SCIRE FIERI INQUIRY, Eng.
law. The name of a writ, the history of the origin of which is as
follows: when on an execution de bonis testatoris against an executor
the sheriff returned nulla bona and also a devastavit, a fieri fac-ias,
de bonis propriis, might formerly have been issued against the executor,
without a previous inquisition finding a devastavit and a scire facias.
But the most usual practice upon the sheriff's return of nulla bona a
to a fieri facias de bonis testatoris, was to sue out a special writ of
fieri facias de bonis testatoris, with a clause in it, "et si tibi
constare, poterit," that the executor had wasted the goods, then to levy
de bonis propriis. This was the practice in the king's bench till the
time of Charles I.
2.
In the common pleas a practice had prevailed in early times upon a
suggestion in the special writ of fieri facias of a devastavit by the
executor, to direct the sheriff to inquire by a jury, whether the
executor had wasted the goods, and if the jury found he had, then a
scire facias was issued out against him, and unless he made a good
defence thereto, an execution de bonis propriis was awarded against him.
3.
The practice of the two courts being different, several cases were
brought into the king's bench on error, and at last it became the
practice of both courts, for the sake of expedition, to incorporate the
fieri facias inquiry, and scire facias, into one writ, thence called a
scire fieri inquiry, a name compounded of the first words of the two
writs of scire facias and fieri facias, and that of inquiry, of which it
consists.
4.
This writ recites the fieri facias de bonis testatoris sued out on the
judgment against the executor, the return of nulla bona by the sheriff,
and then suggesting that the executor bad sold and converted the goods
of the testator to the value of the debt and damages recovered, commands
the sheriff to levy the said debt and damages of the goods of the
testator in the hands of the executor, if they could be but if it should
appear to him by the inquisition of a jury that the executor had wasted
the goods of the testator, then the sheriff is to warn the executor to
appear, &c. If the judgment had been either by or against the
testator or intestate, or both, the writ of fieri facias recites that
fact, and also that the court had adjudged, upon a scire facias to
revive the judgment, that the executor or administrator should have
execution for the debt, &c. Clift's Entr. 659; Lilly's Entr. 664; 3
Rich. Pr. K. B. 523.
5.
Although this practice is sometimes adopted, yet the most usual
proceeding is by action of debt on the judgment, suggesting a
devastavit, because in the proceeding by scire fieri inquiry the
plaintiff is not entitled to costs, unless the executor appears and
pleads to the scire facias. 1 Saund. 219, n. 8. See 2 Archb. Pr. 934.
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