143 Ky. 799 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1911
Opinion of the Coubt by
Affirming.
In March, 1906, A. C. Hurd sold to C. I). Crawford á stock of groceries and certain storeroom fixtures in a grocery store in Newport, Kentucky. It was agreed between them that, as a part of the consideration for this salé, Crawford was to convey to Hiird a certain lot in said city.. -After the goods .’had been invoiced and their value ascertained and Crawford put in possession of the store, Hnrd instituted a. .suit, in which he sought to recover of Crawford, the stock of goods, . upon the ground that Crawford had. no. title, to the lot, and hence was not in- ¿ position to..convey it to him, and had obtained possession of ' the stock of goods'by fraud. The bond.required by Sec. 184 of the Code was executed by Hnrd, but when the officer went to take-possession of the store and goods, Crawford gave the bond as providéd by Sec. 188 of .the Code, with, the Am’err.
The bond upon which this action is based is as follows: “A. C. Hurd v. C. D. Crawford. We bind ourselves and the plaintiff, A. C. Hurd, in the sum of $2,000, that the defendant C. D. Crawford shall perform the judgment of the court in this action. Witness our hands, this first day of May, 1906. American Bonding Co. of Baltimore, by W. W. Helm, Vice-President.”
The defense here sought to be interposed might well have been made in the suit of Hurd v. Crawford. The several questions here raised might properly have been considered in that case upon a motion for new trial. But appellant’s liability in this suit is measured by the terms of its contract. It/obligated itself to, perform the judgment of the court in that case, and the judgment of the court was that the defendant should pay to the plaintiff $1,000, with interest from a given date, and the costs of the action. This is the liability- which áppellant assumed by the plain terms of its bond. It may not complain because the jury did not award the return of the property, or, if not to be had, the payment of its value. Its obligation was to perform the judgment of the court,"whatever that might be. ' When that judgment became final by affirmance upon appeal to this court, appellant’s liability became fixed. Its obligation is wholly unlike the’ bonds in the case of Mounts v. Murphy, 126 Ky., 803, Vallandingham v. Ray, 128 Ky., 506, and other cases cited and relied upon. There the obligation was not to perform the judgment of the court simply, but to perform the judgment, of the court by returning the personal property ordered delivered to the plaintiff, if a return, were adjudged, and by paying to the defendant such sums of money as might be adjudged in the action against the plaintiff, and to diligently prosecute the- suit. Those were bonds executed by the plaintiff in order to-obtain possession of the property, and the property was in each
The judgment predicated thereon having become final, appellant’s contract liability is fixed and the validity of that judgment is no longer a subject of inquiry. Under the proof appellee was entitled to a peremptory instruction, as the matter pleaded and offered in proof presented no defense to the action.
Judgment affirmed.