This is an action on behalf of Campbell & Zell, a Maryland corporation, as plaintiff upon an attachment bond under seal. The bond in question was filed to dissolve an attachment in a case pending in the state courts of Massachusetts, in which Charles C. Homer, receiver of the Campbell & Zell Company, was plaintiff, and the Barr Pumping Engine Company was defendant. Subsequently, upon motion of the plaintiff, the writ in the cause in which the bond was filed was amended by striking out the name of Homer as receiver, leaving the action to be maintained and prosecuted to judgment in the name of Campbell and Zell. As a general rule, an action on an attachment bond, as well as upon other bonds under seal, must be in the name of the obligee when the name is clearly defined, and is without addition or descriptive enlargement; but who the real obligee is is often a matter of construction. In this case it is true the condition in the bond is to pay the plaintiff in the action, and the principal question here
We need not, however, consider whether, under construction of the whole contract, the interest of Campbell & Zell is so substantial and so apparent, and the corporate name so substantial a part of the description of the obligee, as to entitle the corporation to sue in its own name upon the bond as the expressed obligee. This case may be rested upon the position that the bond expressly runs to-Homer in his official and representative capacity, and expressly to his successors as well. This results because the bond itself
“Since the amendment * * * the suit is being prosecuted for those who, by decree of the court appointing the receiver, are entitled to the proceeds, and for whose benefit it was originally brought. The substitution of the company for- the receiver as the party plaintiff was made to comply with the technicalities of our procedure.”
In Tyler v. Hand and others, 7 How. 573, 12 L. Ed. 824, an action was maintained in the name of John Tyler, as President, upon bonds given to Martin Van Burén, President of the United States, and
Cases like Flynn v. North American L. Insurance Co., 115 Mass. 449, are not in point, for the pertinent reason that the beneficiary is in no sense named as the obligee, and the bond runs expressly to another person and to his representatives. So as to that class of cases like Henricus v. Englert, 137 N. Y. 488, 33 N. E. 550, where the name of the beneficiary is not disclosed, and where there is no stipulation as to successorship. Likewise such cases as Keller v. Ashford, 133 U. S. 610, 622, 10 Sup. Ct. 494, 33 L. Ed. 667, where the consideration is from, and the promise to, a person other than the plaintiff, and where the plaintiff is a stranger to the transaction contrary to the relation which Campbell & Zell and its interest sustained to the transaction here in question.
Under the circumstances of this case there is no reason upon principle or authority why this action should not be maintained by the real and disclosed beneficiary obligee, who has succeeded under the forms of law to the full position of plaintiff, and to the full right of action in the case in which the bond was given, in place of the receiver and official obligee, who has become functus officio in respect to the cause of action and the bond of indemnity.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed, with interest, and the defendant in error recovers costs in this court.