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Barrow v. Arrenton

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1840
23 N.C. 223 (N.C. 1840)

Summary

In Barrow v. Arrenton, 23 N.C. 228, Gaston, J., referring to the act of 1784, says: "Since this act, therefore, whatever doubts might have been entertained before, the law is positive that the lands of a deceased debtor in the hands of his heirs cannot be sold, upon a judgment obtained against an executor or administrator, until after a sci.

Summary of this case from Weston v. Lumber Co.

Opinion

(December Term, 1840.)

1. A writ from a court, commanding the sheriff to summon A. and B., heirs of C., deceased, to be and appear, etc., "then and there to show cause, if any, why D. shan't have judgment against the lands of said deceased, in the hands of his said heirs, for $150, besides interest and cost," is not such a scire facias as is required by the act of 1784, subjecting the real estate of a deceased person to the payment of his debts (Rev. St., ch. 63, sec. 1) though a debt may have been previously established against the administrator, the plea of fully administered found in his favor, judgment signed, and an award of sci. fa. against the heirs.

2. Such a writ does not set forth nor refer to a judgment previously rendered in any action for any person, and of course does not call on the heirs to show cause why execution on that judgment shall not issue against the lands descended to them.

3. Where, upon the return of such a writ, judgment by default was entered upon the record, and an award of execution against the lands in the hands of the heirs: Held, that the judgment was a nullity, and that the purchaser at a sheriff's sale, under an execution issuing upon it, acquired no title.

EJECTMENT, to the Fall Term, 1839, of PERQUIMANS, and tried at Fall Term, 1840, before Battle, J. The following is the case made up by the judge:

Badger for plaintiff.

Kinney and A. Moore for defendant.


The lessor of the plaintiff, after proving the defendant to be in possession of the premises described in the declaration, produced in evidence the deed of the sheriff to him for lots Nos. 2 and 3, the premises in question; then two judgments against one William Arrenton's administrator, with a finding of fully administered in favor of the administrator; an order for scire facias to issue against said Arrenton's heirs; instruments alleged to be sci. fas. and venditioni exponases, under which the lessor showed the will of Ambrose Knox, devising the lands in question with other lands to the children of John and Parthenia Wyatt, in the division of which among the children lot No. 2 was drawn (224) by Mary Wyatt and lot No. 3 by Ambrose K. Wyatt; the death of Mary Wyatt, leaving Ambrose K. Wyatt her heir at law; a judgment against Ambrose Wyatt's administrator, with a finding of fully administered in favor of the administrator; an order for a sci. fa. against heirs and devisees of the said Ambrose; instruments alleged to be sci. fas. against said heirs and devisees; judgment pursuant thereto; venditioni exponases, and the sheriff's deed to Hugh Wyatt; a deed from Hugh Wyatt to Charles Arrenton; Charles Arrenton's death without children, intestate; a judgment in favor of William Arrenton against his administrator, with a finding of fully administered in favor of the administrator; an order for sci. fa. against the heirs of the said Charles, of whom the said William was one; instruments alleged to be sci. fas.; judgment pursuant thereto; venditioni exponas and sheriff's deed to Charles and James Arrenton, which the plaintiff alleged was fraudulent and void as to William Arrenton's creditors, because the purchase money, as he alleged, was paid by William Arrenton.

The defendant's counsel objected that the instruments alleged to be sci. fas. could not be taken as such, and that the entries of judgments pursuant thereto were void as judgments; and that therefore the deeds from the different sheriffs through which the plaintiff's lessor deduced his title were inoperative; and further, that the judgment in favor of William Arrenton against the heirs of Charles Arrenton, of whom he was one, was void on account of the same person being both plaintiff and defendant, and that in both accounts the plaintiff's lessor could not make out a title, and plaintiff must be nonsuited.

The court was of opinion that the instruments offered as sci. fas. could not be received as such; that they were substantially defective in not reciting any judgment; that the heirs could derive no information from them as to the purpose for which they were summoned into court; and that as the judgments were entered up pursuant to the sci. fas. without the appearance of the heirs in court, they were the same as if no process had been served on the heirs, and were therefore void; and that (225) as the act of Assembly required sci. fas. to be issued against the heirs before the court could make any order to sell the lands, the purchaser acquired no title by his purchase under the venditioni exponas.

In submission to this opinion, the plaintiff submitted to a judgment of nonsuit, from which he appealed to the Supreme Court.

Copy of one of the instruments alleged to be a sci. fa.:

State of North Carolina, to the Sheriff of Perquimans County — Greeting:

You are hereby commanded to summon Mary White of full age, Parthenia Arrenton and Penelope Arrenton, to whom John Wood is guardian, and Charles Arrenton, to whom Jonathan H. Jacocks is guardian, heirs at law of William Arrenton, deceased, personally to be and appear before the justices of the county court of pleas and quarter sessions at the next court to be held for the county of Perquimans, at the courthouse in Hertford, on the second Monday in August next, then and there to show cause, if any, why Thomas Long shan't have judgment against the lands of said deceased in the hands of his said heirs for $150, besides interest and costs; and this you shall in no wise omit under the penalty by law enjoined.

Witness, John Wood, clerk of the said court, at Hertford, the second Monday of May in the sixtieth year of our independence, 1836.

Issued 27 May, 1836. (Signed) JOHN WOOD, Clerk. Returned, Executed. N. BAGLEY, Sheriff.

The other sci. faciases were in the same form. In the last case mentioned, of T. Long v. Arrenton's heirs, a verdict and judgment, at May Term, 1836, had been rendered against the administrator as follows:

Jury impaneled and sworn, say there is no payment nor set-off; value of the obligation $150, and assess the plaintiff's damages in interest to $18. They further find the defendant has fully administered and has no assets. By the court judgment for $168. Issue sci. fa. v. the heirs. On the return of the sci. fa. to August Term, 1836, "judgment pursuant to sci. fa., and on motion, ordered that execution issue and that clerk indorse thereon that the sheriff will only sell the interest of (226) the heirs who are of full age, in the lands of William and James Arrenton, deceased, and forbear as to the infant heirs — stay execution 12 months as to them."


It was necessary for the plaintiff's lessor, in order to establish a title to the land in controversy, to show that under his purchase at sheriff's sale he had acquired the interest therein which had descended from William Arrenton to his heirs at law. According to the settled law of this State, the sheriff's sale did not transfer that estate, unless there was a judgment, or order of court, warranting the execution under which the land was sold.

The abstract from the records in relation to the supposed judgment and the proceedings upon it is not as full as we could desire. Especially we could wish that the execution itself had been set forth at length. But as we have no means of making the case more full than it appears upon the transcript, we have proceeded to consider it such as we understand it to be.

It appears from the records of Perquimans County Court that there was an action there pending, instituted by one Thomas Long against the administrator of William Arrenton, in which action the defendant had pleaded "payment and set-off and fully administered," at the May Term, 1836, of the said court; that on the pleas of payment and set-off, the jury found for the plaintiff; and on that of fully administered, returned a verdict for the defendant; whereupon the plaintiff had judgment for $168 and his costs of suit, to be taxed by the clerk, and prayed for a scire facias to be awarded against the heirs. From the said May term there issued to the succeeding August term a writ, alleged to be a scire facias, commanding the sheriff to summon the persons therein named, and styled "the heirs at law of William Arrenton" (some of them described as infants, and sued by guardians therein named), personally (227) to be and appear before the next term of the said court, "to show cause why Thomas Long shall not have judgment against the lands of said deceased in the hands of his said heirs for $150, besides interest and costs." The sheriff returned this writ executed, and thereupon, at the August Term, 1836, there is this entry on the docket of the court: "Judgment pursuant to sci. fa., and on motion, ordered that execution issue, and that the clerk indorse thereon that the sheriff will only sell the interest of the heirs of full age in the lands of William and James Arrenton, deceased, and forbear as to the infant heirs; stay execution twelve months as to them." From August term there issued an execution, commanding the sheriff of the lands of William Arrenton, descended to his heirs at law (naming them) to cause to be made the sum of $168 and costs of suit which Thomas Long had recently recovered in said court, and also his costs expended on the scire facias against the said heirs; and under this execution the sheriff sold and conveyed to the plaintiff's lessor the land in controversy.

It is evident that the judicial proceedings referred to were attempted to be fashioned after the model of those prescribed in our act of 1784, Revised Code, ch. 226; 1 Rev. St., ch. 63; but the attempt has been awkward and unsuccessful. The Stat. of 5 Geo. II., ch. 7, had made lands in the colonies liable to and chargeable with all just debts, and declared them assets for the satisfaction thereof in like manner as real estates were by the laws of England liable for debts due by specialty; and had also enacted that they should be subject to the like remedies and process for seizing and selling the same for the satisfaction of such debts as personal estates in the colonies were liable to for seizure and sale. In furtherance of the objects of this statute, our Legislature in 1777, Revised Code 1777, ch. 115, sec. 29, enacted that process which theretofore issued against goods and chattels should issue against goods and chattels, lands and tenements; and that upon such process it should be the duty of the sheriff to levy upon lands and tenements, if a sufficiency of goods and chattels could not be had to answer the exigency of the writ. But until the act of 1784 there was no legislative provision by which, on the decease of a debtor by simple contract, (228) his lands, which, by the statute of George II, had been rendered liable for the satisfaction of such debt, were to be pursued by the creditor. That act, after reciting that doubts were entertained whether the lands of deceased debtors, in the hands of their heirs or devisees, should be subject to the payment of debts upon judgments against executors or administrators, in order to remove such doubts thereafter, and to direct the mode of proceeding in such cases, enacted that when in an action at law an executor or administrator should plead fully administered, no assets, or not sufficient assets to satisfy the plaintiff's demand, and such plea should be found in favor of the defendant, the plaintiff might proceed to ascertain his demand and sign judgment; but, before taking out execution against the real estate of the deceased debtor, a writ or writs of scire facias should issue, summoning the heirs or devisees of such debtor to show cause wherefore execution should not issue against the real estate for the amount of such judgment, or so much thereof as the personal assets were not sufficient to discharge; and that if judgment should pass against the heirs or devisees, or any of them, execution should issue against the lands of the deceased debtor in their hands. Since this act, therefore, whatever doubts might have been entertained before, the law is positive that the lands of a deceased debtor in the hands of his heirs cannot be sold, upon a judgment obtained against an executor or administrator, until after a sci. fa. shall issue to the heirs to show cause, if any they have, why execution of said judgment shall not issue against the lands.

Now, with every disposition to view indulgently defects and errors of form in judicial proceedings, and especially in those which are had in the county courts, we must hold that the writ, which is here relied on as a scire facias under the act of 1784, is fatally defective, and cannot be treated as such. It does not set forth nor refer to a judgment previously rendered, in any action for any person, and of course does not call on the heirs to show cause why execution upon that judgment shall not issue against the lands descended to them. It does not (229) purport to be connected with any antecedent proceedings whatever had in that court or in any court; and we are unable to trace a connection between the writ and the former proceedings in that court, except such as may be inferred from the identity of name of the plaintiff in those proceedings and the plaintiff in the writ, and from the circumstance that those proceedings were had against the administrator of the same person whose heirs are by the writ directed to be summoned. The writ is an original process, of a very singular character indeed, calling on the heirs of William Arrenton to answer to a demand for $150 of Thomas Long, which is no way described, but is sought to be converted into a judgment against the lands to them descended; and is not a judicial process founded upon a matter of record or matter incidental thereto, in order to further and accomplish the end and object of the record, by insuring its effectual operation. It would violate principle to regard this as a scire facias under the act of 1784.

But it is argued that it is immaterial how defective the scire facias may be, if a judgment or order of court of competent authority has been made, after notice to the parties interested, awarding the execution, which did issue. Suppose this position be conceded, will the case of the plaintiff be helped? He must produce some judgment or order of the court warranting that execution. What is it? What purports to be the judgment? "Judgment pursuant to sci. fa.," is per se a nullity. To give it any meaning, we are obliged to recur to what is understood to be the scire facias referred to, and by a liberal aid of this we may perhaps make out that "Thomas Long has judgment against the lands of William Arrenton deceased, in the hands of his heirs for $150, besides interest and costs." What would be the meaning and legal effect of a judgment rendered in those terms, and what kind of process might lawfully issue to enforce it, are inquiries perhaps not easily answered, and, at all events, unnecessary to be now considered. For it is very clear that the execution which issued did not correspond with, and therefore was not, an execution to enforce this supposed judgment (230) or award. It is an execution to make of the lands descended to the heirs of William Arrenton the sum of one hundred and sixty-eight dollars, and the costs of suit taxed by the clerk in the suit, which Thomas Long recovered against the estate of William Arrenton in the action brought by him against the administrator of the said William, and the costs of the scire facias sued out against the heirs thereon. There was indeed such a judgment recovered as is recited in the execution; but unfortunately for the title of the lessor of the plaintiff, there was no scire facias against the heirs previously to the suing out of such execution thereon. There was, therefore, no judgment or order of court, in law, warranting that execution.

PER CURIAM. Affirmed.


Summaries of

Barrow v. Arrenton

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1840
23 N.C. 223 (N.C. 1840)

In Barrow v. Arrenton, 23 N.C. 228, Gaston, J., referring to the act of 1784, says: "Since this act, therefore, whatever doubts might have been entertained before, the law is positive that the lands of a deceased debtor in the hands of his heirs cannot be sold, upon a judgment obtained against an executor or administrator, until after a sci.

Summary of this case from Weston v. Lumber Co.
Case details for

Barrow v. Arrenton

Case Details

Full title:DEN ON DEMISE OF ALFRED S. BARROW v. PENELOPE ARRENTON

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1840

Citations

23 N.C. 223 (N.C. 1840)

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Weston v. Lumber Co.

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