Judges: Stover
Filed Date: 12/24/1898
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This is a motion to cancel and discharge of record a judgment entered in March, 1898, and upon which an execution had been issued against the persons of the defendants. The defendant McCrea, while in custody under the execution herein, obtained a letter from the plaintiff, as follows:
“C. W. Vaughan, Sheriff: Mr. Chapin has just handed, me a letter from Robert McCrea, saying that his wife is very sick, and he wishes to see her. You may let him come home on my account, as per his letter to Mr. Chapin.”
The letter to Chapin was one from McCrea, saying that his wife .was ill, and he would like to go to his home to see her. The sheriff thereupon permitted the defendant to go to his home, and he has not been iu custody since that time. The claim is made by the defendant that the release from custody with the consent of the plaintiff is a discharge of the judgment; and there is no doubt that such was the rule at common law, and that a discharge from' the execution against the body discharged the judgment, but I think the rule has been changed by the provisions of the Code covering executions against the person. Section 1494 is as follows: .
“At any time after a- judgment debtor has remained in custody, by virtue of an execution against his person, for the space of thirty days, the judgment creditor may serve upon the sheriff a written notice, requiring him to discharge the judgment debtor, and return the execution accordingly. After service of such a notice, another execution against the person of the judgment debtor cannot be issued upon the judgment; but after his discharge the judgment creditor may otherwise enforce the judgment as if the execution, from which he was discharged, had been returned without his having been taken.”
It is conceded that the defendant had been imprisoned more than 30 days under the execution. The statute nowhere prescribes the