
    No. 220.
    John Watt & Co. v. A. R. Hendry.
    Citation of renewal of a. judgment must issue from the court that rendered tlio judgment,, whether the defendant resides in the parish where it was rendered or he a resident of some other parish of the State. C. P. 162. An exception that the defendant resides in. another parish is therefore unavailing. Such citation may, however, issue in the namer* of or on the application of any person having an interest in the judgment.
    Tho giving of a twelve months’ bond for tho price of property bid in under execution docs'* not extinguish the debt nor noyate the judgment. If tho bond be not paid, tho prescription applicable to judgments can alone be invoked by the judgment debtor.
    APPEAL from the Twelfth Judicial District Court, parisli.of Catahoula.
    
      Crawford, J. B. G. Smith, for plaintiffs and appellees..
    
      B. W. Bichardson and O. Mayo, for defendant and appellant.
   Lüdeling, C. J.

This is an action to revive a judgment. The-defendant filed an exception to the proceedings on the grounds-that liéis a resident of the parisli of Franklin, -and he can not be sued in- the-parish of Catahoula, and that the parties plaintiffs in' the suit are not the real plaintiffs, having sold their judgment to one Newman, and that Newman can not prosecute this suit in the name of John Watt &. Co., a firm which has been long dissolved.

There is nothing in the record to show whether or not the exception was tried. But there is nothing serious in it. The act of 1853 provides-that “any party interested in any judgment may have the same revived at any time before it is prescribed, by having a citation issued according to law to tho defendant or his representative, from the court wliicht rendered the judgment.” This is one of the exceptions expressly provided by law to the general rule that the defendant must be- suedi before Ms own judge. Ray’s R. S. section 2813; C. P. article 162.

The defendant, in his answer, alleged that the judgment was extin - guished, because a twelve months’ bond had been given in a proceeding under the judgment, that the twelve months’ bond was prescribed by the lapse of five years, and that therefore the judgment itself was prescribed. The twelve months’ bond did not novate the judgment, and whether the bond given for the price of property sold under seizure be extinguished by prescription or not, does not affect the judgment. The judgment is not prescribed, nor has the bond been paid.

It is therefore ordered and adjudged that the judgment of tho district court be affirmed, with costs of appeal.

Mr. Justice Taliaferro recused.  