Spiller v. Hollinger
Spiller v. Hollinger
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit instituted by appel-lee against R. I-I. Spiller, sheriff of Menard county, to enjoin hñn from serving, levying, or in any manner executing two writs of execution issued out of the justice’s court of precinct number one of Bexar county on January 6, 1911. The executions were issued under and by virtue of two judgments rendered on July 13, 1891, iü cases in which. D. Sullivan & Co. were plaintiffs and E. B. Hollinger the defendant. The executions were attacked on the ground that, more than 10 years having elapse'd since the last executions were issued, the judgments were barred by limitation. A temporary injunction was issued. D. Sullivan & Co. were made parties, and, together with them, the sheriff pleaded that the absence of appellee from the state of Texas from the year 1897 until the year 1910 had arrested the running of the statute. D. Sullivan & Co. claimed ownership of the judgments, and that they were unpaid, and prayed, in the alternative, for judgment for the amount of the two judgments, interest, and. costs. The cause was tried by the court, and the injunction was perpetuated, and it was decreed that D. Sullivan & Co. take nothing by their cross-action.
It is the contention that a judgment is a cause of action within the terms of article 3367, Revised Statutes, which provides that “if any person against whom there shall be cause of action shall be without the limits of this state at the time of the accruing of such action, or at any time during which the same might have been maintained, the person entitled to such action shall be at liberty to bring the same against such person after his return to the state, and the time of such person’s absence shall not be accounted or taken as a part of the time limited by any of the provisions of this title.” If the judgments against appellee were causes of action, within the purview of the article quoted, the owner of them must have had a cause of action upon which they could have instituted and maintained suit at any time within 10 years from the issuance of the executions, 'but there was no such cause of action which accrued at any time during the 10 years, and they could not have maintained a suit thereon at any time. They had live, active judgments under which they had the power and authority to issue executions at any time for 10 years from 1S91, whether appellee was in or out of the state, and the judgments could have been kept active thereby for an indefinite period of time. They had no cause of action. They had judgments in which their rights had been adjudicated, and that had been kept alive by issuance of executions within the year from the dates of their rendition. The statute of limitations never began to run by reason of the defendant being within the state, but was put into action by the issuance of the ‘ executions, and the absence of the defendant from the state did not deprive the owners of the judgment of any right whatever that they had and held under the statutes. The right to issue an execution is not dependent on the existence of property belonging to the debtor or the presence of the debtor in the state, but judgments could be kept alive by the issuance of successive executions in the absence of both property and the person of the defendant. A suit on an active judgment would not be entertained, unless some new or additional right was to be protected, because it would be an utterly useless action, would uselessly incumber the dockets of a court, and would entail inexcusable costs upon the defendant. It could not come within the letter or spirit of article 3367. The law does not open the courts of the country to parties to obtain something they already have without the aid of the courts. During the 10 years life of a judgment, which begins with the issuance of an execution within 12 months from the rendition of the judgment, the owner of the judgment has no cause of action against the defendant which has accrued or can accrue, but the cause of action has been merged into an active vital judgment which can be kept in that condition for an unlimited number of years.
Following up the question as to whether suits will ordinarily be permitted on vital judgments, we find the matter definitely settled by the courts of Texas. Johnson v. Murphy, 17 Tex. 216; Parks v. Young, 75 Tex. 278, 12 S. W. 986; Stevens v. Stone, 94 Tex. 415, 60 S. W. 959, 86 Am. St. Rep. 861. In the last-named case it was held: “Where no advantage can accrue to a plaintiff in a judgment by a second suit upon it, we fail to see that there is any propriety in allowing such suit. It is a narrow view of the subject, as we think, to say that the judgment is an evidence of debt, and that a debt will support a cause of action. The purpose of judicial actions is to afford remedies for the enforcement of rights, and, where the result of a suit prosecuted to success is to give the plaintiff no better remedy for the enforcement of his right than he had before, no reason other than a technical one can exist for permitting its prosecution. Since equity discourages a multiplicity of suits and will in a proper case enjoin vexatious litigation, and since under our blended system .equitable principles in every case have their full scope and effect, it would seem that our court should never allow a suit upon a judgment, unless it should be made to appear that the second judgment would be more efficacious than the first.” The judgments in this case could not have been brought within the scope of the exception, for the judgment creditors had no right to safeguard that could not be preserved by the means placed in their hands by the laws of Texas, and the intervention of a court was not required, and would have been absolutely unnecessary and inequitable. The law placed in their hands an inexpensive and efficacious means of preserving their rights by issuing executions, and that right was in no manner endangered or impaired by the absence of the judgment debtor from the state while the judgment was active. The courts could have done no more than the creditors could do themselves.
In the other two cases cited on the subject the same ruling was made. No reference is made in either of the decisions, however, to article 2326a, passed in 1895, no doubt because the judgments under consideration were rendered prior to the passage of that article. In the article mentioned it is provided: “If no execution is issued within twelve months after the rendition of a judgment in any court of record, the judgment shall become dormant and no execution shall issue thereon unless such judgment be revived; but where the first execution has issued within twelve months the judgment shall not become dormant unless ten years shall have elapsed between the issuance of executions thereon, and execution may issue at any time within the ten years after the issuance of the preceding execution.” We find in Black’s Raw Dictionary that a dormant judgment is defined as “one which has not been satisfied nor extinguished by lapse of time, but which has remained so long unexecuted that execution cannot now be issued upon it without first reviving the judgment.” It has never been doubted that the word “dormant” has that signification as applied in first part of article 1664, which applies to judgments of justices of the peace, which is almost identical with article 2326a, hereinbefore copied, and all rules of statutory construction would give it the same meaning when applied in the same article to judgments under which an execution has been issued within twelve months from the rendition of the judgment. If dormancy means a supension of functions for a certain period in the one instance, it must under all reasonable rules of construction mean it in the other. In Cooper v. Yoakum, 91 Tex. 391, 43 S. W. 871, this rule of construction is sustained.
If the language of articles 1664 and 2326a means anything, it means that a judgment under certain circumstances will become dormant, that is, inactive, in 12 months after rendition, and will remain so unless revived, and that a judgment under another set of circumstances will become dormant, that is, inactive, in 10 years from the time when an execution was issued, and remain so unless revived. In the first instance — that is, in regard to a judgment under which no execution has issued within 12 months from its rendition — 9 years is given by statute in which it can be revived. No time is prescribed in which the judgment can be revived or an action of debt sustained when a legal execution has been issued, and it would clearly *341 fall within the provisions of article 3S5S, which are as follows: “Every action other than for the recovery of real estate, for which no limitation is otherwise prescribed, shall be brought within four years next after the right to bring the same shall have accrued, and not afterwards.” We hold, therefore,, that the judgments of appellants against appellee became dormant in 1901, 10 years from the time the executions were issued, and that, under the statute, appellants had at that time the authority to institute suit to revive their judgments or to maintain an action of debt.
When the judgments became dormant, appellants then had a cause of action within the purview of article 3367, and, appellee being without the limits of the state at the time of the accruing of such action, the running of the statute of limitation of four years was suspended until his return, when an action to revive or for debt could be maintained.
Since arriving at the foregoing conclusions we have obtained a copy of a recent opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals of the Third Supreme Judicial District in the case of Gale Mfg. Co. v. Dupree, 146 S. W. 1048, not yet officially published, in which the subject in hand has been ably and forcibly presented by Chief Justice Key. In that opinion the case of Willis v. Stroud, 67 Tex. 516, 3 S. W. 732, in which dormancy is eliminated in so far as judgments are concerned from which executions have issued within 12 months, is thoroughly reviewed and overruled. We thoroughly concur with the reasoning of Judge Key. We conclude that the decision of the Supreme Court is shown to be erroneous by Judge Key, even in the light of the statutes and decisions of that time. It is well said by Judge Key: “To hold that limitation began to run from the date of the issuance of the execution upon the judgment would be to hold that the cause of action was barred before it came into existence, and this court is not willing to commit itself to such an absurd proposition.”
Reversed and rendered.
Reference
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- SPILLER Et Al. v. HOLLINGER
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- Published