steele & Co. were delivered, but subsequently thereto; hence the writs first delivered to the officer must be first satisfied.
We have examined the three cases cited by counsel for the defendants and find them not in point. In Wilcox v. May, 19 O., 408, three judgments were entered at the suit of different creditors against the same defendant in the same court, at the same term, and executions were issued during the term, but on different days, directed to the sheriff of another county, which were levied upon lands of the debtor. The money arising from the sale being insufficient to satisfy all the writs, it was decided that it must be distributed pro rata among the three execution creditors. To the same effect is Clevenger v. Hansen, 24 Pac. Rep. [Kan.], 61. In State v. Hunger, 17 Neb., 216, twenty-four executions were issued upon separate judgments obtained in different j ustices’ courts and placed in the officer’s hands on the same day. It was held that the proceeds of the sale should be applied pro rata upon the several executions. The question we have been considering was not involved in any of the cases above referred to. The order of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.