Sheldon v. Arnold
Sheldon v. Arnold
Opinion of the Court
This' was an. action by the appellee, who was the plaintiff, to enjoin the sale, on execution, of certain real estate, described as lots 17 and 18, in Legonier, Noble county. The appellants were the defendants below. Defendants demurred to the complaint; but their demurrer was overruled, and thereupon they filed their answer, to which the plaintiff demurred. This demurrer was sustained, and final judgment rendered for the plaintiff, enjoining the sale, &c.
The facts of this case, as they are set forth in the pleadings, are substantially these: Sheldon, Hoyt and Van GraasbeeJc, on December 28, 1857, recovered two judgments against Johnson Ourl and James Smalley, each for $200, before a justice of the peace of Noble county; and on the 20th of that month, filed transcripts thereof in the clerk’s office of the Noble Common Pleas, which were duly certified by the' justice, and by the clerk of said' Court duly entered upon the order book. On Jamtary 5, Í 858, the plaintiff, for the consideration of $300, then paid to Johnson Ourl, purchased of him the real estate in question, and received from him a deed in fee simple, pursuant to the purchase; and the
It must be conceded, that the judgments upon the filing and recording of the first transcripts became liens upon the lands described in the complaint; but these transcripts and the records thereof were destroyed, and, of course, no executions could issue upon them until they were reinstated in some mode known to the law. Have they been so reinstated? It is enacted, that any circuit or inferior court of record,' held in any county, the records whereof have been destroyed, in whole or in part, may cause to be reinstated any judgment or decree, before that time made or rendered in said Court. 2 R. S., § 20, p. 510. The terms “made or rendered in said Court,” as used in the statute, if literally construed, would not embrace the judgment of a justice, filed and recorded in the Circuit or Common Pleas Court; but such judgment, when so filed and recorded, is, evidently, within the equity of the statute. Smith’s Comm. 819, et seq. This construction being correct, and we think it is, the judgments in this case, their records having been destroyed, can
Per Curiam. — The judgment is affirmed, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.