Court Opinion

ID: 6540070
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:14:53.240298+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:47.815252
License: Public Domain

Compton, Sp. J. On the 8th day of June, 1860, Alya H. Eddins recovered judgment in the Desha circuit court against George Q. Graddy for $5,192.16, with costs; on which judgment execution was issued and levied on the personal property of Graddy, who, with one Blackburn as surety, executed a delivery bond. On the 26th day of November, 1860, the delivery bond was returned forfeited and the execution unsatisfied, the result of all which was a statutory delivery bond judgment. On the 16th day of May, 1864, George Q. Graddy died; and on the 29th day of November, 1865, letters of administration on his estate were granted to Mary B. Graddy. On the 9th day of .June, 1866, Eddins sued out a scire facias to revive the delivery bond judgment, which was duly served on the administratrix, and at the return term of the writ, October, 1866, the judgment was regularly revived and the lien thereof continued. Afterward, on the 3d day of December, 1866, a transcript of said judgment was presented to the probate court by the attorney of Eddins, and classed by the court in the third class of claims against the estate of the said George Q. Graddy. On the petition of William H. Graddy, another creditor of the estate, the order of the probate court placing the claim of Eddins in the third class was moved into the circuit court on certiorari, and quashed; from which judgment of quashal Eddins appealed to this court. That a delivery bond judgment is,a lien on the land of the obligors in the county, from the time of the forfeiture, and may be revived by scire facias, was decided in Biscoe v. Sandefur, 14 Ark., 569 ; and that all judgments recovered against a deceased person, in his lifetime, and which were capable of being liens on real property, whether he had any or not, belong to the third class of claims against his estate, was decided in Tucker, Rec'r v. Yell, Adm’r, 25 Ark., 420. And although more than three years — the period of the statute bar as to judgment liens — elapsed from the date of the delivery bond judgment to the death of Grraddy; yet, according to the recent decision of this court in Metropolitan National Bank of New York City v. Gordon, all statutes of limitation were suspended during the late civil war; and consequently, the judgment lien in the case at bar existed at the time Grraddy died, and was continued in force by the proceeding on scire facias against the administratrix. It is objected, however, that after the judgment was revived, there was no presentation of it to the administrator for allowance against the estate. None was necessary. The service of the scire facias was a presentment of the claim, and the judgment of revival was an allowance of it against the estate; in such case, the law requires the administrator to make return of the claim to the probate court (Clark, Adm'x, v. Shelton, 16 Ark., 479), and if he fail to do so, the claimant may, without further notice to the administrator, present the claim to the court for classification, as was done in this case. According to the view we have taken, the claim of the appellant was properly classed, and the court below erred in questioning the record of the probate court; for which error the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to affirm the order of the probate court, classifying the claim of the appellant. Stephenson, J., being disqualified, did not sit in this case.