Hopgood v. Dawson
Hopgood v. Dawson
Opinion of the Court
I® this case two actions were consolidated in the court below; the one begun in 1869 to enforce against the defendant in her own right and as tutrix the payment of a judgment against her deceased husband. W. W. Dawson, rendered on the twenty-second November, 1860; the other to revive the said judgment as against the succession of W. W. Dawson. The petition to revive was filed on the twelfth September, 1870, and the prayer asked for the citation, of the defendant in her capacity of administratrix, and not otherwise. The citation was issued, addressed to her “personally and as tutrix,” and was served September 21, 1870. Mrs. Wildblood and Mrs. Wicker intervened on the nineteenth January, 1871, alleging themselves to be major heirs of W. W. Dawson, and made the plea of prescription of ten years. On the twenty-seventh January, 1871, the defendant coming in. as administratrix, and for this purpose only, made what was called a “motion to strike out a default,” upon the ground that there had been no proper citation against her as administratrix. On the same day the cause was tried, and judgment was thereafter rendered
The plea of prescription is well taken. The judgment was prescribed November 22, 1870, and was not revived by citation to the “defendant” in the judgment “or his representative,” as required by law. R. S. 2813. The citation served on Mrs. P. A. Dawson, personally and as tutrix, was not a citation to W. W. Dawson “or Lis representative.”
Judgment affirmed
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.