This is an application to the Superior Court of "Wayne at Fall Term, 1873, to be allowed to issue an execution upon a judgment taken in 1861, and the last execution upon which was returnable more than three years before. The object of the Code in forbidding an execution under such circumstances is to require the plaintiff to show, by his oath or otherwise, that the judgment has not been satisfied, and to give the adverse party an opportunity of showing that it has been. Hence notice to the adverse party is required. C. C. P., secs. 255, 256, (Rev. Code, chap. 31, sec. 109.)
When the adverse party is dead at the time of the application, the same reason for notice to his personal representative (exists as does for notice to him if he be living. In the present .case there was no notice to the personal representative of Har-dison, although there was to his widow and heirs. This of ntselif would be sufficient ground for refusing the motion, un-iless the notice to the administrator is rendered unnecessary by the (circumstances, as the plaintiff contends that it is. The iplaintiff contends that it is unnecessary, because he has a -specific lien on certain lands in Craven county, which belonged r to (Harrison during his life, by virtue of a levy under execution'té&ted of November Term, 1865, returnable to May Term, :1866, of Wayne Court, and levied by the sheriff of Craven on said lands. .If that were so, it would not dispense with notice ..of the. present, motion to the administrator, to give him an opportunity of showing that the judgment had been satisfied,
.'But the sections of C. C. P. above cited are not the only 1 law-.which .applies .where the defendant has died before any ¡lien had been.,acquired.upon his property. As these proceed^ *435ings (with the exception of the present motion,) were before 1868, their regularity and effect must be decided, upon the law in force at their dates. By that law, if a defendant died after judgment and an execution issued tested before his death, the sheriff might before the return day, levy upon and sell his property, notwithstanding his death. But if the teste of the execution was after his death, the execution was irregular without a previous scire facias to the heirs. Samuel v. Zachary, 4 Ired. 377. And any levy made upon such an execution was a nullity.
When a party to an action dies after judgment the action abates, just as it would by his death before judgment, unless it be' revived by or against his personal representative, as was provided by Rev. Code, chap. 1, sec. 1. Of course all executions tested after its abatement and before its revival would be irregular. The abatement would not destroy the lien acquired by a regular levy. The judgment of revival of the abated judgment would provide for its revival with the incident of the lien. Smith v. Spencer, 3 Ired. 526. As to such cases since C. C. P., see Murchison v. Williams, at this term. In the present case, the plaintiff has omitted to take the regular course to revive his judgment, which abated after the lapse of two terms from the death of the defendant. Supposing that he kept up a regular succession oí executions, after obtaining his judgment in 1861, yet no execution issued to Craven county until the one tested in November, 1865. This was not connected with the preceding executions issued to Jones and5 Wake. It was, so far the property in Craven was concerned,an original fieri facias. Smith v. Spencer, 3 Ired. 526; Hardy v. Jasper, 3 Dev. 158. Being after the action had abated by the death of the defendant, it was irregular and the plaintiff acquired no lien by the levy under it.
Ordinarily, upon a motion for leave to issue execution under C. C. P., secs. 255, 256, if it appears that the judgment has not been satisfied, the Court will allow the party to take out an execution which may be authorized by the j udgment. It will *436not undertake to decide in advance what rights will be acquired by a sale under it, as such a decision would be necessarily ear ga/rte. But in the present case, the motion is for a particularform of execution, which pre-supposes a lien on the land, and the Court, before allowing itf is obliged to consider whether there is any such lien as against the heirs of the defendant,, although its decision would, of course, bind no one not' a party.
We are of opinion that no lien exists.
Let this opinion be certified.
PeR Curiam. Judgment below reversed, and motion refused.