Reid v. Bristol
Decision Date | 23 March 1955 |
Docket Number | No. 236,236 |
Citation | 241 N.C. 699,86 S.E.2d 417 |
Court | North Carolina Supreme Court |
Parties | P. M. REID v. W. A. BRISTOL and Mabel L. Bristol. |
J. F. Jordan, Wilkesboro, for plaintiff, appellant.
Scott, Collier & Nash and Zeb V. Long, Statesville, for defendant, appellee.
As indicated above, this appeal does not concern the status of the judgment of 9 October, 1936, in favor of the late P. M. Reid and against Mabel L. Bristol. However, upon the record before us, it would appear that the lien thereof on real property, if any, has ceased to exist, G.S. § 1-234, Lupton v. Edmundson, 220 N.C. 188, 16 S.E.2d 840; and further, that the time for the issuance of execution thereon to enforce payment has expired. G.S. § 1-306.
Under former statutory provisions, last codified as sections 667 and 668 of the Consolidated Statutes of 1919 (superseded by G.S. § 1-306), the life of a judgment, solely for the purpose of issuing execution thereon, might be prolonged beyond the expiration of ten years from the date of rendition; and, when the judgment became dormant by failure to issue execution within three years from rendition or from issuance of a prior execution thereon, the judgment creditor, by notice to show cause, scire facias, and upon satisfactory proof, might obtain leave to revive the judgment and issue execution thereon. McIntosh, N.C.P. & P. (1929), 834-835; Barnes v. Fort, 169 N.C. 431, 86 S.E. 340. Under this procedure, no judgment was contemplated or permitted, but only the revival of the original (dormant) judgment for one purpose, namely, the issuance of execution thereon.
Reference to the former practice discussed above is made solely because cases cited by appellant were decided in relation thereto. But that practice is now obsolete. Since the enactment of ch. 98, Public Laws of 1935, now codified as the proviso in G.S. § 1-306, 'no execution upon any judgment which requires the payment of money * * * may be issued at any time after ten years from the date of the rendition thereof ' The concept of a dormant judgment has no place under present statutory provisions. It is of interest only because a knowledge thereof is necessary to understand the earlier decisions and statute.
During a period when sec. 14 of the C.C.P. (1868) was in effect, it was necessary to obtain leave of court before commencing such independent action on a judgment. Warren v. Warren, 84 N.C. 614. An action on a judgment was recognized as entirely different from a motion to revive a dormant judgment for the purpose of issuing execution thereon, since both remedies could be pursued at the same time. McDonald v. Dickson, 85 N.C. 248. But this statute was not brought forward in the Code of 1883; and, since 1883, such action may be brought as of right. Dunlap v. Hendley, 92 N.C. 115.
As stated by Pearson, C. J., in Parker v. Shannonhouse, 61 N.C. 209: Sec. 109, ch. 31, Rev.Code of 1854, by its terms, treats of procedure, by scire facias, to obtain leave to issue execution on a dormant judgment; and sec. 5, ch. 1, Ordinance of 1866, provides 'that dormant judgments shall only be revived by actions of debt, and every scire facias to revive a judgment shall be dismissed on motion.' Be that as it may, if in ante-bellum days it was ever permissible, by scire...
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