This suit is based upon an appeal bond given by the defendant for the prosecution of an appeal from a judgment in a landlord’s summons proceeding in the circuit court of St. Louis county. The defense is that there was a material alteration in the-bond after it was signed. On the trial it appeared' that the bond in suit, after it had been signed by the principal maker and the defendant McElhinney, was delivered to the attorney of the former to be completed and filed as a supersedeas and appeal bond. Accordingly, the bond in this condition was presented to the circuit judge, who suggested that it would be formally correct if the clause, to wit, “and rents now due and to accrue and to stay waste,” was added. This was done by the attorney in the presence of said judge, and thereafter the amount for which the bond was given was also inserted, and it was signed by the other
The original action, wherein the bond sued on was given, was one for possession by a purchaser of real estate against a tenant who refused to attorn or pay rent. Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 6397.. A judgment for possession, not for rent, is the proper one in such actions. Duke v. Compton, 49 Mo. App. loc. cit. 309; Green v. Sternberg, 15 Mo. App. 32. Such was the judgment rendered in the circuit court of St. Louis county, from which an appeal was taken to this court where it was affirmed. The bond now sued on was given for that appeal, and was in the form prescribed for a supersedeas by the statute regulating appeals from the circuit courts. Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 2249. Upon its presentation to the circuit judge he suggested the addition of the clause, “and such rents now due and to accrue, and .to stay waste.”
In case of a judgment for possession by a justice of the peace against a tenant refusing to pay rent to a purchaser of the demised premises, an appeal to the circuit court will not be allowed the defendant, “unless he give bond with surety sufficient to secure the payment of all damages, costs and rent then due and to
The only inquiry, therefore, is, what was the scope of the bond when so signed, and did the clause put therein upon the suggestion of the circuit judge, alter or vary its legal effect. This court in Green v. Stern-berg, supra, in speaking of a bond given for an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court affirming a judgment for possession rendered by a justice, has said: “The appeal bond in the circuit court was to secure plaintiff against any damage by reason of the appeal. The loss of rent of the premises, out of possession of which plaintiff was kept by the appeal, was a part of the damages caused by the appeal. The defendant, on taking the appeal from the justice, bound himself to pay all the rents that might accrue. Unless he had done so, he would not have' been allowed an appeal. It is true that the language of the appeal bond, given in the circuit court, is that the appellant shall pay all damages and costs that may be awarded against him by the St. Louis court of appeals, and that this court made and could make no award of rent as damages.
The plaintiff, on a retrial, may be able to show that the attorney who presented the bond had the defendants’ authority to consent to such alteration as would
