Foley v. Kelleher
Foley v. Kelleher
Opinion of the Court
This is a proceeding to revive the judgment involved in the case of Kelleher v. Wells, 87 Wash. 323, 151 Pac. 823. That was an injunction suit to restrain the enforcement of a judgment rendered on May 17, 1909, in a common law action on a judgment originally rendered in
The present proceeding to revive was instituted by motion filed in the common law action on January 22, 1915, pending the appeal in the injunction suit. Defendant answered admitting the rendition of the judgment of May 17, 1909, and interposing two affirmative defenses: (1) that the judgment had expired on May 17,1915, and was not capable of revival; (2) that the action of Kelleher v. Wells was pending on appeal to determine the same rights sought to be determined in this action. Plaintiff demurred to these affirmative defenses. The demurrer was sustained. Defendant abiding by his pleading, an order reviving the judgment was entered. He appeals.
As to the first affirmative defense, this case is a replica of the case of Fischer v. Kittinger, 39 Wash. 174, 81 Pac. 551. In that case, as here, the judgment involved was recovered in a common law action upon a judgment, which original judgment was based upon a contract antedating the act of 1897. The judgment upon the original judgment was held revivable by motion under the old law as the law of the contract, regardless of the fact that the judgment sought to be revived was rendered after the passage of the act of 1897. We adhere to that view.
As to the second affirmative defense, it is manifest that the action of Kelleher v. Wells was not brought to determine the same right sought to be exercised by the plaintiff in this proceeding. That action was brought to enjoin the enforce
The demurrer to the answer was properly sustained. Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Maurice Foley v. John Kelleher
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Judgment — Revival—Constitutional Law — Impairment of Obligation of Contract — Statutes. Laws of 1897, p. 52, Rem. & Bal. Code, §§459, 460, limiting the life of a judgment to six years and prohibiting its revival for a longer period, is void as impairing the obligation of the contract as respects a judgment based upon a contract antedating the passage of the act; hence such a judgment may be revived upon notice and motion under the old law as the law of the contract. Abatement and Revival — Another Action Pending — Identity of Issues. The pendency of an action by a judgment debtor to enjoin the enforcement of a judgment by execution cannot be pleaded in abatement of a motion by the judgment creditor to revive the judgment against the judgment debtor; since no such relief could be awarded in the injunction suit.