Livingston v. Rendall , 59 Barb. 493 ( 1871 )


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  • Learned, J.

    This is a motion by an administratrix to set aside a judgment against her intestate, a sole defendant, on the ground that it was recovered after his death. The summons, without the complaint, was served September 5, 1866, by the plaintiff’s attorney. The. proof of such service was made January 29, 1870. And on the same' day a judgment roll was filed, consisting, of the summons and proof of service, of a complaint verified on the same day, by the plaintiff’s attorney, of an affidavit made the same day, by the plaintiff’s attorney, that no answer or demurrer had been served, and of the usual judgment for the recovery, of $2451.30, and costs, $20.52. The complaint sets forth the recovery of a judgment against the defendant and another, June 5, 1856, and the assignment of such judgment to the .plaintiff", and asks judgment for the amount thereof. A few months after the *494recovery of the judgment in this action, the plaintiff’s attorney wrote at the foot of the roll a suggestion of the death of the defendant on or about the 1st of January, 1870; as the fact was. The' plaintiff and his attorney made oath that they had ho knowledge of the defendant’s death at the time of entering judgment. The plaintiff’s attorney states that, after the service of the summons, he delayed entering judgment, owing to the defendant’s statement that he was poor, and that he would pay when he could, if the plaintiff would not enter judgment; that in December, 1869, the plantiff’s attorney notified the defendant that he should enter up judgment.

    The plaintiff claims that the judgment is properly entered, under the authority of 2 R. S. marg. p. 359, §'7. This section provides that in all cases in which a record of judgment shall be filed and docketed within one year after the death of the party against whom such judgment was obtained, a suggestion of such death, if it happened. before judgment rendered, shall be entered on the record.

    There are several provisions of the Revised Statutes, made in reference to the old practice,*which have become practically inapplicable to the practice under the. Code. Originally, judgments were perfected only in term time; and even after the statute allowed the perfecting of judgments in vacation, still the “placita” was of the preceding term, or of the term when issue was joined. But in theory and in form, whenever a default was taken or judgment by default granted, it was' done by the court. And this was evidenced by the. entry of a rule in the common rule book. In an action on a judgment like the present, the plaintiff’s attorney, on filing proof of service of process or its equivalent, would have entered first, the defendant’s appearance, next his default, then a judgment • that the plantiff recover against the defendant his debt.

    This would be the judgment off the court, in the case; in theory, granted by the court; in fact, taken by the *495plaintiff at his peril. Subsequent to this obtaining of judgment, another thing was to be done by the plaintiff, before any proceedings could be had thereon, viz., the filing a record. (2 R. S. marg. p. 360, §§ 14, 15.) This was a more formal document than the collection of papers which, under the present practice, constitutes the judgment roll. It was a history of the proceedings. It did not contain the proof of service of process; for that had been previously filed. It was the record of a judgment which had leen obtained; the judgment having been previously entered in the rule, book of the court. It is to this practice that section 7, above cited, refers; that is, to the filing of a record within a year after the death of the party against whom the judgment was obtained. The judgment referred to, in that section, was either obtained during the life of the party, or was rendered on a verdict obtained during his life. . The record of it might be filed after his death.

    How, the difficulty in-this present case is, that there was no judgment taken against the defendant during his life, and no verdict rendered against him. '

    Probably the plaintiff might have filed his proof of service, and entered a rule for judgment; although this practice seems at present to prevail only in cases of actual application to the court for judgment. And if the plaintiff had taken and entered a judgment during the life of the defendant, it is very possible that he could have filed the judgment roll- within a year after the defendant’s death. But he did no such thing. The only judgment which he has obtained was obtained-after the .defendant’s death. I think that he could not do this. It is true that the time to answer now expires by its own limitation, without the entry of a rule for default. But certainly, a judgment is not recovered against a defendant by the mere inaction of the plaintiff. The mere lapse of twenty days from the service of the summons is not the obtain*496ing of a judgment. Indeed, it appears by the plaintiff’s papers that the obtaining of a judgment was delayed, not, perhaps, by agreement, but by mutual understanding, from September 5, 1866, to the middle of December, 1869 ; which was till about two weeks before the defendant’s death.. There was, under the old practice, and there still is, I think, a plain distinction between a judgment and a judgment roll. The distinction can be easily seen in such actions as foreclosure or partition, and others of that nature. But in simple actions on contract, where judgment is taken by default, the practice seems to prevail that there shall be no entry of judgment except what is contained in the roll. Yet the Code requires the clerk to enter judgments in a judgment book. (§ 279.) At any rate, in this present case, there was no verdict, and there was no judgment obtained until after the death of the defendant. And, indeed, it was not till after his death, and till the very day of filing the roll, that the complaint was verified, or proof of the service of the summons made. Every act, therefore, except the service of the summons, three years before, was done after the defendant was dead.

    It will be seen, also, by reference to 2 B. S. marg. p. 387, §§ 3, 4, 5, that under the old practice, it was only after verdict or judgment interlocutory, that a final judgment could be entered when the sole defendant had died. Even in the case of judgment interlocutory, a scire facias was tó be issued against the executors and the judgment was > against them. (§ 3.)

    Nichols v. Chapman, (9 Wend. 455,) is a case on bond and warrant of attorney, holding that a judgment on bond and warrant may be entered after the defendant’s death; provided it be-entered as of the term in which he died, if the death happen during a term; and if in a vacation, then as of the term preceding. But that decision was based on the old and technical theory that a judgment was entered *497as of the first day in the preceding term ; and it is doubtful whether, even then, that decision would apply to a. judgment by default. There is certainly no such theory now remaining. There is no sense in which judgments are entered as of any term. And it would be very useless, and worse than useless, to continue a mere fiction when no good is to be gained.

    [Albany Special Term, June 27, 1871.

    The judgment roll in question does not purport to be as of any term, general or special; and there is no reason why it should relate back to first day of December term.

    Motion granted, with $10 costs.

    Learned, Justice.]

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 59 Barb. 493

Judges: Learned

Filed Date: 6/27/1871

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023