Besides the points made by the attorney general, to sustain the judgement of the circuit court, another occurred to us in conference; namely, whether this suit can be maintained at the relation of Anderson the administrator de bonis non, without his having first made himself a party to the record of the proceedings of the first administrator by scire facias ? I shall first dispose of the attorney general’s objections to the action.
His first objection was, that the statute does not give the action at the relation of the administrator de bonis non. In the construction of statutes, it is the meaning of the legislature we must seek for: this constitutes the essence of the law: its words are our main guide, but we must not shut our eyes to every thing else, and stick exclusively to the letter. The context, and the subject matter must be looked to; the mischief and the remedy. This court by a series of decisions, had settled it as the law, that, before an action could be brought on the bond of an executor or administrator to charge his sureties, there must have been, 1. a suit against the representative to establish the demand, and 2. a suit to fix the devastavit. The legislature, thinking this intermediate suit unnecessary, passed a statute in 1814, dispensing with it: this statute, in the revision of 1819, forms
The attorney generals second objection is founded on the following words of the statute—“Where any person shall have heretofore recovered, or shall hereafter recover, any judgement 8ic. and upon execution issued ¡kc. it shall be returned, that there are not found” &ic. He insisted, that these words are wholly prospective, and that, whenever the judgement was obtained, an execution must issue after the passing of the statute, in order to authorize the action it gives. I cannot see the force of this objection. The object of the statute was to give the action on the bond of the executor or administrator, immediately on the return of nulla bona. It clearly takes in judgements obtained before the enactment: why not the issuing and return of the execution also, which are mere ministerial acts? When its object was to prevent delay and expense, can it be supposed, that it would put the parties to the useless delay and expense of issuing another execution, when one had already been returned nulla bond ? Besides, to make such issue of a second execution, a pre-requisite to the action on the bond, would, in all cases where the plaintiff in the first execution had died since, be a denial of the action, without an inter
The objection, which I have mentioned as having occurred in conference, was founded on the general rule, that where a new person, who was not a party to the judgement, derives a benefit by, or becomes chargeable to the execution upon it, there must be a scire facias to make him a party to the judgement. 2 Wms. Saund. 6. note 1. 72. e. note 3. At common law, no scire facias could issue on a judgement, except in real actions: in all personal actions, where the lapse of time, or the change of parties, had been such as to prevent the taking out execution, the party entitled to the judgement, was obliged to bring an action of debt on it; 2 Inst. 269. To remedy this inconvenience, the statute of Westm. 2. 1 Ed. 1. ch. 45. gave a scire facias in personal actions: but “ this statute (as my lord Coke says, 2 Inst. 472.) is in the affirmative, and therefore it restraineth not the common law, but the party may waive the benefit of the scire facias given by this act, and take his original action of debt by common law.” In Proctor v. Johnson, 1 Ld. Raym. 669. 670. 2 Salk. 600. S. C. which was a scire facias on a judgement in ejectment j and demurrer, upon the ground, that a scire facias lay not on a judgement in ejectment, for, at common law, it lay only in real actions, and the statute gives it only in personal; and 2 Inst. 469. was cited and relied on : lord Holt said, “ that Coke’s meaning was, that a scire facias would not lie, at common law, for debt or damages, but here it sounded in the realty:” he said further, “ it is absolutely necessary, that a scire facias should lie in this case, because there is no other means, to execute
I think the judgement must be reversed.
Cabell, J. concurred.
I see no difficulty in the construction of the statute of 1814, now the 63rd section of the statute of wills, 1 Rev. Code, p. 390. The legislature cannot enumerate all the cases, to which the principle intended to be established will apply; it is enough, if it gives an example of its application : the court must follow it out, by applying it to cases of a like nature. The object of this statute was to dispense with a second suit against an executor or administrator, in order to establish a waste of the assets, before a suit could be maintained on the administration'bond against the sureties, to charge them. In words, it only provides for the case in which a person or persons recover a judgement, in his or their own right; but the remedy it prescribes is equally applicable to a case, in which the judgement is obtained by an executor or administrator, in right of his testator or intestate. The same mischief is to be prevented : the second suit to establish the waste of the defendant executor or administrator, before any suit could be brought to charge his sureties, was as much intended to be dispensed with, in such case, as in the case in which the first judgement was obtained by any person in his own right. In the last case, the party obtaining the judgement, is authorized,
I think the attorney general’s criticism too nice,—that though the statute is retrospective as to tho judgement, it is prospective as to the execution issued upon it. The language, on examination, seems clearly to comprehend any execution issued on such judgements as were previously mentioned in the section.
As to the doubt which has been suggested, whether tho administrator de bonis non must not make himself a party to the judgement, by an action of debt on it, or by scire facias, before he can sue on the administration bond ; cui bono should he bring debt, or sue a scire facias on tho judgement? He could have no new execution on the judgement he would obtain in either case, after the return of nulla bona on the execution, or the return equivalent to it, in the case before us. At common law, he might have the scire fieri inquiry, directing the sheriff to inquire by a jury, whether waste of the assets had been committed by the executor or administrator ; and, on the return that waste had been committed, ho would have an execution de bonis propriis, to the extent of the waste found by the inquest: but the action of debt suggesting the waste, was found to be a more efficient mode of ascertaining the devastavit, aud has in fact, superseded the scire fieri inquiry, and rendered it obsolete. That action is now dispensed with by our statute : and to compel the administrator de bonis non, or any other representative, to resort to the scire fieri inquiry, would produce all the delay intended to he avoided by the statute;
In deciding this case, I shall take the case of Dykes v. Woodhouse to be unquestionable. Certainly, it ought not to be questioned except by a full court; and I should regret to see it disturbed, because it is better that the question of practice should be considered as settled, particularly, as the decision is in perfect conformity with the rights of parties and the convenience of suitors. By that decision it is declared, that an administrator de bonis non with the will annexed, may maintain an action of debt on a judgement obtained by the executor of his testator; which accords with the doctrine of Brudenel's case, 5 Co. 9. that the executor of an administrator who recovers a judgement, is not entitled to have execution of that judgement: and the converse of the proposition is equally true, as to the administrator of an executor. Now, in this case,
Nor do I think the objection valid, that the issue and return of the execution was anteriour to the enactment of the statute. The statute is clearly retrospective as to the judgement, as well as prospective. I see no reason for any difference, in this regard, as to the execution; and I do not perceive any absolute necessity for construing the words prospectively only. The construction of the statute concerning citizens (in Barzizas v. Hopkins, 2 Rand. 276.) shews, that the present term are, shall be interpreted may be, so as to embrace future cases. But a like freedom is not necessary here: for the words, “ and upon execution issued it shall be returned” seem to me to refer rather to the fact of the existence of such return, than to the time when it may have been made.
The last objection must also be overruled. The sheriff returned that he could find “no unadministered or unincumbered effects.” He could find neither one nor the other. How then from this negation as to both, can we infer the affirmative as to either ? If we cannot, then the return is equivalent to a general return nulla bona.
Judgement reversed.