Court Opinion

ID: 8003687
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:51:27.214275+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:48.087754
License: Public Domain

Wagner, Judge,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appeal in this case was taken from a judgment rendered by the court overruling a motion to quash an execution. The original judgment of the court was rendered in 1860, and no execution was issued thereon until 1870, nearly ten years having elapsed. No notice was given to the adverse party, or leave obtained from the court where the execution was sued out. The law of 1855 provided that after the lapse of five years, and within ten years from the entry of a judgment, where there was no lien in existence, an execution should be issued only by leave of the court, on motion with notice to the adverse party. (R. C. 1855, p. 904, § 13.) But the statute of 1865 dispenses with the motion in court and notice to the adverse party, and permits an execution to be issued upon a judgment at any time within ten years after the rendition thereof. It is now insisted that, as the judgment was rendered while the law of 1855 was in- operation, the issuing of the execution must be governed by that-law, and that the Legislature was incompetent to extend the time and release the conditions therein prescribed. This position is untenable. The rule-that laws are applicable to future and not to past transactions, is. not infringed or violated by upholding this law and applying it to., all judgments. It is simply a regulation for enforcing judgments,. *456and does not trench on any vested right. The case of Bolton v. Lansdown, 21 Mo. 399, is in point and is decisive of the question. Judge Leonard, in writing the opinion of the court in that case, says : “ This is a regulation for future transactions, a new rule to be hereafter observed in suing out executions upon judgments ; and, in order that the law may be uniform, the same rule is applied to all judgments, without reference to the time when they were obtained, whether before or after the act took effect, or to the manner in which the suits were conducted that resulted in the judgments, whether according to the old or the new forms of procedure. Existing remedies for the future enforcement of all judgments, no matter where obtained, or under what form of procedure, are thereby modified according to the wisdom of the Legislature ; but no rights are touched in the slightest manner. The power of theLegislature to pass such laws cannot be doubted, and is very frequently exercised, and we see no ground to ques-question the propriety of it in this instance.”
This authority is directly in point, and is conclusive. As the court upheld the execution, and refused to quash it because it was not issued in conformity to the act of 1855, we think the judgment was right and should be affirmed.
The other judges concur.