Girdner v. McWilliams
Girdner v. McWilliams
Opinion of the Court
Bespondent brought suit against appellant on a promissory note and obtained service returnable to the September, 1913, term of the circuit court of Livingston county. After service was thus
It is appellant’s contention that under sections 498, 499 and 500, Revised Statutes 1909, respondent’s claim must be presented for allowance against appellant’s estate in tbe probate court and no execution can be issued out of the circuit court upon said judgment. It was agreed that tbe estate was insufficient to pay debts in full, but would have to be prorated.
. Respondent says that as no execution was actually issued under tbe order, appellant has presented only a moot case, and that there is nothing before tbe court for consideration.
We think there is more than a mere moot question involved. Tbe right of the plaintiff in tbe case to have an execution on bis judgment is involved. If tbe order stands, plaintiff can obtain tbe issuance of tbe execution at any moment and without notice.
Appellant’s property is liable to seizure thereunder and appellant is without redress against tbe officer holding tbe writ. He is somewhat in tbe situation of being in front of a spring-gun, loaded, pointed,' set,
The plaintiff is not prevented from enforcing his judgment upon any property which defendant may have fraudulently conveyed, and which the guardian, standing in the shoes of the defendant, cannot enforce because of the fraud. The plaintiff can bring suit as a judgment creditor to have the fraudulent conveyance set aside. [Lionberger v. Baker, 88 Mo. 447.] And this is the better practice. [Welsh v. Mann, 193 Mo. 304, l. c. 326.] Besides, it was not shown that there was any such fraudulently conveyed property.
The order for an execution was not a final judgment it is true, hut it was “a special order after final judgment” from which an appeal is expressly provided by séction 2038, Revised Statutes 1909. It was an order made in that case for the purpose of enforcing the judgment rendered therein at the same term at which the order was made. The case of Ackerman v. Green, 201 Mo. 231 is not in point. That was a separate, independent, and special proceeding under a statute,
Appellant concedes that respondent may file his judgment in the probate court and have it allowed against the estate. Under the statutes above'mentioned, the holder of such a judgnient is not entitled to an execution against the property in the hands of the guardian and under the jurisdiction of the probate court. And the guardian has more than a mere academic interest in removing the possibility of an execution issuing which would result in expense and litigation-in preventing its enforcement. The mere possibility of its being issued is o.f some power as a hindrance and restraint on the control and disposition of property..
The judgment is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded with directions to set aside the order directing execution to issue.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.