912
FEDERKL REPORTER,
vol. 71.
RYAN et al- v. KANAWHA VAL. BANK. (Circuit Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit. No. 119. JUDGMENTS-LIEN-WEST VIRGINIA LAWS.
November 11, 1895.)
Under the law of West Virginia, a judgment creditor, in order to reach the land of the judgment debtor, must file a bill in equity in aid of the execution, after a return unsatisfied in whole or in part. A judgment is a lien for 10 years upon the defendant's land, if docketed in the county where the land lies. Plaintiff secured a judgment against H. in 1878, which was docketed in three counties. After the return of an execution unsatisfied, he commenced a suit in equity, in one of the counties, to subject. land of H. in that county to the payment of the judgment. A final decree was entered in this suit in 18IH, leaving the judgment partly unsatisfied. In 1893. plaintiff commenced a suit to reach lands in the other two counties where the judgment was dockl'ted, which lands had in the meantime been sold to third parties. Held, that the first suit in equity was part of and ancillary to the jUdgment, as a mode of enfgrcing it, and kept that judgment alive, not only in the county where it was obtained, but in all the counties where It was docketed, until the entry of the decree in the equity suit, so that the 10-year period ot limitation did not begin to run until that date.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of West Virginia. This sulf was commenced in the United States circuit court of West Virginia in February, 1893. It was brought to enforce a judgment which had been obtained by the plaintiff below in the state circuit court of Kanawha county, W. Va., in 1877. The property sought il\ this suit to be subjected to the said judgment was the interest held in certain tractsqf land in Clay and Nicholas counties, W. Va., Py' Lewis G. Huling, one of the defendants below. F. B. En.slow (of Simms & Enslow), for appellants. J. F. Brown (of Brown,Jackson & Knight; E. L. Buttrick on the brief), for appellee. Before SIMONTON, Circuit Judge, and HUGHES, District Judge. HUGHE8, District Judge. Under the law of West Virginia, a plaintiff, after obtaining judgment for his debt, can issue a writ of fieri facias against the personalty of the defendant. If the executionbereturned unsatisfied, in whole or in part,and he wishes to reach the land of the defendant, he must file a bill in equity in aid The judgment which he has obtained is a lien of the upon the defendant's land in any county in the state, although, as against a purchaser of the land without notice, the lien does not hold unless it be docketed in the county in which the land lies. In 1877, the plaintiff, appellee in this cause, recovered judgment against Lewis G. Huling et at, in Kanawha county, for $3,540.72. This judgment was docketed iIi 1878 in Kanawha and Clay counties, and in May, 1880, in Nicholas county. In these two last counties the defendant Huling owned lands. The dop.keting of the judgment in Clay and Nicholas counties gave notice that the original suit, in which judgment
RYAN V. KANAWHA VAL. BANK.
913
had been entered, was in Kanawha county. The writ of fieri facias issued on'the judgment in April, 1878, having been returned "No property found," the plaintiff, in October, 1878, brought its bill in equity in Kanawha county to subject lands in that county to its judgment. The case was referred, in June, 1880, to a commissioner. His report was filed and confirmed in April, 1881. Sale of the lands in Kanawha county was ordered, and sale of them was made and confirmed in October, 1884. On the 22d of September, 1880, Huling conveyed the lands in Clay and Nicholas counties to the vendors of the defendant, appellant in this suit, who were thus purchasers pendente lite, in respect to the chancery suit in Kanawha county. There can be no doubt but that the statute of limitations began to run against the original judgment, at its date, in 1878, as to the lands in Clay and Nicholas counties. But the question in the case is whether the chancery suit, begun in October, 1878, and finally ended in October, 1884, brought to complete the relief of the judgment, was a continuation of the judgment, and kept it alive, as against the running of the statute of limitations, until the date of the final decree. The record shows that the latter suit, brought to enforce the judgment, resulted in satisfying it, in part, as late as October, 1884, leaving the residue of the amount of the original judgment unpaid. The chancery proceedings were a part of and ancillary to the judgment at law, were a practical mode of enforcing it, arid kept it alive. The decree in chancery was a continuation of the judgment, and continued it in force up to the date when it was entered, kept it alive, not only in Kanawha county, where it was obtained, but in every county of the state in which it was docketed. The docketing in Clay and Nicholas counties gave notice, there as well as in Kanawha county, of the Kanawha judgment, and of all proceedings taken in Kanawha county to enforce it. Just as a successful appeal would have held the statute of limitations in abeyance, so did these proceedings. It follows that the running of the statute of limitations, which was unquestionably suspended in Kanawha county until October, 1884, was also suspended in Clay and Nicholas counties, and that the limit of the statute was not reached until October, 1894, 10 years after the decree in chancery. The defendant's (appellant's)vendors, having purchased the Huling lands in Clay and Nicholas counties in September, 1880, did so pendente lite, with constructive notice of the judgment which had been docketed in those counties, and of all proceedings taken in Kanawha county to enforce,. keep alive, and extend that judgment. The docketing in Clay and Nicholas counties put all purchasers of the lands there on inquiry; and the maxim "vigilantibus non dOl'mientibus jura sub· veniunt" applies. The decision of the court below must therefore be affirmed. v.71F.no.7-58
914
FEDERALREPO"RTER,
ROBERTS v. BROOKS.
(Circuit Court, E. D. New York.
January 30, 1896.)
1.
GRANT BY STATE-ExCLUSIVE PmVII,EGE-NEW JERSEY CONSTITUTION.
The provision in article 4, § 7, par. 11 of the constitution of New Jersey, adopted in 1875, forbidding the grant to any corporation or individual of any exclusive privilege, immunity, or franchise, does not affect the validity of an act of the legislature, passed in 1861, authorizing a riparian proprietor to erect, hold, and enjoy a wharf in front of his land, and upon land belonging to the state, under tide water. Consideration is not necessary to a grant by a sovereign state.
2. SAME-CONSIDERATION. S. SAME-DESCRIPTION.
A grant to a riparian proprietor of the right to erect a wharf In front of his land is not objectionable for want of exact location, since that would be supplied by the wharf when built.
4. SAME-EsTATE CONVEYED-WHARF.
A grant to A. and B., their heirs and assigns, of the right to erect, maintain, and enjoy a wharf on land under water, belonging to the state, conveys a fee in the land under the wharf.
5. DEED-MARRIED WOMAN;
A deed of land belonging to a married woman, which is executed by herself and her husband, and begins as a deed of both, but afterwards uses the singular number in referring to the grantor, and contains the husband's covenants only, Is sufficient to convey the wife's title.
6.
EQUIT,Y PRACTICE-PREMATURE DECREE.
In suit for foreclosure of a mortgage, the mortgagor was notified to appear on a day named and make answer. The bill was taken pro COllfesso on the day before. The mortgagor never appeared, and there was a final decree of foreclosure and sale. Held, that the mortgagor was concluded.
7.
SAME-IRREGULARITIES-DECREE OF STATE COURT.
A suit was brought In a state court to qUiet title under a former foreclosure suit. An administrator ad prosequendum of the estate of the deceased mortgagor was appointed, and service was made upon him. A decree was made that nothing was due on the mortgage, and It was ordered to be canceled of record, The sUbpc:ena bore date of the return day. An appearance was entered for the administrator by the orator's solicitors, and afterwards a decree pro confesso was taken, and an order for proofs made. Held, that none of these things constituted objections which could be urged against the decree of the state court.
E. N. & T. M. Taft, for plaintiff. Daniel Seymour and Philip Wood, for defendant. WHEELER, District Judge. This suit is brought for the specific performance of a contract for the sale and conveyance of a tract composed of three parcels of land" and a dock on land under tide water, at Toms River, in New Jersey. The contract is in writing, signed by the parties, and is unquestioned. It provided for a conveyance in fee simple, and payment and security, at a time and place named. Conveyance was duly tendered, but refused, on objections to the plaintiff's title. These objections, only, require consideration. The title to the dock is foonded upon an act of the legislature of New Jersey passed February 28,1861, by which John B. Horton and Charles L. Davis were "authorized and empowered to erect and maintain a dock in front of their lands on Tom's river," "to collect wharf·