Follett v. Hall
Follett v. Hall
Opinion of the Court
The simple question in this case is, which had the
preferable lien, the judgment or mortgage. It is contended that the judgment lien, taking effect from the first day of the term, includes the entire day, upon the principle that a day in law is not divisible, and is therefore older and superior to that of the
It may be said, that to permit parties to dispose of, or incumber their property on tho day court begins, but before it actually convenes,, opens a door to fraud. This may now be done up to tho first day, and the construction we give to the statute affords very little further opportunity. But it must be remembered, that a fraudulent disposition of property will not avail against a judgment. With the subject of fraud we have now nothing to do. We are merely attempting to fix tho time at which judgment liens attach under the statute. A judgment lien is not better, and should not prevail against other liens, upon the ground that it is of superior dignity. There is no equity which requires that we should endeavor to extend to it an advantage over other liens honestly acquired. In the present case, there is an honest effort among creditors to secure their debts. Tho one takes a mortgage before the day on which court commences, and hands it in for
The demurrer is overruled, and the decree heretofore rendered in this case reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. This case presents the naked question, whether a judgment rendered in a cause duly pending, shall operate as a lien on real estate, situate within the county, from the first day of the term at which it is rendered, including the first day, as fixed by law.
It is with regret that I find myself differing from the majority of the court at any time. Their opinions demand my respect. Yet however anxious I may be to come to any particular conclusion, I can not do it as a matter of choice.
I believe the decision just announced is unsound. The late learned chief judge who was with me when the case was originally decided, was also at the last session of this court after ful] argument, sincerely and advisedly of the same opinion. In stating the reasons which have operated upon my mind, I desire it to be understood that the doctrine is admitted that parts of days, may, in a proper case, be noticed for the prevention of injustice, nor do I understand that there is any difference between me and my brethren, as to the true meaning of the statute relating to mortgages.
We all hold, since the decision in Stansell v. Roberts, that a mortgage has no effect; that it is like an unexecuted contract, until it is filed with the recorder of the county for record. Such is the effect of the statute relating to mortgages. Again, we all agree that since the enactment of the statute, fixing the liens of judg
Now with these facts and premises, upon which there is no division of opinion, I can not conceive that the lien of this judgment is junior to the lion of the mortgage. It does seem to follow that the first is some eight hours older than the latter. Both are legal liens. Both stand upon their respective legal rights, and both depend upon positive enactments which no court ought to gainsay.
This is not a case where a mere legal fiction is attempted to be interposed to defeat a prior equitj1'. It is a case where an older legal right is given to a bona fide judgment by a positive statute in express terms, and to which all the cases, cited to prove that a day may be divided to prevent a legal fiction from working injustice, are either wholly inapplicable, or they prove, by strong analogy, the unsoundness of the application which has just been made of them.
Adjudicated cases have been cited also to prove that a lien attaching at a particular hour of a day, shall be preferred to a lion attaching of the day generally. Admitting the soundness of these decisions and applying correctly the principle doducible from them, and the mortgage lien must yield, because the judgment lien took effect on the first hour of the term of the court, and the mortgage on the eighth hour of the same term. These cases sustain my views.
The terms of the courts are matters of law, of which all the people of the state are bound to take notice. To learn when they commence, the statute only need be looked to. The legislature intended to leave no room for dispute here. But the hour when the court may have actually commenced its session is very uncertain. It may have been at one o’clock in the morning, or at eleven o’clock at night, or at any intermediate hour. In many counties the records will only show that the terms of the courts commenced on the days prescribed by law, without any mention of the hour of the day at which the judges and officers convened. Is it so, then, that the party taking a judgment, at a term when no
The opportunities of embarrassing creditors in the legal pursuit of their honest demands, have heretofore been sufficiently numerous. The means of committing fraud have ever been sufficiently ample. I can not but believe that a new door for gross fraud, and difficult of detection, will be needlessly opened by the rule now established, and that it will be hereafter somewhat improved, to the prejudice of the morals, the peace, and of the best interests of the public generally, as well as to the injury of individual judgment creditors. For these, and the reasons alluded to by counsel, and for other reasons that might be given, it is out of my power to concur in reversing the decree of this court, which was made upon the circuit, and made, too, deliberately, after full argument.
It may be hard for this mortgagee to lose the benefit of his security. But a hard case is a poor excuse for establishing a bad precedent. It is merely saving one man from misfortune, by visiting evils upon the whole community.
*1 do not desire to dwell long upon this subject. Yet there is one other view of the case which has force with me.» The entire usage of the state to the present time has been in accordance with the views that I have stated.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Foster M. Follett v. Francis Hall and others
- Status
- Published