Woods v. Haviland
Woods v. Haviland
Opinion of the Court
This cause was submitted to the District Court, and is submitted to this court on an agreed statement of facts. On the 4th day of December, 1868, a judgment was rendered by a justice of the peace against L. E. B. Holt et al., and an execution was issued thereon in 1877, under and by virtue of which the plaintiff was garnished as the supposed debtor of the execution debtors. It is agreed by counsel, if the execution was invalid, judgment should be rendered for the plaintiff, but, if valid, the defendants were entitled to judgment. The District Court found the execution was invalid and rendered judgment accordingly.
The Revision was in force when the judgment was rendered, and it is therein provided that executions for the enforcement of judgments rendered by a justice of the peace may be- issued “at any time within five years from the entry of the judgment, but not afterward.” Rev. § 3911.
The question, then, is, whether there is a statute which controls the operation of section 3569 of the Code, so that the provisions thereof do not apply to judgments rendered under the Eevision.
It is provided by statute: “All public and general statutes passed prior to the present session of the General Assembly, and all public and special acts, the subjects whereof are revised in this Code, or repugnant to the provisions thereof, are hereby repealed, subject to the limitations and with the exceptions herein expressed. This repeal of existing statutes shall not affect any act done, any right accruing, or which has accrued or been established,” * * . Code § § 17, 50.
The statutory provisions contained in the Eevision in relation to the issuance of executions on judgments rendered by a justice of the peace are of a general and public nature, and were revised by the Code, and, therefore, repealed thereby, unless a right was accruing, or had accrued, thereunder. "We have, then, to inquire, what is the extent or character of the right thus preserved.
It is quite clear that an accruing or accrued vested right
To us it seems clear that the accruing and accrued rights are and must be' of the same character. There is no other distinction made by the statute except that one has accrued and the other is accruing. The statute takes effect upon both, and both are preserved to the party entitled thereto. This being so, we will suppose the five years had expired, during which an execution could issue under the Eevision, when the Code took effect. No execution could issue under the Code, because the right was barred when it took effect. The right, therefore, had accrued. But if such right was simply accruing, it was not affected by the repeal of the prior statutes, but as such right related to the remedy only, and was existing when the Code took effect, the time within which an execution could be issued was thereby extended to the period of ten years from the rendition of the judgment. It seems to us there is no escape from this conclusion, and we think it has been substantially so held in Du Boise, McGovern & Co. v. Bloom, 38 Iowa, 512, and McDonald v. Jackson, 55 Id., 37.
The facts in Gray v. Iliff, 30 Id., 195, are like those in the case before us. The decision, however, was placed on other grounds. The point under consideration does not seem to have been made by counsel, at least it is not alluded to by the court. The right in Schmidt v. Holtz, 44 Iowa, 446, was held to be a “substantial right which became a part of the contract.” This is not claimed in the present case. Being of the opinion the execution was properly issued and was valid, the judgment must be
Beveksed.
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